Wilma Derksen
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Pity Party - 2

10/30/2025

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Other Side of the Story

In response to my last blog, someone who knows me well wrote: “Now that is a very sad pity party. All of it is true, too—but there is another side to your story. What about the awards, the writing, the teaching, the opportunities you’ve been blessed with?”

I smiled. She was right.


Yes, I was born in 1948 — the year Israel became a nation, the so-called fig tree generation – growing up in the shadow of the end times. My father, deeply intrigued by the fig tree prophecy, assumed I shared his fascination and kept me informed of every new fulfillment. Though I wasn’t the favored child — that honor belonged to the long-awaited son born after me — I became the chosen one to accompany him on his spiritual quest. So together, we “watched and prayed,” tracing signs, debating meanings, and marveling at each new shift in the world’s story.

Those evenings remain luminous in my memory — our long, searching conversations about truth, prophecy, and the unfolding mystery of God. In those moments, I felt not overlooked, but seen — bound to my father by a quiet, sacred curiosity.
​

 And yes, I was born during the great Fraser River flood — when six feet of manure soup covered the valley. My mother said the stench was unbearable, but my crying was worse. There’s nothing harder on weary nerves than a baby who won’t stop wailing — and I was understandably, resented. With time, my mother and sisters became a formidable force in the kitchen — bustling, efficient, and confident — while I was delegated to scrubbing bathrooms, sweeping garages, and taking out the garbage. They were Martha's. I was a Mary — quiet, observant, content to sit at the Master’s feet. What once felt like disgrace has become, in hindsight, a kind of freedom. 

Then since I didn’t bond easily with my parents, as a child, I found my way — small and determined — across the pasture field to my grandmother’s house. I can still see myself waddling through the tall grass, my grandmother's face lighting up the moment I entered. She had been a mayor’s daughter in Russia — a woman of intellect and spirit — who, like me, never fit neatly into the Martha mold. Her home overflowed with books: stacked on tables, piled beside her bed, spilling into corners. She devoured words the way others devoured food. She became my first mentor, my refuge — I was always free to come and go as I pleased.

Not finding my place at home, I remember building forts and tiny houses all over our one-acre hobby farm with my red-headed neighbor — a boy who was also rejected from his family. Together we caught polliwogs in the ditches, built rafts that never floated, and laughed until our stomachs hurt. In that wild, unkempt world of play, I found place and friends outside that was just as rewarding plus I discovered imagination — and freedom.

At church, when I couldn’t find belonging in the choir loft or among the musically gifted singers, I found God in the stars. I whispered prayers into the night, read Scripture by flashlight, and learned that faith didn’t have to look perfect — it just had to live.

Meeting Cliff at Bible school was better than any formal education. We were two dreamers, two creative souls. We married, and with little planning and much grace, three beautiful, brilliant children — arrived unbidden gifts who filled our home with wonder. Their coming grounded me - forced me to grow responsible and resilient. I completed a challenging two-year journalism course, a skill that became my lifeline when Candace disappeared just six months after graduation. I might never have excelled at berry picking like my sisters, but all those summers were not wasted, the gave me the discipline and endurance to survive that course even though admissions thought I never would - having three children in tow.

Candace's murder was the darkest valley imaginable. There are no words for that kind of loss. It was the worst. And yet, even there, grace appeared — in the kindness of strangers, the resilience of community, and the unwavering gaze of a God who never looked away. The murderer stole her life — but not her light. Her story continues to live on - illuminating courage and calling forth love in unexpected places.

For me the worst was that I thought I had failed as a mother.  I wanted to hide and just cry but the spotlight found me and followed me — unrelenting. The attention and expectations pulled me out of my grief and forced me to find the answers  which we did in the word "forgiveness". i was forced to tell my story. What I once viewed as a burden became, over time, a strange and sacred privilege. I no longer see that light as glare, but as grace.

Now, in this new season of widowhood and Parkinson’s, I once again thought my life had ended. Parkinson’s felt like another valley — a narrowing of my world. But even this  I've discovered has become an unexpected refuge. Living with my daughter, her husband, our granddaughter, and Charlie the dog has wrapped me again in laughter and love. I can blissfully ignore the kitchen while they prepare feasts worthy of heaven.
 
Yet a question lingered. What now?

I was no longer a therapist  a speaker. My schedule, once overflowing, had emptied. What could possible fill the long quiet hours?

As a girl, I had borrowed Grace Livingston Hill’s Christian romance novels from the church library and dreamed of becoming a writer like her. Later, my secret hero was Danielle Steel. I remember reading that she had a cabin where she would retreat for days — just her, her words, and the worlds she created. I longed for that — not fame or fortune, but a quiet place where stories could bloom.

And now, I look around and realize — I did get my cabin. No mountainside retreat, perhaps, but a sanctuary nonetheless: a peaceful home, the hum of family nearby, and time  precious, unhurried time - to write. I’m writing like never before. indulging  in the freedom of an unfettered schedule and the joy of a rediscovered purpose.

