In the Heat of the Night

She was born in the throes of a fierce Kansas thunderstorm on a hot summer night. The wind hurled the rain against the hospital windows until I thought surely they would break. The lightning splintered the night sky and the thunder cracked open the heavens and the splintering and cracking open of my  body seemed to answer back with an ever increasing intensity. Paul sang to me, he read to me, he talked to me and he prayed over me and the storm raged both inside and out. I was exhausted and I was stuck and it seemed we were at an impasse. I had been in this room all day, all evening and all night. The dawn would break before long. The doctor explained “You are stuck at eight centimeters and have been there for too long. We are going to take you to delivery and see if you can push the baby out. If not, we’ll bring you back.” What he meant was, “If you can’t deliver the baby, we will bring you back to surgery and do a Caesarian” (today that decision would have been made hours earlier). What I heard was, “. . . we will bring you back to this room of torture and you will continue to do what you have been doing for the last bazillion hours.” And I knew that hell would freeze over before I would let that happen.

I no longer remember how long I pushed, but I knew that I was nearing my limit. Later, when I looked at myself in the mirror, I realized that I had broken what looked like every capillary in my face from the sheer force of the pushing. The doctor tried forceps and I shrieked at him to get away from me. He sat down on a stool a little ways away to rest (what did HE have to rest from?!) and I knew any minute he was going to call this. And then it was over. In one long and horrific contraction. All at once – just like that. No head and then shoulders and then body. It was like a cannon ball being shot out of the cannon. The doctor jumped, ran, grabbed (several times) and I heard him yell, “I GOT IT!” Her whole body came flying like a bat out of hell, face up, eyes wide open and he caught her by one foot . It was a hard-won fight, but she had prevailed and she would be a fighter for the rest of her life.

We took her home from the hospital to the upstairs apartment of an old, un-airconditioned house (this house and the Kansas summer heat are detailed in other stories). We had acquired a working window air conditioner and so we could cool one room, the living room. On really hot nights we would put the older two kids and Paul on the floor, and I would sleep on the couch. By the time we got home from the hospital the worst of the heat had broken and so the kids were back in their room and Paul and I and the baby slept in the living room: Paul on the floor, me on the couch and the baby in the cradle. Our first night home Paul insisted, “After what you’ve been through, you need to rest (no argument from me there) so when she wakes up, I’ll get up and bring her to you and you just stay put.”  We had a plan. About 2:00 a.m. I heard her stirring. “Paul, she’s awake.” Nothing. She starts to whimper. “Paul, can you get her?” Nothing. She begins to cry. “PAUL, can you bring the baby to me?” Nothing. “Okay. I’ll just get her myself.” Nothing. By now she is screaming as am I, “PAUL!!! WAKE UP!!!!!!” At which point, he sat up, put his pillow carefully in my arms, and passed out cold. But his intentions were good.

009
011

Maybe it was because it had taken all of her energy just to be born, but from the first day, she slept. . . a lot. Within a couple of days, she was sleeping for 8-10 hours at night, with long stretches in the daytime as well. It was nothing like the first two but I figured each one is different and all was well. . . until we took her to the doctor for her follow up. The doctor weighed her and the drop in her birth weight was alarming. “How often is she nursing?” the doctor demanded. I explained that sometimes during the day she would go for 6 hours and at night 8-10. “But she can’t be hungry,” I assured her pediatrician. “She doesn’t cry.” “Mrs. Abbott, your baby is starving. She’s too weak to cry.” But I cried. And then we went home and set a timer and woke her up every two hours around the clock and every day we took her to the doctor’s office to weigh her in and slowly she began to gain weight and to thrive although it took her an entire year to double her birthweight to 16 pounds. I have always thought that maybe she took that first year to recover from the night we battled through the storm and to prepare herself for the battles she would fight throughout her life.

12

To quote the bard:  “And though she be but little, she is  fierce. ” She was not much past her first birthday the night we put her to bed in her crib and retired to the living room to unwind from the day. After about an hour she appeared in the doorway. Really??! Already she was climbing out of the crib? I knew she was a climber but I hadn’t been prepared for this – not yet. But I really was not prepared for what I found when I returned her to bed. She had dismantled the crib, pulling the bars out one by one until she had a created an escape hatch big enough for three of her to wiggle through. But that’s not all. She had removed the sheet from the mattress and discovered a tiny pin-prick of a hole. And now, covering the bedroom floor, were layers of cotton stuffing which she had systematically removed from said mattress until she had almost entirely emptied it of its content.

