Pages

Mom

Monday, February 4, 2019

Mom. While such a commonplace title, the true implications of assuming this role are often overlooked. Choosing to bring a tiny human into the world and to become his or her mom is life altering, world changing, and confidence shaking. The second you hear that first tiny cry, everything changes and life as you know it will never be the same. You will never be the same. 

I’ve always been the type of person that hates to be bad at something. I won’t try something new until I am certain I will be able to succeed, whatever it may be. You could call it perfectionism, or arrogance. Either label fits. I’m extremely competitive, which further lends to my unwillingness to be “bad” at anything.

Becoming a mom completely changed me. I wasn’t able to study, practice, and become the best mom possible before Liam came charging into our world. There is no one-size-fits-all manual that informs future moms how to do it all flawlessly and perfectly.  When people say leaving the hospital with your newborn baby is terrifying, they’re right in some ways. You’re handed a tiny human being and they trust you enough to take him or her home with no previous experience and keep this baby alive. All on your own.  

Assuming the role of mom humbled and changed me in ways I never knew possible. This new title exposed weaknesses, negative tendencies, and a selfishness I never knew existed within me. And I think that’s the way God intended parenthood to be in its truest rawest form. God uses our insecurity and complete inability to do it on our own to show us how richly he blesses us as parents when we lean on Him. 

Until I became a parent, I didn’t realize how much potential I had for love, or how much potential I had for patience.  I didn’t realize the lesson it would be on God’s love for us. Becoming a parent truly opened my eyes to how deeply God loves us. It opened my eyes to how heartbreaking the cross is and how wondrous a thing God did for us through Jesus. 


Being a mom to Liam has curved my sharp edges, softened my heart towards others, and reshaped my entire future for the better. What a blessing this title has been!

Liam’s Birth Story

Monday, October 8, 2018

If you have ever spent any amount of time with me, you know that I am obsessed with plans and schedules. I live for planning everything—from trips, to weekends, to daily routines—I love to plan. So, needless to say, the prospect of giving birth was already scary enough for me. I couldn’t really plan that out.  You can’t tell your body, “Ok, let’s have a four hour labor, push twice, and be done with this.”  You can’t decide how much pain you will be in or how the birth process will go. Heck, you can’t even decide what day it will happen.

It became very evident on Labor Day, Liam’s due date, that things definitely were out of my hands. Liam was not planning to make his arrival any time soon. I wasn’t dilating and it didn’t seem to the doctor like he would come willingly. So, an induction was scheduled for September 7. We were told to call at 3:30 and see if a bed was ready. If so, we would go in and get started. But. A room was not ready. We were told to call again at 7:30. We called. Two rooms were available!  We rushed to the hospital and checked in. And then we waited. We waited until 10:00 PM. Apparently some emergent labor mothers arrived right before us and took the open rooms. But, by 10:30 we were in our room, paperwork completed, and monitors all hooked up.

I was supposed to start Pitocin at 11:00PM. But, at 11:00 Liam and my body had other plans. All I did was roll over to lie on my right side. Nothing big, right?  Well, as soon as I did, Pat and I noticed that Liam’s heart rate dropped significantly. We are talking a drop from 140s/150s down to the 50s and 60s. Just as Pat and I opened our mouths to ask each other what was going on, three nurses rushed into the room. One yanked an oxygen mask onto my face while the others pulled back the covers and asked me to continually roll onto my right side and then to my left. After a few minutes, Liam’s heartrate finally began to climb back to normal. The nurses informed us they were not sure what caused it, but it could be him lying on the cord or the cord wrapping around his neck. Regardless of the cause, I would not be allowed to start the Pitocin until he was stable for a couple of hours and I also would not be allowed to get out of the bed or move at all.

1:15 AM arrived and Liam had been stable for a good while. So, they started me on the Pitocin. But, I was stillw not allowed to get out of bed. Torture. But, at 2:40 I was given the all clear to move about. So I got up to use the restroom. Once I got back to the bed, Pat hooked me back up to the fetal monitors. But, they didn’t seem to be working. Liam’s heart rate was in the 60s and then it was gone. I reached to call the nurse to see what we did wrong. But before I could, the door burst open and five nurses rushed in. They reclined the bed all the way back, put an oxygen mask back on me, and asked me to continually switch the side I was lying on. Still, I didn’t hear Liam’s heart rate pick back up. After two minutes of this, they had me get on my knees on all fours. They started moving my belly around, trying to jostle Liam. No heart rate.

