My thoughts have been quite jumbled lately. It is hard for me to collect my thoughts as so many seem to be swirling through my head at any given time. I have sat down to write many times, but there are too many directions to go in. I have had more loss since Phil’s death; the loss of several friendships at once; the loss of a church; my son will more than likely be moving away; and dammit, but my health just seems to be further declining, now with some pretty severe stomach pains.
There is a lot on my plate…the plate is so full, I just can’t seem to even see it anymore. There is too much and everything seems to have settled into a haze just beyond my grasp. Which is fine. I can’t find the energy to even deal with it all, anyway. When something comes up, I pull it forward, deal with it alone, then push the plate back into its hazy place. It is emptying slowly but surely.
The loss of friendships is probably the most difficult for me. I am heartbroken over it. It is baffling and I swing from immense pain to being quite pissed off. I was encouraged to share my thoughts but instead of solutions or apologizes, their position was defended. Two simple words could heal all, but, they will not be forthcoming. A declaration to never give up on the friendship by them was taken back within a week. “Peace” was claimed on their end, and that was that. And, I wonder why? If you hurt me, whether you meant to or not, whether you have a good excuse or not, and we have a ten-plus year friendship, and I tell you that you have hurt me, why wouldn’t you make amends? Why wouldn’t you use those two magic words? I have no answers for those questions and the situation has just become one more thing that I have to get through.
The church thing is unfortunate and sad, but judgment and intolerance seem to have a permanent home in our churches. Churches, American churches, preach to marital status. If you are married with children, then the American church is very, very happy to have you. If you are anything but that, you are not their demographic and they truly don’t know what to do with you. This is so far from what the Bible teaches it boggles my mind that they are oh so proud of it all. This particular church has a young pastor who preaches that women are less than. He preaches it, he blogs it, and he, as I found out, lives it. Unless he is related to you, he will treat you with indifference, unless he is being downright rude, each being acceptable behavior for him. And people within the church make excuses for him; that’s just the way he is. He doesn’t mean anything by it. Are you kidding me?
Um, here’s why it’s a problem. He is preaching by the flesh instead of by the Holy Spirit. He is living by fear instead of grace. And, Jesus, who should be his model, treats everyone equally. He loves you no matter who you are; male or female; married or not; childless or not.
1 Timothy 5 teaches us to treat every Christian like mother or father, sister or brother. Jesus also preached and ministers to EVERYONE. This guy has removed words like “whosoever” “all” “the world” and has replaced those words with “only those I feel comfortable with”. So, when a single female (me) asked for much needed prayer when Phil died, I got no response. Ever. Not a “someone will call you as soon as possible” or “I’m sorry for your loss”. This is real, this happened. A pastor of a church ignored a request for prayer. How can you, as a pastor, decide to ignore someone in need? Whom are you truly serving? Ministering to the people in your congregation is a major job description…how can you decide, “ah, I just won’t talk to or pray for women because they might make me stumble?” Pushing your sin on a whole gender is wrong, buddy. Why don’t you know that?
More questions ricochet around my mind; Does he not know the meaning of the word “ministry”? How can he read the Bible and feel comfortable deciding not to minister to certain people? How can he judge like that? How can he add to the Bible, something it teaches us NOT to do? If he has a problem ministering to women, why is he a pastor? And worst of all, how can the people around him let him get away with such unChristlike behavior?
Questions, I again, have no answer for. But I am so thankful, too, that I have wonderful Christian men in my life who ARE doing it right. Who treat me like a sister and support me in good and bad.
Michael leaving is a good thing and I am excited for the opportunities that await him. He has had further loss as well, and I grieve for the place life has him right now. I want him to know that it will all be okay, that he will go on to do great things, and that yes, life will kick him again. I want him to be buoyant and see beyond the pain and sadness to the horizon. Good stuff is waiting; just keep going. Good advice for both of us, I think.
My health. Bleh. I’m sick of talking about it and wondering how I got here. Thoughts of my past and all I have put my body through haunt me a little. Gymnastics, dance, track, running, skiing, ice skating, weight lifting…I swear my body is just rebelling. The days when I could ask my body to do anything and have it respond in kind are long gone. I wonder if I will ever be able to run again? That, is just too much to think about.
As for my stomach issues, it is my gallbladder, which needs to come out. Since I can’t see the surgeon until mid-August, I decided to do a cleanse that some people have had great results with…well, what a disaster! The pre-cleanse has you drink a LOT of apple juice. Like. A. Lot. Plus, no fat or protein. I made it through that just fine and went on to the day of fasting. I was doing great and then bam, a searing headache and nausea so bad I couldn’t hold my head up. I was eventually able to keep an aspirin down and feel okay this morning. The pain is still there but I can at least hold my head up. I don’t know what caused such a brutal headache…no protein? All that sugar from the juice? The funniest thing about all that was when I woke up at 1am, thanking God the nausea had cleared, I found I couldn’t move. I put my hand down to find Timber, all 90lbs of him, snuggled right up next to me with his head across my stomach. The dog knows when I don’t feel good, that’s for sure! So, I’ll bide my time until I see the surgeon and hope the pain doesn’t keep me from missing more fun activities. I missed a reunion, a good friend’s b-day party, and the whole just-not-feeling-good every day does get to me. The days I have energy I’m like a whirling dervish. Hoping those outnumber the bad days!
So, a lot on my plate and I’m just trying to stay positive. I relish the little things throughout the day that are positive; friends calling to check up on me; invitations to get out of the house; time with my son who is staying here until he leaves in a few weeks; the monsoons. God is good, even in this time of trial.
