Showing posts with label compassion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label compassion. Show all posts

Saturday, March 12, 2016

The Darkness of The Train Tunnels Is A Light For Someone Else

It seems the train has been running backwards on the tracks lately, my mind has been on the past. My lupus has been flaring up and my stress levels are high. What do they say about your frame of mind? If you are anxious, you live in the future. If you are depressed you live in the past. If you are at peace you live in this very moment. I am always trying to escape this moment, whichever moment it is, so I am often both anxious and depressed. Some thoughts I can change, some I cannot. Not even the xanax can help when your mind turns on  you, it can just ease you through a few of the rougher patches.
Tonight, for absolutely no reason, I had this fragment of a memory flit through my brain. I grabbed it before it fluttered away and nurtured it, until the fragment grew into a full story. Once upon a time my father took two of my brothers and myself away from our mother. We went to live, for a while, with my mother's parents in a tiny town in Indiana. My grandparents had a house at a crossroad. Across the street from the front of the house was a corn field. On the other corner was another pretty little house and the last corner, diagonal to their house, was a church. A tiny little white country church. The area was full of trees, grass, the houses neatly kept. The main - and only one of two - paved street through town boasted only three or four businesses and a volunteer fire station. The houses were little Victorian cottages, neatly kept. I remember a lot of elderly women with dainty furniture and hand embroidered tablecloths, fragile tea cups and gossipy visits. My grandmother had a garden in her back yard, as most folks did, and she would make corn husk dolls. In the early twilight of a new autumn, the only one I spent there, we would sit on the porch steps and watch the last of the fireflies dance across the broken stalks in the harvested corn field and hear an occasional howl which chilled me far more than the wind. But what I remember most, that fleeting bit of memory that came to me today, was of the church. It was simple compared to the mega-million dollar monuments to various pastors these days. The vestibule was tiny and the pews were hard. They were of a dark, polished wood and the older women that volunteered to clean the church must have put a great deal of care into their work because that wood shined. The windows were all very gothic in shape, and stained glass. I do not remember the depictions, only that they mesmerized me. The church was open all of the time and I often snuck in to play in the pews and wonder at the patterns the sunlight created through those magical windows. I remember that the community would come together for dinners, weddings, parties - all held in the basement. Mostly, though, I remember that I often sat in the back pew. I was a curious child, easily bored unless I had a book - and the bible did not count at the time. Often, there was a gentleman in the back pew with me and, looking back, he was probably in his late 60's, at least. This would have been somewhere around 1979 and I was a very tomboyish six year old. In fact, something that still makes me burn with shame happened about this time. I was always anxious to shed my dress and shiny shoes for shorts and ragged sneakers the moment church let out. And, being in the back pew, I was out faster than anyone. I was so fast, in fact, that one Sunday I was in my play clothes and on my bike before anyone else had really moved beyond the church yard toward their cars, parked on the sides of the street. I, having been cooped up too long with nothing but the magical windows to keep me entertained, sped out on my bike like a Tasmanian devil, wind whipping through my already messy hair. I must have been feeling particularly dare devilish on that day because I found myself veering toward a car and, before I could straighten up, the side of my handlebar left a long scratch on the car. I never did 'fess up. I put my bike away and suddenly the freedom of those two wheels and the riotous wind in my hair had lost their allure. But, as I was saying, there was often a gentleman in the back pew with me. Elderly already, he would be long gone by now. But I remember that he seemed . . . melancholy. And that he always had a butterscotch in his pocket for me. I remember his hands, the skin parchment paper thin, veins standing out, knuckles knobby and his fingers twisted a bit. And I remember his sad eyes. I think now, perhaps, he must have been a widower.
