2015 was going to be a Big Year. I planned to sort myself out, 'get my sh*t together'. I revelled in the fresh white page of a new year. I would face the monsters and overcome.
That resolve lasted precisely 3 days before the aforementioned monsters woke up and smacked me full in the face.
I trudged through January and then February, waiting for the downpour to let up. Little hopes deflated and were washed away by the rain.
And yet!...
[NB. This is not some Disney story with a neat ending 1 hour 30 minutes in. We're all normal broken humans with good days and bad days, areas of growth and stubborn habits we can't break. I also believe we're all in a daily process of change. So no, I'm not 'sorted' (neither are you... Even if you think you are :P) But it's encouraging to recognise progress!]
And Yet, 'OCD' is not the big label hanging over my 2015. Things got pretty bleak and it felt too hard. But it got better - as it always seems to do, despite my expectations - and there were many pleasant times. Dinners with friends, laughs with my housemate, weddings and dresses and first dates. The guys who came to hang out on Friday night even though they knew I felt sucky and would be bad company. Birthdays at the zoo (yes, the zoo), punting in Cambridge. Driving through Spanish valleys in glorious sunshine with a minibus of friends, blaring out Mumford & Sons. Actually feeling grateful for this life.
2015 didn't go at all as I had planned. I didn't get the job I wanted; didn't maintain the relationship I started; left a hundred things undone and messages not replied to. But (and I'm not just saying this because it's the end of the blog and don't you love some sense of resolution?), it was many other things that I'd never expected. Despite the bits I just don't understand, I can see glimmers all through the year of the Father who knows me, giving me better dreams than the ones I'd set out on. No, I'm not some 'fixed' adult. But I hope I'm more real and more true: with more fight in me and a whole lot more dependence on my sustainer. Less fussed about a five-year plan and more content with being where I am right now, secure with the one who's in it for the long-haul.
I hope this is an awesome year for you! I hope it's full of breakthrough moments and steady ascents. Be courageous to do things your own way.
Recognise when the loudest negative voice is your own, and seek help joyfully, knowing that we were never intended for independence but for mutual support. In everything, run toward and not away from the one who created you and calls you by name.
And if it's not such a good year for you - if you get to January 29th and you're So Over 2016 - please keep going. It can get better. Yes it's a giant cliche but maybe Florence (or whoever first said it) was actually right. It is always darkest before the dawn. I don't know what stuff you're facing in 2016, but I do know there are beautiful things to be grasped.
Showing posts with label God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label God. Show all posts
Wednesday, 30 December 2015
So long, 2015
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Sunday, 8 November 2015
On suffrage and sacrifice
Last week I had the pleasure of seeing Suffragette.
Watch it. No, really. I don't care if you don't approve of their militant actions. Nor if you think that feminism has 'gone too far'. Everyone should see it.
As the lights came up and I hastily sorted my smudged eyes, I realised that my limited knowledge of suffragettes had come mainly from Mrs Banks in Mary Poppins. Sure, I had heard about force-feeding and some woman stepping in front of the king's horse... but it had remained an interesting, fantastical piece of general knowledge (like most other history lessons, really).
Instead of a rambunctious upper-class lady partial to breaking into song, I was confronted with the reality of suffrage. Malnourished, shamed and homeless women, giving everything - jobs, husbands, children - for this cause they believed in. It was inspiring to see this relatively recent show of sacrifice. These women believed they were fighting for something greater than their own lives, greater than commitment to husbands or children. And this demonstration of giving up everything felt rather alien to me.
Which is ironic, I guess, given that I've been a Christian for however many years and know Jesus' teaching about "take up your cross and follow me". It's just that as a teenager, that meant putting up with being mocked at school for my faith; and as an adult, accepting that the 'pool' of prospective romantic partners becomes pretty small if you narrow the search to only Christians. Are these things sacrifice? I'm not sure. They haven't stopped me from carving out the idea of a pleasant time on earth, enjoying fullness of life through Jesus and (hopefully) having a vaguely merry time of it.
[NB. Good news: faith in Jesus doesn't mean your life will be awful - that's *not* what I'm trying to say.]
But the idea that I have something so much greater even than women's rights or social justice, to give up my life for - I guess it just hasn't really had to occur to me living in the millennial Western world.
It's never occurred to me that I might actually have to give everything for the sake of the gospel. In theory, I've known and accepted it: but the chance of having to give up home, familial relationships or life for the gospel has always (thankfully) been pretty low.
