Inside of my marriage there is a personage, and that personage IS the marriage.
When I was first married, I was smitten with it. I'd spent months in preparation -reading magazines (because there was no Pinterest in '04) and dreaming up JUST WHAT KIND OF MARRIAGE I WOULD HAVE. My wedding seemed so far away and so close, my emotions climbed all sorts of scales I didn't know existed. Suddenly everyone around me looked married or engaged and all the world existed ONLY for that purpose.
Those early days were bliss and laughter, movies and sleeping in.
But the older the marriage got, I started noticing a few things that were off. I wondered if other marriages were off too, if maybe my marriage was actually completely normal.
I sometimes fantasized about asking other newlyweds about the hidden, intimate parts of their marriage, just so I could know if my marriage was okay. I WANTED to believe it was okay... but I had nothing to compare it to.
I read books about marriage. I held my marriage up to the marital situations in the books and wondered if my marriage needed more books? or less books?
Surely not counseling. Because only REALLY SICK MARRIAGES need counseling. And ours -though maybe MAYBE off a little LITTLE -was most definitely not grouped into the "really sick" category. In that, I was certain. Stiffed, starched collar certain.
The years paced on, and as they did I found out that our marriage was most definitely off. I found I had no voice, or maybe I did and was petrified to use it? The capable young woman I once was became replaced with a fear-ridden woman who asked for permission about most everything.
I watched other marriages around me and realized that the women had these incredible voices that they used to spend money on household things without asking permission and their husbands were okay with it -proud of them, even! I watched them buy clothes for their family and make decisions like it was the most natural thing in the world.
Watching it all go down around me, I realized -YES -the problem was ME. I needed to make decisions more and better! I needed to be more and better! I bought MORE BOOKS!
And when the books failed me and when my advice-sources failed me (I'm looking at you, Google), I grabbed my marriage and I took it to the hospital. I put it in bed. I cared for it carefully, worried about it by night.
When I'd ask my husband if he were interested in coming to the hospital with me, he insisted that our marriage didn't need THAT kind of help. So I'd watch him from the window of the hospital room.
No one knew how sick the marriage was.
I had a few healthy friends who I allowed in the hospital room. In a hushed voice, I'd tell them the truth. I'd tell them honestly about my marriage.
My therapist assured me that I was in the right place. I was definitely in the right place.
My sponsor assured me that I was in the right place.
But it felt REALLY wrong without Danny.
What a watch-keep I kept, ever lonely, ever longing. I couldn't listen to music without wanting to break something. I felt beauty and beautiful things were made for happier, healthier people and white, sterilized life was all I deserved.
I existed in that life for my marriage. It didn't respond to treatment. If anything, it only became worse.
I held out hope, as I'd always been taught.
Those who were allowed into my room said the same thing, "It's going to get worse before it gets better. I'm so sorry."
I felt deflated but strappingly hopeful. I was capable of hard things. I grit my teeth. I oiled my knuckles.
But just as my external environment had let me down, so did my own capabilities. My books let me down easy. It was easy to blame them and hate them for not giving desired results. But when I couldn't give me desired results? THAT IS PAIN.
I left the hospital and went to the prettiest place I know of: the graveyard. I sat on a bench that somehow landed in view of BOTH my great-grandmothers' graves and I cried.
WHAT NOW?
WHERE NOW?
WHY? WHY NOW?
I didn't walk back into the hospital room with my marriage. I couldn't. The entire room reeked of stale hope, fool-hearty aspirations.
I simply went to my husband and told him, "I'm done." It wasn't within me to sit with a dying patient anymore. I had taken all I could.
To my utter and complete surprise, he panicked, turned and RAN to the hospital. I was at an utter loss -I had assumed he wasn't invested in the marriage. But he took my place. He breathed in the stale hope while I built an ice castle on the side of a hill and uncovered my super powers... and let them go.
I took my wedding ring off. I meditated. I wrote. I ate a lot of stuff I shouldn't have. I cried. I prayed. I burned. I redecorated. I laughed. I talked a lot. I made new friends. I connected with old friends. I ordered a ukulele.
My husband would visit sometimes. He kept me updated on the marriage, though I had lost interest. At times, a spark of hope would bounce around in my chest cavity just long enough for me to detect and wreck it.
No hope.
Hope is not safe.
"Walls," I would tell my chest cavity as I set plaster in the hole the spark left, "Walls are safe."
Still. Every visit from my husband brought more sparks, and my plaster supply ran lower all the time.
Still. Hope proved to be a strong-willed invisible creature with the power to overwhelm cynicism. It was -as it's sparks so easily proved -downright fiery.
In my castle on the hill, I found Jesus. At first, Jesus was all mush and cush -total and complete and unconditional love. But I noticed He came with a few rules that weren't totally mush. And as I read about Him and walked with Him, I realized that Jesus is a little scary because He is assertive about my salvation and I have NO IDEA how to handle assertive people. They scare me. And Jesus was very scary.
I found hope to be exactly like Jesus -because really? Hope and Jesus are one in the same.
And they are -in a word -fierce.
Jesus walked with me as I left the ice castle. He walked with me down the hill. He walked with me into the hospital room.
I was glad He was there. I needed Him for the shock.
THE PATIENT I LEFT WASN'T THERE.
I mean, my marriage WAS THERE. But it looked all... different.
I decided to stick around and discover what the different meant, but I resolved that if the patient were different than so ought the room to be.
Windows were flung open, color was added to every white wall. I opened the door and banned any hushed voicing.
And that's where I am right now.
In that room, trying to reacquaint myself with my marriage.
Some people stop by to visit who don't understand how sick the marriage is or what it's been through and they have all the answers.
"Don't torture yourself," they say, "take it off life support or take it home but STOP torturing yourself."
Those people don't get to come back and visit.
"I've been in this room," some guests will say, "Just remember who you are. Be as gentle to yourself as you are true." Those people get VIP treatment.
Jesus comes every time I ask Him to.
He is still fierce and loving, still the most masculine man I've ever met -still the most fascinating. Still my favorite guest.
Some professionals come. Some neighbors come. The kids come, the eldest aware of the sick patient. The middle child aware of the snacks on the table. The toddler a bundle of bliss and energy to every guest she touches -including the patient.
Some well-meaning guest try to shuffle visitors past our door, telling them it's none of their business, it's a "behind closed doors" situation... they take our pain personally and try -in a way they view as compassionate and a way I understand well because I've been there -to control what they can.
I have to ask them to leave. I point to #5 on the board where I've written the rules.
1) Be honest
2) Be loving
3) Be true
4) Hug
5) No hushed voices
My patient is healing.
Because I am healing.
Because Danny is healing.
But not before.
It really IS The Third Person, saddled with hopes, dreams and love. I mourn for it, as I have departed friends. I sacrifice for it. I pray for it, fast for it, invest in it, cry myself to sleep over it.
It is as real to me. It is almost tangible.
Even Jesus died for it as He did for me, as He did for Danny.
And if I hold Christ close WHILE Danny holds Christ close, there is hope for the marriage.
And just as a mother sits over the bed of her sick child, just as a husband refuses to leave the room of his comatose wife, SO WILL WE STAY.
Why?
Because hope.
With our hands enfolded in Christ's, hope springs forth -lighting the entire room aflame.
Take THAT off life support? You must be mad.
This refining fire is MINE.
With Christ, I will stride forward each day -one day at a time -and I will stay the course, knowing that Christ will never fail me.
Never, no never.
Should Danny choose to let go, I know Christ never shall.
Corrie Ten Boom says, "I have learned to hold all things loosely, so God will not have to pry them out of my hand."
So I endevour daily to hand my will, my husband and my marriage to Christ. They are safer there.
I am safer there too.
The flames of Christ's hope encircle me, and I am secure.
Showing posts with label Hope. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hope. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
Friday, December 26, 2014
Blingish
A few weeks ago, I was struggling emotionally -I don't remember exactly why -and I asked Danny for a blessing.
In it he said that this Christmas would be the best Christmas yet, that there great blessings coming, and that as I continued to simplify my life, I would find more peace.
Hearing that great blessings were coming helped me get through that day. As I climbed through the passenger side door of our broken Jeep to sit myself in the driver's seat, I remembered... great blessings are coming. It probably would have helped to chant, "If thou endure it well..." but I didn't.
This Christmas season, and yes -even Christmas day! -have turned out to easily be the BEST I've ever experienced. There's so many reasons why, but I wanted to stop in today and write about one particular reason.
Yesterday, I experienced a great deal of hope for my marriage and circumstances -more than I have had in two years' time!
Danny has been off work, and while I was concerned about that -how and where he would spend his time, I took things day by day. Each day he has slept not only in the house with me but next to me in bed. Each day I gave myself permission to ask him to leave, and each day I made the decision that he could stay. We went on a date, shopping in the city, and I couldn't believe the peace we felt.
Was it perfect? Eff no. I had a meltdown in the middle of Target over spending so much on needed clothes for the kids.
We had agreed to simplify Christmas this year, use no credit cards (though we were fully broke because we'd used all of our fun money to take the family to Disneyland for our 10th anniversary in order to avoid that pain and triggers at home. Healthy? I don't know. Successful? You betcha.) and stay focused on what really matters.
Anytime I felt myself getting worked up or overwhelmed, I'd re-center and ask God, "Okay, what now? I'm trying to control today, so forgive me and tell me... what's next?"
It was usually a nap.
The first holiday meltdown was had in the middle of the Target aisles, and this is remarkable for one good and solid reason: I usually don't allow myself to be honest and melt down -especially not publicly. I was Queen Shove-It-Down! and I was so proud, so very proud to be so very composed at all times.
