a letter to my grand-girl

Dear Grand-girl (aka ‘Lil Miss Woods),

I’ve been thinking a long time about what kind of gift I could give you on your birthday – that very first day when you emerge from the safety of your darkened cocoon into the explosive light of the world you’ll soon call home. Another pink “welcome to the world” onesie, along with a matching “I’m the Grandma” t-shirt doesn’t quite fit the moment, so I think I’ll take a pass on those at this time. (But at some point, don’t be surprised if I’m decorated from head to toe in granny wear, a trait for which you can thank the Olsen side of your family tree. They love a good party and any occasion that allows them to dress up the moment with lavish expressions of wonderment and love.)

No, at this time in your life you don’t need more things to clutter your thinking. Instead, what you most need is the steady and certain love of a family that will never let you go–long and wide and high and deep stretches from the arms that will cradle your beginning and that will carry you forward for the rest of your life.

You’ve got that in us. We’re a sturdy bunch, a motley crew of misfits at times, but a crew strengthened and ready for your road ahead. Why ready? Well, we’ve spent our entire lives growing up so that we might better help you to do the same. Every single one of us have labored and strived all the days of our lives beneath the light and shadow of the Almighty–the Father who has knit you together in your precious momma’s womb. We’ve lived with God. We’ve walked with God. We’ve worked on our faith, and we know to whom we belong. God’s arms are the ones now cradling you in safety. Soon he’ll delivery you into ours. What mystery! What trust! What grace!

As your grandmother, I won’t always be ringside for some of your milestones. I’ll probably miss a lot of them, and I’m mostly OK with that. Those moments belong to you and your parents. And I know they’ll be great ones because I, too, have sat ringside to every milestone of the four kids God has entrusted me to raise … your dad, Nick, your Uncle Colton, your Uncle Jadon, and your Aunt Amelia. Their baptisms, their birthdays, their ballgames, their recitals, their break ups, their first days of driving, their graduations, their marriages, their tears, their fears. Their successes and their occasional failures. Their questions, their doubts, and their settled conclusions. It’s all been on a learning curve for me as a mom, but it has been and will remain the most exceptional privilege of my fifty-three years on this earth.

Wanna know a little secret about your dad? He made me a mom on April 11, 1989, the day after my 23rd birthday. He arrived two weeks prior to his due-date. I knew nothing about being a parent. Zilch. I had a lot of growing up to do myself, and for the last thirty years, I like to say that your dad and I have been growing up together. As he was learning to walk as a toddler, I was learning the fine art of walking as a mom. I still am.

And now, because of you, your parents will have the delicate and delightful privilege of further personal growth because they’ll grow alongside you. You will teach them their parenting skills. God has hand-picked you … entrusted you … as their training manual, and I am not one bit worried about their qualifications. They are rock stars.

Your dad is strong, thoughtful, courageous, contemplative, passionate, faithful, a gifted communicator, and he is truthful (perhaps one of the qualities I admire most about him). A person of truth is a person unafraid of exposure. It takes a long time to cultivate that kind of integrity (some of us spend our entire lives endeavoring to get there), but your dad seemed to be born with a generous portion of it in his DNA. He can’t help but tell the truth, even when it costs him some of his pride (and he’s got a lot of that too, but you’ll help him with that). He will never leave you. He is devoted to you and to your mom. And because Nick’s not a time waster, I always said that he would marry the first woman he seriously dated because he wasn’t going to prattle away a single moment on a girl he hadn’t already decided was worth the investment. I was right.

To give his heart wholeheartedly to one woman, your mom, is one of the greatest gifts he’s already given you. But even more important than his devotion to your mother, your father is devoted to your Creator, and beneath that light and shadow, he will carefully guard his own deposit of faith entrusted to him at an early age so that, in time, you’ll be collecting a faith your own.

As a mom, I have learned this most important truth, and now as your grandmother, I will endeavor to live it out more fully:

My job, my legacy, is to drop enough breadcrumbs of faith along the trodden path of this life so that all of my children, that you and the other grand-girls and grand-boys who will eventually fill up our family tree, can safely find your way home … back into the hands of the One who authored your life and who promises to perfect it.

And now, a word or two about your mom. I don’t know her nearly as well as I know your dad, but in the short time we’ve done life together, I am solidly convinced about her character and her commitment to raise you up with deep roots. Your mom’s strength is equal to your dad’s. She’s a home-grown, home-town girl whose sense of family anchors deeply within that Appalachian soil where she took her first steps. She’s smart (I mean really smart – she’s a professor with a PhD and everything and can produce an academic paper worthy of publication as easily as she drinks a cup of water). She’s clever, witty and can hold her own when it comes to matching wills with your father. She’s quiet, but when she speaks, we listen in because we know we’re going to get something more, another little piece of the puzzle that tells us who she is. I imagine that in these days of growing up alongside you, your mom will reveal even bigger pieces of her story to us, and I think those revelations will blow our minds. She’ll be the doorkeeper of your home, closely guarding who’s coming in and even more so, your going out. She’s a secret-keeper, and while I’m on the complete opposite end of that spectrum, I think her ability to hold things more closely to her heart (to not vocally share every blessed thought that comes into her mind) will help you to learn how to govern your own thoughts, your words, your actions.