What am I saying? Not that we should give up our current lives and go live in caves, or off of wild locusts and honey. But just that when you remember the call of Christian sacrifice - being prepared to give our lives, even - and the hope set before us in Jesus, it changes your perspective on Right Now.
If the core of who I am is striving for God's glory, his kingdom, seeing his face - then the tiny sacrifices I make now will be fairly insignificant. The idea of not getting married seems rather inconsequential when I'm faced with what any sacrifice would be for: the reality of Jesus; the truth of salvation; the hope of everything we've been promised.
Watch it. No, really. I don't care if you don't approve of their militant actions. Nor if you think that feminism has 'gone too far'. Everyone should see it.
As the lights came up and I hastily sorted my smudged eyes, I realised that my limited knowledge of suffragettes had come mainly from Mrs Banks in Mary Poppins. Sure, I had heard about force-feeding and some woman stepping in front of the king's horse... but it had remained an interesting, fantastical piece of general knowledge (like most other history lessons, really).
Instead of a rambunctious upper-class lady partial to breaking into song, I was confronted with the reality of suffrage. Malnourished, shamed and homeless women, giving everything - jobs, husbands, children - for this cause they believed in. It was inspiring to see this relatively recent show of sacrifice. These women believed they were fighting for something greater than their own lives, greater than commitment to husbands or children. And this demonstration of giving up everything felt rather alien to me.
Which is ironic, I guess, given that I've been a Christian for however many years and know Jesus' teaching about "take up your cross and follow me". It's just that as a teenager, that meant putting up with being mocked at school for my faith; and as an adult, accepting that the 'pool' of prospective romantic partners becomes pretty small if you narrow the search to only Christians. Are these things sacrifice? I'm not sure. They haven't stopped me from carving out the idea of a pleasant time on earth, enjoying fullness of life through Jesus and (hopefully) having a vaguely merry time of it.
[NB. Good news: faith in Jesus doesn't mean your life will be awful - that's *not* what I'm trying to say.]
But the idea that I have something so much greater even than women's rights or social justice, to give up my life for - I guess it just hasn't really had to occur to me living in the millennial Western world.
It's never occurred to me that I might actually have to give everything for the sake of the gospel. In theory, I've known and accepted it: but the chance of having to give up home, familial relationships or life for the gospel has always (thankfully) been pretty low.
What am I saying? Not that we should give up our current lives and go live in caves, or off of wild locusts and honey. But just that when you remember the call of Christian sacrifice - being prepared to give our lives, even - and the hope set before us in Jesus, it changes your perspective on Right Now.
If the core of who I am is striving for God's glory, his kingdom, seeing his face - then the tiny sacrifices I make now will be fairly insignificant. The idea of not getting married seems rather inconsequential when I'm faced with what any sacrifice would be for: the reality of Jesus; the truth of salvation; the hope of everything we've been promised.
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Monday, 3 August 2015
Grateful
Gratitude for life is one of those things we don't speak of much. "I'm grateful to be alive" tends to be a phrase reserved for survivors of plane crashes, or over-enthusiastic guys in 80's movies. I'm not sure why. Maybe because of its cheesiness? Maybe because we're British?!
Despite all of this: I really am grateful to be alive right now.
And by this I mean, I am grateful to be here to experience this; I'm aware that I could not be, and happy that I am.
It means there have been times in the past year where I have really not wanted to keep Being, where life just felt like day after day of panic and grey, and I couldn't imagine that there would be sunnier days and peacefulness and contentment.
I was in no way grateful to be alive, closer to Job's cry,
“Why then did you bring me out of the womb?" (Job 10:18)
I felt bad that I wanted to stop existing, when other terminally-ill people would give anything for another year with their precious family. It seemed like such an unfair distribution of life.
And so, in the context of all of that, there are beautiful days like today when I'm so grateful something inside of me (or rather, outside of me) decided to keep living.
Moments where you think "it would have been sad to miss this". Times when life is just really sweet, even if only for an afternoon. It's at these points - the moments you'd happily bottle up and keep it for crummier days - where hope grows back, like fresh buds from a seemingly dead branch.
Suddenly, yet again, there is hope, urged into life a little more by each moment of happiness. And for every stormy day, these days keep me going, in the knowledge that if you just keep pushing through, the sunshine will, eventually, return.
Despite all of this: I really am grateful to be alive right now.
And by this I mean, I am grateful to be here to experience this; I'm aware that I could not be, and happy that I am.