But I'm not now. I'm honest and real and more true to what I'm feeling, even if it's a meltdown over panties and socks.
A few days ago, I was triggered and I melted down again. Danny gave me space to take a hot bath and then asked, "Did I upset you?"
The answer was yes, and I said it. I said the word that I KNEW would bring confrontation.
I realize this isn't big for other people, but for ME -it was huge to be honest.
It was beautiful to feel that there was no other agenda for Danny other than LISTENING.
He wasn't formulating a plan to argue back, he wasn't becoming defensive. He was simply listening to me.
You might call it an absence of the drama triangle, but I like to call it, "seeing Danny get outside of himself and connecting."
As we drove home from the city, I felt that hope and happiness that came from being on his arm, to visiting with him, talking about everything and laughing about nothing.
And then I said something I haven't said in 18 months, "I think I'm ready to wear a ring now. At least, today I am."
In October, I picked a ring out in an etsy store -it was very dainty, very simple.
I fell deeply in love with the tiny pearl and thought of Anne of Green Gables -how she'd looked forward to seeing a diamond her entire life and when she finally was able to, was disappointed. It wasn't all it was cracked up to be. She had a pearl ring instead.
I love that it wasn't trying to impress or prove -it was happy simply BEING. It seemed to embrace the spirit of simplicity, something I'm finding at my center. I'm a simple being.
The ring sold soon after I'd found it, and I was grateful I'd screen-shot it on my phone.
"If you'll text me that picture," Danny said, "I can get a hold of the lady who made it."
On the 24th, I woke up and hugged him. I said, "Too bad I didn't come to the realization earlier that I'd be ready on Christmas day to wear a wedding ring."
"That's what I was thinking," Danny shrugged and we both laughed because life is funny.
Thursday morning, we all gathered around and opened up simple gifts. I gave Danny an iTunes gift card, some wireless headphones, homemade hair pomade (for his stubborn cow lick) and a personalized sign I designed that made him happy cry.
His gifts from me were wonderful: a porcelain shoe to add to my collection, a moon necklace with sentimental meaning ("what do you want, do you want the moon, Mary?" ~George Bailey).
The last gift under the tree was for me -it was a small box, and inside that small box was a ring box and inside that ring box was THE ring... the beautifully simply ring with a beautifully simple pearl! I couldn't believe it!
As it turns out, the DAY after I'd found the ring back in October, Danny BOUGHT IT. He has had the ring for two months, and the timing just happened to be perfect.
I wept, wept, wept and then I beamed the rest of the day. I had the moon AND the world.
Snow fell last night, and as it sent us all off to sleep, I expressed my feelings to Danny the best way I knew how: wordy, wordy, worderson.
I told him how wonderful it was to see a transformation taking place inside of myself, inside of him, and inside of our marriage, how we were OKAY even when we weren't okay!
I feel at home with Danny -a sense of wonderful safety that I created within myself that somehow birthed this wonderful gift of CONNECTION.
Last night, we picked up a million tiny rubber bandaloom bands and put the 2 year old back in bed 50 million times and I couldn't help but give voice to what I think the Lord might be trying to show me:
I never would have thought that I'd find so much peace and pure joy in living in a broken mess -a broken messy home, marriage, and body. It seems that all around me is swirling in broken, messiness... and last night I felt so peaceful and grateful.
Would I trade that peace for a newer car? No.
Would I trade that peace for a bigger home that I actually own? No.
And would I trade this pearl for a diamond? Hell no.
Will we do it perfectly? Of course not, that's the most beautiful element to our tapestry.
My life has become about the present -leaving the future to God, I can honestly say that today I'm proud to wear a ring symbolizing my loyalty to Danny. Today, I feel peace. Today, I feel joy. Today I feel fear. Today, I feel human. Today, I feel -I FEEL HOPE and JOY -and I will not let the future rob me of my present.
Tomorrow I might, but today I will not.
In it he said that this Christmas would be the best Christmas yet, that there great blessings coming, and that as I continued to simplify my life, I would find more peace.
Hearing that great blessings were coming helped me get through that day. As I climbed through the passenger side door of our broken Jeep to sit myself in the driver's seat, I remembered... great blessings are coming. It probably would have helped to chant, "If thou endure it well..." but I didn't.
This Christmas season, and yes -even Christmas day! -have turned out to easily be the BEST I've ever experienced. There's so many reasons why, but I wanted to stop in today and write about one particular reason.
Yesterday, I experienced a great deal of hope for my marriage and circumstances -more than I have had in two years' time!
Danny has been off work, and while I was concerned about that -how and where he would spend his time, I took things day by day. Each day he has slept not only in the house with me but next to me in bed. Each day I gave myself permission to ask him to leave, and each day I made the decision that he could stay. We went on a date, shopping in the city, and I couldn't believe the peace we felt.
Was it perfect? Eff no. I had a meltdown in the middle of Target over spending so much on needed clothes for the kids.
We had agreed to simplify Christmas this year, use no credit cards (though we were fully broke because we'd used all of our fun money to take the family to Disneyland for our 10th anniversary in order to avoid that pain and triggers at home. Healthy? I don't know. Successful? You betcha.) and stay focused on what really matters.
Anytime I felt myself getting worked up or overwhelmed, I'd re-center and ask God, "Okay, what now? I'm trying to control today, so forgive me and tell me... what's next?"
It was usually a nap.
The first holiday meltdown was had in the middle of the Target aisles, and this is remarkable for one good and solid reason: I usually don't allow myself to be honest and melt down -especially not publicly. I was Queen Shove-It-Down! and I was so proud, so very proud to be so very composed at all times.
But I'm not now. I'm honest and real and more true to what I'm feeling, even if it's a meltdown over panties and socks.
A few days ago, I was triggered and I melted down again. Danny gave me space to take a hot bath and then asked, "Did I upset you?"
The answer was yes, and I said it. I said the word that I KNEW would bring confrontation.
I realize this isn't big for other people, but for ME -it was huge to be honest.
It was beautiful to feel that there was no other agenda for Danny other than LISTENING.
He wasn't formulating a plan to argue back, he wasn't becoming defensive. He was simply listening to me.
You might call it an absence of the drama triangle, but I like to call it, "seeing Danny get outside of himself and connecting."
As we drove home from the city, I felt that hope and happiness that came from being on his arm, to visiting with him, talking about everything and laughing about nothing.
And then I said something I haven't said in 18 months, "I think I'm ready to wear a ring now. At least, today I am."
In October, I picked a ring out in an etsy store -it was very dainty, very simple.
I fell deeply in love with the tiny pearl and thought of Anne of Green Gables -how she'd looked forward to seeing a diamond her entire life and when she finally was able to, was disappointed. It wasn't all it was cracked up to be. She had a pearl ring instead.
I love that it wasn't trying to impress or prove -it was happy simply BEING. It seemed to embrace the spirit of simplicity, something I'm finding at my center. I'm a simple being.
The ring sold soon after I'd found it, and I was grateful I'd screen-shot it on my phone.
"If you'll text me that picture," Danny said, "I can get a hold of the lady who made it."
On the 24th, I woke up and hugged him. I said, "Too bad I didn't come to the realization earlier that I'd be ready on Christmas day to wear a wedding ring."
"That's what I was thinking," Danny shrugged and we both laughed because life is funny.
Thursday morning, we all gathered around and opened up simple gifts. I gave Danny an iTunes gift card, some wireless headphones, homemade hair pomade (for his stubborn cow lick) and a personalized sign I designed that made him happy cry.
His gifts from me were wonderful: a porcelain shoe to add to my collection, a moon necklace with sentimental meaning ("what do you want, do you want the moon, Mary?" ~George Bailey).
The last gift under the tree was for me -it was a small box, and inside that small box was a ring box and inside that ring box was THE ring... the beautifully simply ring with a beautifully simple pearl! I couldn't believe it!
As it turns out, the DAY after I'd found the ring back in October, Danny BOUGHT IT. He has had the ring for two months, and the timing just happened to be perfect.
I wept, wept, wept and then I beamed the rest of the day. I had the moon AND the world.
Snow fell last night, and as it sent us all off to sleep, I expressed my feelings to Danny the best way I knew how: wordy, wordy, worderson.
I told him how wonderful it was to see a transformation taking place inside of myself, inside of him, and inside of our marriage, how we were OKAY even when we weren't okay!
I feel at home with Danny -a sense of wonderful safety that I created within myself that somehow birthed this wonderful gift of CONNECTION.
Last night, we picked up a million tiny rubber bandaloom bands and put the 2 year old back in bed 50 million times and I couldn't help but give voice to what I think the Lord might be trying to show me:
I never would have thought that I'd find so much peace and pure joy in living in a broken mess -a broken messy home, marriage, and body. It seems that all around me is swirling in broken, messiness... and last night I felt so peaceful and grateful.
Would I trade that peace for a newer car? No.
Would I trade that peace for a bigger home that I actually own? No.
And would I trade this pearl for a diamond? Hell no.
I think of Anne and her tribute to her own pearls:
Our life is one of accepted failures and joyous victories, of tears of joy and tears of sorrow! Our life together will be built from mutual respect, no other agenda but to individually ask God what He would have us do.“But pearls are for tears, the old legend says," Gilbert had objected.
