Often music fills my ears, pushing back, pushing out the distraction of sounds around me, pulling my thoughts inward, attempts at gathering all the scatter into some sort of coalescing. Today the gray-green waves of the Pacific roar relentlessly. A sound of static unceasing, pleasing perhaps because of the immensity of its raw power, the deep core knowledge that this is water, this is the essence of the earth expressing itself, that monotony that is staggeringly beautiful, from which you can hardly turn away. A line of dozens of surfers bob like black buoys waiting for some moment indiscernible to me, waiting to launch into those few seconds of thrill before the white ferocity takes them down. Eight pelicans, one behind the other, skim the surface, effortlessly, lazily.
The still quiet of my home in Montana knows nothing of this clamor, just shocking liquid quiet punctuated here and there by bird song. Perhaps in storm the land sings with ocean, clouds fill the valley making their way up the canyon with surprising swiftness, the wind proceeds them, the trees bending from the power and the constant rush of air through millions upon millions of evergreen branches, aspen leaves shuddering, flashing. There is that thrill, that giddiness to witness such power, wondrous terror that nothing can stop what’s coming. And so the waves reach for the shore, again and again, a longing never satiated.
I have wondered, would I like to live near the sea? No, sea sounds too pretty, too small and timid and kind. This is ocean. This is a vastness and an infinitude to give the word some beginning of meaning. This is force unyielding. There is absolutely no letting up. Would that sound haggard me? Would its backdrop to every day and every action invigorate and calm or fatigue, cause restlessness, unsettledness?
This is our life, a pounding raw power that never lets up, is always, ever-present. Cancer, and now heart failure too, have been the backdrop to every day and every action for nearly three and a half years. The relentless static ever demanding to be heard threatens to swamp every view. We dared to plan a trip to San Diego, a chance to finally get away and take a break. Canceled plans, thwarted hopes, desires cut short – these have marked us. But there he is, Sten on the beach below the hotel room, black wetsuit and blue board receiving instruction and soon to paddle out into that fierce green fray, lit now like liquid precious stone by sunlight breaking through clouds. The contrast of breaking waves, white, so strangely satisfying.
Allistaire’s life, ever tenuous, overlays all thoughts, undergirds all visions of future. All seems well. You sleep in comfy bed, you eat tasty fish tacos and then there it is, because it has always been there but something causes you to tune into that roar, that relentless pounding of cancer like the wolf threatening to blow your house down. The barbs of cancer puncture and sorrow seeps into those lacerated places, saturating the tissues. Now there is another layer, another strata of sorrow, ever-present, silent but pounding, roaring its reality into unnoticed places. Jens is dead. We repeat it to ourselves in disbelief. I saw his body laying there on the table, clothed in plaid flannel and dirty Carhartts, a most common image. “They didn’t do his hair right,” Jo exclaims through tears, lovingly running her hand through his hair, “he never did it that way.” A sad smile because Jens really never did do his hair, that’s why it doesn’t look right. I held his hand and felt the shocking cold of his arm under the shirt. I told myself, this is Jens, he is dead, he is dead but I could not fathom it, I cannot fathom it, I don’t know how to take it in! We sit, we walk and there suddenly we are confronted with something that brings Jens rushing to our minds. We stare at the amazing stretcher from the ambulance, awed by its engineering design and there is Jens. We walk down the sidewalk and see the “corn hole game” and there is Jens. We hear Dave Matthews in the restaurant and there is Jens. Someone mispronounces Sten’s name, I correct and go through the list of the four brothers with the norwegian names and there is Jens. I send out a group text to give an update on Allistaire and there is Jens. My husband’s green jewel eyes fill again and again like pools, and there is Jens, Jens. His sweet brother is gone, gone. His name pounds through our hearts, punctuating our days endlessly.
