Monday, December 21, 2015

The Parts of Our Stories We Don't Like


I finally sank into the chair by the Christmas tree to catch my breath.


Struck again with the anxieties of this season: 
This season of the year and all its expectations.
This season of life and all its weariness.
From the daily-of-life to the enormous-of-life.

Wondering the whys of circumstances and challenges.
Why are there those parts in our stories that we just do not like?

Why did this past July have to hold such enormous news and emotion: 
  • of our pregnancy
  • my sister's cancer
  • my father-in-law's cancer








And the longer-ago lingering events:
Why did we have to go through such a loss in our first year of marriage?
Why did my husband have to lose his mom when they were both so young?
Why did our friends have to lose their babies?
Why did our loved one have to go through the loss of a marriage? 
Why did each of our boys have the diagnoses that needed surgeries at their little ages? 
Why sudden pains and losses and life changes we just don't want to swallow.
...Oh-so many more stories we just didn't want to include in our stories.

These longer-past events, they may have some sort of answers and meaning.
But the raw, fresh circumstances? So hard to see as clearly.

Can we trust there is a purpose for those things?

As I took a moment of somewhat-quiet while the boys watched an old children's Christmas movie I grew up watching, it suddenly hit me: 

  • When Mary and Joseph arrived at the inn "late" and all available rooms were taken, it SO would not have seemed ideal. Not one bit. Yet that was part of The Big Plan, for them to not have all the comforts and expectations of theirs met how they probably wanted. Not how they dreamed. NOT IDEAL.

  • And before that, when they had to face the reactions of their peers and community with their unplanned-by-them pregnancy... that had to have been a horrendous experience to live through. Not easy. NOT IDEAL.
  • And when they had to take that long and uncomfortable journey (pregnant and dusty and riding a donkey? As someone on my fourth pregnancy, I just cannot imagine. Not comfortable!) NOT IDEAL.
  • And so when they finally arrived at their destination (later than all the others in the crowds), discovering there was no private space to rest in? Not lovely or pretty. NOT IDEAL.

But, was there meaning and reason behind each of these ordeals? 
These parts of the story they probably didn't like? 
Or times we felt "late" and that the timing was off (late to arrive, not how we envisioned a life event, our hope to be comfortable and at ease)?
Absolutely.  
And it's what we treasure about the story of Christmas: 
The sacrifices, the trust, the love, the faith. In something bigger than themselves or what they could see.
It just didn't seem clear or lovely way right away.


When I look back at those earlier past questions, I can see some meaning...
Why such losses and why such tragedies.

 


 The beauty from the ashes.






The deeper love for another.

The deeper appreciation for the good.

The deeper maturity in your soul.

The deeper faith grown.

The deeper understanding that we are not the biggest thing in the world. 
(There is something more.)
























This quote stands out in my mind as these thoughts flutter around:
"The demanding of my own will is the singular force that snuffs out joy." 
(Ann Voskamp, 
http://www.aholyexperience.com/2014/12/light-the-candles-advent-devotionals-week-03-joy-video-experience/)

So. 
When my expectations and will for the rest of this week (and this life's season) may not turn out how I had hoped... 
And when I wonder and question why certain circumstances are the way they are:
This is okay, even the best way. 
Letting go. 
And resting in the larger meaning, beyond what I can see right now.
Trusting that one day, someday, it will be clear.

"Rest happy and love this story of a coming King 
who prepares the downtrodden for Christmas by becoming the Way, 
who lays Himself down in the creche, on the Cross, 
so we can lie down and rest."
(Ann Voskamp, "The Greatest Gift")


So I am slowing down and trying to remember to shut out all the clutter and worries, 

huge and tiny.
May you slow down also, and look back on the meaning in how your story has gone...

(At least for the moment.
Then we'll need to be reminded again.)

Blessings on your own season, 
Elizabeth

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

A sister's heart


I've been struggling these past few days.
Feeling on the verge of sick.
But each time I've felt discouraged that way, 
my thoughts immediately jump to my sister. 
(As if thinking of her ever really stopped.)

I imagine her chemo days that will soon start, 
and I wonder how her lovely body will respond. 
How all the coming procedures will treat my precious sister- body, mind, spirit.
And the tears are there again. Again.



