"Strength." -  Shade's answer to the pre-trip question, "What are we going to the mountain to  learn?"
 "Push through." -  Shade's answer to the question, "What are you going to do when it gets  hard?"
  "I will cheer for you, I'll encourage you, I'll go  with you, I'll lead you, I'll serve you,  I'll take some of your load, but the largest part of this climb is  yours...and I can't help you with it." - Yours Truly, with some coaching from my friend Keith, to  my son, Shade, on our first day's  hike 
 Something in me is crying as I  begin writing this one...I'm not sure why.
 Maybe it's because the lesson  from this part of the trip is so good, but scary. So necessary, so true,  but sometimes I just wish it wasn't.
 Maybe it's because I still  haven't totally learned this one, and don't want  to.
 Let me start by saying that  sometimes it is my good heart that hurts my kids. It is my deep  love...my willingness to do anything for them...that could end up  handicapping them. Limiting them. Holding them back in a childhood that is not  supposed to last forever. I don't mean to do this. I have full intentions of  intentionally helping my kids grow up. I'm not pushing it, mind you. On the  contrary, I love them as children, but sometimes I can feel myself loving them  as children so much that I wouldn't mind them staying there. Or, at  least, my desire to be a "good and loving dad" makes me help them (or bail them  out) a little too much.
 Okay, moving  on...
 Shade crossed the bridge over  the wide and fast-moving Upper Animas River with enthusiasm and a bounce in  his step. We had a half-mile hike back down river to a trail that started going  up (and up and up) that followed along the beautiful Needle Creek (one  of those "whoa...look at that!" creeks that tempts you to stop around every  corner and gaze on it's flow, it's waterfalls, its nooks and crannies). We began  this trek at over 7000 feet, and were going to go steadily up (meaning,  less oxygen in the air) and far (meaning, we will spend all day doing this).  Within the first mile, the glamour, excitement, and romanticism of this trip was  quickly overcome by the harsh realities around us, and the plan before us.  
 Shade didn't blatantly want  out, but he sure wanted it easier than it was.
 He started complaining about  his feet, and his knees, and how "he can't breathe" and that his pack was too  heavy. We took regular breaks, which quickly became his favorite part of the  climb (can't blame him there, it was quickly becoming mine too!). I was  right with him every step, and started feeling like I might have been a little  over-zealous about how much weight he was carrying. He's a 60 pound kid and he  was carrying about 19 pounds. Keith and I split about 9 pounds of that (thinking  about the idea that none of us were carrying 1/3rd of our body weight). But  still, despite all my pre-trip warnings and preparations about the difficulty of  this first day, Shade was struggling with having to endure it.  Where is the fun in this?
 Pause. A few weeks earlier, my  wife had a bunch of girls over in our living room late one Wednesday night.  Shade and I were in there enjoying their company when he pulled a first. He  said, "Dad, can I talk with you privately?" 
 "Sure," I said, as I went with  him into the other room. He was wanting to confess something, and as it came out  of him, I could see he was looking for reassurance, motivation, and  courage.
 He began..."I'm real excited  about our trip to the mountain. Except for one part of it that is making me  nervous. That first day that you say is going to be so  hard."
 I nodded. "Yeah, me too, Shade.  It's going to be a tough day. But you remember when we were praying together,  asking God about why He had us going on this trip? About what He wanted you to  learn? What gift He wanted to give you?"
 "Strength," Shade  replied.
 "Yeah...strength," I  said. "And I think that's why He's sending us to this mountain. Because He  needs us to have that first day. A day that's hard, that will make you  need strength in order to succeed."
 I filled with pride that this  was enough for Shade. He nodded, and said with a snap of optimism and acceptance  in his voice, "yeah...okay." Then he went on back to  socializing.
 Before I get back to the story,  it's probably important for me to tell you that, while I would not have  been able to identify this at the time, I believe that I was secretly  thinking that if worse came to worse, I would be able to be Shade's  strength...which now I know was really cheapening what God was setting  up, not to mention vastly overestimating the strength I would have on  this trip. 