"I'm not afraid of that. And tears can be happy as well as sad. My very happiest moments have been when I had tears in my eyes—when Marilla told me I might stay at Green Gables—when Matthew gave me the first pretty dress I ever had—when I heard that you were going to recover from the fever. So give me pearls for our troth ring, Gilbert, and I'll willingly accept the sorrow of life with its joy." -Anne”
Will we do it perfectly? Of course not, that's the most beautiful element to our tapestry.
My life has become about the present -leaving the future to God, I can honestly say that today I'm proud to wear a ring symbolizing my loyalty to Danny. Today, I feel peace. Today, I feel joy. Today I feel fear. Today, I feel human. Today, I feel -I FEEL HOPE and JOY -and I will not let the future rob me of my present.
Tomorrow I might, but today I will not.
Thursday, June 19, 2014
Oxygen Shortage
A little over 18 months ago, I was rolled onto my side, clinging to a hospital bed and ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN that death was a breath away.
The pain. Oh my gosh, THE PAIN! It was the most intense physical experience of my life.
Danny was standing next to me, but he wasn't on the bed with me. He wasn't feeling what I was feeling. In short, he didn't know.
"My body is breaking," I cried out, desperate for someone -ANYONE -to realize and see! SEE!
"Your body isn't breaking," Danny said.
I hated him in that moment. My brain went into a tail spin. I realized that everyone in the room THOUGHT I WAS FINE.
But I wasn't.
I knew I wasn't fine, but no one else could feel it. In fact, they were certain I was fine!
"Your body isn't breaking."
The contractions weren't letting up. Before one would let go, another would start. There was no break, no rest, no regrouping, no recentering... there was a shortage of oxygen getting to my brain.
I couldn't THINK straight.
My body responded to the pain and that was that.
"I'm dying," I told my husband, desperate for him to TRULY SEE that I was -in very fact -DY.ING.
"You're not dying," he tried to soothe me.
Again, I felt crazy. No one that wasn't me didn't seem to realize the seriousness of the situation. I bypassed my husband and looked at a nurse.
"CAN'T YOU GIVE ME ANYTHING FOR THIS PAIN!?!"
She seemed surprised.
"Oh! Yes!"
Apparently when I'd said a few months before that I wouldn't be having an epidural while I was in the hospital that I was one of those women who was against pain medication while birthing babies. But I wasn't. I just strongly felt I should have an epidural. It was a gut feeling, so I went with it.
The hospital staff was obliging. TOO obliging.
The nurse ran out of the room to order and get me some relief, and THAT'S when it happened.
That's when the baby decided maybe she ought to debut.
The nurse came back in, her hands filled with magic vials, "What happened? I was gone for a minute!"
The baby happened.
Calm, serene, plump, quiet. They placed her in my arms, and still. STILL. The pain was fierce. I begged for medication.
"It will interfere with your bonding," the Dr. warned.
Oh my gosh, WHAT BONDING? I was hurting so much I could barely focus.
It wasn't until a few hours after she came that I finally felt bonded to my baby and her cute little elf-like skin tags on her ear. Her imperfections were just perfect to me. I breathed her in. I'd had two babies before, but this one? Something was different. I knew her. I'd known her before. It was a sort of foreign kind of "you're HERE" kind of reunion.
The pain -the seemingly lethal pain -brought me an immeasurable gift.
The trials in life right now seem to be just like those contractions.
Marriage broken.
Cousin hit a bus the same day Alicia starts job. Dies twice on helicopter, makes miraculous comeback despite brain trauma.
I leave my full-time Mommying in the past and fully underestimate how hard it will be emotionally.
Grandpa in hospital.
Dad works shop and Grandpa's ranch. Overdoes it.
Dad in hospital with viral infection. Nearly loses the fight, transfers to ICU down int he Phoenix area.
Alicia fields job without training because her boss (Dad) is in the hospital.
Dad comes home.
Danny leaves for 2 months to train for his new position (K9). He's home on weekends. The break is very timely. As much as Alicia needs help, the marriage is just so fragile.
Mom goes into the hospital -knee surgery.
Thanksgiving comes -family tension causes a boundary Alicia hated enforcing.
Baby turns one -Alicia forgoes a baked cake and instead sticks a candle in a ho-ho. Ole!
The next day, Danny and Alicia sit in front of the computer where Brannon is "present" as Danny reads his full disclosure. Everything addiction related. Alicia listens. The session ends. Alicia leaves town with cash and writes a very angry letter in a bed and breakfast while entertaining a fantasy about cancer... the kind that kills you.
Christmas.
Holidays.
Sicknesses.
Mom gets her other knee replaced.
Alicia starts to realize something is OFF and realizes she's going through depression.
The depression wreaks a strange sort of havoc in her life and Alicia struggles to understand what the eff is going on.
The baby begins walking and Alicia gives up on any chances of being able to sit on a clean floor.
Behind the mess of the depression and the actual literal mess of the house, the marriage situation is confusing at best and straining and worst.
But we work hard. Counseling, group therapy, weekly meetings -both online and in person. Sponsors. Talking, connecting, honesty.
And then the group therapy ends abruptly.
As does counseling.
Danny's boss puts pressure of holy pressure on him.
Alicia's gall bladder begins assigning her a seat on the bathroom floor.
Each day she's sick -nausea follows eating. Rinse repeat. Surgery in July.
And guess what?
I'm at the "MY BODY IS BREAKING" point. I can't breathe or see clearly anymore. To everyone around me, I'm not breaking. I'm fine.
But I'm on the table again. Looking around for a blessed nurse with magic vials.
So many nurses are thronging me -food is brought in now and then, children are taken from time to time, house cleaning help both hired and volunteered is given. The Lord is taking sweet and precious care of me as I cling to the hospital bed and cry out in desperation, "I AM DYING."
I used to wonder at people who couldn't seem to get enough help, who still despite seemingly having their basics needs me still struggled to just SMILE. I judged them.
And the Lord -in His sweet wisdom -is stripping me WHOLLY of that judgement.
All things will work together for our good.
I'm grateful for the suffering -it's setting a course for the way I will live out the rest of my life. My priorities are shifted (and shifting), and if anything... if NOTHING else... the Lord is preparing me to serve His children with pure charity, unmarked by judgement.
I feel ungrateful writing these things. I feel like a whiner. I feel FEAR that people will hear my words and judge me because my basic needs are met and I'm still crying out from the bathroom floor, "Can't you give me anything for this pain?"
Today and everyday I will simply do the next right thing.
Living one day at a time? When things are good. Today I will live one moment at a time, one situation at a time. One hour at a time.
For when the oxygen returns to my brain, I will behold a mysterious, miraculous gift... imperfect and perfect, grand and small, a sort of birthing experience in it's own right.
And I know at that point -I will bond with it and look back on this laborious treachery as a worthwhile investment.
But for today, I'll just do the next right thing.
The pain. Oh my gosh, THE PAIN! It was the most intense physical experience of my life.
Danny was standing next to me, but he wasn't on the bed with me. He wasn't feeling what I was feeling. In short, he didn't know.
"My body is breaking," I cried out, desperate for someone -ANYONE -to realize and see! SEE!
"Your body isn't breaking," Danny said.
I hated him in that moment. My brain went into a tail spin. I realized that everyone in the room THOUGHT I WAS FINE.
But I wasn't.
I knew I wasn't fine, but no one else could feel it. In fact, they were certain I was fine!
"Your body isn't breaking."
The contractions weren't letting up. Before one would let go, another would start. There was no break, no rest, no regrouping, no recentering... there was a shortage of oxygen getting to my brain.
I couldn't THINK straight.
My body responded to the pain and that was that.
"I'm dying," I told my husband, desperate for him to TRULY SEE that I was -in very fact -DY.ING.
"You're not dying," he tried to soothe me.
Again, I felt crazy. No one that wasn't me didn't seem to realize the seriousness of the situation. I bypassed my husband and looked at a nurse.
"CAN'T YOU GIVE ME ANYTHING FOR THIS PAIN!?!"
She seemed surprised.
"Oh! Yes!"
Apparently when I'd said a few months before that I wouldn't be having an epidural while I was in the hospital that I was one of those women who was against pain medication while birthing babies. But I wasn't. I just strongly felt I should have an epidural. It was a gut feeling, so I went with it.
The hospital staff was obliging. TOO obliging.
The nurse ran out of the room to order and get me some relief, and THAT'S when it happened.
That's when the baby decided maybe she ought to debut.
The nurse came back in, her hands filled with magic vials, "What happened? I was gone for a minute!"
The baby happened.
Calm, serene, plump, quiet. They placed her in my arms, and still. STILL. The pain was fierce. I begged for medication.
"It will interfere with your bonding," the Dr. warned.
Oh my gosh, WHAT BONDING? I was hurting so much I could barely focus.
It wasn't until a few hours after she came that I finally felt bonded to my baby and her cute little elf-like skin tags on her ear. Her imperfections were just perfect to me. I breathed her in. I'd had two babies before, but this one? Something was different. I knew her. I'd known her before. It was a sort of foreign kind of "you're HERE" kind of reunion.
The pain -the seemingly lethal pain -brought me an immeasurable gift.
The trials in life right now seem to be just like those contractions.
Marriage broken.
Cousin hit a bus the same day Alicia starts job. Dies twice on helicopter, makes miraculous comeback despite brain trauma.
I leave my full-time Mommying in the past and fully underestimate how hard it will be emotionally.
Grandpa in hospital.
Dad works shop and Grandpa's ranch. Overdoes it.
Dad in hospital with viral infection. Nearly loses the fight, transfers to ICU down int he Phoenix area.
Alicia fields job without training because her boss (Dad) is in the hospital.
Dad comes home.
