There are remnants of the Christmas celebration still all around my house. New toys to be organized. Parts to new toys to be found. Wrapping paper and gift bags to be put away for use next year. The task of taking down the Christmas tree and this year's decorations is still yet to be tackled. A college student to be driven back to her home away from home. A bored junior high student. Two little rug rats playing with all the new goodies given to them. Homemade candy lying on the counter going stale. It's still basically Christmas around here.
Even though my home looks like Christmas, the new year is coming in like a rocket...TONIGHT! I will most likely ring in this new year while tucked away in my warm bed with the family all asleep. While I should be looking forward, I cannot help to look behind at this past year. My heart keeps reflecting on how our life as the Pedens has changed by grace.
The year of 2014 started off with a big bang of fireworks, of course! We spent New Year's Eve at our home away from home...the emergency room! I had developed some life-threatening pulmonary embolisms in my lungs. This left me spending the next few months trying to catch my breath all the while dealing with the fact that because these were due to aHUS, I would spend the rest of my life going every two weeks to get an infusion to keep me alive.
Okay. Check. We got me under control. Shelli graduated high school and spent the summer at Camp Garaywa. Marli spent the spring months with softball and then the summer rehabbing her knee from a meniscus tear.
July came in with a bang as well. Fireworks for the Fourth! While Keith was at work on an early, hot July day, he had his first seizure and totally dislocated his right shoulder. We had no idea what the future held. The injured shoulder would require months of therapy to lead to surgery to more therapy. The seizures, however, are still undiagnosed and he has had many, MANY since that mid-summer day. It has taken on a toll on him, and us.
Our health is only part of the story. You see, one cannot drive a vehicle in Mississippi until he has been seizure-free for at least one year. Well, that little tid-bit blows it for employment. Keith has the type of seizures that come with no warning whatsoever. This makes him a liability to any employer. With Keith being the sole provider for our household, this puts a little (okay, huge) kink in our financial issues. This means we have NO income!
In August, we took our oldest daughter, Shelli, to Delta State and left her to begin her future. We left her with no car (because it utterly and completely died two days before the day she was to leave) and with very little money in the bank. That day was no doubt one of the hardest of my life.
Sounds like a rough year. Well, yeah, it was. But through these past few months, I have grown and stretched in ways that I could have never imagined. The things that I have learned are God-things. Things that only God could bring me to and through. Growth spurts in humility and in trust, and in mercy and grace, and so much more than I can list.
We have lived on the absolute mercy and grace of God and those that He has chosen to take care of us. We have found friends that I venture to say we would have never known in such a way as we do now had it not been for these broken circumstances. I see others and their actions in a different light than I did a few months ago. Grace abounds now more than ever. I am learning to live, once again, in the moment and to find thanks and to give thanks for the good and the bad.
This past year has been so much more than the afar-off eye can see. As long as I am learning, I am growing. As long as I am growing, I am living. So as I close this 2014 chapter in my book, I will not look back in sadness or regret. I will look through my eyes of gratefulness and say that 2014 was indeed a good year for me.
Have a happy 2015!









