Friday, July 30, 2021

2,429 gifts

For anyone who read my last post, it was a little bit… bleak. Depressing. After writing it that afternoon, I told Christian, “I wrote a blog post for the first time in a long time, but I think it might be too negative to post.” But it was true, and I did, and, well, it’s there and that’s that. Just in case you missed it and somehow got convinced by this paragraph that it is worth reading, you can find it here: It's Not Over.

I decided to post it because it accurately reflects how I feel sometimes. Not all the time, but regularly, whether it be on a mild or severe level. However, it is important to note that that is not always how I feel. Not by a long shot. God is so good, and I know that goodness all the time, and I feel it some of the time. I am on a journey (aren’t we all?) of learning and trying to take in and experience his goodness more and more. 


A very important step in that journey—or rather, the catalyst for such a journey—happened seven-and-a-half years ago. I had recently returned from volunteering in Uganda for the first time and had decided to go back to Noah’s Ark as a missionary a few months later. It was a challenge to sort out commitments to camp, Noah’s Ark, my boyfriend, my family and friends in America and Uganda, and I did not always handle that challenge gracefully. 


In the midst of all that, I read a book called One Thousand Gifts by Ann Voskamp. In that book, Ann describes her journey of learning to give thanks to God—daily, regular, open-the-eyes-of-my-heart thanksgiving in the best and worst of circumstances. I won’t tell you more because I think you should read the book yourself, but one thing she shared in her book was that she was challenged to make a list of one thousand things she was thankful for—one thousand gifts from God. 


I know with certainty I am not the only one who read that book and then bought my own journal to start a list of gifts God has given me. It was spring 2014 when I wrote my first entry: 


  1. geese that make funny sounds that make me laugh


What, you didn’t expect my first entry of a thousand things to be thankful for to be geese? Neither did I. I do remember sitting at a park outside Madison as I read and journaled that day, and that between all the long, yellow grass in the pond there was a flock of geese. I don’t remember the sound they made, but I do remember that it was an unusually sunny day after the coldest winter in 35 years, and my number two reflects that: 


2. warm sunshine on my face


And I continued. I made a goal of writing three things every day. Some days I forgot. Some days I couldn’t think of anything new. Some days I got carried away and wrote ten or twenty. I filled one journal and started the next. I wrote in Uganda, I took it with me on furlough, when I got married, when my children were born. Last year I decided to accompany the entries with dates so I could more easily see when I was thankful for particular things and what seasons of my life prompted such gratitude. 


I intended to write this post in the first week of January, freshly released from 2020 and ready to take on 2021. My Facebook feed was full of people celebrating the end of such an awful year, and I can’t blame them. But I had no desire to join them. 2020 was different. It came with new challenges, we all know that. But it also came with new blessings. New opportunities. New moments in which God opened my eyes and my heart and filled me with gratitude for blessings big and small. 


So even though, as you read in my last post, we are still very much in the middle of Covid here in Uganda, and even though sometimes I feel trapped and stuck and frustrated, I am thankful. 


To date, I have written 2,429 things for which I am thankful. I am on my third journal. I have probably repeated things over the years because, let’s be honest, when I feel gratitude for something I am not going to pore over a hundred pages of my list just to see if I have already said thank you to God for that particular thing. 


Today I want to share a few entries from the last year—from the beginning of the pandemic up to now. Because the truth is, even in the midst of what many call the worst year ever, it has really been a great year for at least 990 reasons…


1,430. Christian’s support of me pumping breastmilk for Babirye even though it took a lot of my time


1,432. when I was sitting alone on my bed, reading through the last several chapters of the book of John, the way the Easter story came alive in my heart this year


1,436. our fridge, freezer, stove and oven


1,596. yesterday marked six years since I moved to Uganda


1,601. enough printers on the compound that even when four don’t work, there is still a way to print homework


1,684. I am known by God


1,739. the patience to calmly deal with discipline cases all afternoon and not blow up at the children for interrupting me


1,759. Simone washed all our windows and now they don’t bother me anymore


1,762. hearing my dad’s laugh in my head when Patricia does something funny


1,771. I cannot hear a single mosquito this morning


1,765. a short list of boys’ names on which we agree


1,769. a reminder of the urgency of the gospel


1,779. Little Peanut, aka Elliot Mukisa Berkman, is here!


