Whatever you're facing...
Heaven Can Begin Now
Unhappy
1f I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most
probable explanation is that I was made for another world.
       C. S. Lewis Mere Christianity
I was not a happy child.
It's strange how hard that sentence is for me to write. Not that it's untrue. Just that
setting it down seems a betrayal of cherished parents.
It's Daddy who would have been most dismayed to read those words. Mother would certainly have
disapproved of airing so private a matter. "I'm sure we all have our troubles, dear. No one
wants to hear about someone else's."
But Daddy. . . Though he died more than fifty years ago, I can hear his cry of bafflement as
though he were reading over my shoulder. Not happy! With a loving family, good health,
material blessings beyond anything he dreamed of in his own childhood! He liked to relate how
as a boy he'd be sent to the butcher shop, clutching the dime that was to buy meat for their
family of nine. "Don't forget to ask the butcher," his mother would call after him, "to throw
in the liver for the cat!"
They didn't have a cat.
How could a child as fortunate as I, fail to be happy?
How could I, years later as a young wife and mother, be anything but fulfilled and content?
When in 1952 I was diagnosed with clinical depression, Daddy was outraged. "You have no right
to be sad!"
He enumerated the reasons: "A husband who loves you, beautiful kids, a nice home. And you can
have a steak anytime you want one!"
It was all true. That is the terror of depression, the dark mystery I could not explain
either to him or to myself. You can have a steak anytime you want one. The words have
become shorthand for John and me, for all the things that ought to make a difference and
don't.
Eldest Child
Not that there weren't lots of happy times in my childhood. But as I trace the journey to
heaven to its beginnings, a sad-eyed little girl too often looks out from the snapshots.
In her books Catherine Marshall often wrote of the carefree days of childhood. As Catherine's
editor for over twenty years, I would often put a question mark by these passages. Even for
youngsters less moody than I, I didn't believe childhood was tension free. The specifics of
my experience are only variations in our common story.
Like Catherine, I was the oldest of three children -- the responsible eldest. "You're
in charge now." In charge of getting the playroom
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