ry%3D400

It was Thanksgiving Day and she was three. She was supposed to be napping. I think it started with the chair. Or maybe it was the piggy bank. Wherever it started, it ended with a trip to the emergency room. She had climbed onto the rocking chair to reach the piggy bank on the shelf and when they all came tumbling down, the piggy bank was shattered and the gash in her chin was going to need stitches. They put her little three year old body on the table wrapped in a papoose sort of straight jacket to keep her from moving because, the doctor explained, nobody could get out of that. She would have none of it and to their astonishment (though not to mine) she was quickly free and fighting them off. The doctor told Paul, “You’re going to have to help the nurse hold her down because we can’t do this if she’s moving and there is no way she will be still without restraint. Her dad leaned in. “Fathie, if you are perfectly still and do not make a move and let them put the stitches in your chin, I will take you for ice cream when we are done.” Okay – she whispered back and her body lay perfectly still and unflinching. Finding someplace to get ice cream on Thanksgiving Day proved to be problematic. But a promise was a promise and after driving the town, we stopped at 7-11 and bought a half gallon of ice cream.

006
still a lover of the tree tops

Maybe she was always trying to recover that feeling of flying through the air that she had at the moment of her birth and the sense of being freed from the confines of the womb. She loved the freedom of gymnastics –   flying through the air as she came off the vault or doing dismounts off the balance beam. She climbed to the top of the tree in the backyard and when her braids got tangled around the branches, she sent her sister to get me. “Sorry, I don’t do heights. You’ll have to wait till Dad gets home.” So she happily passed the time from her perch overlooking the world until assistance arrived. She loved the biggest and baddest rollercoasters at the theme parks. It was in the days before height restrictions on rides and  she begged Paul to take her on a particularly daunting one at Busch Gardens. He hesitated, I think partly because HE wasn’t too keen on it. But she would not be deterred, and so he stood in the line with her and did his best to talk her out of it. As they were being buckled into the car he said again, “It’s not too late. Are you sure you wouldn’t rather ride something else.” She would not. And as they plunged to what felt to be sure and sudden death, he looked over at her. She set her jaw and hung on for the ride and loved every minute of it.

5

She was and is an obsessive organizer. She clipped coupons every week from the Sunday paper and during our monthly grocery shopping trips was quick to assure me that we could afford to buy the more expensive cereal or snack because she had a coupon. She loved to organize the pantry alphabetically and fussed at me when I did not return items to their proper place. “It would help,” I told her, “if your spelling were better.” Why would I think to put jello under “g”?” She couldn’t have been older than eight when a friend of mine with several small children of her own hired her to be her house cleaner. She would go once a week to Libby’s house: organize the kids’ toys, clean under their beds, rearrange the closets, and heaven only knows what else. When she was still a toddler her grandmother called her “the bag lady” because she always had a bag to carry all of her stuff and her accessories. Periodically she would stop mid-step, dump the bag out on the floor and take inventory and if even so much as a doll’s sock was missing, a massive hunt would ensue until said item had been located. My mother marveled that she could keep track of what was supposed to be in the bag at any given time; perhaps this was the beginning of her obsession with list making that would last a lifetime.

The organizational gene she got from her father. Along with his crystal blue eyes and his wanderlust and love for road trips. They are both wordsmiths and introverts and voracious readers. From me she carried the recessive gene that gave us the only red-headed grandchild though she herself was the only one of the six to have dark chestnut hair instead of red. She got the cancer gene that struck both my sisters and would not once but twice rear its ugly head in her body before she reached the age of 40. She got from me her love of summer heat and baking pies. And if she inherited her love of the open road from father, from me she got the “which way is north?” gene. I think she may be the only person who was as excited as I was when the GPS became standard operating procedure.

From the time she learned to make letters, she was a writer and It was not at all unusual to find on my bed at the end of the day a card or note she had written and left there for me to find.

IMG_4221

In the months she lived in Germany she wrote often and eloquently of all she was learning about the land, the culture, the people and the history. When she went away to college, she wrote long and frequent letters home – sharing her life with us as it unfolded. And then again when she moved to Chicago and started her family, her pages-long, hand-written accounts of her life and her thoughts and her musings found their way often to our mailbox. I treasured them all.

letters

As I look back over them now, these boxes filled with her letters,  it reminds me how much we have lost with the advances in technology. Her message has changed since those childhood, college and young adult days. Her voice has always been her own.

When the storm was over and the wide-eyed baby girl was in my arms, I knew the name we had chosen was the right one. Faith Leanne – born August 12, 1976. “Faith, without works, is dead, ” writes James. It had taken a tremendous amount of hard work, on both her part and mine, to make it happen. But she was here in this world with all of her beauty and her giftedness and her struggles. She was a survivor and a message to us of God’s grace and of the faith it takes to endure the really hard times. As an adult she would choose a different name for herself, and I’m okay with that. Because, in the end, we all choose our own identities and our own stories, though they are forever and inextricably linked with those we call family.

