And Then She’s Gone

Not too long from now, I will drive my Bella back to Alabama to the same “almost half way” point between here and there and I will tell her goodbye. As we hug I will hold on a little longer, squeezing her a tad bit tighter, communicating without words that I will miss her.

It never gets easier. I thought it would. I thought the pain would lessen and I would become accustomed to telling my child that I will see her next month. If anything it has become more difficult.

I seldom open up about this part of my life. These are not feelings that I like to stir. As I sit here, darkness all around, centering in on meditation, I had this thought, “Has any holiday ever been without that gnawing feeling of loss?

Many of you know that anytime there is a child involved in a broken relationship, holidays are usually the most fought for time. Why is that? If there is anything that I have learned over the last several years it’s that everyday has its own unique meaning. Maybe we should start making up a holiday when we have great celebrations for no reason at all?

I remember when Chris bought me my first really nice, designer handbag. I had never owned anything like it. “Purses have their own bag to be stored in when not in use? Why wouldn’t I use it all the time?” He could not wait until the actual day set to give me the gift.

It was a Tuesday. I was in the kitchen when he came around the corner with the beautiful store bag in his hand, which proudly displayed the designer logo. I stared wide-eyed, wondering what this could possibly be.

“Open it!” he exclaimed, grinning from ear to ear.
It was so beautiful. Hand stitched, not one detail missed. It smelled like the finest leather one has ever seen, because it was. I ran my hand across the side and felt the newness and quality of this extravagant gift. “This is so beautiful.” I said. “So you like it?” he replied.
I responded, “Yes, I like it very much. Thank you! Why on this random day?”

“Why not on this random Tuesday? Now it’s no longer random.” he said.

I love that. Now it’s no longer random. I still love that purse and every time I use it he smiles and says, “Look, it’s the tootsie roll!” (that’s our nickname for it.) It instantly brings back a feeling of newness and surprise. I can close my eyes and still smell the leather.

If you’re wondering where I’m going with this, don’t worry, I’m bringing it back around. I brought this into memory because today, when everyone is celebrating by eating too much, discussing arguing politics and lighting things on fire, I will be thinking about my beautiful Bella. Wondering where she is and if she’s having fun…Just as I do every “holiday” that we’re apart. I will eagerly await her return.

Hear me when I say that I have an amazing husband who I have been madly in love with since the day we met and two incredible little boys that could not be more full of life. I cannot and I will not imagine my life without them. As I look at each one of them and think of how immensely blessed I am there is an empty place at the table, a voice not heard in the halls, an absent presence that represents our family “complete.”

We will not wait for a holiday. It may be a Wednesday, Friday or Sunday, but when my Bella returns, it will be a day of celebration.

I think of the family of my beautiful friend, Elliot. Her children are entering a year of holidays without their mom. Her father so eloquently wrote that when the children and her husband, Chris were at the grandparents house for Father’s day, Bradford (her little girl) said, “Something is missing…it’s my mommy.” I’m imagining that little voice. Children are so literal. They almost never refrain from stating the obvious.

Well today, something will be missing in all of the festivities. It’s my Bella, but I will see her again in a little while. She is still very much alive and living her life. For many, their loved one will not come home again.

Maybe today, as we celebrate, we could remember this, for some it’s just a Wednesday. Not because they don’t want to celebrate freedom and all those who have so willingly sacrificed everything to provide it for us, but because the celebration occurs on a different day and in their own heart and mind. Let that be okay.

I guess what I’m asking is, instead of judgement over how someone is doing something or not doing it, choose understanding. Maybe they just lost someone they love and they are now trying to navigate a world without them. Maybe they are missing someone. Maybe they are the spouse of a deployed service member and while everyone is celebrating with food and beverages, their heart is heavy.

Maybe today, we can start living life to the fullest and learning what it means to embrace every day as if it were a day we knew we could sleep in and overeat. Maybe, going forward, Tuesday will become more than just a random Tuesday for you too.

I am more than thrilled to let you know that tomorrow’s post about body image and self-esteem is written by my daughter.

