Friday, April 8, 2011

To Write Love On Her Arms


Pedro the Lion is loud in the speakers, and the city waits just outside our open windows. She sits and sings, legs crossed in the passenger seat, her pretty voice hiding in the volume. Music is a safe place and Pedro is her favorite. It hits me that she won't see this skyline for several weeks, and we will be without her. I lean forward, knowing this will be written, and I ask what she'd say if her story had an audience. She smiles. "Tell them to look up. Tell them to remember the stars."


I would rather write her a song, because songs don't wait to resolve, and because songs mean so much to her. Stories wait for endings, but songs are brave things bold enough to sing when all they know is darkness. These words, like most words, will be written next to midnight, between hurricane and harbor, as both claim to save her.

Renee is 19. When I meet her, cocaine is fresh in her system. She hasn't slept in 36 hours and she won't for another 24. It is a familiar blur of coke, pot, pills and alcohol. She has agreed to meet us, to listen and to let us pray. We ask Renee to come with us, to leave this broken night. She says she'll go to rehab tomorrow, but she isn't ready now. It is too great a change. We pray and say goodbye and it is hard to leave without her.

She has known such great pain; haunted dreams as a child, the near-constant presence of evil ever since. She has felt the touch of awful naked men, battled depression and addiction, and attempted suicide. Her arms remember razor blades, fifty scars that speak of self-inflicted wounds. Six hours after I meet her, she is feeling trapped, two groups of "friends" offering opposite ideas. Everyone is asleep. The sun is rising. She drinks long from a bottle of liquor, takes a razor blade from the table and locks herself in the bathroom. She cuts herself, using the blade to write "FUCK UP" large across her left forearm.

The nurse at the treatment center finds the wound several hours later. The center has no detox, names her too great a risk, and does not accept her. For the next five days, she is ours to love. We become her hospital and the possibility of healing fills our living room with life. It is unspoken and there are only a few of us, but we will be her church, the body of Christ coming alive to meet her needs, to write love on her arms.

She is full of contrast, more alive and closer to death than anyone I've known, like a Johnny Cash song or some theatre star. She owns attitude and humor beyond her 19 years, and when she tells me her story, she is humble and quiet and kind, shaped by the pain of a hundred lifetimes. I sit privileged but breaking as she shares. Her life has been so dark yet there is some soft hope in her words, and on consecutive evenings, I watch the prettiest girls in the room tell her that she's beautiful. I think it's God reminding her.

I've never walked this road, but I decide that if we're going to run a five-day rehab, it is going to be the coolest in the country. It is going to be rock and roll. We start with the basics; lots of fun, too much Starbucks and way too many cigarettes

Thursday night she is in the balcony for Band Marino, Orlando's finest. They are indie-folk-fabulous, a movement disguised as a circus. She loves them and she smiles when I point out the A&R man from Atlantic Europe, in town from London just to catch this show.

She is in good seats when the Magic beat the Sonics the next night, screaming like a lifelong fan with every Dwight Howard dunk. On the way home, we stop for more coffee and books, Blue Like Jazz and (Anne Lamott's) Travelling Mercies.

On Saturday, the Taste of Chaos tour is in town and I'm not even sure we can get in, but doors do open and minutes after parking, we are on stage for Thrice, one of her favorite bands. She stands ten feet from the drummer, smiling constantly. It is a bright moment there in the music, as light and rain collide above the stage. It feels like healing. It is certainly hope.

Sunday night is church and many gather after the service to pray for Renee, this her last night before entering rehab. Some are strangers but all are friends tonight. The prayers move from broken to bold, all encouraging. We're talking to God but I think as much, we're talking to her, telling her she's loved, saying she does not go alone. One among us knows her best. Ryan sits in the corner strumming an acoustic guitar, singing songs she's inspired.

After church our house fills with friends, there for a few more moments before goodbye. Everyone has some gift for her, some note or hug or piece of encouragement. She pulls me aside and tells me she would like to give me something. I smile surprised, wondering what it could be. We walk through the crowded living room, to the garage and her stuff.

She hands me her last razor blade, tells me it is the one she used to cut her arm and her last lines of cocaine five nights before. She's had it with her ever since, shares that tonight will be the hardest night and she shouldn't have it. I hold it carefully, thank her and know instantly that this moment, this gift, will stay with me. It hits me to wonder if this great feeling is what Christ knows when we surrender our broken hearts, when we trade death for life.

