Tag Archives: revelation

Becoming Mom

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By the time I go to bed at night, every night, I am tired both physically and emotionally, overwhelmed with the work of parenting a newborn and guilt ridden at the thought that I’m no longer fulfilling the role of wife and homemaker as well as I once did or as I feel I now should be able to again.

Our lovely Mabel Quinn is two weeks old today. I’ve been holding myself to this strangely high standard of recovery and return to normalcy. Intellectually I can acknowledge that, at two weeks postpartum, I’ve barely recovered from the c-section and shouldn’t yet have any expectation of proficiency as a new parent or the full return to my role as wife as it was prior to birth. Emotionally, however, I feel I’m letting my husband and new daughter down by not being better at this yet. I’ve convinced myself that I should be able to keep the house clean, have dinner ready, get some exercise every day and keep myself looking good, all while parenting our new daughter perfectly.

My excessively high standard for recovery and proficiency doesn’t take into consideration, of course, most of my new reality. Mabel, for all her breathtaking loveliness, is what you might call a “high needs baby”; she doesn’t fuss or cry very often, but she also doesn’t want to be put down. She’s going through a growth spurt that has her nursing about once an hour and, even when her doting daddy is home, only Mommy’s arms seem to do the trick. Seems I didn’t factor a third personality into what I envisioned during my pregnancy as the Great Postpartum Return to Self.

Of course, that isn’t all I forgot to take into consideration when making plans to “get my Self back” after pregnancy. I didn’t know well enough to acknowledge that the “Self” I thought I was returning to was no longer going to exist after Mabel came. There is no Me to go back to, there is only the Me that I am becoming. This, of all things, is something I have experience with – redemption, reinvention. I need to remind myself of the process, to remember to be kinder to me as I transition into yet another facet of Self.

I acquainted myself with some of the ins and outs of postpartum depression during my pregnancy. It’s not that I necessarily expected to have some trouble after giving birth, but as a person prone to depression and anxiety, I thought it was important to be educated. I think it would be fair to say that, instead of assuming everything would be fine once our little one arrived, I gave myself permission to not be fine if that was, in fact, what ended up happening.

I check in with myself from time to time, consider some of the difficulties I might have had that day and try to evaluate them rationally. I’m prepared to call a doctor should I need to, but every time I assess where I’m at I realize just how okay I am.

The evening hours are hard, it’s true. My arms are tired from baby loving – frankly, so are my boobs – and I’m worn down. Jason is home and I watch him fending for himself, for the both of us, in the kitchen and I feel some guilt. I look around the house and wish it were cleaner or neater, or that I was.

Yet, something incredible happens every night once we are in bed. My sweet two week old daughter snuggles up against my side to nurse happily as she drifts off to sleep. I smile at her and watch her contentment for as long as my eyes stay open and then I, too, drift off to sleep. We awaken a few times throughout the night – to shift position, to burp, to comfort or snuggle – and each time I stare at my sleeping husband and marvel that, despite whatever may have happened during our days, here we all lay at night, a contented and peacefully sleeping family, caring for each other as we are able and as we should.

Morning comes and Mabel and I get up to face our day while Jason is at work. We share smiles and songs, alternate snuggling and sleeping and discovering the world together. Sometimes a new bit of the house will get tidied or cleaned, sometimes it won’t. Sometimes the day is just rocking and nursing and napping and silly TV shows to entertain me while Mabel goes about the business of growing.

And when the evening comes with it’s challenges, I check in with myself to make sure I’m still okay, only to realize I’m more okay than I’ve ever been before. And while Mabel grows and changes so do I. I’m becoming a new Me, finding a new Self. And the new truth of this Self is that it’s really not about Me so much anymore. Everything is different. Perfectly and wonderfully different. 

Lessons I Keep Relearning

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There are a few lessons I keep learning again and again. No matter how many times I argue myself out of the following truths, they don’t become any less true. I may as well just stop trying. It’s time to face the facts.

1. Procrastination is not worth it.

The truth is, I really do relax better for 25 minutes if I clear the counters first, than if I sit and rest for 30 minutes with them dirty. I write better the cleaner the house is. No matter how many times I convince myself that there’s no difference between a painted, plywood floor that hasn’t been mopped, and one that has, there is. Floors should be mopped.

