Turning off Nurse Jackie

Many years ago, Chef and I watched the A&E program “Intervention” religiously, even contacted them about taking on our son.  (They were in until he caught on and denied any use.) The hope at the end of each episode as the addict is shown after 90 days of rehab kept us going.  Netflix has been suggesting I watch Nurse Jackie for almost a year.  I resisted until a month ago.  Having spent 90% of my life living among addicts, I couldn’t find the entertainment value. I can’t speak for the veracity of a nurse who uses drugs but the series has now captivated me.  I initially was captured by Jackie’s charisma, her deep compassion for patients and her incredible wealth of knowledge.  The fact that her personal life was a train wreck was secondary.  She was still likable.  I didn’t understand her use or why she was compromising her marriage or job but it seemed to be working for her.  Until it wasn’t.

Watching her life unravel, watching those around her fight for her, harder than she was fighting, brought things too close to home and I took a break from my binge watching.  Imagining successful rehab for her, I picked the remote back up only to be so disappointed, so angry.  I get that it is tv but it is also real life for me.  The lies, the constant lies.  The manipulation of those closest to her, so ugly.  She was no longer likable.  The educated people in her life who gave her chances and opportunities that she discarded like the gloves after each patient reminded me of all that we have done for Arrow.  The courage of some to draw strict  boundaries, firing her, divorcing her.  People who had loved her and were just used up by the continued choice of drugs over everything else.  I was watching our life. When she began to hurt patients, to risk even that part of her life that she had cherished, her identity, I saw a true addict, because she didn’t stop.  I hated her.

I understand that great tv needs conflict so there is little chance she will get clean, put her children first, regain her life.  I pray our real life doesn’t need so many episodes to find resolution.  I would be okay with our show being canceled.  I don’t currently like our addict.  I understand the disease but hate it and the behavior that comes with it.  I hate the strict boundaries when I only want to draw him closer.  Parenting an addict is contrary to everything a heart desires.

I think it is time for a new Netflix suggestion.  This one is not entertaining.

Samaritans

Pastor Chris challenged us this week to look at who the Samaritans are in our lives, those who were the excluded group.  He told how the first black Methodist men left the balcony of the “integrated” church, approached the altar and were quickly removed by those good Christians.  My heart recoiled.

Who are the people we think we are including, yet creating different rules, different places for them to worship, different ways for them to live.  As Christians, our job is only to love.  So incredibly simple.   We all seem to want the job of CEO, decide the policy, influence the decisions of the board.  We don’t recognize that job is filled.  We will never hold that position no matter our ambitions or good works.  We will always be entry level workers, all of us, no hierarchy.  No ladder of success to climb, a very simple task to complete every day: “love your neighbor as yourself.” Easy when our neighbor looks like us, votes like us, marries like us.  Pastor Chris reminded us we were all once the excluded group, the gentiles.  Someone took a chance and let us approach the altar.  Aren’t we full of ourselves now?  We have forgotten what it felt like to sit in the balcony, separated from the real worshippers of God.  Someone decided we counted too, we were worthy of the love of God.  Someone decided it was only their job to love us, not judge us by our lack of circumcision or adherence to the rules.

We are surrounded by “Samaritans” who God is calling us to love, to bring up to the altar.  To step aside from our positions of righteousness and rules and just invite to worship God together.  All the colors scattered are beautiful but when joined, create a beautiful rainbow, one we leave our homes after a storm to revel in, take pictures of.  We remember that this rainbow is a gift from God.  I pray we find our churches filled with so many different people we can see only the glorious rainbow of God’s people singing holiness to the CEO.  Surely that is what HE is asking, a joining of His people.

Today I am Blessed

Today I am blessed to hear the spring bird’s melody as they flit from tree to tree, landing for a moment on our new feeder.  I know the act of buying a feeder to invite the birds is an act of love to us, inviting God back into our home.

I am blessed to soak in the colors and scents of all the flowers on the porch as I drink my first cup of coffee, knowing these aren’t just hanging pots filled with dirt and plants.  Rather these are fertilizers for our souls, reminders that God grows things from seeds, that God can handle our dirt and make beautiful things grow from it.

Today I am blessed to trust our family is on prayer lists of close friends and strangers.  I trust in prayer.  I am blessed to have friends to pray for, to have strangers to lift up.  I am blessed to have been trusted with deep wounds to allow my heart to understand the pain of others.  I know the only way out is through but through is painful and lonely and scary if done alone.  I am blessed to be part of a Jesus community that holds my hand and whispers in my ear: We are not alone.