Beauty, the Beast and the Product of the Week: Sunscreen

Summer is here!
I am reminded of that every time I look down at my oh so white legs. The funny thing is, I don’t care as much anymore. I guess having 3 pre-cancerous freckles (notice I said freckles, not moles!) removed from various parts of ones body before the age of 34 will make baking in the sun seem less appealing.

SO, I am dedicating this weeks beauty pick to sunscreen and protecting our beautiful skin from the damage that the sun can do. I’m a big fan of vitamin D and it’s great in small doses, but I am also an overdo-er and moderation has always been a challenge.

Here’s the skinny on skin cancer…

Let’s look at how sun exposure relates to skin cancer. The two most common nonmelanoma skin cancers, basal cell carcinoma (BCC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), are directly correlated with sun accumulation over many years. Indeed, the most common locations for basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma tumors are sun-exposed areas: the face, ears, hands, etc. (However, it is not unheard of for a basal cell carcinoma or squamous cell carcinoma to appear on a non-sun-exposed area of the body.)

Melanoma is different. The sun exposure pattern believed to result in melanoma is that of brief, intense exposure – a blistering sunburn – rather than years of tanning. (Some studies now indicate that basal cell carcinoma also may be triggered by this exposure pattern.)

Other risk factors are also associated with melanoma, such as a family history, skin type and having a large number of sizable moles on the body. Like nonmelanoma skin cancer, melanoma can arise on any area of the body, regardless of whether or not a sunburn occurred in that location.

Preventative Tips:

  • Seek the shade, especially between 10 A.M. and 4 P.M.
  • Do not burn.
  • Avoid tanning and UV tanning booths.
  • Use a sunscreen with an SPF of 15 or higher every day.
  • Apply 1 ounce (2 tablespoons) of sunscreen to your entire body 30 minutes before going outside. Reapply every two hours.
  • Cover up with clothing, including a broad-brimmed hat and UV-blocking sunglasses.
  • Keep newborns out of the sun. Sunscreens should be used on babies over the age of six months.
  • Examine your skin head-to-toe every month.
  • See your physician every year for a professional skin exam.

When choosing a sunscreen, look for this seal

For a pdf version of this list, click seal-brand-list-may-2012

I thought I would spare you the graphic pictures of skin cancer. However, if you have something you are concerned about and would like to get an idea of what irregular spots look like, click here         

If you like quizzes (and who doesn’t?!) click here and discover where your skin fits in.

If you are a “Nothin’ but the facts” kind of person, click here for some bullet points that are sure to set your mind thinking more about your epidermis.

So tell me…do you love the skin your in? If so, are you protecting it for the long haul or just trying to look like a hottie now? Hottie now (can) = Not-So-Hottie later. Do you agree?

21 Days later

The following was taken from Elliot’s CaringBridge site. It was written by her daddy. I was going to edit it down as it is long, but there is not one part that I could remove. It is all so beautiful. Tears of joy and of sadness run down my face. I cannot help but be happy that her destiny is Jesus and yet my heart aches for those left behind. Her father’s words leave me encouraged and homesick for Heaven. Be inspired!


Twenty-One Days Later… Someone is Missing but NOT FAR AWAY        

By Edward M. Patterson (Written June 18, 2012)
Elliot died twenty-one days ago. ‘They say’ (whoever ‘they’ is) to keep writing, keep talking, keep processing. If Beverly and I were in a foxhole during a war, I would be writing an essay on a legal pad ‘how did we get here?’ and Beverly would be planning the practical steps to save us from harm. Our differing strengths, temperaments and personalities have complemented 42, soon to be in August 43, years of marriage.

These days we are a bit more cautious about presuming the next breath, and know the admonition in James 4: 13-15 to be ‘true truth.’ There are no guarantees we will make it to 43 years. Chris and Elliot only got 11 years of marriage together. Trying to keep perspective helps a bit. Some couples are engaged and one dies before the wedding. Or another couple marries, and one partner dies within two weeks, or six months, or three years. There are just no guarantees about anything. And the sooner we begin to live our lives like every day may be our last day, we will be wiser as we live ‘in the moment,’ not ‘in the past’ or ‘in the future.’

