New Year’s Letter

“I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want. I can do all this through him who gives me strength.” –St. Paul

Greetings Dear Ones, 

I suppose it’s a bit silly to send a Christmas card at the end of January, but my order of Christmas photos was bungled and they didn’t arrive until last week, so I had to decide whether to send them out or…save them for next year?  Considering that 2020 was such a significant year in our lives, and such a challenging year around the world, I wanted to send a real letter, even if it doesn’t reach you until February!

For many this has been the worst year of their lives, a year of anxiety, illness, restrictions, and loss. To all those who are suffering, I offer you my love and prayers for comfort and sustenance. It has been a hard year, a strange year, a fraught and anxious year. But for us, it has been, primarily, a year filled with blessings and gratitude.

We were blessed to buy a beautiful old Craftsman House, our first ever home purchase, the first week of March 2020, that is, we moved in two days before the whole country shut down in a panic. We held our breath, and settled in. We thanked God for Jacob’s continued employment (recognizing that, in another industry, he easily could have been laid off the week after we bought our first house!). As we adjusted to the new restrictions and uncertainty, we set about unpacking, painting, rearranging, and Craigslist shopping for new-to-us furniture. We began to rejoice in the opportunity to focus on our new home and family life, our homeschooling, and the happiness of just being together.

For so many years, we have had our own private struggles. Jacob has had long deployments, long work hours, hard labors. We have moved many times, had many pregnancies and babies and sleepless nights. Jacob has worked night shifts and rotating shifts and double shifts. He has taken a full load of college classes while working full time. I have learned to manage children and household duties largely alone, pregnant, nursing, and handling everything from exterminating ants, to dealing with drug-dealing neighbors, or nursing a gravely ill child at the hospital. A lot of our marriage has suffered the hardship of being apart, sleepless, and stretched thin. And this is the first year where we have really felt able to settle in, and enjoy our home, our children, and each other. Indeed, for us, this year has perhaps been the most “normal” of any. And with the Pandemic and suffering all around, we have been even more thankful and aware of every one of our blessings. We have soaked up the joys of each day, each house project, each dinner together. The simple joy of a normal family life together in our home. We thank God for these great blessings!

Praise God, we are healthy. We are joyful. We have a lovely family. And we have a home, a safe and comfortable and beautiful house big enough to spend our quarantined days in relative peace. We have enjoyed the break from outside activities and this very unique opportunity to turn inwards, to focus on our family life, and make our home a place of great joy and learning and prayer, a “domestic church.”

As we look to the year ahead, we are filled with hope. As much as we have cherished 2020, we look forward to a vaccine (Jacob already got it!) and the return of activities and gatherings. We hope for swim lessons, and maybe gymnastics and parkour. We hope to host more friends in our home, and sing more often. We plan to read more books and play outside. We hope for a garden full of flowers and vegetables. We hope we shall be able to visit family and take a real vacation or two. The only conflict is that I hope to go camping (as I hope every year), and my husband distinctly hopes that we don’t

Looking forward to the year ahead, when we raised our glasses of champagne to toast 2021, it was indeed a night of deep contrasts in our household. This was a year of suffering the world over, and yet for us personally, it was a year we were especially thankful for. At the same time, that very New Year’s Eve, in which we celebrate new beginnings and hopes and dreams for the future, Jacob’s dear Aunt lay dying, passing away that very night: requiesce in pace. Her earthly journey, with all of its cares, worries, hopes, and plans, had come to its final end. We marked that end, and grieve that loss, even as we open the book to a new chapter in our own lives, reflecting again on our blessings, and also recognizing that nothing is guaranteed, and anything and everything may be taken away from us. Indeed, as I held my champagne glass in midair, grieving and celebrating simultaneously, I felt a moment of anxiety: What unknown suffering awaits us in 2021? In answer, the words of St. Paul came to mind. “I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty…” Whatever 2021 brings, we shall strive to find that secret of being content, whatever the circumstances, relying on Him who gives us strength to face all things. May we do so with faith, hope, and love, to the very end of our days.

From our family to yours,

God bless you. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

“Shopping Therapy”

I don’t know when it started. I was never much of a “shopper.” I never thought of “going shopping” as an amusement or leisure activity to be enjoyed. Shopping was a necessary obligation on occasions, like buying groceries, but just less often, and with a much greater degree of consternation and costs. When it came to spending money, I was far more interested in good coffee, travels, date nights, and books. I much preferred purchasing seats to the symphony, rather than an outfit to wear there! This should be accentuated by my husband’s utter disregard for clothing, and his preference to not spend money on what may be referred to as “appearances”–things like matching pillows, or matching dishes, or curtains or brand-name clothing. Yet he’s not stingy, or a cheapskate. He’ll spend extra money on select items: good coffee, the Opera, a rare book, a worthy cause. But he is not tempted to spend money. I think he spends money justly, where spending money is due. Sometimes that is on a very rare and beautiful book that he will both read and cherish. Sometimes that is on a bottle of wine for guests or a fancy meal to celebrate a worthy occasion. I would not call him frugal, nor wasteful. He uses money well, according to the occasion and his values.

