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Ashes and Obedience
Originally posted July 2017
I remember reading a story a few years ago about a little boy who’d been earmarked as the next child-prodigy. At the tender age of six, while most kids are just learning to clap their hands to music on-time, young Jonathan Okseniuk was not just performing, but conducting famous orchestras across the nation. The words he used to describe his love for music during an interview after his debut performance are burned into my soul. He said, “I was born with music in my bones.”
Music wasn’t something he learned. It was something that flowed out of him from the depths of his very framework – from his bones. Pretty profound for six!
His words cut like a knife through my heart, because I too felt like I was born with something in my bones.
Words.
From my earliest school memories, I’ve always had a thing for writing, describing, communicating. I remember being in third grade and not understanding why my classmates were having such a hard time understanding where to put commas and semicolons. In high school, I was the designated essay and book report editor in my circle of friends. But it wasn’t until years later that I realized why I like writing so much. It’s the only thing I’ve ever done that makes me feel creative – that gives me a voice.
I’ve always been the quiet one; the one who gets talked over; the one who people forget was even at the event. Not the life of the party. Not the popular one. Not the one people are craning their necks to hear what is being said. If I had a dollar for every time I tried to share in a group setting and was interrupted, only then to face that awkward moment when the group realizes you were talking and tries to act like they care about what you were going to say, I’d probably have a lot more money than I do right now.
But when I write, there is this brief moment where there is no competition, no interruptions, no embarrassment. I can be myself. I can bare my soul. I can contribute to the conversation. For a moment, someone chooses to listen because they want to. For a moment, I get the opportunity to make someone feel, hope, dream, realize. That moment is pure magic for me.
But the truth is, as much as I like writing, this blog terrifies me.
What if no one reads it? What if I offend people? What if people leave mean comments? There are tons of really talented bloggers, what could I possibly say that hasn’t already been said or that they couldn’t say better?
Terrified.
I’ve actually started a blog two other times in the past and never posted anything. So this right here, post numero uno, this is a milestone. This is me taking a step of faith and believing in the things that God has put in my heart. I’ve neglected my gift for so long. I’m so guilty of pursuing other things and ignoring what God has put right in front of me. I’m rusty. I don’t feel equipped enough to do this. I don’t feel like I’m half as good of a writer as so many other bloggers I follow, but this is me choosing to be obedient to the call of God.
Obedience
Gosh, I kind of loathe this word. It’s the thing you think you’ll get to forget once you’re an adult, but then you realize that it follows you everywhere, and that being obedient to your parents was, in a lot of ways, less of a commitment than being obedient to God.
When I reflect on my life (which I do a lot lol), I can see just how much of my heartache has been from my own disobedience. Disobedience to my parents. Disobedience to God. My life hasn’t turned out anything like I planned. But when I look around at the messes I’ve made – these piles of ash – I’m reminded of Isaiah 61.
“The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is upon me… to comfort all who mourn, and provide for those who grieve in Zion – to bestow upon them a crown of beauty instead of ashes, the oil of joy instead of mourning, and a garment of praise instead of a spirit of despair.” Isaiah 61: 1-3 NIV
Literally, this promise is a one-time event – the imminent return of the Lord when He will restore everything to the way it was meant to be. But even so, I feel like this exchange of beauty for ashes represents the cycles we go through. Even when we’re victims of our own arson, we can humbly hold up the ashes of our lives to the Lord and hope for something beautiful in return.
This blog is ‘holding up ashes’ in a lot ways for me. I’ve tried so many things on my own and nothing has ever panned out like I thought it would. Failures. Wasted money. Lost time. It’s sounds kind of dramatic to think that all my hopes and dreams are linked to words on a screen. Maybe they are. Maybe they aren’t. I don’t really know. I’m just trying to be obedient.
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So I’ll leave you with this question – What were you born with ‘in your bones?’ What gift, dream, passion has God given you that you been neglecting that is just dying to rise to the surface? Music? Photography? Art? Business?
It doesn’t matter what it is. God gave it to you for a reason. There might be other people who can sing, but no one will be able to sing like you. There are lots of people who do photography, but no one else will be able to capture the world through your point of view. There are many talented artists on this planet, but no one else will be able to bring the visions inside your mind to life.
God is the ultimate Creator, and I truly believe He gave each of us an element of his creative ability. When we tap into this, we have the unique opportunity to bring Him glory by letting others share in the gifts He has bestowed upon us. God doesn’t ask us to be awesome; He just asks us to be obedient. What is He asking you to do?
Only you know what is buried in the depths of your framework. I hope you’ll take a step of faith with me and bring them out of the recesses and let them shine.
and I hope you don’t leave mean comments… and make me cry.