Danny leaves for 2 months to train for his new position (K9). He's home on weekends. The break is very timely. As much as Alicia needs help, the marriage is just so fragile.
Mom goes into the hospital -knee surgery.
Thanksgiving comes -family tension causes a boundary Alicia hated enforcing.
Baby turns one -Alicia forgoes a baked cake and instead sticks a candle in a ho-ho. Ole!
The next day, Danny and Alicia sit in front of the computer where Brannon is "present" as Danny reads his full disclosure. Everything addiction related. Alicia listens. The session ends. Alicia leaves town with cash and writes a very angry letter in a bed and breakfast while entertaining a fantasy about cancer... the kind that kills you.
Christmas.
Holidays.
Sicknesses.
Mom gets her other knee replaced.
Alicia starts to realize something is OFF and realizes she's going through depression.
The depression wreaks a strange sort of havoc in her life and Alicia struggles to understand what the eff is going on.
The baby begins walking and Alicia gives up on any chances of being able to sit on a clean floor.
Behind the mess of the depression and the actual literal mess of the house, the marriage situation is confusing at best and straining and worst.
But we work hard. Counseling, group therapy, weekly meetings -both online and in person. Sponsors. Talking, connecting, honesty.
And then the group therapy ends abruptly.
As does counseling.
Danny's boss puts pressure of holy pressure on him.
Alicia's gall bladder begins assigning her a seat on the bathroom floor.
Each day she's sick -nausea follows eating. Rinse repeat. Surgery in July.
And guess what?
I'm at the "MY BODY IS BREAKING" point. I can't breathe or see clearly anymore. To everyone around me, I'm not breaking. I'm fine.
But I'm on the table again. Looking around for a blessed nurse with magic vials.
So many nurses are thronging me -food is brought in now and then, children are taken from time to time, house cleaning help both hired and volunteered is given. The Lord is taking sweet and precious care of me as I cling to the hospital bed and cry out in desperation, "I AM DYING."
I used to wonder at people who couldn't seem to get enough help, who still despite seemingly having their basics needs me still struggled to just SMILE. I judged them.
And the Lord -in His sweet wisdom -is stripping me WHOLLY of that judgement.
All things will work together for our good.
I'm grateful for the suffering -it's setting a course for the way I will live out the rest of my life. My priorities are shifted (and shifting), and if anything... if NOTHING else... the Lord is preparing me to serve His children with pure charity, unmarked by judgement.
I feel ungrateful writing these things. I feel like a whiner. I feel FEAR that people will hear my words and judge me because my basic needs are met and I'm still crying out from the bathroom floor, "Can't you give me anything for this pain?"
Today and everyday I will simply do the next right thing.
Living one day at a time? When things are good. Today I will live one moment at a time, one situation at a time. One hour at a time.
For when the oxygen returns to my brain, I will behold a mysterious, miraculous gift... imperfect and perfect, grand and small, a sort of birthing experience in it's own right.
And I know at that point -I will bond with it and look back on this laborious treachery as a worthwhile investment.
But for today, I'll just do the next right thing.
Labels:
Addiction,
Counseling,
Depression,
Hope,
Recovery,
Support,
Trials
Friday, May 16, 2014
The End of Numb
I remember the first time I found out about porn. I caught him.
A newlywed with all her bloom and youth and tight skin pulled over energy and twitterpation... I turned into a different creature. To say I was devastated would be a gross minimization.
Oh, how I FELT that discovery, how I lived it over and over again in my mind -the worst rerun in the history of TV Land.
I felt sure I would never go through it again. I didn't know that porn was something that was less like a "whoopsie daisy" and more like the worst kind of blood-deep poison.
But it did happen again.
"And again and again and again!" to quote my favorite Uncle Willy (The Philadelphia Story).
I tried reasoning, shaming, bargaining, saving, preventing, more shaming... I OVER"loved" him. Nothing worked.
I poured my entire self into the poison.
My life and obsession, my sole hobby... it was Danny. More than anything, I wanted my marriage covenants to remain intact. I wanted my family together forever.
I loved Danny. I loved our marriage.
I understood his weakness, and gosh darn it ALL if I wasn't THE MOST PATIENT wife in the history of the universe.
Do you know how long you can last trying to compete with porn? Oh, I think the answer is different for everyone. But for me, personally, it lasted about 6 1/2 years. At that point, I began doing recovery work. I read the books, I found support. I gained education.
I knew I was getting better because the devastation I felt all those years ago was beginning to dissipate.
He would come to me with disclosures (or I would fine evidence), and I shrugged.
Eh.
Meh.
Blah.
Whatever.
Then I would look at myself in the mirror and work on the only thing I had control over: ME.
I continued living with an addict.
I choose my marriage. I choose my marriage to an addict. But the only way I could survive it was numbness.
It felt like I was sitting on a couch, watching Groundhog Day over and over again... yelling at the screen, pulling my hair, but in the end... I was utterly powerless over Danny's actions.
The numbness made it go down easier.
Only.
There were certains in my house who weren't numb. In fact, they were the OPPOSITE of numb. They're impressionable, sensitive, and internalizing everything.
I watched tears stream down my daughter's face after an outburst from Dad.
"Because I did something bad," she sobbed.
I started realizing that for all the patience I had, for all the CHOOSING MY MARRIAGE I had done... the return, the truth... was ugly. Facing seemed to feel a lot like heartbreak -something I had shielded myself against.
But the Lord has a way of providing us with what we need, even if we don't want it.
He provided me with truth: hard evidence that no matter how you sliced it:
Danny was not choosing our marriage.
Danny was not choosing me.
There was no real recovery.
I knew -though it killed me -that I couldn't stay. I wouldn't stay. Staying in a marriage where I was cleaving unto God and my husband (and fear, while we're at it) was pointless.
I married for ETERNITY. Not time. A time marriage made no real sense to me. I was hell-bent on eternity.
But I could not force it on any other person.
And so the time came when that person had to go away because my marriage -though it began in the Temple -was something I'd feared since I was a child.
It was pointless.
To maintain my peace as a woman of God and a mother of three beautiful children (yea, THE MOST beautiful children), I had to sever ties. I had to leave my marriage.
God was my guide.
It turns out that I can't live numb... primarily because "living" and "numb" can't actually coexist.
I'm not powerless anymore. I'm not watching scenes go down at shrugging anymore.
I just can't!
I just can't! SO MUCH.
Thinking of The Numb Place makes me feel so sad. Reminders of The Numb Place make me feel sorrow.
I want to LIVE. I want joy and pain and sorrow and happiness.
I want feelings to come into my body and I want to EMOTE them out: write them, scream them, sing them, talk them!
I want a marriage where my husband CHOOSES ME and LOVES ME and SEES ME AS AN EQUAL and REMAINS WITH ME INTO THE ETERNITIES.
I seal that desire with the death of my marriage.
I seal that desire with baptism by fire.
I seal that desire with love... my failing love of God and His unfailing love for me.
The future is alive, and in His hands.
(and as it turns out, I'm not the patient person I thought I was all these years. In fact, I have no patience at all. For anything. Hello, Character Weakness.)
A newlywed with all her bloom and youth and tight skin pulled over energy and twitterpation... I turned into a different creature. To say I was devastated would be a gross minimization.
Oh, how I FELT that discovery, how I lived it over and over again in my mind -the worst rerun in the history of TV Land.
I felt sure I would never go through it again. I didn't know that porn was something that was less like a "whoopsie daisy" and more like the worst kind of blood-deep poison.
But it did happen again.
"And again and again and again!" to quote my favorite Uncle Willy (The Philadelphia Story).
I tried reasoning, shaming, bargaining, saving, preventing, more shaming... I OVER"loved" him. Nothing worked.
I poured my entire self into the poison.
My life and obsession, my sole hobby... it was Danny. More than anything, I wanted my marriage covenants to remain intact. I wanted my family together forever.
I loved Danny. I loved our marriage.
I understood his weakness, and gosh darn it ALL if I wasn't THE MOST PATIENT wife in the history of the universe.
Do you know how long you can last trying to compete with porn? Oh, I think the answer is different for everyone. But for me, personally, it lasted about 6 1/2 years. At that point, I began doing recovery work. I read the books, I found support. I gained education.
I knew I was getting better because the devastation I felt all those years ago was beginning to dissipate.
He would come to me with disclosures (or I would fine evidence), and I shrugged.
Eh.
Meh.
Blah.
Whatever.
Then I would look at myself in the mirror and work on the only thing I had control over: ME.
I continued living with an addict.
I choose my marriage. I choose my marriage to an addict. But the only way I could survive it was numbness.
It felt like I was sitting on a couch, watching Groundhog Day over and over again... yelling at the screen, pulling my hair, but in the end... I was utterly powerless over Danny's actions.
The numbness made it go down easier.
Only.
There were certains in my house who weren't numb. In fact, they were the OPPOSITE of numb. They're impressionable, sensitive, and internalizing everything.
I watched tears stream down my daughter's face after an outburst from Dad.
"Because I did something bad," she sobbed.
I started realizing that for all the patience I had, for all the CHOOSING MY MARRIAGE I had done... the return, the truth... was ugly. Facing seemed to feel a lot like heartbreak -something I had shielded myself against.
But the Lord has a way of providing us with what we need, even if we don't want it.
He provided me with truth: hard evidence that no matter how you sliced it:
Danny was not choosing our marriage.
Danny was not choosing me.
There was no real recovery.
I knew -though it killed me -that I couldn't stay. I wouldn't stay. Staying in a marriage where I was cleaving unto God and my husband (and fear, while we're at it) was pointless.