I am so thankful for my faith in times like these. Being able to pour out my heart to God and ask Him these questions that rattle through my brain. He is bigger than all these things and will sort them out in His time. For me, I lean on His comfort and His teaching that this is only a season. And will try to use this time of sorrow to learn His path for me and to have Him strengthen me as I go through it.
Blessings to you.
Sunday, July 14, 2013
Friday, May 10, 2013
On Death and Dying
The call came in the wee hours of Wednesday morning. I saw it was Michael and I wondered if his stomach flu had kicked in again. His words were even and monotone. “Mom, Phil’s dead.” He said it so quietly, I asked, “What?” even though I had heard the words. “Phil’s dead.”
Phil is dead. I still can’t believe, or understand, or comprehend that this beautiful boy is no longer here. No longer Michael’s best friend. He and Michael met, if not on the first day of school their freshman year of high school, then a day or two later. And they seemed to be best friends immediately. Two peas in a pod.
Memories of their life flood back to me. The video game sleep overs. Coming home from work one day to find my front living room furniture pushed aside with their band equipment in its place and them rocking a song. Phil entering our house with his familiar, “Hi, Mom.”
The crushing effect of Michael’s words hit me hard for so many reasons, because the sad part is, we’ve been here before. Twice before actually.
Michael had five close friends in high school; Phil, Nick, Aaron, Chris and Stephen.
Aaron died first. March 2008. It was devastating. The boys were in their Senior year of high school and Aaron’s death was more than a shock. Michael, Phil and Aaron had just been at the house playing music then ended up at Phil’s for a sleep over and had stayed up all night talking about their futures as well as goofing around at Udall park. Michael and Phil ended up back at my house raiding the fridge and seeing how long they could stay up since they hadn’t sleep the night before. When the call came, I told the person they were wrong, that Aaron had just been here, that they had the wrong Aaron. But, no, they did not have the wrong Aaron; he was killed riding down Mt. Lemmon on his motorcycle. I called out to Michael and carefully told him the news, to which he said the same thing. We just were with him, you’ve got it wrong, Mom. Aaron’s death seemed exceptionally harsh because of the promise before him. He was a tremendously talented musician. He would sit on my couch and casually play a guitar while talking with Michael and the beauty of his riffs were incredible. The boys took it very, very hard and eventually honored him by tattooing his name in Hebrew on their wrists.
Then, in 2011, Stephen died. Stephen was the troubled kid of the group. Bright, funny, smart, but troubled. He was a lethal soccer player, loyal friend, but depression seemed to surround him and in their Junior year, he ran away from home. His Mom would call to see if we had seen him or had heard any news and I would keep her up to date with any tidbits Michael had. I couldn’t stand the thought of him sleeping behind dumpsters so Michael and I would drive the streets at sundown looking for him. Then one day, there he was, walking his bike down Broadway. We pulled alongside and I told him to get in. I fixed them both dinner then went to call his Mom. He stayed maybe two weeks before he left again, eventually joining the Army and asking for infantry. He committed suicide while on leave here and the day I met his Mother face to face was the day of his funeral. I remember standing at his grave with Michael beside me, Phil behind me, and Nick and his parents beside Michael. The boys were sad, of course, but not surprised. Poor Stephen, maybe now he had found some peace.
And now, Phil.
Phil was the happy-go-lucky one of the group…everybody’s friend. His goodness is what strikes me now and what I’ll miss most. Driving his Toaster, wearing his neon, being his funky self and not caring what anybody thought. His friendship to Michael also makes my heart ache because I wonder how Michael will fill that void. Where Michael and Nick have a deep, we-can-share-our-deep-dark-secrets-and-you’ll-understand friendship, Michael and Phil had the everyday friendship. They seemed to do everything together; their band, their jobs, their circle of friends. They each had their own life, but shared everything. Their future was so tied together that Michael’s sense of loss goes to a depth that reaches beyond what he should have to be dealing with at his young age. Phil, from what we understand, was at a party and drown in an apartment complex pool. Michael was supposed to be there but that stomach flu had kept him home. His parents are very private and have asked Michael to help. They are worried about him, as we all are.
We have dealt with death frequently…not only these three boys, but Jon in ’07 and my Dad in ’10. We are familiar with grief. Michael grieves silently, alone. I grieve openly and want people around me. So, we rub each other the wrong way during these times. I want to help and hold and he wants me to leave him alone. He will sit by himself on Sunday, when we go to bury Phil. He may let Chelsea and Nick near. I will sit with Nick’s parents. His Mom and I scared for our sons. How will they cope burying Phil? How will they cope with the loss? How will they cope with being the ones still here? The questions of why are innumerable.
My mind can barely go to his parents. Phil was their only child and how do you go on? How do you bury your only child on Mother’s Day? My heart grieves and breaks for them. My feeble words of what their son meant to me, to Michael, they seen so small. How do you express gratitude for the wonderfulness of their son in our lives?
My prayers have been feeble as well. I have prayed for comfort and the peace that passes all understanding for everyone involved. But, my words fail me after that. My grief is too big right now. I have grief and worry and questions and know this won’t be over after the service on Sunday. I reached out to the Pastor of the church I have been attending and got no response, so now I have anger, too. And the verse on their wall yesterday was… Bear one another's burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ. -Galatians 6:2. Apparently practicing what they preach is not their strong suit.