So I was just going through the motions, putting medication in Bee's feeding tube, when that church, that man, just flickered into my brain. The more I thought of him, the sadder I became until I sat down and sobbed for a man I can barely remember, one I'm sure whose name I never even knew. A man I sometimes sat beside during a brief summer and autumn of my childhood with sad eyes, old hands and a butterscotch always at the ready for an unruly little girl looking for magic in stained glass windows. A man long gone in years and memories, I'm sure, and yet I sobbed for him as if he had been my own flesh and blood and had just passed on. It took a long time to stop crying. I think, at some point, I stopped crying for the perceived loneliness of that old man and began to cry for my own consuming loneliness.
And now I sit here, the occasional tear still falling, wondering about the mysterious roads my mind often takes me down these days. I think the memory came to me because - other than myself - he has become, in my mind, the picture of loneliness. Not just loneliness. but of actually being alone. Bereft of loved ones, of friends, of community, of purpose. I feel that way so much of the time. And this man came to me, this lonely memory wandered in, because in the last week my daily devotions have concentrated on the sacrifices of Jesus. And, for some reason, I've found myself so busy that the days I've been able to pray my rosary without falling asleep have been Tuesday, Friday and Sunday - and if you are Catholic you know that those days (the Sundays during Lent) are all about the sorrowful mysteries. The first mystery is the Agony In The Garden, and it described the terrible loneliness that Jesus felt as He prayed.
InTouch had a devotion titled "The Cost of Our Salvation" a few weeks ago. Did you know that Jesus was completely separated from God during this time? That He was not just feeling the weight of our sins, He was feeling he weight of the shame, the burden of punishment, and all without that lifelong connection He had always had with God. He was, utterly and completely, alone. Even His friends could not stay awake, they did not seem to understand His great loneliness and agony. How alone He must have felt. Somewhere in my brain, in the haze of anxiety and xanax, I seem to have put the old man from my childhood and the image of Jesus weeping in the garden together and the thought of that elderly gentleman brought me to thoughts of Jesus, weeping in the garden and praying for God's love that was, for an allotted time, withheld from Him.
It is both a comfort and bitter knowledge, that Jesus understands my dreadful loneliness. I know I've written about that before - loneliness is a longstanding theme in my life. But until recently, I did not know or understand the absolute depth of the loneliness He must have felt, having been separated from God entirely. I have never felt that. God has always been in my life. I tell people sometimes - and they always look at me as if I'm daft - that God is in the flowers. As a little girl, nursing bruised flesh or feelings, I would creep into our forbidden flower beds, lean against the house and feel the flower petals. Born with Anosmia, I could not smell the flowers, but I would rub the velvety petals and feel . . . comfort. I would feel God, as if He was sitting right there enjoying the beauty of the very flowers He had crafted and watching over me. And even in times when I cannot feel God's presence, I know that He is watching over me, working in my life behind the scenes, on miracles both big and small that will come into my life in time. Unlike Jesus, I have never been without God at my side. But, for a time, that was a price Jesus was willing to pay. And the more I learn about what He went through, the more I understand, the more I am both thankful and shamed.
And so, as I sit here still weeping for a man lost to time, for myself, I know that Jesus understands how I am feeling, more than I would like Him to. Before I had my little breakdown I didn't understand people with true anxiety or depression, but now I do, more than I would like. The price Jesus paid for our sins wasn't just an accounting, sins tallied and marked off a balance sheet - it was an example, yet again, even in those final hours, for us to follow: I understand your loneliness and so I can comfort you; I can be in your loneliness with you and will not abandon you.
What have you experienced that has changed the way you can be with your fellow man, that has given you a perspective that affords you a beautiful opportunity to simply be there for another person in their anguish, their loneliness, their anxiety, pain, depression .  . . ? Don't pass up the opportunity, it is a gift you have been given, that we have all been given, to take a darkness we have passed through and turn it into a light for someone else. And for me, it is a comfort to believe that one day, this bitter loneliness I feel to my very core will transform into something beautiful, something meaningful, and will give solace to someone else. And I pray that elderly gentleman from so long ago knows that his life profoundly impacted mine, in such a brief season, for such a small acquaintance, his life still has value.