It means there have been times in the past year where I have really not wanted to keep Being, where life just felt like day after day of panic and grey, and I couldn't imagine that there would be sunnier days and peacefulness and contentment.
I was in no way grateful to be alive, closer to Job's cry,
“Why then did you bring me out of the womb?" (Job 10:18)
I felt bad that I wanted to stop existing, when other terminally-ill people would give anything for another year with their precious family. It seemed like such an unfair distribution of life.
And so, in the context of all of that, there are beautiful days like today when I'm so grateful something inside of me (or rather, outside of me) decided to keep living.
Moments where you think "it would have been sad to miss this". Times when life is just really sweet, even if only for an afternoon. It's at these points - the moments you'd happily bottle up and keep it for crummier days - where hope grows back, like fresh buds from a seemingly dead branch.
Suddenly, yet again, there is hope, urged into life a little more by each moment of happiness. And for every stormy day, these days keep me going, in the knowledge that if you just keep pushing through, the sunshine will, eventually, return.
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Sunday, 14 June 2015
Learning to trust
I was speaking to a good friend tonight and it made me realise something.
She was talking about her future and spoke with a great faith that God would guide, do the unlikely and work wonders in her lifetime.
She was talking about her future and spoke with a great faith that God would guide, do the unlikely and work wonders in her lifetime.
Sitting opposite her I felt a poor reflection of what I saw before me. I realised that, partly without even noticing, my trust in God had diminished. Growing fears and repeated disappointments have shrunk my view of Gods capabilities - or the things he will choose to do in my life.
I still believe he loves me and is sorrowful in my suffering, but maybe I'm less convinced that he will actually do much about it. My view of God has gotten smaller. More limited. I find it easier to trust that he's got me saved for eternity, (and boy is that going to be great) but in the meantime (the next 60 years or so) I seem to have become less convinced that he will work the impossible for his glory and for my good.
Do I believe God is powerful? Do I believe he gives good gifts? Yes, but.
But.
Yes, but there are a whole lot of people suffering on our planet. Yes, but God's power + God's love does not always = happy times in life. Just check out the early church and Paul's life for an example. Did he regret his decision to face suffering for Christ? No, I'm so sure that he didn't. But perhaps he was far better at trusting God for a reason for his suffering, than I am.
Maybe my expectations are wrong? That's what I've been telling myself over the last while. The reason I feel pain and disappointment in current life situations is because I was expecting for the most part to be happy and healthy; things that I don't believe God guarantees us in this life.
So as a response to this suffering and confusion I guess I've tried to reign in my expectations. Perhaps this has been a defence mechanism; but whatever the cause I realise that in limiting my expectations I have naturally limited my faith. I've subconsciously stopped expecting him to do amazing things, work wonders and miracles, and am less convinced that he has good plans for me.
So, it's sad, but probably good to have realised this. It means I can pray about it, asking God to give me the courage to trust him again, to know and trust him more deeply and not on some level resent him for recent struggles.
Only thing is that I'm not sure HOW to do this, whilst still managing my expectations. It's somewhat of a cliche to talk about the 'now and not yet' of the kingdom, but in all seriousness, how do people manage to hold these two things in tension?
It has become apparent that I have focussed on the 'not yet' and have limited my faith as a response to this. But I've missed a key tenet of this concept: 'not yet' doesn't mean God is impotent, insensitive or too busy to answer me. And it doesn't mean he will answer in the same way for every other area of my life and the lives of those around me.
It's hard to pray for the healing of others, for miracles or good weather or guidance, when you're struggling with God being far away and seemingly unresponsive to suffering.
How do I trust God to do the supernatural, whilst accepting my current circumstances and their difficulties, WITHOUT believing untruths about my father? I guess, as my friend suggested last night, it comes from spending time with him and truly getting to know him. My prayer is that I will become more attuned to him and his heart, so that whether I am dealing with seemingly unanswered prayers, or praying for miracles, I can do both and erstwhile still praise Him.
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Sunday, 29 March 2015
Why I celebrate
I officially hit a quarter of a century - 25 years on the earth - later this week.
I've always loved birthdays, my own and other people's (more on this here). Making it a special day, marking it with something different. I never understood people who said they didn't celebrate their birthdays: why wouldn't you?
And yet this year, I've anticipated my birthday with nothing close to joy or excitement. Having a birthday and - specifically - turning such an undeniably 'adult' age means I can no longer hide behind the guise of being a 'Young Person' or '21 plus a few'. My Peter Pan-like self is forced to come face-to-face with the truth that I am, to all intents and purposes, an adult.
