Showing posts with label death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death. Show all posts

Thursday, August 28, 2014

on life and death


I think we should be talking about a topic that, generally speaking, a lot of us tend to avoid.

We let the moments of our days burlap-cover and tuck underneath what fear says we can somehow protect. We force-feed ourselves with various remedies that we think will manipulate a kind of growth to make our heart superhero-strong from pain.

Just below the undergrowth that we use to camouflage the tender shoots of our heart is a unique, one-of-a-kind treasure that was specifically designed for this crazy, mixed up, wild-like world. Yet, we don't believe it.

Acknowledging death in the periphery of our vision, we shirk off any consideration that our hearts matter and we try to better ourselves with busyness, expecting it will actually give us life.

Fear partitions us from our senses, keeping us focused on protecting ourselves at all costs.

We sacrifice the gift we can unwrap in tasting flavors mixed together because we're so famished for attention and we have this idea that we need to look a certain way to have what we crave.

Engaging with our children or even noticing them as they play feels like a waste of precious time and we want to do things that really matter, so we sacrifice the gift of seeing and feeling all that play and the perspective of a child can give us.

. . . and the list goes on.

People have shared their experience with me of how quickly time goes and they have encouraged me to hold onto it and to treasure the moments before their gone. Though they've been well-intentioned in their advice, I've always felt like their comments were itchy, like a wool sweater. I want to appreciate it for its warmth and comfort, yet this heaviness I experience with this kind of advice is sometimes too much for me.

I'm discovering that time is not something we can control. The vulnerability of not being as strong as we would like to be is what scares us the most I think. We fear the imperfect of our humanity, that we will miss something about a moment, or that our choices in how we allocate our time will somehow be wrong.

I believe that we were created by God who fully knew that we'd make mistakes. To go a step further, I believe He purposely created us this way.

We would be wise to face the hard fact: we will always miss some. thing.

We were purposely created as imperfect beings. This may be simple truth to some people, yet for me I somehow managed to misplace my focus for so many years. I spent my living days aware of my imperfections and thinking that my purpose each day was to fix me, or at least make strides toward fixing . . . toward perfecting what isn't. I thought God tasked me with the responsibility of fixing His mistakes or what He left undone.

My fear of complacency has been like a worm that wreaks havoc on a body, including the neurological system. I was afraid that if I accepted my imperfections then I was resigning myself, giving up on what I could be, and that I won't have what I hope for if I don't put in the effort to get there.

Did I think that my hope was used as some sort of carrot to be someone better?

Did I think life was a cruel test of will? 


Perhaps it's the American way, or maybe it's just me, but somehow I thought success was a constant highway of always improving, always growing, always striving; while, maybe, someday, arriving . . . at least mostly.

In the Spring I was faced with a question that rocked my world:

     How have I spent my life so far?


Truthfully, my own answer made me cry. Because, for so long I wanted to be someone who I'm not -- at least not yet. I've held such hope in my heart that I'll be someone different or better and so I've focused on being her, instead of simply me.

I didn't consider Who gave me my hope . . . Who will lead me to see it fulfilled . . . Who wrote a part for me in the plan for this world.

When I stood at the altar nearly 14 years ago and committed my life to my groom, words stirred in me that have stuck with me. They were words that made me consider how limited my time with him will be and that is what I focused on more so than the other part -- the part that said, "I love you so much I am giving this man to you as an example of my love for you."

There weren't expectations that I be someone who I wasn't, just that I know I am loved. That I receive the gift.

Back then I was ten pounds heavier than I am now. I didn't think then that I had any weight that I needed to lose. Now, if on any given day I'm a bit squishier or pudgier than the previous day, I somehow think I need to hide from the man who said he'd love me until death and who shows it to me everyday with his steadfast stickwithitness. Because, I've learned to eat even more healthy and to take care of my body even better than I did before. Knowledge has side-swiped me from living free to living focused.

I've focused so much on the end -- on when our end will be and how it could be any time, or on what is good for me and will help avoid this or that disease.

I've focused on so much that I thought would protect me that I limited myself from simply falling into the moments and receiving them. 

Living free is vulnerable and scary. I've seen people have the proverbial rug pulled out from underneath them, gutted by utter surprise at death or disease and I've not wanted to be left in a lurch like that, so I've done everything I could do to prepare myself and protect myself.

: : : 


This summer has felt a bit more like winter to me in that it's been a time of restful sitting on the couch with a cleared agenda and calendar. That my family and I haven't had plans has actually felt refreshing, like the comfort and warmth of a blanket.