I, on the other hand, am “un disastre.” I remember a nun using the term, “a disaster!” to describe someone or something–I am quite sure she wasn’t referring to me–but whenever I remember her, I remember her expression as applied to myself and my many flaws and foibles. I think of her shaking her head, but with a full understanding that life, and people, are often a mess, and while she was reproving of this, she was also merciful and at least a little amused by it. I suppose, when I think of her, I am able to readily admit my sin, some area of “disaster” in my life, like a child’s horribly messy room, and accept her head shaking, while also noticing the smile at the corners of her eyes and mouth. And that allows me to smile too, and get to work cleaning up.

Reflecting on my “spending money,” I think it started after I had my first baby and my husband was deployed. A huge frustration of new parenthood is that it seems impossible to DO anything one used to do, or want to do, or hope to do. Experiences, like hiking, or sitting all afternoon reading in a coffee shop, or even going to church quietly to pray…those things couldn’t be done anymore (or so it seemed). Indeed, it seemed impossible to do much of anything, aside from attend to a baby/toddler, and manage the cooking and laundry and dishes as best I could. I think that led me to, at times, buy things…it didn’t take much time or effort or energy to buy something, especially online. And it felt pleasurable to do so. Maybe I didn’t have time to do the things I wanted, so I began to acquire things instead, and hope I might find time to use and enjoy them someday.

I suppose too there is some kind of pleasure response in the brain to acquiring a new something. Like getting a gift, or the excitement of a package in the mail. Even though I am the shopper, buying things for myself without surprise, there is still something mildly exciting about a new widget, arriving especially for me. Furthermore, purchases can represent something I hope to do: an exercise program I wish to complete (yoga mat, belt, blocks, leggings, tank tops…), an amount of weight I want to lose (stylish outfit), a new skill I think I might acquire (that pretty looking calligraphy set at the bookstore), a way of life I wish to adopt (a bike, bike trailer, bike bag, for shopping at the Farmer’s Market with my baby), and so on and so forth.

The problem is not just spending too much money, or acquiring things needlessly (and those can be significant problems), but I think the most ridiculous foible is that I may spend an inordinate amount of time “shopping” (staring at a computer screen late at night, looking at photos, reading reviews, comparing products…), and no time at all actually using or enjoying or DOING the thing the purchase was supposed to be about.

I think of this as the “Fitness Magazine” problem. Fitness magazines have such an allure. Skinny, fit, happy looking models in snug and swanky workout gear. Promises that if you do such-and-such, you can look and feel as amazing as that airbrushed cover girl. It can be oh-so-tempting to buy the fitness magazines, to ogle their pictures, to skim their articles, to dream about one’s upcoming new fit life, and even to stock up on all the right gear–of course–exercise tops and bottoms and undergarments, shoes and socks, hair things, and other things, equipment and devices, gym memberships and classes and passes–oh there is a lot to BUY! And it’s so easy! (Much easier than working out!) You can just sit up late at night, even while nursing a baby, and click on all the things you want. And if you have a credit card, you can buy them!

The same can happen with cooking magazines: lots of ogling, and even buying, but very little cooking!

And it can happen with books. It’s very easy, and tempting, to buy many lovely looking books. It’s a lot more difficult to read them.

Pretty soon, one may have a house or apartment overflowing with stuff, and a hefty credit card balance to pay off, and yet taking honest stock, one might find that one used, or enjoyed, very few, if any of the things!

(Unlike a nice bottle of wine: I always enjoy that, and in short order too! So I guess that’s money well spent?)

Even worse, like a messy room getting messier, I have noticed not only this problem I describe, but also this added iteration of trouble: after one gets accustomed to the pleasure of acquiring things, as with any addiction, one may begin to use this behavior more and more inappropriately, not only to acquire something, but also to try, falsely, to achieve other purposes by this particular pursuit of pleasure.

For me, it probably began humbly enough, perhaps an emotional balm to my loneliness when my husband was deployed years ago. He was gone, and I missed him. I couldn’t have him back for a long time, and the pain of separation is sorrowful. What could I do, late at night, alone with a sleeping baby? I was too tired to read anything rigorous. I couldn’t go anywhere. If I was tempted other ways, I might have watched a lot of TV or binged on Netflix series. Instead, I picked out outfits and make-up to wear when my husband returned. A few clicks, a few special packages coming my way, and I felt better. I don’t think it was a bad coping mechanism. Indeed, a reunion after months apart is worthy of a new outfit and some lipstick.