1,784. managing to naturally deliver a 3.9 kilogram baby without pain medication


1,820. the book Bright Evening Star by Madeleine L’Engle


1,828. the gift of a chunk of pumpkin from the neighbors and the possibility of pumpkin muffins


1,830. toys for the children to play with at our house


1,881. having two young children in the house, knowing where they are and that they are okay all the time


1,945. the feeling of relief after waking up from a bad dream


1,994. the younger kids, like Isaac and Asaf, joining band


1,998. uplifting phone calls with Ruth, Josephine and Vanessa


1,999. the joy of a fully chaotic house and yard with the kids in the afternoon


2,004. democracy


2,097. watching Zadock focus so much and work so hard on his shading sheet


2,099. the holiday program aunties participate wholeheartedly in Monday morning games


2,100. Lydia teaching stomp with me


2,169. our Olympics opening ceremonies went well


2,180. “Patricia, wat was het hoogtepunt van jouw dag?” “Papa!”


2,223. spending part of the night sleeping next to Elliot and seeing his cute, sweet little face when I open my eyes


2,226. back scratches


2,262. new, nice neighbors


2,299. despite being the only nurse and working full-time, Rachel does her job with as much love, joy, patience and care as ever


2,302. Big Josephine tutoring Little Josphine and giving her much-needed help in school


2,303. Yulia has prepared a lot and planned a really good camp to do with the children


2,315. P.4s enjoyed reading games so much that the next class over had to tell us to be quiet


2,349. the small group of teenagers who are putting full days and lots of energy into Bible Camp


2,373. a mattress cover so when we have sleepovers and children wet the bed the clean-up is still minimal


2,374. Patricia’s prayers


2,420. we made it to the Netherlands




Thursday, July 15, 2021

It's Not Over



In December 2020, I sat at our clinic and listened to the doctor say how happy she was that 2020 was finally ending and that 2021 would bring a fresh start. Like much of the world, she was optimistically convinced that Covid was a thing of that year and could not follow us as we moved forward. New year, new problems, but let’s throw out the old. 


I disagreed with her very much. Of course January first would not be magical. Of course people who went to sleep sick on the last day of 2020 did not wake up miraculously healed on the first day of 2021. Of course things would not just hop back to normal. 


By that time, schools in Uganda were partially opened. To make room for social distancing, only a few classes of students were allowed to return to school in October, meaning most of the school-going children in the country had spent the last nine months without any formal education. The government produced homework study packets—hard copies, because not everyone can afford internet for such things—but even though they were supposed to be free, in most places the distributors asked exorbitant amounts of money for them, which meant most students had no option but to do without. The money simply wasn’t there. 


In February schools opened a bit more. More classes were allowed to come back. The Ministry of Education even published a four-year plan of how to get schools back on track with a normal school calendar after such a long hiatus. Things looked promising. 


Most people in the country went back to life as normal. I know this primarily secondhand, since to leave our compound we still needed to have a gate pass signed by one of three people in the management team, only one of whom actually lives on the compound. We tried to do the responsible thing and stay inside the compound as much as possible, only taking an occasional outing to file papers for my work permit. For Christian’s birthday, we were extravagant and hired a car to take us to a swimming pool down the road for the morning. It was a BIG day for us. 


I made a five-month homeschool and camp program that would last until July 2021, which was supposed to be the end of the 2020 school year. Finally we could plan some things without asking every week what the next step was going to be or what lockdown would look like next month. It felt good to be sure of something. It felt good to be able to put something on paper—something that had a period, not a question mark.


Since the rest of the world began to open up as the vaccine became available, we felt like we could finally visit our families without being socially irresponsible. Christian’s brother is getting married in August, so we bought plane tickets to attend his wedding and spend Elliot’s first birthday with family, then make our way to America to introduce my family to the newest member. 


We expected to get a rush of excitement after buying the tickets. Instead, we felt heavy. It took a day or two to realize: It was dread. What if, for the third time in a row, this trip doesn’t work out? What if our parents have to go even longer without seeing their grandchildren? What if we don’t get our rest? 


Our trip is 11 days away, and I am still using the word “if” when I talk about it. Because I have learned that nothing is certain. Nothing is for sure, 100 percent going to happen. I refuse to fully believe we are going until we are sitting on the airplane and the wheels have left the ground. Then I will exhale. 


Six weeks ago, all schools in Uganda closed again. Completely closed, not a single student allowed. Covid had run rampant through the younger demographic this year and putting students together was exacerbating the problem. (One health professional put it very plainly when he told us, “Social distancing died an early and natural death.”) 