When death comes, I think about life. It is the everyday stuff we all take for granted. And the big ideas and philosophies we hold are all nothing if we do not live them out every day. Tomorrow never, ever comes. Today is the day the Lord has made, let us give thanks and be glad in it. Jesus tells us to love one another. Not judge others, not elevate ourselves, just love everyone. Death makes me think about my life and if I am even making a difference. Do I love? I get so hard on myself because I know how quickly this life can end…am I doing enough? Am I living my words?
And I look at Phil’s life, cut too short, and I see all the people he affected. The words people have written are of his goodness; of how nice he was; of his friendship. And it makes it easier somehow to know of the legacy of goodness he left behind. He did not talk about being a good person, he was a good person.
So, rest in peace, beautiful Phil. Your legacy lies before all of us and we are all better for knowing you. While we grieve your passing, Heaven rejoices at your entrance. I’m sure you and Aaron are riffing with Stephen bobbing his head in time. Thank you for showing us what love is. Miss you and love you always.
Phil is dead. I still can’t believe, or understand, or comprehend that this beautiful boy is no longer here. No longer Michael’s best friend. He and Michael met, if not on the first day of school their freshman year of high school, then a day or two later. And they seemed to be best friends immediately. Two peas in a pod.
Memories of their life flood back to me. The video game sleep overs. Coming home from work one day to find my front living room furniture pushed aside with their band equipment in its place and them rocking a song. Phil entering our house with his familiar, “Hi, Mom.”
The crushing effect of Michael’s words hit me hard for so many reasons, because the sad part is, we’ve been here before. Twice before actually.
Michael had five close friends in high school; Phil, Nick, Aaron, Chris and Stephen.
Aaron died first. March 2008. It was devastating. The boys were in their Senior year of high school and Aaron’s death was more than a shock. Michael, Phil and Aaron had just been at the house playing music then ended up at Phil’s for a sleep over and had stayed up all night talking about their futures as well as goofing around at Udall park. Michael and Phil ended up back at my house raiding the fridge and seeing how long they could stay up since they hadn’t sleep the night before. When the call came, I told the person they were wrong, that Aaron had just been here, that they had the wrong Aaron. But, no, they did not have the wrong Aaron; he was killed riding down Mt. Lemmon on his motorcycle. I called out to Michael and carefully told him the news, to which he said the same thing. We just were with him, you’ve got it wrong, Mom. Aaron’s death seemed exceptionally harsh because of the promise before him. He was a tremendously talented musician. He would sit on my couch and casually play a guitar while talking with Michael and the beauty of his riffs were incredible. The boys took it very, very hard and eventually honored him by tattooing his name in Hebrew on their wrists.
Then, in 2011, Stephen died. Stephen was the troubled kid of the group. Bright, funny, smart, but troubled. He was a lethal soccer player, loyal friend, but depression seemed to surround him and in their Junior year, he ran away from home. His Mom would call to see if we had seen him or had heard any news and I would keep her up to date with any tidbits Michael had. I couldn’t stand the thought of him sleeping behind dumpsters so Michael and I would drive the streets at sundown looking for him. Then one day, there he was, walking his bike down Broadway. We pulled alongside and I told him to get in. I fixed them both dinner then went to call his Mom. He stayed maybe two weeks before he left again, eventually joining the Army and asking for infantry. He committed suicide while on leave here and the day I met his Mother face to face was the day of his funeral. I remember standing at his grave with Michael beside me, Phil behind me, and Nick and his parents beside Michael. The boys were sad, of course, but not surprised. Poor Stephen, maybe now he had found some peace.
And now, Phil.
Phil was the happy-go-lucky one of the group…everybody’s friend. His goodness is what strikes me now and what I’ll miss most. Driving his Toaster, wearing his neon, being his funky self and not caring what anybody thought. His friendship to Michael also makes my heart ache because I wonder how Michael will fill that void. Where Michael and Nick have a deep, we-can-share-our-deep-dark-secrets-and-you’ll-understand friendship, Michael and Phil had the everyday friendship. They seemed to do everything together; their band, their jobs, their circle of friends. They each had their own life, but shared everything. Their future was so tied together that Michael’s sense of loss goes to a depth that reaches beyond what he should have to be dealing with at his young age. Phil, from what we understand, was at a party and drown in an apartment complex pool. Michael was supposed to be there but that stomach flu had kept him home. His parents are very private and have asked Michael to help. They are worried about him, as we all are.
We have dealt with death frequently…not only these three boys, but Jon in ’07 and my Dad in ’10. We are familiar with grief. Michael grieves silently, alone. I grieve openly and want people around me. So, we rub each other the wrong way during these times. I want to help and hold and he wants me to leave him alone. He will sit by himself on Sunday, when we go to bury Phil. He may let Chelsea and Nick near. I will sit with Nick’s parents. His Mom and I scared for our sons. How will they cope burying Phil? How will they cope with the loss? How will they cope with being the ones still here? The questions of why are innumerable.
My mind can barely go to his parents. Phil was their only child and how do you go on? How do you bury your only child on Mother’s Day? My heart grieves and breaks for them. My feeble words of what their son meant to me, to Michael, they seen so small. How do you express gratitude for the wonderfulness of their son in our lives?
My prayers have been feeble as well. I have prayed for comfort and the peace that passes all understanding for everyone involved. But, my words fail me after that. My grief is too big right now. I have grief and worry and questions and know this won’t be over after the service on Sunday. I reached out to the Pastor of the church I have been attending and got no response, so now I have anger, too. And the verse on their wall yesterday was… Bear one another's burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ. -Galatians 6:2. Apparently practicing what they preach is not their strong suit.