At this point, I looked over and made eye contact with Pat. He kept telling me “it’s ok. It is going to be ok. Liam’s ok,” but I could see the panic in his eyes.

After four minutes, a doctor rushed in. One of the nurses filled him in as the other nurses kept looking for a heartbeat. FINALLY, after five minutes, I heard a heartbeat.  Relief flooded through my body as they had me lie on my side. I was told I would no longer be allowed to get up or move and that at this point, it appeared I would be having a c-section in the morning. Sure enough, my OB arrived at 3:30AM and said as much. He also informed us that if Liam’s heartrate dropped too low again, I would be rushed back for an emergency c-section immediately.

We made it through the rest of the night with no issues, and at 7:40 AM my doctor and an anesthesiologist came in to tell us what to expect. We were scheduled for 8:30. However, just before 8, I heard Liam’s heartrate slowing again.  The nurses burst into the room and began yelling orders and unhooking me from machines and the IV drip. By 8:00, they were wheeling me out of the room and on to the operation room. As they rushed me down the hall, I asked if Pat could come with us. He was told no and to wait in the family waiting room. I promptly burst into hysterics.

Upon arriving to the operating room, the nurses attempted to get a heartbeat again. It took nearly five minutes to finally get one. Within minutes, I had received a spinal block, was hooked up to monitors, and they were about to begin the surgery. Noticing my hysterics, my OB came over and hugged me as I cried, reassuring me that it’s the nurses job to panic, but that Liam was ok and it would all be ok. Within ten minutes of wheeling me into the room, the doctor had cut me open. Several minutes in, I asked “is someone going to get my husband?” To which the doctor yelled, “did no one go get the husband yet!?” Thankfully, Pat made it in to the room mere minutes before they pulled Liam out. The moment we heard him cry, Pat and I both cried with relief. Our son was alive, he was breathing, and he was safe.

Pat was an amazing dad in those moments. He stayed with Liam the entire time after and made sure he was ok. Once the nurses cleaned him up, Pat brought Liam over to me so I could finally meet him. Never in my life have I been so overwhelmed with joy and relief as in that moment. Pat went with Liam to the recovery room while the doctor finished closing me up. When I joined them fifteen minutes later, Pat was cuddling Liam and giving him his first bottle. Finally, we were all together, a happy, healthy, safe family of three. The doctor told us that Liam ended up having the cord wrapped around his torso. Whenever I moved, he moved, and the cord constricted him, cutting off his air supply most likely. Unfortunately, there’s no way to know if that was happening prior to my admission to the hospital. But, what we do know is that it is by the grace of God that Liam is alive, healthy, and with us. What a mighty God!

Miscarriage. My Story.

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

I want to start this post off by saying that GOD IS GOOD.  He can bring ruin from ashes and redemption from pain.  But following God does not mean we will live lives free from pain and anguish.  God allows us to go through those times in order to teach us, grow us, and restore us to Him.  He is good.  He is faithful...

Grief isn't an ocean. It's a wave. It keeps pummeling you every time you think you've broken free. Every time you finally are able to catch your breath. Every time you think "Finally I am past it. Finally I can keep my head above water and move forward from this place,"  It crashes over you again, pulling you under and shoving you back into the depths.

We had it all planned out from the moment we got our first positive pregnancy test. We planned how we would announce it, what the announcement picture would look like, how we would tell our families. Everything. I knew the plans I had for the next year as we prepared for our future child.  But God knew the plans He had for us.  He knew our child wouldn't make it. He knew it was time to call our precious baby home to Him. He knew my body and the baby were incompatible and it would be better for my child to come home to Him than for both of us to be at risk.

And while He knows the plans He has for us, He also knows our pain. He knows how I grieve and how I cry out for our loss. He knows that my heart screams out silently every day. He knows I want to crawl inside myself and hide away. He knows the guilt, shame, fear, and anger I feel. And He takes it all on. He bears my burdens with me. He doesn't force me to heal and "move on". He doesn't tell me "maybe you shouldn't talk about it if it makes you so sad". He listens, He comforts, He accepts my anger.