Okay, Post #1 – Done! This obedience thing might not be so hard after all š
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Vacation Blues
āEvery child has three core needs that must be met in order to develop into an emotionally healthy adult. They need to feel unconditionally loved, ultimately secure, and deeply significant. Of those three things, which do you feel like you lacked the most as a child?ā
That felt like a heavy question for a first session with a new counselor. āIāve only been here for thirty minutes, but I guess weāre just going to dive right in, arenāt we?ā I thought to myself. āI am here for help though, so why not just rip the Band-aid off?ā
I sat there on her comfy couch, leaned forward over my knees, staring at the handout explaining each of these emotional needs, pretending like I had to think really hard about it. I didnāt. I knew immediately which one of the three was my long-standing Achillesā heelā¦
āSignificance,ā I replied. āIāve always felt so utterly insignificant.ā
The frustrating thing about that is I donāt even know why Iāve always felt so insignificant. I knew my parents loved me. They supported me in whatever endeavors I wanted to pursue, even from a young age. They did their best to help me achieve all the things I wanted to achieve. They were and still are great cheerleaders, but yet, something inside me has always screamed āYou donāt matter!ā
This belief has manifested itself in different ways throughout the course of my life. It was reinforced by bad relationships in early adulthood when boyfriends were unfaithful or when seemingly good friends just disappeared from my life like we were never even friends at all; when I didnāt get invited to the luncheon or to the girlsā night; or worse yet, when I did get invited and then people forgot I was even there; when I was once part of āthe groupā but then suddenly not part of the group anymore. All of these things and so many more just reiterating the belief that I donāt really matter.
Even being aware of this tendency after spending a lot of hours in counseling, I still have to fight this feeling today.
Just last month when I was checking into the gym, I walked up to the instructor to get my station assignment. He was looking at me waiting for me to tell him which station number; I thought heād forgotten my name, so I said, āShannon.ā
He looked at me and smirked with his eyes, because his face was covered with his mask, and said, āI know your name, Shannon. Youāve been in three or four of my classes,ā as he kind of chuckled.
And without even knowing what was really coming out of my mouth, I tried to recover and said, āOh! I didnāt know. Iām super forgettable,ā with an awkward laugh.
He gave me those crazy, confused eyes you make when youāre literally trying to process what was just said and replied, āYou are not forgettable!ā
And of instead of laughing it off, I countered back with, āYes I am! Totally forgettable.ā
*Insert Facepalm*
I finally got my station assignment and walked off super embarrassed, thinking, āWhat is wrong with you? Who argues with someone over how forgettable they are? I bet he remembers you now, you IDIOT!ā
Your heart will tattle on itself, if you’re paying attention. My self-talk clearly needs work. And so does my real-talk, apparently. I probably need more counseling. Sighā¦
Two and a half years into the loss of my husband and feeling āinsignificantā is probably one of the most persistent emotions that I currently struggle with. Iām past the point of crying for hours on end or being stuck in a trance reminiscing about us. I donāt cry very much at all anymore, and itās not that Iām no longer sad, but more that grief changes as you grow, and it manifests itself in other ways besides extreme sadness.
On the days when I feel the most grief-stricken, itās usually because, in all honesty, I am so incredibly lonely.
I deeply miss sharing my life with someone and feeling important to someone; and not just āimportantā but being one of the most important people in their life. My husband would have moved heaven and earth for me, and I knew it. He was my biggest fan. I so completely knew that our kids and I were his entire world, and thatās a void that even the dearest friendships just canāt fill.
A couple of weeks ago, our Pastor preached an awesome sermon about the value of staying connected in biblical community. It was so great. You can watch it Here. But one of the things he said struck me in a different way than he probably intended. He was referencing the Creation story in Genesis when he pointed out that the first time God declared something ānot goodā was when he said it was not good for Adam to be alone.
Light ā Good
Land and Seas ā Good
Vegetation ā Good
Sun, Moon, and Stars ā Good
Sea Creatures ā Good
Land Creatures ā Good
Man ā Good
Man Being Alone ā NOT GOOD
Did celestial sirens start to wail in Eden when God declared this ānot goodā? Because I feel like they should have. I mean, this was such a big deal to God that he stopped whatever else he was doing and immediately started hunting for a partner for Adam, and he couldnāt find one, so he made one. Man being alone was so ānot goodā that God created an addendum to his Creation Plan. Let that sink in for a minute.
I felt the sting of hot tears in my eyes and a lump in my throat as I choked back my emotion at this revelation. Not because this idea was hurtful, but because it was validating. It was a scriptural confirmation of all the feelings Iāve been having for months.