I have read a couple of short essays recently passed along to me on processing grief. …. not looking for any quick fix or any ten steps to healing. The only take away at this time is I am not crazy, and everyone grieves differently. Elliot’s death is still as raw and unbelievable as it was that Monday, May 28, packing up her hospital room where she spent the last ten days of her life, then leaving UAB Hospital & Women’s Pavilion, and driving back to her home on a stifling hot and humid Birmingham summer-like afternoon.

The only difference in then and now is  then I wore, probably unknown to me, an invisible  protective covering which must have been made of the same strong materials that jet airliner windows are constructed — covering me from head to toe, and  also covering Chris, Wyatt, Bradford, Beverly, Erin, Jay, Jim, Susan, and all Elliot’s extended family (and I am sure many friends)— for the next few days, to get through a week we never could imagine we would spend—one which included the gracious outpouring of support and love during visitation, the beautiful private graveside service on a refreshingly cool Thursday morning overlooking a hilly portion of Shelby County (Chris did extremely well in selecting the burial site – and even as I type this, it is surreal to even read the phrase ‘burial site’), the luncheon the gracious ladies at Brookwood Church provided for our family, the celebration service, the reception which followed, the yellow balloons into the sky, the packing up of flowers, photos and plants from the church, another visit to the cemetery on the home way, and then to a quiet house in Montgomery where Elliot and Erin spent much of their growing up years, where even as I write, her presence, like in her own beautiful home in Liberty Park, is literally everywhere.

Well, I am sorry to say the protective covering has melted. I can only speak for myself, but I can observe that Chris’s protective suit is gone, so has Beverly’s and so has others’. We talk. We function. We do what we have to do. But we are uncovered emotionally and almost every other way as well. To pretend otherwise and stuff it in the face of stoicism would not be good.

One surprise is the materials covering me were not as strong as I thought they might be, although I must have told at least 80% of the people with whom I talked during Wednesday night visitation on May 30 and the reception line following the service on May 31 “to pray for us, the hardest days are ahead.” On May 30 and 31, I could have never imagined exactly what that would be like. I suppose that is why families can make it through such a week – the numbness and shell-shock is just that, and one can smile and be gracious and sincere.

We were genuinely touched, and hundreds have ministered to us, but most of those we talked to were looking to us for cues as to how to act. Just as children often get their cues from adults as to how to act so do adults as they observe their friends and loved ones trying to cope with the life-changing, devastating and shocking experiences we have lived with since last September culminating much to our surprise in Elliot’s rather quick death.

Another way of expressing what has occurred is that in the past 21 days, the anesthesia has worn off after heart surgery, and now we are left with the pain and the healing of broken hearts. In time, scabs may form over the cuts, but the scars will remain.

Thankfully, in just the past few days I have been able to realize that even though the high-tech jet window covering is gone, our entire family has been for months prayed for and over and literally covered in prayer, and even tonight as I write, I sense deep in my spirit that we still are and, believe me, it is the only covering that will last as we continue down this road. It is not a man-made cover, but a supernatural cover furnished at great cost to us by the mercy and grace of God.

Erin stated it so well last week, “The reality is beginning to settle in that she is not coming back.” You see, two weeks ago, I honestly thought just maybe she was gone for the weekend and would return. The mind and heart play tricks on you in times of overwhelming sorrow.  But when I arrived in Birmingham to spend a few days with Beverly, Chris, Wyatt and Bradford last week, Elliot was not in the kitchen bustling around creatively coming up with a fabulous dinner for us, she did not greet me on the driveway with a hug. She was not even, as she had been several times before upon my arrival, in her bedroom or on the sofa in the den physically ‘weak and wounded, sick and sore” as the hymn writer states in the hymn, “Come Ye Sinners Poor and Needy”. In the hymn, that phrase is used to describe our spiritual state before we come to know Jesus as our Savior and Lord. She just was not there.

