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When my daughter Mara was a toddler, she loved to meander downstairs before sunrise sporting her bedhead and unicorn footie pajamas. I would startled awake the minute our bedroom door creaked open. Mara would slip under the covers, grab my arm and wrap it around her waist, nestle in close, and flood the room with giggles.
One morning, I was up early and in the shower when my husband discovered Mara settled in bed next to him with a pen in hand, scribbling all over his favorite Bible.
Greg wanted to lash out in anger, but his half-awake state delayed his rebuke.
Just as he reached for the pen, Mara looked up and uttered the phrase, “Hi, Daddy.”
Usually, this would be a typical response for a three year old. But Mara was not a normal three year old. Our daughter was diagnosed six months prior with Classic Autism and was non-verbal. When those words casually rolled off her tongue, my husband’s eyes welled with tears as he stared in disbelief.
“Say it again, Mara! Say it again!”
Heading to work later that day, he found himself overwhelmed with dueling emotions. He was ecstatic to hear his little girl’s voice but this precious moment in time had poked a hole in the dam walls that were built years prior.
You know the walls I’m talking about.
The ones we build around our hearts. No one can come in and nothing can come out.
Under the covers that morning, a pinhole was pricked, and a wave of emotions came rushing—emotions that could no longer be contained.
Weeping and crying out, Greg begged God to heal Mara. He mourned the loss of the daughter he envisioned. He spoke of the pain a father feels when he doesn’t even know his own child. He complained to God how Mara lived in her own world and rarely acknowledged our presence.
God interrupted Greg’s lament and spoke these words to his heart:
I hear your cry and I know your pain. I too am a Father and oftentimes, my children fail to acknowledge my presence.
Day-in-and-day-out, they repeat the same routine: Breakfast. Work. Dinner. Netflix. Bed.
They too live in their own little world—a world filled with trivial details and silly obsessions. A world entrenched in hobbies, football games, binge-watching sitcoms, and Instagram surfing. I try everything imaginable to get their attention. I send people into their lives to interrupt their routines. I answer big and small prayers in hopes they will know my heart. I even went to the extreme of sending my Son, as an attempt to convey my love for them. Everything they have is a gift from me. Yet they continued in their ruts and can only manage to mumble a few words of gratitude before theirThanksgiving meal.
I don’t NEED them, but I desperately WANT them.
They desperately NEED me, but don’t WANT me.
My greatest desire is for them to stop what they are doing and look into my eyes. I don’t have a list of rules for them to follow or a regimented agenda for their lives. I just want a relationship. I just want to do life with them.
And I’m not mad. I don’t care how many times they have scribbled all over my story and messed it up. What they don't realize is I can redeem past mistakes and edit whole chapters. I'm the original author of their lives and I'm crafting a beautiful tale—if they would only hand me the pen.
Until then, I will patiently wait for my child to look up from all the distractions of this world and utter the words that cause my heart to skip a beat…
“Hey, Daddy.”