[Authorâs Note: This story precedes 2018: A Year in Review â The List but is not critical to its reading. If you have stumbled upon this post but are interested primarily in our decisions, rather than our decision-making process, then I recommend that you read the aforementioned post instead.]
âOk, babe, Iâd like you to finish up within five minutes, and then weâre going to do our Year in Review.â
â… What?â my husband asked after a beat. It was Christmas night, and the baby had been asleep for a couple hours. Taylor had just slain a gold Bokoblin in Breath of the Wild and was understandably distracted.
âRemember how we were going to sit down and pick out the five words that describe 2018 and the five words we want for 2019?â
âOh… yeah, that.â My husband paused his game and glanced toward the nursery.
âNo, you canât âphone a babyâ,â I snapped before he could ask. His shoulders slumped a bit. âAnd unless you think âmum-mumâ or âuh-eeâ is a good descriptor, he wonât help you anyway. I think you can manage ten words.â
Taylor looked at me askance, silently challenging, Iâll bet I canât!
We sat down at our kitchen table with a mostly-blank spiral notebook, and I flipped to a clean page. âOk,â I started, âso Iâm going to write down five words that I feel like described 2018, and then youâre going to do the same â without looking at my words â and thenââ
âI get a point if my words donât match your words?â
âUm, no. Thatâs a different game. And then weâll look at all ten together and try to choose the five among them that best characterize our 2018.â
I quickly scrawled my five words, then passed the book back to Taylor. After a few minutes of thinking and writing, he set down the pen and announced, âTa-da!â
I scanned down the lists. âOk, it looks like some of these are basically the same,â I assessed, linking the almost-pairs: my âexhaustedâ to Taylorâs âenduranceâ; my âtransitioningâ to Taylorâs ârefiningâ; and my âlearningâ to Taylorâs âdiscoveryâ. That left four unpaired descriptors: âfruitlessâ and âtrappedâ on my list, and âmalleableâ and âjoyfulâ on Taylorâs.
âMan, all of my words are a lot more depressing than yours,â I commented. Taylor laughed.
âNo, seriously â like, these are irreconcilable. Thereâs no word that combines âjoyfulâ and âtrappedâ.â
My husband sobered a bit. âTrue,â he responded, âbut we did have a lot of joy this year. I think, since your life takes place in the metaphorical trenches, itâs just harder for you to see the joy.â
âYeah. I guess youâre right.â I circled âjoyfulâ and moved on.
âOk, so what about these last three? I think âmalleableâ is kinda the same as âtransitioningâ, so letâs incorporate it into that sentiment.â
Taylor: <grunts in assent>
I tapped my pen against the notebook. âSo… that just leaves my two â âtrappedâ and âfruitlessâ.â
âYeah… what exactly did you mean by those?â
I sat back into my chair with a huff. âI mean, like, nothing Iâve done this year feels like it has any weight. Like itâs all just been worthless.â
âThatâs not trââ
âYes, I know itâs not true,â I said quickly. âBut it feels as though itâs true. I guess itâs more that I feel like I have to do everything that I do, even though it doesnât make a huge difference, because itâs what Iâm supposed to do. Does that make any sense?â
Taylorâs blank stare told me that no, it did not.
I took a breath and tried again. âOk. What Iâm saying is that we perceive that God wants us here â me at home, you at your current job â but I feel *trapped* in this small life that doesnât really seem to offer many opportunities for success. Like, every win I have is a small one, you know? âWoo, got the baby dressed today!â or, âAlright! It only took me three days to get the laundry put up this time!â Iâm not, like, rich and famous like I thought I would be after graduating from engineering school.â
âWould you rather go back to work? We can find a nanny and make it happen.â
His question was rhetorical. Weâve been around and around on this, and the answer is always the same.
âIf God wants me to return to work, then He will very clearly open a door for that,â I sighed. âPlus, I donât want to go back to engineering, and Iâm not qualified to do anything else. Like, working at Victoriaâs Secret wouldnât even pay for the childcare.â
âSo… what?â Taylor prompted.