When Chris and the our grandchildren came to Montgomery for Father’s Day weekend, they spent their first night in our home last Friday night, and she was not here on Boxwood Drive either. Precious Wyatt correctly told us at bedtime, “someone is missing, and it is my mommy”.

We have learned much about life and death in a short time, yet more mysteries than ever remain about life and death than they did twenty-one days ago, and I rather think that more mysteries and questions will appear on my radar screen as the hours, days, and months unfold. I did not say doubts. I did say questions …. Real honest questions. There is a gap for most of us in knowing how to grieve, and we are barely beyond the kindergarten stage. 

As Wyatt graduated from kindergarten just days before his mother died (ironically, he started kindergarten about the time she received her first diagnosis) we, too, may or may not graduate from grief kindergarten in eight-plus months. I think we are all slow learners, not because we are not intelligent or grounded in faith-matters, but rather because we are both human and fragile. We may learn at different rates of speed as well. I know one thing. It cannot be hurried. Often we cannot seem to concentrate on the book, the lessons, or the materials because it takes all we can do to get up, get dressed, and take the carpool to ‘grief-kindergarten’ – to do what needs to be done, and just keep going.

We are learning to write lower case and upper case letters, spelled “Grieving 101”, and yet at most levels, I do not think there is a primer or a how to manual. There is a difference in moping around aimlessly, and grieving properly. I do know that honest grieving is very tiring and draining, but at some point, the results will be worth the effort, much like training for a race – another challenge – another hurdle.

I am learning much from the simple, honest, heart-felt gut wrenching, but beautiful questions from Wyatt, and Bradford and from our 3 ½ year old nephew, Elijah Brooks who loves “Aunt” so dearly. I have watched each individually, and then together, and have marveled at the simplicity and profundity and depth of their faith and trust at the same time.

On more than one occasion the Holy Spirit has nudged me, and said, “Ed, see there, watch Wyatt, Bradford, Elijah Brooks. That is why I tell you sophisticated adults that you have to become like little children to enter into my Kingdom. No room for your man-made philosophy, your daring assumptions in the face of all that is yours to observe in the world I have created, beginning with you–made in my very image. That is also why I said ‘blessed are the children, and forbid them not to come to me, for such is the kingdom of God.’”

I must tell you my respect and admiration for Chris knows no boundaries these days, as I do not believe I could have done what he is doing with such grace and strength, though brokenhearted, if Beverly had died when Elliot was 5 and Erin was 3, or 6 or 4, or at any age!

In less than three weeks, we will observe the one year anniversary of my mother’s death who died July 7, 2011 at 86 ½ after being on hospice care for a year, and impaired from numerous strokes since she was 80. Little could we have dreamed that two months after we buried her, Elliot would face a diagnosis that would take her life eight months later.

My mother was ready to die. In fact she longed for death after a while, but was totally happy to stay here on earth as long as God would keep her. Her loss is a loss of the past. During her talk to the Community Bible Study in March, Elliot clearly stated she had to get to a point where she was willing to live or die. But I tell you, she wanted to live. She longed to live to raise her children – to be with her family that she loved. Elliot’s death is a loss of the future.

I still wear the blue teal bracelet I put on for the first time last October following her second surgery, and it reads “Courage & Strength & Hope & Faith.” I have never observed a person exhibit such courage, strength, hope and faith like Elliot did these past nine months. People keep telling us about Elliot’s faith. Her faith was real. But, in adversity, she also matured in her faith. However, in addition to her faith, I think most about the immensely Large Courage she bore in every fiber of her being throughout this journey — even at the end. Such grace, such dignity, such courage. I have never witnessed such courage.

My mother suffered a lot, and always remained upbeat and hopeful, and strong. On more than one occasion in the last weeks of her life, Beverly and I remarked how much Elliot in her infirmity reminded us of my mother in hers – their kindness to the nurses and doctors, their smiles to everyone who came by no matter how bad they were feeling, their quiet ‘thank-you’ to those who cared for them. I am sure those who have been in harm’s way on the battlefield fighting for our country, have exhibited great courage as well. Courage can be applied to many fact scenarios, and I know of no greater battle than Elliot faced with this enemy – horrid, aggressive, rare cancer, and no more courageous solider.