Romans 5:3-5 Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character hope. And hope does not disappoint us, because God has poured out His love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom He has given us.



Thursday, September 24, 2015

Third Stop: The Neighbor's House. Population: Everyone

     Before we lost our house it was the place to be during the summer - at least for all the neighborhood kids. We had a three lane slip-n-slide as well as a Banzai skimboard surfer slip-n-slide that you took a run up and jumped on this little board and tried (though rarely successfully) to stay on your feet down the length of the slide. I cooked out every afternoon. During sudden rain showers we would all gather on the porch and I'd pass out little cups of ice cream, the kind with the wooden spoons. Evenings were filled with flashlight hide and seek and sparklers. We had some epic Nerf battles and plenty of grade school drama. It was a nice neighborhood and everyone got on well together, for the most part. Here in the complex we don't really know most of our neighbors. There was a murder soon after we moved in, and then another, so we keep to ourselves. Who are your neighbors? Do you host dinner parties for them? Have backyard barbecues, feel comfortable running over for a cup of sugar? Maybe you don't know them very well, maybe you just wave when you see each other but couldn't place them if you met up at the grocery store.
     Jesus instructed us in Mark 12:31 to love our neighbors as ourselves. And He didn't just mean the guy across the street that doesn't close his robe when he goes out for his morning paper. Or the sweet old lady down the block that always has a wave and a smile. He meant everyone. Everyone is our neighbor. Every. Single. Person. And we are supposed to love them. And yet, the world is full of hate. We hate each other over something as ridiculous as skin color, we fight each other over cultural choices, we despise each other over financial status, we fling hate at each other over sexual orientation. And everyone has a reason, some foundation for their hate that they feel is absolutely justifiable. But hate is wrong, always.Sometimes, as we are not perfect, we can't always help it. I'll freely admit that I hate my ex-husband. It is something I'm working on, but I'm so very much not there yet. People hurt us, or they hurt someone we love, they do something truly evil and we hate them for it. It's something to work on. But when you pick and choose bits of the bible to support your hate and attempt to make it acceptable, I have to draw the line. I have absolutely no idea how many times Jesus admonished us to love each other, but He said it a lot. In fact, love was kind of his theme: 'Love me, love God, love your enemies, love everyone'. And He didn't just say it, He showed it. Time and again Jesus taught by example. In Luke 14:13-14 Jesus tells us to invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, to our banquet. Well, you can just substitute any word for banquet because He means to include them, to treat them equally. And then in Luke 15: 1-2, He does just that. Jesus is hanging out with tax collectors and other "sinners". Jesus is teaching them, speaking with them, treating them as equals, as He instructed us to do ourselves. Jesus never saw poor people dressed in dirty rags, He saw brothers and sisters, children of God. Think about that. Whenever I get really negative about my ex-husband, I remind myself of that - he is a child of God. We all are. God made each of us, God LOVES EACH OF US. So when we exclude others, when we look down at others, we are doing that to someone God loves. Imagine someone treating a child of yours that way! And I don't care what "sin" YOU feel they committed. That isn't up to you to decide or judge. Jesus was very clear: love one another. In Matthew 5: 43-47 Jesus tells us to love our enemies. Be kind to them. Don't just love the people that love you, don't just be kind to those that are kind to you. Love everyone, be kind to everyone. Seriously, I've got to go through the New Testament and count how many times He tells us this.
     Lately the news has been filled with hate for the poor and homeless and most of that hate is coming from "Christians". That absolutely baffles me! With so many clear admonishes to love everyone, how exactly are we justifying so much hate? I am continually shocked at the vitriol directed toward the homeless. Why? When my children and I were homeless we met a lot of lovely people in the same situation. They weren't on drugs, they weren't sitting around being lazy while trying to take your hard earned money. They were regular people, hard workers, most of them homeless because they had been hit with a medical condition that drained their finances, left them struggling. What is their sin, exactly? I am reminded of a news article about a wealthy community that called the police because they thought a homeless person was sleeping on a bench in front of their church. Turns out it was a statue of Jesus that had been donated. But those church goers were horrified at the thought that some "street person" might be hanging out by their church. They weren't moved with compassion to help this person, they wanted to banish him. I have a feeling Jesus was not in attendance at their service, He was clearly not invited.
     I get it, I really do. That whole "love everyone" thing is a lot harder than Jesus made it seem. I mean, He's the son of God. He's love and light. He looked at the people around Him with only hope and compassion. We struggle with loving ourselves, even with loving the people that love us, so of course we struggle with loving people that are different than us. But make no mistake, that is our assignment. That is the whole meaning of life, in case you've been wondering about that: Love God and love each other. And when you give it a little thought, it really is that simple. The next time you feel like being unkind, losing your patience, making a snarky comment, remember that the object of your hate is a child of God, wholly and completely loved by our Creator, and your brother or sister in this family of God's. And then. . . choose love.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Matthew 11:28-29