Raising kids by myself ā Not Good
Working on life by myself ā Not Good
Juggling all the things by myself ā Not Good
Not having a helper ā NOT GOOD
A verse Iāve read dozens of times suddenly jumped off the page and seemed to clearly explain the animosity and dissatisfaction I have with my current situation. Simply put ā itās just not the way God intended it to be. My entire existence feels counter to the perfect design of partnership that God established in the Garden, and I feel every single ounce of the daily struggle to keep moving forward alone.
This confirmation hit me extra hard, because I was watching this sermon online from a resort in Florida, on a mini, CHILD FREE, vacay with my Bestie, and two days prior, I attended a time-share presentation where the sales associate (who Iāll leave unnamed) and I had a really great connection. Iād spent the better part of 3 hours engaged in discussions about my life, things I like to do, adventures Iād been on, places I want to travel to, memories I want to make, all mixed with some friendly bantering, and toward the end of the conversation, which felt so genuine and unsales-y, he smiled at me from behind his mask and said, āYou have to be the coolest girl Iāve ever met. If I wasnāt in a relationship, Iād so be taking you out tonight.ā
I sort of giggled, and then he complimented my laugh, which no one has ever done before, and reiterated his comment, making me promise that if I come back to Destin next summer, Iāll look him up so we can have dinner.
I walked out of that building with an extra pep in my step, reeling off the excitement that someone thought I was interesting and funny, and dare I sayā¦ attractive? I basked in the warmth of that satisfaction like the Destin sun, remembering what it felt like to have someoneās undivided attention and experience the adrenaline rush of a new interest. For the rest of the day, my mind was saturated with mushy thoughts of what it would feel like to be in love again someday.
I creeped on his Fb a few hours later, and realistically, we probably wouldnāt be a good match, just based on the sole fact that his current girlfriend has a Jolly Roger tattooed on her arm and more cleavage than a Hooterās girl peddling lust with a side of hot wings.
We had a great conversation, but beyond that, it looks like heād probably prefer the 21 year old version of me who was all taking shot and shaking tail-feathers on Friday nights. Even as hard loneliness tries to convince me otherwise, Iām just not that girl anymore. I havenāt been in a long time, and I know that road only leads to emptiness and more loneliness.
Was he a good Dad? I donāt know. Was he financially responsible? No clue. Did he love the Lord like I do? Doubtful, since he didnāt mention it. But he was easy to talk to, he made me laugh, and he had that reckless abandon in his eyes that made me wonder if weād end up slow-dancing to Brett Eldridge in a parking lot at midnight or laughing hysterically at bad jokes all night long.
For three hours, I didnāt know what was happening in Portland, how many children had been sold into sex-trafficking, how many new cases of Coronavirus there were, what the stock market was doing, how many jobs had been lost, or what Congress was (not) doing to save our country imploding. For three carefree hours, all I knew was that someone found me significant. And it was glorious.
So Iāve had a bit of the vacation blues since I got home from Destin.
Not to mention, I lost my coveted Kate Spade frames on the way to the airportā¦ and that more than doubled the cost of this little weekend getaway.
And then a varicose vein in my leg swelled up so badly from the cabin pressure on the flight back that I was sure I had a blood clot in my leg for the next 3 days.
And then I realized I accidentally let the hosting on my original blog site expire, dumping 3 years of posts and over 500 subscribers into the abyss of the interwebs. (All. The. Tears.)
And then our church temporarily closed for in-person services, because people who I love dearly have tested positive for Coronavirus.
And Iām going for an MRI of my abdomen today to figure out this unexplained pain in my liver that just wonāt go away ā cue my anxiety ā all within ten days of being home.
There is nothing quite like a relaxing vacation to illuminate how stressful reality is.
So Iāve just been here, in a house I canāt seem to keep picked up, worried about people I love who are sick, mad about the money it cost to replace my glasses, devastated about my blog, concerned about my own health, ignoring the list of things I need to do to send my kids back to school next month, struggling to juggle all the emotions and responsibilities, and Iāve never been more aware of just how alone I am.
Now, before you come at me with your āJesus is your husbandā babble, let me just kindly say: Can it, Karen.
Last I checked, Jesus isnāt going to take the boys for haircuts, help me brush teeth 8ā¦ EIGHTā¦ literal times a day, vacuum out my van that has enough crumbs in the floorboard to feed starving children in India, cook dinner, make money to pay these bills, fold the mountains of laundry that keep accumulating, and juggle putting all these kids to bed.
You get the point. At least, I hope you do. My hope in Christ keeps me sane, for the most part, and empowers me to do these things, but there are very real physical demands of being a single parent of three kids. Please donāt downplay them with some clichĆ©.