When I was younger and I dealt with these 'worries', I always expected that it would be a passing phase, something I'd grow out of; that by the time I was 'grown up' (whatever that means) I'd be a fully-fledged, fully-functioning adult and these fears would be a distant memory of adolescence. Marking my birthday means facing the painful reality that right now I'm kind of in a place I hoped I'd never be again.
So many people must feel similarly when their day rolls around. I can see why marking 'special' days after the loss of a loved one, a terminal diagnosis, or a relationship breakup is too painful to face.
And Yet. I'm still going to celebrate on that day. Not because life is perfect or particularly happy right now, not because I've achieved what I hoped to by 25 or that I'm where I hoped I'd be, but simply that I have LIFE. Joy may be somewhat eclipsed at the moment, but I still have family and friends who love me and a God who gave me life.
While I have breath in me, I have a reason to thank God for it. While I have life, there is reason to celebrate.
(Heck, there's even more reason after this life, but that's for another time).
When I'm coping okay, I can see the point of all of the above. But when I'm struggling, it feels far from what I want to do. Despite this, I choose to see my birthday as an archetype of the way I wish I lived every day. Not as a day where we pretend life isn't difficult and the world isn't broken, but a celebration of what we have, with a hope for what the future could hold.
Sunday, 22 February 2015
Sitting in the ashes
So it's here again, people. Lent. A time of waiting (or is that just Advent?) Either way, a time for preparation and reflection.
These blogs are meant to be my reflections on the world (because I know people must be super-interested in what I have to say). They're generally fairly positive. But I'm not really sure why I'm writing this because (spoiler alert) I don't have many answers right now.
So here's where I'm at. Daily life feels increasingly like a complex obstacle course that I am ill-equipped to navigate. Some days are okay; some are good; some are downright horrible. I'm pretty joy-less (fear will do that to you) and aware that something needs to change. I know God is real and good and close by, but I don't really understand what's going on here, or why.
A phrase I've heard repeated several times is, "Faith is believing in the darkness what you have seen in the light". And I guess that kind of sums up where I'm at right now. I do have some hope that I can get better again; but on days when it feels like I am losing the battle I wonder how long it has to carry on being like this before I get to be 'normal'. Right now I'm in the Good Friday bit of the Easter story, and I don't know how long it will last. Or how many times I may have to revisit it.
When life is a struggle, when the joy gets sucked out of the beautiful everyday things, when I'm in 'survival' mode, I forget about hope. I'm so consumed by my not-so-pretty circumstances that my hope in what Jesus has won for me gets kind of sidelined.
I titled this post 'Waiting in the ashes' both because of last Wednesday being 'Ash Wednesday' and because it seems to express where I'm at right now. Sometimes I don't have any wisdom or answers. Sometimes there doesn't seem to be a silver lining or moral of the story. Sometimes, it's just hard, and that time is when I guess I have to sit in the ashes and wait, hoping that joy and hope will return.
"Let him bury his face in the dust— there may yet be hope.
I called on your name, Lord , from the depths of the pit.
You heard my plea: “Do not close your ears to my cry for relief.”
You came near when I called you,
and you said, “Do not fear.”
Lamentations 3:29, 55-57 NIV
These blogs are meant to be my reflections on the world (because I know people must be super-interested in what I have to say). They're generally fairly positive. But I'm not really sure why I'm writing this because (spoiler alert) I don't have many answers right now.
So here's where I'm at. Daily life feels increasingly like a complex obstacle course that I am ill-equipped to navigate. Some days are okay; some are good; some are downright horrible. I'm pretty joy-less (fear will do that to you) and aware that something needs to change. I know God is real and good and close by, but I don't really understand what's going on here, or why.
A phrase I've heard repeated several times is, "Faith is believing in the darkness what you have seen in the light". And I guess that kind of sums up where I'm at right now. I do have some hope that I can get better again; but on days when it feels like I am losing the battle I wonder how long it has to carry on being like this before I get to be 'normal'. Right now I'm in the Good Friday bit of the Easter story, and I don't know how long it will last. Or how many times I may have to revisit it.
When life is a struggle, when the joy gets sucked out of the beautiful everyday things, when I'm in 'survival' mode, I forget about hope. I'm so consumed by my not-so-pretty circumstances that my hope in what Jesus has won for me gets kind of sidelined.
