What a day!
I’m mentally and physically exhausted. Fortunately for me, I’m
spiritually stronger than ever. I’ll admit there was about an hour after I came
home that I had a hard time shaking off the “street.” I’d been out longer than
usual today and had encountered what can only be described as part soap opera,
part action-adventure. With graphic violence. And mature situations.
But not language. No-one curses around me. I’m not sure if
it’s a reverence to the ministry thing or just respect. Perhaps it’s because I’ve
threatened to wash their mouths out with soap in the past. In any event, mouths
are cleaner than usual around me.
But they are still filled with hatred and lies.
Today was unusually bad.
I met a friend from a veteran’s service program this morning
and took her to meet a vet at Tent City. I arrived to find two ladies fighting,
the boyfriend of one of the ladies with a broken hand from a fight the day
before, and the 60 year-old self-proclaimed “peacemaker” approaching from
behind with a baseball bat. It was almost comical that when I turned and Mr.
Baseball saw me, he lowered the bat then made a couple of practice swings as if
he were headed out for a game of pick-up.
They don’t know my son Cody.
Born in 1991 with baby blue eyes beneath a mountain of
eyelashes, he made the neonatal nurses fall in love at first sight. He didn’t
stop there. He charmed his teachers into overlooking missed homework assignments,
his sisters’ friends into doing his reports, and his girlfriends into doing his
chores. As the only boy in the family, he learned that being the cheerleading “base”
or playing the Disney prince was the way to the hearts of his three sisters.
He also knew how to charm his mama. While the others would
gag and proclaim a disastrous recipe “disgusting,” Cody would sweetly smile and
tell me it “had a very unique taste” as he slipped it piece by piece into the built-in
drawer for later retrieval. He concocted a plan with his PawPaw who lived up
the hill that whenever he was grounded he would hang a white bandanna in the front
window. PawPaw would call and ask for Cody’s help in some project he couldn’t
do alone, and even though he was grounded, I’d let my son go help my dad ‘cause
that’s what families do. The “projects,” I learned years later, consisted of
cards, sandwiches, and root beer. ‘Cause that what PawPaws do.
So the doe-eyed innocent look doesn’t wash with me anymore.
It didn’t matter. By the time he reached me, the bat had
completely disappeared. The fighting hadn’t.
We decided to go to a restaurant for the meeting. The vet
hadn’t eaten anyway so I bought lunch. Throughout our meal, as he filled out
paperwork, I did some internet research on the family he hadn’t seen in eight
years. Within five minutes I found his wife, living less than five miles away,
and one of his sons, who’d been adopted years ago but reached out through a funeral
home guestbook of a relative.
What do I do with this information?
He’d asked me to look, but once I found them, he didn’t know
what he wanted me to do.
“Say whatever you want,” he said.
What I want?!! What do
YOU want?
The conversation ended as quickly as it started.
After this meeting, I took Mr. Baseball and Fighting Female
1 and Broke Hand to their appointments.
Rather, their places.
Because there were no appointments. And
every single place we went closed down from 12-1. We arrived at the first place
at 12:05.
That was one hour in the car listening to lie after lie.
I grew more and more frustrated. Then disgusted. Then mad.
Tell me you smoked up your entire check. Tell me you broke
into a building. You can even tell me you killed someone.
BUT DON’T LIE TO ME!
There was no doubt I was being lied to. And not the I’m-running-a-con
lie, but lies about events that took place and people I’m also helping. One girl
was at a safe shelter and I’d been talking to her and the program director for
two days. These three in my car said she was “laid up in Mr. X’s house on that
crack.” Not only did all three claim they’d seen her there, but they also had
passed along that information to the police. I was furious.
But was I letting the anger that ruled their environment
into my own heart?
I never said a word, continuing along on our stops and
praying to not lose my compassion.
Then Bailey called, followed by J.T. She’s on her way to
Florida and he’s “got to help her because she’s in a bad situation.” Guess what, J.T.? You are going to be too
when you let her back in. Those soul ties will destroy you.
I stopped by to visit Raleigh and Frances. She has been
living with him as a caretaker, her first time off the streets and out of jail
in years. She had been sober, trying to get an education, work off her fines, and
turn her life around.
She’s back on the fence.
I could see it in her eyes, that yearning for Christ mixed in
with a craving for the drugs. The battle raged within her and it appears the
darkness has the edge right now.
I prayed with her, gave her my fence analogy (you can’t stay
up on that fence for long..the barbed wire will start to cut and your strength
is not enough to keep you propped up), and reminded her of Roger Garrison’s
funeral service. A service she’s destined to repeat with her own estranged
child if she doesn’t get her life together.
A few more phone calls came through on my way home and I turned
onto our road wanting nothing more than to stand under a hot shower and let the
water drain the physical and spiritual filth from my body.
But we live next door to the church and I arrived home to more
needs. I felt like a car, already running on fumes, that had pulled into a gas
station to find the pumps shut down. My engine sputtered a little.
While we were still in the church, my husband began to play
the guitar. I laid flat on my back on the floor of the church, closed my eyes,
and sang that hymn with everything I had.
I felt like I’d come back to life.
I guess with the Holy Spirit, we become hybrids.
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