He drove away again last night…
This one comes and goes. It’s like a yo-yo game for my heart, but each return feels like home and each departure feels like heartache – familiar, but unwanted. When he was only three years old, he waved to me at the door of his preschool room, without a care in the world. “Bye, Momma!” he declared with a smile, and off he went. Other mommas peeled nervous or crying children from their legs, but not me. I walked away amused, but not surprised that this independent man-child of mine was ready to soar. I know the goal was to raise a man where a little boy once was, but this one has been forcing me to man-up from the very beginning. He’s great at it. Me – not so much.
Usually he laughs away my worries with a playful jab or a sarcastic quip, but occasionally he slows down and lets me have a moment to heal my soul. He didn’t even know about the dream, but he knows how hard the goodbyes are on my heart, and so the morning of his departure day, he stepped away from his work and his planning to say goodbye to the little ones and me. Unrushed. He didn’t play or tease. He gave me a long hug and held on as I prayed over him, and his travels, and his life. He let me have a momma-moment to hold on tightly, knowing that letting go must follow.
Oh the letting go…no one warns a new momma that the hardest part of parenting isn’t the sleepless nights with a fussy baby in her arms. It isn’t the long days where she dreams of a break from the crying…the clinging. No, sweet Momma…the hardest days are not in the holding on, but in the letting go, and yet – that is the goal. They tell us we have succeeded when we reach this point. We have accomplished our purpose when our babies leave the nest. Self-sabotage, I joke. It’s rigged. We’ve been duped into breaking our own hearts in the name of SUCCESS. The truth is, there is much joy in watching adult children thrive. It is rewarding and beautiful beyond anything I could have imagined. And it’s the hardest thing I’ve ever done. So hard, in fact, that it’s been showing up in my dreams for months. The battle of letting go is my reality, in wake and in sleep.
The dream began, or rather, picked up mid-action, as we merged onto a crowded freeway. Semi trucks weighed down with utility poles, and a convoy of enormous military trucks of all kinds immediately surrounded us. Hunter was looking out the window and up at the giant vehicles trying to identify which fleet was the one he would be joining shortly. My mind raced with questions of what was to come, but we clearly already knew that he would be going with one of these groups into whatever type of battle may lie ahead. It all made sense and yet none of it made sense.
As we moved in between two towering vehicles, I suddenly realized that I was at the back of ours. We were in a van or small bus of some sort and I was driving, but I was not in the driver’s seat. No one was. I was stuck in the back and became immediately overwhelmed with the feeling that things were going out of control. And then I woke up.
My sleepy brain tried to process the end of what had felt so real just a moment before; my panic slowly subsided. Why do I KEEP having these weird dreams where I’m (supposed to be) driving from the back seat of large vehicles? I wonder to myself. Does it MEAN something??
Almost immediately, I laugh. The deeper meaning is SO incredibly obvious. It’s about control. So often in these dreams, I find myself on a winding road where accurate navigation is needed, but I’ve clearly become distracted (or displaced) and ended up in the back when I’m supposed to be driving.
But are you? I feel the question burn in my heart. In this most recent dream, it would make sense that maybe Hunter was to be driving. It was his journey – his destination – that I longed to control. (Ouch) But in some of the other dreams, the intended driver isn’t obvious. It seems that it is supposed to be me and I’m failing.
FAILING… the mean girl in my head LOVES to point it out. Can’t get it right in real life; can’t even get it right in the dream. I shake off her input and continue my musing…
What about the ones where there’s no one who can drive but me? Why is the driver’s seat empty?? I wonder in my sleepy confusion
Maybe I don’t need your help. The answer is not an audible voice, but a clear and direct thought that comes to my spirit, and I know. He’s right.
I’m not saying God himself spoke directly to me at that moment. That would be presumptuous. Maybe he did. Maybe not, but He has taught me from His Word, and He has been tuning my ear to hear His voice, and He showed me, through my dream, the error of my thinking. Any control I’ve ever had is only an illusion. HE is in control, and I can trust him on the curves, and through the convoy, and on whatever road life brings even if it seems like things are veering out of control and no one is steering.
I sigh. It was just a dream, but the lesson lingers, and I know I have to write it. I roll my eyes as “Jesus take the wheel” begins playing in my mind…where an unending game of mental Spontuneous interrupts my life and thoughts continually. But really…I need Him to take the wheel because I am unprepared to navigate this trip. This trip of comings and goings. This life of continually watching pieces of my heart scatter, and smile, and drive away. This winding road of unknowns that leaves me nauseous and sometimes a little panicked.
Thank goodness I can wake from the nightmare of being out of control… because I was never in it to start with. The goodbyes may never be easy and the road may never be straight, but at least I can rest in knowing Who’s driving each of our lives…the One who was really behind the wheel when he drove away again last night.