Grief is a marathon, not a sprint. To work through it remains very difficult work!  I continue to wrestle, but gradually I am coming to realize in my heart again (not just my head) that God is with me in the struggle. Our modern life as a whole is not organized or structured in such a way that a large number of people will hang on with us as we move on through this process, but many will.

Two weeks ago I said I doubted Beverly and I would ever recover. I still believe that, but I do hope, in time, we will be able to embrace the change – and think of it somehow as ‘good’ although now we see “through a glass very darkly” on that subject. I do know in my head that Psalm 23:6 says that surely goodness and mercy shall follow us all the days of our lives, and as we look back over our lives we see that truth magnified in many ways, and at least in weak faith I must believe that God’s goodness and mercy will light our dark path forward into the many unknown highways and byways of life for as long as God grants us earthly life.  But the second part of that verse Elliot has already claimed for her own: “and I (she) shall dwell (is dwelling) in the house of the Lord forever.” I hold on in my head and am asking the Holy Spirit to gently drop it into my heart the beautiful prayer in Romans 15:13, “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope.” For some reason, the following passage is easier to settle into my heart at the present time: And so we do not grieve as others do who have no hope. (1 Thessalonians 4:13) I cannot imagine those who grieve with ‘no hope’ beyond the grave.

But does any of this lessen the heartache, and questions, the searing pain and sense of loss, the sadness we feel and want to erase for Chris, and Wyatt and Bradford as well as for us, and Erin, and all our family? Not for a nanosecond – but somehow, someway, God is surely weaving a beautiful tapestry for each of us. Already he sees the design, the colors, the shape, the incredible beauty. For us, we see the backside of the tapestry – the knots, the loose strings, and the lack of design. The final design may only be revealed when we are reunited with Elliot in the presence of our heavenly Father.

We will forever talk about Elliot in the present. I hope you will help us keep her memory alive through the years. Talking about ‘her heavenly Father’ I had this impression all day Sunday as I moved, sometimes tearfully through the first Father’s Day without her, that I would be well served by celebrating daily “Heavenly Father’s Day”, for that is what she is doing as she is in His presence.

I found such joy in being with Erin, our precious second-born, and all our immediate family over the weekend – laughter and light-hearted fun entangled with an ever-present heaviness and reminder of the paradoxes and complexities in life. Children have an amazing capacity to keep us occupied with them and their needs – all good. And the sensitivity and thoughtfulness of so many of you to offer up your prayers for Chris and me as we moved through Father’s Day touched us. And to have Chris in our home 18 years to the weekend that he knocked on our front door, smartly dressed in white shirt and bow-tie, to take Elliot on a first date, was both a good and sad memory. But still it was a special time for us…and another one of those ‘thin places’ where somehow I sense God is as we need to see it, bridging the gap between the things that are seen which are temporal and the things which cannot be seen, which are eternal.

I am still offering up prayers and supplications to God with loud cries. I was recently drawn to a passage in Hebrews 5: 7 which I had never read, but have been meditating on it. Even Christ, during his lifetime here on earth (not just in the Garden of Gethsemane) did the same thing. The ESV Study Bible states it this way: “In the days of his flesh, Jesus offered up prayers and supplications, with loud cries and tears, to him, who was able to save him from death, and he was heard because of his reverence.”  I continue to be stunned by the beauty and power of this passage. Jesus offered supplications and pleas to God with loud cries and was heard because of his reverence. My notes to this passage state that the word “supplication” indicates a “submissive request”, and the tenor of the passage is simply that in a broader period of time than just the week of His crucifixion, Jesus ‘in the days of His flesh’ prayed earthly prayers that were constantly heartfelt, earnest, and accompanied by tears. I know it is appropriate to continue to follow Jesus’ pattern of prayer and supplication without trying to ‘spiritualize death.’

