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Melodie leads WORSHIP with her music, words and life

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

The Unexpected Big Brother

Never could we have imagined that the boy to which we were giving a hand up would end up paying it forward to our special needs son.


It all started at the beginning of the school year in our sophomore daughter’s English 3 class. Meredith filled our ears about the intriguing, hilarious, exchange students that were her classmates, and one in particular, Edvard from Ukraine, had become a close friend within a short window of time. Due to circumstances beyond his control, Edvard needed a different place to call his American home for the rest of the school year – and fast. Meredith came home with puppy dog eyes and lip rolled down, begging that we be his host family. Um, ahem. No.

However, the fatal mistake was when we as a family agreed to “pray about it and have Edvard over for dinner one evening.” The next week, he came to live in the Griffin house.

Since our oldest boy, Jonathan, has Down syndrome and doesn’t always adjust well to change, we had some concerns about how he might respond to Edvard and how our Ukranian guest might respond to him! Early on, it was difficult for the two boys to communicate due to Jonathan’s disability, but I noticed that very quickly, the boys began to bond – with words and without. They came up with their own private jokes and rehearsed them on a daily basis. Always aware of his older “little brother”, Edvard engaged Jonathan’s world in a way that words on this page cannot adequately convey. My special little guy adored this tall, blonde boy from Ukraine. He wanted to be just like him. When Edvard would return from lifting weights at the gym, Jonathan could be seen flexing his own muscles in front of the full length mirror. If Edvard crossed his legs, so did Jonathan. If Edvard rested his arm on the back of the chair, so did Jonathan. And so it went. Jonathan even learned to swish his Bieber-like hair. Just like his big brother did.

Our Jonathan has two stellar sisters who brighten his world on a daily basis!  They take him places, dote over him, and are immensely patient with him. But there was just something about having a brother…as our Ukranian exchange son was learning to navigate America, he was also teaching our biological son how to navigate life.

Edvard was with us for just over 6  months. One hundred ninety four days of adventure, laughs, inside jokes, exchanges of cultural richness and deep-rooted love. The middle of last month, all 5 Griffins and one honorary Ukranian Griffin made our way to the airport and did the ugly cry as we let go of the boy/man who came across the world and stole our hearts. Not a day has passed since Edvard’s departure that Jonathan hasn’t grieved, but we are learning to make Skype and Facebook our new best friends and walking the tight rope of holding on and letting go all at the same time.  Seeing the joy on his mom’s face as she is now reunited with her beloved makes it a little easier to swallow, too.

Thank you, Edvard, for bringing your love into our home and touching Jonathan’s life in a spot not yet cultivated. We are all better because of you and claiming the words of one of my favorite authors, Ann Voskamp. “Don’t grieve that it’s gone. Wonder that is was. Laugh that you lived and dance that you dared. Inhale that it happened and it was grace.”


Melodie Griffin is a native of the Pee Dee who now resides with her husband and 3 children in the Midlands of South Carolina. A popular speaker, musician, writer, and private music instructor, Melodie does laundry in her spare time. Find her at www.melodiegriffin.com to learn more or to invite her to inspire attendees at your next event.