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We arrived today in Leavenworth, Kansas, at about 3:15pm. There was some relief, I think, in pulling up to the house safely after such a long road trip. We first started Sunday afternoon, and stayed over the first night at my house in Northville before heading on. As soon as people saw us home Monday morning, they began to stop by to wish us well. We are surrounded by prayers.
There was something cathartic to me about having spent so much time on the road, in much the same manner Jonathan had himself on his last journey and on many before that. The trucks we passed reminded us of what had happened, but also began to show us that they could be safe. We were able to imagine what he might have experienced, but were also able to keep him company somehow by our presence with him on the road. We read aloud from CS Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia, his (and my) favorite childhood books: on Monday, the whole of The Magician's Nephew, and on Tuesday, the whole of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe--shy two pages we read in our hotel room.
Now, we have started The Silver Chair. Perhaps we will read some of that while we are here at his house. It was, in particular, his favorite of them all. The memory is that he always wanted, for this book, to start at the beginning; so that it was very, very hard to ever reach the end.
Tomorrow we are planning to travel to the place where the accident occurred, and in general to try our best to confront the reality of his death. He was so full of life! - I still can't imagine him, even for a moment, without picturing him moving, or thinking or talking or jumping around. It seems incongruous, that such a person should be stilled.
Mom said this evening that we are all used to Jonathan not living nearby. It is far too easy, she said, and attractive to imagine that he is only gone away for a while, as though to another country or on a trip. There is a struggle to maintain the knowledge of what has happened... denial will not help us grow. Acceptance - which is ugly, and brutal, and chokes words in our throats - is akin to truth. God can always use our experiences, when we can face them in truth.
And thanks again to the Cox family, and to all their baking friends, for the wonderful dinner we had together tonight. Sleep well, and see you tomorrow.
-Kirianne