This morning, I was sitting at our desk, still in my pajamas, tears streaming down my cheeks. 
Scrolling through (a choice, for better or worse) the late Kara Tippett's beautiful blog entry titles on "www.mundanefaithfulness.com" 
Yes, just the titles written by this incredible woman (who fought cancer and ultimately passed away a few months ago) of her entries and emotional photographs. Only a few minutes of looking at the words and heartbreak of this blog and I had to shut down the screen. 

Couldn't stop crying.

And then I realized my boys were chatting away while playing Legos at the dining room table, my back to them, not 2 feet away. 
And, as quick as lightning, I became inwardly angry. 
Angry at this lingering sadness, 
and (unjustly) angry that those children of mine didn't seem to have the slightest care that their own momma was nearby and so upset.

And then, as I (unfairly) thought those boys had no hearts (emotional days, yes?!), the middle son asked why I was sad. 
When I told them "I'm sad because my sister, your Aunt Mary, is sick and I'm afraid. Well, I don't know if afraid is the right word. I'm just really sad."
Luke tilted his head and shrugged, "But she'll get better soon?"
"I don't know, bud. We'll see." Crying still.
Zachary looked straight on at me, "But what are you afraid about?"

A few moments later, as I was still pondering his question, Zachary spoke up again,
"There's kind of 2 ways. 
You have to choose one way. 
The #1 way is you could forget about the whole thing and just go on. 
The #2 way is you won't go far from thinking about it, today and the next day and the next day. You're right there now- kinda sad."

Seriously?

This is my 7 year old son who seldom talks of the heart level or seems to pick up on emotional cues. This boy, who just shared these thoughts with his momma (who had to immediately write down his precious words, since my memory is terrible!), and softened my mean-momma spirit a bit. (I admit, my moods with my own children have been as volatile as anything these past few days.)

And the reality of what he said is absolutely true. 
#1 way- trying to forget about it. (Not really possible right now, but I could see the appeal for some situations, right?) 
#2 way- not being able to stop focusing on my sister, or the imagination of what's to come, whether in the forefront of my mind or quietly dwelling in the midst of all moments of the day.



I'll be honest here again: 
I have been carrying around my green leather journal and Bible with me almost everywhere I go in the house. Having it nearby. But, I haven't had the ability to actually open up either. They stay closed and just sit next to me. 
Not sure what's up with that, but I guess I know this dullness isn't forever. I may even have fallen asleep holding my closed leather devotional book in my hand, but sometime soon it will be opened again. 
Just blinking back enough tears that I suppose I can just trust that God's carrying me through, as confused and sloppy as I've been, trudging through these days.



I feel like, right now, just about all I have the heart for is talking about my sister. (And of course, crying just because someone shared a kind smile!) 
So many friends of mine and friends of my family are praying and burdened for my sister and each of us as we process this still-new-news. And how grateful am I! 
When all I can seem to do is think. And think. 
And talk about it. 
And want to trust God, while the heartache has been so real, almost physically hurting. 
My 40 year old sister, married with 4 young children. 
No breast cancer in our genetics. 
Bam! 
And so I just keep thinking. And sometime (soon, I hope) I can go back to reading the verses about God's care and promises. For now, those beliefs are in my soul, deep. It's just hard taking that step to go back to normal daily life before this journey began for my precious sister and her family.

And I've got to tell you, my big sister ROCKS. She has got a team of support around her a mile long each direction, and each one of us walking alongside this with her is going to be absolutely blessed by her beautiful trust in God's purposes. In the high and low moments, sis, we're all going to keep praying you through. (High five, sis.)

And so, for today, these words from a video on Kara Tippett's blog keep bringing me back out of the foggy thinking and shake me into remembering to look out the window:

"I have today, 
and in this today, 
I get to live well."
(Kara Tippetts)



Tomorrow will be different, somehow. 
Grace enough for one day at a time.

Blessings,
Elizabeth



Friday, June 5, 2015

What's with all the coffee mugs?


So, really.
What’s with all the coffee cup pictures taken on my camera these past few years?

A quick tour through coffee time bliss...














These past several days, my spirit has been reminded of the reason.