I am blessed to be married to the man God chose for me, a man who needs more than I give and I forget that.  I forget that I am not alone and that we are more than friends many times.  Schedules, chronic illness, weight of worry all destroy romance but the closeness remains.  Because God chose this man for me, He isn’t willing to let me mess it up.  I get chance after chance and do better the next time.

Today I am blessed.  Soon the noisy 5 year old will arrive. Lego, guns, mud.  More blessings.   As for this moment, I am reveling in the sounds of birds, the smell of flowers, the prayer list before me, the coffee lovingly set up by my husband last night.  I am blessed.

My Truth

Putting your truth out into the world is scary.  Having a story about you in the world is scarier.  Wondering who knows, what they know, what they think, when will they stop being your friend, exhausting.  Living with shame has destroyed my self-esteem, my ability to trust, my courage in building relationships.  Rather than allow things to develop naturally, I put my history on the table first, to get the rejection over before I go too far.  My label from over 20 years ago, one that haunts and hurts.  One I can’t bear to write, as a child who suffered sexual abuse by a community of men who supported each other by sharing little girls.  That label is not me.  That is not my truth.

Putting my truth out into the world, all at once, instead of waiting for whispers or wondering, is liberating.  No longer bound by the shame, freed by an act of facing an accuser who spread rumors, the first time I actually knew who was seeking to destroy what I had built again.  Hiding behind shadows, the internet, anonymous reporting sites, people  try to tell a story but don’t know the truth.  I have lost jobs because employers knew my story but were afraid of the ramifications of a caller who spewed hate.  Fortunately I have kept others with employers who were strong enough to shut down those who would try to hurt me.  With each show of support, I gain a bit of me back.

I never had the chance as a little girl to tell what was happening to me and have the outrage of a community buoy me as I healed.  I lived with secrets and shame until they unraveled my soul and destroyed my career.  I paid a heavy price, I still find I must pay but my motivation to do so is decreasing.  I can now tell my story, my truth, stop hiding and accept the support of my community of friends who know me and have loved me through it all.  Some have loved me anyway, some have loved me and now maybe wonder why.  What I am sure of is that I will no longer start relationships telling my sins first.  Everyone has them.  Everyone has shame.  Mine has been very public but without my voice.  Now I have told my truth.  As I begin to peel back the layers of my experiences, I just want to tell that little girl to yell until someone hears her.  Nobody listened 50 years ago.  I am learning to yell now.

This is my truth.  Scary to yell it, freeing to shed the shame and secrets.

June Bugs In May

This first week with no preschool is only four day old and my life is in chaos.  The schedule I imagined, filled with reading time, quiet time, building time, is laughable.  Struggling to fit in work around an unexpected day trip to see cows and pigs and cousins, I am weeks behind suddenly.  How can 5 hours of preschool missed create such a vacuum?  My mind swirls with “have-to-dos” like haircuts, empty dog food bowls, dirty sheets, walls that want to be washed, a car that needs to be cleaned.  Then he giggles.  He chats.  He tells me in depth about a game.  He teases me, like a big boy with the understanding of such nuances.  He lifts his eyebrow, just one, he smiles his crocked smile when I question what he is hiding in his hand, trying to sneak in the house.  A June bug, a real treasure he tells me because it is only May.

We are four days into our first week of the summer.  Transitions are hard.  The hardest one is coming. Today I vow to slow down, look for June bugs, plant more flowers.  I can’t bear to count the days before I will be without that crocked smile, that raised eyebrow all day.  Someone else will see his treasures on the playground.  If you visit us, don’t judge our home by the state of our walls, rather by the happiness of our grandson.  August will be my spring cleaning time, when I will mop with tears.  For now I will smile my crocked smile at the greatest joy summer could bring.

Embracing our Season of Spring

We bought wind chimes yesterday.  The really nice ones that sing delight into the breeze.  The day before we bought hanging baskets of colorful flowers, two pots of bursting spring happiness to grace our porch.  Our porch that used to be a gathering place for neighbors, one we neglected for the summer last year as our lives crumbled.  We stopped bringing our own colors, decorating our own souls.

A season of mourning has ended, we are entering a true spring.  It is one that still contains rainy days, unexpected cold fronts, empty porch chairs.  These are the things we can’t control.  We can add flowers and wind chimes and delight in the beauty of growth and bird songs, colors and sweet melodies of chimes.  Our choice to see the joy around us, our choice to create some joy.  This season we are choosing to decorate our own porch, not for anyone else.  We are enough.