Once again, all 200 of our children were home. I threw away my nice paper with the five-month plan. I held some meetings to decide what to do next. I waited. I worked. Hard.


Then Covid hit closer to home. After successfully keeping the disease at bay for more than a year, it breached our compound walls and entered in. Not in a big way, but we needed to take big action to keep it contained. Everyone stay home, interact as little as possible, all nonessential work stopped. Does that sound familiar to anyone? But surely… this was a thing of the past, right? 


The country went back into lockdown too. In June, Christian and I sat and listened to the president speak (the ONLY times I have watched the news in the past decade have been to hear the president announce new Covid measures) as he announced a ban on public transportation, school closures, how overwhelmed the hospitals are, that Uganda has too few oxygen tanks and how important it is to wear a mask. When he finished, I turned to Christian and said, “We heard the exact same speech last year.” 


We seem to be going in circles. Who is playing this pandemic on repeat? 


We want to get vaccinated, but the country is out of vaccines. My sister, who organizes vaccine clinics around her state, sits in a room for a whole day and gets only one—one!—person who wants to be immunized, and the same day I read an article in a Ugandan newspaper about 800 people in Kampala who were immunized with water because that was a fast way for a few “doctors” to make some money. “Send them here!” I want to shout to my sister. “We’ll take anything you have!” 


Students have been in the same class for one-and-a-half years, and there is still no end in sight. Still no word about when schools will open for those classes, let alone reopen for everyone. I dare to guess that with every passing day schools are closed, at least one more student will decide not to come back at all. By the time we do open, social distancing should be easy.


Vaccines are coming, slowly. Healthcare workers, teachers, government workers. People are scared of both Covid and the vaccine so whether they get immunized depends on which fear is the strongest. 


Last year, when other countries were going into lockdown and everyone had to stay home except for grocery shopping and medical emergencies, I felt so blessed. Here on the compound, we had freedom. I could see 200 people in a day just by doing my job. I could still do my job. I could run a kilometer-long circle on the road inside the compound, not be confined to workouts in my living room. Compared to my friends and family, I was not at all confined. 


When you were locked up, I felt free. 

Now that you are gaining your freedom, I feel locked up. 


It has been 16 months since I went for a run off the compound. What I wouldn’t give to not have every step memorized before I make it. I even have places on my route I know I only step with my right foot, or my left, because it has become such a routine. 


These days, I prepare activities for the children from my own home and give all the homework, games and crafts to some aunties every morning. The aunties lead the activities; I do not go there myself. It has been five weeks since I have played with the children from the children’s home, even though I can see them from my front door as they play on the playground. Last week someone donated bouncing castles for a day, so Patricia and I sat on the road by our house and watched the children run around screaming and having fun. Patricia asked if she could go; I had to say no. Children shouted to me, asking if Patricia could bounce with them; I had to say no. (My solution was to borrow a mini trampoline, put it in our yard and tell Patricia that was her bouncing castle. She believed me, bless her sweet little heart.)


On the one hand, this seems so cruel. In 11 days I am leaving for three months, but I already miss the children terribly. How much will my heart hurt at the end of those three months? When I come back will I get to hug them, or will I only be allowed to wave from a distance? 


On the other hand, it makes my heart so happy that I miss them. Even after being here all the time without a break, even after serving them day in and day out, I want to be with them. I love them. I don’t want to be away from them. How God has grown my love for these children, to make part of me not want to visit my own family because for a time that means saying goodbye to my family here. As excited as I am to celebrate Elliot’s first birthday with his grandparents, I am also disappointed it means that his dear friends here have to miss out. Curse geography. 


This year feels a lot like last year. A lot like last year. Now, however, we are used to the uncertainty. We are used to not being able to plan. We are used to not knowing. This year, the uncertainty doesn’t make me nervous; it makes me weary. The stability we always took for granted—schools, grocery shopping, government offices doing their jobs—has been stuttering for the last 16 months. Sometimes those things are there, sometimes in part, sometimes not at all. And what are we left with, when all our stability is gone? When our periods have again turned into question marks? 


This afternoon I was browsing through some of my old journals and stumbled across a passage I had written on March 12 of last year, the day after we cancelled our trip to America: 


But I trust you. And I will accept this. And I will serve my heart out here so the time and the cancelled trip are not wasted. Maybe you will make it very clear in this situation why the plans have changed and maybe not, but I will not blame you for anything. I am sad and will let myself be sad, but I also trust you and choose to have peace in you. I am in your hands. This is in your hands. There is no place I would rather be.


