Category: surrender

  • We’re Listed!!!

    June 10, 2010, 11:36 a.m., John is listed!!!

    After a few irritating weeks with the insurance company asking for more and more tests at the last minute, John is finally, officially, on a heart transplant list! We are thrilled and just cannot believe that he is months away of a new heart and a new life!

    Right now, at 4:01 p.m., there are 3,147 people listed for a heart transplant. This is from the United Network of Organ Sharing, the organization that manages donors and prospective recipients. http://www.unos.org/ Now John is one of those people. Our prayer is that of the hearts that become available in the next few months, one is perfect and right for John.

    I have already packed John for his hospital stay. He’s been packed since we got home from the hospital the last time! Now I just need to get packed! We’ve been told to keep our cell phones charged, gas in the car, and be ready at any moment!

    Thank you, God, for this answered prayer!

  • This Week’s Praises and Prayers

    Thank you, Lord, for these things this week:

    1. our time with Will, Jamie, Georgia, Rod, and Jensen
    2. a three day weekend for rest
    3. John’s heart continuing to sustain him and give him energy
    4. John’s ability to walk around yesterday at Old Salem

    Lord, please hear and answer these prayers:

    1. John’s heart continues to give him energy and strength
    2. that God will protect our emotions and feelings and keep us from depression and sadness
    3. for John’s new heart to come in God’s timing – of the hearts that become available in the coming months that one will be a perfect match for John
    4. for John’s heart donor – for his salvation – for John’s heart donor’s family – for peace, love, strength, and comfort now and in the months to come
    5. for John’s upcoming surgery to have no complications and that his body does not reject his new heart
    6. that John has many, many more years here on earth to learn more about You and glorify You
    7. that we will continue to see God’s hand in all of this and glorify Him

  • This Week’s Praises and Prayers

    Well this week has been busy, but we still have so much to praise God for!

    We thank Him for these things this week:

     

    1. John went back to work on Monday and is feeling great!

    2. John’s company and colleagues have been supportive and understanding.

    3. The HR department is helping John through all of the disability paperwork for the past week and for the future transplant without any problems.

    4. John’s IV medication is going well and continues to be healthy with no infections.

    We are asking God for these things now:

    1. John’s IV medication continues to help him to feel well and sustain his heart until the transplant.

    2. For God to begin to work in the life of John’s heart donor. For John’s donor’s family. That God will begin to give them comfort, peace, strength, and love.

    3. That lives will be changed because of John’s story and people witnessing God’s work through it.

    4. That we will glorify God through our response to this trial and that we will always give Him all of the credit.

    5. For John’s new heart to come in God’s timing and that we are patient and trust Him in the meantime.

    6. For God to continue to make me into the wife he’s called me to be for John.

  • This Week’s Praises and Prayers

    We have so much to praise God for this week!

    Thank you, Lord, for these things:

    1. giving John life for the six years he’s had Cardiomyopathy
    2. the miracle of John’s heart’s ability to compensate unbelievably well for how sick it truly is
    3. helping John to be relentless and strong in his fight against this disease
    4. leading us to Duke to receive excellent healthcare
    5. living in this period in time when there are so many medical advances
    6. leading me to John to be his wife and helper
    7. John’s catheterization and it’s success
    8. sending transplant survivors to us in the hospital to encourage us and give us hope
    9. friends and family who love us so much

    Lord, we pray for these things:

    1. the evaluation to continue to go smoothly and for John to be placed on the transplant list
    2. a healthy, perfect heart for John to become available in your timing
    3. the heart donor, that he is a Christian and will experience eternal life with you, and for his family, that you will begin to give them hope, love, comfort, courage, and strength
    4. John’s heart to sustain him at home with the IV medication until his transplant
    5. peaceful rest and sleep at night for John with minimal symptoms and aches and pain
    6. wisdom and direction for the entire transplant team
    7. for this experience to glorify God and draw us closer to Him
    8. for God to continue to show me how to be the wife he’s called me to be for John and to give me strength
    9. wisdom and direction in all the decisions we will have to make this week and in the next several months

  • Then God Showed Up

    There have been times over the past few months when I felt like I was going to fall on my face, literally, with anxiety, fear, and panic. Last Wednesday when we walked into the hospital was one of those days.

    As we walked into the lobby, with standing room only at the admissions desks, children with cancer in wheelchairs, medical personnel zooming past us, and patients hooked up to IV medication taking their afternoon walk, I felt every muscle in my body tense. I was shaking all over. I was trying to be strong – keeping a serious face, looking ahead, not making eye-contact with anyone – because I knew that one move would send me into a crying convulsion that couldn’t be stopped. My mind began singing to me the “What ifs?”, and the “What if” song is never a good one.

    Then God showed up.