I don’t know if I can live with this unceasing roar. I feel desperate sometimes, wild with the desire to use my wee force to make this all stop, turn around, never come this way again. We have no choice. It is unyielding, it is a reaching, a groping that will never be satisfied, not in this life. We will never again hear Jens’ voice in this life, nor see the green of His eyes, the eager excitement in his story telling, the silly contortions of his face to make us laugh, the gentle tug of pulling Jo into his protective warm chest, the wrestling with how to live out his days – his desire for satisfying work and play. Oh dear Jensie, I cannot comprehend that you are really never again going to walk through the door. Surely you are just away, or more likely, I am simply in Seattle with Allistaire and you will visit or I will see you when I get to come home again, you will walk through the door for one of our big family get togethers, arms loaded with tasty food. You will join the circle of your brothers, beer in hand and I will stand back and take in with swelling satisfaction the joy of our family together, the hope of more little kids. But I saved all the baby stuff. I saved it for YOU! For you and Jo. I wanted to see those sweet little clothes that encircled the bulgie flesh of my two little girls, on your children. I couldn’t wait to see what they’d be like. I have imagined you Jens over and over, holding that new warm bundle of life in your arms in awed amazement, in wonder at what you and Jo had made, Jo next to you looking on, equally rejoicing in a new little life and seeing you as a dad. For you Jens, were to be such a sweet, sweet dad, full of joy and play. And it is not to be and what is Jo to do with those bags of clothes, of baby gear I thrust on her?
There now, just to the side, in parallel to the bright thread is now the dark. Every remembrance is dual, joy and pain. Jens is dead. There is now no hoping, no imagining his future. There is only sadness of what might have been. Allistaire’s future remains ultimately unknown, though there is already cost, already deep gouges in her flesh that cannot be undone. On a Wednesday we sat huddled together on the couch at Sten’s parent’s house, Jo and all her family, the Wilsons, and all of Jens’ family, we the Andersons. We gathered to draw together tales of Jens, bright threads of his life intertwined with ours, sorrow and joy all tumbled together. I sat on the edge with the phone shoved up against my thigh, ever aware of its presence, that its ring might suddenly clatter into this sacred space, slicing, and telling us what is to come. Hours passed with no word from the doctors, despite knowing that surely by now her PET/CT was complete, results would be back and final results from her bone marrow biopsy should also return soon.
When our time of remembrance wrapped up, I shut myself in Lowell’s study and sat on the carpet as close to the heater as I could get, right up against the window, staring out, watching the slow consistent fall of snow. The day before had begun with sun and sixty degrees and then the evening turned windy and fat flakes began to fall. All through Wednesday the snow fell. I sat with apprehension, knowing that at any moment the next twist in this journey with Allistaire would be revealed. I sought to prepare my heart for what might come, to see the news as from the hand of Christ. For I believe in God who determines all of our days before one of them has come to be, God who holds all of our life in His hands.
But it gets messy see? I seek to follow my finite mind, a trail, a nubby fiber of reasoning and it all gets mucked up. Did God cast Jens off that mountain? Does God command the swirling rotation of electrons around the atom’s nucleus? Is He Lord over atom binding to atom to form molecule, joining countless others to form the cell? Does He declare, “here your proud waves halt?” Does he pour forth the snow from its storehouses? Does He count the number of hairs on my head? Is He alert to my every rising up and laying down? And what of another head sliced off by Isis, another body rotting away from Ebola? Where is God in these moments? Is He God? What sort of God? Is it His prerogative to decide if and when cancer finally gnaws away Allistaire’s life? Is He good?
The snow falls and I wonder. What if it’s all just a bunch of crazy talk? I’ve read the Bible, I know. There are wild tales there. Mysteries. Paradoxes. Seeming contradictions. Countless questions left unanswered. Answers that make me twist and arch in discomfort. What if there’s no point at all, simply an incredible accumulation of mutations over eons resulting in a staggering fancy arrangement of atoms? Who cares then? What is Allistaire’s life? Its loss is only sadness. And what is sadness? An illusion? Another blind accomplishment of evolution, a component of survival of the fittest to get me to fight for the life of my offspring so my species can go on? Is my love mere firing of neurons? And what of Jens? Was he just dust laying there on the table, soon to go back to join the rest of the earth to one day become a blade of grass, energy produced as the bonds of atoms burst in that furnace burning up his flesh, to go up and join the energy of clouds and wind and light? Is Jens simply a molecule in the scale of the fish I will eat? But where was Jens when that body lay on the table? For he was not there.