I've discovered that I actually want to be home, even though it's not exactly the way I want it to be. Traveling and hustling with plans to do this and that really is just one big headache and my typical attempt to avoid the discomfort of imperfection.

I've discovered that I'm loved, even though I'm a wreck a lot of the time and as much of a yo-yo emotionally as the weight of my body. I've felt like new life is hidden just underneath the burlap and that an unfurling will happen, even though it's not quite happening when I think it should.

In the midst of feeling like each moment I live is one step away from falling on an icy patch and feeling tempted to be timid even to breathe, much less walk, I've realized that like my legs, my heart actually feels better when I exercise it instead of focusing so much on keeping myself safe and secure.

I found that by accepting the conditions of each moment, I am able to really live. And by that I mean, to embrace joy in the midst of the jaw-gripping, fault lines of life.

There's a young man who died recently, sparking so many conversations about people's perceptions of other people, particularly of biases as it relates to race. So much of the world noticed because the killing seemed unfair, judgmental, and irresponsible. People have been angry and rightfully so, yet I wonder if they expected some sort of perfect that hasn't transformed humans in spite of the strides that have been taken around human rights.

There's another young man who died recently, sparking another kind of conversation about how experience and success should somehow making him exempt from incurring pain or harming another person.

And then there's a third young man who died recently, sparking attention from a smallish-size group. Though not a nation-wide news story, people stood in lines for hours upon hours yesterday to pay their respects to a roughly 40-year old young man's family -- a village bartender -- who suddenly died of a heart attack.

I feel badly for the families of these men. I feel badly for their having the weight of sadness and for how these deaths have affected so many other people connected with them. I even feel badly for seeing goodness in all of these stories, because declaring any smidge of beauty in the brokenness feels so trite and dismissive of the pain people are experiencing.

Yet . . . I believe there really is more beauty than there is brokenness in this world . . . and most especially, that brokenness always gives way to beauty -- that it's purposed, even though we sometimes can't fathom how or even begin to pretend that we agree.

In the winter-like summer that I have experienced this year, I have hibernated and learned to rest. While doing so, I have contemplated the fragility of life and the risk of love and life.

I decided that I want to live, even if it means I'll experience brokenness.

I decided that holding my heart hostage from joy is more torture than any loss could ever be.

Death will happen. I will likely come when I least expect it. And though I am sometimes tempted to consider which way is a better way or which is a crueler way, I want to stop doing that as often and instead just breathe -- while I can -- sipping, savoring, and sometimes even slurping down the moments.

I'll sometimes evoke all my senses and might even taste life as I drink it in, yet there will be times when I'll gulp it right down with the mindlessness of a 1,000-thoughts-at-once frantic human being.

Maybe talking about death more would help us to be more comfortable with the imperfect nature of how it comes upon us. Maybe it would help us not to be so consumed with the idea that we can somehow perfect our handling of it.

Like parents do with children, we will mess up life.

We will forget to watch our tone and we'll even forget to wash our hands. We will forget that we really don't want the cookie and we'll reach for vices that have become our habits.

Life isn't something we can perfect or get through without pain. Though we want to be better, the truth is that we will die and we will die imperfect.

I don't want to spend all my energy trying to perfect me (or others) when I'll never finish the job anyway. 

I've decided that if Someone decided this world was worth having me a part it, then I can trust that Someone knows better than me.

That Someone wants me to embrace what is, as it is -- even what isn't exactly right or how I'd like it, including myself and other people.

Who am I to question Someone's Art?

Linking with Jennifer and Bonnie.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

lookatmeish

It's the time of year.

Filthy.

Saturated.

Messy.

Sloppy.

Dusty.

Dirty.

And that's how I feel.

A washing is coming. But first this filth.

He's bringing it all to the surface now.

What was once covered over like snow -- with pretty and clean and fun -- is now becoming exposed and awakened. 

I'm becoming aware of what I really want, what I really pine for.

Idols. Mostly of self.

And I'm confessing a lot these days. About what I've tried to control as I've entertained myself with my pretending to be *in* control.

Truth is pouring out all over my carefully crafted mask. It's wrecking my paper mache life.

I crave Real, and yet I don't choose courage to live it.


I long for true friends. Ones who just come over. Ones to laugh with. Ones our families like and want to spend time with.

I wonder when someone will sweep off their clutter and carve out time for us.

So I sometimes make things happen. I craft dinner gatherings and make plans. 

My plan-making is all with a selfish attempt for closeness, to create relationship. Yet, I know I can't always make things happen. And schedules keep us disconnected.