There is a quotation from Dr. Peter Marshall, former chaplain of the U.S. Senate and senior pastor of the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C. which will continue to help our family the remainder of our lives. I share it to encourage anyone who reads it to let its truth sink deep into your mind and heart: “We believe as Christians, that when our love ones die, they go to be with the Lord. The Bible teaches that the Lord is with us. Well, if they are with Him, and He is with us …..they cannot be very far away.”

~Ed Patterson

Related Posts about our Elliot:
When Cancer is no longer a Stranger
In the midst of the storm
A Father’s Love
When the monster returns, Thy will be done
A Tribute to Elliot
Saying Goodbye
Memorial Fund
Thank You~Gracias~Grazie~Danke~Arigato

(Click on photo for credit)

And then there was Grace

Image

When I’m feeling hurried and stressed by the demands that I think the world is projecting onto me and I think I will explode if I’m slowed down by one more obstacle…
…He opens up the heavens and reminds me that He knows and He cares
this is not my home…and red lights aren’t always a bad thing.

Thank You~Gracias~Grazie~Danke~Arigato

I want to take this opportunity to say, “Thank you.”
Sincerely, from the depths of my heart.
I am so grateful for each of you reading this.
The fact that you would take a break from your busy life to read what I have written is not only humbling, but motivating and encouraging.

Thank you for allowing me to process the shock, pain, anger, regret and all of the other emotions that I have written through over the last 10 months.
As you know this journey with Elliot has changed me. In a good way.
She has changed me and will continue to.

I know the posts have been deep and sometimes dark, but I could not have experienced the peace that I have had were it not for those of you who are reading, sharing, commenting and praying.

I will continue to write about my beautiful friend. How can I not?
However, I will also get back to posting on life in general.
I will try to center most everything around experience, strength and hope.

Thank you…for embarking on this pilgrimage with me.
It is often bumpy and at times I cannot see much further than my own face, but it is worth it. You are worth it…I am worth it.

If only we could see more than a fraction of our worth.
Our fear would dissolve in the truth of our potential.
We were born with a great purpose in mind. Each one of us.
We are being groomed for greatness.

On the days when you feel anything but great (and those days will come), if you remember nothing else, remember, you have been given this gift of life. With this gift comes the freedom of choice, the blessing of opportunities, the realness of humanity. I don’t care what you’ve done, what you’re doing or what you will do, nothing on this earth has the power to strip you of your potential.

Eleanor Roosevelt said it best, “No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.” Friend, You were born to be blessed. Don’t allow anyone or anything to tell you different.

Love and Light,

Your Beloved needs You now

In the peacefulness of early morning
before even the sun has dispelled the darkness of night
there is praise on my lips.

It is You who wakes me from sleep
beckoning me
to embrace the stillness and quiet
while listening for Your voice.

God,
make me acutely aware of Your presence
in my coming in and going out
in each conversation in which I engage.

May You always be at the forefront of my mind
first in my heart
anchoring my soul and stirring my spirit.

Calm my anxious thoughts
dissolve my fear
with the gentle reminders of Your faithfulness.

Expose my lack of faith
so that the light may extinguish its power
search me, know me
completely and fully.

Your will is not my will
compared to You
I am but a vapor.

How can I not trust
how can I not believe
how can I not call on You in the early hours of morning
throughout the day and
into the evening.

When this world is everything but
You are grace
You are hope
You are light
You are life

Your magnificence is all around me
and yet, at times, it is as if I am blind
open my eyes to Your splendor.

Open my ears to the sounds of creation
Your creation
filling the earth with songs to You.

When I seek solace in things of this world
draw me back to You
my Provider, Protector, Comforter
my Resting Place.

Let me not seek out grandiose events
but rather delight in each moment
may everything I do
everything I am
be pleasing to You.

Take captive every thought
and before it becomes a word
may it be gratifying to You
before it becomes an action
may it honor and glorify You.

Lord, in whom I put my trust
You do not leave me here in the silence
You are everywhere I look
If only I had faith like a child.