I married for ETERNITY. Not time. A time marriage made no real sense to me. I was hell-bent on eternity.
But I could not force it on any other person.
And so the time came when that person had to go away because my marriage -though it began in the Temple -was something I'd feared since I was a child.
It was pointless.
To maintain my peace as a woman of God and a mother of three beautiful children (yea, THE MOST beautiful children), I had to sever ties. I had to leave my marriage.
God was my guide.
It turns out that I can't live numb... primarily because "living" and "numb" can't actually coexist.
I'm not powerless anymore. I'm not watching scenes go down at shrugging anymore.
I just can't!
I just can't! SO MUCH.
Thinking of The Numb Place makes me feel so sad. Reminders of The Numb Place make me feel sorrow.
I want to LIVE. I want joy and pain and sorrow and happiness.
I want feelings to come into my body and I want to EMOTE them out: write them, scream them, sing them, talk them!
I want a marriage where my husband CHOOSES ME and LOVES ME and SEES ME AS AN EQUAL and REMAINS WITH ME INTO THE ETERNITIES.
I seal that desire with the death of my marriage.
I seal that desire with baptism by fire.
I seal that desire with love... my failing love of God and His unfailing love for me.
The future is alive, and in His hands.
(and as it turns out, I'm not the patient person I thought I was all these years. In fact, I have no patience at all. For anything. Hello, Character Weakness.)
Labels:
Addiction,
Choices,
Danny,
Dear,
Family,
Heavenly Father,
Hope,
Love,
Marriage,
Numbness,
Patience,
Recovery,
The Savior,
The Temple
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
First in Five
My husband asked me out today.
It seems like such a given, right? Husbands asking wives out... except that in July I told my husband I wouldn't go on dates with him (unless he wanted to attend the Temple together). It's a boundary that helped me feel safe. I didn't want my marriage, so why invest?
As I sat in the aftermath of The Great Bucket of Water to the Face, I found myself ring shopping. I didn't understand it, but I didn't fight it either.
Was it because I finally saw reality and was okay with moving forward with it?
Was it because I work primarily with men and find myself missing the protection a ring has to offer?
Was it because I'm a girl and girls like shopping for shiny things?
I don't know. I just felt okay looking for rings, so I did.
This year -for the first time ever -I read Anne of Green Gables. As I read it, I was a little freaked out because I related SO much to Anne. Her talking, her INCESSANT talking, her imagination, the way she romanticized everything right down to her reflection. Reading her thoughts was like frolicking through my Little Girl brain. Of all the Hollywood relationships, her love and then marriage to Gilbert Blythe is one of my favorites. Their time together is fraught with misunderstanding, fights, caring, compassion, thoughtfulness, encouragement, competition, and every other REAL emotion human connection has to offer. Gilbert believes in Anne and encourages her to pursue her dreams and develop her gifts. Anne feels the same way about him. As they begin their life together, Anne sports a delicate gold ring with a pearl on top. Why? Because she had envisioned diamonds to be the most romantic gem in the world... right up until she saw one. She was so disappointed that she never got over it. It wasn't what she thought it was going to be. She insisted on a pearl ring.
As I thumbed through images of rose gold rings with champagne diamonds, I somehow stumbled into an etsy shop full of delicate rings. One stood out, fairly screaming at me... delicate, gold, single pearl on top.
And that's what I want.
My current wedding ring is still broken, and I have no plans to put it back on. ever.
I left home Saturday morning -the "morning after" -and came home Sunday noon-time. I spent my Saturday morning on a massage table and my afternoon rifling through antique shops.
My drive to the city is usually riddled with anxiety and white knuckles, but as I drove over icy roads and through holiday traffic, I was unfazed. I'm terrified of car accidents, but on Saturday I thought about what a welcome relief one would be. It would stop time. No one checked into a hospital for a car accident ever keeps track of time. Life slows down, people feed you, your children are taken care of. And you don't have to do anything but focus on letting your body heal.
As the massage therapist worked her steady hands into my flesh that morning, her soothing voice became almost bossy, "You have no choice but to take care of yourself physically. The stress... the stress has done so much damage. Can you feel me working heavy burdens out of your body?"
Answer: Yes. The most wonderful "ouch" ever.
As the sun went down behind the San Francisco Peaks in the city, I called the owners at my favorite Bed and Breakfast and asked if they might have -by some wild chance -the room under the stairs open.
The Harry Potter Room, they like to call it, though it's actually the house's old pantry room.
I could feel in my gut I needed to get stay away from home for the night, but I wanted a small room... a quiet room in an actual house where there was limitless hot water and a thick robe and complimentary chocolate milk.
Three years before when I'd hit my own rock bottom, I holed up in a tiny room at a Bed and Breakfast and wrote in a journal and cried and prayed. This trip was to be no different.
Because tender mercies are very REAL, The Harry Potter room was available. I poured myself into the red sheets and wrote.
The night after The Bucket of Water in my Face, I dreamed of a woman... she was standing on a barren street corner in a dirty wedding dress. She was a shell of a woman who once was. She was getting ready to be married again, but she had no feeling left, no love, no purpose. I tried to tell her that she was strong. In reply, she walked me down a hallway filled with memories of her first marriage. There was a table adorned with her tastes: colors, flavors, styles. There was a wedding cake. There were snap shots... each one featuring a beautiful young bride with bright gleaming eyes.
She didn't feel the same about them anymore... her memory of her own past had been altered.
As I sat in bed with my chocolate milk by my side, I felt like the girl from my dreams. She was a sort of modern Miss Havisham in her own right.
But my pen gives me power of expression, and I used that power to take my memories back. I went through each memory that had been taken from me and I took it back. I wrote myself a list of advice... a general guide for what I should have done.
Don't chase.
Ask more question about this and that.
Insist on better medical care.
You are not a fix.
I went into detail in each paragraph of advice, telling my old self how to do, what to do.
Don't ditch class.
Buy him gifts that are not sexual.
Don't have sex on your honeymoon.
Go on organized dates with no sexual agenda.
As the words poured out of me, I was angry. It was unfiltered, righteous indignation. The guilt that normally prevents me from honest anger was not allowed in the Harry Potter room.
At midnight I set my pen down, locked my door with the original skeleton key and fell asleep to the sound of downtown city living: trains, sirens, bass thumping in the distance...
The next morning, I woke up on my own before 6 am. I stepped into the shower and set the water as hot as I can stand it (boil a lobster has always been my default shower setting). I sat on the shower floor and let the hot water and steam cleanse me. Water, both literal and living, has been on the forefront of my recovery journey. After I'd soaked and steamed and cleansed for long enough, I wrapped myself in a lovely thick robe and climbed back into bed.
I put the pen to paper and once again wrote my truth. My angry words from the night before were a few pages and a hot shower behind me...and I wrote an unexpected invitation.
"I finally truly see reality, and as I face it with wild desire to escape, I welcome you into it. My bare memory walls need to be filled... I am going to be hard to live with for awhile as I exert my voice and give reign to my inner core... and with that, I issue an invitation... you come too."
And so it was with nervousness in his voice that he called and asked me on a date.
Lots of couples can go for five months without a date. It seems like no big thing, just another Wednesday night, right?
But for us -tonight -we are starting over.
It's a delicate pearl ring and Robert Frost kinda thing.
It seems like such a given, right? Husbands asking wives out... except that in July I told my husband I wouldn't go on dates with him (unless he wanted to attend the Temple together). It's a boundary that helped me feel safe. I didn't want my marriage, so why invest?
As I sat in the aftermath of The Great Bucket of Water to the Face, I found myself ring shopping. I didn't understand it, but I didn't fight it either.
Was it because I finally saw reality and was okay with moving forward with it?
Was it because I work primarily with men and find myself missing the protection a ring has to offer?
Was it because I'm a girl and girls like shopping for shiny things?
I don't know. I just felt okay looking for rings, so I did.
This year -for the first time ever -I read Anne of Green Gables. As I read it, I was a little freaked out because I related SO much to Anne. Her talking, her INCESSANT talking, her imagination, the way she romanticized everything right down to her reflection. Reading her thoughts was like frolicking through my Little Girl brain. Of all the Hollywood relationships, her love and then marriage to Gilbert Blythe is one of my favorites. Their time together is fraught with misunderstanding, fights, caring, compassion, thoughtfulness, encouragement, competition, and every other REAL emotion human connection has to offer. Gilbert believes in Anne and encourages her to pursue her dreams and develop her gifts. Anne feels the same way about him. As they begin their life together, Anne sports a delicate gold ring with a pearl on top. Why? Because she had envisioned diamonds to be the most romantic gem in the world... right up until she saw one. She was so disappointed that she never got over it. It wasn't what she thought it was going to be. She insisted on a pearl ring.
As I thumbed through images of rose gold rings with champagne diamonds, I somehow stumbled into an etsy shop full of delicate rings. One stood out, fairly screaming at me... delicate, gold, single pearl on top.
And that's what I want.
My current wedding ring is still broken, and I have no plans to put it back on. ever.
I left home Saturday morning -the "morning after" -and came home Sunday noon-time. I spent my Saturday morning on a massage table and my afternoon rifling through antique shops.
My drive to the city is usually riddled with anxiety and white knuckles, but as I drove over icy roads and through holiday traffic, I was unfazed. I'm terrified of car accidents, but on Saturday I thought about what a welcome relief one would be. It would stop time. No one checked into a hospital for a car accident ever keeps track of time. Life slows down, people feed you, your children are taken care of. And you don't have to do anything but focus on letting your body heal.