As I was meditating this morning, God simply said to me, “This is an opportunity for you to trust me.” I will do that. I trust you, Lord.


What a long opportunity to trust him. What a long, glorious, forced opportunity to trust God. But I do. And I will. (Notice: That is a period, not a question mark.)

Friday, May 28, 2021

Birth Story :: Elliot Mukisa

The doctor was sitting outside in the waiting area for the clinic. Perfect, I thought. I wanted to talk with her without making a big deal out of it. No one was around, so I entered and pulled up a chair next to her. After making the usual greetings, I got straight to the point. “I would like to buy a pregnancy test to do at home,” I whispered. The whispering was not because I was embarrassed, only that I didn’t want any passersby to hear what I was saying. I had not even told Christian I suspected I was pregnant, and I would hate for rumors to start from a child who overheard my request. 

“You think you might be pregnant?” she asked kindly and curiously. 


“Maybe,” I admitted. I told her how lately I had been feeling especially tired, and how my stomach had felt a little off for two or three weeks. There were no big signs, but once the seed of possibility entered my mind, it grew until I knew I needed to take a test just to be sure. 


“It’s probably nothing,” I said, “but I just want to double check. And please don’t say anything to Christian about it.”


The doctor raised her eyebrows. “He doesn’t know you are taking a test?” I shook my head. She seemed amused, or perhaps honored that she was literally the first person I had told about my suspicion. She gave me a pregnancy test to take home. I hid it in the back pocket of my jeans, then pulled my shirt down over it, just to be sure nothing could be seen. When I reached home, I hid it in the bathroom until I was ready to take it that evening. 


I would not have been surprised with a negative result, but I was also not surprised when the two lines grew dark on that tiny stick. I would even say there was a twinge of happiness. 


Christian, on the other hand, was shocked. After I told him, he just stared at me and I swear I could hear the gears in his head turning. We had not planned this. In fact, we had planned not to have this happen. I had an IUD. On top of that, I was still breastfeeding Patricia, who was two weeks shy of a year old, three or four times a day. When I wasn’t breastfeeding her but still had milk, I was pumping for two babies in the children’s home. When we told my parents two weeks later, my mom’s first reaction was, “How can you be pregnant? You’re constantly breastfeeding!”


Take note, women: Breastfeeding is not birth control. 


That is how we came to know about Little Peanut, as we affectionately called our surprise baby. After a few weeks the shock wore off and we were able to joyfully adjust our plans for the year (and beyond) to accommodate this new little life. 


Fast forward to August, and we were all prepared for the arrival of Little Peanut. I cut back on work when I was 37 weeks pregnant to give us time to organize the house, get the last supplies we needed, and spend some quality time with Patricia while she was still an only child. In the last weeks of my pregnancy with Patricia we were impatient to have her with us. We would have gladly welcomed her before her due date so we could meet our first child. 


We did not experience that with Little Peanut. For one, we were both working a lot and simply didn’t have time to sit down and think, We can’t wait for something to come and make our lives even busier! But more than that, we enjoy Patricia so much—and she takes so much energy—that we were very happy to have a few more weeks where we could give her our complete attention. 


Or so we thought. 


Like the pregnancy, the delivery caught us a little bit off guard. 


Monday, August 24, started like our other Mondays: Christian and I dropped Patricia off at daycare, grabbed our Bibles and went to staff devotions. After devotions I went down to the library for a couple hours to organize some of the mess I had left when the lockdown program ended a week before. That day I finally felt like I had made enough progress that it looked like a library again, not a storeroom. Or a pigsty. 


Once in a while I felt something—not exactly a pain; more of a small pressure—in my pelvis, but as I had been walking around the whole morning, carrying boxes back and forth between the library and the storage room, and I was eight-and-a-half months pregnant with what looked to be a huge baby, I assumed it was just from the activity and nothing with which to concern myself. I was also very tired, to the point where I wanted to take a nap, but that was not uncommon considering work, the one-year-old, and the pregnancy. It did cross my mind that I hoped the baby would not come that day because I didn’t feel like I had enough energy for labor, but the thought was fleeting as I went about my business. 