And I was, and sometimes still am, so so angry. I prayed over my child from the moment I had the positive pregnancy test. I prayed for protection for my baby. I promised God I would spend my life raising my child to love Him and serve Him. I promised to be a good steward of the gift God was giving me. I begged and pleaded for a safe pregnancy. And yet I lost our child.

On August 31, 2017 my world was shaken and I felt a loss unlike anything I have ever experienced before. In one day, the ultrasound went from showing something to nothing. That's how quickly my body rejected the pregnancy like it was nothing...like it wasn’t the most precious thing in my life. With each part of the miscarriage process my grief started anew, with a new wave crashing over me and crushing me down into the depths of despair.  Each time I found myself not thinking about our precious child, the grieving process started all over again. 

I often feel guilty for forgetting even for a second and feel ashamed for living my life happily again.  I feel the loss acutely. I feel anger that it happened to me. I feel confused as to how this could have happened. I feel terrified to try to conceive again. I feel loathing towards my body for betraying me and taking this from me. I feel numbness and shock as I try to wrap my mind around everything. I feel pain and a sort of anger with myself with every post I see of friends announcing a new pregnancy, or friends with happy, healthy pregnancies or with precious, whole, safe newborns. I feel frustrated that no one who hasn’t been through it understands my grief or cares to listen without saying "it'll be ok".

Miscarriage is not something that everyone can understand.  You do not truly understand the pain and emotional turmoil until it happens to you.  When my sister went through her miscarriage last year, I remember texting her and saying I was sorry and that God had a plan.  I did not know how much pain she was in and how much a heart can grieve over the loss of a human being that has never been held or touched.  I did not know the deep, jagged wounds miscarriage carves into a human heart.  I did not understand that no words can ease the pain.  There is no "right thing to say".

It won't be ok. It never will be. And that is ok.  God heals all wounds. Yes, wounds leave scars. And I will forever have deep, jagged, painful emotional scars that will be with me for the rest of my life. The waves of grief will become fewer and farther in between, yes, but they will still come.  But even so, God is good. 

God is good. His grace is abundant.  He is the giver of life.  He is the God of miracles.  He walks beside me and I know He will not not abandon me, no matter how rough the road of life may become.  Through this process, He is teaching me that He alone can fill this hole in my heart.  I need to be patient in the process and stop continually working towards "the next thing".  It is through seasons of pain and grief that He does the biggest and most impactful work.  

God alone can mend this hole in my heart.  Not Patrick.  Not my family.  Not work.  Nothing.  I must choose to let go and let God do His will in my life.  Letting go of my expectations, my timeline, and my hopes and dreams is the only way I can find peace, patience, and understanding.  Grief cannot overtake me so much that I miss out on the blessings God has in store for me and Patrick.  God brings beauty and life out of the ashes and dust of painful times.  We only have to trust.

Location Matters

Monday, September 18, 2017

Matthew 7:24-27
24 “Everyone then who hears these words of mine and does them will be like a wise man who built his house on the rock. 25 And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat on that house, but it did not fall, because it had been founded on the rock. 26 And everyone who hears these words of mine and does not do them will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand. 27 And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell, and great was the fall of it.”

Bad things happen to everyone.  Period.  Bad things happen to bad people, and bad things happen to good people.  It's a fact of life.  Try as we might, we can never avoid the difficult times life has to offer.  It does not matter how much you do to try and avoid those things, because they will still find you.  Instead of devoting countless hours and efforts towards pointless evasive maneuvers, we should focus on preparing ourselves for when those times arrive.   And arrive they will.

Time and time again, we try to build our lives around temporary things because it is easier.  We devote our time and pledge our allegiance to things that lack the substance to weather the storms of life.  We waste our time, energy, money, and emotions making idols out of nothing.  We make idols out of money, careers, relationships, alcohol, children, social media "likes", etc.  The list goes on.  In college, I made physical fitness and thinness my idols.  I obsessed over workouts, calories, and what I allowed to impact my body.  I neglected time with God over time spent running long distances, purging foods, and counting calories.  I made anorexia my god.

Can you guess what happened when a huge "storm" took a direct path through my life and laid waste to everything?  My idol did nothing.  The winds and the storms had come out in full force, and my idol provided me with nothing substantial to rely on or to derive comfort from.  I was left alone to deal with my pain and my emotional injuries.  The thing I was standing on and staking my life on was not solid ground.