When death comes, I think about life. It is the everyday stuff we all take for granted. And the big ideas and philosophies we hold are all nothing if we do not live them out every day. Tomorrow never, ever comes. Today is the day the Lord has made, let us give thanks and be glad in it. Jesus tells us to love one another. Not judge others, not elevate ourselves, just love everyone. Death makes me think about my life and if I am even making a difference. Do I love? I get so hard on myself because I know how quickly this life can end…am I doing enough? Am I living my words?
And I look at Phil’s life, cut too short, and I see all the people he affected. The words people have written are of his goodness; of how nice he was; of his friendship. And it makes it easier somehow to know of the legacy of goodness he left behind. He did not talk about being a good person, he was a good person.
So, rest in peace, beautiful Phil. Your legacy lies before all of us and we are all better for knowing you. While we grieve your passing, Heaven rejoices at your entrance. I’m sure you and Aaron are riffing with Stephen bobbing his head in time. Thank you for showing us what love is. Miss you and love you always.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
On Boston
On
Boston
This
past Monday, something unimaginable happened. Bombs exploded at the finish line
of the Boston Marathon. I knew several people who were running, but was not
watching it on line like I do Kona. I had a busy day and had just got back from
running several errands. I fixed myself some lunch and turned on the TV to
watch some DVR’d shows. But what was on the screen I didn’t understand.
Couldn’t understand. As what I was seeing caught up to what I was hearing, I
started to cry uncontrollably. They played the tape over and over again and I
still couldn’t understand…my brain could not wrap itself around what was happening.
I pulled my lap top from the office, lunch forgotten, and tried to search for
my friends. Were they safe? Thank God for FB because one by one they posted
that they were okay. Prayer requests poured in for their friends who had gotten
hurt; people were frantically searching for their loved ones. The Hoyts
(teamhoyt.com) were running their 31st Boston Marathon and the four
hour mark is when they normally finish. Where were they? Their FB page was full
of people pleading for info on their whereabouts and safety. Finally it was
posted that they had been near the 25 mile mark when the bombs went off and
were safe.
As
the coverage continued and the injuries explained my mind became numb. I knew
instinctively that it wasn’t the same terrorists as 9/11. I knew they were
young and from here…they had to be. No one but people from either the running
community and/or Boston knows the significance of that day; of that race. It
was specific, what they did. It was intentional. It was cruel. I know that
sounds like I am stating the obvious, but the way it felt was personal. To me,
to everyone. More so than Newtown or Aurora, because they targeted everyone.
And
maybe I feel it is personal because this is my community. My peeps. I am a
runner. I run…injured back notwithstanding. I race. I’ve done 5k’s, 10k’s and a
few ½ marathons and I’ve spectated at just as many. The running (and triathlon)
communities are simply the most positive, encouraging, fun, open, accepting
communities out there. Everyone is happy on race day; everyone is smiling; everyone
is cheering on strangers. Even if you have a bad race or get injured or bonk,
there are people there to build you up, cheer you up, and support you. People
cheer you in whether you are first or last. And as Boston is the mecca, well,
it just cut me to the core. Those bastards.
As
the investigation got going I just didn’t want to hear about the people
responsible. I thought it was one guy, young, as I said. Once they announced
that it was two, I understood that and just hoped the media would not name
them, would not tell us all about them, not plaster their high school year book
photos for all of us to see. Then they released the video of them walking with
the bombs on their backs and it just made my heart hurt. And the questions just
popped into my head…what happened to you two to make you hate your fellow man
so much that you’d lay a bag at their feet to explode? They were so young…and
everyone had such nice things to say about them. Which makes it harder somehow.
And eerie, as reports that the younger brother went back to school as if
nothing had happened and that the older had a wife and young daughter.
The answer
to the whys, for me, is always the same; we live in a fallen world and in a
fallen world, until Jesus comes again, evil exists, reigns even. We are a people that kill each other.
If we feel hurt, or forgotten, or tossed aside, as our culture loves to do, or
people disagree with our point of view, we let our anger build, we focus on
ourselves, and in our hurt and anger, we take it out on the people who we
perceive as hurting us. Cain killed Abel because he was jealous of God’s praise
to his brother and God’s rebuke to him. Why did these two brothers turn their
hate on the people of their own community? Only the coming days will tell us
that…but quite frankly, I don’t care.
Because there are a million other ways they could have handled their anger, disillusionment, or self-loathing. A million other ways to share their point of view. I don’t believe there is any good explanation or justification. Bad childhood? Wah. Ignored by people? Welcome to planet Earth. People don’t like your point of view? Try being a Christian. Led astray by some subversive terrorist group? Yawn. It’s almost a cliché now isn’t it? And knowing why won’t un-shatter the lives of those lost, maimed and injured. It won’t undo that they brought their stupid violence into an event that has been around for over a hundred years. Into an event that celebrates the wonderful spirit of human competition from world class runners to the weekend warrior who busts his or her respective butt to train and push themselves to qualify. It won't undo that we now live in a world where people bomb sporting events.
I know a lot has been said about the city of Boston and the wonderful, heroic people who rushed to the fallen, seeing things no one should ever have to see, in their eagerness to help. My words fall short in my admiration for these people. What I feel for what they did cannot be expressed adequately. There is no way to honor them properly, but my heart swells to a fullness I can’t describe when I think of what they did. And the fallen and injured themselves. The little boy who died and his sister and mother both gravely injured; the two brothers, who each lost a leg. A newlywed couple, each losing a leg. The one man who lost both legs but was able to help identify the suspects. Such bravery. Such heroism. Such an example of that human spirit that no bomb can ever, ever shatter. The Yankees playing ‘Sweet Caroline’; Chicago posting in their paper that they were the Chicago Red Sox, Chicago Bruins, Chicago Patriots, etc. Beautiful examples of ways to love each other. Simple really.