But sin, and addiction, can be tricky like that….it can start out as not-sin. Oh, it’s the way even good things can become idols. Exercise is wonderful for health and energy and productivity. It can really help us to become our best selves. It can even be necessary for physical healing after injury, or to avoid early death by heart attack. And yet, it can so easily become an idol, done for vanity or pride, and to a selfish degree, where workouts come before children’s activities, or time spent with one’s spouse, or doing a needed project in the home.

I just never expected this to be a problem for me. Hadn’t I lived with nuns for almost a year, spending almost no money, acquiring nothing beyond what I was given? Didn’t I know the sweet freedom of needing nothing of cost, of enjoying all that was free, and freely giving of myself?

And yet! What “un disastre” I had become!

I am beginning to see how wildly I spend money, with carelessness, and to fill emotional or other voids, or to try to solve other kinds of problems: I was worried I was pregnant (when I was hoping not to be), so I went shopping for a new lot of maternity clothes to make myself feel better and to try to get excited about a pregnancy I didn’t want. I was depressed, so I bought new lotions and make-up to make myself feel better and prettier. I was tired of being “poor” so I “treated myself” to a load of brand-name clothing. I was stressed, so I bought something. I was sad so I clicked something. Aromatherapy, candles, a dress, a shirt, a book, a blanket. When facing one kind of hardship, I decide to “reward” myself with purchases. I get tired of sacrifice and self-denial. I want to celebrate…and shop!

And again, it can be tricky to untangle. I genuinely needed some new clothes recently. I was unable to lose all the weight after my youngest baby. He was 19 months old, and I was still wearing sweatpants, maternity pants, and my husband’s jeans! I finally accepted that I am now a larger size, and I still deserve to wear clothes. Indeed, that acceptance, and my simultaneous gratitude for my good health (regardless of the extra pounds), seemed to warrant a bit of happy and reasonable shopping. It did warrant it. And yet…like a true addict, I fail in moderation. I set a budget, but don’t stick to it. I set new, and very generous, budgets for each store outing. I conveniently don’t count a whole lot of purchases. I go to somewhat expensive stores. I buy more than I need. I buy more because it’s, “on sale.” I attempt to make a return, but then buy additional items as soon as I walk in the store.

I’m tempted to excess. I’m tempted by desire for more.

I also fail in my financial and sacrificial obligations to my family, and to the suffering poor.

For my family, I too often prioritize myself, my desires, my clothes, my comforts, my “little (or not-so-little) luxuries.” The family may not appear to suffer as a result, but the cost–which I realize could be indeed calculated, if I was willing to keep track of it–the cost is nevertheless somewhat hidden, but very real. I will spend hundreds of dollars for a batch of new exercise clothes, or special scented candles, or new pillows…but what else could that have paid for? We have an old house in need of repairs. We want to remodel the mudroom, and the kitchen. We (my husband included) need a large wardrobe because the one tiny closet in the master is quite insufficient for two people. We want to plant a garden in the backyard and we need to buy plants and soil. There will be car maintenance and eventually a new car purchase. There are plane tickets or summer vacations. Or even, post-Pandemic, a date night and trip to the theater. When it comes to these large family purchases, my husband and I may have careful discussions. He’ll be judicious in choosing what projects we should do, and in carefully selecting the materials for a low budget. He’ll wait for an item to go for sale, second-hand, on Craig’sList. And he’ll postpone a needed purchase for himself indefinitely, going without, in order to prioritize what we most need for the family. But when it comes to luxuries for myself, I just swipe my credit card, with no discussion at all.

And the suffering of the poor! With every purchase I make on a luxury for myself, it would seem I not only forget them, but drag them through the mud. “I’m tired of not being able to buy things for myself!” I say. And I go shopping. I relieve myself of the feeling of budgetary restrictions and “indulge.” But what of the very poor? What of them? They NEVER get to go shopping, or indulge, or even have the comfort of knowing they have, or will have, all that they need. They do not have all the food they need, or clean water, or heat, or shelter, or safety. They do not get to nap when they are pregnant. They don’t get to stay home when they are sick. Worst of all, worst of everything: they don’t have enough to feed their children. They don’t have medical care they can reach or afford when their child is suffering illness or injury, even at mortal peril.

I cannot imagine a worse thing than to be unable to afford for the needs of my children, even with backbreaking and exhausting efforts. I cannot imagine what it feels like to stare in the hungry eyes of my little babe, and also know that somewhere, somewhere, there is another woman, a mother, who is out shopping for whatever random thing she wants, a mother who can easily feed her kids, and also afford to indulge in a multitude of luxuries–and she knows, that is, I know, that the poor mother exists, and I, I look away, or worse, I see her, and do nothing, or perhaps throw her some crumbs, which I then feel quite overly good about–even though I made a careful, agonizingly teensy contribution to a charity for her, but then spent easily and extravagantly on whatever I desired for me.

It’s not fun to think about. I am sure it’s much worse to experience such poverty.