IMG_2518
ry%3D400

Post Script: Let me just say how intimidating it is to write about a writer. She would say it so much better and with such poetry, but I can only tell it from my perspective and  with my voice – so it is what is :  a story about thunder and lightning and love.

Nobody Doesn’t Like Sarah Lee

IMG_4224
1223 Ohio, Lawrence Kansas

She was my second August baby  – born in the heat and humidity of a Kansas summer in 1978. We lived in an apartment on the second and third stories of an old house without air conditioning and it was beyond miserable.

Not only that, but we had learned only a few weeks before that the landlord was selling the house and we would need to move. So my friend Lori came and helped me to pack up the house where we ran fans to move the sticky, hot air and tried to keep the six, four, and two year old from killing each other or unpacking the boxes as fast as we packed them. Actually she packed and I sat in front of the fan drinking iced tea. I was nine months pregnant, soon-to-be homeless, tired and hot and cranky, and terrified of the upcoming labor and delivery. The memory of the one from two years before still haunted me and I was convinced this time I or the baby would surely die.

It was too hot to sleep, I couldn’t get comfortable, and about 5:00 a.m. I woke Paul. “I think we should go to the hospital.” “Why, are you in labor?” he asked as he grabbed his clothes. “I think so. Maybe. I don’t know. Not really. But it would be cool there and I think I might be having some contractions . . . maybe.” Paul finally agreed that the worst that could happen is that we could get some temporary relief before they sent us home. By 5:30 we were at the hospital and I thought I might be in labor. Maybe. Much to our surprise, they admitted me and as the contractions picked up in intensity, Paul and I settled in for the long haul, drinking in the cool, de-humidified air. I hoped and prayed that I would have a baby by nightfall, but we were not optimistic. Before too long, the nurse announced in a very cheery voice, “Mrs. Abbott, I think we’re going to have this baby here by breakfast.” Seriously? How could this happen?? And I knew at that moment that there was, indeed, a God in heaven. The delivery was fast, complication free, and almost before we started, it was over. Sarah Leanne – born August 9 at 7:30 a.m. I remember the doctor singing the jingle from the Sarah Lee commercial:  Everybody doesn’t like something, but notbody doesn’t like Sarah Lee..

But we still had that pesky issue of our house being sold out from under us. We eventually found an upstairs apartment a block down the street from our previous residence which is a whole story within itself.  Once again, it was an old house and we were renting the upstairs but it had no kitchen so we had to build a kitchen and “we” are not carpenters. But another story for another day. In the meantime we were still in August, still in Kansas, and still without air conditioning. So we improvised a plan that we would load up the kids and the baby and Lori in our old van and drive to a pastor’s conference being held at a camp in the Rocky Mountains. We found a great cardboard box to take for the baby to sleep in, threw some sleeping bags in the van and we were good to go. We had grown up in Colorado and we knew it would be cool and dry and besides we could stop by Pueblo at the foot of the mountains and visit my mother so she could see the new baby. “Let’s  just make it a surprise visit,” I insisted. It is only in retrospect that I see that what made this attractive is that I did not wish to face my mother’s wrath when she learned of our plan to take a three day old infant on such an odyssey. I reasoned (incorrectly it turns out) that if we showed up on her doorstep she would be so pleased that she would keep her opinions of the wisdom of the plan to herself.

What I did not know at the time is that as we were making our way to the mountains, my oldest sister Lila was traveling across the plains of Kansas. My mother insisted that she take a detour to “check up on Sherry and the baby and to make sure she’s not overdoing. But we won’t tell her you’re coming – just drop in and surprise them,” my mother said. Which is how my sister arrived on the porch of 1223 Ohio in Lawrence, Kansas, to find that not only were we not at home, but that we were on a road trip to Colorado. “That can’t be,” she explained to the downstairs tenants.  “She’s just had a baby. They wouldn’t be so stupid as to haul that baby across the country.”

In the “new” apartment, the three older kids all shared one big bedroom and Sarah slept in a cradle (which had replaced the card board box) in our room, but she was outgrowing the cradle which meant we would need to make other arrangements. Our good friends had given birth to their first born a few days before Sarah was born which meant that they too were on the lookout for a crib. And then one night Jim and Libby showed up at our front door holding a big box. “We brought you a crib,” they said. “Because if our baby is going to sleep in a new crib, so should yours.” And they came in and we unpacked it and set it up in the kids’ room and they slept through it all. It was not the first or the last time that God would show his generosity to us and our family through this couple and it was nights like these that linked our stories over the years.