Now
that one is dead and the other captured and apparently fighting for his life in
a hospital, their crime will become a footnote. It has already faded, not
because it is insignificant, but because the goodness of people has already out
shone their violence. The police, FBI, AFT, and all the other agencies swooped
down and made a statement that no one that does wrong will prevail. The crowds
that lined the streets to cheer on law enforcement after the capture was unprecedented.
And they deserved every, single, cheer.
As I
looked at pictures of the day, Farther
Along by Josh Garrels came on my IPod and his words and the haunting music
brought fresh tears. It’s posted below…his words are true. In this fallen
world…”I wonder why, the good man dies, the bad man thrives, and Jesus cries because He loves
them both.” It is hard to understand and make sense of this stuff and I do try and look for the miracles, but the idea that my Saviour grieves for those two bombers humbles me and again takes me to a fullness of heart that has no words.
Friday, April 5, 2013
On Being Injured
On Being Injured, or Hurt, or Sick
I injured my back in August trying to pull Timber away
from a stray dog that had attacked him. Timber is a good sized dog…86lbs and is
tall. When he leans against me, his head it at my rib cage. So, when he got attacked
and started pulling, I pulled, he pulled, I pulled and a displaced rib and
raised hip later, I have been in a good amount of pain ever since.
And this is just the latest in a long line of injuries
and sicknesses that I have endured for most of my life. Right off the bat, I
was sick. When I was born, three weeks early, I almost died from RH poisoning.
Basically, my parent’s blood did not mix right in me and I had to have a
transfusion to keep me alive. I guess I wasn’t supposed to make it…between being
a premie and an RH, my time was almost up before it started. But, make it I did
and it seems since then, I have gotten more than my fair share of illnesses or
injuries.
Let’s see, there was scoliosis in grade school, which I
obviously still have; mono in high school; a wrist injury that ended my
gymnastic career because I didn’t tell anyone about it until it gave way on the
bars during a routine; my big honkin calves started when I ran track in
college, swelling so much and into such rocks that I used to have to go to the
trainer before and after (sometimes during) practice to get icy hot massaged
into them; debilitating migraines; Fifth Disease in my mid 30’s, which is
basically a childhood disease but when you get it as an adult it knocks you out
for 3-6 years. And it took them 3 years to diagnose me; severe tendinitis in my
rt elbow, which I still deal with; plantar fasciitis; a stress induced rash on
my hands that was so bad I had swollen bubbles on my hands and fingers; injuries from my 70.3 crash; various
pulled muscles, strains, and the like just from running and being active;
pneumonia; and now this back injury that just won’t go away.
And, this being my 50th year, I’m getting
tired of it. All of it. It is hard for me to remember a time when I haven’t
been in pain in some way or another; a time when I haven’t had to endure
something to just freakin exercise. For years I’ve had no sustainable fitness
and that is majorly frustrating for me. I barely train for races because, let’s
face it, the odds of me getting hurt in some way is so high, I really just
can’t stand the disappointment anymore. So, for the past few years, I train
just enough to get me through the race and always wonder what I could do if I
could actually train to my full potential. I wonder if I’ll ever know.
It’s not just the physical pain; it is the emotional
pain, the shame, the embarrassment, and the enduring of what people think of
you. Because people think less of you when you are hurt. Maybe not at first, but
eventually they do. They believe somehow that you aren’t doing all you should,
or you are milking it for attention, or you are weak. Their actions and
attitude toward you shows you exactly what they think of your little injury or
sickness…and sometimes that judgment hurts worse than the injury itself. If I
come to your house and my back hurts to the point where I can’t get off your
couch, and you go and leave me, well, that speaks volumes. And I wonder…do you
want to shame me into getting better? Do you honestly think I’m doing this on
purpose? The actions would say yes to those questions. You think it is my fault
and if you are just mean enough, in a nice sort of way, I’ll understand you
don’t like me injured and bounce off the couch healed.
Or, I’ll grab the next plane out of there and now have
the added pain of broken trust to deal with as well as an aching back.
And I wonder why we are like this? Why do we look down on
people who are hurting? Be it emotional or physical, our noses get really long
when looking at people with either of these maladies. Unless you break your leg
spectacularly on national television and get the support of a nation, you will
have to go it alone and endure the judgment that comes with it. My yard is a
mess and the neighbors judge; my house is a mess and people judge; my body is
expanding and people judge; I am not as happy go lucky as usual and people
judge. I complain about my circumstance and people judge. I’m cranky and people
judge.
So, what I do is push. I push too hard too soon because I
have been taught since childhood that no one likes you when you are a less
than. And if you are injured, you are a less than. The second I start to feel
better I walk farther. I add in some sprints. I’ll do burpees, pull ups, and
hold a plank for two minutes. I’ll start planning how long it will be until I can run and calculate when
I’ll be able to race again. I’ll start to feel like I belong again, only to
have my body tell me otherwise and I’ll be back on the couch resting and dreading the coming judgments. Because
the other side of all this is how isolating being injured or sick can be. And
this is just one more thing you have to deal with. No wonder I push.
