When Special Needs Parenting Resists Resolution
After watching a movie, guest blogger Rebekah Benimoff was slightly dissatisfied with its neatly wrapped up resolution. Today she shares how the film did and didn’t resonate with her special needs parenting life.
When Special Needs Parenting Resists Resolution
Today I watched God’s Not Dead. A compelling plot. I loved the courage of the college student, the bravery of the young woman who left a domineering and abusive relationship, the unwavering faith of the missionary, whose joy was simply contagious.
Most of all, I loved… well, I’ll tell you a bit later.
First, I have to confess that the conclusion was a bit neatly wrapped for my pragmatic sensibilities. I get why there is resolution in the main plot: it’s meant to encourage Christians to stand firm in faith, in the face of ridicule, abuse, even sacrifice.
Still, I grapple with the realism quotient.
We humans are problems solvers, so we long for resolution. Yet in my special needs parenting life, this is not a daily reality. All is not finally and perfectly resolved. Life is unpredictable, even chaotic.
If I can’t have resolution, will I settle for assurance?
Assurance that eventually, somehow everything is going to be all right? I used to pin my hopes on the idea that all will be resolved if I stay faithful. Until what I’d built my Christian existence upon evaporated, and my hopes for a nominal, normal Christian life were shattered.
The song, Worth It, written by Francesca Battistelli says, “Whatcha gonna do when the bottom falls out and you’re left with nothing but your fear and your doubt to hold you? Who will hold you?“
And here’s the thing.
The loss and the grief and the fear and the doubt are real, and at times, overwhelming. But we are not left alone in them. We are not left gaping, with hope only for an eternity in heaven. When my tidy Christian existence was swiftly and summarily incinerated, do you know what was left?
The presence of God.
The chaff burned away; all those Christian maxims and platitudes held no power, and the choice became: fall into the embrace of the One who is Hope, or hold Him at arm’s length. I had nothing left to cling to but God, himself. He was enough… and still is.
What I loved most about the movie God’s Not Dead was this question: Where do you find your hope?
I know where I find mine.
I do not have all the answers to life’s problems. I can’t prove to anyone that God exists. What I can share is my experience: When my dreams were in tatters and I was at the end of myself, I cried out “Jesus help me!” and I found myself cradled. No judgement, no expectations, only unconditional acceptance and the purest, deepest love I had ever known.
God is where I find my hope.
Where Do You Find Hope?
Does your special needs parenting story lack resolution, too? We’d love to hear where you find hope and assurance in your uncertain circumstances, so leave a comment in the box if you wish. To read more about Rebekah and her special needs parenting journey, visit her website at Just Me Mama.
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By Rebekah Benimoff
Rebekah Benimoff is the wife of a husband with PTSD and the mother of two young men, both of whom grew up with medical and special needs. She blogs at In the Chaos…. and In the Calm (justmemama.blogspot.com).
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Yes, no matter our circumstances now, or in seasons to come, our hope is found only and always in Jesus.
That is the hope we cling to, is it not?
I love such truth in this. It’s hard at tines and I’m not a parent but when it’s all gone there is Jesus still standing there with us. Immanuel. God is with us (me). May I never forget.