November 12th
Peter’s Shadow
Now many
signs and wonders were done among the people through the apostles. And they
were all together in Solomon’s Portico. None of the rest dared to join them, but the
people held them in high esteem. Yet more than ever believers were added
to the Lord, great numbers of both men and women, so that they even carried out the sick into the
streets, and laid them on cots and mats, in order that Peter’s shadow might
fall on some of them as he came by. A great number of people would also gather from
the towns around Jerusalem, bringing the sick and those tormented by unclean
spirits, and they were all cured.
Acts 5:12-16
What
is the craziest therapy you have ever tried?
I assume that it does not reach the level of Bring-your-sick-to-the-temple-so-that-the-shadow-of-a-prophet-could-pass-over-them-and-they-will-be-restored. What are all the things that you have tried?
We
have done weighted blankets and vests.
That helped for a while. We tried
hanging swings and installing slides in my son’s room so that he could get some
swinging motion and movement during the cold winter months. We tried diet changes…so many diet
changes. We tried cutting out dairy and
we tried cutting out gluten. We cut out
yeast and sugar because there was a thought that he had an overabundance of
yeast in his system and we tried getting it out through diet. We tried letting him cry himself to sleep
which never worked. We tried music
therapy. We tried martial arts. We tried a treadmill. We tried no media. We tried all the media. We tried headphones and earplugs to bring the
world’s volume level down. We tried
pets. Complete disaster. We tried turning our garage into a beach
complete with sand and a filled wading pool.
We tried swimming and weightlifting and painting and meditation. We tried lying on our stomachs to do homework
because that was supposed to help with concentration. Mostly that just hurt my back. Oh…then there was cross country running…those
are not pleasant memories for me.
There
are plenty of other pursuits that we have tried for either short-term or
long-term periods. We are always on the
lookout for opportunities and activities and therapies that will help our son
move towards a healthier life. The
people in the Portico were in a similar place.
They had come to the end of traditional medicine. There was nothing else that they could do
other than hope and pray for a miracle.
Peter’s shadow seemed like as good a miracle-delivery-device as anything
else.
What
do we do when we have come to the end of the treatments? What do we do when our therapists say that
there is nothing more that they can do for our kids? Do we dive into medications? Do we look to legalized marijuana? Do we turn to Essential Oils? Do we go to see faith healers? Or do we just give up and say that healing
will probably not happen on this side of Heaven?
I’ve
watched and listened to parents who have chosen each of those
alternatives. I have seen them go well
and I have seen them go incredibly poorly.
And in each of the results I have seen people choose joy and gratitude
and I have seen others choose despair and bitterness.
Health
for our children is a process and a relative term. Sometimes therapies simply help with a single
life skill. But that is one life skill
that they did not have before and one step healthier than they were. We can choose to celebrate that one skill or
be upset that they have not reached typical-peer-level-healthy. My son is miles beyond where he was ten years
ago thanks to a lot of those things that we tried. Is he done and healthy and ready for
independent living? Not by a long
shot. But I can be grateful for not
having to lock all the doors and not having to hide the knives and not having
to put his clothes on backwards and not having to make gluten-free chocolate
chip cookies anymore.
Those
steps are worth celebrating, even if we took some wonky paths to get here.
A moment to reflect:
How has your child changed and developed in the past 10 years? What can you be thankful for?
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