The truth is, if I make that call I’m dreading today, instead of tomorrow, I won’t have to have it in the back of my mind anymore. If I make sure to pay all of my bills on time, I will be rewarded. If I stay one step ahead of my to-do list, my life will run smoother and with less anxiety.

2. Self-control is worth it.

The truth is, no matter how good that sugary treat or second helping may taste, I’ll be happier in the long-run if I skip it. No matter how much I think it doesn’t matter to eat processed and unhealthy food substitutes, it does, and my body reacts to the difference. No matter how much I don’t feel like going to the gym, if I do make myself get there, I feel better when I leave.

The truth is, no matter how much better I think a drink will make me feel, or how much more fun it will help me to have, I will eventually regret it. No matter how much I wish I were as thin as once was again, my life depends on cocaine not being an option.

The truth is, no matter how much I think someone should hear and know what’s on my mind, sometimes it really is better to keep quiet. It doesn’t matter what conclusion I’ve come to, those around me might have lives more peaceful and happy, if I keep it to myself.

3. I am an alcoholic.

The truth is, no matter how much I wish I could drink like everyone else, I cannot. No matter how much I wish I could have one glass of wine and forget about the rest of the bottle for days, it will not happen. No matter how many excuses I come up with when entertaining the idea of drinking again someday, they are not true. No matter how much I think I’m better, no matter how much more mature or responsible or healed I tell myself I am, I am still an alcoholic.

4. Lying to anyone always backfires. This includes lying to myself.

The truth is, lying isn’t worth it, ever. No matter what I think I may gain, or what I think I may prevent, by telling a lie, it is never going to be worth it in the end. I will be anxious for a very long time, for no particularly good reason. No matter what I’m trying to avoid dealing with, lying to myself does more harm than good. No matter what the situation, if I am not able to see myself with brutal honesty, I will be stunted. There is no good reason lie to anyone, about anything, ever.

5. I am who I am, whether I (or you) like it or not.

The truth is, it doesn’t matter if I like me or not, I’m stuck with me. This does not mean that I am not responsible for my negative behavior or personality quirks. This is not a license to fail. I can (and should!) grow and change and evolve into a better version of myself. However, in that, I must understand I can never stop being me. I might as well learn to love me, because I’m sticking around.

The truth is, I’m probably always going to be too loud and boisterous for some people. I’m probably always going to have a habit of speaking my mind and there will probably always be people who are put off by this. I’m always going to be a little bit moody, a little bit off the ‘normal line’. You might as well learn to love me, if you plan on sticking around.

6. I don’t like having long hair.

Period.

Biting off more than I can chew

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Biting off more than I can chew

“Restoration doesn’t necessarily mean making things the way they were, sometimes it means making things the way they’re supposed to be.” Jill Lillis

If I haven’t had much to say lately, it’s because I’m pretty soundly confused much of the time and, out of my as-of-yet-to-be conquered fear of a poor public opinion, I’ve made this blog more about essays on revelations I’ve grasped and vague ramblings on the things I haven’t rather than anything at all about an actual journey to wholeness.

The truth of my journey at the moment is that, from all outward appearances, I seem to have entirely lost the path and, from an inward perspective, I still seem to be very much on it.

I warned you I was confused.

I’ve made a series of decisions over the last year that have come with some consequences to be certain. The first was last March, when I began socially drinking. The second was in December when I entered into an intimate relationship with a fantastic guy who happens to not be a Christian.

Have you gasped and moved on yet? This post is not meant to be about me and alcohol so I’ll not make it, but I will say, for those who I imagine are concerned, I am fine and balanced and, for the most part, not “prone to drunkenness” as the Bible warns against. Now that it’s out, I’m sure there will be more on that later.

Now then, I wish I’d been writing truthfully about these things all along, about all of it. The last year has been one of both incredible highs and lows. I’ve failed in some areas deeply and, in that, learned valuable lessons. In other areas I’ve pushed past opinion and bias and broken through legalism in a way that I’d only talked about in theory previously. As an aside from the point here (if indeed I even have one), I’ll offer that the steps one must take in order to truly step outside of religion and legalism are not at all pleasant and tend to be not at all popular.