I know, it’s complicated. I could, faced with such thoughts, feel compelled to sell all my earthly possessions, move my family into a studio apartment, and give every possible free penny to the poor. (And I would certainly marvel at anyone who does that.)

I am reminded of the story where Jesus tells that very thing to a rich man who asks him what good thing he should do to inherit eternal life:

Jesus answered, “If you want to be perfect, then go and sell all that you own. Give the money to the poor, and you will have riches in heaven. Then come and follow me!” But when the young man heard Jesus tell him to give away his money, he was sad. He didn’t want to do this, because he was very rich. So he left. Then Jesus said to his followers, “The truth is, it will be very hard for a rich person to enter God’s kingdom. Yes, I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter God’s kingdom.” (Matthew 19:21-23)

Now, I grew up fairly wealthy, and I attended church services in a number of wealthy communities. Oddly, this story was read frequently at these churches, and it was always the subject of the sermon, which always went , with great eagerness, something like this: “Now, Jesus didn’t actually mean that you have to sell everything and give it all to the poor! (Rich people chuckle in the pews; of course He didn’t mean that! Preposterous idea!) He just meant that you can’t love money more than Him. The rich man loved his money more than Jesus, so he was sad. You just have to love Jesus more than anything else you have, love Him more than your money or possessions, with your whole heart….”And keep talking about how much we all love Jesus, and how generous the rich are, and how wonderful everyone here is.

As for me, I was never so sure! I thought it was, at the very least, a bit presumptuous to assert that God Himself didn’t mean what he said. And I thought those preachers to the rich were rather over-eager to comfort their worried wealthy congregants, to pat them and assure them that no action was needed, so long as “their heart was in the right place.” In case I hadn’t gotten the message, I even had this sermon re-hashed (more than once) at the dinner table or kitchen island, to make sure I was very clear in my understanding of this parable (which sounded more like a lesson than a metaphor to me).

In any and perhaps every case, it’s clear I am missing the mark here. Not only am I not giving away all our wealth, I’m not even making sacrifices for the sake of the desperately poor, or even for my own family or my husband. I like to make donations to charities, or buy things for my kids and spouse and house, but I almost never do so by denying something to myself–which I think is a huge piece of the Christian life…maybe the whole point of it, to lay down one’s life for others…at the very least, you’d think I could avoid the next pair of fancy yoga pants for the sake of giving something far more important!

Embarrassingly, that has become a difficult challenge for me. I do feel tired of sacrifice. (Was it the back-to-back-to-back-to-back pregnancies that wearied me? I think that plays a role, though it doesn’t suffice as an excuse. Women have always been pregnant. That doesn’t exempt them from their obligation to their neighbor, to the poor, to their children and spouse.)

So what should I do? What will I do? Let me begin with this:

I want to stop using shopping as a therapy. Instead, let me read, let me write, let me exercise, let me pray. When I am tempted to click on a shopping related ad or website or emailed coupon, let me ask myself, “why?” Am I clicking because I actually need something? Or is it just a habit, or temptation, or am I trying to fill in a gap somewhere more serious, because I am depressed or anxious or unhappy? I want to turn to other things. Just as I am ready to be done reading dumb things on my phone when I am tired or grumpy, I also want to be done with shopping for emotional reasons. And that includes happy or celebration shopping. Let me find other ways to celebrate, like reading with my spouse, or singing, or playing outside. It’s time to form new coping mechanisms, new habits, and step away from spending money for every problem or emotional state. It’s time to DO the things, rather than buy them! And it’s time to form habits and pursue activities that will make me better. Instead of shopping, I could be becoming a better human being (and that’s usually free!).

Further, the time is coming to turn this problem of mine over to my dear husband. I’m not going to give all our money away to the poor (our Lord knows I am quite far from that!), but I could do one small action that would be a big sacrifice for me, and also a very appropriate one: give my husband counsel and authority over ALL purchases. Our dear priest suggested this idea one Lent, for spouses to do this for each other, and I am quite sure the time is coming (this Lent), for me to take it up. What it would mean is this: All purchases would be made or approved by my husband.

No more late-night internet spending binges. No random clicks. No shopping swipes. No heading to the store for one thing and coming back with a whole lot of other things that randomly captured my attention. That’s not to say no shopping at all, or no spending, but no doing so selfishly, secretly, without moderation or discussion. It means showing my husband what I want to buy and saying, “what do you think?” Or asking my husband to buy what I need. And if I am at the store, it means sticking to the agreed upon budget and list! That will be humbling for me, and also, I think, effective.

It is worth saying that my husband is not stingey or controlling. What I am proposing for myself can be, in other relationships, a form of abuse and control of one partner over the other–control of finances, with one partner groveling for permission to purchase anything. This is not the case here. My husband is aware that I spend sometimes extravagantly. He is generous. He is charitable. He laughs at my foibles and shakes his head. “It’s just money” he will say. He doesn’t want to fight over it. He doesn’t want to give money a dignity or priority of concern or conversation. He doesn’t want to waste precious time of this short and precious life focusing on money. And he trusts me. Too much, perhaps. And so, I think it is time for me to humble myself in this way, to make this sacrifice, and to honor him and my family in a way that I have long failed to do.

