Moving in the Rain

It had been raining all day. California is experiencing a drought, but on the day we needed to move, it rained.

We had 3 days to pack up and move. (3 days!!! I may have even needed to resort to throwing all our clothes onto blankets, rolling the blankets and throwing the blanket-wrapped clothes heap into the u-haul. Desperate times, desperate measures.) We ended up moving in with my parents short-term while we wait to buy a house. I think the combination of knowing how difficult it would be to move a family of four into my parents’ house plus the sheer enormity of the task of packing an entire house on short notice had me varying between taking lots of deep breaths, pacing, praying, and occasionally leaking tears.

After a long day of moving, I was sitting in my car driving my daughter to what we would call home for a few months. I was wet to my skin after walking through a downpour to the car. Five minutes into our drive, the clouds broke and it was as though the rain had wiped the sky crystal clear.  We saw constellations and all the little in-between stars.

Addy began to sing a song of her own making. “Let them glow. Let them glow. The stars are beautiful. God put them in the sky for us. Let them glow…”

I was quiet, content to listen, savoring her fleeting youth. After a while I said, “Oh. I like that song, Addy. Can we sing it again tomorrow?”

Then Addy said something rather profound. “No, Mom. This is the song for today. I can’t sing it a different day. Each day gets a new song.”

This is the day that the Lord has made. I will rejoice and be glad in it.

This day, this hard day, where I feel stretched to breaking…
This day, this Jonah day where I can know change is upon me, not just nipping at my heels but overtaking me…
This day has a song worth singing.
This day has gifts that can only be found and received today.

Warm California rain sliding down my skin.
The smell of damp earth and mustard flowers carried in on the wind.
A field of a thousand geese
The sight of a tulip tree through rain drenched stairs. 
A former intern and dear little sister in Christ coming to watch my kids and her wanting to spend the whole rest of the day with me, even in my frazzled state.
Being present to hear an Addy original song.

Generous parents. A place to stay on short notice. Knowing I could be packing up a house for the last time in a good long while…


As we turned onto the bridge that would take us to our temporary home, I thought of how much my life feels up in the air, out of my grasp. A place to live, a church to call home… all up in the air, beyond my control, just floating there out of reach. I long for things to settle. I long for things to stop changing.

The grand adventure Christ leads us on asks us to pick up our cross daily, asks us to lay down our life, asks us to live unsettled. I place my life in Christ’s hands and then it’s no longer in my hands. (Profound, I know.)

Each day we change. Those babies that used to fit so sweetly under the crook of my neck have expanded the length of my arms and are not so easy to hold anymore. In the span of one year, we have now moved twice, my husband has become a cop, I have become a cop’s wife, our church has moved… so.much.change.  

Yet the Lord is here, with me. Each day is different and new. Sometimes we change in subtle shades and sometimes the Master dips the brush into a new color and paints with bold, surprising strokes on what might have seemed a monotonous canvas.

Whether changes are subtle or surprising, God is here. And He is good.
This day is the day that the Lord has made. And I can rejoice in it.

Each day gets a new song and I will sing it.


By Grace,

Amanda Conquers