I can feel you all around me, thickening the air I'm breathing, holding on to what I'm feeling, savoring this heart that's healing...

Friday, December 26, 2008

Christmas Discovery

I've discovered something new this Christmas.
No, it's not something entirely new.
In fact, it's quite old, but I've never truly discovered it before.

It's the lyrics to the Christmas carol, O Holy Night.

I've never actually been one for Christmas carols, but this year....this year was different. Now don't get me wrong, I love music in general and especially Christmas music, but I've never gotten into actually singing the old carols. Too often do I think we sing without hearing what it is that we're singing. It happens to me all the time. This year, however, I finally "heard" these lyrics and have been forever changed through them:

O holy night! The stars are brightly shining,
It is the night of our dear Savior's birth.
Long lay the world in sin and error pining,
'Til He appear'd and the soul felt its worth.
Til He appear'd and the soul felt its worth. That phrase has been constantly ringing in my ears the past few days. I can't help but wonder at the words...til He appear'd and the soul felt its worth...

I don't know, maybe its because I wasn't able to spend Christmas this year back home with my family, but this season, I've really been in a contemplative mood. This carol has especially stricken me at the heart and made me feel so incredibly loved...who am I that the God in heaven would see me as so valuable and worthy that He would send His only son to the earth for me? For me?

I had known before that the Lord loved me enough to send his son to be born and to die for me, but I've never quite seen it this way before. 'Til He appear'd and my soul felt its worth...

Do you feel it?

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

4 Hours 'Til Alarm [rings]

It's 2:29 in the morning and here I am again.

I'm lying awake while my roommate sleeps soundly down the hall.

Racing thoughts and a slightly uncomfortable stomachache keep me from getting any shuteye.

I'm wondering if there's a reason God keeps waking me up in the middle of the night or if I'm just slowly inheriting my father's habitual worrywart-ness. (Is that a word?)

Well, it is now.

Some clarity would be good, God.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Eternity

It's 12:42 am.

Breathe in. Breathe out. Tonight I am restless, overtaken by an all-consuming and unknown fervor. As I sit here on my bed, my back against the wall and my computer on my lap, I am struck by contemplation. God. Love. Eternity. Saving grace. Mercy beyond compare. What are these things? My mind races, trying to fill in the gaps left by my humanity. Why me, God? Why me? What love is this, I'm so unworthy to be called one of your own! My thoughts are sporadic, unconnected, distant. God glue me together! I'm a broken vessel, my mind a wandering and thirsty nomad in the desert. I need you, Father, I need you. You. Not him. Not her. Not me. You. No one but you. Touch my heart with your inspiration. Breathe in. Breathe out. Your breath, Lord, your breath. Your breath is what causes me to live. To live. TO LIVE! Lord who am I to be a living demonstration of your glory and power?
The house is quiet. My spirit—anything but still. When a mind is screaming, a quiet house is a thunderous hell. There is nothing to draw one's attention from the clamor of unsaid thoughts…

"From eternity to eternity I am God.
No one can snatch anyone out of my hand.
No one can undo what I have done." Isaiah 43:13

God speaks, the heart listens.
Breathe in. Breathe out.
The noise lessens. My breathing deepens.
There is nothing to fear. Trust in the Arms wrapped around you.
Peace.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

One Year Ago Today




Last year on December 2nd, I went to the Casting Crowns/Leeland/John Waller concert from the "Altar and the Door" tour held at NIU's Convocation Center. I loved that concert--it was amazing-- and today I ran across a photo from it on my computer. This photo still gives me shivers.

During the song "Voice of Truth", Casting Crowns had an artist painting whatever it was that God inspired him to. This is what the Lord gave him.

Here's the lyrics to the song:

Oh,what I would do to have the kind of faith it takes/To climb out of this boat I'm in onto the crashing waves/To step out of my comfort zone/Into the realm of the unknown where Jesus is,
And he's holding out his hand

But the waves are calling out my name and they laugh at me/Reminding me of all the times I've tried before and failed/The waves they keep on telling me time and time again/"Boy, you'll never win,/you'll never win."

But the voice of truth tells me a different story/the voice of truth says "do not be afraid!"/and the voice of truth says "this is for my glory"/Out of all the voices calling out to me/I will choose to listen and believe the voice of truth

Oh, what I would do to have the kind of strength it takes/To stand before a giant with just a sling and a stone/Surrounded by the sound of a thousand warriors shaking in their armor/Wishing they'd have had the strength to stand

But the giant's calling out my name and he laughs at me/Reminding me of all the times I've tried before and failed/The giant keeps on telling me time and time again/"Boy you'll never win, you'll never win."