What those peaceful coffee images represent: 
It is much bigger than an obsession with coffee.
It is much bigger than a love of photography in capturing-the-bliss-moment.
It represents something deep in me.
It is the symbol and gift of soul refreshment for me, the introvert.

Something in this season of life has left me so thirsty, so overdone, so longing for solitude. 
This season of motherhood and adulthood is what I have longed for all my years, 
yet something in these years has gradually been snatching away much of the sweetest spirit and life from my hours and minutes.
3 young, busy, noisy, chaotic, fun, crazy, noisy, physical, risky, noisy boys all my hours of all these days? An absolute blessing.
But when the noise and the chaos is often all I see, my spirit loses its vigor, its charge. 
And it about dies out.






So here is are the questions:
Why do I have a ridiculous number of photos with a cup of coffee. (Or book, or journal.) Why this image of beautiful silence?
Why do I stay awake most nights until everyone else is sleeping, even if I am so tired, just to allow for some absolute quiet and stillness?
Why is it that every time we have a cherished and longed-for family gathering in my childhood home, I must somehow slip out onto my parent’s front deck, or into the unoccupied living room to grab hold of space in solitude?
(Heck, why even at my own wedding reception filled with beloved family and friends, did I need to sneak out for a moment or two, just to have some silence before returning to the celebration scene?)
Why do I love my relationships with all my being (LIVE for relationships, just about) but also then deeply crave my solitude?

Why?
Because I. NEED. THE. ALONENESS.
Every itty bitty part of me needs it.
Not the slightest bit of exaggeration.

Why?
Because I am an introvert.


Meaning?
A huge need for energy conservation.
And the need to recharge my mental/soul/spirit batteries by being alone. 
A love of people, but mainly just that certain circle of relationships- in deep and rich and true ways.
Needing quiet and solitude:
In order to get back into the bigger, larger, louder world.

To refuel.
To regroup.
To refresh.
To appreciate.
To notice.
To breathe.
To retrieve my real smile.

Otherwise?
If these recharging times do not occur, Watch Out.

Empty.
Grumpy.
Angry.
Resentful.
Smile so forced, if at all.
Explosion. (Like I said, Watch Out.)

“Your job and family demands 
may require you to function as an extrovert quite a bit.”
But introverts
“need a quiet, reflective place 
where they can think things through 
and recharge themselves.”
“It takes more time for introverts to restore energy 
and it flows out faster than an extrovert’s energy.”
(Marti Olsen Laney, “The Introvert Advantage”)


The struggle of this season?
24 hours are in a day.
I am surrounded.
Sleeping time is often The Only Time that provides a reprieve. 
(And does sleeping really count as down time? No. Not when you are unaware of that down time!)

This writer explains it completely:

“They (children) are with you ALL THE TIME.
You are ON.
All the time.
On call, on shift, on board.
You have little people needing Band-Aids, food, entertainment 
and perhaps most importantly of all, for you to be emotionally present with them (not just physically present, which is way easier in my opinion).
As an introvert, being alone is what energizes me.
When I'm alone, I can think about my kids, miss them and plan what we're going to do next.
But when they're with me ALL THE TIME, 
there is no time to think about them, 
miss them or plan what we're going to do next. 
I parent off-the-cuff, doing what has to be done, 
putting out fires and getting through the day.”
(Holly Klaassen)
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/holly-klaassen/why-parenting-is-so-hard-for-introverts_b_5518659.html


I almost cried to read these words, 
to recognize that I am not alone in this inner struggle of this season-
of very often resenting the constant needs of my little ones, and questioning my often-desire to get away from them:

“I was overwhelmed and outnumbered. 
The volume of work it took to keep my household running was exhausting. 
But there was something more to it than physical fatigue: 
parenting was emotionally exhausting. 
I felt trapped. I lived for naptime and bedtime. 
If one of the kids woke up early, I felt rage. 
I was desperate to get time away from them in any way I could.
My overwhelming thoughts when they were napping were, 
‘Please don’t wake up. Please give me a little more time to myself. 
Please, just a few more minutes.’
Society tells us that we should savor every precious moment with our kids, 
and I was struggling to do this. 
If motherhood had been one of my biggest goals in life, 
why did I want to get away from my children? 
Maybe I was a horrible mother.
“There is nothing wrong with you 
beyond the fact that you need time to yourself to refuel and recharge. 
You are running on empty. 
And you need to stop beating yourself up 
over the fact that you need time alone. 
It’s how you’re wired.”
(Kristen Howerton)
http://www.quietrev.com/surviving-as-an-introverted-mother/

Where is the chance to nurture your own life- and to not seek this selfishly, 
but to retain and your uniqueness, spiritually/emotionally/personality/passions/giftings/talents?
Where is that space. To just be. To recollect and to revitalize.