The snow falls and I wonder and I feel sick to my stomach. What is the point of all this, all this agony, if all she is is a bunch of atoms? Let her go, let her go. Walk away. It doesn’t matter anyway. It’s all illusion, all dream, all for what? But I cannot go there, the very fibers of my being rail against that view. I have seen beauty. I have learned of kinase inhibitors, of heart muscles beating in unison, of atoms seeking electrons to at long last be at rest. I have looked into Allistaire’s blue eyes flashing with delight. Jens was no longer there, just beautiful, beloved dust. I choose one unprovable over another. I have seen the Lord. I have heard His voice. I stand with Job, having tasted a bit of loss, and I yield to the Lord and allow Him to instruct me. The waves pound the shore. The ocean speaks of the depths of God’s love. The sky, as far as the east is from the west, speaks of His forgiveness. Mountains fall into the sea at His voice, declaring His power. The stars in all their vast infinitude, well, He calls them out one by one. I smile. My heart yields and I stand in awe and I know that when the day comes that I see Jens again, I will have first fallen on my face in adoration, in delighted submission to the God of the Universe who orders my days.
I walked down the hall into the kitchen where folks were about to head out to another family gathering in this week of sorrows, of mourning. In that moment I was struck with the shocking suddenness and swiftness of Jens’ death, those sixty startling seconds. I was struck by the contrast of that quick death with the nearly three and half years that Allistaire’s life has hung as by a mere thread, numerous times dangling over seeming insatiable jaws of death. There is no leukemia in her marrow, I tell them. No detectable cancer in her marrow and all of the six previous spots of solid leukemia as seen on PET/CT – gone. There is only one small new spot of likely cancer. A 1 cm brightness on the scan shows up on the outside of her left leg in the soft tissue. The doctors are shocked. With her ANC plummeting to zero, they assumed they would find a marrow packed with cancer. But no. Again her life is sustained against all probability.
After I return to Seattle, a biopsy confirms the spot in Allistaire’s leg is cancer. Last Thursday, with giddy excitement, Allistaire was transported by a critical care ambulance to the University of Washington for a radiation simulation and consult with Dr. Ralph Ermoian. Her leg may be deformed in terms of its long-term growth. It may end up being shorter than the other but radiation should be effective at eradicating the cancer in this location. Of course any part of the body exposed to radiation is also more likely to become cancerous down the line. The barbs snag against our flesh, but we are well acquainted with such stings and give the warnings no attention. Allistaire is set up in the CT machine to line up her leg and create a foam form around her leg and foot to keep it precisely in place during radiation. Lines are drawn along her shin and upper thigh to align the lasers and two tiny jail-house style tattoos are etched into her knee, needle dipped in ink and scraped into tiny dots. She screams and trembles in fear. How many times have I had to tell her, “I know it hurts, I know it tastes yucky, I know it is scary, but we must do it, we must, or child, you will die.”
Radiation will begin on Wednesday when Sten and I return. The hope is that Allistaire can make it through all of the ten days with no sedation. She will be alone and must stay totally still for approximately five minutes “in the vault” each day, with several 30 seconds blasts of radiation. It will be wonderful if she can do this without sedation. While the three episodes of cardiac anesthesia (for her bone marrow biopsy, PET/CT and biopsy of leg) went great, sedation does pose its problems for the heart, specifically in reading the signs of how well the heart is functioning. Each sedation brought lower blood pressures and an increased BNP. Sedation requires no eating for long periods of time, impacts energy and can increase nausea. The cardiologists feel that Allistaire is very ready to wean off of her Milrinone and have been eager to give it a try. But sedation would confuse all the indicators of how well her heart and body would tolerate the wean. They decided to turn down her Milrinone from .3 to .2 on Saturday and will keep it at this dose until after radiation on Wednesday. If she does well without needing sedation to stay still during radiation and the wean of Milrinone appears to be going well, they will then turn her down to .1. Today’s echo showed an ejection fraction of 31, down from the last one of 34 which was done from the prior at 38. Each three of these echos the cardiologists say look essentially same, but boy what I wouldn’t give for better numbers. Exciting times and nerve-wracking times. Times of ever waiting.