I titled this post 'Waiting in the ashes' both because of last Wednesday being 'Ash Wednesday' and because it seems to express where I'm at right now. Sometimes I don't have any wisdom or answers. Sometimes there doesn't seem to be a silver lining or moral of the story. Sometimes, it's just hard, and that time is when I guess I have to sit in the ashes and wait, hoping that joy and hope will return.
"Let him bury his face in the dust— there may yet be hope.
I called on your name, Lord , from the depths of the pit.
You heard my plea: “Do not close your ears to my cry for relief.”
You came near when I called you,
and you said, “Do not fear.”
Lamentations 3:29, 55-57 NIV
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Monday, 19 January 2015
New Year, Old Me: a strategy for positivity
New Years Eve: so much excitement, joy, wondering about what
2015 will bring…
Y’know what I want to say to the girl in those NYE photos?
“YOU’RE
A FOOL! IT SUCKS!”
Okay, apologies, not the most cheery way to start a blog
post (and my first of 2015 at that). But it is based on these two key points:
b) It took approximately three days for the new year’s high to wear off, and to wonder when January would be over.
Again, I know this is all very negative. I try to be a
positive person. I love the idea of cherishing life and living each day to the
full. But when each day seems to bite you on the bum, it gets hard, y’know?
Pretty much most of 2015 so far, I’ve not been in a great
place. I kind of forgot about hope and joy and all of those things, and a grey
smog came down. I don’t know why it’s been like that. I think it’s partly the
weather and the come-down from Christmas, some difficult conversations and the
small fact that I have an anxiety disorder… but I’m not a fan of this
life-hating me.
I’m not prepared to drag myself through each day, from one
anxious episode to the next, staring at the clock and looking forward to bed
time. Life is too precious for that.
This thing I’m fighting is a monster and a lot of days it
feels like it’s winning. But I’m not going down without a fight.
(Excuse the corny
action-movie rhetoric – it’s true).
There’s a lot of stuff I can’t fix on my own on a Monday
night, like why I get anxious or terror threats or the fact that it’s freezing
and work is stressful.
But, there are little things I can do in the fight for hope –
my Strategy for Positivity.
There’s a disclaimer before I list them. I know from my own experience
that all these little frivolous things will not make you feel okay if you are
in a bad place. (That’s why I haven’t been able to write this blog for the last
two weeks).
But once you surface enough to find the energy to fight, like I
appear to have done this evening, then little, frivolous things can bring
light where gloom has set in.
My personal list includes (in no particular
order): Clearance Christmas chocolate; nail varnish colours; watching box sets
(I would highly recommend New Girl); making a list of reasons to be
positive/reasons to keep fighting; central heating; trying new carb-a-licious
recipes (even if they don’t turn out well).
And as for the real, less frivolous stuff? Talk to someone.
Spend some time (once you’ve got the energy to) working out a plan of action,
what help you might need and how to go about getting it. Get some exercise
(even if it’s only on an exercise bike in front of the TV), get some sleep.
If you’re a Christian, remind yourself (or get someone else to remind you)
about the unshakeable hope you have in Jesus. And if you’re not a Christian…
maybe now is a pretty good time to find out about that hope.
:-)
Here’s to a Happier January.
Monday, 27 October 2014
Ode to the Hopefuls
This is for us
Who are still fighting
Holding on to wavering and (at times) blind, hope
That today and yesterday and the day before do not have to be the pattern for tomorrow
That yesterday's thought does not have to dictate tomorrow's feeling
That love is not just for the lucky or the strong
But for those of us who are still waiting, still hoping
with the scaffolding around us, still Under Repair
To hope against hope that the future can be different
even when the past trails a twisting pattern
of breaking and restoration
To hope, because hope is the only thing
between ourselves and admitting defeat
To hope in the face of deafening, unrelenting fears
at which dreams crumble to dust
leaving you winded and bent double
And even then to hope, because you know
the One who conquered death and lives to make you new again.
Who are still fighting
Holding on to wavering and (at times) blind, hope
That today and yesterday and the day before do not have to be the pattern for tomorrow
That yesterday's thought does not have to dictate tomorrow's feeling
That love is not just for the lucky or the strong
But for those of us who are still waiting, still hoping
with the scaffolding around us, still Under Repair
To hope against hope that the future can be different
even when the past trails a twisting pattern
of breaking and restoration
To hope, because hope is the only thing
between ourselves and admitting defeat
To hope in the face of deafening, unrelenting fears
at which dreams crumble to dust
leaving you winded and bent double
And even then to hope, because you know
the One who conquered death and lives to make you new again.