“Our downtime is sacred.
We use the quiet, the stillness, the absence of interaction 
as a way to renew our bodies and minds.
We need that time alone to become ourselves again.”
(Toni Hammer)
http://www.scarymommy.com/the-struggle-of-the-introverted-mother/#sthash.JILWjz5L.dpuf


This summer has brought this issue to the FOREFRONT.

When all 3 of my children are home with me (or out with me) every moment, every day.
(When this is my dream and life work- to be a full-time-hands-on momma.
But when I am running on empty and building up my anger and resentment.)
And it can absolutely impact my relationships, my marriage, my mothering…

Where is the break?
Where is the refreshment?
Where is the joy?
Trying to keep giving while on empty... can only lead to failure and discouragement and grief.


How to battle the guilt and the disillusionment of being that nurturing mother who loves her children but simply needs to be away sometimes?

Giving myself permission. 
Giving myself freedom.
(Not for neglect or laziness.
But to allow for permission to get away, while still being that constant caregiver.)
To allow myself to stay home.
To limit loud, crazy, crowded social events.
To remember the situations that DO give joy and energy: friendship. alone time to read/write/think.
And to embrace that this is the way God created my personality.

And I have discovered 1 practical way (DingDing! I love practical.)
I have begun surviving (and maybe thriving in?) these summer days:

Slowly.
Adding.
An.
Afternoon.
Movie.
For.
The.
Older.
Kids.
So.
I.
Can.
Sneak.
Upstairs.
For.
Time.
Alone.

Got it?
Yep.
Got it.

Simple.
But quite powerful.

(Keep in mind that screen time has been a rare occasion and treat for the kiddos in this family.
Very rare, which has the potential to be guilt-inducing to allow more of it... Remember that guilt, and that need to give self permission? That need for FREEDOM?)
But, the other option of constant interaction has left me exhausted, physically and emotionally and socially. So the movie break is the solution of the moment. 

This afternoon, the older boys are downstairs in the living room with a friend, intently watching the bonus features of “Monsters, Inc." while the littlest one naps.
And they are happy. 
And I, upstairs, sprawled out on my stomach and typing away with the ceiling fan doing its cooling magic, and I am happy.
There is no more “Shhh! Boys, just a minute! Would you just give me a moment to myself!" (Inside screaming: 
"Grrr!")
They are getting some much-needed time for stillness (instead of the constant basketball dribbling and shooting right in that same living room!) to rest those busy bodies.

They are refreshed. And I can charge up that (real) smile again. Time alone is the gift.


And so, yep.
A summer of afternoon movies downstairs is what this may be shaping into for this cozy-home-with-few-rooms to spread out and be alone.
(And while they lay back and chill with a movie in these afternoons?
I may just be upstairs in the quiet. Enjoying my solitude. 
Or reading. 
Or writing.
Or enjoying that cup of coffee. 
Or now that this topic has appeared so fresh and new to me? Maybe rereading my favorite about-introversion book that led me on my grad school final research paper on Introversion and Depression, “The Introvert Advantage” and digging into the related-topic book “Quiet.” 
These books are really recommended if you are at all relating with what I’ve written here!)

And so these introverted ideas represent and explain me. 
What about you?
Are you a fellow kindred introvert? Or a lively, loving extrovert? Or a sweet combo of the two?

We all tend to think “our way” is the preferred way of thinking/perceiving/taking in the world.
The diversity of extraverts and introverts of this planet are what make us all work together so beautifully. To provide a balance, to provide a unique tapestry of faces and personalities and passions in this life we share.
To understand each other a bit better, and be accepting of these differences?
That is what we can work on.
Not give guilt. But try to understand.
Ourselves, our relationships, our children, our jobs, our everywhere.




Blessings,
Elizabeth