The
text I’d been expecting, finally came.
"We had a sweet baby girl around
8 o’clock, Annie...”
I
clenched my jaw, my eyes blurred. A girl…a sweet baby girl.
We’d
been waiting, wondering, praying.
The
ultrasounds—and there were many—couldn’t reveal whether the baby was a boy or a
girl. But it really didn’t matter.
Annie.
I’ve heard the name means, grace; from the Biblical Hebrew, Hannah, meaning,
gracious or favored.
How
fitting.
In
all my life, in all the births, with all my kids and grandkids and relatives
and friends…I’ve never witnessed anything so filled with grace, with peace, as
this one.
I
wiped my eyes.
“Momma is fine, just
recovering from surgery”
I
let out the breath, I didn’t know I’d been holding.
“We spent our time with
her, holding her…”
I
smiled.
My
eyes sprung a leak as I pictured the little family taking turns holding Annie.
Mom and dad and big brother, Beau, who’s almost two. Each pouring a life time
full of love, into that moment.
Dad
trying to squeeze, into this precious moment, all his dreams of teaching her to
walk, swim, ride a bike, fish…and say no, to boys.
Mom
spilling a life time of love down both cheeks, off quivering lips and kisses.
Big
brother whispering, “I love you sis.”
The
words from months ago, echoed. I closed my eyes and shook my head, but the haunting
memory wouldn’t go.
“Ultra sound wouldn’t show
gender, due to enlarged kidneys…
no lung development
Every specialist
No chance of survival
No options
Two possible outcomes…
still born,
or, deliver baby and have
whatever precious time God allows.”
How’d
they do it? How’d they go through with it? How did they hold it together?
Twice
a month doctor’s visits at $400 each.
The
good news they hoped for, prayed for, was only met with nothing new. All bad
news.
Sure,
Clint may have fallen a little behind at work, sometimes he forgot to do the
simplest of things. But, never once did he make an excuse, never was he irritable
or rude. Somehow, through it all, he remained, professional, courteous and kind.
If you didn’t know better, it seemed he was at peace; as if, all was well.
Somehow,
they managed to keep doing life, even though, instead of painting the nursery
and putting together a crib, they were calling a funeral home and picking a
casket.
I
felt guilty thinking—most folks wouldn’t have done it. They’d have ended it, at
the first bad report.
But
not the parents of Annie; the mommy and daddy of grace.
The phone rang. It was Ruth. I could tell by
the sound of her voice, she knew.
“So,
you’ve heard?”
“Yeah…I’ve
been bawling like a baby.”
We
talked about how doctors should’ve been able to do something…how God could’ve.
Finally,
I asked, “How’d they do it?”
“I
don’t know. It’s like, she carried the baby…just for God.”
I
stared out the window and whispered. “The baby, Annie, born for heaven.”
I
hung up the phone. Cleared my throat, wiped my eyes, blew my nose. Then, read
the rest of the text.
“…around 9:30 she went to
heaven. We had a very peaceful morning.”
We
had a very peaceful morning?
I’ve
heard baby deliveries described as long, loud, exhausting, joyful, painful,
tearful…but never peaceful.
How
could they say, peaceful? Especially, since she, since Annie…
Annie…
grace….
God’s
amazing grace….
That’s
how.
I
typed a reply:
“Thanks
for letting me know, my friend.
There’s
no denying The Prince of Peace and His great love are near, when you can go
through something like this, and still say, ‘We had a very peaceful morning.’
You
and your precious family are so, very, loved. Your sweet Annie will only know
the most wonderful of love and joy and peace. She’ll never know sorrow or pain
and she will be so happy to meet you some sweet day not so far away.”
I
asked if there was anything we could do, if there was anything they needed.
He
said, “No, we already have so much. You’ve already given us the power of
prayer. That to us is overwhelming.”
I
was overwhelmed, at his response and thought of the overwhelming peace that
must’ve saturated the soul of Horatio Spafford as he drifted over the spot where
his four daughters were drowned at sea, and he penned:
“When peace, like a
river, attendeth my way,
When sorrows like sea
billows roll;
Whatever my lot, Thou
hast taught me to say,
It is well, it is well
with my soul.”
I’m
convinced, that same peace that enveloped Mr. Spafford, filled a hospital room in
Florida, where my friend Clint and his precious wife Bristen and their little
mister Beau, said hello, and, see you later, as they watched, their beautiful
little Annie, go Home.
PS:
I'm all at once, smiling and crying, as I write this:
God's specialty of bringing life from death is crystal clear in the wonderful life of Annie.
When seeking permission to share Annie's story I was told that she has already donated two life giving valves from her precious heart, to a patient in need.
3 comments:
I can't recall when I've read anything as touching as Annie's story. May God bless this little angel and her family.
No words...just love
No words...just love.
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