Thursday, December 1, 2011

broken pieces

I was just reading over a recent post I wrote called "Daddy's girl" in which I wrote about my relationship with my dad. I needed to revisit the perspective of hope out of which came that post because after this weekend I needed a refreshment. 


I have never been around my dad during a manic episode, at least not to my recollection. I've spoken to him many times on the phone and know all the tell-tale signs but being around him this weekend really punched me in the gut. Since he was on his medication, he really wasn't that bad--not as bad as he can get without meds (this "bad" is the kind of impulsive and reckless behavior that has landed him in jail). But it was still difficult seeing him from this perspective. My husband described it perfectly when he said that he was like a 60-year-old man with ADHD, if you can imagine it. He talked almost incessantly, shared things he would never utter when not manic, and flew from one task to the next without really spending much quality time with me. But he was almost glued to Savannah, which was wonderful to see. He didn't have much of that "natural touch," but he fawned over her like any proud grandpa would do. 


I'm supposing that none of that really sounds so bad, but I guess it's just that I realized once again that I won't ever have the type of relationship with my dad that I crave. When I see him in his "normal" moments (a low-grade depression as he once told me) and his manic moments, I know that I'm not getting the full picture. I don't know if I will ever know the man he truly is without the mental illness. I keep telling myself that we will have that relationship in which we can have deep and involved conversations and a true trust between one another. That we will have a relationship in which we can understand one another's sense of humor and just call each other to see how the day is going. That I could buy him a little present and really know that he will like it because I know what he likes and dislikes. I want all those little things and all the big things that make any relationship good, but I'm figuring out that this may never be possible. It is yet just another painful realization in the life of my relationship with my dad. I'm really trying to focus on the positive, but for now all I feel is disappointment. 


But an important point I've been missing is that he has this mental illness. As much as I wish it weren't so, this is a part of him. God could take it away, but  God has allowed this to happen to my dad for reasons that I can never know. I want my dad without this thing that clouds his mind, but I have to accept that I'm never going to get that. I have to accept him as he is and allow God to show me how to enjoy the relationship we do have. Truly I am blessed to even have this. 


When my mom died, I felt sort of orphaned since I could not rely on my dad at the time for much of anything. This feeling is creeping back in now, the feeling that I don't have those roots in my parents that I think I need. I can complain to God about the unfairness of it all--about how the relationship with my dad is unsatisfactory and how I can't have my mom anymore; but when I am left with the truth and the pieces I do have, what will I choose to build with them?


I believe with all my heart that God is making something beautiful out of this relationship, and I have seen small signs already, but I want to see the final product--what God sees when he looks upon the work of art he will create out of these broken pieces. When I ask him to show me, though, he will not. He will not show me because he wants me to trust him with it. He knows that my artistic abilities are lacking but that his are perfect. When he looks upon the mess of my past--the wreckage of my parent's divorce, the scarred mind of my father, the death of my mom and the hole she has left in my heart--He sees the beautiful masterpiece that He can and will make if I will choose to give him all the pieces. You'd think I would have learned by now that I am a clumsy, foolish mess when it comes to repairing my broken heart. 


I do believe that this is the most revealing I've been in my posts, but I just couldn't not write it. We all have broken pieces from our pasts and our presents. I pray that when you look at your pieces you will not strain and fret over how to make them look pretty or how you can hide them under the rug. I pray you will do the hard thing with me. Let us live every day to please our Lord. Let us allow him to deal with the pieces completely. He so desires to make all of this brokenness new.