One of the primary consequences of my decisions is that I am no longer singing in church and with church groups. Again, this is not about that, though I’m sure another post one day will be. The circumstances in which that consequence came about was handled poorly and dealt to me painfully and caused a divide between me and the church I call home.

And, in short, that’s where I am today.

Today in church, during the worship service, I was meditating on how unfulfilled my life feels when God is not the very center of it. (I’m often meditating on missing the wholeness of God during worship services as I still only feel my truest and deepest self with Him in music and I can only feel like I am sharing in His heart fully when I am singing for others to find it.) I stood and sang, quietly, and wondered what if I could go back to the way things were? What if I could undo the decisions that had put me on the outside of a intimate group and take my place once more?

My journal from this moment reads:

“I cannot stand to be this far from God. And yet, here in church, I look around, and I cannot bear the thought of plugging back into this. It is so hollow. Accomplishing nothing. Self-focused. Empty. Is this my choice?! Is this what I should give up a life I love for? I cannot stand the idea of it. I don’t want anything that isn’t true and authentic and effective. What shall I do, God? Where shall I go?!”

And then that services worship leader, Jill Lillis’ words are written there, as if God were answering me without a moments hesitation, “Restoration doesn’t necessarily mean making things the way they were, sometimes it means making things the way they’re supposed to be.”

This evening I called a dear (and wise) friend. My intention in making the call was to tell her about a great sale I’d been to that day and encourage her to go shopping for herself. We ended up discussing this topic instead for an impassioned hour.

While she’s also one of my best friends, she apologized to me, as the ministry leader for more than one of the ministries I was formerly involved in, for not seeing me for who (and where) I actually was, for expecting more out of me than I was mature enough or ready to give and for giving me too much leadership too soon. I don’t hold her responsible, of course, for this separation I feel now, but her words brought some comfort and some confirmation. I’d been feeling, months ago, like I’d made a grievous mistake in not being completely genuine when I first began to attend my church home; feeling like I’d been more interested in portraying the proper image to what I felt was the suspect church eye, than in authenticating who I was to God and He to me. I was so focused on proving to my family (first and foremost) and to my new church family that I wasn’t the same old Seana, that I wasn’t that ‘rehab kid’, that I was committed to God and to my future with Him, that I lost sight of my actual relationship. I began to act the part instead of living the truth and what was true and good (that I am not the ‘same old Seana’ and that I am committed and in love with God) began to become corrupted from within.

And then, when I began to demand of myself that I be genuine before I be well-esteemed my outwardly seeming perfect peace began to crumble. In my dedication to playing a role, I had not paid careful enough attention to my very foundation.

My friend, in her wisdom, also said on the phone tonight that she feels like I’m where God intends me to be right now, that in and through this, I am finding my authenticity with Him.

I’d like to think when all is said is done I’ll not only be alive in Him and Him in me but I’ll have stumbled upon the place where He intends me to be relevant to His as-of-yet unchurched people.

And so, here I am. Lost in the thickets of daily revelations, out of sight from the main path but certain it’s just around every corner. I have a suspicion, however, that by the time I find the main path again, God won’t have me traveling it any longer. I have a sneaking feeling that I’m not going to be walking the popular path for a good long while to come.

After the last couple of months, a big part of me kind of hopes not.

As a final thought, I apologize to my readers for not being more forthcoming prior to this and for not chronicling with better truth the journey I promised to share. I’ll be more mindful (and less afraid) in the future.

Chasing Life

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Chasing Life

I guess I’m supposed to feel far from God right now. At least, the worried glances of my concerned church family and the continued reassurance that “no matter what, God loves” me have me wondering if they know something I don’t know.

Because I don’t feel far from God at all. Sitting here, alone, in the quiet of my new middle-of-no-where apartment, with hands a bit dirty from handling wood for the fire, rain boots muddy from stamping down tire ruts, and a steaming plate of kale stir fry, I feel anything but far from God. I feel like I am precisely where God expected me to be in this moment, on this day. I feel like He’s right here with me, in every new and awakening moment of rustic life lived independently, I feel Him in every contented breath.