     The last few days have been quite a struggle for me. When the sun comes up, I feel such relief - I made it through the night. I don't sleep a lot anymore, I'm up all night. I used to be up all night because my daughter, Bee, needed me to turn her, or change her diaper, put more food in her bag, give her meds or a breathing treatment. I still do all of that stuff but after 20 years it is routine. Now, I don't sleep because the anxiety has my nerves stretched to the breaking point. Before the last few months I'd have said I was well acquainted with stress, anxiety and depression. Twenty years as my daughters' only caregiver has certainly given me more than a passing relationship with them. But I have discovered that I knew absolutely nothing about true depression and anxiety, until recently. I have been guilty of losing my patience with friends that seem to stay in their depressions, that stress out over simple things until they take to their couch in a fit of nerves. I've been guilty of saying inane things like "Start your day off with good thoughts" and "You have to choose to be happy" and other rather foolish things. I see a pattern in my life of judgement. I think that is one of the lessons I'm supposed to learn in this life: do not judge.
     In high school my best friend became pregnant. I didn't see her for several months and when I did, I was shocked that she had gained so much weight. It wasn't just pregnancy weight, it was what-have-I-done-to-my-life weight. I made some flippant comments about her weight and never knew, until much later, how much they hurt her. Fast forward a few years and I became pregnant with my first child. I was somewhere between 100 and 108 pounds when I became pregnant. In fact, I'd always been underweight, my whole life. But by the time I gave birth I had gained 100 pounds. The doctors couldn't figure out why, they ran every test, monitored my food. Now, I know why.
     A few years later when my son was about eight a friend was struggling with her teenage son. He had pushed her several times, screamed at her, had become belligerent and distant. My son and I spent all of our time together talking, playing games, reading together. We were very close. I offered my friend advice that was laced with criticism about her son and his behavior. I was certain that my son would not behave that way as a teenager and I thought I knew exactly what she should do. Fast forward eight years and my son is a moody teenager that has, occasionally, yelled at me, He slams doors, stays in his room most of the time and rarely speaks to me. He's a good kid going through a rough time.
     A few years later I have a couple of friends that deal with anxiety and depression. While I have always tried to be supportive, send cards, call, check up on them, I've always been right there with the silly platitudes that I thought were so helpful, so spot on. I did not understand true depression and anxiety, I did not understand what it feels like inside. How you just can't stand being inside your own head anymore. How you try, you do, you surround yourself with "happy" things, you get up and try to do all the positive things that should make the days and nights better . .  but they don't. And then you discover how very alone you are in your depression and anxiety, and just how much those silly comments hurt, how they leave you alone in your darkness and throw in guilt for good measure. Mostly, I have found that not only have my friends left me in my darkness but they trivialize it. Oh, don't get me wrong, they are good women. But they make some truly devastating comments, as I did in the past.
     Tonight I sat here drinking tea, looking at the clock, praying for the sun to come up, that I could get through another long night. I had some of those "why me" moments. I thought about a Christian radio program I heard once. A woman remarked to her father that she found his ability to sympathize with his congregation was remarkable, and that she wished she could connect with others that way. She admitted that she often lost patience with people, could not step into their shoes and understand their pain. Then one day she became ill. She was, eventually, diagnosed with a terrible illness that would only grow worse as time went on. On the day of the radio broadcast she said that God had answered her request to be more like her father. She found that her ability to connect, her compassion for others, had grown. During my long night tonight I thought about that, and hoped that one day I could help others, that my struggles have a purpose. Because in this darkness I sometimes have such moments of clarity and I realize that my life is so pointless, that time is a heavy burden, that life is monotonous. No, those things are not true, but they feel so true when I'm on my knees and know that I can't hold on much longer.
     Every single day I read Matthew 11: 28-29. I'm so grateful that Jesus understood how tiring living can be. That everything can weigh you down so much that you can't move another step forward. I don't like to think about what happened to Jesus that gave Him such insight but I am so grateful He made a point to encourage us and give us hope, to do the one thing it seems no one else can do - sit in the dark with us so that we are not alone.

Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 

     The Great Physician, offering healing to broken souls.