If you walk in the Allistaire’s room, you will encounter a sweet-eyed five-year old girl bursting with joy and life and an insistent plea that you play with her. What you see is the vibrant life of a girl we are so passionate to save, but there are happenings below the surface that constantly reveal another story. She tested positive for C-Diff (Clostridium difficult), a bacteria in the gut, which has meant she’s been not only in ordinary contact isolation, but now contact enteric which means she hasn’t been able to leave her from for the last two weeks. Her course of antibiotics wrapped up yesterday and if she remains symptom free, she will likely be allowed to roam the halls in a few days. We hope she can fully get over this as sometimes C-Diff can be pesky and keep coming back. Her other challenge is that her marrow has been incredibly slow to recover. It finally did recover from her heavy-duty round of chemo that began in January but with this most recent round of chemo about six weeks ago, her ANC plummeted from nearly 1,700 down to 8. The chemo she received, Azacitadine, is not supposed to be very count (marrow) suppressive but clearly her marrow has just been beaten down so relentlessly. The major problems with this is that it means her blood counts aren’t recovering well enough on their own, resulting in continued red blood and platelet transfusions which tend to be hard on the heart (they are a big fluid increase and the fluid is heavy/dense). Also, with such low white blood counts, she is far more vulnerable to infection of all kinds and it takes far longer to get over infections. On top of it all, Allistaire still has cancer that needs to be warred against. It has been six weeks since her last round of chemo began which means she’s two weeks past when she would normally begin another round of chemo. The door to cancer cells has been left wide open. She needs chemo. She needs her marrow to recover. It is all such a delicate balance and requires decisions to be made with no guarantee of outcome, just hope, hope.
The most recent bomb dropped on us unintentionally came when Dr. Ermoian talked to us about radiation. He referenced the conversation he had with Dr. Gardner about the pros and cons of this focal radiation. He mentioned that she said Allistaire would not be able to get TBI (Total Body Irradiation). My mouth dropped. My heart dropped. Heat clamped down on the back of my neck. Allistaire was not able to get TBI in her last transplant. It is a core part of her hope to finally be cured of AML. It can have long term serious consequences for the heart. Oh God. Here we are again – your most powerful weapons to kill the cancer are the very weapons that will in turn take your child’s life. There are no letters to sound-out the agonizing wrathful rage and sorrow I feel at this plight. I want my child to LIVE!!!!! Then Dr. Ermoian says that it is not even clear how effective TBI is in the long run. Dr. Gardner’s words from months ago come flooding my mind, “We like TBI so much we give it to babies.” Her point was that they so believe in the worth of TBI that they even give it to infants – to infants!!!! Do you know what TBI is? I will quote again what the Fred Hutch website says, “it is like being near the epicenter of a nuclear blast.” Your baby, my little girl, intentionally placed near the epicenter of a nuclear blast?! Would you ever do that? You would, you would if it was your only hope that your child might live. But what wretched, agonizing choices, not really choices at all. You may be weary of me asking you to give money to cancer research. But I’m going to ask you again, if you haven’t already, would you consider giving to Obiliteride? Obiliteride is a fundraiser where 100% of donations go directly to cancer research at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research. Donate HERE.
I have been so thankful for Jo’s heart in the face of losing Jens. My heart and faith have been encouraged as she has sought the Lord, His directing, His holding her up, His provision. She has determined to be on the look out for what He will do, what He is up to. Her fight has only just begun. These days I have felt so weary, circling endlessly in this eddy, little to no seeming progress forward, no end in sight. Mine has been a choosing to lift my eyes to Christ for three and half years. Jo’s soaring spirit admonishes mine to look back over the bounty of God’s provision, of His faithfulness, of His words etched into my heart over these years. And really, Jo’s fight to have eyes to see the Lord did not begin on April 11th with Jens’ body hurled over cliffs, nor did mine begin with Allistaire’s diagnosis. No, long before these days, in long years past, a seed was planted and the root has gone down. Our thirst for our Father, a scanning the horizon of our days for His face, came long before. Do not wait for tragedy to seek His face. Determine to seek Him now. Thirst. Hunger. Yearn. I believe lie when I live in wait for my circumstances to line up with my desires for how my life should look, waiting to truly live, to know rest and satisfaction. The Lord IS my life! The Lord IS my dwelling place, my home. My Father is my sabbath rest now, now!