I feel far from people. Not all people, of course. In every experience of growth and change, or even in the failures and the falls, there are always people who surprise you with their grace and with the authenticity of their love. There are always people, however, who surprise you in another way completely. I feel far from those people. I feel far from the church, not the people who comprise her, but from the mammoth statue of tradition that “church” implies.

I feel adrift somewhat, though by choice and not chance. I feel as though I’ve kayaked out to sea and have turned to gaze back upon where I was. It’s a moment of decision. Is that really where I want to be? Is that girl who was living on that island really who I am meant to be? It’s surprising how ugly the view is from out here, blemishes not easily picked up upon when you’re in the middle of it all. I guess that makes them too large to see up close. I’m grateful for my vantage point.

I don’t feel far from my destiny, but I do feel the disappointment of people who feel like I am. The murmurings of “we had such hope for her”, “she could have done so much”, “such a waste of talent”. At first I was tempted to agree. Surely I was on the right track to accomplishing great things for God. I’d made the right choices, signed on to the right projects, presented in the right way, I was a shoe in. Only problem was, I was the one making the decisions, choosing the projects, tweaking presentation. I was so busy chasing “my destiny” that I forgot to chase God. I forgot how to chase God.

I respect a people who believe in prophesy. I respect a church who invites a prophet to their pulpit. I’ve lost respect, however, for prophesy chasing. It’s too easy to lose sight of what’s important. A huge prophetic word can change a person in the eyes of the church, and suddenly everyone is on board to get this person with the ‘big calling’ where it is they need to be. The battle cry begins, “we are fighting for your destiny!”

It all feels good for a time.

Except that I am a person and not a destiny. Except that while we’re all busy ushering me toward my destiny, my life is suddenly on a different track than it might have been, than it might be supposed to be. “I’m supposed to preach so I’ll work on my public speaking skills.” “You should read this book about prophetic singing, it’ll teach you what you need to know.”

I don’t want to chase my destiny. I don’t want to spend my life following a (or every) prophetic word. It’s not that I’m unwilling or disinterested, it’s just that, well, it’s my destiny, right? I imagine just living life is what’s going to get me there. Chasing destiny burnt me out. Living life brings me peace. Besides, a prophet can be wrong. Even more so, a prophet can be misunderstood.

It was said over me once that I would be famous, and “not known about your town kind of famous but known around the world kind of famous”. Oh, now there’s a prophesy worth chasing, right?

Except Anne Frank is famous. Just a girl, living her life, without any idea she was someday going to change the lives of others. World famous.

I’m so grateful for my peace. At whatever cost it comes.

Screwtape’s Influence

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Screwtape’s Influence

I feel like my life reads back to me like an extra chapter of the Screwtape Letters sometimes.

It all starts with me feeling grateful for being called to walk the “hard line”, for basking in revelations of grace over legalism and love over fear. I am strong and sure in my identity, in my love for my Savior and my hope for the future.

Then, secret thoughts (disguised as truth) begin to grow, unbeknownst to me, planted there by a foreign enemy too clever to overlook.  And, suddenly, I am not so sure anymore; the lines that used to be starkly drawn begin to blur, but I’m not yet aware of its happening.

With just enough truth, any line of thought can begin to confuse, until, eventually, I become aware that there’s a war in my mind and begin to participate.  Except, what now is truth and what is born of revelation, and what has been planted and growing without my permission?  Which line of thought is it, then, that I am arguing?

I cannot think. 

If I loved Him, I would obey Him.  He has given us a spirit of self-discipline, powered by His own Spirit.  I cannot love Him without Him giving me the power to do so.  I should try harder.  It shouldn’t be such work.  I cannot sacrifice without desire.  I can’t have desire unless He gives it to me.  I’m not doing enough.  I cannot handle anymore.  I can’t be who He wants to me to be, I don’t want to be anyone but.

I cannot focus. 

