She could have been anyone. Anyone’s sister, daughter, aunt,
friend. She didn’t tell me her name but she did tell me she was a child of God.
Hearing that warmed my heart. The rest broke it a little. Maybe a lot.
When she sat down on the couch across from me in the church
foyer I figured she must have been visiting. She wore black sweatpant capris,
an Old Navy hoodie and a gray beanie on a cool summer day. Maybe she just came
from a camp site. She cleared that notion with the next twenty minutes of
heart-pulling conversation.
Her biological mom was a unicorn, she told me. She preferred
that term over ‘stripper’—what her mom actually was.
Without skipping a beat she shared how her adoptive father
had molested then raped her as she grew up. When the truth came out, her
adoptive mother thankfully left her husband but according to this girl, checked
out in the meantime. So there this young girl was. For whatever reason, given
up by her biological parents. Then abused by one new adoptive parent and
essentially left to her own devices by the remaining adoptive parent. In her
teenage years she said she turned to alcohol and weed for solace and eventually
became a regular in ‘the system’. In and out of foster home after foster home
she said she saw more ‘messed up stuff’ than she cared to share.
More messed up than the ‘stuff’ she’d already shared?
So now she’s at the point where she seeks peace in a church
building and wants nothing more than to just live in the woods with a dog—a
black lab or a Siberian husky.
But then what? She has enough wherewithal to think there
would be consequences to just up and leaving for the woods. What would she eat?
How would she survive. You see, she explained, she is a survivor. And a child
of God. That much she knew. And she knew none of this was her fault. The stuff
she’s experienced. The things she’s done. Has had done to her. She said it’s
all her parents’ fault.
Then she asked me if I thought she was going to Heaven or
Hell. Before I could open my mouth she decided out loud she deserved Heaven
because all the bad stuff she’s done is her parents’ fault.
And it got me thinking. Whose fault is it? At the surface
she seemed clean, well cared for, well adjusted. But a step closer and the
cracks at her seams come through. The black lining her teeth from years of
alcohol abuse and who knows what else. The voices she says are telling her
everyone around her is a whore. Her jittery energy she says is from ingesting too many
calories.
Whose fault is it that her mortality has come to this. Is it
her parents' for making a baby they didn’t want? Is it her adoptive parents' for
taking a baby they couldn’t love the way a child deserves to be loved? Is it ‘the
system’ for letting her fall through the cracks? Is it our fault, as a larger
whole, for turning a blind eye to it all?
I love that we have agency. It bothers me to no end when my
agency—or anyone’s for that matter—is jeopardized. I may choose poorly but that
is my choice to make. Did this girl have agency? Did she choose this path? I
don’t know anyone who would outright choose a life of calamities, abuse and
neglect. Or do I?
This girl did. She knew someone who chose that life. And she
clung to the idea of Him. In her despair, I think she, much more than I, could
relate to our Savior. He had suffered tremendously in His walk in mortality. At
such a young age, this girl had clearly suffered much as well. And still she
had hope. That she could learn more about Jesus. That she knew she was a
daughter of God and deserved more than this.
Today gave me a dose of perspective. In a world of suffering
and sin and scary, scary ‘stuff’ there is hope. There is peace. There is a
Savior we can all turn to. He might not fix everything now. He might not fix
many things now. But in time, the ultimate physician will right the wrongs.
That young girl knew this. I hope, for now, that’s enough. But I know she
deserves more than enough. She is, after all, a child of God. Aren't we all?
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