I was like the man in Matthew 7:24-27.  I built my "house" on sand.  The things of the world cannot sustain and give peace.  Money can be gone in an instant.  Jobs can be taken away unexpectedly.  A  husband/wife/boyfriend/girlfriend/best friend can leave with no reason.  Alcohol is a temporary high.  Children will disappoint at times.  Social media...don't get me started on that.  The only constant in life we are ever promised is God.  God is the solid foundation on which we should build our house/life because He can weather any storm.

In yesterday's sermon at Grace City Church (I would love for you to come with me any Sunday), the preacher made this point about Matthew 7:24-27:  "Our location after the storm is determined by where we were standing in the midst of it."  The location we build our houses will determine if our home is still standing (solid ground) or in ruins (sand) after the storm.  Preparing your heart for the storms of life doesn't have to be fruitless. But it doesn't mean things will be easy.

Let's be real.  Christianity is easy and fun until we face difficult times.  That is when things get real.  As a Christian, you will not survive if you operate under the assumption that everything will always be easy and great.  That's naive.  The Bible is full of verses about enduring suffering as a believer.

Romans 5:3-5 "We rejoice in our sufferings because we know suffering produces endurance."
James 1:2-4 "Count it all joy when you face trials in life."
Romans 8:18 "I consider my sufferings as nothing compared to the glory God will reveal in us."
John 16:33 "In this world you will face many trials."

Need I go on?

Let me tell you, when I learned that I could not avoid bad things, I finally felt free for the first time.  All throughout my childhood, and even up until two weeks ago, I felt like I could prevent bad things from happening.  If I called to check on my family enough, they would be fine.  If I double checked that the house was safe and secure, it wouldn't burn down or no one would break in.  If I watched my health and was careful, nothing bad could happen to me.

But you know what?  Bad things happened. My mom had a tumor.  My dad had precancerous cells.  My grandfathers both passed away.  Crime still happens in our neighborhood.  Things happened to me physically that I could not control.  And I will admit...for most of these things, I gave in to fear and despair instead of turning to the solid rock I could have built my house on.  I claimed to be a Christ-follower, and yet my house had no power inside.  I looked and acted like a Christian, but I did not have God's peace and His presence permeating all of me.

Ever since Pat and I got married nearly two years ago, we have made it a point to attend church every Sunday that we are able.  We have joined City Groups where we can grow, learn, and be discipled by others.  We have gotten involved at church and joined teams where we can give back.  We have committed to making decisions to be lights for Christ to others.  We have been building our houses on the solid rock of Christ.

A couple of weeks ago, we went through the first life-changing trial we have had since we built our lives around God.  In previous years, something like this would have been a huge set back.  I would have wallowed, lashed out at everyone around me, stopped going to church, and withdrawn from everyone and everything.  This time, I was prepared.  Yes, I was devastated and spent a good week crying.  But I still turned to God.  I still cried out to Him.  I still leaned on Him and found comfort and solace in Him.  More than anything, I needed to be in my church home.

Building your life on the solid foundation of God is the best decision anyone can make.  You won't be guaranteed a pain and suffering free life.  You will, however, be guaranteed a hiding place to turn to when you need unconditional love, peace, and comfort.

Once Upon a Time: The Story of Pat and Camille

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Once upon a time, there was a boy and a girl who were not even aware of each other’s existence.  The boy was living his own life, wondering if he would ever find someone who he felt was 100% who he wanted to be with for the rest of his life.  The girl was living life on her own, not sure she ever wanted to remarry again, not sure there was such a thing as the person who would make her truly happy in every way.  Until they met each other…Sounds like the recipe for a fairy tale, right?  Well…in some way, yes, it was, and in other ways, we had our struggles at the beginning.  Considering our one-year DATING anniversary is in less than one week (October 16!), I thought it would be fun to write our story.

You see, when Pat and I first met, both of us were in relationships.  He had been dating the same girl for a year and a half, and had come to the point where he realized that she wasn’t who he wanted to be with for the rest of his life.  In fact, he wondered if he would ever find someone he actually wanted to marry.  Meanwhile, I was in what I guess you could call a relationship.  The guy turned out to be a not-so-prince-charming type of guy who lied and mislead more than anything.  But, neither of us was in a hurry to move on into another relationship.  But there was one person who called “bull” on that and was determined to open our eyes to the possibility of each other. 