This being my 50th year, I just have to say,
all this is not in my plans. How can I accomplish anything I wanted to do this
year if I can’t get off the couch and am seemingly losing friends who are
annoyed with my circumstance along the way? Because, as I’ve learned, no one is
going to come sit on the couch with me. My visions of being somewhere fabulous
as I turn 50 (NYC or Disneyland or the beach) with my friends and family around
me are slowing fading away. The 15lbs I want to lose by my 50th is
also getting further and further from reach. Let me tell you it’s quite
difficult to lose weight when you can’t do any sustainable cardio…and I’m going
on six months without now. What makes turning 50 better is the great things you
wanted to do throughout the year; and really, those things aren’t possible from
the couch. And I really, really, really don’t want to be in pain anymore. Any.
More.
But, short of a miracle, and I’ve prayed diligently for
one, the pain is here to stay. I’ll try another doctor for another opinion,
I’ll try more physical therapy, but I am starting to lose hope. Because this is
all very hard. Being alone, enduring all this alone with no support, is very,
very hard.
Luckily, the Bible is filled with people who were cranky
and complained or lamented; Moses crabbed about the Israelites, David wailed
his sorrows to the heavens, Solomon wrote a whole book bemoaning how
meaningless life is, and I actually wondered if maybe he wasn’t suffering from
a back ache at the time. Job, well, Job lamented his circumstance and then had
three wonderful friends who blamed him for his predicament. Oh, and then there
was his wife who told him to just curse God and die. Yowza.
All this to say, I know I am in good company.
I know God is big enough to take what I’m giving Him
right now. I’m still praising Him in this storm, but, man, some days it is hard
to sing of joy when I’m going on month six of almost daily pain and the curtailed life that goes along with it. And I’m
talking PAIN here people. I can take a lot of it, but, I may have reached my
limit. It's exhausting, really.
So, what do I do? Where do I go from here? It is the same
old thing; I just keep getting up every day. When I get knocked down by all
this, I have a good cry and just get back up. Again. Because as hard as this
is, I don’t know what it looks like to stay down.
And I want it to stay that way.
Saturday, February 16, 2013
On Waiting
Waiting is hard for me.
As a Christian, the Bible is full of situations where
someone has to wait. Moses waited for 40 years in the desert, David waited and
waited and waited to be King, Abraham and Sarah waited into their nineties for
their first born, Isaac. David and Abraham had been told by God that they would
be King and that Israel would come from them, respectively, and then endured
the wait to glorious results. And after Moses’ wait, he led the Hebrews out of
Egypt, parted the Red Sea, spoke w/ God and so much more.
So, why is it so hard for me to wait on God?
And, it is HARD for me to wait on God. Really, really
hard. I'm ready, God! Let's go! But, no.
I’ve been waiting for years, it seems. To find…something. And every time I try to “make something
happen” as it were, well, nothing happens. And what I keep hearing from God is, “Wait.” “Stop.” “Rest.”
The situations in my life seem to support those
murmurings. I have applied for jobs all over the country and have had few
bites. I have been injured since October and can’t run or bike or swim or hike
or dance or any of the other physical things I like to do. And I seem to be
following Moses in that God hasn’t yet shared His plan for my life.
Not that I am just sitting here twiddling my thumbs…although
some days that seems to happen. Everyone is working during the day when I am
wanting to go do something and there is only so much cleaning, organizing, TV
watching, writing or reading I can do. And sometimes the days do stretch out
with nothing to do. I tell myself to be grateful for this time of rest and
remind myself how ridiculously busy and crazed I was a year ago when I quit my
job. How this time is really for resting of my mind and spirit, and my body as
well, so it would seem. Most days are great…I wake up when I want to and have
more freedom than I’ve had in 20 or so years. My days are all mine and that is
so very sweet.
Yet, I find myself yearning for….something.
When I talk to God I tell Him what I think should be
happening right now. “God, wouldn’t it be great if…” and I fill in the blank
for Him, like He doesn’t already know what would be great for me. I see Him
patting my head and scooting me away. When I lament to friends, the response is
either them telling me to shut up as they trudge off to work, or they remind me
how gracious God is and that He will provide more than I can ever imagine. And
the line from Star Wars always pops into my head; “I don’t know. I can imagine
an awful lot.”
Now faith is the
substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen (Hebrews 11:1,
KJV).
When I quit my job a year ago, it was truly on faith. Faith
that God, in His promises, would take care of me. He has taught me many things
in this year, a year that has sped by faster than any other in memory, and I
know that I must continue to wait and have faith.
Have I mentioned that is hard?
Here’s why…because when the fears of the world creep into
my brain I turn from God and entrust myself. Because it’s scary not knowing
what is going to happen. I have hope on one hand and fear on the other and
sometimes fear wins out. So I pack up my car and drive to San Diego to
interview for a job I know I will hate; a job in a field I just left, but that
is in one of my favorite places on earth. And the interview goes well until I
ask the question every adjuster out there wants to know of an employer. What is
an average pending? (Pending is the open files an adjuster is working). Now, for
reference, at my last job my average pending was 90ish. And, as I have said, I
was crazed. And the reply is….150. For two full seconds my eyes are wide and my
mouth is gaping open. I control my facial features, but not the horror as I
calculate just how many claims that is a week. A. Freakin. Lot.
So, I am waiting. And really, not just for a job, or a
wonderful man, or friends that are here since all my close ones seem to move
away. I’m just waiting for the next chapter of my life because it really, really
feels like one is closing.
I just really wish it would hurry up already. In the words of Vizzini…
“I’m Waiting!”
Monday, January 21, 2013
On Lance
On Lance
Against my better judgment, I found myself watching
Lance’s interview with Oprah. I didn’t want to watch for many reasons, but
I almost couldn’t help myself. I wanted to hear it from him; I wanted to hear
him say it and hear his explanations, if he had any.