Next to find joy in weeding the long neglected landscaping, to recover the trampled hasta and remember there is life beyond the porch.  Today it is sufficient to sit just outside the door, breathing in joy, remembering spring is here.  We made it through the long dark winter.

Footprints, Forgiveness, Forever a mom

I survived the day, one set aside to honor mothers.  Mine is gone and my children are both choosing to pretend I don’t exist.  I survived the day.  A motherless child, a childless mother.  Unable to spread my pain out with friends who would surely help carry the burden as each are thriving in their motherhood.  Each would be getting cards, hugs, flowers, lunch.  I couldn’t share my agony with my husband who was running a restaurant, sure to work 14 hour days, exhausted and excited with the rush at the same time.  A successful weekend.

I am a failed mother, one who no longer gets to know her children.  My daughter has chosen to cut off contact, believing her truth and ignoring the reality of more truths.  Every attempt to seek forgiveness for her perceived wrongs, accepting all responsibility, becoming so deeply honest, have been judged not enough.  My mailbox is empty, no phone calls, no texts.  On good days I remember that God is handling this.  There are few good days.

My son has battled addiction since he was 15.  After almost 4 years in prison, he just came home to us in September.  We bought new clothes, new bedding, new coats, a new phone and even a car for him to use after we took him to get his license. We stocked the house with food he might like, he wasn’t sure anymore.  Four years of taking his calls which we had to pay for, sending money we didn’t have, pictures of his son to always keep him included, visits which meant time off of work and more money for vending machines and gas and lunch as we traveled.  He turned 21 while inside and thought that even though he is a drug addict he could still drink.  He chose to drive while under the influence.  He chose to hide alcohol in our home.   This young man chose to listen to those who tell him lies instead of his mother who tells him the hard truth.  I had to tell him no.

I was a wonderful mother who sang songs every night after bath and books.  I made real dinners from family recipes.  I took my kids to the park and played with them there, no cell phones to distract.  I made crafts pre-pinterest.  We planted things, dabbled in science.  I taught them that they owned their bodies, they never had to hug or kiss anyone if they didn’t want to.  I needed my babies to be safe from the horrors I knew when I was a child.  I wanted little more than to be a mother to my children.

I was a wonderful mother who made terrible mistakes.  I reverted to childhood coping and didn’t seek the help I needed when confronted with sexual overtones from someone who scared me.  I  allowed the little girl in me to take over instead of the adult with choices.  I was raped.  By a 15 year old emotionally unstable adolescent who was in the group home where I worked.  He had been removed from every school and was deemed too aggressive for other settings.  He was.  But because I didn’t report and tried to manage it on my own, after telling my husband at the time, I eventually was charged with the crime.  He was sent away to a boot camp for boys with criminal tendencies.  I was sent to prison.

I was away from my children for 2 1/2 years, the worst time of my life.  I begged God to let me die in those early days of jail when I couldn’t even have visits.  I sat on the steps one day and just pleaded with Him to let me out of this pain.  My mind was flooded with the story of the Footprints.  I tried to push it away, I got images of the beach and the one set of prints in the sand.  I knew I had my answer.  Whatever happened, I wasn’t alone.

I survived.  I used the time to become the woman I wanted to be, not one defined by childhood abuse. I continued counseling, sought truth, accepted my role in becoming a victim when I had resources.  I also forgave myself.  I allowed for the whole picture: a flawed professional in a broken system, red flags ignored, cries unanswered.  I learned to say no.  Loudly.  Fiercely.  To keep saying no until someone listens.  Or to walk, run, away until I find safety.  Sometimes it is an emotional exercise, other times I have to remember the steps and follow through with a safety plan.  Women who have been sexually abused as children are more likely to be raped as adults, women who have been raped are more likely to be so again.  We just don’t know how to protect ourselves.  We communicate victim to a predator.  I work hard to change that message, some days more successful than others.

I accept that I was a wonderful mother while trying to keep the parts of my life separate, keeping my children safe from a young man who tried to steal them from daycare, threatened my husband.  I did the best that I could.  My children were safe.  I was not.

When I returned home, after years away filled with weekly visits, nightly phone calls, daily letters and handmade gifts, I found my children still wanted their mother.  I had realized while away that I could never love a man who didn’t protect me when I came to him with this trauma, thus the marriage was over.  I was without a home but I had my family.  We started over and we laughed, read books, made food, planted things.