But the voice of truth tells me a different story/the voice of truth says "do not be afraid!"/and the voice of truth says "this is for my glory"/Out of all the voices calling out to me/I will choose to listen and believe the voice of truth

But the stone was just the right size to put the giant on the ground/and the waves they don't seem so high from on top of them looking down/I will soar with the wings of eagles when I stop and listen to the sound of Jesus singing over me

But the voice of truth tells me a different story/The voice of truth says do not be afraid/And the voice of truth says this is for my glory/Out of all the voices calling out to me (calling out to me)/I will choose to listen and believe (I will choose to listen and believe)/I will choose to listen and believe the voice of truth

I will listen and believe/I will listen and believe the voice of truth/I will listen and believe/'Cause Jesus you are the voice of truth/And I will listen to you.. oh you are the voice of truth

Happy December 2nd, everybody.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Waiting. Wondering. Why.

Sitting here at my computer in my little room at my apartment, I am on the verge of tears. I can’t understand what God is trying to do. Up until recently, I have been able to see God’s hand at work in pretty much every aspect of my life and I have been growing in leaps and bounds in my relationship with Him. That has recently changed. Right now, I am sitting, wallowing in the pain of my past life (I use that term loosely) and can’t understand what God is trying to do through this, if anything at all.

Two weeks ago at Joshua House, Jonathan Rue was speaking on the topic of trusting in God even when we don’t agree with him. This message was a very good one, and kept my attention very well, but during the sermon something happened that I didn’t expect at all. Jonathan made some off-hand comments during his message that acted as trigger points for me. Although I can’t remember exactly what they were, I do know that the questions pertained to questioning God’s motives and reasoning during hard situations in our lives. Like I said, they acted as “trigger points:” I heard those questions and immediately became very, very angry. All my old feelings about my mom’s death that had been buried in my soul for years, resurfaced in one angry, foul swoop. I reverted to my old ways, yelling at God in my head, questioning his reasoning behind “killing” my mom, once again screaming at his audacity for taking my mother away. The funny thing was, that while this was happening, I felt like I was living two people’s lives at the same time: my old one that was very hurt and bitter, and my new one which knew not to be angry at God or at my mom, which knew that I had already dealt with these questions and accepted the not-knowing. It was, in short, extremely confusing.

I later talked with a friend and my dad about what happened and they both agreed that either I was being spiritually attacked, or that God was trying to break through to me and let me know that it was time that I really, honestly dealt with my buried feelings of anger and hurt before I could move forward in my relationship with Him. I almost hoped it was the former, not the latter, because that way I could rebuke it and move on, not having to dig up old feelings that I believed I had already dealt with and moved on from.

Two weeks past and nothing happened. I sort of forgot about it. Then this morning I went to church. Mistake….or God?

This morning, Rich preached on anger. How ironic. During the sermon, I once again had the same feelings that I did two weeks prior, and now God had my attention. What did he want from me? I felt like I should go up and get prayer at the end of the service, but once again, I stayed in my seat. Stupid, stupid, stupid. I wonder about me sometimes.

After talking to friend tonight about this morning, I realized something. I think that God is honestly, trying to get my attention and tell me that its time I deal with this. I think that maybe I buried my feelings and grew up around them, hiding them and forgetting all about them, believing a lie that I had dealt with them, and now it was time to really deal with them.

I realized that the reason I did not go up for prayer was because of pride. After my mom passed away, I became fully the “big sister” for my little sis. I learned to buck up and take whatever the world handed me, take it for the team, that I didn’t need and couldn’t rely on anyone else. I became so consumed within myself that I believed it was wrong to lean on anyone else, and therefore found it really difficult to trust anyone else with my problems. I believed that by trying to lean on other people, I was an annoyance, and so I leaned on myself…but wait, you can’t lean on yourself. You fall over. Which is exactly what God is teaching me. The Christian life is not designed to be lived by yourself. You need others, you need community. I however, didn’t believe that and stuck God in the box that I had lumped everyone else in. I thought that by going up and getting prayer, I was appearing weak and vulnerable to others, and when your mask is impenetrable strength for yourself and for everyone else, appearing weak is the last thing you want to look like.

I’m a daddy’s girl and I’ll never forget something my dad told me when I was growing up. He said, “I’m so proud of you for not using your mom’s death as a crutch.” That statement eats away at me. If you only knew, Dad, if you only knew.

Something a friend told me tonight at dinner was this: “You’re going through surgery. Surgery sucks. It hurts. But what God is doing is taking out all the old broken parts and replacing them with new parts. Let him fix you.”

I’m trying. But pain hurts. Hurts bad. I feel like I’m being dragged through the mud of my previous life. Hopefully God will reveal his plan soon and let me know what he wants to do with me through this, because I wish I could just get back to growing happily. Not painfully.