Friday, 18 April 2014
But why is it Good....?
Out of few inevitable things in life - y'know,
death and taxes - a lesser known inevitable is the fact that this one-carriage,
thrice-daily train across the Welsh border will always smell of
wet dog and Monster Munch. But the sky is blue, the sun shines, it's the beginning of the 4-day Easter
weekend.
I'm excited about going home, seeing my family, and I am definitely excited for 4 days of rest and my mother's roast lamb.
I'm trusting that this visit, and the beautiful countryside, will be a healing time. All is not well in my heart. Two weeks of goodbyes, packing, cleaning, moving, living out of bin bags and attempting to make sense of a new job have left me bruised and drained. I have nothing to give. And in the hubbub of my self-centred chaos, I barely hear the whisper of Easter approaching. I feel completely disconnected to what it means for me; yet aware that it's for people feeling just like me today.
In a brilliant book I've been reading by Shauna Niequest, she comments that one of the central messages of the gospel is the cycle of death and rebirth; beautiful sunshine and then rain; losses and new beginnings. She also commented that change is hard, and that if we fight it, it can break us. I read that, some weeks ago, sitting in the sun, thinking 'Well... Yeah, course'. What else is new?
And yet, as I stood dejected in my bare, bin-bag-filled room, I realised that fighting against the change, rallying against it in my heart rather than being open to the new things God might birth, was exactly what I had been doing.
So what does this have to do with Good Friday, with God himself taking on all our sin and pain and loss and destroying it? Well, (as ever), it means there's hope. The hope of rebirth. Things can and will get better. Hurdles can be overcome; joy can be clung to. Death is never the end of the story, and though we might wait 3 days or 30 years for the rebirth, the new hope - it always comes.
I'm excited about going home, seeing my family, and I am definitely excited for 4 days of rest and my mother's roast lamb.
I'm trusting that this visit, and the beautiful countryside, will be a healing time. All is not well in my heart. Two weeks of goodbyes, packing, cleaning, moving, living out of bin bags and attempting to make sense of a new job have left me bruised and drained. I have nothing to give. And in the hubbub of my self-centred chaos, I barely hear the whisper of Easter approaching. I feel completely disconnected to what it means for me; yet aware that it's for people feeling just like me today.
In a brilliant book I've been reading by Shauna Niequest, she comments that one of the central messages of the gospel is the cycle of death and rebirth; beautiful sunshine and then rain; losses and new beginnings. She also commented that change is hard, and that if we fight it, it can break us. I read that, some weeks ago, sitting in the sun, thinking 'Well... Yeah, course'. What else is new?
And yet, as I stood dejected in my bare, bin-bag-filled room, I realised that fighting against the change, rallying against it in my heart rather than being open to the new things God might birth, was exactly what I had been doing.
So what does this have to do with Good Friday, with God himself taking on all our sin and pain and loss and destroying it? Well, (as ever), it means there's hope. The hope of rebirth. Things can and will get better. Hurdles can be overcome; joy can be clung to. Death is never the end of the story, and though we might wait 3 days or 30 years for the rebirth, the new hope - it always comes.
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Sunday, 20 October 2013
Which way?
Maybe it's because it's grey and rainy, and my usually favourite season of autumn
is showing its unpleasant damp side. Maybe it's the recent changes in my life, or a
lack of time spent with my Heavenly Father. Or maybe it's just from spending time
in the presence of good friends facing exactly the same sort of questions. But
something about life right now seems to be throwing into sharp illumination the
vague,grey form my life appears to have taken on at the moment. I feel like Rachel,
Phoebe and Monica from Friends in the episode where Rachel realises she has no plan
in life, and Phoebe assents that this stage is 'floopy'. Yes, on one hand, my
freedom means apparent doors of opportunity, adventure, and possibility ahead -
but in real life, it usually means a misty fog lying ahead of me, with no clear
path or even vague light to direct the way.
What is it about this stage of life - post-university, pre-full blown career,
marriage, family - that makes me, us, feel so directionless? Is it just that we're
so accustomed to having life directed by the education system, or the ties of
family, that we are thrown by suddenly having to carve out a way for ourselves, by
ourselves?
