What My Third Decade Taught Me

“I used to think I knew everything. Now as I get older, I realize there’s a lot I don’t know.” -every older person that wanted to annoy me
“Oh I know. Believe you me, I know.” -naïve self 

The first time I said my new age was on Twitter. It read, “I am 30.” Strangely, there was no unexplained vomiting or dying like I predicted would happen. It didn’t even taste bitter coming off my tongue. I might have actually smirked a little when I said it out loud, which I spoke while I was tweeting. So, I survived.

A new decade feels like a new life. I drag in a deep breath and see that my hands are more open instead of more determined like they were when I had 20 candles on my cake. I’m ready to embark. Guess I better be, I’ve already set sail. 
I reflect back on what I’m taking into this next stage.

Life is Unpredictable. I didn’t believe it until I lived it.
 
When my belly swelled under maternity overalls that were a mistake, my Chase was building our first home. We lived in a makeshift apartment in his parent’s basement for two years while he worked full time, stacked logs to frame our walls, and drained himself over blueprints. On the same two beautiful acres he’d bought in high school, where he’d found the perfect pine tree to carve a marriage proposal, we were starting our life. Dreams of protecting toddler fingers from splinters, a constantly roaring fireplace, endless dinner conversations with our teenagers, and two rocking chairs surrounded with grandchildren filled my mind. A garden here, stone landscaping there. Christmases fit for a Pottery Barn spread.
Then baby girl came, and giggles were missed because of the hour-long drive to work and the hour-long drive home. We got feet of snow, not inches, that had to be plowed just to get down the driveway for milk again, and again. Winter gripped us much longer than summer graced us.
“Let’s buy a rental in town,” became “Let’s move into the rental,” became our new place. We had a boy, another girl, and seven years of memories I wouldn’t trade. 
It wasn’t what I wanted. It wasn’t what I planned. Until family time was robbed and suburbia gave it back. Yeah, life is unpredictable but that’s part of the fun.

Your True Heart is the Key to Freedom
Words.
Being a safe place for my kids to talk.
Not oatmeal. Or peas. Never peas.
Date night.
Abba.
A quote that changes me.
Writing. Horrible writing. Good writing.
Hours of reading. Horrible reading. Good reading.
Listening to someone hurting.
Letting someone hurt with me.
Strong coffee. Plenty of cream.
Boundaries.
Less self.
More women’s shelters. More homeless.
Time to change Barbie’s clothes. Time to get bandages on scrapes. Time to watch growth.
Hunger and thirst.
Second chances.

You Get to Change Your Mind
There is a place, a most precious place in our quaint metropolis that serves an old-fashioned, loud-waitress, you-are-family kind of menu. I secretly fantasize about working there when my all three of my children are in school for more than a morning. I’d thrive as an employee as much as I do a paying customer. Mostly because there are lots of retirees who sip coffee while talking about what used to be. I’d be fantastic at waving some decaf in their direction.
When we found this most valuable nugget I ordered a big breakfast. Choice of egg: scrambled. Choice of meat: sausage. Choice of pancakes or French toast: pancakes, as large as a dinner plate and drenched in an ice cream scoop of butter. Please.
My wise Tinys would get the homemade cinnamon roll. They gave me samples (meaning I used my mom voice to teach them “sharing”), and I’m telling you that coil of icing is not of this world. And I’m not entirely sure from which side of the eternal spectrum it comes forth. Then one day I tried the French toast. OK, there are no words. My order has shifted. Choice of egg: scrambled. Choice of meat: sausage. Choice of pancakes or French toast: the toast, don’t forget the ice cream scoop of butter. Please.
Because I’m a grown-up and being responsible doesn’t happen without humbly knowing you can be wrong or have the liberty to change your mind.

 There will be Loss
If there’s a hint of a sniffle, a whisper of a cold catching on, I can guarantee one or all of the kids will be calling my name in the night. “I need a tissue,” they say with a swipe of their sleeve.
A few short hours ago I was lying in the dark, clenching my retainer and whispering prayers about a new diagnosis. News of a friend that broke my man down to stunningly handsome tears.
We’ve said good-bye to more than we’ve wanted. We’ll do it again.
I’ve learned this is the cycle until my name is called.

