Find Your Hope

Find Your Hope

FYI- this post was written on Feb. 12, 2024, but not published for another 2 months.

My beautiful daughter, 

You have lit up a room since July 16, 2005 with that open mouthed smile & infectious inner beauty of yours. Being your mom has been my best work by a mile, and I have an urgency to write you a letter today...

I believe we caught a glimpse of your second act on February 12, 2024- exactly 18 months after your precious dad left for heaven. 

Before I gush about the details of the day, I want to back up a bit. Most kids spend lots of time pining for their senior year. The bigness of it all. Senior sunrise and sunset, doing things for the "last" time, applying to colleges and campus visits. I, too, got sucked into the excitement of it all watching friends do it with their daughters. 

But alas...that was not to be for us.

Your dad died 2 days into your senior year, rearranging everything. We didn't know it at the time, but the things lost in the fire were enormous, and the devastation was bigger.

You played and loved volleyball for 9 years, always with your dad fully engaged & cheering. It wasn't long after his departure that you could no longer step on to the court. The sacred love of the game was lost to sheer exhaustion & deep grief. 

You were absent nearly 35% of your senior year. Crippling anxiety and panic tethered you to your bed for so many days. And there were times you cried and mumbled, "My only friends are my mom and my cat." It ripped me to shreds seeing you so overwhelming sad, knowing the only thing you wanted was something I could never give you. 

The weight dropped off your 6 foot frame quickly. Dark circles accompanied, and at your lowest I think you clocked in at 104 lbs. I didn't have the energy to panic because I was barely surviving myself. 

We toured a few college campuses, and I quietly cried behind my sunglasses, because dammit, I dreamed of doing this WITH YOUR DAD BY MY SIDE!

How was I doing this alone?

The house that once welcomed gobs of your friends for visits and sleepovers got painfully quiet. No one visited while you laid in bed. And both of us were too sad to care. 

Graduation day had you on the floor in a heap when you were supposed to be dressed and in line at school. You didn't let the darkness win. I threw you in sweatpants and flip flops, with a head of wet hair. While commencement unfolded, you got sick in a trash can in the office, but rallied enough to be thrown in a golf cart and snuck in a back entrance with enough time to claim your diploma. You were so weak, I had to hold you up while you climbed the stairs.

This was not a failure. It was actually your finest hour.

It was a hell of a year. We saturated ourselves in the loneliness. The fear. The aloneness. The unfamiliarity of this newly rearranged life. 

And we survived.

We survived for the better days ahead. We survived for the second act we've been building, one small step at a time. We survived for today. 

Because today...you looked like this. Today...all you grieved for months and months was the kindling to reignighted hope...at a place with the same name.

 

Hope College. A lovely small school in Holland, Michigan. We spent the day here, touring & imagining you in classrooms, making new friends, finding brand new joys and painting a blank canvas with some spectacular color. 

My heart swelled as you smiled & asked questions. I grew excited thinking about you walking between classes, transforming an ordinary dorm room into a small cocoon, and inviting new people to sit at your table. 

You've been building your wings for some time, and they began to flutter today. I heard the hum. 

I want you to know that as we wandered campus, your dad was nearby. He was keeping watch over his girl, and I know this to be true because of the sign he sent. Our tour guide- Samantha- stopped us to peek into only one classroom- Classroom 1111. 

Dad has been sending repeated 1's from the beginning, and today was no exception. He's protecting you when I cannot, offering gentle reminders to keep going, loving you from so very far away. We've been told repeatedly that Geoff Hayball has an incredibly strong spirit that comes through often. What a dad you have, Gwenie Girl, reminding you at every turn to lay down the worry and angst, because he's paving the path with his bright light. 

I snapped and created this picture over a week before we toured Hope.  My friend Nancy gave me these words in a text, and I LOVED them...because grieving is mostly existing in hopelessness. Then it changes, and we begin searching for hope again. Who knew these words would have such deep meaning for us.

Hope College in Holland...we found you.