With Jo’s permission, I have copied below her words from Jens’ memorial service and a link to the video of the service HERE
“Jens. A single. Mighty. Syllable. Four letters that align so solidly beside one another, providing a foundation on which to build a life, develop character, cultivate relationship, grow ever more in integrity.
Jens. A name woven deep into the tapestry of my soul, your fibers reinforcing my own at their weakest places and adding depth and beauty to my places of strength.
Jens. Jens. Jens. I hear your name with each beat of your heart and with it I am transported, whisked away to cold, foggy early mornings in the Lamar Valley of Yellowstone, peering with anticipation through darkness as we wait for the first signs of dawn to show itself. Another heartbeat and I sit in the passenger seat of the 4-Runner as we bounce along dirt roads of Montana, nowhere to be but right where we are. My heart beats again and I find us snuggled in the tent perched high in the mountains, your face lit up as clear as day with each bolt of lightning that cracks above us, your eyes gleaming, awed by the display of power and beauty of our God. Another thump of my heart and I look over my shoulder to see you flex your strength against the waters, navigating the raft down the river or the canoe through the lake, you tirelessly paddle and steer as you smile back at me. My heart beats and we wake up and our eyes meet – we both smirk and shake our heads in wonder of the ball of black and white fur that so masterfully weaseled his way between us in the night – Peyto Dog was ever faithful in keeping tabs on his pack, even as he slumbered. Another beat and you’re making popcorn, pouring copious amounts of butter over the top. The next beat sends me to the garage where I serve as your third and fourth hands as you skillfully craft another beautiful wooden piece with those rough, weathered, hard-working Yensie hands. Another beat and we’re gathered around the table at your parent’s house, everyone talks and eats and talks some more. I find you on the couch or in the hammock reading, another Ivan Doig book down, another rich classic finished. I find myself on skis, skinning up a glistening, iridescent blanket of snow off the Teton Pass, following you and Peyto Dog up, up, up… and surfing the deeps back down again. I see you crawling around endlessly on your hands and knees, a thick furry blanket over your back as you delight Allistaire with your bear grunts and tickles. I walk around beside you around the park at night in the cold, your big red hat covering your head, every now and then a wisp of smoke rises as you puff your pipe. I find you lying on your back, head in a cupboard, fixing a leaking pipe, repairing the garbage disposal, troubleshooting the dishwasher that’s on the fritz. You come to bed late the night before a backcountry venture, waxing skis, ensuring you’ve packed appropriately, pouring over weather forecasts, condition reports, and the next day’s terrain on google earth just one more time before you rest. Another heartbeat and you‘re in your fleece trout pajamas being the goofy guy I so love, making up silly dance moves and striking poses, all to see my face light up and hear laughter pour out. Another beat and we’re sitting around the fire, watching for hours as the embers dance their way to the inky, star-studded sky. I blink and the night sky is still there, but the dancing embers have been replaced by the mesmerizing green + gold + white dance of the Northern Lights in Norway…
These heartbeats and moments in time continue on and on and on, filling me with memory of you. Other heartbeats are shocking, excruciatingly painful, visions of what could have been, working through the complexities and beauties of this life as we would have grown older together… these beats are unavoidable and meaningful, our unfulfilled dreams that will hang in the balance.