As the massage therapist worked her steady hands into my flesh that morning, her soothing voice became almost bossy, "You have no choice but to take care of yourself physically. The stress... the stress has done so much damage. Can you feel me working heavy burdens out of your body?"
Answer: Yes. The most wonderful "ouch" ever.
As the sun went down behind the San Francisco Peaks in the city, I called the owners at my favorite Bed and Breakfast and asked if they might have -by some wild chance -the room under the stairs open.
The Harry Potter Room, they like to call it, though it's actually the house's old pantry room.
I could feel in my gut I needed to get stay away from home for the night, but I wanted a small room... a quiet room in an actual house where there was limitless hot water and a thick robe and complimentary chocolate milk.
Three years before when I'd hit my own rock bottom, I holed up in a tiny room at a Bed and Breakfast and wrote in a journal and cried and prayed. This trip was to be no different.
Because tender mercies are very REAL, The Harry Potter room was available. I poured myself into the red sheets and wrote.
The night after The Bucket of Water in my Face, I dreamed of a woman... she was standing on a barren street corner in a dirty wedding dress. She was a shell of a woman who once was. She was getting ready to be married again, but she had no feeling left, no love, no purpose. I tried to tell her that she was strong. In reply, she walked me down a hallway filled with memories of her first marriage. There was a table adorned with her tastes: colors, flavors, styles. There was a wedding cake. There were snap shots... each one featuring a beautiful young bride with bright gleaming eyes.
She didn't feel the same about them anymore... her memory of her own past had been altered.
As I sat in bed with my chocolate milk by my side, I felt like the girl from my dreams. She was a sort of modern Miss Havisham in her own right.
But my pen gives me power of expression, and I used that power to take my memories back. I went through each memory that had been taken from me and I took it back. I wrote myself a list of advice... a general guide for what I should have done.
Don't chase.
Ask more question about this and that.
Insist on better medical care.
You are not a fix.
I went into detail in each paragraph of advice, telling my old self how to do, what to do.
Don't ditch class.
Buy him gifts that are not sexual.
Don't have sex on your honeymoon.
Go on organized dates with no sexual agenda.
As the words poured out of me, I was angry. It was unfiltered, righteous indignation. The guilt that normally prevents me from honest anger was not allowed in the Harry Potter room.
At midnight I set my pen down, locked my door with the original skeleton key and fell asleep to the sound of downtown city living: trains, sirens, bass thumping in the distance...
The next morning, I woke up on my own before 6 am. I stepped into the shower and set the water as hot as I can stand it (boil a lobster has always been my default shower setting). I sat on the shower floor and let the hot water and steam cleanse me. Water, both literal and living, has been on the forefront of my recovery journey. After I'd soaked and steamed and cleansed for long enough, I wrapped myself in a lovely thick robe and climbed back into bed.
I put the pen to paper and once again wrote my truth. My angry words from the night before were a few pages and a hot shower behind me...and I wrote an unexpected invitation.
"I finally truly see reality, and as I face it with wild desire to escape, I welcome you into it. My bare memory walls need to be filled... I am going to be hard to live with for awhile as I exert my voice and give reign to my inner core... and with that, I issue an invitation... you come too."
And so it was with nervousness in his voice that he called and asked me on a date.
Lots of couples can go for five months without a date. It seems like no big thing, just another Wednesday night, right?
But for us -tonight -we are starting over.
It's a delicate pearl ring and Robert Frost kinda thing.
Thursday, August 1, 2013
The "H" Word
Once upon a time, I entered the world of recovery because I was an unmanageable mess. In a painful process of discovery and education, I began to understand how to live -truly live -again.
This morning, I woke up and and was amazed that despite the Mess that is My Marriage, I still functioned. I still laughed.
The garden was weeded.
The grass was watered.
The children attended swimming lessons.
I received an hour of training at my new job.
There were phone conversations and sandwiches and make up and baths and a gigantic slip n' slide at the park.
Why? WHY?
Because there's no hope. I have no hope. Without hope, there is no hurt. Without hope, I'm safe.
At least, that's what I thought.
And then, I met with the Stake President tonight. He called me for I Didn't Know What, and as he questioned me about a variety of things, he asked me some very pointed questions about my roll as a wife.
I was honest with him. I told him about my weekend, about my job, about my circumstances -all of which he was completely unaware of.
And then I admitted OUT LOUD -with a quick disclaimer that I wasn't happy about it -that I did have hope.
I did hope that we would be okay.
I drove away from the Stake President's Office. I went to Wal-Mart. I bought a bag of dark chocolate covered blueberries.
I ate them on the road home in a nervous, stressful fitful state.
HOPE! HOPE!
If I have hope, I'm not safe anymore...
In my shin-length polyester skirt that looks like something out of the 60s (which I actually think it is), I felt stark naked, vulnerable, exposed. I was a sitting stupid susceptible duck.
After ALL the hurt.
After ALL the years.
After it ALL.
I still felt hope. I called my sponsor and tried to talk it out, work it out in my head. I called my husband and started saying things like, "I'm married, but not. But not single. But I'm your wife. But I don't feel like it."
All the while stuffing my mouth with self-loathing and chocolate.
"I promise to forget you ever said the word HOPE," my husband said, "As far as I'm concerned, you don't have any."
I came home, hit my knees in prayer and asked my Father in Heaven OUTRIGHT.
"Does feeling hope mean that I am weak? stupid? susceptible?"
And the answer came... clearly, distinctly, "Alicia, hope is part of the Atonement. Your hope is in the Atonement."
Peace flooded through my being.
Except for my stomach, which had to be excused on account of the nausea induced by the bag of chocolate.
I DO feel hope.
I do HAVE hope.
For a few awful hours tonight, I thought my hope was anchored in my husband, and that thought was enough to send me into insanity. But the truth is, my hope is anchored firmly in the Atonement of Jesus Christ.
The Atonement has the power to change men.
The Atonement has the power to heal broken hearts.
No matter what the future holds, the Atonement applies to it -a blanket, miraculous balm.
I trust in it and I hope in it.
And THAT is something that makes me rather the opposite of weak, naked, susceptible, vulnerable, and stupid.
I don't WANT my husband to forget I ever said it.
Before he left for his training this week, I told him I couldn't say the H word.
But one enlightening conversation and empty bag of chocolate later... I CAN say it, and I WILL say it.
I hope on.
This morning, I woke up and and was amazed that despite the Mess that is My Marriage, I still functioned. I still laughed.
The garden was weeded.
The grass was watered.
The children attended swimming lessons.
I received an hour of training at my new job.
There were phone conversations and sandwiches and make up and baths and a gigantic slip n' slide at the park.
Why? WHY?
Because there's no hope. I have no hope. Without hope, there is no hurt. Without hope, I'm safe.
At least, that's what I thought.
And then, I met with the Stake President tonight. He called me for I Didn't Know What, and as he questioned me about a variety of things, he asked me some very pointed questions about my roll as a wife.
I was honest with him. I told him about my weekend, about my job, about my circumstances -all of which he was completely unaware of.
And then I admitted OUT LOUD -with a quick disclaimer that I wasn't happy about it -that I did have hope.
I did hope that we would be okay.
I drove away from the Stake President's Office. I went to Wal-Mart. I bought a bag of dark chocolate covered blueberries.
I ate them on the road home in a nervous, stressful fitful state.
HOPE! HOPE!
If I have hope, I'm not safe anymore...
In my shin-length polyester skirt that looks like something out of the 60s (which I actually think it is), I felt stark naked, vulnerable, exposed. I was a sitting stupid susceptible duck.
After ALL the hurt.
After ALL the years.
After it ALL.
I still felt hope. I called my sponsor and tried to talk it out, work it out in my head. I called my husband and started saying things like, "I'm married, but not. But not single. But I'm your wife. But I don't feel like it."
All the while stuffing my mouth with self-loathing and chocolate.
"I promise to forget you ever said the word HOPE," my husband said, "As far as I'm concerned, you don't have any."
I came home, hit my knees in prayer and asked my Father in Heaven OUTRIGHT.
"Does feeling hope mean that I am weak? stupid? susceptible?"
And the answer came... clearly, distinctly, "Alicia, hope is part of the Atonement. Your hope is in the Atonement."
Peace flooded through my being.
Except for my stomach, which had to be excused on account of the nausea induced by the bag of chocolate.
I DO feel hope.
I do HAVE hope.
For a few awful hours tonight, I thought my hope was anchored in my husband, and that thought was enough to send me into insanity. But the truth is, my hope is anchored firmly in the Atonement of Jesus Christ.
The Atonement has the power to change men.
The Atonement has the power to heal broken hearts.
No matter what the future holds, the Atonement applies to it -a blanket, miraculous balm.
I trust in it and I hope in it.
And THAT is something that makes me rather the opposite of weak, naked, susceptible, vulnerable, and stupid.
I don't WANT my husband to forget I ever said it.
Before he left for his training this week, I told him I couldn't say the H word.
But one enlightening conversation and empty bag of chocolate later... I CAN say it, and I WILL say it.
I hope on.
Monday, July 15, 2013
The Reciprocation Effect
via ocsoldier.blogspot.com
Last week, I went to my knees in prayer and asked the Lord each day what He would have me do... not because I'm humble like that, not because Step 7 told me to... but because I was stuck, I was despairing, and I could of mine own self do nothing.
Nuh-theen.
I was harrowed about with chaos, so to speak. I went to my knees because there was nowhere else to go, and the Lord is kind enough to let my life spin out of control because He knows at this point in my life -hopefully not forever -Alicia won't ask of the Lord unless there's nowhere else to go.