    In His tiniest whisper that He often likes to use, God began to talk to me. Not audibly, of course, but through the Holy Spirit and the encouragement and hope we immediately began to receive.
    Only a few minutes after arriving in John’s hospital room some new members of the transplant evaluation team came in to meet us. We had met Dr. Rogers before, but then we met Dr. Rosenberg, Meaghan, the Physician’s Assistant, and since Duke is a teaching hospital, about three interns. It seemed like each word they spoke allowed another muscle in my body to relax. They spoke about what John’s life would be like after the transplant. It was a life I’ve never experienced with John. It seemed too good to be true. Dr. Rosenberg told John that when he wakes up from his surgery he will not believe how good he feels. He said that because John’s been so sick for so long that he will feel like he’s twenty years old again. The stoic look on my face began to be replaced by a smile – a joyful smile that I almost couldn’t contain. When the doctors left the room I looked at John and just cried. But not because of anxiety, fear, or panic, but because the thought of John being that healthy overwhelmed me.

    Then God showed up. Again.

    The next day John and I were lying on his hospital bed and in walked a man. We just thought he was there to draw blood, take vital signs, or weigh John, which is what people do around there about every hour or so. He introduced himself as James Garrett, and he told us he was a heart transplant survivor. He was a medium sized built man with the biggest smile on his face.

    James Garrett’s heart transplant was three years ago when he was forty years old. He had Cardiomyopathy, and was very sick. He was in the ICU for a little while and went home on a heart pump before he received his transplant. Then, right before eating pizza about two months later, he received the call that they had a heart for him.

    James Garrett could not keep his emotions hidden. He was overjoyed, three years later, for the new opportunity of life he received. Now he volunteers by visiting transplant patients in the hospital and telling them his story. He told John that he will wake up and not be able to believe he’s the same person. He said that after his transplant he immediately wanted to get up and go. He said that he was a completely different person with an appreciation for life that he never had before. James Garrett was so inspirational, and gave us a hope that the doctors could not give us. He told us the practical side of life before, during, and after transplant. He was a survivor, just like John’s going to be a survivor.

    Then God showed up. Again. And again. And again.

    The week has gone just like that. Every time someone walks in the room and leaves we feel God’s presence through their stories, their hope, their encouragement, their wisdom. We are blown away by the opportunity before us.

    So my anxiety has turned into joy – an uncontrollable joy. Don’t get be wrong. I am completely exhausted physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. I have still had that passing “What if?” thought. But I know that God is going to show up. Through this he has given me glimpses of His hand in all of this, and He’s quietly whispering, “Brenda, I am here, and I’m going to show you. Just hear me.”

    Thank you, Jesus, for showing up again, and again, and again.

    I’m telling you these things while I’m still living with you. The Friend, the Holy Spirit whom the Father will send at my request, will make everything plain to you. He will remind you of all the things I have told you. I’m leaving you well and whole. That’s my parting gift to you. Peace. I don’t leave you the way you’re used to being left – feeling abandoned, bereft. So don’t be upset. Don’t be distraught. John 14:25-27 (The Message)

    When is a time that God showed up for you?
  • Would I Trade You?

    Would I trade you right now – my life for yours? I could move forward with my life with no desperate worries or fears. I could enjoy my marriage by going to dinner, taking longs walks with my husband, and going home to visit family and friends in Georgia. I could maybe have a baby or two and do what a lot of other couples do with soccer practices and dance recitals and trips to Disney World.
    You would think that I would jump at the chance to give up my life right now for someone else’s life.

    But I wouldn’t. Right now I am a part of a wonderful story that God is writing. I have been chosen, not by anything I am or have done, but simply by God’s infinite wisdom and design, to be a part of a miracle. Not just a miracle of physical healing, but a miracle of spiritual healing of all the people who will be touched and affected by John’s story.

    If I traded with you, I would miss out on the blessing – the joy – of watching it unfold and being a part of it in such an intimate way. God has blessed me with joy during this season of my life that could otherwise paralyze me, so that I can experience His sovereignty, His peace, His healing, and His love.

    “Therefore, since we have been made right in God’s sight by faith, we have peace with God because of what Jesus Christ our Lord has done for us. Because of our faith, Christ has brought us into this place of undeserved privilege where we now stand, and we confidently and joyfully look forward to sharing God’s glory.

    We can rejoice, too, that when we run into problems and trials, for we know that they help us develop endurance. And endurance develops strength of character, and character strengthens our confident hope of salvation. And this hope will not lead to disappointment. For we know how dearly God loves us because he has given us the Holy Spirit to fill our hearts with his love.”
    Romans 5:1-5

    So, no, I could never give up this precious gift that God has given me to see Him work firsthand. I feel nothing but honor when I wake up each morning and remember that God has chosen me to be a part of this trial, out of love, so that I can know Him personally by seeing Him work in our lives.