For many of you, this probably sounds like “no big deal.” You are the folks who are able to actually stick to your shopping list, and not make a bundle of impulse buys. But this is where I am quite weak. Indeed, I am reminded of how it feels, while lumbering around in the third trimester, to bend down and pick something off the floor or to put on socks: easy for everyone else, but a great accomplishment for this Mama! So it is.

Baby steps, that for me, “un disastre” shall feel like great leaps.

Classical Music and Food Banks

Standing at the kitchen sink, my eyes sting with tears. I am listening to the Classical Music station, which is in the midst of its Fall pledge drive. I want to contribute. I have been listening every day, even as they fund-raise. Again and again, in every possible way, the hosts cajole, encourage, beg, and plead for contributions. But I have nothing to give. Further, the hosts remind their listeners that every contribution to the station will also generate a matching contribution to the Oregon Food Bank, feeding the bodies of the hungry and the poor. I feel the stinging at the corners of my eyes, and for a moment, I look through the window with blurry sight.

I cannot contribute any money. Indeed, I have been wondering lately if we are “poor enough” to visit a food bank ourselves, and each day the radio station has brought this question to mind. I have been calculating our expenses. I have been trying to budget. I have been holding back on any personal or extraneous spending. But sometimes I buy a chocolate bar. We get mid-range coffee and have not yet made a switch to Folgers. We even paid a babysitter and went out for a little date for our wedding anniversary. Perhaps if we cut all of those things….Perhaps if I had not bought extra food and gifts for my son’s birthday, if I had not thrown him a little party, perhaps then we could make it, then we could break even. If I never bought any presents at all. Is it okay to go to the food bank, so that I can afford to throw a very small birthday party for my son? If I was able to get some free groceries, that could balance out the costs….My head spins. I am not too good to accept charity. I am not too proud to take a hand-out. But I don’t want to take something from someone else who is in greater need. And I feel unsure….How much personal sacrifice should we make, before we accept for ourselves the sacrifices of others (who donate food) on our behalf? I don’t know. I never thought I would be here, trying to figure this out.

The music returns, and for a few moments, I think about calling in. The station, the music, it’s beauty have been sustaining me these days. Every day, as I do dishes–there are always dishes–I can turn on the radio, for free, and listen to beautiful music. I can experience some of the greatest heights of human culture, the greatest moments of musical composition, that which speaks wordlessly, speaks to, empathizes with, and uplifts one’s soul. As I debate about food, my soul is still nourished. I cannot make a contribution, not right now, not today or any day soon, but I want to call in and thank them for this, for this gift of Beauty to one who can little afford it. I want to ask if someone would donate on my behalf. Because being able to listen to this is keeping me afloat right now. For whatever we lack in money, we have a library and a music station and thus access to the most beautiful things in the world. We are poor in funds, but the riches available to our souls–for free–are nearly boundless, as much as we can consume! I think about calling in, but I don’t. I still haven’t made up my mind about whether or not we can go to the Food Bank. And I don’t think I could make it through the phone call, not without bursting into tears. As much as we have in Beauty, I still feel our lack, and the pain of it, still stings.

For Richer or Poorer

Thus it is with heavy secret burdens that we arrive at my husband’s cousin’s wedding. I am miserably pregnant, and now, terrifyingly poor. My husband is worried. I have been deeply depressed. But my husband’s family doesn’t know about any of that. To them, we’ll appear to be living the good life: new job, new rental, no more deployments, and exciting new adventures. I’m a stay-at-home mom, which is quite a luxury to much of the world, and for most of my husband’s family too. Everything appears like it’s wonderful. I prepare to paste on a smile, and hope it doesn’t look as weary as I feel, lest I should have to explain the sigh beneath the surface.

Even still, I am glad we came. My husband’s family is a big, boisterous, bubbly group of working-class Catholics…construction workers, home-builders, blinds installer, lunch lady, school secretary, teacher, highway patrolman, and mommas and papas to gaggles of children. The mother of today’s groom has ten kids, my husband has five siblings, his other aunt has seven children, a friend has four….just a few families happily fill the church with a joyful bustle.

The church is glowing, cheerfully lit up and adorned with simple, hope-filled flowers. Little girls twirl in their dresses. Boys run in and out, back and forth, wrinkling their shirts, both laughing and grumbling. The sanctuary is full of life, in all its stages.

I try to embrace the happiness, joy, and hope of it all. For brief moments I do, but then I remember…. Without succeeding, I try to embrace the new life growing within my womb. I try to celebrate the mystery of motherhood, the privilege of carrying another soul inside my own body, next to my heart. I try to face the reality of our new financial hardship with courage, with humility, with all of those virtues that I thought I possessed but now find badly wanting! I try to find a way to lift my head above the waters, to catch my breath, to find my place, something to stand on, something to grab onto, some lighthouse to show me a path through this terrible fog inside my mind.

