My journal from January, 2012 contains only two entries. The first is a black “X” across the entire page along with one sentence that reads, “Everything—life as we knew it—changed forever.” The second entry simply says, “I can’t write.”
In the days following my brother’s suicide, grief paralyzed me in body and soul. I’ve come to the conclusion that there are two kinds of pain in life: The pain of being outside God’s will, and the pain of being inside God’s will. Having experienced both, I’ve always said I’d take the latter any day. But after Jay took his life, I was tempted to rethink my preferences.
Someone once said, “Grief is life’s greatest teacher.” I’m not far enough into the journey to pass judgment. When a wound is gaping wide, you don’t care about learning anything. Grief burns a hole through the center of your chest and, frankly, most mourners just want to pick a different teacher.
My friend, Micki Ann, understands suffering because she has suffered. She says, “Suffering is a seed we are given to steward.” Several months after Jay’s death, Micki Ann gave me a handful of seeds. Even though there were days when I wanted to throw them back at her, I couldn’t deny the fact that her wisdom invited intrigue to inhabit my despair.
In an effort to prove my friend’s theory, I searched the scriptures.
It didn’t take long to realize that the Apostle Paul had a real knack for stewarding his suffering. Stonings? Shipwrecks? Paul went through the wringer. That’s what makes him so credible. Given his ordeals, on many nights, Paul’s words stopped my self-pity in its tracks. “Our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all” (2 Corinthians 4:17 NIV).
I believe Paul. I really do.
It’s just that in the face of our present pain, eternal glory can seem so very far away.
When I glance up from my computer and see the photos of Jay posted above it, glory’s gates couldn’t feel any farther away.
On days like this, grief outweighs glory—hands down.
When I used to write essays, articles, or blog posts, I would conclude my thoughts with some neat and tidy resolution.
But, grief isn’t neat, or tidy.
It’s sloppy and snotty. Inconsolable and distressing.
There is no closure, especially with death by suicide. Instead, there are only endless questions that will never be answered.
Grief makes a writer ramble, but I should at least be woman enough to confess what I can’t gloss over…
I have no prescription for this pain.
Truth be told, if the J-shaped hole in my heart could be filled with a prescription, I’d be the first person in line for that pill.
I’m not trying to sound dramatic, just honest.
The temptation to shrink back from my sorrow and suffering is immense. But, there’s no evidence that grief’s purpose is to make us give up.
Paul never backed off from God’s mission. Actually, the opposite is true. It was Paul’s pain that propelled God’s purpose, and he knew it. “Now I want you to know, brothers and sisters, that what has happened to me has actually served to advance the gospel” (Philippians 1:12 NIV, emphasis added).
By faith, Paul pressed into his pain and in doing so, his pain shaped his purpose; giving it color and contrast and depth.
And so…
That’s all I know to do.
I press into my pain as I ponder God’s Word.
I press into my pain as I grasp for Micki Ann’s seeds.
I press into my pain as I pray that somehow, my lament will offer hope to yours.
And, somewhere amidst all this pain and pressing…
A tiny bud bursts through the dirt.
What if suffering isn’t supposed to be a hazard, but a hallmark?
What if suffering isn’t supposed to be avoided, but embraced?
What if, instead of shrinking back, I seized my suffering?
And, what if I let God till this unplowed ground, hoping against all hope, that what sprouts forth will become “an oak of righteousness, a planting of the Lord for the display of His splendor”? (Isaiah 61:3b NIV)
God only knows what the seeds of suffering might become.
And, although there are still days I want to throw my seeds back, I have a sense that if I press into this pain hard enough…
Redemption will tip the scales in glory’s favor.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Apostle Paul, death, God, grief, grieving, lament, loss, mourn, mourning, seeds, stewardship, suffer, suffering, suicide, weep, weeping | 4 Comments »
As strange as it may seem, the passageway of our greatest pain…
…Often becomes the birthplace of our greatest hope.
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“…And Then There Were 5,” speaks of that one specific moment in time when, at the news of my brother’s suicide, my whole world changed.
“Oh, that I had wings like a dove! I would fly away and be at rest (Psalm 55:6 NKJV). The dove represents my youngest brother, Jay; his departure from the tree of life and his ascension into Heaven. As the dove is received into the hands of our Heavenly Father, the landscape of the earth is forever changed…as was the landscape of our lives in that moment.
“But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name” (John 1:12 NASB). All earthly momentum is swept Heavenward, along with the dove. As the dove ascends, he is met by the waiting hands of God who has burst through the skies to receive him. The tears falling to the earth on the right side of the collage belong to God as He wept with us.
