Monday 30 March 2015

Remembering Tawa and Tino



On March 30 2014, my friend Fortune Bango-Macheri lost her two precious babies in a road accident. This being the first anniversary of the tragic event, it can't be easy on her. I didn't have the right words to say to her, so I asked her to talk to me and I would listen. She did...in the story below, which she asked me to share. May Tawa and Tino rest in eternal peace. May the Lord continue to console Fortune and her husband.  The pictures are a bit haphazard because she wanted all of them to accompany the article...
 I had not visited my friend, Violet since the day she had moved from Kokstad to stay in Matatiele. All I had given to her were just empty promises. She had visited us a countless times and once slept over with her whole family. Many weekends she had sent her two children over, Audrey and Taku to spend time with my beautiful children, Tawa and Tino. So on this particular weekend, I had decided it was high time I returned the favour. That's it!  We were all going to Violet’s house for the whole weekend. 
On the other hand, I was getting tired of hitting a brick wall with the Kokstad traffic department to get my driver's license.  Having gone there the previous Friday, the Matatiele traffic department had proven to be more helpful and   understanding. I took the Friday off work and packed everything for the weekend on Thursday night, there was overwhelming excitement and both my kids couldn't wait to leave the house. Tawa had had a chance once to visit Violet's house and he had loved almost everything there.  He had said their television was bigger than ours, their fridge too was bigger and most importantly, Violet had always dished a sausage in Tawa's plate that was bigger than I would do. My bubbly son, Tawa, loved food. Sausage was the third item on his food list after Steers Double Cheese Burger and Debonairs Triple Decker Pizza. Early Friday morning we hit the road and no one slept a wink till we got to Matatiele.  After successfully sorting out my licence issues, we had a great weekend.  We went shopping, talked and laughed most of the time. Tino, my daughter was a loving fan of Audrey (still finding it unbelievable to use the word was - never thought I would ever in my lifetime). Audrey had a habit of spoiling Tino rotten. Despite Tino going to turn six in the next three months, Audrey would put her on the back, lift her like a little baby and kiss her all the time. They played with dolls, rode together on Audrey’s bike and did all sorts of girls stuff. It was the best weekend away.
The day we should have all dreaded arrived, Sunday, goodbyes were due. The weekend felt so short and we didn't want to leave but we had to.  We were due to leave in the morning. I had promised my brother, Silence and his wife Selina that we would pass through their place and spend some time with their new baby, Ethan. Tino loved Ethan to bits. She loved to touch his little and fragile fingers, toes and almost every part of his tiny wonderful body. Ethan was the first little baby Tino had experienced in her life. Somehow we got delayed and the more we did, the more my kids loved it.  Tawa decided to get busy with games on my tablet.  Realizing that Taku and Tino would never leave him to enjoy the games, he took our car keys and locked himself in the car. Fortunately for him, I was the only one who noticed his strategy. I was amused not by his selfishness, but by his ability to identify challenges, come up with solutions by himself and successfully implement them without assistance. That was a survival skill, I thought.  As all bags were being packed in the car Tino was almost in tears. She didn't want to go back.  Her school, Power of Love Pre- school had closed for school holidays.  Audrey's school too had closed. Both Audrey and herself were on holidays, so why would she go back home?  Half of me wanted her stay but a thought struck me. My friend was going to have a new maid the next day and her son, Taku always took time to get used to strangers.  So I thought leaving Tino behind wouldn't do any good but just overwhelm Audrey.  After forcing everyone in the car, we drove away. Before we got any further, I mistakenly thought I had left my work books and we had to drive back.  Before I could step out of the car, I realised that l had all my books and needed not delay going home. Out of the blue, Violet appeared with two hotdogs for my kids, as if she knew it was the last time she had to spoil them. The children indulged themselves in the delicious treats, still sulking though, and we sped off. There was total silence in the car and tension was high. Within minutes, both kids had retired from a hectic day. I too, was getting sleepy and in no time, it got the better of me leaving my poor husband the only person awake.
In what felt like a short period of time I was forced to come back to life. The car was moving in a weird way. When I was wide awake I was horrified, we were out of the road and headed towards what seemed like a scary, long and wide wall of rocks. I had a complete black out only waking up when the car was upside down had come to a halt. Everything happened so quickly, in the blink of an eye, I had lost the most precious gift any parent could ever have. Without much difficulty I found my way out of the car wreck but I was alarmed by the silence. My kids who were scared of a housefly or the smallest ant on earth were not calling out my name. Why on earth were they not screaming out loud for attention?  I began to panic just like any mother on earth would do. I just knew that something was wrong, it's called mother’s instinct, you just know. I could not open the back doors so had to run round the other way. At this juncture I was behaving like a headless chicken. My head was a pot of confusion. Before I got far I met my son's body lying outside the car and all the evidence was there that it was too late to save his life. I was terrified. Ooh God what was happening to me? Then I tried to find my daughter, with my heart held in my hands. What had become of my daughter? Other motorists had stopped by and no one allowed me to keep searching. They all said it was too late. I could not believe it, too late for what?