In my fifteen years as an adjuster, I have interviewed
thousands people. The key to any good interviewer is the ability to listen.
People will tell you a lot, if you let them, and after so many years of
interviewing people, you learn when people are being honest, and when they’re
not. There are cues people do that let you know something is amiss. Their tone
becomes monotone or suddenly becomes animated; they don’t answer the question
or their answer doesn’t make sense.
So, almost immediately upon tuning in, I knew Mr.
Armstrong was not being truthful. His tone was even with no inflections; he
moved constantly, leaning back and forth, rocking side to side and crossing his
legs and arms, almost hiding his face with his hands at some points; he was not
connected to the words he was speaking until he was asked how he doped. He
didn’t answer, but then said it was “smart”. His eyes lit up and he smiled. It was
the first true statement he had said.
The whole thing to me was upsetting. Lance’s story has
been a great one and an important one in my life. Jon was a huge Lance fan.
They had raced against each other in youth triathlon years ago and Jon had
always followed his career. As a special education teacher, Jon had posters of
Lance up in his room. Not of him on his bike or winning, but when he was sick
with cancer; bald and skinny. The greatness of his story…overcoming cancer by
sheer will it seemed, then going on to win, win, win, captured the world’s
admiration. Jon used the story to motivate his kids, and himself. I know
thoughts of Lance got Jon through Kona.
One of the first trips Jon and I ever took was to go see
Lance speak at a convention. Augie Nieto the founder of Life Fitness had been
diagnosed with ALS about the same time as Jon. It had been a little under a
year for both of them and, at that point, the effects were slight. Mr. Nieto
turned Life Fitness’s annual convention into the start of “Augie’s Quest”,
which was his quest to raise money and awareness for ALS, much like Jon would
do with the Blazeman Foundation and the War on ALS. The keynote speaker was
Lance. After Ironman, Jon and Augie had been in contact with each other and
Augie invited Jon to the convention. Since it was in Vegas, we took a flight
over and met up with some of Jon’s friends who had driven over from CA.
The convention was top notch, with amazing food, amazing
energy, and amazing events. While at the sushi table, I reached for the tongs
at the same time someone on the other side of the table did. Our hands touched
and we both pulled our hand back…I looked up into the face of a very handsome
guy. He was short and had on a sweet leather jacket. “After you,” he said with
more charm than anyone should be allowed to have. I smiled, and when he smiled
back, I realized it was Lance. Man, those eyes are blue! I giggled, got my sushi,
handed him the tongs, smiled, he smiled again, I continued giggling, and moved
on down the food table. When I got back to my seat, I told Jon, who HATED sushi
and hadn’t wanted to come with me to the table, who I had just encountered. His
face read several things; “Damn, why don’t I like sushi?!” then,
“Lance!!!” He bolted up out of his seat
and took off to find Lance. He never found him and from that day forward, rued
the day he decided he didn’t like sushi.
When Lance got up to speak, the crowd of several thousand
became so quiet you could hear a pin drop. He spoke eloquently; forcefully;
with purpose and encouragement for those in the crowd who had ALS. His speech
really was to them alone, and I could see the effect on Jon. He seemed to swell
and gain courage from the words. I think, really, that is when the War on ALS
was born.
So, in watching Lance’s interview, I could only think of
Jon and how crushed he would be. Well, not crushed, this is Jon I’m talking
about. He would have been super, flipping, MAD.
Irate. And rightly so. For me, as I watched Lance continue to lie, I was
struck by how caught up he was in his own little world of lies and deception. How
he had the self-awareness and emotional intelligence of a teaspoon. That the
only person he was lying to was himself. We all know, Lance. We all can see it.
Yes, you bullied the guys on your team to dope. Yes, you called honest people
liars and sued the pants off of them. Yes, you had people close to you try to
pay off USADA. No, you’re not sorry for what you did. Yes, you are very, very
sorry you got caught.
And I could only think, “What a waste!”
Your whole life is built on a lie, dude. You are morally
corrupt. And it’s just such a waste.
In reading all the articles, blogs, and commentaries
about Lance, everyone has put their own spin on it, and everyone has come up
with a lesson to be learned. Or given him a pass to go on to triathlons or
marathons, which I personally hope does not happen. They wonder if he will
realize what he has done. Does he understand the impact his lies will forever
have on his kids? Oprah said she hopes he becomes a better man.
For me, I’m just sad. And, I already knew these lessons.
I already knew that pride comes before a fall. I already knew that a life of
lies cannot be sustained. I already knew that sometimes God gives us over to
our folly in hopes that His grace in the situation will lead us to right our
wrongs. And, I already knew that when we don’t, God will step aside and let the
chips fall where they may.
This is not the end to his story. He will continue
fighting his war on himself and the world. If I could talk to him I would tell
him this…Fix your stuff, dude. You’re angry at your father…go find him and have
some conversations. Take that freakin chip off your shoulder and realize, even
if you never race again, you are so blessed. Listen to your ex-wife…she is wise
and if you listen to her you will come to understand that honesty is
everything. Start by being honest with yourself. Eighty six the people you have
around you that thought all this was a good idea. Go ride your bike, for the
sheer joy of it, not to prove you are somebody to the world. Find God. That
emptiness you feel will only be satisfied with Him.
And so, as his life work is scratched from the record
books and from our thoughts, I think I will remember him in that space and time
when he was someone to someone I loved. Because when I need motivation, I think
of Jon.