As we arrive at the treatment center, she finishes: "The stars are always there but we miss them in the dirt and clouds. We miss them in the storms. Tell them to remember hope. We have hope."

I have watched life come back to her, and it has been a privilege. When our time with her began, someone suggested shifts but that is the language of business. Love is something better. I have been challenged and changed, reminded that love is that simple answer to so many of our hardest questions. Don Miller says we're called to hold our hands against the wounds of a broken world, to stop the bleeding. I agree so greatly.

We often ask God to show up. We pray prayers of rescue. Perhaps God would ask us to be that rescue, to be His body, to move for things that matter. He is not invisible when we come alive. I might be simple but more and more, I believe God works in love, speaks in love, is revealed in our love. I have seen that this week and honestly, it has been simple: Take a broken girl, treat her like a famous princess, give her the best seats in the house. Buy her coffee and cigarettes for the coming down, books and bathroom things for the days ahead. Tell her something true when all she's known are lies. Tell her God loves her. Tell her about forgiveness, the possibility of freedom, tell her she was made to dance in white dresses. All these things are true.

We are only asked to love, to offer hope to the many hopeless. We don't get to choose all the endings, but we are asked to play the rescuers. We won't solve all mysteries and our hearts will certainly break in such a vulnerable life, but it is the best way. We were made to be lovers bold in broken places, pouring ourselves out again and again until we're called home.

I have learned so much in one week with one brave girl. She is alive now, in the patience and safety of rehab, covered in marks of madness but choosing to believe that God makes things new, that He meant hope and healing in the stars. She would ask you to remember.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Planned Parenthood Exposed



I have one question..."How can people be so naive to let this happen....why don't they use protection or other things like birth control if they really don't want a baby to "Ruin" their life....because aborting a fetus (baby) is murder. yea sure it hasn't been born and hasn't taken a breath yet and you haven't seen the fetus yet but still the fetus is living. It's a baby. Even if it's your body you had the choice to have sex, to use protection or birth control and or not to have sex, but once you became pregnant, you don't control your fetus. That baby is a human being. It is a person and they need to have the chance to speak. So the sooner that this world starts to understand this and comprehend it, we will be much better off. Because you are easily killing the next president, someones future spouse, or the next Albert Einstein. Just think about it. You have already had the chance to live....let your baby have a chance.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

LOVE WINS - Rob Bell

Photographs & Memories

March. . . that is one month I used to always love to hear because it meant the sounds of birds and hearing the snow melt and watching as the sun would take longer and longer each day to fall to sleep. Spring....I loved this time of year because of all of the smells and the flowers and everything about it, but now it just brings me to remember that I haven't seen Adam in another month, another day, a minute, and even a second. It's a numbing feeling, knowing that time is not stopping, instead it just keeps pressing on. I know I need him back, I need him here. I stumbled across a song by Jason Reeves called "Photographs and Memories" and I love it.

Friday, January 7, 2011

Eric Ludy - Depraved Indifference



My Reasons For Posting This:
-It's Powerful
-It's Important
-It's Noble
-It's Courageous
-It's Brave
-It's Moving
-People Need to Hear This.

What if that was your child on the road, left there abandoned? He was hungry, he was tired, he was weak, he is starving to death, what would you do? Would you try to claw through cement thick walls with your bare hands if you had to? Would you call upon all of your friends to have them go to him and be a father to him? I would. How could any man(any person) do this? How could a person not ache, how could someone not want to vomit their heart out for not helping with this. We have a disease, and that's sin. We see children homeless, poor, hungry, starving to death, clotheless, shoeless, abandoned across the country and we can go to sleep that very night and sleep fine. We should be so moved that we have to find any way possible to get to those children and love them. We need to love those children. They are GOD'S CHILDREN. They are His sons and daughters. Our brothers and sisters. We need to help them, because they need to be loved. They need to be wrapped up into your arms and never let go. Only a person without their heart would not care to do anything to help these children. Let me ask you again, do you care? Do you want to help? If you do care than help them. Love them. Adopt.

What would you do if this was your baby?