So many lessons. Parenting is hard, and no one knows how to do it until they jump in, no matter the age. Marriage trails with the same statement. Farting will never not be funny, though I don’t do it. Conflict molds you when done well. Heartache draws you to Truth when you let it. Happiness isn’t as rich as peacefulness. Losing sleep is sometimes the only quiet moment I’ll steal, and when I steal chocolate. Seinfeld will forever be the backdrop to my laundry getting folded. 

And I’m pretty sure all those oldies who said the more they know, the more know they don’t know? They were right.  

 

Rounding to 30

For as long as I can remember I’ve had an unrelenting ache to be known. When I’m caught in a confrontation, it isn’t as much about being right as it is about being seen, heard, understood. While I’m rounding the corner to my thirties this week, I think about those three decades, what they’ve meant, who’s walked beside me, who’s let me slip away, and there’s a phrase I read last week that I just can’t shake.

I HAVE FORMED YOU.  – Isaiah 44

What I don’t remember is where we were or the age I was when I did this. What I do remember, was looking for the familiarity of knee-length ironed shorts, the aroma that is my mother, and her safe form I was certain would shield me from the shyness that was creeping in when I looked up at foreign faces. I found her, squeezed her thigh as only a toddler can, and then was caught by surprise when the person attached wasn’t my mom at all.

I HAVE FORMED YOU.  -Isaiah 44

Our kitchen carpet was like a kaleidoscope of oranges and browns, like all carpet laid in the 80’s. It was morning. And it was my birthday. I squealed and lowered into a crouch with my hands out like I was about to receive the biggest balloon of all my short years. “I can’t believe I’m nine!”

I HAVE FORMED YOU.  -Isaiah 44

Midwest summer days nearly suffocated me. Still, it was better than school. My cousin and I tromped around the fields, dodging bees and boredom in the in-between of elementary. We wound our way through the strawberry patch and picked our afternoon snack. Sweat tickled my ears when I brushed dirt from the red wonders I ate, and memories etched into my mind, not letting me go even 20 years later.

I HAVE FORMED YOU.  -Isaiah 44

Standing in front of my peers I suddenly couldn’t get away. The desks were too close, the eyes were all on me. I wanted to speak what I was going to say but in a rush I went to the bathroom. “It’s a panic attack, not a heart attack,” the doctor later said. It came to be the first of many.

I HAVE FORMED YOU.  -Isaiah 44

We drove over a day to get home from Texas, my mom and I. More than once. In the desolate, dry spans of Oklahoma we made up songs. Particularly about the friend of ours with big lips, the one we’d just visited. (He knows who he is, and he’s proud of his smacker.) Each phrase ended in a rhyme, the beat consistent through the words.

I HAVE FORMED YOU.  -Isaiah 44

I didn’t make it to the end of the driveway before I broke down in tears. I wanted a baby, and my friend had just announced she was having one. What if I never hold my own, a part of Chase and a part of me? What if there’s something wrong with me? Or him? What if it never happens? In the days that followed I learned why I was so emotional. That the girl who is now one year from a two-digit birthday was already growing.

I HAVE FORMED YOU.  – Isaiah 44

Yesterday my kids were outside in their bare feet, when they weren’t roller blading or getting their socks wet. They were breaking apart the crumbs of a snowman they built over the weekend, a large mass refusing melt. I was kneeling by the new green of my lilies starting to peek from the ground unaware that today we’d be 30 degrees with more white falling from the sky.

When I struggle to know how to do this life, when I have mornings I don’t want to make lunches or agreements on how much Wii will be allowed later. When the cold of the day seeps too deep into my soul, I remember One who hasn’t left since I was too small to see with the naked eye and just starting in the womb. He hasn’t missed a moment, a skinned elbow, a tear, or a laugh.

“And another will write on his hand, ‘Belonging to the Lord.'” -Isaiah 44:5

And He won’t miss the ones ahead.