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The red and orange leaves showered down onto the rubber mulch below.
My eight-year old son Isaac had arrived at the park solo, but was quickly greeted by a blonde-haired barefoot beauty named Chloe.
After the awkward introductions—the chase was on—weaving in and out of the swings, crawling through the tunnels, and down the twisty slide.
The air was infused with giggles as I sat on a bench nearby with a Tim Horton’s double double warming my hands. A breeze swept in and seemed to whisper to my soul, “There is beauty here.”
Life is a gift.
At some point, Isaac initiated a game of hide-and-seek. He crouched into a crawl space, cupped his hands over his eyes, and began counting.
“One, two, three, four…”
A car door slammed and I spun my head around. A man sporting a Brave’s snapback stepped out of his Highlander and motioned for his daughter.
“It’s time to go home, Sweetie.”
Chloe reluctantly grabbed her light up sneakers from the grass and was whisked away before Isaac reached twenty.
“Ready or not, here I come!” My son hollered while scanning the playground.
“Chloe? Chloe? Wow, you’re good at hiding.”
“Honey, she had to leave. Her dad said it was time to go.”
Isaac ignored me and kept searching.
“Isaac, she’s not here.”
Still, Isaac refused to look my way.
In a moment of frustration, I yelled, “Isaac, she’s gone. Her dad came to take her home.”
Finally, he snapped out of his state of denial. He ran into my arms with a quivering lip and giant alligator tears.
“Why did he do that? We only got to play for five minutes!”
"I know, Honey, you didn’t have much time.”
“I didn’t say goodbye.”
“I know, it happened so quickly.”
“Who am I going to play with now?” Isaac asked as he surveyed the empty playground.
“It’s not fair!”
“I know, Buddy, but I’m not her parent. I don’t get to determine when it’s her time to go home. That’s up to her father.”
And then it hit me…
Life is beautiful and horrible all at the same time.
Life is full of belly-laughs, and heartache, weddings, and funerals, cancer, and sunsets.
One minute you are drinking in the world’s goodness,
and the next minute the phone rings with devastating news.
It happens in an instant.
You rarely see it coming.
There’s no time to say goodbye.
Nothing about it is fair.
And in the cave of sorrow, you can’t help but feel alone.
But the truth is, we don’t get to determine when it’s someone’s time to go home.
That’s up to their Father.
Yet, we can grieve with hope.
Because love never dies—people do.