 Okay...so Keith and Zach are  plodding along really consistently and strong, and Shade and I are moving really  slow because of Shade's complaints and pain, and our way-to-frequent stops. It  was getting tough on both of us, but praise God I wasn't getting impatient,  crystal clear on the fact that this is why we were there. So I asked  Shade to look at me in the eyes, and mustering my best  loving-but-firm-and-confident look, I said, "Buddy...we are going all the way.  We are going to hike all day until we get to our campsite. And you are  going to carry that (I pointed at it) backpack. So you can decide if you want to  use your energy trying to change that, or use your energy accomplishing  that."
 I loved him as he looked  in my eyes and measured what I was saying. I loved him. My love exploded for him  (and I already love him so much, I didn't think that was possible). I wanted to  take back what I said out of love. I wanted to attach his pack to mine. I wanted  to say, "If you can't make it all the way on your own, don't worry, I'll carry  you." But I didn't. I just looked at him in the eyes as he was deciding whether  he could adjust to what I was saying as the unchangeable truth. And I loved him.  And I would love him no matter what he decided in that moment.  
 Pause again. It really, REALLY  helped me knowing that God told me to bring Shade to this mountain. See, there  are other mountains we could've climbed that didn't require such a long hike,  nor such a steep ascent. If it were on me, I would've chosen a much different  place...less challenging. I can't tell you how many times I wanted to relieve  his pain (and mine) by changing the plan, taking care of him, going down early,  etc... But I kept going back to that other mountain months ago, where I heard  God say, "Go back. Take Shade." Seriously...if I weren't convicted that this was  from God, I wouldn't have had the strength myself to demand that he push  through.
 So just like back in the living  room, only this time with much more difficulty (because he was in the midst of  his pain), Shade said, "yeah...okay". Then he went back to  climbing.
 From this point on (for the  rest of this hike, but also for the rest of the week), Shade got better and  better. And by that, I mean that he accepted the difficulties inherent in this  trip more and more readily. He got stronger and stronger. My  son pushed through.
 I can write that now, but I  wouldn't really acknowledge this on the trip...too afraid that I was just  being a little too optimistic about this, just seeing what I wanted to see so  desperately. But without any prompting from me, as we were driving home, Keith  busted out with the statement, "I feel like Shade just kept getting better and  better as the week went on. He started out struggling, but just kept doing  better." This was one of the many gifts that I feel like God gave to me by  having Keith and Zach join us on this trip (there were countless). I contained  it in the car, but my heart leapt right through the roof! I wanted to blow up  with a freakin' excited, glad-to-be-affirmed yell of victory, "I DID  TOO!!!!!"  
 Shade didn't have to get better  and better for this trip to have been excellent. Shade didn't have to exhibit  strength, stop complaining, or make it through the hike that day without more  help from me for me to love him.I just love him. And I love helping him. And I  love him feeling helped. 
 But I loved helping him in this  way, too. In this way where he seems to be learning that he has a reservoir of  strength to pull from when things get hard. Strength that will help him achieve  things that he starts out thinking might be too hard. Strength, not from me, but  from God.
 About a month or two before our  trip, a real special friend named Pam called me having had a recurring dream  that she felt like she was supposed to tell me about. She said, "I could see you  and Shade going up on that mountain you're going to. It had some sort of  relation to Abraham and Isaac. It was the identical dream two nights in a row.  And I had the distinct feeling that Shade is going to get something from God  up there that has nothing to do with  you."
 I smiled huge when she told me  this. This would be my dream, I thought, and I instantly prayed that God would  please make it so. I thought of all the students I've known and loved as  they were trying to "attain their own faith" (rather than feel like it was just  their parent's idea for them) for over 14 years (not to mention remembering my  own transition into my own faith). And so for Shade to be getting special  "things" from the Father, at such a young age, that had nothing to do with his  dad on earth would be worth the world to me.
 Dear Father...In the name of  Christ, give my kids a relationship with You that has nothing to do with me. The  sooner the better, Father. Thank You for letting me be in their lives.  

 
2 comments:
privaledged to be with you on that first mountain and feel like I was there on the second one. What a great story and more than that, what an amazing thing for Shade.
Hey what courage u both had, and For Shade to be with God, all by himself, to feel his own ability to know he was able to do it and conquer it... What a teacher......what a student!!!!!!!!!!!
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