We settle our family into a pew, and again I remember to be thankful. Happy, healthy children. A faithful, loving, and patient husband. My babe-in-arms is a squirmy, crawling 10-month old. I walk with him to the back of the church, follow him as he crawls, lift him to my hip and sway, trying to catch glimpses of the Nuptial Mass. I can’t help remembering my own wedding, which feels so long ago now, just six years later. I was so perfectly happy back then. So full of hope. I wasn’t worried about anything. I never imagined being poor, or depressed, or miserable. I didn’t know where life would take us, but it all seemed such a grand adventure awaiting, a life-long honeymoon to come! So long as I could have my husband…

My husband. He suffered greatly in the Navy, getting the paychecks, housing, and perks that allowed us–me and the children that soon came along–to live comfortably and securely as we started our family life. I never had to worry about the bills getting paid, or having another mouth to feed. But for Jacob, it was awful. He was miserable in every way, except in knowing that I was alright, and that his family was well. But he toiled under a great burden of depression, misery… He had the opportunity to get a $70,000 BONUS if he signed on for three more years of service. That was certainly more money than we had ever had, or expected to have, at any one time. But it was out of the question. He was miserable. I wasn’t sure he’d make it another three years, and if he did, I wasn’t sure I would know the man he’d become, wasn’t sure that he would be able to recover himself from three more years of such affecting service.

So we left, without looking back. Prospects looked so good. We were so happy. My husband looked years younger and like he’d dropped a heavy pack from his shoulders, as his military contract finally came to an end. He was free. He had survived. We were moving on! That chapter was over for him. And this, this right here, this was supposed to be the happy time. The new chapter. The new adventure. Our Happily Ever After.

Instead, I am depressed, pregnant, poor, scared, ashamed.

I collect my crawling boy from the vestibule floor and bounce him vigorously, trying to keep him quiet. I desperately want to watch and hear the bride and groom say their vows, my favorite part. I manage to watch from the back, focusing on them as they transform from separate persons to become husband and wife, with glowing eyes and enraptured smiles. As the words of promise leave their mouths, I vividly recall and mouth my own sacred vows:

I, Shannon, take you, Jacob, for my lawful husband, to have and to hold, from this day
forward, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, until death do us part.

Why, I suddenly think, why did I never think the negative side of those vows would have to be fulfilled? I realize, with some shock, my maiden naivete. That as I stood at the altar, I, perhaps like nearly every blushing bride and groom, only imagined the good parts: for better, for richer, in health, forever! Why would we ever be unhappy? Certainly we would never be poor. We were humble starting out of course, but everything was just going to get better and go up from there! Health, happiness, and comfort were all coming our way!

Alas. Although I said the words, I very much did not expect, “for worse” or “for poorer.” I never expected to need those vows. I meant them. But I didn’t expect to have to live them. Yet here I was.

And rocking my squirmy boy, I remember too some words I had heard from Pope Francis, when he addressed a group of newly-weds, he said: “When I meet someone who is getting married … I say to them, ‘You are the ones who have courage!’ Because it is not easy to form a family, not easy to commit your life for ever; it takes courage.”

It takes courage.

This is a part of marriage that I never expected to experience. For worse. For poorer. Indeed, it is the first time any doubt about my marriage has fluttered across the surface of my mind–not doubt about my marriage, itself, but rather, the realization that my marriage is fallible, that it could be difficult, it is difficult, and that, that if I don’t rise to the challenges now, it could even–no, I can’t quite suggest it, because I won’t let it happen–but now, for the first time, I can see how a marriage, even my own marriage, could fall apart. I see how the strain of my depression, the stress of our too-small duplex, the pain of the financial limitations and worries…I admit that I see how it could be too much, that beneath such weights a marriage bond could snap, especially if little or no dedicated efforts were made to care for it…

My husband.

I, Shannon, take you, Jacob, for my lawful husband, to have and to hold, from this day
forward, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, until death do us part.

In the back of the church, witnessing the wedding of a young couple full of hope and joy for their newly married future, I am profoundly moved. My own circumstances, as painful as they are for me, are still a living out of these very vows, a part of this journey of marriage. I didn’t picture this on my wedding day. But this too, as much as the white dress and maiden blush, this too, is marriage. The facing of real trials, genuine hardship and uncertainty, with faith, together.

Yes, it does take courage.

That is part of the great mystery of marriage, “not for the faint of heart,” as a dear old friend would say. When one stands at the altar, it is a true act of faith and love, to say, without caveat or reservation: I vow to love you forever, to be forever yours, whatever happens, under whatever circumstances, no matter what.

Till death do us part.