Both of your parents already love you unconditionally. The relationship that you share with them will probably be the most important, framed picture in your home, the best snapshot that captures how Jesus really does love us all … that agape love which puts “best interest over self- interest” (you can read all about that kind of loving in 1 Corinthians 13. Uncle Jadon will be happy to break it down for you. He loves God’s Word, and he’ll love answering all your questions). This kind of love is an important picture to hang in your heart, and it has been through this lens (this love that I have for my four children) that I have finally been able to grasp just an inkling of how much I am loved by God. Best interest over self-interest … the Calvary story. One I will tell you more about in coming days. Consider this letter the prologue. 

So sweet precious grand-girl, you who I have not yet seen with my eyes, you whose name has not yet been revealed to the world, I am at a better place of peace in my life because you are now in it. God has seen you. God knows your name, and very soon we’ll start writing the chapters of your life together. And when you can’t find the words to your story, I’ll help you look for them. When the chapters don’t make sense in isolation, I’ll remind you of the bigger picture … that all good stories have a clear beginning, a mostly muddled middle, and, ultimately, a grand conclusion. When the pen you’re holding in your hand loses its ink, when the well from which you draw the lines of your story seemingly dries up, come over to mine and borrow some. My well runs long and wide and high and deep. I’ll lend you my strength because this fragile world you’re entering into, the one where you will write your legacy, will require it. Don’t let that reality scare you. Instead, let it challenge you, embolden you, because this I promise you …

God has already given you everything you need to make it through this delicate dance called life. He’s given you the promise of his presence, and he’s given you the present of our presence. Presence is the best gift we can give you on the advent of your arrival. You’re one of us now. Your name has been carved into the family tree, smack dab in the middle of our names. Our signatures surround yours. We’ll watch over you, and by God’s grace, we’ll all leave a trail of breadcrumbs so that you might most clearly and most easily find your way home.

And as always, may God forever bestow upon you, over you and beneath you, before and behind you, his peace for the journey. There’s no better place to grow up. 

I love you,
Your granny

21 Responses to a letter to my grand-girl

  1. Dear fellow readers:

    Whatever name we (as grandparents) have chosen for us by Grand-girl, I love starting my morning with Elaine. We have been in rigorous pre-grandparent training for a long time now and I think, together, we are ready. It’s already been a lot of fun imagining Elaine as a grandma, and even more fun imagining the adventures that await!

    Elaine will bring all the best of herself to being a Granny, but, for those of us that know and love her, that is not news. Elaine does not know how to do things in small measures; she continues to inspire me, my wifeforthejourney!

    -Billy
    aka “Pops, Grampy, Grandpa Billy, Papaw,” or whatever baby Woods decides to call me, I’m having T shirts made for every day of the week!

  2. I liked your letter. I imagine you will send her many such letters in the future. My grandchildren and their parents all call me granny. The decision for that name was made by my daughter who thought it hilarious in its contrast to my personality and age at the time. In that same vein, I think you would do the name justice. Incidentally, as time passes, it becomes less and less ironic.

    • Hey Christie… I really don’t care what she calls me, but we’re really into British crime dramas and a season ago, one of the characters had a very British way of saying “granny” and I liked it. So there will be lots of linguistic training on my end.

  3. Once again, Elaine, you have penned some powerful words. Enjoy your Granny journey!!!
    Love you!
    Shirley

    • Awww, thanks, Shirley. You know you’ll be sitting ringside to more pics and adventures to come. I love you.

  4. Wonderful words, Elaine. God bless all as this new little one enters the world and your life. She will be blessed by such a loving and caring Christian family.

  5. Beautiful words to begin your journey of Granny. The 1st one will be the beginning of just one heartstring of love that will grow more and more with each one thereafter. I’m excited for you, because its one fun filled ride!

    • “A heartstring of love” … very beautiful, Karen. Perhaps you should pick up a pen and do some writing!

  6. Girl, you have brought me to tears. What beautiful, powerful words that she will always treasure. Grandparents are a precious gift to grandchildren and parents. I treasured mine so much and I know this little one will treasure you too. Absolutely beautiful.

    • Thanks, Beth. There’s so much excitement that comes with new life. Thanks for being here.

  7. Like Beth and many of your readers, you have brought me to tears as well. I’ve missed out on a lot when it comes to parents, siblings and children of my own, but when given the chance, I bathe myself in your family; in their tears and walks of faith and moments I know God is with you. I’m excited for all of you, Granny Elaine! My grandmother was one of the biggest influences in my life, and without her… I hate to think where I’d be. No one told me what to call her, but out of my tiny mouth came Mamie. She died almost 30 years ago and not a week goes by I don’t think about Mamie, miss her and thank her, but I know all is well with her soul because she was a woman of devout faith. Love, Brenda

    • We met 10 years ago when I went through my breast cancer journey! I found a warrior-friend in you. What a great encouragement you have been… through cancer and through all of my journeys, none more so than Jadon’s recent fight for life. You have been grafted into our family tree through your prayers and love for us. I cannot tell you how much that means to me! We may never share a table on this side of eternity, but we will there. And for the record, I’m coming to you for all my heavenly fashion advice. Honestly, new body and all deserves new clothes! Love you.

  8. Oh my word! What a treasure! What a legacy that sweet girl enters into. Elaine, this might be your masterpiece, your magnum opus. I know your grand-girl will be the most blessed little one ever because she has you and Billy as grandparents. I am praying for you all, dear friend!

    • Well that is high praise, Leah. This is nothing but a gifting completely and totally from God; alone, my words are a jumbled hot mess. To God be the glory; great things he has done. Great things he will keep doing. I love you.

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