As I stare at this sweet face I am reminded at how far we have come. I am brought back to the day I first laid eyes on Malachi and Michael…so small, fragile, hanging onto life by a thread. I felt like my heart could burst with love, and i remember crying out to God, “please don’t take my babies from me” with tears streaming down my face. I remember the day the doctor came to me with a box of tissues in hand and told me the news that my child had a severe brain bleed. I remember feeling like i was drowning and that the very air was knocked out of me as she reviewed the possible outcome for my child. She so calmly said “some parents choose to peacefully let there children die” after referring to the quality of life Malachi might have. And she added “at least you have Michael.” Our hearts felt like they were going to burst as we sank down in the floor of the hospital and cried in our despair. I asked Jake “where do we go from here” as i felt my entire body trembling. After several moments of utter despair we decided that we were going to just trust the Lord and the plans he had for us. We were going to fight for our babies lives, and lean on Gods word even when we didn’t see a light at the end of this deep dark tunnel.
I held Malachi later that week for the first time, not knowing if it would be the first and last time I ever held him. I wept, trying to remember the way he felt in my arms, the way his little head smelled. I find myself now trying to remember every detail of Michael, and how he felt when I held his little hand or the little noises he would make while on the ventilator. But in that moment I thought, if one of my children wasn’t going to survive, I thought it would be Malachi. But God chose a different path for Malachi- a path toward healing, a journey towards life, and life abundantly.
I don’t know exactly the capabilities or deficits that Malachi may or may not have, but I know that I serve an awesome God that has brought Malachi this far for a reason. Malachi brings me more joy than I can express, and I claim healing over his mind and body.
On this Easter Sunday we are celebrating Gods love in a small hospital room in the special care Nursery at Vidant Medical. We choose to not focus on the negative, but instead how far we have come. We remember Michael with a heaviness in our hearts, but we rejoice that we knew him, and he knew us. Words cannot express the grief we bear, but we know he is seated in the arms of my risen savior. Today we thank God that Malachi is out of the NICU and in an intermediate care unit. He is gaining weight and bottle feeding. The NG tube was removed yesterday and will stay out as long as he takes 30 mls every 3 hours. He is on 1/2 liter of oxygen, but hopefully in the coming days they will try him off of it. He is receiving occupational and physical therapy weekly. Because he is premature, he has bradycardia sometimes during feedings ( drops his heart rate dangerously low) he forgets he has to suck, swallow, and breath… and sometimes he clamps down, holds his breathe and turns blue… which is very scary for mom and dad. Most importantly we need prayer for his brain and shunt functioning, his development, and his lungs.
Malachi continues to fight, and we are so blessed to see his progress. Each day is still hard, but this little boy just melts our heart and fills us with gladness.
I always feel a little perplexed when people say “Allison you are so strong”…i almost want to laugh and say,” i am the farthest thing from strong“. Most days I have felt overwhelmed in weakness, and overcome by sadness. I am not strong, but I am tethered to an almighty God that is so very strong. Like an anchor he keeps me grounded, like a steal beam he keeps my head held high, like a raging storm he keeps pushing me forward. I saw an image of a tree the other day that had been cut down to a little stump. From the ground the tree looked lifeless, cut off, and broken…but below the soil there were large roots that clung deep into the depths of the earths soil. I felt like i saw myself in that little tree. Broken, and helpless- but with unseen roots that run deep…grounded by the grace of God. I learned through this journey that Gods grace is sufficient. His grace is enough for whatever suffering he allows into our lives. Not just enough to survive, but enough to equip us to EMERGE from our suffering; with faith and hope for the future.
Hebrews 12 1-2 Let us run with endurance the race that God has set before us. We do this by keeping our eyes on Jesus, on whom our faith depends from start to finish.