That is the vow. And I absolutely meant it then, and I still mean it now. I just understand it, in a way, for the first time. This, this right here, right now, what I thought was going to be my fairy-tale ever-after, this is my marriage. These are my vows. And now, now is the time I must muster myself to live up to them.

For Better or Worse.

For Richer or Poorer.

Till death do us part.

Becoming Poor

The Setting

We were in the car, driving down to a cousin’s wedding, when my husband broke the news. We had recently left the military and moved across the country. My husband had accepted his first post-Navy job offer, and I was, unhappily, newly pregnant. We were living in a crowded two-bedroom rental with our three current children, the youngest less than a year old, and another baby on the way. I had been feeling sick, stressed, miserable, and depressed, spending much of my spare time crying on the couch. After six years of military life, including long deployments and duty days (nights and weekends my husband had to stay at work all day and overnight), we had been looking forward to this period of our marriage with great joy and expectation. My husband could work a normal job, normal hours, no deployments, and we could enjoy a long-awaited regular family life. We weren’t expecting to be rich, just normal and incredibly happy. What could be happier than my beloved husband coming home every night?

But I wasn’t happy. Instead, I had been a total disaster. The new pregnancy I thought I wanted, when just weeks ago I had been glowing with hope for our future, had quickly became a heavy burden, as the reality of it, along with the symptoms of nausea and exhaustion, set in. We wouldn’t really fit into our current rental with four children, at least not comfortably, which would mean moving again. We had moved far away from family to pursue other dreams and friendships, and I was feeling stressed, guilty and confused about that decision. Really, after six years of military life, of being provided for and having the military decide where we would live and work, the reality of making a decision, any major decision, was causing me terrible stress. I was worried about making the best decision for my spouse and for our children. I was stressed about the “new responsibility” of paying the housing and utility bills, and healthcare costs. I was worried about having enough time and energy to care for a new baby and our other children. In addition to these concerns , I had been swimming in what was most-likely a hormone induced depression, leaving me feeling hopeless and barely able to function, as if a dark cloud followed me everywhere, generally pushing me to the couch for another cry and lonely stare out the window.

Thus, it was not surprising that I didn’t want to make the six or seven hour drive, with three offspring in the van, to a cousin’s wedding, where I would need to smile and act happy, and avoid the wine while also trying to hide my early pregnancy. The last thing I wanted was to be congratulated! I wasn’t in the mood to have Aunts and Uncles and Cousins discussing this pregnancy that I could barely tolerate, nor was I in the mood for celebrating anything, perhaps marriage in particular. I might have been in the mood to drink copious amounts of wine, had that been a viable option. But my husband wanted to go. And I wasn’t expecting to find myself any happier by spending the weekend on the couch, blankly staring out the window. Perhaps a change of scenery would help somehow. The little too-small house was still strewn with boxes that didn’t fit anywhere. At least I could spend a day or two without tripping over them. Without enthusiasm, I agreed to the trip. We would divide up the driving into two days, so we would spend Friday night at a hotel en-route. That was part of my reason for going. To spend a night in a clean, uncluttered, nearly-a-vacation hotel. It sounded almost refreshing. So we threw the few pieces of luggage in the van and started on our way on Friday night, the kids watching a movie, then drifting off to sleep, leaving my husband and I with some precious time to talk on the road.

I always cherish that idle time with my spouse beside me, the open road ahead of us, the slowly changing scenery around us, the hours to spend in each others’ company, talking about anything and everything. And now, despite my depression, my struggle, even my nausea, it was good to be in the van, good to be beside my still-beloved spouse, and after so much change, stress, and business, it was good to be able to talk. It was at this point, as the children drifted off to sleep, as we curved through the growing darkness, that my beloved broke the news…

The Shock

“I don’t want to add to your stress, but I have to tell you this.” My body stiffened. My husband never had ominous announcements to make. What could be worse than how I had already been feeling about everything? Or than the actual challenges of our circumstances, and this new pregnancy. What could he possibly need to add, right now?

“I got our first paycheck.” Yes, right. His new job. His first paycheck. Out of the military. That should be good. He’s working. We’re getting paid–

“It was low. $790.”

My breath caught, my body tensed. I gripped the arm rests on the car, as a sense of panic was tightening my chest, tensing my jaw, widening my eyes. I did the math in my head. It’s not too difficult… not quite $800 for one week of work, times 2 is $1600, not quite, for two weeks of work, which means less than $3, 200 of monthly take-home income. Only $3,000 a month!

Are taxes really that high? How could I be so stupid? How are we going to live? Our rent is nearly half that, not counting utilities. We normally spent around $500/week on…stuff. Life. I had been expecting around $4,000/month take-home pay, maybe $4,500. Not $3,000! By my rough calculations of our expenses, we would be around $1,000 short of funds, per month! We could make cuts, but how could we cut $1,000 in monthly expenses? And how had I been so foolish to move across the country for a new job and not realize how much our paychecks would actually be!!!