The three of us had lunch at home and then I grabbed my Bible and journal to do devotions. Since Christian was busy with something in the living room, I sat down on our bed to read. I read one page, and then rested my head on my arm… and closed my eyes… 


I woke up about half an hour later with a dull pain in my abdomen. It lasted about thirty seconds and then subsided. That’s a bit strange, I thought, sitting up again and closing my Bible and journal. I surrendered to fatigue, lying down properly on my pillow and actually giving myself permission to close my eyes. Twenty minutes later, I woke up again with the same pain. And again twenty minutes later. And then once more. 


I was not yet convinced this was real labor, but since the pains had been at regular intervals I got out of bed and told Christian the baby might be on the way. We agreed to time the possible-contractions for the next hour and then call the midwife if they stayed consistent. 


They did not stay consistent. 


By the end of the hour, contractions—and by then we knew they were contractions, whether it was real labor or not—were five minutes apart and lasted a minute. Christian went to get the midwife while I got Patricia, who had been napping, out of bed and into her high chair for a snack. I sat in front of her on the coffee table and breathed through the steadily-growing contractions. Once I closed my eyes to focus on my breathing. When the contraction ended and I opened my eyes to see Patricia again, she was also breathing loudly and slowly, her mouth in a perfect circle and eyes on me. That girl copies everything!


The midwife came and did an exam. “You are in labor,” she told us matter-of-factly. “You are dilated five centimeters. You can stay here and take care of Patricia for now. Call me when your water breaks or when you feel like pushing and I will come back.”


When she left I looked at Christian. “When I feel like pushing? Won’t that be too late to go to the clinic?” With Patricia we did a “home” birth in the Netherlands, but here that was impractical. Our bedroom is so small that the bed takes almost all the space. It would be difficult for anyone to get to different sides of the bed quickly. Not only that, but the foot board on our bed would make it impossible to deliver the baby in that direction because no one could stand there to catch it. The clinic is less than a minute’s walk from our house, and we knew if we delivered in the clinic we wouldn’t have to deal with the mess in the same way we would in our own home. So even though this delivery was in Uganda, it would end up being in more of a medical facility than what we had in the Netherlands. 


We had arranged for Irene, a teenager from the family units, to be our on-call baby-sitter for Patricia when I went into labor. Since we needed something to do to pass the time and the contractions, the three of us put on our shoes and wandered down to the family units to let her know she should come to our house later in the evening. 


Our hope was to put Patricia to bed at 8:00 and then let Irene take over while we went to the clinic for what would likely be the whole night. We tried not to make a big deal of it as we smiled and told her (with eight other girls from the family unit eavesdropping behind her) that the baby was on the way and Patricia would need her services in a few hours. 

It was dark by the time we reached home again at 7:00. The contractions were no closer together and no worse, but it was still early in labor. I sat on the floor and finally got a hold of my mom, whom I had called multiple times on multiple numbers but had failed to find until then. Sitting on the floor was because my water had not yet broken and I was in no mood to figure out how to clean amniotic fluid off our couch. Turns out sitting on the floor was a wise move because a few minutes later I felt a warm bubbling between my legs and knew without a doubt (in contrast to labor with Patricia) that my water had just broken. Christian whisked Patricia into her high chair to keep her from skating on the slippery floor and called the midwife again. 


The midwife returned and said I was now dilated six centimeters but that after water breaking labor tends to speed up, so it was time for me to come down with her to the clinic. I grabbed my phone, kissed Patricia good night, and left her screaming in her high chair when I closed the door behind me. Christian would join me in half an hour after giving her supper and getting her in bed. 


One blessing, for which I had not thought to wish ahead of time, was that Little Peanut decided to make his entrance in the evening when the clinic was closed. That meant that I had the freedom to walk around the waiting area without weaving in and out of patients’ outstretched legs and without wearing a mask, and there was only the occasional person who walked by and was clued in as to what was going on. 


For the next hour, I paced. 


I like rhythm when I am in labor. With Patricia, I had a rhythm of breathing while I was waiting for the green light to push. This time, I made my own little track, always following the same route around the chairs, down the hall, and back. I did it backwards once or twice and it felt weird. For distraction, I held my phone in my hand and listened to a Friends episode on Netflix. I remember it was the one where Phoebe, Monica and Rachel all wear their wedding dresses and Rachel scares Joshua away and though I haven’t watched that one since then, I am sure for the rest of my life it will always remind me of that night. 


“Are they increasing?” the midwife asked through the window of her office as I passed. I breathed out a “yes” and kept walking. 


By the time Christian came with our things, I was having trouble staying composed while I moved. I tried sitting a couple of times, because on a normal day if I have pain while moving then sitting brings relief, but sitting only brought me the expectation of relief and no less pain, which turned out to be worse. 


