"Make the most of yourself, for that is all there is of you." Ralph Waldo Emerson

Tag: Jesus

Lazarus

Death is permanent. It is a definite end to life in this world. I will never see my husband again in my lifetime. I will never hear his voice again (with the exception of the voicemails that I listen to relentlessly). I will only see his image in pictures for the rest of my life. I will not be in the room with him silently. I will not share a meal with him. He will not be rubbing my feet. He will not kiss me goodbye every time we part. Instead of him, there is a void. This permanent void is overwhelming and painful.

My grief is all encompassing. It affects all parts of my life. Because I shared all of my life with someone who is no longer here, I am reminded of his absence in all aspects of daily life. Every mundane daily event is an exclamation point to his absence. However, life is going on. The world has continued to rotate every 24 hours regardless of my new widow status.

So to move forward I have had the chance to participate in a bible study at Pink Hill UMC about grief. I was reminded of the story of Lazarus at the most recent gathering. Even Jesus could not escape the pain of death. “Jesus wept.” John 11:35. It is a powerful thing that Jesus grieved before he woke Lazarus. Before he woke Lazarus and removed the barrier of permanent separation, he grieved the loss of Lazarus. There is a reason and a purpose for grief. It cannot be just a black hole of pain and suffering. It is important. There is something in the midst of it to lead us somewhere.

Ordinary /ˈôrdnˌerē/

with no special or distinctive features; normal.

Oxford dictionary

As much as grieving is extraordinary to me personally, it is an ordinary experience. It is ordinary because it is normal. Experiences of loss are universal. The option of “Qualifying Widower” is on tax returns for crying out loud. I’m not the only one. I’m not special. However, none of that eases the pain. That line of thinking makes me want to minimize my pain. It wants to make me think I should be getting over it. Why am I still crying in the bathroom mirror every morning? How many tears can I possibly make?

So I think maybe, one of the purposes of grief is to force us to move forward. The pain is so raw and uncontrollable that it forces me forward. I can’t stay here because I cannot survive here. It is reflexive to move away from pain. It is natural to want to alleviate it. Every day, I find myself doing things that do help alleviate the pain and it helps me move forward. This blog is of one of those things. Returning to work was another. Changing out my garbage disposal with a friend is another. Moments that are new experiences and new memories in my new chapter of life.

Moving forward in life is not moving away from my love. It is not forgetting and replacing. It is merely survival. And that is ok. That is all I know right now.

Always crashing the same car

This is one of my favorite Bowie songs and also a very familiar theme in my life. I too am always crashing the same car, metaphorically speaking. Often, I am too keen to repeat the same mistakes and patterns in my life. Behaviors are difficult to escape.

Last week, however, I took the theme to the literal sense and crashed my ACTUAL car. Or, rather, a deer ran into my car. Nevertheless, the car is crashed into. I am upset. My Jeep is my baby. The only new car I ever owned and it’s barely a year old. Feeling a bit devastated, not gonna lie. Actually taking this a bit worse than I did the cancer diagnosis truth be told. So, that may give you a bit of an insight as to how exactly messed up I actually am.

I like my firecracker red Jeep with the vented leather seats and moon roof. The heated steering wheel keeps my hands from turning blue (which happens regularly with my Raynaud’s disease). I like it so much that I felt more of a gut punch when the deer caused $3000 worth of damage to it than I did when I heard the nice doctor man say, you have cancer.

Lyrics from Always Crashing the Same Car – David Bowie, Low 1977

Honesty is the best policy

I promised I would be honest with this blog and this would be about me and my life and what I want to pass on to people about me. I’m a messed up person. I admit it. I do crash the same car over and over. I keep asking myself why do I put myself in situations that strain me emotionally, financially or spiritually? The answer is always the same. I’m just a sinner.

The struggle is real

On a spiritual level I know that I was not made for this world, but man have I gotten accustomed to it’s comforts. I am prideful, glutinous, lustful, envious, greedy, lazy and easy to anger. That is the heart of it. The heart of every single problem, not only in my own life but in every life I know. I need to ask forgiveness every single day. I want to be less of me and more like Christ, but the struggle is real ya’ll. I just don’t seem to put enough of those days together in a row, or even minutes of hours if we are being totally honest.

Fortunately I grew up in a family that is so rich in Christian heritage. I think it seeped into my bones somehow. I gave my life to Christ as a 9 year old and at that age I was so open to really listen to the still small voice. It shaped me in such a way that even when I was older and began to question the specifics of my beliefs, I knew no matter what I did or how I messed up, Jesus would be there for me. He would cover me.

Better and brighter

So, I’m still always crashing this same car, and He is there every single time to pick up the pieces and make it better and brighter. He knows I’m going to crash it again, and He still makes beauty out of my mistakes when I call on him to rescue me yet again. I’m so thankful for that. I wish I could successfully explain the security I have in that to my kids. Maybe some day they will read this and they will get it. I pray every single day that each of you experiences this security and love if you have not already.

Blessings and Peace

Surprise trip… Jesus take the wheel!

Mondays are generally sucky.  I think we all can agree on that point.  It’s a day we just all kind of endure but no one enjoys it.  This past Monday was set to be that way for me,  another ENDURING Monday for the books. But at 2:30 p.m. I received an unexpected text.  

“Hey, I found tickets to Carrie Underwood tonight.  Want to go with me?”

The ride or die friend in me thought “Heck yes I want to go!” However, the mom who knew that her teenage kids were at home nursing a stomach bug just couldn’t jump in without checking the waters at home.  So a few quick texts to the kids and then to my hubby, and getting a “Go girl” response, I was off to the races… On a Monday no doubt.  No planning even.  Who IS this person????

I sped home from work at 5pm, made a record 5 minute change of clothes and quick lip gloss application, and I was off to pick up my friend!  We listened to Crime Junkies podcast and chatted the whole way to the concert.  It was so unMonday.  We also didn’t talk about anything medical or even say the Cancer word.  Honestly, this is the one friend that didn’t know yet. We just had fun.

The Cry Pretty concert was amazing.  I remember voting for Carrie Underwood back in the American Idol days of yore! I have always loved her.  She is really so authentic and I think she is who she portrays.  No doubt she will be remembered as one of the greats when it is all said and done.  Her voice was on point.  But, I swear, when she sang Temporary Home and Jesus Take the Wheel, I almost bawled.  I guess thinking about life and death with everything that’s been going on has made those songs have so much more meaning.  

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