That horrible night I didn't sleep. I was numb, my whole body was stiff and my heart was torn into a million pieces. My whole world had just crushed on me. I felt pain not just from my heart. It was beyond that. Every part of my body was aching, not with physical pain but something that no one can describe. You could just feel it but it was beyond description.  Poor Abigail, my sister-in-law who spent the night with me and had to console me! How do you comfort someone who does not want to be comforted, let alone stop her from crying when it looks impossible? I do not recall much of what transpired that fateful night. My sanity was running up and down, Abigail was really strong, for she had to nurse me too even after the burial of my children.  I was such a total mess, a wound so jagged that could only be soothed by God's love.
The next days were terrible nightmares that I kept hoping   I would wake up from, but alas that was the reality of my life. I felt weak, useless, angry, lost appetite and nothing made sense. I cried inconsolably. Even a word from my pastor could not make me feel better. Something in me kept reminding me that it had not happened to them, they have all their children and so they don't know what they are talking about. I was lost in my own world and my days were dark and empty. Every morning I woke up with such overwhelming, all-consuming pain that I had to stuff my knuckles in my mouth to stop myself from screaming. I wanted to run away from myself if only it was possible. Something inside me whispered continuously: I shouldn't have survived the horrible accident because my life was meaningless without Tawa and Tino. Why had l walked out without a scratch? Every parent lives for their children, work for their little ones and their dreams. Their hopes and future plans have their children written all over. Children give us a purpose to live and thrive in life. Without them life is meaningless, dull, sad and without purpose.  
The only person I understood to realize my pain was my mother for she had lost my two brothers, albeit in different years. I looked at her wondering how she had survived the agony of losing a child. All memories flashed back. I remembered how long back, my mother had cried quietly every single night after losing my 13-year-old brother. How she had grown thin and how I thought she was going to go mad, if not die. Now I understood the sadness in her eyes that shows every now when she smiles or laughs. Her eyes have long lost that sparkle. Only if you know her story can you realize a strange sadness in her laugh, smile, and voice and in her eyes.
I have learned that it will never go away but will live within me for the rest of my life.  I miss them every day. I miss their touch and I miss their voices mostly. I go through all their pictures and just talk to myself and say: Tawa and Tino I still can't believe it. You came into my life for such a short while and brought so much joy and fulfillment, and now it's all memories. If only I had known, I would have played with you more, kissed you every minute, held your special hands and never let go. I would have loved you more, never yelled at you and laughed more. I would have sat with you all the time for your favourite TV shows. I would have watched nothing but Mickey Mouse, Tinkerbell, Barbie in the pink shoes, Spiderman and the rest of them. We would have lived like we knew we won't go beyond 2014 together. Only if I had known. It has been a whole year now but it hurts like it happened yesterday. The wound is still fresh and bleeding. I guess it will never stop. Initially, I was angry with God. What kind of God would entrust me with two beautiful children and then think of me as an unfit mother that he would just grab them back without warning. Was I a bad mother? The answer was NO all the time. I had put my children's happiness and safety first every time. I had sacrificed my journalism career for a teaching career that would allow me more time with my kids at home. I had left my country and my family to build a better future for them here in South Africa. Was that being a bad mother? My heart grieves with any parent who loses a child. No parent should lose or bury their own child but who are we to judge God? My pastor told me that my children are in Heaven and I believe him, the bible says so when Jesus said: Let the little children come to me for the kingdom of Heaven is theirs.
Through this journey and my seeking for answers, I have met some women, women that I never knew existed, women that have walked the same path as me. That have lost a child or two in the same way I lost mine. These women are very strong. I don't know how they have sailed through the storm. They keep saying it won't rain forever but in the rainy days you need a better umbrella. These women are prayer warriors and they depend on God to go by each day. I met Florence. Her two boys, both beyond 10 years old, where food-poisoned at the same time and died on their arrival in hospital in Zimbabwe. Florence never had a chance to say goodbye. It was too late to see them when she got to the hospital. It has been eight years now since her boys passed on, the only children she had. Flo has since moved to Germany and she says it is only by the grace of God that she is not somewhere in a mental hospital or eating from the street bins. Her story gives me strength every day. She is my pillar of strength.
