It took several years before things worked out and I finally
got to meet my little sister. It felt more like several lifetimes, and it
kind of was. We change so much throughout our lifetime that by the time I
turned 27 years old, I had been several different people. Every experience
in my life changed my outlook, changed the way I experienced the things that were happening to me and around me, and changed
the way that I viewed the world.
This piece of my life in particular has changed me
the most.
At times growing up, I felt so lost and
unloved and unwanted and broken, and other times I felt so strong and
confident and so full of love and forgiveness for all the things that had
happened. There were so many things in my past that I was part of, but had no
memory of, no control of, things that made me who I am today, but things that I
felt so disconnected from. I wanted a chance to be able to prove my worth to
the people that are my family, but who were really strangers to me. It's such a
conflicting feeling to know that I have people out there who are part of me or
part of my past, and who I want to be part of my future, but they are
people I had never met. It's one of the most confusing feelings. I am not even
sure there are words to describe it.
Because
I have two younger brothers that I grew up with, I am lucky to know the joys of
being older sister. I love, love, love that role and the closeness that I feel
to my brothers made it that much harder, knowing that I had a little
sister that I was disconnected from. I felt robbed that I didn't get
to talk to her, share life experiences with her, give her sisterly advice,
and that I missed out on having all the memories of her growing up, doing the
crazy things that siblings do together.
To top it off I have a father who I have
wanted to meet, wanted to get to know, and never had that opportunity. It feels
like part of my heart is sitting in a different place than the rest of my
heart. There is still love and longing there but it's disconnected from the
rest of me. Sometimes I would go through pictures and stare at the picture so
hard hoping that there would be some kind of memory, or connection made just by
seeing their faces, that I would know who they really were. I hoped that I
would know what they were like, and that all the pieces that were missing
by not having the time with them would be filled.
When
things finally looked like I was finally going to get to meet my sister
and she was heading towards the east coast, part of me started freaking
out. I was so excited and I had all these ideas and plans in my head of
how I wanted things to turn out, but not knowing what she was really like,
I didn't know how to figure out what to do together. I knew that my father
would be the one driving her out to meet me and I knew there were some
reservations about how things would turn out, understandable reservations. All
the plans that were made for she and I to get together made sure that it was
all about two sisters getting together and getting to know each other.
When
she was finally on our way to my house she text me and let me know that my
father would like to meet me too. Every emotion possible flooded me. I had
never felt so petrified in my entire life. I ran upstairs and wanted to scream
and cry and yell all at the same time. I looked in the mirror, checked my
clothes and brushed my hair again. I wondered if when he saw me, my
home, my children, and my husband, would
he think that I turned out good or that I was a loser I must have checked the mirror 50 more
times before they pulled up out front. I felt like I was getting ready for
a blind date, when you are wondering if you're good enough for the person
stick around or if they're going to cut the date short because you
were not what they were expecting. I wanted everything about me that
wasn't good enough when I was a baby, to be enough now, but I didn't really
know what it was that was wrong with me, and I had no way of fixing it to make
myself good enough for that moment.
I stood
in my kitchen, watching out the window as my husband and my kids went
over to meet the two of them, shake their hands and bring them to the
front door. I am not sure my heart beat a single time as I watched everything
happening out front of my house. My little sister walks in the door and my
heart fired off one hundred beats per second. I had so much love for the
stranger standing in my front door, that it took a lot of self-control not squeeze
her so hard that I'm sure her head would have popped off. Part of me wanted
to bury my head in her shoulder so I could just enjoy that moment and not
have to remember that there was another person standing behind her that I
was terrified to meet. I wanted to just take in the moment and see
beautiful she was, how sweet her voice sounded and how excited I was to be
the big sister to this amazing young woman who walk through my front door.
I was
expecting this huge wave of anxiety to hit me the minute I let go of her and
had to see him face-to-face, but by some tender mercy, there was a smooth
transition from letting go of her to being introduced to him and hugging
him and somehow, there was not the awkwardness I expected there to be, hugging
a stranger. Every feeling of fear, anger, and uncertainty that I had felt for
so many years disappeared for that moment, because I felt relief, and
quite possibly love, from both of them. As we walked up to the living room to
go sit and talk, I was again surprised at how smoothly things went. Even
though they were my family, they were strangers. Every time that I was worried
there was going to be an uncomfortable pause in conversation, I remembered
that the two people sitting in front of me were the two people that I
wanted to know more about then I could possibly fit in one day and that
there would never be enough time for all the questions and information I
was hoping to absorb from them. And even though the time together did not
last near as long as I hoped for, the peace that I felt when they were with me
made it worth it.
Through
all of this, I have tried my best to be as objective about everything as I can.
I wanted to go through each experience feeling each feeling and taking in each
moment without too many expectations. As children we have certain needs
and expectations of our parents, and every interaction we have together,
shapes who we are. My children have been going through this experience with me.
I have done my best to be honest without sharing too much and to open without
putting their own feelings at risk. I have learned so much about parenting
through everything that has happened. I have had a million different scenarios
run through my head, trying to change what has happened and what might happen,
trying to feel less pain, trying to cause less pain, and trying to make
everything as simple as possible.
But.....
Life is not simple. It's painful. It's hard. It's messy.
But.....
The things that we learn from the pain and the mess can be beautiful.
I will
never stop wanting there to be more. More connection, more interaction, more
love, and that will always put me at risk for more pain and hopefully one day,
that love. What an amazing thing I can teach my children: That life will
never be easy but that we KEEP trying, that some people are harder to love and
harder to feel love from, but we NEVER stop loving, and that the bravery it
takes to do those things not only makes us STRONGER, but makes life a
worthwhile experience.
Beautiful Lauren. If I weren't sick, I would come over and give you a big long hug.
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