See, I worked out with this girl, Elise, who also happened to be one of my dearest friends.  She also happened to work for the same company as Pat.  One day back in June of 2015, she and I were working out and suddenly she started waving.  She turned to me and said, “Oh, there’s Patrick.  He works for Davita too!”  He walked up, they exchanged words, we briefly introduced ourselves, and that was it.  End of meeting.  A few weeks later, Elise decided we should invite him to join our workout group.  So, we did and he started working out with us.  Given that we both were in relationships, we didn’t exchange many words outside of the topics of gym and Davita, which was fine with me, because 1) I have social anxiety and new people sometimes make me awkward, and 2) neither of us were available.

Then, one day, something changed.  Patrick was single—he had broken up with his girlfriend…and I had already come to the realization I was unhappy in my own relationship.  I began to see him in a new light…a more romantic one I guess you could say.   We were able to talk, carry on a conversation, and joke around. Elise and her husband invited me over for dinner, and I encouraged her to invite him over (but told her not to tell him I told her to invite him—so childish, I know).  I found myself wanting to spend more and more time with him.  After a couple more weeks, Patrick began pursuing me…hard.  He was very, very persistent.  He was convinced we needed to give dating a try.   In my head, I agreed; but I am horrible at hurting people’s feelings and found it hard to end it with the other guy.  Pat knew I was unhappy, and he knew I wanted to end it but hadn’t found a way to just yet. 

In his pursuit of me, Pat wasn’t pushy, he wasn’t disrespectful, and he didn’t put any pressure on me.  Each day he just engaged me in conversation, asked me about my life, took a real interest in me as a person.  He offered me advice on my family, he helped me come up with ideas for ways I could incorporate fun into my teaching, he gave me advice on how to potty train my dog.  He waited.  For nearly two months, he waited.  He tried dating other people, but in the back of his mind, he said he always knew they weren’t right and he needed to keep waiting for me.

I remember one night, I was lying in bed, about to read my Bible and pray over my feelings.  The other guy was texting me, demanding I ignore my quiet time and talk to him about what was going on between us.  Patrick, however, told me to turn off my phone the moment he found out what I was doing.  He encouraged me to seek after God and His will.  He valued my relationship with God, which I had never experienced before with a guy.  In that moment, it was like a weight was lifted and I finally had the courage to end things with the other guy.  The next day, Patrick and I met up to discuss where things stood and what we wanted out of all of this.  I told him my reservations, and he told me his.  But, we ultimately decided to give it a go.  

Needless to say, things worked out--even though that night, my dog had a #2 accident in his apartment, I panicked, threw it away in his trash, and didn’t tell him…which stunk up his apartment for the next two days until he found out what happened…oops.  Ha.  Silliness aside, with Pat it was easy.  I could talk to him about anything.  I could share the deepest, darkest parts of me that not even my family knew about.  I could have intellectual, adult conversations about things that mattered to me.   I could also act a complete fool around him.  (Thank God there are no hidden cameras in our home, because we have been known to run around, making strange sound effects, playing hide-and-seek.  And there may have been a time I hid in the dog’s kennel to scare him.  Just saying.)  Most important of all, though…he loves Jesus and he encourages me to grow in my walk.  He desires to grow in his.  There are so many other little things in our story leading up until the day we got married…one and a half months after we started dating.  But that is definitely another blog post to come.  The point is, we met, he waited, he prayed over us, he waited some more, and God finally brought us together.


And they lived happily ever after.


Healing

Monday, April 25, 2016

"Time heals all wounds."  How many times have you heard that phrase?  How many times have you banked on that promise and waited…and waited…but never found relief and recovery?  So often, we sit back and wait on time to do it's thing.  We wait for our broken heart to mend after the guy we thought was "the one" broke up with us.  And again, we wait for healing when he moves on, but we haven't.  We wait for our fears to subside after going through a traumatic experience.  We wait for the resentment to go away when someone wrongs us--no matter how big or small that wrongdoing was.  But what happens when time doesn't do its thing?  What happens when we wait, and wait, and wait…but we are still stuck hurting, resentful, scared, and alone?