My high school friend and sister, who is now in Canada and had long lost contact just resurfaced from the blue. Sometimes God just throws or brings back some people in our lives in his time and for a certain purpose. Nothing ever happens coincidentally or without his knowledge. Tendai helped me stand on my feet again, encouraged me each day to trust God.  She would phone and check on me more than necessary. Ooh my poor friend Mayda. She didn't know what to do, almost flew in from England. We have been friends since high school and her two daughters are almost same age with my late Tawa and Tino. She made sure that I didn't collapse or turn into a Zombie. Checking on me all the time. My church in Kokstad has been extremely supportive. I don't know if I would still have my sanity without the First Baptist Church in Kokstad. They were there for me from the horrible day and even now. People check on me all the time and I feel so loved. Is that what not families do for each other? Is that not the true meaning of Christianity and what God desires from us? My pastor has a beautiful heart, so understanding and   supportive. He knew exactly what to say and I could understand everything he said to me. It made sense to me. My pastor comforted me with answers from the Bible. He encouraged me with the truth of God's Word. Those who are grieving deserve a compassionate answer rooted in the truth of Scripture. The loss of my kids drew me closer to a couple in our church that had lost their son in an accident. He had not turned 10 years of age. That was Erica and Peter Kaizer. They made it their task to look after me spiritually. They taught me a lot about losing a loved one and still be able to trust God and rejoice in him. They said it was possible to still feel His presence and love even in the darkest hour.   From the Scriptures they gave me every day, I have learnt that scriptural answers without comfort will fall on deaf ears and comfort without scripture will never completely heal and uplift a grieving heart. We need the words from Heaven on the death of a child. Rather we must look at what God's Word has to say on the matter. We are called to be faithful to the word and place our faith in Christ.
My whole family gave me tremendous support. I could see that my sisters were crushed. They were torn apart and I could see their bleeding hearts. My mother was the worst. She had the pain of losing two grandchildren and she carried the pain of her daughter too. Having walked this road before, she knew what was in store for me and feared I would collapse. I had to be strong for her, pretend that I was hurting but surviving yet I was dying inside. Right through my mourning I knew there was a couple that I was going to need to rely on completely.  I knew they were going to take care of me and I needed them badly just to talk to them or cry on their shoulders. The Brittinghams. I had worked with Allen and Gloria Brittingham for years and we went to the same church. They are more like family to me and they loved my children very much.  Allen, who is a prayerful man, taught me that my children have never been beyond the loving care and concern or watchful eye of the Lord even at the time of death. Their destiny is according to His carefully wrought plan and purpose.  Mr B (as my kids loved to call him instead of the long name Brittingham) continuously said: no one can ever fall into any situation or circumstance that is shielded from God's view. God is completely in control of our lives. We are firmly and fully within his grasp every moment of our existence. The decision whether a child lives or dies is God's decision. He allows birth, He also allows death. No death or life occurs apart from the purposes of God. These are the wise and unforgettable words Allen taught me. Recently I have been reading a book his wife, Gloria gave me: Martha's Journey written by Maureen Lee.   This book contains a story of a very ordinary woman, six months pregnant, working full time in a factory sewing sacks to raise her five children, Martha Rossi, suffered the agony of the death of her fourteen year old son   in France in the heat of a battle. It chronicles the hurt and anguish mothers experience and the need for answers mothers go through after losing a child. Now I am on my second book: Safe In The Arms Of God written by John MacArthur. Erica Kaizer gave me this book and I’m beginning to understand why she wanted me to have it and probably read it. This book talks about what happens to children when they die.  It tries to answer the question: Is my child in Heaven, with scriptural truth revealing the Heavenly Father's care for every life.  
This is a painful journey. To all mothers who are walking with me or have walked this road or will happen to walk this road, let your comfort begin with the truth in God's word. God created your child. God's purpose and destiny for your child are fulfilled perfectly, even if the child died. That is the reality.  I’m not saying this with ease. For me too, it is not a walk in the park and it never will be. I’m still trying to get that into my thick head. My struggle didn't end by just meeting these people and them sharing their stories or God's word with me. I still struggle to get through birthdays and special holidays without my children. In the weakness of my own logic, I still struggle to understand what happened. I still struggle to be submissive to God's plan and serving Him joyfully until the day he calls me home to Himself. The struggle never end I guess.
Many thanks to friend Charlotte Nyatanga for encouraging me write out my thoughts. I thought it was going to be a big challenge to do so, only to realise that I needed to let it out. It also gave me a platform to look back, view myself in the mirror and measure to see how far I have moved since 30 March 2014 to 30 March 2015. I realised that it can only be the Lord who has covered me with his Grace and taken me this far. Otherwise if I didn't believe in him and didn't have such a strong support network, I would be in a mental hospital or naked, eating from street bins of South Africa. All Glory be to God forever and ever.






