Friday, August 1, 2008

Finding God in the Everyday: Baby Steps

Mom, Dad, baby. Typical family, right? Think again. Let's try: Mom, Dad, 5 kids. Grandma. Grandpa. Family friends family--Mom, Dad, baby. Single family friend currently in between places. 2 dogs. 30 bazillion fish. 1 house.

That's where I'm at.

Until I find an apartment, this ragtag bunch of hooligans has become my second family. And I love them. While at times the noise level becomes obnoxious, the unnaturalness of my living situation begins to feel unnatural, and my homesickness becomes unbearable, God still manages to show himself.

Sigh. Sometime I wish He'd shout what He wants me to hear. Maybe then I would listen and understand fully.

But no. We worship a poetic God--one who prefers to reveal himself in whispers and in life played out before us.

Zack. The cutest one-year-old ever. God has a knack for showing me himself to me through him often. Not too long ago, Zack learned to walk. And while Zack is a good walk-er, he still takes a tumble every now and then. Therefore, Ryan (Zack's dad) keeps a careful eye on him and follows him closely wherever he goes.

If Zack falls down, Ryan will pick him up again. If Zack wants to climb the stairs, Ryan will help him along and teach him how to do it. And if Zack cries, Ryan is there to wipe away his tears.

As I witness this scenario often, God sweetly reminds me that I am like Zack and He is like Ryan. I am learning to walk on my own in this crazy world and learning to take those first scary baby steps on my own. And even though often it feels like I'm alone in this, He whispers to me that He's there, following closely behind. I'm never truly alone.

He's there to pick me up when I fall down. He's there to teach me how to navigate the dangerous spots. And He's there to wipe away my tears.

But He's also there to share in my victories and to cheer me on when things get tough.

And one day, when I can walk strong on my own, He'll be there too--still guiding me, cheering me forward, and whispering "I love you" into my baby ears.

Because really, I will always need my daddy.

Finding God in the Everyday: Of Toes & Dust

Sunshine beckons. Caffeine calls. "Coffee first," I think. Isn't it funny how God can be found in the mundane? Thank you, Jesus, for cream and sugar. Right foot. Left foot. Coffee cup. Front porch. Rocking chair. First sip, then leaning back, I take a seat in the presence of cricket, birch tree, dust, and God.

How much like the dust I am. Like the dust, I am small, seemingly insignificant, but somehow recognized. Yet unlike the dust, I am welcome to be present, not swept and discarded by an impatient Hand off the Glory Seat of heaven.

Second sip. Drawing knees to chest, I am humbled by the wind in the trees and the streaks of sunshine dancing across my toes. Toes. What a funny thing. They look funny. They sometimes even smell funny. I am, actually, embarrassed by my toes. But sometimes, it's the smallest things that make the greatest impact. Without toes, we wouldn't be able to walk. They give us balance.

Am I more like a toe or the dust? Sometimes I feel like the dust--small. Insignificant. Sometimes I feel like a toe--ugly. A cause for embarrassment. But God is teaching me to be happy in my dusty, toe-like self...completely welcome and loved, and important to the Kingdom.

Third sip. Toes and dust. Who would have thought.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

...purple toes and joking llamas...

So the other day, I met with a spiritual mentor of mine who I really look up to, and he said something to me that's kind of been ringing in my ears the last few days. He said that I need to work on being more, well, light-hearted. He said that I'm always having "serious conversations" and that that's not necessarily a bad thing, but some people might get freaked out if I'm talking about deep and serious issues all the time.

Now I think he brings up a good point, and I do admit that most of the time, my conversations are about serious topics. I like deep conversations. But maybe...

That's just me.

So I just thought that I'd let everyone know that I'm not serious all the time.

Heck, I painted my toes pink and purple today.

In alternating colors.

Want to hear a joke? Here's one that made me giggle.
What goes 99-clunk, 99-clunk? A centipede with a wooden leg.

Oh yeah, and my vitamin water that I bought at the gas station today said that if I drunk it, I would be able to bench press llamas. Just like Diane in Tuscaloosa. (whoever she is)

Now, that's cool. Who doesn't want to bench press a llama?

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

...recoil and...