I can see the patterns, I know the genetics of addictions passed through our lineage.  I tried desperately to protect my son from this, I failed.  He chose.  I knew one day my children would be ready for adult talks about our past, one I freely discussed with them at each developmental phase.  I didn’t anticipate not getting to talk, not being able to listen.  I learned to say no to my son, I know how to listen to my daughter, she just won’t talk.  I taught them both the value of forgiveness and grace, they saw the destruction of shame in my life.  They know the hurt of grudges yet both are on their own path. They have to walk through anger, hurt, accountability, acceptance, forgiveness.  Until this happens, my mailbox is empty, my phone stays silent.

I am a wonderful mother.  I pray for my children with most breaths I take, my love is unceasing.  I bake cookies and always have fruit for my grandson.  I say no to him and teach him to own his body.  I make mistakes, I try again.  I have survived this weekend and the intrusive thoughts of driving the car into a pole, drinking myself into oblivion, walking until I just couldn’t.  I survived by   remembering that I am still a mom.  I will always be a mom.  I am a wonderful flawed mom who loves her children and knows that their hearts still include love for me.  One day God will show them how to tell me.  Until then, I have to trust those footprints on the beach.

Healing Cups

Sometimes a cup is a cup.  But sometimes, if you are really blessed, a cup is a story.  It is bravery making “what ifs” into “what is”. It is courage in facing some demons.  It is guilt shed and seeds blooming.  It is water for thirsty children in Africa.  I am so blessed to have four such cups.  Cups that will hold water and coffee and tea but even more, joy and remembrance of chances taken and gifts shared.  These cups are the perfume poured out on the feet of Jesus.  God delights in these cups, gifts used to heal the world. I delight in my friend who created them.

Fruit Salad

I love a great fruit salad, all the colors bright and inviting.  Tastes of all in one bite. Strawberries, blueberries, oranges cut so the juice coats everything, apples for crunch, grapes sliced up for ease of eating, bananas added at the end. Kiwi and raspberries if I have them, extra color and juice.  Yet I rarely make fruit salad.  I eat each one individually, enjoying what it has to offer and knowing that by combining all I would have the richness I desire.   Unwilling to put in the effort to create this medley of flavors for myself, I await a potluck, a picnic, a gathering, to bring this colorful bowl of joy.

I told my friend Janet last night that I needed to have a hard talk with someone.  Her response: “May it be a fruitful discussion.”  There is sound wisdom is this.  To have hard talks is much like making a fruit salad. Much work in the sharing, listening, exploring, repeat.  The juice, tears, may be the sweetness that holds it all together.  Fruit salad or a hard talk with only one flavor or side just doesn’t work.  It is in the blending, adding, stirring, that the real magic happens.

So I made a fruit salad last night and it was delicious.  For my soul.  And my relationship.  Maybe one day soon I will make one that delights my tastes as much.  Today I will be satisfied with an apple and know that I carry the glorious colors of that bowl full of salad in my heart.

 

22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, 23 gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law. Galatians 5:22-23 (NIV)

Guilty

I went to sleep last night in fear, woke the same way.  After the Indiana primary, we are clearly facing 6 more months of hate-filled political rhetoric.  Words that will pull us apart, encourage violence, give permission to be our worst selves.  As I was perusing my morning news feed, I saw a clip of Senator Cruz elbowing his wife as he was hugging everyone on stage during his concession speech.  I immediately shared this with my niece and then with my husband.  “You have to see this, it is really funny.”  My chef watched and asked what was funny about it.  This from the man who loves slapstick comedy, will laugh at the same Jackass stunts over and over.  I mumbled something about the look on her face and walked away.  Guilty.  I fell into the trap, I just that easily, because I am human and had no coffee yet. I shared and made fun of someone’s lowest point.

I went to sleep in fear and woke up the same way.  The only way to combat this is with deep faith that our God is bigger than Mr. Trump and the KKK.  I have to consciously practice kindness and look for opportunities to show grace.  I need to demonstrate conflict resolution and take down walls.  I must must, must follow the teachings of my Jesus who’s only extremist plan was that we love everyone, even Mr. Trump.  I am appalled at my behavior and vow to atone by being nice today.  The whole day. I am going to resist reading my newsfeed, instead reading the Word.  I think I will find others there who have struggled with fear, humanity, worst selves.

2 Samuel 24:14

Then David said to Gad, “I am in great distress. Let us now fall into the hand of the LORD for His mercies are great, but do not let me fall into the hand of man.”