Condemnation has been my lifelong companion, shame it’s bosom friend.  I am harder on myself than anyone could be on me.  I create disappointment in faces where it never existed.  In such a fertile ground for harsh personal judgment, who is to know the difference between conviction and condemnation?  Guilt is guilt, it’s not prettier in one shade over another.

I cannot tolerate this.

I am not angry, I am exhausted.   I am not faithless, I am afraid.   I am not turning my back, I am losing grip.   Where will I fall to?   Maybe falling is the whole point?

Life Outside The Box (let there be cake!)

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Life Outside The Box (let there be cake!)

  This Christian walk stuff is not easy. Granted, that’s not the most original thought I’ve ever had, I don’t think there’s a whole lot of people who assume that Christianity is easy, but sometimes it strikes me just how difficult of a path this can be. I’m not even talking about the do and don’t lists. In fact, the commandments can be the easy part. If I’m on a strict diet, I don’t eat cake, pretty simple. But if I’m just “watching what I eat”, if it’s a “lifestyle”, do I eat cake? If so, how much? It’s the Christian life compromised that’s impossibly difficult and, as my dieter friends can relate to, once you take that first bite of cake it’s just a little bit harder not to have french fries the next time.

But, really, “Christian life compromised” isn’t the right term, although, when one isn’t careful it does seem to be the end result. I guess what I mean to say is, it’s relatively easy to be a Christian and to walk roads soundly investigated, approved and maintained by the traditional church. It isn’t difficult to live life uncompromised on Sunday morning or at a gathering of like minded friends and family. It isn’t hard to stand your ground when no one is challenging you, or tempting you. On a diet, following a regimented menu laid out for you by a more studied individual isn’t very tough, in the short term. It’s when you decide to rework your very lifestyle to embody health and fitness in a way that’s real and lasting for you that challenges come.

Legalism can be easier to live in than grace. I think it’s why we’re drawn there. We just feel better when someone is telling us what to do, like if we follow all the rules, we know we’re getting it right. Religion based in fear. Pharisees.

I live a lot of my life outside what the church considers comfortable confines. The local pub (a community gathering spot), the homes of non-christian friends, music festivals; many of the places where I most feel at home, and the most free to be myself, are outside of the traditional black and white territory of the church. It can be hard, sometimes, to overcome mindsets taught to me as a child by strict Christian parents, even in myself. I find myself arguing the propriety of my choices, comparing them to those of my other Christian friends, and wondering if I’ve completely lost my way and the Holy Spirit forgot to tell me. Should the topic come up, of my friendships and hangouts, I find myself justifying my beliefs to an inquisitive, concerned or sometimes accusing church family member. Mostly, though, I just sort of keep quiet about it, worried I’ll be thought of as less of a Christian, that, in their concern for me and out of homage to the tradition of rules and clearly defined right and wrong, I’ll be ousted from ministry and deemed among the lost.

Don’t get me wrong, I have lots of friends who are Christians, and I love them and time with them, too. I just haven’t limited myself to only that and only there. There’s a lot of reasons and, to be honest, evangelism wasn’t originally one of them. But, as I’ve prayed through these struggles, what seems clear to me is this: Jesus hung out with some pretty shady characters, and He wasn’t preaching or handing out tracts or condemning choices and lifestyles, sometimes he was just eating dinner. I think repentance is born of relationship. I think it’s unwise to overlook the importance of being an “out-Christian” in a secular world, a position that requires us to actually step foot into the secular world. I believe that I’m laying a foundation for some of the people I meet and interact with, that I’m planting a seed that will one day be harvested.

But sometimes, I wish I didn’t feel so alone while I was doing it. I wish that I could go to my church and share the particular difficulties that come from living for Christ while in relationship with a world who isn’t. We all sin and all sins are equal in God’s eyes but, truth be told, they’re not in the eyes of the church; and in an environment so readily given to judgment, it isn’t easy, or even wise, to share the struggles unique to a life outside of the box.

Which brings me back to my original point. This stuff isn’t easy. There’s a whole lot to figure out, a whole lot of two steps forward and one step back. There is, at the end of the day, a whole lot of growth.

And maybe that’s what makes it all worthwhile. Lonely, perhaps, a little lacking in the usable advice department, but worth it.