This sense of 'floopiness' can seep into every part of life - not just work/career,
though for many of us that's the primary example. My year was one of the last who
was still instilled with the mantra that one should go to university in order to
get a good job. Now we're out in the real world, and this mantra has fallen flat
on its face. Graduates are two-a-penny; degrees appear worthless without
'experience'; that degree exploring how to make the world a better place seems
kind of unecessary when we find our jobs wrapped up in writing e-mails and
ordering stationary. The great, ambitious plans of falling into career out of
university are unmasked as foolish preconceptions of an easy life.
There are all sorts of brilliant talks, books, articles, on guidance, and trusting
God. I'm aware that so many of our problematic doubts or 'floopy' feelings can
transpire because of our desire to know what lies ahead and to be in control.
However, right now, those things don't concern me. I'm not asking for a map-out
of the next 20 years; I'm just asking for some vague sense of where I go next -
in careers, in geographical location, in pretty much every aspect of life. And
I'll admit that I'm impatient; life is too short for me to sit around watching
life and opportunities to live pass me by. Maybe I should accept that sometimes
God only allows the fog to lift when we force ourselves to stop and wait on Him.
At times like this, it is far too easy to allow the bleakness of the weather,
the relative loneliness of post-studenthood life, and the vague mist shrouding
all that lies ahead, to get the better of me and be overwhelmed by it. As ever,
my only choice is to force myself to lift my eyes to Him who has seen the end
from the beginning, and is intimately involved and actually caring about the
direction of my life. I have to stand, and fight as hard as I can against the
strong current which seeks to floor me in the face of uncertainty and options.
I have a choice about the way ahead: I can put my fears and apprehension about
the future into the hands of him who holds it all; or I can be washed up by the
sheer enormity of the choices ahead. I need to choose to be comforted by the fact
that, however I feel on a Monday morning, my life is not directionless, that I Am
Not on my own in this, and that God Is still at work in my life, even if it feels
like He's having an extended tea-break.
I have to continually remind myself that my trust is in Him who is eternally
loving, who doesn't forget, or get overwhelmed, or 'drop the ball' on us.
And that, therefore, my future is in the safest of hands, the most reliable of
Fathers.
"...faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see."
~ Hebrews 11:1
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Wednesday, 7 August 2013
One Year On: Things I've learnt.
Today marks one year since Hannah and I arrived at our new home in south-east London to start the next stage of life. I cannot get over how much has changed since then – cue some emotional nostalgia.
We arrived in the middle of the Olympics, the whole city revelling in sun and sporting success. The playlist of those weeks was Emeli Sande and Florence & The Machine. We were introduced to Blackheath and watched Usain Bolt's 100 metre win on a sunny evening on the heath with locals.
We arrived in the middle of the Olympics, the whole city revelling in sun and sporting success. The playlist of those weeks was Emeli Sande and Florence & The Machine. We were introduced to Blackheath and watched Usain Bolt's 100 metre win on a sunny evening on the heath with locals.
A whole year on, I think I’ve learnt a few things about myself, the world, London, and life. I thought I’d fill you in....
1. People DO (occasionally) smile on the tube. In fact, a man did actually speak to me once. But he was American, so maybe that doesn’t count. Similarly, in the early days I informed a colleague that I relished smiling at strangers on the tube – and that some actually smiled back. I was bluntly informed that “That’s cos they think you’re mental”. Well, at least she was honest.
Another thing I’ve learnt is that a morning commute essentially means you will be forced to share a highly un-British and uncomfortably small amount of space with complete strangers. This inevitably results in the unsociability that pervades London transport: the only way you can get through a train ride with your face in someone else’s armpit is to avoid all eye contact.
2. After a whole year, working near travelling past the London Eye, South Bank and Westminster hasn’t got old yet. But having to shove through huge crowds of tourists all taking the same shot of Big Ben did, really quickly.
3. I can manage a whole month living alone in a new city, without being found half-eaten by Alsatians (a concern at one point – see here)
4. One of the most valuable things for getting settled into a new place is good friends and family to show you round – thank you Emily and siblings.
5. No matter how cold it is outside, when on board a train you will need to remove almost all clothing to avoid sweating profusely.
6. A good thing about our location is that people often want to stay over for the night. Guests include: Mim, Shepka, Luke, Fran & Miller, Lydia, Hannah, Tingley & Pete, Becky and Colette. Fortunate guests of Chateau Cope-Randerson will have become accustomed to Hannah’s ridiculously loud coffee maker, and my loud singing in the shower (actually, my loud singing full stop).