On the left side of the collage, there are five mourning doves representing the remaining five siblings who were left behind to grieve and mourn. Each bird sits perched, frozen on the branches of the tree in a suspended moment in time. We appear as inanimate and two-dimensional, representing the shock and disconnection of the trauma. The beak of each bird is bound in speechless silence while our eyes drip wet with tears.
The tail-feathers of each mourning dove are made from something that represents each of our unique personalities. Jeff, the oldest, is represented with the tail-feathers of a world map. Lynne is perched on the branch below him, with her tail-feathers wrapped in a medical narrative. I am perched next to Jeff. My tail-feathers are wrapped in Psalm 27:13-14; a passage given to me by a friend, shortly after Jay’s death. “I would have despaired unless I had believed that I would see the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living. Wait for the Lord; Be strong and let your heart take courage; Yes, wait for the Lord” (NASB).
My younger sister, Carol, is perched closest to the trunk of the tree. Her tail-feathers are wrapped to represent health, beauty, and creation. Nancy, the smallest bird, is perched between Carol and Jeff. Her tail-feathers are wrapped in words to represent her service in public education.
The exaggerated size of the teardrops dominating the left side of the collage represent the immense depth of our grief and the grief of Jay’s many other loved ones and friends. Our collective tears are being swept upward into God’s hands, along with the dove.
P.A. Bragg, 2013 Mixed Media Collage
In terms of the materials used to create this collage, torn paper and tissue are a fitting metaphor for the ravaged heart inside of every person who, like us, has suddenly lost someone they love. In addition, using paper remnants gives voice to God’s redemptive purposes birthed from the shredded fragments of our lives on this side of Heaven.
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My article posted today on the My Purpose Now website entitled, “The Grief of God’s Mission.”
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…my article posted today…
on the My Purpose Now website.
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My brother, Jay, has been in Heaven for a year now. It sure seems like he’s been gone forever. In his honor, I post this commemorative video which includes some of Jay’s original music.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Bronzini, death, grief, grieving, Jayson, life, loss, mourn, mourning, sadness, sorrow | 2 Comments »
On nights like this…
I want to hear your voice on the other end of the line.
To have one last chance to beg you to stay…
To declare how deeply you are loved…
And, how we long for your return.
On nights like this…
I long to hear your thoughts and inklings…
And, the things that concern your heart…
To hear your records blaring in the background…
To know that you won’t give up.
On nights like this…
I want to wake from this terrible nightmare…
To hear joy in our family because you’re back.
I want your healing to have come on our side of Heaven…
To have this night without you be my last.
But, I can have none of these things,
No, not one.
THIS is the sobering reality I must stare down…
Knowing that it will stare coldly back at me.
Unchanged.
Unmoved by the weeping of my soul…
On nights like this.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged death, grief, grieving, loss, mourn, mourning. weep, sorrow, weeping | 2 Comments »
It’s been nine months since I got “the call”…
Nine months.
I’ll never forget the moment I received word that my little brother was…gone.
NEVER.
“Penny. Penny! PENNY!” My sister kept sobbing my name over and over again on the phone, each time with increasing intensity. That weekend, we had both been trying, unsuccessfully, to get a hold of Jay. When he hadn’t responded to our repeated texts or calls and his friends hadn’t heard from him, she decided to drive over to his house. Deep within my gut, I knew what she was about to confirm.
Her words paralyzed me in every way. I listened to what she was saying, but refused to hear the tragic truth: That our brother had barricaded himself in his bedroom, ending his pain the only way he knew how.
“No. NO!” I cried. “I don’t believe you. I’m not going to believe you! It’s not true!”
I curled up fetal on the floor, wrapping myself in the blanket my grandmother had sent me two weeks earlier.
“Wrap this around yourself when you need a hug,” she had said.
The crushing weight of my grief and sorrow was more than I could bear. I wept in anguish for the rest of the night…
As I would on many nights thereafter…
My journal from those first agonizing days contains one entry.
Nothing has been the same since December 11, 2011.
NOTHING.
But, while I never could have conceived it nine months ago, I am slowly coming to understand…
That the labor pains we must bear in death…
Are God’s passageway to birth new life.
“I tell you the truth, unless a kernel of wheat is planted in the soil and dies, it remains alone. But its death will produce many new kernels—a plentiful harvest of new lives.” John 12:24
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged birth, Christ, death, grief, grieving, Jesus, life, loss, mourn, mourning, pain | 3 Comments »







































