Friday, September 18, 2015

Second Stop: Loneliness. Population: Me . . . and Jesus

     Growing up in a houseful of brothers all several years older than myself, I spent a lot of time alone at home. Picked on at school, I spent most of my time alone there as well. Lonely became comfortable, safe. Each time I tried to reach out I would end up with another broken piece of my heart in my outstretched hands. I was always hopeful though. I dreamed of a warm, loving family. Close girlfriends and sleepovers. We had several board games at home and I usually played them by myself, hoping someone in my family would come along and take pity on me. I was desperate enough to be willing to accept a pity game but they never joined so I played alone. I grew up and married a man much older than myself who traveled for work. He'd fly all over the country, was gone for months at a time. Our daughter was born with severe disabilities and the few friends I had at the time were so uncomfortable they stopped coming over. Once again, I was alone most of the time. I actually looked forward to the many hospital stays. There was a sense of community within the pediatric ward at the hospital. Eventually my son was born and I wasn't so alone anymore. As he grew we spent a lot of time reading together, playing board games. I cannot tell you how much I enjoyed buying his first board game! Within a few years we had a walk-in closet dedicated to board games. Now that he is a teenager though, he spends most of his time in his room with the door closed. Board games, crafts and reading with Mom are just not as appealing as they once were. Home bound in a town where we know very few people, I am alone again. Over time, though, lonely stopped being a comfortable place. Lonely stopped being quiet and safe. It roars in my ears, pulling the walls in until I am suffocating. My anxiety has grown until it is a monster that shadows me, giving me no peace. I tried to talk to a few of my friends about this growing anxiety and depression. I got a lot of suggestions like "Start your day with positive thoughts" and "Happiness is a choice". I know they didn't mean to do so but their advice only made me feel more alone. In fact, I have never felt more alone in my life and I think that is saying something.
     I turned to my bible but it didn't really help. Not until I ran across a daily devotion that detailed some of the emotions that Jesus experienced in the last weeks of his life. One of those emotions was loneliness. I was shocked. It had never occurred to me that Jesus would have been lonely. He was always surrounded by people that loved him! How on Earth could he have been lonely? I read the bible passages that accompanied the devotion and realized that if this was true then Jesus understood what I was going through - because He, too, had experienced loneliness! And not just loneliness, sadly, but fear and loss as well. I began to look at passages in the bible differently. Suddenly I could see a pattern that had escaped me all of my life. I grabbed a blank index card and wrote in bold letters: Jesus Understands. On the back I listed several stories in the bible that illustrated this fact. And as I read my bible each day, I am on the lookout for more. You see, I had always had this vague idea that Jesus had a pretty simple life. He knew who He was, He completely understood and embraced His purpose. Things like fear, loneliness, grief, anger . . . they didn't mesh with the experience I imagined Jesus had as a man. I thought the knowledge that he was the son of God was somehow  . . . insulation against the deeper, negative emotions. But the truth is He came to Earth as a man to fully and completely experience life as a human. Love, anger, loneliness, grief, need, hunger, fear - all part of the human experience. The next day the devotion was about the names of Jesus and how they described the different aspects of his life: Prince of Peace, Almighty, Bread of Life, Great Shepherd, Counselor, Deliverer . . . the list was extensive and each one added another piece to the puzzle of Jesus that I was slowly putting together. Then I saw the name Man of Sorrows:

He was despised and rejected by men; a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief; and as one from whom men hide their faces he was despised, and we esteemed him not. Isaiah 53:3

     I cried when I read that. I hated the idea that Jesus suffered that much. On the heels of that terrible realization I finally understood that He is called Counselor because He has lived through the same pain, He understands, and can counsel us accordingly. There is comfort in that, as God intended, I'm sure. When the anxiety takes over, I try to hang on to that one truth. When the loneliness threatens to consume me, I cling to that one, comforting truth:

Jesus Understands

     Perhaps you will find comfort in that truth as well. When you are overwhelmed by loneliness, when you are stumbling around in your own personal darkness and feel like even your friends have abandoned you, remember that Jesus felt the same way in the Garden of Gethsemane (Matthew  26:36-46). If you are drowning in grief consider that Jesus wept over the death of His friend Lazarus (John 11: 33-36) and showed His understanding of the grief of others when He raised the widows son from the dead, so moved was He by her tears (Luke 7: 11-17).  Jesus understood fear as well. How else can you explain His reaction when the people came to Jairus, with whom He was walking, and told him that his daughter was dead. Jesus immediately told Jairus "Don't be afraid; just believe." (Mark 5:36) Jesus knew the news created an instant reaction of fear and dread within Jairus. I imagine He took him by the shoulders and looked deeply into his eyes as He told him those beautiful words, words I often repeat to myself: Don't be afraid, just believe. 
     Life is a journey over rough terrain. The twists and turns and bumps can leave us bruised and broken. Thank God (literally) that there is a Counselor we can turn to who knows exactly what we are feeling because He was bruised and broken, too.