Tuesday, December 18, 2018

How is Everyone Doing?


“How is everyone doing?” Many kind people have asked me this question these past few days. Following the untimely death of Michelle Mueller-Hinton, our beloved Director of Christian Education and Learning Ladder Preschool, everyone- friends, teachers, children, church members, staff, and family, especially family- everyone is grieving. Grieving itself is a good gift of God, and it is a part of becoming whole, even in the grip of loss.

How is everyone doing their grieving has been powerful to see. I’ve seen it on Sunday morning in worship and Monday and Tuesday mornings in preschool. Of course there are tears, and there are those hugs that are actually a way for two people to hold each other up. There are loving conversations in homes and in hallways and in grocery stores and everywhere else. There are circles of people praying in our classrooms. There are people coming down the Sunday school hall to say, “Here I am. Do you need me to go teach or just help somewhere?” (We did.)  There are staff members who are putting in long hours to do double and triple duty to make sure everything is covered, even as they are grieving deeply themselves. There are so very many acts of kindness, big and small.  These are assurances that we will all get through this grief together, and we will.

One of my favorite acts of kindness that I’ve witnessed was the person who brought donuts to the Learning Ladder staff, saying “Food is my love language.” Even when people don’t know exactly what to do, I keep seeing people do what is exactly right. People have offered and continue to offer to help the church, the preschool, and each other get through this time. Thank you. You are truly making a difference.

There is laughter, too, and that’s good. There are the moments when something comes up, and we’ll say automatically, “Oh, let’s ask Michelle. . .” And then a rueful smile, or a tear, or a chuckle. All of these things are a part of how we grieve, and they are along the path to healing.

How are the children doing? Mostly, they are doing what children do, which is play together and process things at their own pace in their own manner. When Michelle would be asked by parents how to help their children deal with loss, she would recommend the book The Fall of Freddie the Leaf, by Leo Buscaglia. It’s a good book for all ages, and I join Michelle in commending it to you.

On Saturday, we’ll celebrate Michelle’s life with joy and laughter, along with tears. All of these things can coexist at the same time in grief. 

How is everyone doing? We are doing this grief together, which is the best and only way that it can be done. Which is exactly how Michelle would do it, too.