Tags
Addiction, comfort, Family, grandparenting, greif, Nature, opioid crisis, personal, spirituality, Wendell Berry

“Crystal Light” by Erin Hanson
“When despair for the world grows in me, and I wake in the night at the least sound in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be, I go and lie down where the wood drake rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds. I come into the peace of wild things who do not tax their lives with forethought or grief. I come into the presence of still water. And I feel above me the day-blind stars waiting with their light. For a time I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.” ~ Wendell Berry
I have not lain down where the wood drake rests, but I am coming to find a kind of grace in letting loose, more than letting go, in pressing steadily forward without attachment to the outcome, in a kind of letting be, come what may.
My granddaughter came to live with me at the beginning of summer and she is with me still, having started first grade at a nearby school in which I enrolled her. I am petitioning to become her legal guardian. This comes with the blessing of my son, but not the child’s mother, who will fight this. Both are struggling with addiction, both victims of this opioid crisis.
I grieve for my son and my heart breaks for the mother, even as I fear for my granddaughter. Sometimes it seems overwhelming.
Then I take a deep breath and do what must be done, regardless the outcome.
I move toward “the peace of wild things who do not tax their lives with forethought or grief.”
I rest in “the presence of still water,” and feel “the day-blind stars waiting with their light.”
I cannot say I “am free.”
But I do feel the grace of the world, and love of God, surrounding me and mine. I lean on that, and it comforts me.
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May you continue to rest in that grace Deborah. I’m sorry you’re having to fight to have custody. Friends of mine went through the same thing with their 2 grandkids. They won custody, but things are rough between my friend and her daughter. I’m glad your son wants this.
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Yes, I am so happy that my son loves his daughter enough to want her to have the stability that he cannot provide right now. If I win guardianship, parental rights are suspended but still in place in case either of the parents can someday provide her with the quality of care and consistency she needs. And, of course, both parents will be able to visit and spend time with their daughter when they are able.. I am sorry for your friend. My granddaughter’s maternal grandmother supports my bid fro guardianship and knows that doing so will cost her the love of her daughter. And that is heartbreaking.
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Thanks for caring and understanding.
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So many I know are going through this same valley with their children and becoming “parents” of their grandchildren. It’s a difficult and heart-rending path to walk through. My prayers are with you.
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Thank you for your prayers, Lois. I know quite a few grandparents who are already doing so too. A sad sign of the times.
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Dear Deborah,
I don’t know why I am receiving this newsletter. I just want to say a mother is a mother whatever is happening in her life. Whatever you can do to make her feel she is present in the life of her daughter, she will feel reassured. I am educating court and professional on the importance to never erase a parent from the life of a child.
Hope you can find peace in accepting what is without judgment.
Childrensneedsfirst.com
Best Imène
On Sun, Aug 18, 2019 at 6:24 AM Deborah J. Brasket wrote:
> deborahbrasket posted: ” “When despair for the world grows in me, and I > wake in the night at the least sound in fear of what my life and my > children’s lives may be, I go and lie down where the wood drake rests in > his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds. I come into t” >
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You are right, Imene. I also agree that both of her parents should remain important parts of her life.. They say it takes a village to raise a child, and that is how I am looking at it: two parents, grandparents on both sides, aunts and uncles .. . we want to surround her with love and a strong sense of family and belonging and community support.
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I am so sorry your family is going through the hell of addiction. But believe me when I say that your granddaughter is blessed to have a sane advocate. I put my oldest child through hell in my addiction, and I wish someone had been brave enough to intervene on her behalf. No child should ever be dragged through that life. Prayers for your whole family.
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Your comment heartens me. Thank you so much for that. I do worry that should I prevail in the effort my granddaughter may come to think of it as a betrayal because I know how much she wants to return to her mother, who was her primary caretaker. Yet she seems happy enough with me now, and i believe she knows that much of what she experienced under her mother’s roof was not in her best interest. My son and I have been worried about her for a long time, but this did not come easy for either of us.
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This might be just the thing her mother needs to start her back on the right path…it’s hard to say. The way an addicts mind works is not the way a “normal” persons mind works. Most of us had to lose everything that mattered to us and hit rock bottom before we got desperate enough to change. I hope your son and his child’s mother are able to get help & get clean, but no matter what, a child deserves a safe home with safe people. Even the most well intentioned addict isn’t safe. There’s no way around that. You are doing the absolute right thing. ❤️
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I’m was hoping that would be the case, but so far her responses and actions are scary and not normal at all. It means a lot that someone who has gone through this on the other side thinks this is the right path to take. Thank you.
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I grieve for you, too, Deborah, and your granddaughter. But you are my hero.
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Thank you, Luanne!
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No words…just know you’re doing the right thing, no matter the circumstances or difficulty.
virtual hugs and support
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I hope so. I just got temporary guardianship at least. We’ll see it I can get full guardianship at the next hearing in December.
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This is such a tough and painful situation to be in, Deborah, as you battle for the best outcome for your granddaughter and juggle these responsibilities with mixed feelings. May you keep pausing to breathe, rest in the grace of the world and the comfort of wild things. Light, hope and clarity will eventually break through. Sending prayers, love and hugs to you. 💜
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Thank you for the prayers and hugs, Joy!
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You write poignantly of a sorrow that many face today. Grace and blessings on every step forward you make.
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Sadly, this is true. Thank you.
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Reblogged this on From 1 Blogger 2 Another.
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Dear Deborah, when things seem tough I often use a Buddhist blessing which I send to you and all your loved ones: May you be happy. May you be free from suffering. May you come home to your completeness.
I use it as a mantra when I see animals in bleak places, and I use it for my son who has to care for a tetraplegic step-daughter and her fragile depressed mother.
What a blessing you must be to your grand daughter. I remember the relief of being cared for properly by my grandmother after my mother disappeared when I was six….
I end with another favourite mantra :’ May only love prevail’ , Valerie
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Thank you for that blessing, Valorie. I love it. I am also comforted by your sweet memories of the time you spent with your grandma when she took you in at such a young age.
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Good to know that my words might have made a small difference to your travails. I hope the process is unfolding satisfactorily for you all…
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I wish you continued grace, strength. May this all be in the favor of the child. So glad that she has you, and though her parents love her, may they find the best solution in their recoveries one day.
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