I press my ear to your chest, hoping to hear and feel our heartbeats align. Yours is a mighty, sure rhythm, the metronome stomping out a rhythm for your life. Oh how I marveled at it… this steady beat was at the center of all other creative rhythms you so incredibly pounded out – whether on pots and pans as a young boy, the steering wheel on road trips, the drum set in the northeast corner of the house, or as you poured out yourself on Sundays. Days you played at church I would intentionally show up after the music had already begun as I so loved pulling into that parking lot and stepping out of the car and hearing the only audible noise from inside filling air: Yens stomping out a rhythm on the bass drum, an extension of your wildly loving heart, pumping life through your body, through our family, through this community and beyond as you gave yourself with abandon to worship the Giver of all Life.
My heart has been privy to gentle whispers over the last decade of life… the first, before I knew you well, was God’s soft nudge and raising of my eyes to see you as he said, “That’s HIM”, something I never told you until 4 years later and we were husband and wife. My heart also endured a recurring dream over the last couple of years… I was always spared details about what took your life, but found myself widowed due to a ski accident, a burden that always fell to Peder to relay to me. I had this dream, this preview of life to be lived out without you by my side, and though it pained me so, it brought no anxiety. We would talk about it and you always refocused my vision, for you firmly believed that your task was to live fully vested in each day, deeply committed to taking responsibility for your actions to best preserve your life + the lives of others. The rest was up to the Giver of Life, who numbered your days before he fashioned your large cranium, wavy blonde locks, green eyes, and heart of gold in your momma’s womb… when this day came, it would matter not what you were doing, you would be ushered swiftly from this earthly realm to the feet of our Christ, our King. When the avalanche report came out detailing your accident and producing the exceptionally rare statement that there is, essentially, not a single explanation for what occurred on April 11th, my heart somehow found rest in that this was the day I had been prepared for over the last couple of years.
Your above and beyond efforts to be safe in the backcountry – from obtaining your Wilderness First Responder and Avy 1 certifications and rereading through your course materials a couple times every season to the so-called “over packing” of extra first aid and survival items – has preserved the lives of your brothers and friends over the years, and for that I am exceedingly grateful.
As my heart beats on, flashing through fifty-some treasured memories and painful dreams a minute, I have yet to hear it muster “Why God?? Why now? Why my Yens??” …Instead, all I hear is the persistent inquiry, with a tone of expectation, “What are you up to, my King?” For God, you still sit enthroned in my heart and in the heavens and beckon me to love you more deeply… and you even sweetened the deal, at Yens’ request, I’m sure, by gifting me with seasonal favorites of mine, heaps of spring snow followed by blue skies and radiant spring sun, both of which bring such promise of renewed LIFE. I’m on to you, Lord, I see you moving and shaking, and extending such Love, that same wild love that brought such vigor to the heart of my grizzly bear.
So… I implore you who listen in today, on behalf of my best friend, my love, my sweet honey: slow your selves long enough to picture the four chambered organ just beneath your sternum, a perfect + harmonious balance of electricity, chemistry, pressure, and tone, a gift with at, without any conscious effort on your behalf, send the gift of life throughout your body to sustain you. WONDER. MARVEL.
Jens’ big, giving, powerful heart beckons me and you to march onward in his wake, embracing the grace and freedom he wrapped his life around, to continue to stomp out that rhythm that we’ll hear the most loudly when the thunder clouds roll in and Yens takes to his drum set in the sky and makes a mighty ruckus with THE KING.
You are dearly loved, deeply revered, immensely missed by a greater group of people than you would have ever fathomed… I cannot wait to look you in the eyes again, see you smile, and fall on my face beside you in worship at the Throne of Grace.” (Written by Jonell Anderson for her husband, Jens’, memorial on 4/18/15)
This post….almost too much for the empathetic human heart to endure. Your words, your pain, these pictures…..create a deep nauseating sensation I can’t imagine living with. I know the days ahead for you all, and especially Jo will be writhed with this pain, and I wish there was some way to take all of this from your awesome family. We think of you often; pray for your faith and peace; while knowing it’s not enough. Our hearts are with you.
Ashley’s comment is so perfect, and details exactly what I was thinking. We think of all of you so very often, and while I wasn’t blessed to know Jens as well as his older brothers, the incredibly beautiful service was so inspirational. He left a legacy many can only hope to achieve in our short lifetime. His athletic prowess, intelligence and deep caring for others truly made him an “Anderson”. Thoughts and prayers are often, and you all are in our hearts.