Thursday 12 March 2015

Of predatory men of the cloth, friends, and trusting yourself before others...



My friend Sihle and I were discussing how people are overly dependent on others. We sometimes have an astounding lack of faith in ourselves and end up placing our life decisions in the hands of friends, relatives or even total strangers instead of being responsible for our own lives. Whenever we encounter crises, we want to go around consulting friends, relatives, and strangers and take their advice.These are just people who probably know bits and pieces of our lives, not the full story. When you get advice from all and sundry, you get really confused about what to use and wind up in a worse situation than before you went shopping for the advice. And these people won’t be there when we have to live with the consequences of the decisions they helped us make. They have their own lives to live, you know, their own problems to solve. I’ve seen it happen in car parks at shopping malls. A clueless car guard who wants a coin or two from you stands behind your car as you are reversing and starts to direct you with hand signals going, “Woza boss, woza boss! Wooooza boss!”  You innocently trust the car guard knows what he’s doing until WHAM!! A car comes from nowhere and hits you. You get out to assess the damage and ask the guard how he let that happen, but he’s disappeared into thin air and you’re left to pick up the pieces.
I have nothing against sharing our problems, sometimes, so that we don’t suffer in silence. There, however, has to be a limit to how much we are prepared to share and who we share that with. We need to wisely pick the people to talk to about matters that are really private. I’ve had my moments when I felt I had over-shared and started stewing in my own juices thinking, “Good Lord, why did I divulge all those details?” Sometimes you tell someone something personal and discover after that conversation that you’re in a deeper hole than you were in before the conversation. I did it once when I had a problem that I thought was really insurmountable. I called my friend and told her about it. She said, “From the look of it, your problem is most likely going to get worse so you must just pray. Sorry hako! (Pity you!) As for me, well, my life is a fairytale. I just don’t go around saying it because people will hate me for it”. Sharing that problem reaped no rewards.
These days the fashionable thing is to run to faith healers who congregants call “powerful men of God”, “Papa”, and other titles of endearment.  
On numerous occasions we hear stories of people who were fleeced off by prophets who they had entrusted to pray for them. Countless women, around Africa especially, have been raped and/or impregnated by these “powerful men of God”, men have lost their wives to these shepherds that prey on their flock. Why we insist on calling another person man/woman of God is beyond me. We are all people of God, created in his image. I acknowledge that there are people who are gifted at saying powerful prayers, but that doesn’t mean we should bestow all our faith in those people to a point where they become deities. There’s only one God for me to worship. The rest are mere mortals who have their own sins to repent for. The bible says, “For all have sinned and come short of his glory”. Christianity has never been as confusing as it is in this era. Anyone who just fails to find a job will study the bible from front to back, back to front, run and form a church. Before you can say “Hallelujah” they are Pastor or Reverend so and so, even though there is nothing to revere about their conduct.
I’m not anything near what people call a “Prayer Warrior”, I totter in my faith a lot, but I am aware that I need to have constant personal connection with God. Things happen in life that make you sit down and reflect, and realise that regardless of how much wisdom you think you have, how revered you are in the community or how many resources you have at your disposal, without God you’re nothing. You need to say your prayers from the heart, not through an intermediary. It’s not like being a company executive where you can assign your PA to send flowers to one client, thank you notes to the other, and a bottle of champagne to the next. To those clients, everything will be acknowledged as having come from you. But prayer is a different ball game altogether. God will know that you are sending other people to pray for you while you’re not doing anything for yourself. If your prophet prays for you, God will know it’s not you and that you’re sending messengers even though he said, “Come let’s reason together,” in Isaiah 1:18. I know people who haven’t knelt a day in their lives to pray but are quick to run to prophets at the first sign of turmoil to get prayed for. I’m all for people praying for each other, the bible supports that too. But expecting some of these weird pastors, or anyone, to intercede for us while we lordly sit by expecting some miracle to happen is wrong on so many levels. It’s a display of arrogance.
We need to take time to study the bible, think about our lives and pray for God’s guidance in everything that we do. We shouldn’t just jump to ask our friends for solutions before even giving ourselves time to reflect on our problems and coming up with our own solutions.