âI mean… donât you just feel like our lives are kinda small? But youâre right, âtrappedâ and âfruitlessâ are pretty negative and not really the words I want to use to describe the life that God has for us. Itâs almost like itâs….â I trailed off. Words usually arenât hard for me, but something about summarizing the past year was insurmountably difficult.
Taylor sat patiently as I thought.
âLimited!â I declared finally. âThis past year has been limited.â
Taylor: <grunts in query>
âIt summarizes both trapped and fruitless, but puts them in perspective,â I elaborated. âWe are limited in the scope of what we can do as well as what we can accomplish. Ok, at least, what *I* can accomplish. My life, in particular, has taken place mostly in this house. But that wonât be the case forever,â I concluded.
Taylor cocked his head. âIâm not sure that I actually feel limited though,â he said.
âReally? You donât feel limited when we canât leave the house after 8pm because a babysitter isnât in the budget most months?â
âOk, yes I do,â he conceded, âbut being limited isnât always bad. Sometimes God places limits so that we can excel in a certain area, right? Donât you think Paul felt pretty limited all the years he was in prison? But, he banged out a bunch of really important epistles in that time.â
âThatâs a good point,â I acquiesced. After a pause, I added, âSo… âlimitedâ, then?â
âYes, I think so.â
I circled âlimitedâ to round out our list.
âAlrighty. Now for 2019.â Taylor retreated into the kitchen as I flipped the page and marked out our columns. I immediately jotted down âfruitfulâ â the opposite of âfruitlessâ, my first entry for 2018. And then I… sat there. And sat there. And sat there. I could not think of a single additional word for 2019. Worse than that, I couldnât picture 2019, at all. I realized that, for the first time in my life, I have nothing on the calendar… for an entire year. (Ok, thatâs not exactly true. Our current plans include â and are limited to â Boâs first birthday party in February and the Labor Day Lift Off in September.) The year is my oyster, and I have absolutely no idea whatâs inside â or even, what I want to be inside.
Meanwhile, Taylor wiped down the counters as he waited for the oven to heat. My holy crusade against our over-full freezer (described in Makinâ Bacon) has continued, and our target that night was a raw bread loaf. (Another Leroy acquisition, I believe.) After about twelve hours in our frigid kitchen, the loaf had finally crested the bread pan, somehow managing to be both over- and under-proved. Taylor stuck the lopsided blob oâ gluten into the now-hot oven and returned to the table… where I was still sitting idly by.
He grabbed the notebook and scribbled down five words over the next few minutes while I continued to sit in pensive contemplation. Why couldnât I picture my life in 2019? Itâs not that I donât have any plans for my life â itâs that my plan is, âWait for God to reveal a plan for my life.â
And He has â in stages. During my senior year, it was, âI donât have a engineering job for you. I have a child for you.â So we walked in that (with a little kicking and screaming on my part). During my pregnancy, it was, âWork. Save money now for when youâll need it.â So we walked in that. When I was recruited to return to my old department early in Boâs life, it was, âThis job isnât for you. I have you at home right now.â So weâre currently walking in that. There has been no new revelation for our âplanâ since Bo was about three months old, and every time Iâve tried to do something major to alter the course of my life, I have failed spectacularly. (Think: health and wellness home business, makeup artist, freelancer, etc.) So, in summary, weâre here until we hear otherwise.
But just because I donât have a set agenda doesnât mean that I canât have hopes for how next year might turn out. As my husband finished up his list, I thought of all the negative descriptions I had used for 2018. I decided that I could probably just use their opposites for 2019. If I didnât like this year, then I can hope that the next one will be different. I slowly picked out my remaining four words as Taylor retrieved the misshapen bread loaf from the oven.
When he sat back down, I uncovered his list of words and was heartened to find that most of them seemed to have analogues among mine. I started at the top of his list.
âOk, so you have âgrounding (relationships)â â which ones?â I asked.