Look at the work of Your hands
You are in every detail
nature screams of Your divine providence
evidence of You cannot be ignored

Even in my grieving
I find comfort
in the undeniable truth that
You are in all things.

Before time began
as centuries have passed
now and in the future
You remain unchanged.

Less of me
more of You
this life is fragile
I don’t want to waste a moment.

Even so, I know that this earth is not my home
help me make eternal investments
in the time that I have
until I am made complete
when in Your presence

And by Your power
all is made well.
___________________________________________________________________________________

“Beauty”

“Praise”

“Childlike wonder”

“Splendor”

“Grace”

“Faithfulness”

“Master Creator”

Saying goodbye

“Jesus has overcome and the grave is overwhelmed. Victory is won, he has risen from the dead and I will rise when he calls my name, no more sorrow, no more pain, I will rise…” ~Chris Tomlin

Thank you to all of you who have prayed fervently over the last 9 months for Elliot. Many of you have never met her, but have been so strongly impacted by her testimony that your heart is broken with the news of her passing. So I feel like I owe you this post. There is so much to tell you, it will be difficult to give the experience justice, but I will try my best.

Thursday, May 31, Elliot’s body was laid to rest. Many of us gathered around the graveside and listened as the pastor spoke of her courage, the light that she is and her unwavering faith in a God she could not see. He read from Psalm 91, Elliot’s favorite passage.

Chris had encouraged anyone who wanted to bring their children to do so as his children would be involved in the services. I couldn’t help but smile when after the service, little ones ran playfully around the headstones, tracing the letters of the last names with their small fingers. They were completely unaware that this was a place where people came to mourn.

It reminded me of the passage in Matthew 18 “…Whoever becomes simple and elemental again, like this child, will rank high in God’s kingdom. What’s more, when you receive the childlike on my account, it’s the same as receiving me.”

One of the roses from Elliot’s casket

Before leaving the site, Chris asked Wyatt (6) and Bradford (4) if they would like to say one more prayer for mommy. The three of them went over, placing one hand on the casket, and one hand in their daddy’s hand, they said a prayer. While Chris was praying, Bradford rested her head against the side of her mother’s coffin. It was such a touching moment, innocent and sweet.

There was no more stopping the tears for me at this point. They flooded my eyes and I didn’t fight them any longer.

There was a small window of time between the graveside service and the service of celebration. I cleaned my face and thought, “Okay! Good. I’m done crying. I’ve cried so much. No more tears.”

I arrived at the service an hour early and there were already a good many people there. Everyone who had been to the visitation the night before was still buzzing with comments about how many people had been there. One guesstimate was 1,000 people, while another was 700. They spoke of how the family stayed until the last person came through the line.

Elliot’s mom, Beverly had posted the following on facebook after such an incredible turnout; “My Dear Precious Child, I saw tonight how very loved and respected you are in this community and beyond. You have set the bar so high for all of us, and I pray I can point people to God and Christ as you have so boldly done in your short life with us here. I WILL see you again!! In that thought I have peace and can rest tonight. Love, Mom”

It was time for the service to start. The pastor had made multiple pleas from the front for everyone to scoot in to make room for others. People filled the small sanctuary, including the choir section and spilled out into the hallways and overflow chapel where the service was streaming live.

Several people got up to speak. To detail each would take thousands of words and more time than you have here. I would, however, like to highlight several things that were said.

Elisabeth, Elliot’s best friend, recalled when she got the call that the pathology report showed cancer, she went over to Elliot’s house and laid down beside her. Elliot looked at her and said, “I told you God was preparing me for something big! I wonder what all He’s going to do through this?”

As the pastor asked everyone, I too have to ask myself, “How willing am I? Am I willing to be that prepared? Am I willing to do what she did, surrendering everything and telling God that no matter what His will, I am ready and willing to carry it out with my life?” Honestly… I hesitate to answer.What about you?