In that moment, I felt panic. I felt shock. I felt stupid. But I also felt the need to pull myself together. To muster myself to meet this challenge. To save my marriage. To keep a roof over our heads and, literally, food on the table, the heat on for the winter.

Up until this moment, I had been wallowing in depression over an unwanted pregnancy, laid low by exhaustion, stress, anxiety. But this was a new level of challenge, and I would need to pull myself together. Because this is real life. This is confronting a real hardship. This is being an adult. A parent. A wife.

For the first time in my life, I wonder if we will be able to pay our bills. I never imagined I would be in a situation where that would be a question. Having grown up wealthy, privileged, and with the unconscious expectation of being wealthy myself (without even thinking about what is required to be wealthy), it is a scenario with which I have no familiarity. I feel fear, even terror, and certainly shame at this possibility, but most strikingly, I feel the biting pangs of pride. My parents are still wealthy, but I desperately don’t want to have to crawl home to my parents to ask for money or help. But how will we make it?

I turn to look at my husband. He is burdened, disappointed. He feels responsible, as if guilty of this. He knows I have been depressed and struggling, and now it appears we won’t be making enough money to cover our needs, much less our wants. “If only I had stayed in the military, we’d have more than enough….”

No. I stop him. No. He was miserable in the military. He was deeply depressed. I was losing him. He was losing his soul. Nothing is worth that. Nothing. No amount of money or financial security. I need him to be okay. And I know he needs me to be okay too. We are in this together.

We’ll figure it out, I tell him. I take his hand and squeeze. He squeezes back. And we begin. We begin talking, strategizing. What can we cut? Where can we save? How can we add additional income?

As our car weaves through the hills, my emotions are a tangled jumble: panic, fear, guilt, embarrassment, frustration, shock…but also a bit of courage, gratitude, and real love. I can turn and look back at my three children sleeping peacefully in their car seats, healthy, content, beautiful. I can hold my husband’s hand and be assured of his unwavering love and commitment to our marriage, our children. Putting my depression to the side, we are all healthy and well. We are not facing death, disability, divorce, or some sort of irreparable crisis. There is much to be grateful for. Most of all, we love each other. My husband is still my best friend. He loves me. And even though I don’t feel very loveable or very lovely, I love him.

Quite late we arrive at the hotel, and carry sleeping children into bed. I try not to think about how much the hotel costs, because I now know we can’t afford it, whatever it is. In the morning, I try to enjoy the sweetness of being a family sharing a hotel room, my children’s delight at waking up in a new place, the sense of adventure in just walking down to breakfast. This is exciting. I remember going on trips as a kid, and marvel at the fact that I am the parent now, in the role of the grown up, with grown up concerns. But even with the weight of them, I can still enjoy these moments, the enthusiasm of my children, their many joys, the joy of being together.

Still, I am looking at the world differently. I will be poor now. I have been voluntarily poor before. But I always had a generous bank account waiting for me. And I wasn’t paying rent then, or caring for a family. When I volunteered to be poor, for a time, a time that was clearly chosen and temporary, I had made sacrifices. I had not eaten at restaurants. I had not bought items. I lived with extreme simplicity. But now I feel the very real difference of having that imposed upon me. I wonder about things that I know are trivial, and yet I feel the burden of the enforced sacrifices that I see before me. Will I be able to afford my fancy face wash? My body wash? My preferred brand of deodorant? What about the coffee I like? The fancy dark chocolate? I recognize that, facing our current situation, every luxury should be cut. I had always assumed myself virtuous enough to cut these little luxuries “if necessary,” and I know that I can, but I feel the very real difference between the hypothetical and the actual.

And those are just the little things. But there will be big things too. We won’t be able to afford vacations. Activities for the children. Groceries? I really don’t know if we’ll be able to afford groceries! And, of course, the biggest one: A house! We had hoped to buy a house. Now, my hope shall be, oh this hurts, to not be evicted!

Suddenly I understand the fear, the stress, the pain of poor families. The sacrifices they must make. The things they can’t have or can’t do. The things they cannot buy for their children. It’s one thing to not be able to afford something for myself. It’s quite another to not be able to afford something I want to give to my children, or worse, something that they actually need. It’s scary. It’s heavy. And it hurts.

Quietly, I carefully collect every consumable item I can take with us from the hotel….the soaps, the half-used mini shampoos. I slip some oranges and raisins from the breakfast bar into my purse to serve as a snack on the road. I have never done that before. Not like this. Now, we can’t afford a snack from the gas station, and I don’t know if we’ll be able to afford shampoo. If we’re going to cut $1,000/month from our expenses, even drops of shampoo will need to be measured and counted.

I am scared, but I also feel resolved. I have been self-absorbed in my depression. Now I have a concrete challenge to face, one that is outside myself, one that requires my attention, energy, and sacrifice. My husband needs me. My children need me. And I need to face this challenge for them.