Alicia will read books first.
Alicia will consult Google.
Alicia will consult research and her elders...
and when all man made means fail, when she has exhausted every faucet in her mortal reach, she'll fling up her hands and through tears will cry out, "I can't do ANYTHING. So tell me what to do."
Why am I so unteachable? Why do I have to keep going through this process?
Why am I so intent on fixing myself?
Each day as I surrendered my unmanageable life, I found simplicity, peace, and perspective.
Did I tell you about my new calling? I'm the wahrd arrganist.
This means I spend the hour of Sacrament meeting tucked neatly in a corner behind a blaze of glowing buttons with no children tugging at me.
After a frustrating morning of trying to get everyone to church early so I could play prelude, a fight with my husband over triggers and stupid addiction, and my husband getting called into work... I plunked my baby in my unsuspecting aunt's lap 10 minutes before Sacrament was to start and craned my neck five minutes into my Prelude to see if my other children had found caretakers in the sea of The Community helping to raise my children.
They had.
I exhaled. As the meeting wore on and I listened to our amazingly valiant youth bear strong testimonies that had been built and strengthened during their past week at Youth Conference, I thumbed through the lesson I was about to teach in Relief Society.
The lesson was on submitting our will to our Father's. And as we all know -MM best of all -there is no such thing as coincidence.
That lesson was absolutely meant for me.
Through my studies, I stumbled onto Matthew 20.
In the end, the Lord is passing by two blind men. They call out to him, they are shamed by the multitude surrounding the Savior, but they call out again.
What happened?
Jesus was still.
And then He asked of them, "What will ye that I shall do unto you?"
I stopped short and stared at the scripture. It touched something deep inside of me, and I went back a few verses to read again. This time I saw in my mind's eye that the two blind men were actually myself and my husband, calling out, calling out, desperately reaching out for healing despite the shame induced by the crowd.
And the Savior is still. He has all the time in the world for healing.
"What will ye that I shall do unto you?"
It turns out that AS I WAIT upon the Savior, HE is waiting upon ME.
Blessings are waiting for us -my husband and I -if we surrender and submit our wills.
Healing awaits as we call out to the Master.
I am blind in so many mortal and confining ways, but of this I see and know for a surety: The Savior is alive. The Savior is walking by his blind sister and his blind brother, and He is still and asking what He can do for us.
All I have need of is to call out.
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Overnighter
My husband just got home from an overnight work thing-y.
I enjoyed him being gone... not in the "good, he's GONE" kind of way, but in the "yay! less dishes!" kind of way.
I visited with my sisters-in-law and listened as they expounded on their inability to sleep if their husbands are gone, and then I went home at 10:15 pm and slept soundly... alone in my bed.
Years ago, it was a different story entirely. When my husband worked graveyards, I was a mess. I would call him constantly.
"Would you drive by and spotlight the house?"
"I think I heard something..."
"Where are you?"
I tried not to hassle him, so I would spend a lot of time tossing and turning with a pit of fear in my stomach.
All that time alone, at night, alone, with his smart phone...
Toss, turn, toss, turn.
Progress, right? It felt like progress right up until the point when he came home and I felt like I was just waiting for the bomb to drop.
"I had a hard time."
"It was a rough night."
Nothing. He said nothing about it. I couldn't shake it.
Was he going to confess? Was it in my future? Was he too scared? Should I just ask?
"No," my gut said, "Let it the heck go."
All day I shook it off, and we fell asleep next to each other in a half-stupor (kids make us tired).
This morning I finally said, "This is weird. Okay? This is just weird. I feel like I'm waiting for you to come and disclose something after having stayed overnight somewhere."
"I've stayed places without problems before," he said.
"I know that... it's just... this is like a weird adjustment for me."
"Nothing happened," he chuckled.
Nothing happened.
It's true. He's not lying. And instead of me patting him on the back and giving him thumbs up, I'm standing off to the side and scratching my head.
This is weird.
What do I do with this reality?
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Sunrise
A few years ago, I hit my rock bottom. In an effort pick myself up, I got online and ordered a book for wives of men who are addicted to porn. I read it almost completely through and then booked a room in a Bed and Breakfast for a weekend. I went alone.
My room was in a small, detached old building behind the B&B. It was the upstairs room. The ceiling was slanted, there was barely enough room to walk around. It was perfect for one person -for one very sad person with no agenda but to attend the temple, read scriptures, journal, pray and cry.
And, as it turns out, YELL at Heavenly Father.
I did eat some, I guess.
and shower that one time.
I came home, and I felt prompted to watch the sunrise. I didn't know why, but I did it anyway. When I was done, I came inside and I wrote about it. After reading Jane's post this morning, I remembered my experience with the dawn. I pulled it out and read it, and I knew I needed to post it here. It goes right along with what I'm learning and doing TODAY -two years later. The Lord is so wise -his wisdom infinite.
via fitdeck.com
January 17th, 2011
My room was in a small, detached old building behind the B&B. It was the upstairs room. The ceiling was slanted, there was barely enough room to walk around. It was perfect for one person -for one very sad person with no agenda but to attend the temple, read scriptures, journal, pray and cry.
And, as it turns out, YELL at Heavenly Father.
I did eat some, I guess.
and shower that one time.
I came home, and I felt prompted to watch the sunrise. I didn't know why, but I did it anyway. When I was done, I came inside and I wrote about it. After reading Jane's post this morning, I remembered my experience with the dawn. I pulled it out and read it, and I knew I needed to post it here. It goes right along with what I'm learning and doing TODAY -two years later. The Lord is so wise -his wisdom infinite.
January 17th, 2011
I didn’t want to step outside.
I cracked open my screen door and hesitated. I can’t remember the last time I watched the sunrise -I can’t remember if there has ever been a first time. I woke up this morning determined to watch it -determined to see what I KNEW to be a glorious and beautiful transformation of nature.
But there I stood on the precipice of my personal morning devotional… scared. I’ve always been afraid of the dark, and I began to doubt if my determination to see the sunrise was enough to get me to step over the line between the comfort of my warm home to the darkness that enveloped my front yard.
With a deep breath, I gripped my quart-size mason jar filled with hot herbal tea, straightened the beenie I crocheted for my husband last year (which he insisted on plunking on my head as I dressed this morning), and I took that first step.
I could barely see a thing. I looked around for a source of light and found only stars, those “rulers of the night” who persist in feigning the glory of the sun. They barely glimmered enough light to make themselves known, save one.
One stood out above all the rest. His glow was far brighter, far stronger than all the rest, yet it was not nearly bright enough. I looked out on the horizon and saw a hope of a sunrise, and that was enough to satisfy me for the moment. I gripped my hot tea close to my body and looked around. In the darkness, there was little movement. The last few stubborn leaves of fall clung to my trees, rustling in the very slight breeze. There were no birds singing -no birds flying. I looked back to the horizon and saw little change.
I folded my arms and asked my Father in Heaven to help me see the beauty of the sunrise -to fully FEEL of it. I closed my prayer, opened my eyes, and the horizon was glowing brighter.
I looked to the sky and noticed the stars had seemed to vanish completely. The soft glow of promised sunlight was enough to beat them into silent submission. In earnest, I looked for the brightest of the stars. He was still making his presence very much known -still clinging on in the foolish hope that he would come off conquerer.
A movement on my left caught my eye, and I turned to see a bird flying low to the ground as if to test the first light. The morning breeze picked up, and I took sips from my warm tea in hopes that my body would store up some heat.
The colors of the horizon continued to shift and change, and I watched.
The distant clouds radiated indescribable hues of pinks, golds, blues, and violets. It was breathtaking. I fixated my eyes on it, giving myself up to it’s spell-like state.
How is the stubborn star fending? I wondered. Glancing up, I saw that he had diminished to a tiny fleck, but still glowing. How badly I wanted to tell him to fade, to give up. He looked so sad, standing up against the unconquerable force of the Sun.
All at once, I became aware of the freezing temperature around me. Had it actually gotten colder? I sipped on my tepid tea, and shifted my weight from one leg to the other. The thought came to me to just… go inside. Give up. The sun would rise tomorrow and the next day and the next week and the next year.
Why should you endure it today? The stubborn star seemed to ask.
Had I endured the initial fear of darkness and the bitterness of cold to simply turn back now? Now? Just when the Sun was so close I felt as if I could climb a tree and SEE it?
No, I shook my head at the faint star.
No, I will not give up. I will stand to see you fail. I will stand to see the Sun.
In a sudden stroke of genius put on by the utter lack of bodily warmth, I put my cold herbal tea down, sipped my thick leather coat up, and began walking. I turned and walked toward the Sun.
The early morning wind picked up more speed, biting at my face. I found a safe place to shield me from the wind and offer me a better view of the Sun and waited. The dim star begged me to return indoors.
I refused to yield, though my resolve was weakening. I glanced around to see more birds flying, but now they had lifted themselves high off the ground. The Sun had instilled confidence in their flight. In the distance, a rooster crowed. As if the Chorus of the Birds had taken it as their cue, their quiet, soothing sounds permeated the silence of morning.
I stretched out my frame -stretching it out until it was AS TALL as it could be. I fixed my eyes on the horizon and strained to see…
And there He was. Rising up against the darkness of night, the Sun transformed the earth with his brilliance. I took in a deep, satisfying breath.
The fear I had felt upon leaving my front door was completely wiped away, and I took the short walk back home with all of the confidence in the world. Just as I turned away, I looked up.