The dangerous thing about waiting for time to heal, is that it can quickly turn into a slippery slope of anger…and even hatred.  Time frustrates us.  It embitters us.  It makes us apathetic.  These thing all lead to anger.  Anger is one of the most poisonous, dangerous, life-ruining forces I have ever experienced.  It gets into your bones, your heart, and your soul.  It makes us say things to people we love…things we never thought we would ever say.  It makes us lash out at others in hurt, when in reality, they aren't the one you are upset with or wronged by--its the person who hurt you.  It makes us give ultimatums to people--makes them choose between us or something--or someone--else.  It makes us bitter, selfish, and even petty.  But why is this?  Why does anger turn kind, happy people into hateful, lonely people?

It is easier to be angry than it is to face the mountain head-on and begin recovery.  It is easier to blame others than it is to admit that maybe we were wrong.  Maybe that guy wasn't "the one" and you should be happy that he is happy--after all, if you really do "love" him, then your love should be selfless and include his happiness over your own.  Maybe that traumatic experience you went through has a can have a purpose.  Maybe the horrific injury you went through or the person who violated you can still serve some kind of good purpose in your life.  Becoming angry and waiting to heal isn't going to do anything.

Healing only comes in facing things and admitting we are hurting, admitting we are helpless to save ourselves, and admitting we need help.   I have been through enough trauma, enough pain, and enough hurt to know this firsthand.  When my parents went through a divorce, I could't move past it without help.  When my trust in someone I loved was horribly violated, I had to voice it…I had to talk to someone.  When I went through a period of serious depression and suicidal thoughts, I had to get help.  When a tornado destroyed my university and I saw and heard things I still can't get out of my head--I had to confront it and work through that.  When I went through an eating disorder that consumed my body, my muscles, my bones, my mind, and my emotions, I had to get help before it killed me.  When I went through a divorce and lost everything and most everyone, I had to face the realities of what happened, what I did, and what it cost me.  When I kept making countless poor choices as I spiraled out of control, I had to ultimately own up to it, admit I was in the wrong, and make a complete 180 in my life.  I don't share all of these things to "one up" anything you are going through or to show you how strong of a person I am.  I share all of these things to say, whatever you are going through, someone out there has gone through it too.  They survived.  You will too.

Don't let your anger towards that friend destroy a friendship that once meant something to you.  Don't let your bitterness towards that guy keep you from moving on and finding the guy who actually IS the one for you.  Don't let the person who violated you and your trust years ago keep you from trusting others and having healthy relationships down the road--and PLEASE don't let it become an excuse for unhealthy relationship patterns down the road.  Don't let your past actions and past history dictate a future full of shame and regret.  Let all of these things be mountains you surmounted, obstacles you overcame, and lessons you have learned.

And now…the religious part because, yes, I am a Christian.  And yes, I will openly say God is the ONLY reason I had the strength to move on from these things.  Counseling and medications helped for the traumas, the depression, and the hard times.  But God is the Master Healer.  He is the only reason I am still alive today.  When the paralyzed man at the pool was waiting to get in so he, too, could be healed, Jesus was straight forward.  There is no power in the pool.  The pool was just a bandaid, a "tool", if you will…kind of like how we use alcohol, medications, and drugs to try to self-medicate and heal ourselves.  The man thought the pool would heal him in time.  Notice:  he thought time would heal him.  But, Jesus is the only one with healing power.  The only healing power we will find is in Jesus and his compassion for us and our situations.  Want to know something though?  Jesus heals us for one of two purposes:

1.  He heals us to handle.  He heals us in such a way that we cannot walk through these hard and painful times without Him.  Through His power, He gives us resilience to handle it until it is over.  So many times, this is how I experienced healing in Jesus.  My depression didn't just disappear.  It was discovered through a fateful phone call to a friend at one in the morning.  My dad happened to wake up and had this strong feeling he needed to pick up the phone and listen.  And thus began my recovery process in Christian counseling.

He will heal us to the deepest point of need for us to survive and keep on moving.  He heals us to handle because his grace is enough for us.  He knows what we need more than we do.  It is often the things we want to wave a wand and make disappear that Jesus uses the most in our lives.

2.  He also heals us for His glory so that we may give testimony that He is the only explanation for what has happened.  Think of the friend who had cancer that one day was simply gone.  Jesus healed the man at the pool for His glory.  He told him to pick up his mat and walk.  And He trusted in Jesus to do what he said he would do.