Related:
Robbing people in the name of Jesus

This little diary in my head...



Forgive everyone for everything
Forget issues of the past

I got a chain message from my sister with the above recommendations. Sometimes I wish I could lose the diary in my head. Wouldn’t that be lovely? A bad experience comes your way, you deal with it and immediately tear out the page out of your diary and POOF, and it’s gone. Never to be remembered again.  It’s so hard to forgive everyone for everything. Some people hurt us in ways that turns us into monsters that forget the values we held before. As for forgetting the past, we can’t really help what we remember, can we?
Having a sharp memory ought to be a blessing but sometimes it can work against us. There are things that I remember that are like a dagger to my soul. When I think about them, all I want to do is retrace my steps to the moment it happened and handle things differently, by maybe poking someone in the eye with a toothpick.  There are things you just wish to forget but can’t.

Many sermons have been delivered with regards to the subject of forgiveness, but I doubt that having it drummed into you over and over again changes your pace of walking towards forgiving those that hurt you. People should be allowed the space to forgive in their own time. You don’t flog someone like a horse and chant “forgive, forgive!” until they relent. It doesn’t really work that way. Forgiving is a process, not an event. I just find it strange that it’s the offenders that usually want to push those they offended into the forgiving corner. You offend me when it suits you and you also dictate when I should forgive you?
They will come brandishing bibles, chanting verses on forgiving and shoving our faith into our faces. “You’re a Christian, so you should forgive.” You’re spiritually blackmailed with words such as, “God forgives you when you err. Why don’t you forgive too? Where was your bible when you set out to offend others? Yes, I’m a Christian. A struggling Christian. The devil can, indeed, cite scripture for his purpose, as Shakespeare said. There are also verses about not offending others.
Some things are easy to forgive, like accidentally breaking someone’s china or stepping on their foot. But acts of deliberate cruelty, like breaking a heart or spirit sometimes can take a lifetime before the slate is wiped clean again. People always say: “Forgiving doesn’t mean you have to forget how you were hurt.” what does that even mean? They say a burnt child dreads fire. Meaning if a child was burnt at some point, next time he sees a fire, he immediately knows that’s the enemy. The child is cautious around the fire, not wanting to get too close. That’s exactly what happens when people get hurt. The victim is wary of the ones that hurt him and might want to keep them at arm’s length. But that’ not what people want. They want to see that you’ve forgiven them by allowing them back into your space again like nothing ever happened. Once you remember something negative that was done to you, you can’t help the emotions that flow with the memory. You feel angry or hurt all over again. It’s like a dormant volcano. The anger or sadness is not always visible but it’s there somewhere, waiting for a trigger for it to resurface.
Also funny how some people think they should be forgiven because a long time has passed since they offended, not even because they apologised. I’ve heard people say, “Don’t tell me you’re still angry about that! That happened so long ago!” So what if it happened a long time ago? Hurt doesn’t melt like ice. Asking for forgiveness also doesn’t mean you will automatically be forgiven, so don’t go and pester someone whose feelings you hurt asking, “How come you haven’t forgiven me? Didn’t I say sorry?” I wish there was a magic wand to wave all bad memories away. When you keep remembering bad things that were done to you in the past, sometimes it takes away from present happiness. I don’t think anyone wants to be tormented by the past, but forgiving is difficult because we remember how someone’s actions or words made us feel. The best way to avoid unhappy memories is by not creating them in the first place.
Back in the day I used to note every significant incident in my diary just so that at the end of the year I would reflect on what happened over the 12 months. Now I don’t always do that because some things are quite insignificant and you actually forget them. Then when you read the diary, you go, “What! But how could s/he?” And then with other things, you don’t even need a diary, the offense is right there at the back of your mind, always rearing its ugly head on occasion.
People can always be counted on to tread on your toes and stab you in the back. Keeping the diary in your head isn’t entirely a bad thing. There are people whose presence in your life requires that you always remember to sleep with one eye open because of what you know they are capable of.