When she was about three we were staying at a campground on vacation – The Blue Mountain Campground in Branson, Missouri. We pitched our tents, cooked over the campfire, went to Silver Dollar City for one day and hung out at the pool for several days. In the days of resorts and beach houses it sounds pretty lame but for somebody with four kids and no money, it was a great way to vacation! It was on one of those “hanging out at the pool” days that it happened. I had run up to the tent for something and Paul was with the kids. The big kids had a beach ball that they had blown up and were tossing back and forth to each other. Sarah didn’t want to get in the water – she couldn’t swim and the water was over her head – and she was happy to stand by the side of the pool in her new “thwimming thoup” and throw the ball to them. On one of the throws she forgot to let go and flew into the pool, lost the ball, and disappeared under the water. Her brother tried to help her but couldn’t manage to swim and carry her and that left Dad, a non- swimmer himself. He lay down flat on the concrete, reached his body and his arm far into the pool and grabbed her, pulling her out of the water.  He likes to point out that he is the only non-swimmer in the family and yet the only one to save someone from drowning. Given her inauspicious start to camping, it is surprising that Sarah is the only one of the six who still enjoys pitching a tent in the great outdoors and sleeping on the ground. But she’s adventuresome like that and she gets her love for Nature and the out of doors from her father.

106
IMG_4182
sarah 3

For Sarah, life was about discovery.

When she was about five and learning to read we would painstakingly work on letter sounds, blends, and trying to combine them into words. But it was laborious and less than rewarding. And then one day it clicked and she looked at the letters and they formed themselves into a word and then another and then another. And that tiny little person looked up at me, her face lit up with the excitement of a whole new world that was about to open up to her and shouted,  “This is great!! I can read and listen at the same time!!!” And so began her life-long love of reading. To this day, she is one of my best resources when it comes to new and interesting reading material because she is always reading something.

She must have been six or seven when one of the other kids pointed out to me that Sarah was walking around the neighborhood with a clipboard, knocking on doors. “Why?” was the obvious question. They just shrugged. Turns out she was taking a poll to find out who they intended to vote for in the next election. Better than selling vacuum cleaners I guess.

sarah 1

When she was ten we moved into a new neighborhood – one with kids. This happened to coincide with her new found interest in the performing arts and before long she was hard at work: writing, casting, directing, acting and producing a play. It might have been a musical. One summer day a steady stream of neighbors began arriving at the front door – some of whom we had never met. They had tickets in hand and they were there for the “show” – one in which their children had landed starring roles. Sarah appeared and pointed them to the basement, handing out the hand-made programs as they filed past her. “You might need to set up some folding chairs,” she instructed me.  “And put out some cookies for intermission.” Got it. They played to a packed house who cheered loudly and applauded wildly and when the reviews were in, they were universally favorable though the show closed before it ever made it to off Broadway.

8

It was because of her that I began directing high school theatre – something I went on to do for twenty years. She gave me courage to tackle an overwhelming and intimidating task and figure it out as I went – to trust my instincts and to honor the process of creativity. She taught me that.

dolly
IMG_4202

She went to a small college that really had no theatre department but by the time she left she had built up a whole program and when she graduated they hired her to carry it on. In the beginning she acted, directed, produced, designed and built the sets, made the programs, procured the facility, collected the props – all of it (just like when she was ten years old). In the early years if it got done, it’s because she did it. But to me this is the truly remarkable part: she so inspired others and mentored them that they took  on responsibility and leadership and she passed on her love of the art to them. I saw every show she was in and every show she directed in those years and I was in awe of her every single time.

IMG_2525
IMG_4181

And what also became abundantly clear in those days is that she is one of the most hard-working people I know and she is a natural leader. This she has proven at every job she has ever held.

The other thing I have learned from her is that artistry resides in the soul – not in the equipment. Put her behind a camera and she will capture the moment, the person, the emotion, the beauty or the story every time. She “sees” it and then allows us to do the same. It’s a gift and it doesn’t matter how much you spend on the camera, if you don’t have it then you don’t have it. I have always wished I could just hire her to come and follow me around and take pictures of my life because it would help me to see the mundane or the ordinary as the truly beautiful and extraordinary moments that they are.

10392210_147024220734_7947545_n

And then there is this: she is a story teller. Whether it’s telling you about the man in the airport and their discussion about tattoos, or retelling an old family story, or her photograph of a little girl on the boogie board at the beach, or putting on a play in the basement, she is a master story teller. And we are blessed beyond measure to have her as a part of our story. Something tells me her best stories are yet to be written.

Happy Birthday, Sarah! You amaze me every day.