You would think that the first blog that one would post would be a happy one. And mine might have been, had I written when I first opened up my account nearly a year ago. But here I am, one year later, down on my knees and questioning God's reasoning. It's funny how when traumatic experiences happen to us, old habits left to the wayside expose themselves again.
I used to write in my journal all the time when I was younger, all the way from elementary school through high school graduation, because during that time I was dealing with a lot of pain and bitterness with God. Shortly after graduation though, I had an experience (which I will write about later) in which I reexamined and rededicated myself to my faith and the pain and bitterness I was feeling disappeared. Honestly, I probably haven't written a journal entry in 2 years--which is in part, I think, to my overcomings. But here I am again.
I am a 20 year old sophomore that attends Kishwaukee College, but I also attend a Christian fellowship group at Northern Illinois University called InterVarsity. In seeing how the vast majority of my friends attend NIU as full-time students, I consider InterVarsity a second-family and Northern a second-home. As you may know, there was a school shooting that occurred at NIU last week on Valentine's Day, and it affected all of us in different ways.
At the time of the shooting, I was on my way home from my art history class at Kish and I had no idea what was going on. All I knew was that I was sitting in bumper-to-bumper traffic on Rt. 38/Lincoln Hwy and there were cops, students, ambulances, and fire trucks swarming everywhere. I was quite bewildered, to say the least. Suddenly, my cell rang and it was my dad on the line (who works as a manager in DeKalb). I picked it up and the first words out of my dad's mouth were demanding: WHERE ARE YOU?!?
My dad knows how deeply involved I am on NIU's campus (I'm there nearly everyday--in fact I was there the day before the shooting) and so to have him call me, I knew immediately that something was wrong just by the tone of his voice. I told him that I was sitting in traffic and the next thing he said was "lock your doors now!" Alarm bells went off in my head and I asked him what had happened. He filled me in, to the best of his ability, and told me that there had been a shooting at Cole Hall, and to get over to his office as fast as I could. The last thing he said was "keep a calm head" but I wondered if he was talking to himself or to me, because at that point, nothing had sunk in yet, and he was acting more freaked out than me.
I booked it over to his office where I hung out for a bit, making copies, and generally mulling everything over. Nothing had sunk in yet even then; I was almost denying that anything had happened. I even made the off-hand comment, "well maybe we'll still be able to have InterVarsity tonight if they can figure everything out in time." My denial quickly turned to shock though when I walked outside the building and saw news helicopters hovering over the campus, and my thoughts turned to my friends. As soon as I pulled out from my dad's building, I grabbed my cell and starting making calls...well...at least trying to. The cell towers in DeKalb and the surrounding areas were jammed due to so many calls going in and out. Thankfully though I was able to get through to a couple people, who had talked to other people, who had talked to other people, and so on, so it seemed like all was well with the people I knew.
An hour went by and I received a phone call from my sister who had heard the news, and she was hammmering me for information on her friend Troy. Now at the time, I had not heard anything about Troy, but I promised her I'd find out what I could, so I spent the next several hours making phone calls, texting, facebooking, and emailing people. In the process of doing this, I found out that I had 3 friends who had been shot (2 of which eventually recovered).
The next day, Kishwaukee College still had classes so I had to go to class, but the majority of my class wasn't there. It was weird.
This week has been more difficult than last I think. Up until Sunday morning, I had been walking in a haze, hoping that it was all just a nightmare and nothing had really happened. Sunday morning though, it finally hit me, and I crashed. I was in alot of pain. I was angry at the shooter for tearing up my town and the school that I've practically grown up on. I was mad at the shooter for hurting me and the ones I love. I was mad at the Westboro Baptist Church for blaming the shooter on us and the fact that "NIU is a school overrun with fags." They said that the shooter is God's punishment on us. They said that God doesn't love everybody. I was mad at them for dragging the Christian presence InterVarsity and CRU has on campus through the mud. I was mad at them for hurting those I love.
I was in a lot of pain.
And I had to get up and go to church early for worship team.
The last place I wanted to be at that moment.
Thankfully, I finally dragged my butt out of bed a half-hour and a lot of tears later, and got in the shower.
Turns out, church was exactly the place I needed to be. Being on worship team that morning helped jumpstart my healing process. Cindy (our worship pastor) asked me to play guitar and sing that morning, and picked a song in which it repeats the phrase "heal me, heal me" in the bridge. When I was singing that phrase, I literally couldn't stop--I had tears in my eyes. I was singing for NIU. I was singing for the victims. I was singing for the victim's families. I was singing for the first-responders. I was singing for Troy, Harold, and Gayle. I was singing for InterVarsity. I was singing for CRU. I was singing for all the students. I was singing for my friends. I was singing for my family. I was singing for my church. And I was singing for me.
Heal us. Heal us. Heal us.

Last night, I was given the opportunity to leave work early and go to a Grief Counseling training session with the Billy Graham emergency response team. Afterwards, the group from InterVarsity in attendance went to the fellowship hall and just sat in silence for a few minutes. Eventually, someone opened up about their experience and how they were dealing with the tragedy, and soon we were all talking and praying. The meeting was rough because it also opened up the wounds again. But through those openings, it gave us all the opportunity to lean on one another and heal together.
Last night was the first time I slept fully through the night since the shooting.