Feeding the body that works



Yesterday I was chatting with a beloved friend who is suffering from a serious case of burnout. She told me how everything was weighing down on her to a point where she has totally withdrawn into her shell and can’t enjoy the things she loved before. I have such moments too, together with many other people. Sometimes I feel so overwhelmed with my responsibilities and the walls start closing in on me.  I start to obsessively think about the frustrations in my life and begin to feel that my life really sucks and no-one quite understands what I’m going through.  I can almost physically feel cobwebs invading my brain in moments like those, it’s not a good feeling trust you me.
We usually get so caught up in the rat race that we forget what really matters in life. Of course,what matters in life is relative. We all have our different takes on the matter. What really counts for me is to have meaningful relationships, contentment, and good health. Now, if I’m disgruntled, then all the above can’t come into fruition.
I told my friend that it was normal to be discontented, but what counted most was what we did with the feeling. We don’t drown by falling into the water but by staying there.  Sometimes we need to sit down and look at our lives to find out where exactly the roof is leaking and take the necessary measures. Some levels of burnout just require us to have a brisk walk or jog, watch a movie, a much needed chat with an old pal, or reading a good novel and you feel rejuvenated. Others require a complete overhaul of one’s life, like changing career path, weeding out toxic people from our lives, or “talking to someone”, that isseeing a professional counsellor. I come from a society that hasn’t fully embraced the expediency of counselors, but these are very important people that are trained to help us put our lives back into perspective when the tide threatens to overpower us.

I asked my friend if she had a hobby to help her take her mind off things and she said her days were cram jam full of responsibilities and there was just no time for frivolities like hobbies. That’s where we go wrong, in my opinion. Dwelling on our woes just sinks us deeper into the abyss that is depression. It has this way of creeping up on one. Sometimes all you need to get out of a negative mindset is a fun activity to help you clear your head and get back on the horse. It’s difficult to come up with effective solutions to life’s problems when you are down at the bottom of the barrel.
I’m not a counselor, but I have a formula that works for me. When I’m feeling particularly low, I squeeze in about 30 minutes to do something I love. Before I know it, the 30 minutes would have overrun to an hour or two and that works wonders for my brain. Having a hobby is underrated. My hobbies keep me sane. I get so absorbed in what I enjoy doing that I forget to think about what’s bugging me. I love writing, reading, cross-stitch and exercising. For those, like my friend, who feel there just aren’t enough hours in a day to factor in hobbies, it might mean waking up early or sleeping later than usual to get some me-time. Draft a timetable like a school kid and stick religiously to it if time management is an issue.
Taking care of our head space is just as important, if not more, as everything else. There are just too many things clamouring for our attention – kids, work, households, spouses, extended family and more. We are, however, not effective in our respective duties if we feel stretched beyond what we can endure. We can’t take care of the needs of others without taking care of ourselves. Sometimes when I remove myself from my children to breathe a little and recharge my batteries, I start to feel guilty. I feel selfish for enjoying myself after leaving my baby with the sitter, screaming for me. I have to keep silently chanting to myself, “I deserve this time alone, I need it, baby is going to be just fine”.