All of us, at some point in life, will face hard
things. And by hard, I mean
life-sapping, crushing, painful-beyond-imagining, hard things. At times like these, we can look around at others,
feeling bitter and angry that life’s cruel lottery has dealt us this hand and others, one that makes
much better reading on Facebook. I faced
a hard thing, when my daughter, Grace, was still born at 25 weeks of
pregnancy. The road I’ve walked since has
been one of doubt, hesitancy, small steps, more questions, moving forward,
moving backwards, moving forward again and getting to a place of fragile
healing.
I was not naΓ―ve enough to think this would be my lifetime
supply of ‘hard things’ and sure enough, more have come knocking – pounding down
the door, in fact – in recent weeks.
None of the ‘hard things’ are yet my story to tell; they are bound up
and interwoven with the lives of others, whose confidence I will not
break. It will suffice to say they are
hard, life-stripping, anxiety-causing and fear-inducing and are doing a good
job of trying to drown out a more hope-filled, life-affirming voice, which I’ve
had to train myself to heed in rough waters.
The key word here is ‘try’ – because they’re not succeeding
and they won’t. I’m a different person
now, to who I was seven years ago, when my first real exposure to a painful
trauma sent my hope and faith scurrying into a deep, dark cave. The process of coaxing it out again has been
long and painful, but I know some of the lessons I’ve learned through it are
helping me in this storm – and will
do in the next…and the next!
I am writing this for me, to remind myself what I
have learned and to give myself some things to anchor me, to remind myself
that, though I may be tempest-tossed, the enormity of the waves will not leave
me drowning with no hope or help.
1. God is still God and He is still good and He
loves me. It’s the first certainty that
goes, I think, when trouble strikes. It’s
the first question we ask – “How could God…?”
I’ve read my share of books on the subject (Philip Yancey’s “Disappointment
with God” and Jeff Lucas’ “Faith in the Fog,” are two I would recommend). None of them answer the question fully. They can’t.
Life and God will remain a mystery this side of eternity. What I’ve settled on is this: we live in a
fallen and decaying world. Bad things
happen because of this. They are not
orchestrated by a cruel God, arbitrarily doling out happiness to one, misery to
another. They just happen. Sometimes God intervenes to change
things. Sometimes He doesn’t. What he does do, is grieve with me, walk
beside me, count my tears, hear my soul-wrenching questions and doubts, comfort
me like a mother and give me hope that, whatever happens, one, final day, it
will all be more okay than I could ever even begin to imagine here and
now. When I take “God how could you…?”
out of the equation, my path through the storm is lit in a way that it was not
before.
2. Other people are a gift to me in difficult
parts of my journey – but I don’t have to take every piece of advice they give
or go in every direction they suggest.
Their approach may be full-on and confrontational, whilst mine may be
gentle and gradual – or vice-versa! Being
honest – painfully and brutally honest – with a close few, is essential. If we can’t express our deep and heartfelt
distress and questions, we will never grow.
But we don’t have to keep everyone in the loop. It’s completely reasonable to give a
glossed-over version to some who cross our paths - or no version at all!
3. There will be oddly ordinary – and even funny –
moments, as the storm rages all around. I
can’t exist for the whole of the storm, fully focused on it and miserable
because of it. I can smile and laugh and
carry on with a slightly altered version of ‘normal’. I can talk about the weather or my washing
powder or the bargain leg of lamb I bought yesterday. In fact, these may be the perfect thing for me
to focus on and discuss in that particular minute of my particular storm. In the three days (Christmas Eve, Christmas
Day, Boxing Day) between discovering our daughter had died and giving birth to
her, there was horrible, soul-crushing sadness.
There was also: a walk in the park with my toddler and his grandparents;
amusement at the Christmas toilet roll my parents had even remembered to pack
in the mayhem of ‘Operation Bring Christmas to Us’ as we couldn’t come to it;
and laughter over a remote-control helicopter battle with my husband, where a
stray propeller sliced down a rather nice Christmas decoration! There will be
lighter moments. I will embrace
them. I will enjoy them. They are a gift.
4. It is still possible – in fact essential – to worship
in the midst of horrible situations. I
am an authority on this. I’ve done my share of sulking with God and feeling
unable to lift my voice, never mind my hands, in worship, longing for church to
be over, yet knowing I needed to be there.
This time around, I’ve found power and peace as I’ve sung “What a Faithful
God Have I,” “I believe that You’re my healer,” “God of Miracles…” – even when
I’m not feeling it. Something changes,
something shifts, something grows. A
smouldering ember bursts back into life and I’ve got the spark I need for the
next day – or hour, or minute. Worship
and declaration of truth bring life and hope, even when circumstances don’t yet
appear to have changed.
5. Being positive and hope-filled doesn’t
necessarily mean the outcome you desire will happen – but it’s a better
approach than assuming the worst. If you
hope for the best and the worst happens, it’s painful. If you fear the worst and the worst happens –
same result! So whilst my hope and prayer for miracles in my life and those of
my friends and family might look like
denial of hard realities – to me it makes sense. Why not
keep hoping, as long as there is breath in our bodies and hope to be had? If
you don’t pray for a miracle and don’t get a miracle, you avoid disappointment. But what if…just what if?! So my stance is:
believe for a miracle and have the courage to face hard questions and harsh
realities in the meantime.
As you very well said, God is and He will always be good, no matter what.
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Superbly said, Georgie. You nail it here, plus so excellently expressed. I'm sorry life remains so tough, but you're mining some gems here.
ReplyDeleteThank you Jane! Your encouragement means a lot π x
DeleteThere's godly wisdom here, Georgie, taught to you by the school of dark experiences. Thank you for sharing it with honesty and vulnerability. I pray that you'll hold fast through the storm and enter calmer waters on the other side soon.
ReplyDeleteThank you Philip. Greatly appreciated π
DeleteA beautiful post from the heart Georgie. Thank you for your honesty and faith x
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mandy! Really appreciate this comment π x
DeleteWhat a lovely post. Thanks for sharing so honestly
ReplyDeleteThank you, Wendy. It always really encourages me, as a beginner, to get feedback from 'real life writers!' π
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