The Star was barely discernable in the sky, flickering out his last lights before succumbing to the Sun’s extinguishing powers. He had lost, but he meant to rise again.
And he will rise again. Every night, he’ll come out to rule.
But how pathetic is the kingdom he rules -how short-lived is his reign.
There is hope smiling brightly before him and behind him, and that hope is greater than he. That hope is greater than little me. That hope is the reason life comes out and fear dissipates.
That hope is the reason I have confidence in today.
I cracked open my screen door and hesitated. I can’t remember the last time I watched the sunrise -I can’t remember if there has ever been a first time. I woke up this morning determined to watch it -determined to see what I KNEW to be a glorious and beautiful transformation of nature.
But there I stood on the precipice of my personal morning devotional… scared. I’ve always been afraid of the dark, and I began to doubt if my determination to see the sunrise was enough to get me to step over the line between the comfort of my warm home to the darkness that enveloped my front yard.
With a deep breath, I gripped my quart-size mason jar filled with hot herbal tea, straightened the beenie I crocheted for my husband last year (which he insisted on plunking on my head as I dressed this morning), and I took that first step.
I could barely see a thing. I looked around for a source of light and found only stars, those “rulers of the night” who persist in feigning the glory of the sun. They barely glimmered enough light to make themselves known, save one.
One stood out above all the rest. His glow was far brighter, far stronger than all the rest, yet it was not nearly bright enough. I looked out on the horizon and saw a hope of a sunrise, and that was enough to satisfy me for the moment. I gripped my hot tea close to my body and looked around. In the darkness, there was little movement. The last few stubborn leaves of fall clung to my trees, rustling in the very slight breeze. There were no birds singing -no birds flying. I looked back to the horizon and saw little change.
I folded my arms and asked my Father in Heaven to help me see the beauty of the sunrise -to fully FEEL of it. I closed my prayer, opened my eyes, and the horizon was glowing brighter.
I looked to the sky and noticed the stars had seemed to vanish completely. The soft glow of promised sunlight was enough to beat them into silent submission. In earnest, I looked for the brightest of the stars. He was still making his presence very much known -still clinging on in the foolish hope that he would come off conquerer.
A movement on my left caught my eye, and I turned to see a bird flying low to the ground as if to test the first light. The morning breeze picked up, and I took sips from my warm tea in hopes that my body would store up some heat.
The colors of the horizon continued to shift and change, and I watched.
The distant clouds radiated indescribable hues of pinks, golds, blues, and violets. It was breathtaking. I fixated my eyes on it, giving myself up to it’s spell-like state.
How is the stubborn star fending? I wondered. Glancing up, I saw that he had diminished to a tiny fleck, but still glowing. How badly I wanted to tell him to fade, to give up. He looked so sad, standing up against the unconquerable force of the Sun.
All at once, I became aware of the freezing temperature around me. Had it actually gotten colder? I sipped on my tepid tea, and shifted my weight from one leg to the other. The thought came to me to just… go inside. Give up. The sun would rise tomorrow and the next day and the next week and the next year.
Why should you endure it today? The stubborn star seemed to ask.
Had I endured the initial fear of darkness and the bitterness of cold to simply turn back now? Now? Just when the Sun was so close I felt as if I could climb a tree and SEE it?
No, I shook my head at the faint star.
No, I will not give up. I will stand to see you fail. I will stand to see the Sun.
In a sudden stroke of genius put on by the utter lack of bodily warmth, I put my cold herbal tea down, sipped my thick leather coat up, and began walking. I turned and walked toward the Sun.
The early morning wind picked up more speed, biting at my face. I found a safe place to shield me from the wind and offer me a better view of the Sun and waited. The dim star begged me to return indoors.
I refused to yield, though my resolve was weakening. I glanced around to see more birds flying, but now they had lifted themselves high off the ground. The Sun had instilled confidence in their flight. In the distance, a rooster crowed. As if the Chorus of the Birds had taken it as their cue, their quiet, soothing sounds permeated the silence of morning.
I stretched out my frame -stretching it out until it was AS TALL as it could be. I fixed my eyes on the horizon and strained to see…
And there He was. Rising up against the darkness of night, the Sun transformed the earth with his brilliance. I took in a deep, satisfying breath.
The fear I had felt upon leaving my front door was completely wiped away, and I took the short walk back home with all of the confidence in the world. Just as I turned away, I looked up.
The Star was barely discernable in the sky, flickering out his last lights before succumbing to the Sun’s extinguishing powers. He had lost, but he meant to rise again.
And he will rise again. Every night, he’ll come out to rule.
But how pathetic is the kingdom he rules -how short-lived is his reign.
There is hope smiling brightly before him and behind him, and that hope is greater than he. That hope is greater than little me. That hope is the reason life comes out and fear dissipates.
That hope is the reason I have confidence in today.
Friday, March 29, 2013
And That's Okay
My marriage isn't in tip-top shape.
There are no love notes on the mirror, no voluntary foot rubs, no giggling or gushing.
There also isn't any hatred, contempt, or name calling.
Right now, our marriage just IS.
When our marriage plateaued like this in the past, I would go into all-out FIX mode. I couldn't STAND for our marriage to not be functioning at it's all-time BEST.
But I don't want to fix anything anymore because I CAN'T fix anything. No matter how much I hug, or compliment, or curl my hair or cook or put on a happy face, I can't fix.
I can smother him in kisses and love notes and spread sunshine and gush all over the atmosphere of our home, but there would be an undercurrent of frustration. Forced sunshine just isn't as pleasurable. Just... don't tell that to Dr. Laura. She makes her bank on the idea...
Neither one of us feels good, health-wise.
He's got bad, bad allergies, and I've got who KNOWS what going on (test results impending). Suffice to say: I'm really tired. I can normally function on 5 hours of sleep, and the night before last I got in bed at 9 pm (after falling asleep on the couch at 8:30 while trying to watch "Wreck it Ralph" with the kids) and woke up at 8 am.
That's not normal for me, even WITH a brand new baby. And what did I want all day? A nap.
My husband is reading a lot of recovery material these days, and I don't really know what's going on.
Sometimes he's so aware. The other night, he forced me to sit down while he cooked dinner (grilled cheese tastes SO good when someone else makes it). Sometimes he's so unaware.
It's a tricky place to be in when you see one man and another within hours of each other. Which one do I trust?
Neither.
I'm learning how to appreciate one without planting my hope in him.
I'm learning how to see the other for what he is rather than identifying him AS my husband.
So basically: on top of being physically spent, I'm brain dead trying to analyze it all out.
And the ending result is a plateau.
I'm strangely okay with my marriage being a mess on a plateau.
It doesn't bother me. There's still an undercurrent of frustration, but it's faint. I don't give it reign to rule... I only give it reign to express itself in prayer and the occasional bout of tears in the bathtub. I can't force it down. If it's here, it's here. And I need to let it out, and so I do.
BUT I'm finding an undercurrent under the undercurrent.
It's hope... hope that's been planted in the Savior and his Atoning Sacrifice.
Gentle hope rather than frantic hope.
Peaceful hope rather than panicked hope.
Hope in myself.
Hope in a stable, taken-care-of future.
Solid, safe, springtime Hope.
How timely.
There are no love notes on the mirror, no voluntary foot rubs, no giggling or gushing.
There also isn't any hatred, contempt, or name calling.
Right now, our marriage just IS.
When our marriage plateaued like this in the past, I would go into all-out FIX mode. I couldn't STAND for our marriage to not be functioning at it's all-time BEST.
But I don't want to fix anything anymore because I CAN'T fix anything. No matter how much I hug, or compliment, or curl my hair or cook or put on a happy face, I can't fix.
I can smother him in kisses and love notes and spread sunshine and gush all over the atmosphere of our home, but there would be an undercurrent of frustration. Forced sunshine just isn't as pleasurable. Just... don't tell that to Dr. Laura. She makes her bank on the idea...
Neither one of us feels good, health-wise.
He's got bad, bad allergies, and I've got who KNOWS what going on (test results impending). Suffice to say: I'm really tired. I can normally function on 5 hours of sleep, and the night before last I got in bed at 9 pm (after falling asleep on the couch at 8:30 while trying to watch "Wreck it Ralph" with the kids) and woke up at 8 am.
That's not normal for me, even WITH a brand new baby. And what did I want all day? A nap.
My husband is reading a lot of recovery material these days, and I don't really know what's going on.
Sometimes he's so aware. The other night, he forced me to sit down while he cooked dinner (grilled cheese tastes SO good when someone else makes it). Sometimes he's so unaware.
It's a tricky place to be in when you see one man and another within hours of each other. Which one do I trust?
Neither.
I'm learning how to appreciate one without planting my hope in him.
I'm learning how to see the other for what he is rather than identifying him AS my husband.
So basically: on top of being physically spent, I'm brain dead trying to analyze it all out.
And the ending result is a plateau.
I'm strangely okay with my marriage being a mess on a plateau.
It doesn't bother me. There's still an undercurrent of frustration, but it's faint. I don't give it reign to rule... I only give it reign to express itself in prayer and the occasional bout of tears in the bathtub. I can't force it down. If it's here, it's here. And I need to let it out, and so I do.
BUT I'm finding an undercurrent under the undercurrent.
It's hope... hope that's been planted in the Savior and his Atoning Sacrifice.
Gentle hope rather than frantic hope.
Peaceful hope rather than panicked hope.
Hope in myself.
Hope in a stable, taken-care-of future.
Solid, safe, springtime Hope.
How timely.
Labels:
Addiction,
Hope,
Marriage,
The Atonement,
The Savior
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