âLike, developing relationships that are grounding. I guess just actually making solid friends,â he answered.
âI have âcloseâ, which I think is equivalent, except âcloseâ was also supposed to refer to us and God.â
âWell, yeah,â Taylor responded, âI kind of figured that went without saying.â
âMaybe for a mind-reader,â I grumbled. âHmm. You know, I actually think these would both be better represented as ârelationalâ.â
âYeah, that works.â
I scanned the lists again. âI think âpassionateâ and ârekindlingâ might be equivalent,â I speculated. âWhat did you mean by that one?â
Taylorâs cheeks flushed a bit â a common occurrence, with his rosacea. âLike, rekindling the spark in our relationship,â he explained. âYou know, with a new baby, things arenât always… like, sometimes we choose Bo over each other, and we have to make sure that we continue to prioritize our relationship.â
âI wasnât aware that we were missing our spark,â I stammered.
âWe arenât! At least, not completely,â he amended. âAnd itâs gotten better in the last month, even.â
I reflected on what he had said. Itâs true that things between us sometimes verge on clinical. âYou have the baby.â âPlease change his diaper.â âHe needs to be fed now.â But surely we arenât doomed to always just be loveless roommates?
Taylor leaned over and kissed me. âWeâre ok!â he said, looking into my eyes. âIâm just making sure that we prioritize us.â
âYeah, no, youâre right,â I answered. âI was thinking of âpassionateâ as more along the lines of, like, doing stuff weâre passionate about, but it can incorporate, you know, marital passion, too.â
Next, I lumped Taylorâs âimpactfulâ with my âdirectedâ and âfruitfulâ.
âSo, doing something meaningful, under the guidance of Christ?â I clarified.
âYeah, pretty much. Iâm hoping that this is the year we actually start a Millennials ministry in our church.â
âYeah, me too.â You will know them by their fruits. I circled âfruitfulâ and moved on.
âOk, so what did you mean by âsolidifyingâ?â I asked.
âLike, settling into our roles and feeling confident in them. Weâve been parents for almost a year now.â
âSo… what, any day now, we should start feeling like we actually know what weâre doing?â
âYeah, but more than that. I mean, we stopped, like, resisting parenthood a while ago, but we should start actually, you know, embracing it.â
âOk, then I think that goes with your âreassuringâ, right? Is that just, like, reassuring that weâre on the right path?â
âYes, that was exactly my reasoning. So both of those are about us… you know, accepting where we are.â
I added âacceptingâ to the other two words, then analyzed the set. âItâs almost like… like, âcontentmentâ. Like, âcontentingâ?â
Iâm actually embarrassed at how long Taylor and I sat there and tried to think of an adjective that described contentment.
âPeaceful!â I finally shouted. I think it is a word that we have used maybe three times in all our years together. âPeacefulâ just generally doesnât describe me â but Iâd like it to. I donât think that our life will ever look peaceful, but we can have peace about it.
Taylor: <grunts in confirmation>
I moved on to the remaining word. âI think âimpactfulâ just gets wrapped into âfruitfulâ,â I said, âwhich leaves us a word short.â
I looked over at my husband, who decided at that moment to revert to his normal, laconic self. He shrugged his shoulders as if to say, I donât know any words!
Again, we sat there silently, groping for the perfect word to set our intentions for 2019. Taylor was, alas, no help. I think that night may have used up all of his talking for the rest of this calendar year.
âWhat if,â I suggested, âwhat if we said âjoyfulâ for 2019, too?â
Taylor laughed. âYeah! Why not? I want another joyful year for sure.â
And with that, I wrote and circled our last word, and we prayed over our hopes for next year. Emotionally exhausted, I set down the pen and closed the notebook (although, of course, I had to open it again to write this story and its companion piece, 2018: A Year in Review â The List). Taylor pulled me into his lap and kissed the top of my head.
â2019âs gonna be a good year, babe,â he whispered. âI just know it.â