"I am a little pencil in the hand of a writing God who is sending a love letter to the world." -Mother Teresa

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Love
There is a saying in many parts of Africa: "If you educate a man, you simply educate an individual, but if you educate a woman, you educate a nation."

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

The other side of gaining

Today, as I celebrate an answer to prayers, a substantial “gain” in my life, I am reminded of loss. Today, Luba left South Africa to come to the United States. I am stoked. I am thankful. Our dream has been realized. I am excitingly nervous. I am happy, really happy. This. Is. It. At the same time, I am sad. I am heartbroken in a way that cannot be described, but this heartbreak is not even a sliver of what his family feels. 

Today, I am reminded that gain is usually accompanied by some sort of loss. 

Throughout this process, I have tried to remind myself each time that I’ve celebrated steps and counted down days that I must honor the sacrifice of both Luba and his family. I’m going to be totally honest, in the beginning of this process I focused on my losses. It was all I knew. I’ve been in survival mode on my own for years. I borrowed loss from the future and neglected the present and more important, intangible and irreplaceable losses from him and his loved ones. I remember the day that it hit me in the gut, one of those powerful gut kicks from God. I was leaving my financial class at NewSong and thinking of the financial turmoil I felt myself walking into and the weight of becoming the “breadwinner.” Albeit temporary, I thought of what I would exclude from my budget that I loved. Would I give up the cute toe designs? I truly love them. They are my splurge and my 1 ounce of “girly-ness.” When I have children, will I be unable to work part-time or more so not have the choice? Would we have to have meatless dinners? The list of “what ifs” moved to the forefront replacing all the beauty and gifts I would gain with this relationship. Suddenly, I felt God say “Hey Selfish, wanna practice for marriage and actually start thinking about someone else?!?!” Images suddenly began rolling through my head, one after the other. A lot of those images were faces-his parents, his nephew. Luba’s face was there. I heard laughter from a boisterous close community. I heard songs in Xhosa that I knew from Sundays at Harvester Church where his dad pastors. The difference was that all of those things, people, places, identity, beloved country, culture, and friends were irreplaceable like my pedicure, groceries, money, etc. It was at that moment that I began to understand the depth of Luba’s future loss and his sacrifice so that I would gain, so that we would gain. I felt such shame. How had I missed something so simple? I knew that it was a wakeup call to do things as right as I consciously could until his arrival [which will continue after]. I began to seek out those who have immigrated here, especially those with a similar visa journey, for input on how to best make a house a home, how to keep reminders, etc. 

A shift started that day in my thinking and feeling. I’ve pursued that shift and continue to do so in order to be better prepared when he is here. I know I’ll mess up at times, but I’m committed to being conscientious. I was reminded that God has taken care of Luba to this point and will continue to do so. I assigned myself as “breadwinner.” I put on that weight I carried, no one else. I trusted God with the “big stuff” [which he answered in miracle after miracle] but I put myself back in control with the small details that I then let override the big. I had been my biggest obstacle. 

So today, I celebrate and look forward to the hugest exhalation I’ve ever produced once he shows up at LAX [tomorrow]. He has never been here and this will be my first time on this side of international arrivals. But today, I also mourn his departure with his family and for him. My promise to them is that I will do my very best and all that is in my power to maintain the connections. We will be and will lead a family by faith and trust in God. I’m committed to building a bridge between the two countries and incorporating South Africa into all possible. 

Nosipho & Mqokeleli (and the rest of the family), thank you for this precious gift and your sacrifice.

Love,
Danielle

2 comments:

  1. You blessed my heart so much Danielle and you are a wise woman indeed who sees beyond what the human eye can see. Thank you for sharing your life and my prayer is that God will bless your and Luba's obedience towards His destiny for your lives as a family. God bless!!!!!!

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  2. I am so glad you are happy. Always put God first, family second and work last and God will always take care of both of you. Continue to make decisions based on what is right by God and not your emotions and you will always be at peace with what is happening in you life. To me peace is happiness. Things will get hard at times when he gets here but remember to never make decisions based on your emotions. I wish you both the best and I know God will take care of you both! Congratulations!

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