Our Journey to Tizibt

God's plan unfolds...................

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Goodbye.....

We arrived home safely last night after 26 hours of travel.  All went smoothly, thank you for your prayers.

Prior to leaving Addis, we were allowed our final goodbye visit with Tizi.  We took that time to hold her when she would allow us to, play with her and soak her in.  Tizi is in a good place at Jane's House.  She is loved fiercely by a staff that adores her.  She adores them back and I understand why.  I adore them too.  They touch and coddle and cluck at each of the children as we do our own.  The minute a cry is heard, it strikes me how quickly staff come running.  While we were visiting the orphanage, the entry gate was left open slightly.  I went over to push it shut saying we didn't want any escapees and Levi said, "Why Mom? They won't leave.  They love it here."  He's right.  Even with the gate opened, exposing a world outside of their own, none of the children rushed to it.  They were home.  They were safe.

It's knowing that, realizing that Jane's House is currently Tizi's home, that causes me fear. The beep of our driver came announcing we needed to leave and collectively we all groaned.  It almost sounded staged to the point where the staff laughed at us.  We each said goodbye to Tizi and we each cried.  Tizi continued as if it were any other day.  I wonder what she thinks of us or who she thinks we might be.  Our goodbye held great significance to us and meant little to Tizi.

Mula, the head caregiver, so graciously tried to connect Tizi to us and to encourage Tizi to let us hold her and love on her throughout our time together.  Often Tizi would connect, but her choice of love still comes from her caregivers. They are her "mama", they are her safety.  This is what we are going to be removing Tizi from and as much as I long for her to be with us, I feel fear and sadness knowing what's in store for Tizi.

We made it to the airport and as I looked at Marc and the kids, their eyes were sad and hollow.  We talked, but it was about Tizi.  I talked about what Tizi will feel when we take her with us.  Will she scream?  Will she hate it? Love it?  Will she be afraid?

Mula describes Tizi as a "happy baby, she love play with her friends. She happy," but in the same sentence, Mula said, "Tizi have moods"  (oh oh...know what that's about!)  Our family knows "moods", as passionate as we are, we have our moods!  What if she has a "mood" her entire trip home?  Yikes, I need to close that subject in my mind!  The kids kept telling me to stop being negative.  I don't feel negative.  I feel the reality that we are taking a two year old baby from her safe nest.  I feel the reality that this will be Tizi's second great loss in her short life.  I feel the truth that someday we will need to walk Tizi through her grief and her loss.  I feel scared.

On the airplane, Jake fell into me in his sleep.  I leaned back into him and breathed him in as I no longer get the privilege often, and I smelled Ethiopia.  I smelled it to the point that I breathed in his hair again, just to make sure. (for those who have been there, you will know the smell) It wasn't a bad smell, but it is  distinct.  It smells like their spices, their car exhaust, their people and their wind. Blended together, it creates the smell that links me to Ethiopia.  I've noticed it also on the babies at the orphanage.  When I hold them, it's not Johnson and Johnson that I smell, instead they all smell a little spicy with a touch of something sharp thrown in, they all smell like Ethiopia.  It struck me, that in 10 short days, our bodies had permeated this world, this smell.  I wonder what our world is going to smell like to Tizi?  I wonder if our first shower home will wash this smell from us.  I hope not.  This smell is owned by Tizi, I want us to own it too.

God unraveled our hearts on this trip.  At first, I felt it like a slow thread pull.  As we stayed longer, the pace of the thread pull quickened and as we sat in the airplane and all I had time to do was think, I could only visualize our hearts, raw and open with a heap of raveled thread laying along side.  What to do with these unraveled hearts?  That's the question we need to live out until we are joined with Tizi again.  Josie continued to say, "I don't want to be here. I want to stay in Ethiopia." But "here" is where God has us.  "Here" is where God wants us to be.  In knowing that, I want to do "here" right.

I'm not sure how to do that or what it will look like.  As we got closer to home, the kids started to reconnect.  I could see it and hear it.  They began talking about school, about their sport schedules, about their friends.  They talked about how different our home life was from Ethiopia and about how they would explain Tizi's home to their friends.  How will we connect these two worlds?

Tizi doesn't know this, but she impacted each of us in a way that left a hole in our hearts.  The hole weighs about 21 pounds, with beautiful black eyes and a smile you long to see again and again and again.   This pint size hole has managed to weigh us down in ways I've never imagined.  It's caused us to think and see our world differently.  I hope that this weight, this hole in our hearts is not quickly filled with our world.  I hope it remains open and tender and willing to see and take in the people in our world that will be blessed by Ethiopia's impact, by Tizi's impact.  Maybe that's exactly why we needed to come back to our "here,"  our world, empty handed.  Maybe God needs us to practice and strengthen our hole-filled hearts so that we are ready to receive Tizi's love. Maybe God needs us to be more willing, more open to pass along His love.  It seems our "here" is exactly the place we need to be.








6 comments:

  1. You describe the experience so beautifully, Mary. Tizi is blessed to be one of your pack.

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  2. I've been so blessed by the privilege of sharing your journey through your beautiful recounting of each moment. Thank you, Mary. Thank you.

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  3. So happy to see you all back! And can't wait to see Tizabit!

    -Noah

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  4. Oh the wonderful smell of Ethiopia...my heart remains in that beautiful country that our precious daughters call their birth country. Praying as you wait yet again.

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  5. Glad you made it home safe. I see a book in your future or at least a story in Guidepost magazine.

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  6. I'm thinking of you all often and trying to imagine how your transition back into this life as you knew it before you met Tizi is sitting with you ~ knowing 1/6 of V6 is due to arrive and join you ~ then life as you know it changes again.
    (So you know a song is flowing through my mind:
    "Great is Thy faithfulness, O God, my Father;
    There is no shadow of turning with Thee.
    Thou changest not; Thy compassions, they fail not,
    As Thou hast been, Thou forever wilt be. ......... Morning by morning, new mercies I see.
    All I have needed, Thy hand hath provided.
    Great is Thy faithfulness, Lord, unto US!"

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