Ed Patterson, Elliot’s father got up to speak a few words about his daughter. He introduced himself as her father and then explained so eloquently how Elliot knew that the most important relationship one can have is with their heavenly father. He spoke about Elliot’s unwavering faith through all of this and that her very name in Hebrew means; The Lord is my God. She embodied and lived out the meaning of her name. He stated what I was feeling, which was, “You hate cancer. So do we. So did Elliot. But it was clear while she was sick that she was continually asking, ‘How can cancer glorify God?’” He then assured us that Elliot’s wish would be that each of us leave there thinking more of Jesus than of her. (He read from several beautiful works that I have referenced at the bottom of this post if you would like to read them.)

The tears ran down my face and I knew that they would not soon stop.

We stood to sing another hymn. I did not even open my hymnal as I knew the words would not come out. I glanced over several rows at little Bradford. As she settled into her daddy’s arms and lay her head on his shoulder we sang, “All I have needed Thy hand hath provided. Great is Thy faithfulness…” She was asleep. What a perfect depiction of childlike faith. The kind that God desires for us. In the midst of uncertainty we rest safely in our Father’s arms.

Chris had said outside Elliot’s hospital room, Not only did she help unbelievers believe, She helped believers believe more. Truer words were never spoken.

I’m not sad for Elliot. How could I be? She is in the presence of the Savior. Her faith has become sight. There is no more pain. No more struggle. No more fear. No more death. She won. She is the victor now. She conquered. We are the ones left to grieve and to envy.

To echo something Elisabeth said, “Not everybody gets an Elliot.” She’s right. I’m so blessed to have known her. She has left quite a legacy. Her light is bright and vast. Imagine what it will be when we continue to carry and share that light with others. My goal is for her children, as they grow up, while in conversation with someone they don’t even know, to discover that their mother changed the world.

When my 4 yr old saw this picture of the sky behind me on the way home from the services, he said, “Mommy, that’s Heaven.” I agreed.

Maybe someone you know needs to hear what Elliot was quoted as saying in 2010, “When you are so beaten down that all you can do is lift your hand and say. ‘Help!’ He will. I promise.
Don’t put God in a box ’cause he’s not going to fit.
Don’t tell God how big your storm is. Tell your storm how big your God is.”

~Elliot Patterson Williams 1975-2012

Readings by Elliot’s dad, Ed:
“Though devils all the world should fill, all eager to devour us. We tremble not, we fear no ill, they shall not overpower us.
This world’s prince may still scowl fierce as he will,
He can harm us none, he’s judged; the deed is done;
One little word can fell him. The Word they still shall let remain nor any thanks have for it;
He’s by our side upon the plain with His good gifts and Spirit.
And take they our life, goods, fame, child and wife,
Let these all be gone, they yet have nothing won; The kingdom ours remaineth.” ~Martin Luther 1529 “A Mighty Fortress is our God”

1. What is your only comfort in life and in death?
That I, with body and soul, both in life and in death,1 am not my own,2 but belong to my faithful Savior Jesus Christ,3 who with His precious blood4 has fully satisfied for all my sins,5 and redeemed me from all the power of the devil;6 and so preserves me7 that without the will of my Father in heaven not a hair can fall from my head;8 indeed, that all things must work together for my salvation.9 Wherefore, by His Holy Spirit, He also assures me of eternal life,10 and makes me heartily willing and ready from now on to live unto Him.11
[1] Rom. 14:7–8. [2] 1 Cor. 6:19. [3] 1 Cor. 3:23. [4] 1 Pet. 1:18–19. [5] 1 Jn. 1:7; 2:2. [6] 1 Jn. 3:8. [7] Jn. 6:39. [8] Matt. 10:29–30; Lk. 21:18. [9] Rom. 8:28. [10] 2 Cor. 1:21–22; Eph. 1:13–14; Rom. 8:16. [11] Rom. 8:1. ~The Heidelberg Catechism, Lord’s Day 1

I have no greater joy than to hear that my children are walking in the truth.” ~3 John 1:4

Related Posts:
A Tribute to Elliot
When Cancer is no longer a Stranger
In the midst of the storm
A Father’s Love
When the monster returns, Thy will be done