If Adam had physical access to God himself in the Garden of Eden, and God still deemed Adamās lack of a helpmate as ānot goodā, I feel like Iām well within my scriptural rights to complain hereā¦ and pray here.
Donāt get me wrong, I have amazing people who help me. I donāt know what Iād do without them. My yard wouldnāt get mowed and my trash would probably never make it to the curb on Friday mornings if it wasnāt for my Dad, and Iād probably never get a night away from all these children without my in-laws.
What Iām saying doesnāt downplay their sacrifice to keep us going, but even they know their contribution isnāt the same as having someone in the trenches of daily life raising a family. Itās not the same.
And this is the part where I get easily discouraged, because as fun as laughing until my face hurt with some cute guy was, I know Iām not looking for a Good-time Charlie. I donāt want a project; I want a partner, because being 100% responsible for 3 tiny peopleās financial, spiritual, social, emotional, nutritional, educational (thanks Rona!) and health needs is the most mentally taxing thing Iāve ever done in my entire life.
And the reality is, being single in your mid-30s is a super hard place to beā¦
It feels like the pond has done and dried up, because all the great Jesus-loving people you knew in your 20s are happily married with seventeen kids of their own. So your options are 1) people whoāve never been married with no kids, which just the thought of dating someone with no parenting experience sounds like more extra work than I could handle at this point, aside from the obvious question of āWhy have you never been married?ā or 2) people who are divorced, which begs the question of āWhy didnāt it work?… and more importantly ā āOn a scale of 1-10, how psycho is your ex-baby mama?ā or 3) people whoāve also been through something traumatic like spousal death.
Being single in your 30s is coming to the realization that just having basic criteria like mutual attraction, generally healthy, responsible, fun, loves God and is open to ministry, and wants to raise 3 young kids he didnāt create equates to a seemingly mathematical impossibility.
This is the point in my actuarial analysis where Iād like to just resign to soaking in my single misery by turning on some country music, gorging myself with cheesecake, and daydreaming about the time in my life where I felt like I had options and opportunities for love.
But hereās the thing ā what you feed, grows.
When you feed your hatred, it grows.
When you feed your anxiety, it grows.
When you feed your loneliness, it grows.
You have to be mindful of and get tactical about controlling your thoughts and how you let the thoughts of others influence you. I know that feeding my dissatisfaction will only enable it to demand a greater presence in my mind, so (for the most part) I just donāt. I indulged it a little bit to write this post, and Iāll let it out of its box every now and then just to reprocess my feelings about it, but otherwise, I consciously try to feed my faith and my hope instead.
When you see me jamming hard to Hillsong, just know I’m feeding my faith. I might even be fighting a mental battle for contentment right then. If you call me and hear Chris Young playing in the background, you might need to stage a Friendervention.
What you feed, grows.
Shortly after my husband died, I met a lady whose husband had also died when she was in her mid-30s, leaving her with 5 small children. The circumstances of our encounter were just a total God-thing, but Iāll leave that for another post. Anyhow, I was messaging with her in the week after his death, and she sent me this scripture as an encouragement. She said someone had given it to her after her husband died, and it was āher verseā that she leaned on during her darkest days, and she was passing it on to me. So here it is:
In simple terms ā āI would have given up if I didnāt believe I would see God do good things again in my lifetime. But I do, so Iām going to be brave, and Iām going to keep waiting for God to answer.ā
For two and a half years now, this verse has been my go-to word for a quick infusion of hope when Iām feeling downcast. In it, I find the challenge I need to reset my frame of mind around what I truly believe: that ultimately God is good; that God has good things planned for my life; and that He loves me enough to bring about that goodness in my life, even in the midst of what has felt like destruction.
And hereās where I hit my turn-around, because when I begin to meditate on this verse, I feel my spirit swell with hope, because I know I serve the God who specializes in making the impossible, possible; the God who, like the song says, turns āgraves into gardensā; the God who, like Isaiah 61:3 says and this blog is named after, gives a crown of beauty in exchange for your ashes of despair.
Listen Friends, you donāt have to try hard to sell your situation to God like itās on the discount rack at Dollar General. If you will humbly surrender it to him, He will literally just hand you something beautiful in exchange for itā¦ because He loves you unconditionallyā¦ He wants you to feel ultimately secure in Himā¦ and He finds you deeply significant.
Whatever mess youāre standing in the middle of today, whether it’s an unexpected season of chaos and loneliness like me, health challenges, financial hardship, extreme grief, whatever it may be, I pray you take courage; I pray you keep going; and I pray you wait for the Lord.
Blessings!
Shannon