I followed him to what I guess would be called the labor suite, a room with two beds and a bucket we brought for a toilet since there are only pit latrines in the clinic and the midwife understandably did not want me to accidentally deliver my baby into a pit full of poop. (I did not actually have to use the bucket, which made me happy.) My tolerance for the pain did not increase at the same rate as the pain itself. I sat on the floor and rested my head on a chair, rocking back and forth until the midwife told me to sit on the bed because “they do come and clean the floor… but it’s the floor, so you never know.” 


Back to pacing. 


There is a short hallway with a seam down the middle of the flooring. Concentrating all my efforts on that seam, I walked the line like someone taking a DUI test. Over and over, back and forth, trying to think only of that line. (Friends was way behind me at that point.) When even that became too much, I succumbed to the bed. Christian brought me some juice and a granola bar and every contraction I put my head between my arms and rocked back and forth on my knees until the two-second pause before the next one. 




I could hear the midwife preparing the delivery room next door. Finally, I whispered to Christian, “Tell her I want to push.” 


Compared to our bed where I delivered Patricia in the Netherlands, the bed in the delivery room felt like plywood. A doctor told me later it is to encourage mothers to deliver quickly. The clock hung on the wall in front of me. I started pushing at 9:00 pm. 


After the very first push, the midwife said, “There it is,” and pointed between my legs at the bed. I didn’t really think the baby had come out already, but what else could she be talking about? Then she picked up the IUD I had just delivered and put it on a table for safekeeping.


The delivery room is full of windows. It is full of windows with no curtains. Two of those windows directly face the main road on the compound, about ten feet away from the side of the building. It was dark outside, and we had the light on in the room. I would have felt entirely on display if it were not for the fact that I had on countless occasions walked that road and glanced at those windows and I know from experience that you can see absolutely nothing from the road. It doesn’t make sense to me, but it did make me feel better. 


Our midwife here was the opposite of our midwife in the Netherlands. For Patricia’s birth, during push after push, the midwife was by my side almost shouting, “C’mon c’mon c’mon c’mon c’mon!” to encourage me. This time, she was calmly arranging things in the room while Christian stayed by my side, occasionally coming over to check progress and then going back to her other business. 


Labor is like a trail full of switchbacks. When you walk switchbacks in the forest, you have no idea how many still lie ahead of you. You can only see a short section of trail in front of you and every time you switch back you wonder if you’re going to get the view that time… or the next time… or the next. Once in a while you think to yourself, This MUST be it!, only to see more trail. Do you need to save your energy for twenty more, or can you power through these last few to reach the top? Are you allowed to be tired yet, or would that be foolishly premature?


Pushing a baby out is like that. 


“You need to give the next one more effort.” 


I did. No baby. 


A bit later: “If you push harder on the next one, it might be your last.” 


I gently (at least it was intended to be gentle, but was likely not) clutched the front of Christian’s shirt and said with closed eyes, “Pray that this is the last one.” 


“I already did,” he answered. What a guy. 


Then—finally—I heard, “It’s out.” Not wanting to relax too soon, with my chin still to my chest I shouted in one breath, “Just-the-head-or-the-whole-baby!?”


“Just the head—one more push!” 


The last switchback. 


And there he was. Our bloody, big, screaming, gray, slimy treasure. 



The midwife laid him on my chest for just a minute or two before taking him away to get cleaned up and warm. I just kept looking at his gross head and whispering in a mixture of joy and relief, “You’re here. You’re here.” 



After a while, Christian wanted to send a message to our families. We had recently narrowed it down to two names, but each of us slightly preferred a different one. The good thing about being half naked and bloody and sweaty on a delivery bed that felt like a plank was that Christian said we could use the one I preferred. Then he asked how to spell it. 


For all of you who see Elliot’s name and think it should be spelled with double t—yes, it should. But we were eager to tell people about him. So we guessed. And we stuck with it. 


Elliot comes from the name Elijah and means “the Lord is my God.” Mukisa, his middle name, is the Luganda word for blessing. Elliot Mukisa Berkman was born at 9:30 pm on August 24, 2020, after a mere six hours of labor. (To sum up the difference between delivering a first and second child—the intensity of the pain is the same, but it doesn’t last as long.) It was a good thing he came two weeks early, because at 3.9 kilograms I would not have wanted to grow him any bigger on the inside! 


We thank God he gave us this blessing even when we didn’t know we wanted it.