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
On Looking Back
On Looking Back
At the end of every year, the media starts churning out
end of the year lists along with the top stories; top celebrity scandals; top
pop culture trends; and whatever else is deemed worthy for us to remember. I
think it is good to look back, good to remember where we’ve been, and this
year, I think, has been particularly difficult. Not for me personally, but for
our nation. We went through a horrible political season with mudslinging, and
let’s face it, out and out hatred for one another. We no longer value one
another. We no longer can tolerate anyone who has an opinion that is different
from ours…and the election showed that in spades.
We also took killing one another to new heights. If we
don’t value each other, I guess it is inevitable, but the lengths that these
evil people have gone to show their hatred makes me shudder. And it is evil.
They are evil people…gun control or mental illness or what have you…but they
planned meticulously, they knew what they were doing, and that is evil. Should
we talk about gun control and mental illness? Absolutely. But, let’s also talk
about hatred and evil. If I value you, I’m not going to stock pile ammo and
spend weeks planning how to kill you. We need to talk about how we can’t seem
to cope with life’s ups and downs. Or our anger.
Adultery scandals continued to roll across our television
screens and newspapers, this year taking down the head of the CIA, among others.
We can’t even seem to value our spouses.
And our financial world is dangling on that darn cliff
they keep talking about. They’ve reached an agreement for now, but I wonder how
far will we, the people, fall if our elected officials can’t get it together?
Pretty darn far, I’m afraid. It seems the only thing they can agree on is to
give themselves a raise. Sweet.
Locally, we didn’t fare much better…little Isa is still
missing; shootings and killings are a daily event; people are dying on our roads
weekly; there is an arsonist on the loose, and Jack’s BBQ closed.
So, I wonder what lies ahead for us in 2013? It seems the
momentum has been carrying us along now in the wrong direction and it is
supremely difficult to turn things around once they start heading anywhere. So,
how bad is it going to get before we do something about it?
Or, am I just focusing on the wrong things here? Have I
succumbed to the media feast of negativity? As I always do when the world gets
too big, I look inward. What did I accomplish in 2012? Did I value those around
me? Did I live up to my expectations for myself? I’ve never been a goal setter, but I do have
ideas that I try and put in to place at the beginning of every year. They are basic ideas like “trust God
more” or “be more social”. These seem more tangible to me and can be lived out through the year
in many ways…much better than say, “run every day” or “read the Bible for 10
minutes each day”. Both good things, but could become a chore rather than the
life changing or life growing ideas they should be. Or worse, something I stop doing January 25th because I've missed a few days.
So how did I do? Did I trust God more in 2012? Oh yeah.
You can’t quit your job without another one and not trust God. And, here’s the
thing about that…when you say to God, I want to trust you more, He’ll give you
situations so you, well, have to trust Him more. It’s one of those things that
Christians joke about…don’t ever pray for patience, cause He’ll put you in the most patience inducing
situations ever. Same, same. But with that trust, comes the peace that passes
all understanding. When Jeremy was here in October, we were discussing my
financial situation and although it is distressing, he commented that I don’t
seem that concerned. And basically the answer is, I have to trust God. Matthew
tells us that not a sparrow falls from the sky that God doesn’t know about…and
to me that means, He’s got my back. In leaving my church, that also meant I had to trust God. Although I loved the church, I hadn’t really been able to get involved. The
music and teaching was great at first, but I was never really a part of their
community. Once the teachings started to slip, I felt God’s nudging me to find
a place where I could be involved and be part of a community. I have found a
new church, but it is always difficult to fit in at first. I’m not a young
married with children, which seems to be what every church is about these days,
but I have joined a missional community group and am starting to get to know
people. And, I have to trust that God has me there for a reason.
Which leads me to the “be more social” idea…how did I do
with that this year? Pretty good. My idea was to not make more friends or to
join more groups, but to be more social with the people who were already in my life.
Instead of succumbing to the busyness of life, I tried to be intentional about
inviting people for coffee, lunches, movies, or hikes. And it’s always a little
daunting at first, right? I mean, it shouldn’t be, but it is. What if they say
no? What if they don’t return my call? What if we do meet for coffee and the
fun friendship we have in a big group doesn’t translate? What if I ask people
over for dinner and no one comes? But, what I found is that people do want to
do things and once you are on their radar, they will in turn invite you to
things. And people do say no, but it’s usually because they truly can’t, not
for all the horrible reasons we think up in our head. And sometimes it is awkward, and sometimes an invite goes unanswered, but it is worth it to find those people that you click with and whose company you enjoy.
So, I find that looking back on our nation and on life is
really about growing. Our nation seems to not value itself anymore. Our nation
seems to be about greed for the ones in power. Our nation seems to not be able
to cope with disappointments or anger. But with those struggles, our nation is
looking for ways to grow beyond that; and I am happy that the debates have
begun. Go democracy! And the question becomes, what can I do about this stuff? Yelling
my viewpoint from the top of the Empire State Building isn’t going to change a
thing. But, as I always say, the change starts with me. I can value myself and
others; I can be generous; I can learn to cope with disappointments and anger.
And the start of a new year is great for that, right? Looking back shows us
where we faltered and where we succeeded and we can look to the future and say
how we want to grow and how we want to do better. I mean, no one ever says they
want to watch more TV or gain 10lbs in the New Year. No, we see the New Year as
new opportunities to better ourselves and the world around us. And, looking
back, my world did get better last year. I grew as a person, I grew in my
relationship with God, I deepened friendships.
And as I shift from looking back to looking forward, I am
excited about finding a few new ideas to carry me through the year…what is
flitting through my head is “finish things” and “love more”.
Yowza.
Happy New Year!
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