My dearest little man,
Yesterday I watched
you from the door of the nursery, hiding myself from your line of
vision so that you wouldn't notice me standing there. You were giving
quite the monologue, chattering away to the ceiling as you lay there.
You then began to clap your hands, watching, alert and fascinated, as
those little hands of yours clapped together, then came apart, then
clapped together, then came apart, over and over again. You separated
your hands, turned to look at one hand, then turned to look at the
other, then began to clap again. What an intelligent, alert little
boy you are. I've never seen a child lie in their crib and interact
with themselves like how you do.
You sat up, turned
upsidedown on your head, and pushed your feet up on the side of the
crib. That was when you saw me standing in the doorway, our eyes met
and you tumbled out of headstand position, all a flurry to reach out
those arms to me. Your eyes glowed and twinkled and crinkled and
smiled. Indescribable noises of joy burbled and babbled from your
sweet mouth. You started to bounce, up and down and up and down in
your crib, and then you waved, and then you blew me a kiss, and then
you started the whole process over again. I picked you up, and you
instantly clung to me like a Koala bear, laughing all the time,
looking into my eyes and then up the stairs we ran, up, up, up
laughing together until we got to the balcony. You hold onto me for
another five minutes, secure and safe and happy before you squirm
down to go and play.
How
can I tell you how much I love you? How can I tell you how amazing
you are? How intelligent you've proved yourself to be? How fun to be
around? How full of life and energy and life?
God
has made you sheer wonderfulness and I marvel at his Image reflected
in you each and every moment of each and every day. You have grown in
leaps and bounds since August and I am so
proud of you. I'm proud of all the words that you can now say, of how
aware you have become of your surroundings, and of the way that you
just started to point at your parents and say, “mama” and “papa”.
Yesterday you even kissed their pictures, and it melted my heart.
Your family looks wonderful
and I am so thrilled at the prospect of your new life with them. They
will love you and teach you the ways of the Lord and all will be
well.
My prayer of many
is found in Isaiah 61 – I pray that the Spirit of the Sovereign
Lord will be upon you. I pray that you have purpose in life –
purpose to preach good news to the poor, to bind up the
brokenhearted, to proclaim freedom for the captives and release from
darkness for the prisoners, to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor
and the day of vengeance of our God, to comfort all who mourn, and
provide for those who grieve in Zion – to bestow on them a crown of
beauty instead of ashes, the oil of gladness instead of mourning, and
a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair. I pray that you
will be an oak of righteousness, a planting of the Lord for the
display of His splendor.
You're home is in
Michigan, my dearest little boy, and though parting with you will
bring a torrent of tears, I know that it will not be nearly as hard
to part with you as many of the others, because I hope with all of my
heart to be reunited with you one day soon.
All my love,
Kathryn
I can so easily envision him lying in his crib, fascinated by his hands and how they come together to clap. I'm sure that your time with him has brought a lot of that sense of wonder and the sparkle in his eyes!
ReplyDeleteOh, désolée, Kathryn. Le “Au revoir” est très difficile. Je prie souvent pour toi.
ReplyDeleteI too am praying. Love you. Dad
ReplyDelete