7. Don’t dress up in a dragon onesie in front of your boss – unless you decide you care more about having fun than getting a promotion. Ditto, dalek costumes.
8. The best place to go and think about the Big Things of life during your lunch break is Parliament Square. Even if it’s sleeting and 2° outside. Parliament Square is also a brilliant setting for a motivating walk to work – walking along past statues of Churchill, Abe Lincoln and Nelson Mandela really gears oneself up for a day of e-mails and stapling.
9. On that note – unless you do a grad-scheme or ‘get lucky’, your first job out of uni will likely be occasionally interesting, but often boring. Once you start, you will realise just how little you know, and how young you feel (although dressing up as a Dalek probably didn’t help my case). The more you learn, the more you’ll realise your ignorance. But God has been showing me this year that it’s not what I do but who I am doing it for.
10. The only way to walk in central London, is quickly. If you’re not going to walk quickly, get out of our way.
11. In addition – something about London makes me more impatient. And perhaps, people generally. Maybe it is that Londoners have become so used to accessing whatever so quickly – materials, food, transport, entertainment – that even a brief wait is too long and perceived as an inconvenience.
12. Google maps, Google maps, Google maps. Forget the London A-Z. This little treasure was the one thing that (usually) stopped me getting completely overwhelminghly lost in London, and the one thing that means I turn up to vaguely the right event venue at vaguely the right time.
13. Going to church on your own for the first time is really daunting, even if you’re a Full-On Extrovert. Be especially friendly to the people who turn up looking awkward and new-ish. Unless you stay in the same place your entire life, one day it will be you.
14. If your flatmate comes home excited after a wedding, chances are she got engaged whilst she was away.
15. Don’t travel through central London, on your own, on New Years’ Eve. You will be forced to traipse up and down the Strand following policemens’ directions and be immersed in a shoving crowd of drunk revellers all trying to get home.
16. Living with a hyper-organised person will, on the whole, make you more organised. Lists can be useful. Planning can be fun. (Oh gosh, who have I become?) Living with Hannah means making sure the toilet lid is kept down at all times (except, when you’re using it) and the DVDs are alphebetised – Richard, take note.
17. In a similar vein, the past year of living with Hannah has also taught me that: 1) salad can be a tasty meal (provided it involves meat and the word ‘Epic’ is placed in front); 2) One can apparently never have enough couscous; 3) Made In Chelsea is ridiculous, but also shamefully addictive; 4) if your flatmate rearranges the entire living room furniture, the world does not actually end; 5) Don’t Ever Touch Hannah When She’s Hot; 6) The only way to plan a wedding 18 months in advance is with multiple spreadsheets.
18. Things I have taught Hannah: 1) Spontaneity CAN be fun; 2) If I go too long without a hug I am prepared to chase her around the living room until she gives in; 3) I will happily shout ‘HANNYBEAR, WAIT FOR ME’ in public if I want to embarrass her at any point; 4) The Guardian is a normal newspaper and not only for hippies; 5) I am remarkably calm in a panic situation, say, when the brakes stop working whilst Hannah is driving.
19. Working in central London will expose you to people who have a lot more than you and people with a lot less. Trying to remain content in every situation is difficult but valuable.
20. Trafalgar Square is a fantastic location for a game of Where’s Thea.
21. The journey between London and Birmingham is not all that long and completely worth it when there are lovely people to see at the other end.
22. If the landlady tells you that your flat is in a quiet neighbourhood, what she means is that you won’t speak to your neighbours all year (except a fateful evening after the first day of the new job where upstairs’ flood leaks through to your flat). You will, however, be sharing a neighbourhood with people who get arrested under the terrorism act, and a man who enjoys blasting a single reggae song from his penthouse at bizarre times of night.
But I guess more than any of this, the most important thing I’ve learnt over the past year is that God is so incredibly, immensely faithful. He had to ‘throw me out of the nest’ (so to speak) for me to fly. A year ago, I was bewildered, daunted, fearful, and totally doubting what I was doing here (read my blog here). My mum pointed me to Exodus and the Israelites’ doubting God’s purposes for them after Egypt. I was forced to hold on and trust that God had a plan in this. Being dragged (kicking and screaming, as it sometimes felt) to London, by God, was exactly what I needed to get stronger, grow and have loads of exciting adventures. I’ve seen for myself that God can bring us out of the valleys, that he is the one who ‘restores my soul’. It was by being thrown so totally out of my comfort zone that I have flourished and come to really full-on love life again.
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