Growing Edges
alexa lopezArchive for Parenthood
You’ve Got Questions…
Speaking for myself, I don’t mind being asked about my tattoos.
I don’t even mind when people draw conclusions about me when they see my tattoos because I was once that person…
…yes, that person who secretly assumed the worst about anyone who would “defile” their skin with such permanence. That was me.
Being “inked” has opened doors that may not otherwise have been opened, specifically with regard to conversations with people who know that most tattoos have a story behind them, and they wanted to know mine.
A heavily-inked 20-something girl who also had a few piercings stopped me at Target one evening to ask about the dragonflies tattooed on my back. “Those represent my six children,” I told her.

Rial "flitting" off to heaven
Then she asked, “Why is one different from the other five?” She referred to the one that has a date tattooed under it.
“That tattoo represents my fifth child and memorializes her; she died in 2000 at the age of 10 weeks,” I said.
She wanted to know more about Riál, about her illness, her hospitalization and her death. Then she began to tell me how one of her twin daughters had died earlier this year at the age of 11 months.
“I’m still so angry and in so much pain about her dying,” she said. “How do you get past that?”
Thank you for a wide open door to tell her my story. I told her honestly that during the seven weeks I spent with her at Children’s hospital, I didn’t think I could hear anymore news about “turns for the worse” and actually requested to be put into a room and knocked out until she was better.
I told her that my personal faith in God was tested. I felt weak. I had shaken my fist at God between periods of hope and faith that she would fully recover.
I told her I felt God was failing me when my prayers for Riál went unanswered, and that it wasn’t until I finally prayed, “Father, if healing Riál — making her ”whole” — means having her with You, then I’m okay with that.” And after a great day where things were improving, she died in her sleep that night.
How merciful for God to wait until I could accept things as they were before taking her home to heaven.
And I told her that I finally found that my faith was real…that I could still love the giver of life who didn’t preserve my daughter’s life on earth.
The “inked” crowd is more receptive to me now that I’m not the stereotypical silent tattoo-condemning Christian they’ve encountered so many times before…like I said, that used to be me.
Though I don’t quite understand what vibe I put out that makes people think I am unapproachable or that I have it all together, being “inked” means I get more opportunities to share my life experiences and my faith in a non-condemning way.
© Alexa Lopez, 2009
A Hand To Hold
I love that he knows I’m here for him. My 5…almost 6-year-old son knows it even if he doesn’t realize he knows it.
Anytime we walk together — across a parking lot, in the mall, to his class at school, around the lake — I only have to open my hand as we walk and he automatically reaches for mine. It’s as though he senses when my hand is reaching for his…to guide his steps, to keep him from danger, or just to feel his hand in mine.
I want my relationship with God to be like that. I want always to be aware of His presence and reach for His hand, to always sense He is here to help me along. I want to remember to reach for Him when I fear or when I sense danger, or when I’m lonely. Or when I am hurt. Or when I am lost. Or when chaos seeks to govern my consciousness.
But I forget. Time and again, I forget….and yet, once I snap out of my mental meanderings, I do not need to run after Jesus, catch up to Him. He is not ahead of me; He is still beside me, still reaching for my hand…waiting patiently for me to reach for His…

He can't NOT smile, this one.
Our 5-year-old fell at recess last week, severely scraping his face on the pavement. The school nurse called to tell me about it and said he was okay. When I picked him up after school, his brown eyes became pools of tears that refused to fall until his blink forced them to, and after a long hug, he was good to go. It looked painful. I wished I had been there to hold him when it happened, to be the immediate source of comfort he automatically sought.
Oh, those human limitations! I am thankful beyond expression that God uses our children to teach me so much.
My humble prayer is that, though our children may outgrow the need to reach for my hand, they will instinctively reach for the capable hands of Him who does all things well.
© Alexa Lopez, 2009


