Sacred Tears

Life is hard.

There. I’ve said it.  I know this because I’ve lived much of the last decade in pain—debilitating physical pain caused by chronic illness, and the soul-crushing pain of having a precious child who is locked in a place of emotional trauma. Perhaps the deepest hurt of all is knowing that I cannot free her. 

I also know this because every day I receive emails and notes from people desperate for comfort, for some acknowledgment of their pain. They, like me, are longing for hope in the middle of the hard.

Hi, I’m Lindsey. Lovely to meet you. In 2014, I started Bottle of Tears, an online business that sends gifts to those in dark places. Each gift comes with a card that reads, “A small token of hope to remind you that you are not alone. There is purpose in your pain. God sees you, God loves you, and your story is not over.”

I am pretty sure we all need to hear that, so let’s talk. Let’s be real and honest. I’ll start with my story, and let me just say, it’s messy. My story (spoiler alert) does not have a Hallmark-movie ending. There is no neat red bow I can wrap around the pieces of my life that will make it all look okay. I am not writing from the perspective of having been through suffering. I am writing from the middle of it. And I suspect I’ll be in the middle of it until heaven.

Let me lay some groundwork for you. My husband and I adopted a baby girl twelve years ago. While mine is not an infertility story, every woman who aches for the family she has birthed in her heart is near and dear to my soul. Your pain is unique and valid and as devastating as my own. But for Chris and me, adoption was our first choice and Guatemala stole our hearts. So we brought home our precious baby knowing full well she had experienced serious trauma in her first sixteen months of life. We did not understand the extent of the trauma or the life-altering repercussions, but even if we had known, we would do it all over again. We would still choose our daughter.

Fast forward several years. We now understand that our girl has severe PTSD. We have utilized every spiritual, financial, medical, and educational resource we can get our hands on to help her thrive. But I’ll be honest, many days we barely survive the complicated, permanent effects that early childhood trauma has left on our funny, intelligent, free-spirited daughter. We have made great strides, but she remains trapped by the consequences of choices other people made on her behalf when there was no one to advocate for her. 

Did I mention I have Lyme disease? Because if functioning on two hours of sleep each night and managing the ups and downs of a child with PTSD isn’t enough, my body gave up on me in the middle of it all. I frequently experience inexplicable pain, fatigue, and loneliness. I think the loneliness is the worst.

Suffering has a way of giving birth to an isolation that feeds our every fear and anxiety, and tricks us into thinking we have to keep it all to ourselves. 

So here I was, lonely, hurting, and scared—asking God what fruit could possibly be produced from my suffering. And he gave me you, dear friends. He clearly and without question gave me a vision for a business that would minister to people in their darkest places. The ones people know about and the ones who suffer and grieve in secret. I started Bottle of Tears to equip people with meaningful gifts they can send to those who are hurting, but it is so much more. Bottle of Tears has opened a door and given me a platform to tell my story so that others know there’s a safe place to tell theirs. I read every letter, every email, every comment. And I pray for you as tears run my mascara and leave lines on my cheeks. I pray for healing, protection, miracles, and for purpose. 

Yes friend, the Lord has purpose you for. There may not be healing on this earth but there will be fruit.

There is a deep longing in each to understand who we are and why we exist, and, for some of us, our suffering is the very vehicle to this understanding. Your purpose will look different than mine, but it will absolutely impact other people because God created us first for himself and then for each other. 

So can we sit in the middle of the hard together? Can we talk about when we’ve prayed, but not been healed? Let’s face the pain of never getting to bring the baby home to the waiting crib. Let’s not pretend it’s okay when the job offer doesn’t come, or the spouse walks out, or the depression is so heavy we can’t get out of bed.

Let’s not hide our tears. Those things that leak out of our eyes when we’re happy, sad, angry, confused or overwhelmed are precious. They are so precious to God that he saves them—all of them—in bottles.


Use HOPEHEALS15 for 15% off your order at bottleoftears.com


You keep track of all my sorrows. You have collected all my tears in your bottle. You have recorded each one in your book. Psalm 56:8 NLT

Whatever you are going through as you read this, you need to hear these words: God sees you, He loves you, and your story is not over. Every tear you shed is precious to Him. Your suffering is not in vain.

This collection of heartfelt essays, eye-catching word art, inspiring Scripture verses, honest prayers, and uplifting photography will meet you in your place of pain, offering solace and refuge for your weary soul.

Lovingly written by Lindsey Wheeler, a pastor’s wife and adoptive mom who lives with chronic pain, Sacred Tears will bring you the blessed respite you’ve been longing for and remind you that you are never alone. You’ll discover what to do when you feel far from God, how to trust Him even when you don’t understand His plan for you, and how to handle the difficult decisions that often accompany painful situations. All this and more await inside.

Experience the hope and comfort only God can provide.

Lindsey Wheeler

In 2008, Lindsey and her husband, Chris, adopted their daughter, Eliana, from Guatemala, unaware of the deep emotional trauma their new child had already experienced. Shortly thereafter, Lindsey was diagnosed with Lyme disease, a condition she still struggles with.

Despite the daily physical and emotional challenges she faces, Lindsey's heart is to maintain a positive outlook and find laughter and beauty in the pain, a desire she pours into every token of hope she sells through her online store, Tears in a Bottle. Lindsey and her family live in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

http://www.bottleoftears.com
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