So yes, my pity party is over

My life might have unfolded differently than I once imagined, and I may have walked through more valleys than most,  - but as I look back now. I see a life threaded with grace - a life filled with unexpected joys, hard-won freedoms and opportunities beyond anything I could have dreamed.

It's time to celebrate.

“I will love the light for it shows me the way,
yet I will endure the darkness because it shows me the stars.”
— Elizabeth Edwards

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Pity Party - 1

10/26/2025

4 Comments

 

Wallowing

I was listening to a broadcast featuring two brilliant psychologists discussing contemporary issues when one of them said that the worst trauma anyone could face was the murder of their child — and the other agreed.

It caught me off guard. The world went black as I slid into a bottomless pity party.

They were right — it was the worst. But I was now facing another worst. My life, it seemed, had been a collection of “worsts” from the very beginning.

I was born in 1948 — the year Israel became a nation and the so-called “end times” began. My father, fascinated by eschatology, often hosted visiting prophets predicting imminent disaster. I grew up knowing I was a member of the Fig Tree generation. I grew up under a cloud of doomsday prophecies.

It was also the year the fierce Fraser River overflowed its banks. We lived in Greendale — dairy country — when the dike broke and floodwaters covered the entire valley in six feet of manure soup. My mother, pregnant with me, said it couldn’t have been worse: the stench, the chaos of being forced into a flood refugee camp, and caring for two preschoolers while expecting me.

And on top of all that — I was unwanted. My patriarchal father had hoped for a son, and I was his third daughter. My mother often reminded me how disappointed he’d been.

It’s not surprising that I cried for the first two months after my birth. Later, I learned that Jewish babies had also cried constantly during Auschwitz — they could feel their parents’ stress. Perhaps I, too, was carrying secondary stress.

As I grew, sibling rivalry only deepened the ache. My older sister was the clever one — she remembered everything and collected awards like trophies. My second sister was the beautiful one, elegant and admired. I was short, plain, brown-haired, with a peasant body and a Barbra Streisand nose.

And I was creative — a writer at heart — a temperament not exactly celebrated in our practical German culture. In Low German, the word for “artist” is the same as “village fool.”

To make matters worse, I couldn’t sing — imagine that — growing up in a Mennonite church community where music was everything. I mouthed the hymns, pretending to join in.

Work was constant. My summers were spent in the berry fields — strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, blueberries — under a relentless sun. Later, I worked nights at the cannery until two or three in the morning. Being slightly uncoordinated, I was never fast enough, never quite good enough, even there.

When it came time for higher education, I longed to attend university, but my parents sent me instead to a small Bible institute in Saskatchewan. Three years later, I married a Saskatchewan farmer — a man rejected by his own family, whose only dream was to become a pastor. We followed that dream across Canada, but it never took root. We never earned enough to support our three children — all unexpected surprises.

In desperation, I returned to school to study communications — with three children in tow. Just as I graduated — my first real success — my world collapsed completely. Our thirteen-year-old daughter, Candace, was abducted and murdered on her way home from school. And if that wasn’t enough, my gentle, loving husband had to take a lie detector test — the insult of all insults.

After a visit from another parent of a murdered child warning us of the long road ahead, Cliff and I realized how critical our next steps would be. In desperation, we chose forgiveness — privately. But our decision went viral, placing us in the center of a national controversy that never seemed to end. Apparently, eighty percent of Canadians disagreed with our choice.

Because of the seven-week search for Candace, we had invited everyone into our trauma and inadvertently developed a public persona — sustained by the mystery and the ongoing investigation. Twenty-two years later, the man accused of Candace’s death was charged, then acquitted. He now lives free — even suing Manitoba Justice for millions. Justice never arrived; closure never came.

Then, just as we were preparing for retirement, my husband was diagnosed with gallbladder cancer. He died three months later — far too soon.

While caring for him, I realized I had Parkinson’s — the cruelest disease: humiliating, antisocial, relentless. It steals movement, dignity, and confidence.

So, when I heard those psychologists agree that the murder of a child is the worst trauma imaginable, I nodded. I had lived it. It was the worst — but so were all the others. My life had been a cascade of “worsts,” each one heavier than the last.

As I remembered, I could feel myself sinking — descending into what felt like a primeval ocean, slimy and dark, heavy with despair. I let myself wallow and hit rock bottom.

For a whole week, I indulged in a grand self-pity party. Poor me. My life was nearly over, and I was going to end encased in a Parkinson’s body.

Then a friend called and I invited her to my pity party — dress code: sackcloth and ashes.

Actually, I have learned that a there is a healthy way to do a pity party…you invite a friend. – then you sink to the very bottom…. and then you look up.

There are times when we must sink to the bottom of our misery to understand truth, just as we must descend to the bottom of a well to see the stars in broad daylight.  Vaclay Havel
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