So, how will you begin healing?  Will you keep waiting for time to take away the pain, hurt, anger, and resentment?  Will you keep blaming others for things that are not their fault and for things that no longer are in your control?  Or will you trust in Jesus to take it away all at once, or at least heal you enough to handle and learn what He is trying to reveal to you?


Friendship

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Friendship.  When you think about it, it is a pretty simple thing at its core.  It comes with a list of certain "criteria":  honesty, trust, respect, fun, laughter, time spent investing in one another.  But, have you ever thought about how our criteria really and truly change over time?

When we were little kids on the playground, everyone was our friend.  We didn't have a concept of who was weird, or "not cool".  We accepted any and every person and would welcome any newcomers.  We had sleepovers and birthday parties and every one was invited.  Not a single kid was excluded.  But then, we got older.  In middle and high school, we were aware of who was "cool" and who was "weird".  We become more picky in our choices of friends.  We choose those who are similar to us in personality.  We are less welcoming and less accepting of those who are outside of what we deem "normal".  We claim "dibs" on our friends and don't want to share because, to us, everyone in our group is our "best friend" and no one else can claim them.

But then, this beautiful thing happens once we reach adulthood.  We stop seeing what is "cool" and what is "normal".  We begin to FINALLY mature past pettiness and selfishness.  We accept that it is ok to have friends who have friends we don't know, or even like.  We understand that friendship is not about what we have to offer one another in terms of popularity and acceptance--or even in having a good time.  We see that friendships, true friendships, edify us.  Real friends challenge us, they call us out on our stupidity and selfishness.  They make us want to grow and be better people.  They want to talk about real things and be vulnerable.  And we want to offer the same things to them.  Friendship is no longer seen as a transaction or as something where we ask ourselves, "what can I gain from being this person's friend?".

As an adult who has finally reached this point, it makes me desire intentionality in my friendships.  Yes, I have those people who I can hang out with and have a good time, and even carry on a conversation with.  And I value those people.  But, I also find myself desiring to find people who I can be intentional with in developing a mature, adult, relationship with.  I want people who I can be vulnerable with, share my heart with, and still have a good time with them too.  And I am completely ok with the fact that they have other friends too.  Being adult means you no longer have "besties" or call everyone you know your best friend.  It means you have real, adult friendships that add value and meaning to your life.  And you accept these people for who they are--flaws and all.  Having real relationships means you can go to each other and have those hard conversations and confrontations--because you don't fear that, in doing so, you may lose a friend.

And let me tell you, finally reaching this point was the most freeing thing in the world.  Over the last couple of years, one of my friendships has evolved into this kind of adult relationship.  Before, if one of us was hurt or offended, or even jealous of the others' friendships, we would stay quiet and stew on it.  And it would slowly eat away at us until we exploded.  But, we finally learned that, if you have a grievance or a hurt, it is OK to talk to each other.  Now, when one of us is upset, we immediately say "hey, did you mean that comment this way" or "I feel like we don't spend a lot of time together, and you seem to spend a lot of time with her.  Is it cool if we hang out one weekend?  And hey, bring her too!".  The most amazing thing happened when we started doing this...we grew to be closer as friends and we learned from each other.  Isn't that a beautiful thing!?

So, how do I define friendship, in light of all I just said?  To me, true, deep, meaningful friendship means:

1.  Accepting the other person, faults and all
2.  Understanding, its ok to share each other with other people/friends
3.  Telling the truth, even when it is hard
4.  Challenging each other to be better people
5.  Making time for each other when life if busy, even if its just sending a "thinking of you" text
6.  Enjoying hanging out and having a good time
7.  Enjoying sitting around doing nothing but talking
8.  Being able to trust each other and respect each other
9.  Allowing yourself to confront them when you are upset and knowing they will not penalize or punish you for it
10.  Being real.

I challenge you, reader, to find people who you can look at and say, "they fit the bill".  Surround yourself with people, with community, who you know will make are a better person for knowing them.  But hey, its also ok to have friends, not so close friends, who you just want to go out with and have a good time.  Those types of friendships are important too.  Let me tell you, coming to this understanding of what friendship is all about, is the most freeing thing you will ever experience.


Source: http://elitedaily.com/life/ways-define-true-friendship-mid-20s/1701234/
 
FREE BLOGGER TEMPLATE BY DESIGNER BLOGS