And really, it's me who keeps us disconnected because I fear. While I long to be noticed, I also run and hide. I am afraid of being too much or not enough. 

Still, I want that. I want Real. I want relationship.

Really, I want to believe my sloppy and dirty self was really created for purpose. 

I long for acceptance. And freedom.

I crave affirmation because, really, I'm a doubting wanderer. 

Yet in my idol-living to fill all the gaps of my soul, I have missed out on the truth that my longing can be satisfied right where I am

A dozen years ago I stood at an altar with sunshine streaming through windows that it nearly blinded him. 

I clearly remember hearing a voice speak inside my heart, as if parting the chaos and fear: 

     I am giving you this man to show you my love for you. 

It wasn't long before pride muddied the waters of my vision. I stopped seeing Him through him. 

Addicted to the mirror, I would entertain thoughts of being the fairest one of all. 

Eventually I dismissed that he could possibly have a vision, a hope, a dream. 

His love runs deep, though. For me and for my groom. You see, He didn't want me to live that way for long. Neither of us. And though 12 years seems like a long time, to Him it's just a blink of an eye. His time isn't like ours. 


These days, the confessing is breaking the hardened mud of my lookatmeish life.

As dirty and filthy and as I am in my entertaining and charade-living ways, I am accepted just as I am. I'm starting to really believe it as I bravely toss out my costumes and mirror. 

And I'm noticing him, right between the bedsheets, one hand away from me -- Grace. Just waiting for me to receive.

Thank you, Father, for the uncovering of the filth. 

Share your heart . . . add a comment below.

_______________________________________________


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Monday, December 13, 2010

growing up

Life sometimes involves experiencing vulnerability, and sometimes it resides in your parents - those who you thought were superheroes, stronger than anything.

I am 31 years old and a mother to a six year-old.  My mother has been a mother for, well...31 years.  She's more experienced than I am.  She knows more than I do.  She has it all together.  Or, so I thought.

This SuperMom hero of mine is vulnerable, and come to find out she probably has been all along, even though I've thought otherwise for as far back as I can remember.

Recently I've discovered that my mom's kryptonite is losing both of her parents.  With each of their death's we knew their end was coming. With the first, we had no idea it would be so soon, and the loss was a heavy weight of sadness.  With the second, her passing was long and hard, grueling even.  We knew it was close, and yet still it was heavy with so much to learn in the process.  So. Much.

Virtually no words can describe the feeling of watching my own SuperMom experience the passing of her parents so recently.  My mom has handled it all with such grace and dignity - two words she uses for the hope she has in how she will handle the remaining details of her parents estate, without realizing she already has these two descriptors in her character.

Grace. Dignity.

Losing a grandparent is painful and hard.  Losing a grandparent whose presence was so meaningful to my life and who truly added love and wisdom and joy, well, that's still painful and hard...but it's sweet, too.  It's time that I apply all that I've learned from this woman and allow her words and expressions and time spent together to settle upon me, and take up deep residence, as her roots plant firmly in my brain and in my heart.  Such joy and such sweetness.  What gifts we're given.

It is also a gift to watch my own mother lose her own, especially at the age I am, when I am able to make more sense of it all than if I was even a decade younger.  There's so much I can learn from as I watch my own mother's emotions play out before my eyes.  And mostly, I can learn about being human and real, and I can learn that it doesn't do anyone any good to put another person up on a pedastal.

We all hurt.  We all have pain.  We all get confused and struggle to make sense of anything.  We all need love and time and patience to heal.

Someday I'll look back on all this and remember pieces of how it felt watching my mother hurt, knowing that her own mother is no longer here to wipe her tears away and that I cannot make everything all better for her.  My mother must go through each step of the process and she will hurt - it's part of growing.  It's a necessary part of the process of living.  I'll learn more than I already have as my mother navigates through the mystery of grieving and remembering.

I think about life being birthed, and how I had to learn to be patient with myself as I navigated through my own feelings of confusion, fear, and anxiety, even among pure joy and happiness.  I hadn't had any experience with how I would feel as a new mother, much less any experience with what needs my own child would have and what kind of a person he would be.

And so, as I think of that new life just beginning, I compare it with lives ended and I find similarities.  No one has taught my mom how to feel as she navigates through her emotions from the deaths of her parents.  She can read the stages of grief and identify with others and their own experiences, but no one has had the conversations my mom has had with her mother in the time before her passing.

This is our time for growing up, even more than we already have. It's my time to learn that even though my mother is older and now a grandmother, she isn't all grown up yet and she continues to grow through life's experiences.

I see as I grow up a little bit more, that All Is Grace.  All.  Even this.