I would echo what Ashley expressed so well above. I also want to tell you, Jai, how deeply I admire your intelligence, your passion, your curiosity, the ferocity of your love and faith, your humor, all of your beautiful beautiful soul. I said this to Sten and I say it to you, our instinct even though we understand there is very little we can do is to want to hold your beautiful family close, to cry with you, to laugh with you (even if a bit bitterly) to try to give any relief from the fear and release from the sadness. It is clear that you bring light and joy to one another even in the depths and I am so glad that you and Sten got away for a bit even if there is no getting away, not really. I wish I had known Jens. He seems like a remarkable, wonderful human being who loved and is loved so very truly. And Jo is such a startlingly beautiful creature. I imagine you are a fearsome duo and will continue to be a huge comfort to and support for one another. I am wishing you all joy, strength, time together and healing.
Oh, how in his death, you have brought this wonderful man, Jens, back to life for us in Jo’s words at his memorial service. Both families are in my prayers for mercy for this tragedy. It is too much to comprehend, as I tried to understand what is happening with Alistaire and with Jens’ death. The PET results sound wonderful! That there is an option for the last remaining spot, is a miracle! Thank You God for giving this hope! Everyday, I see with children with cancer, that decisions are made that will kill the disease, yet harm the child. You say it much more eloquently than me. But, I see exactly what you say. May our God remain with you and guide you in all decisions and give you peace.
I am only a stranger but a Sister.
I have no words.
I, like Job’s friends (and I am not even a friend), clasp my hands over my mouth and say nothing…because “they saw how great his grief was”…and I see not even that. But enough.
I see and hear enough. A stranger but a Sister.
Pulled into this story from the other side of this country through a friend of a friend. But it is enough. JESUS is including who He will.
This Tapestry Our Father weaves. We are threads of Hope, Prayer, and Robed together in His Righteousness. And so we PRAY for your sweet family. Especially Allistaire and Solveig. Alot.
Often. With passion. With PRAISE. Our God can do ANYTHING…what is HE about? We love HIM.
xoxo
Oh, how your words pierce my heart! Not even knowing any of you, the pain you feel and the love for God and your family are transferred through your dynamic compositions! My heart cries out to the Lord for all of you. Hugs and prayers from Laurel, Montana
Thank you for sharing all of this. I am thrilled about the PET results and continue to hope and pray for Allistaire’s life. Thank you for Jo’s words. The KING is coming soon, if we don’t go to Him first, and all of this will be a distant memory.
Sten, I’m sorry about the unexplainable loss. Your brother sounds like a true Montana legend and a great guy.
Jai, your post is so raw and real. Thank you for keeping us in your families life. You ask what Allistaire’s life is … The answer is simple and echoed in every one of your posts – it is strength, courage, selflessness and beauty; it is pure and inspirational.
I may be wrong although I think it’s ok to question God, to even perhaps be mad … We’re humans and I’m sure He expects it so long as we don’t hate Him. Your Faith in particular really is truly amazing and as I’ve said before has been an anchor to which so many have latched on to in their own times of need.
We’re a phone call away should you two ever need anything.
“Against all hope, Abraham in hope believed and so became the father of many nations, just as it had been said to him, “so shall be your offspring.” Without weakening his faith, he faced the fact that his body was as good as dead- since he was about 100 yrs old- and that Sarah’s womb was also dead. Yet he did not waver through unbelief regarding the promise of God, but was strengthened in his faith and gave glory to God, being fully persuaded that God had the power to do what he had promised.” Romans 4:18-21
I pray everyday for physical and spiritual strength for you Jai! I pray daily for complete and total healing for Allistaire! I read this passage yesterday morning and just prayed it’s truth over you- God has the power to bring life, despite the physical realities you are facing, against all hope…
Praying for continued strength and faith and healing!
Hello! I was unable to find your email…am I blind?! Any who, I will be in Seattle June 7th and would love to visit! I work with your father-in-law, Dr. Anderson (who told me about your blog). Blessings.
Hannah