We loved you for the possibility, the community, the space you are offering my fragile yet mighty daughter to breathe, dream and belong after a very long hiatus. 

Today- exactly 18 months after your dad left for Heaven- I saw your shoulders relax and a smile creep onto your face repeatedly. I've made so much space for your hurting heart to simply be still for so long, and it's all been so worth it to see you at the precipice of hope & change today.

You are a phoenix rising. And it's my greatest joy to bear witness to your strengthening, your gathered courage, your building Hope. 

This flight is about to get good!

Keep going, Gwenie girl.

 

UPDATE- In the time since this post was written, Gwen has been admitted & accepted to Hope College for fall, 2024. That feeling of magical belonging as we walked campus was right on the money!

I give thanks to Matt Bird, my old high school friend from a lifetime ago. He worked behind the scenes to make Hope shine brightly for us Hayballs.

Also a big shout out to Barb Miller, transfer guru at Hope. Your personal attention & gentle, welcoming way helped this community feel like home. 

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28 comments

I know Hope and Holland. So proud of you BOTH for how you navigated hell…with grace, and open to receiving alll the signs. ❤️

Betsy Novak

So excited and proud of Gwen. It sounds like the perfect fit for her. I am so happy for you guys taking that next step in your lives. Love you lots❤️❤️

Brandi

I have kept up from a distance, watching as many of us do through social media. My family and I prayed so hard for all of you. Something urged me to reach out, something that reached beyond the anxiety of “what do I say?” So many times that type of anxiety gets in the way. Why? Connection is so important! We need to be connected and feel connected to the world around us. The time that had passed didn’t make a difference, the thoughts of “I hope she doesn’t think that this is weird” didn’t make a difference…it kept coming to me to reach out. I got “over myself” and reached out, and simply stated “thinking of you.” I am thankful that I did, that connection triggered more than I could have imagined. We have had wonderful conversations about education and the passion we share for it. You sharing your journey as eloquently and pure as you have, it is truthful and courageous! It is helping so many people, more than you can ever imagine. The conversations it has spurred in my household have been so helpful for our family. My wife lost her father to cancerwhen she was 16…grief can connect us. Even though some of the people you thought would stay by you, don’t…others you haven’t thought about in years, reach out I got over myself, and reached out. Look what has come from a text “we are thinking of you.” I am so thankful for my family’s connection to your famly, it may have started in high school, but it has grown stronger because of Geoff. Everything you have shared about Geoff has been inspiring, he LIVED his life. When you live, you love the world around you, you connect to the people and places around you. Geoff lived! Ashley, thank you for your courage to share your journey. Gwen, I look forward to seeing you on campus! Know our connection is a strong one, even though we have not officially met…yet. You have an amazing journey ahead of you! Believe it! Do NOT be afraid to BELIEVE IT! Hope is the desire accompanied by expectation of or BELIEF in fulfillment. Gwen write the story you desire to write! Dream big, believe in those dreams with conviction. Hold so tight to that conviction it manifests to reality! When you feel weak, stumble, have fear, or feel alone…reach out, you never know where a “connection” can take you! You have lifetime friends, you have not even met yet! Welcome to Hope, Gwen! Matt B

Matt Bird

Way to go, Ash. You’re one of a few people that can get me sobbing first thing in the morning. Side note- I’m a really ugly crier. My heart is so happy (after reading all the heaviness she went through) knowing that she’s excited for the next chapter. And, come on, HOPE College?! Could it be named more accurately?! I love this for her and for your mamma heart. ♥️

SB

This is a special post because I have two daughters as well. My oldest lost her dad before he senior year began therefore Sammy parallels here. I also thought Kraig should have been by our side for the numerous college tours we attended. Each tour was great because I got my steps in, but painful because we were doing this without her dad. Well-he was certainly guiding from afar. I am happy for your daughter and this exciting news. My husband and I love Holland and have been on Hope’s campus many times. Wishing you all well.

Kristen Andersen Gazley

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