In high school, my entire world fell apart. Granted, when
one is in high school, her world is ridiculously small. My two best friends left my school – leaving me
friendless and questioning everything. I
felt empty and sad and lonely and hurt. So much sophomore pain. In an effort to survive, I threw myself into
any and every activity that school provided – both within the classroom and
without. Knowledge Bowl, Golf Team, ASB,
Worship Team – you name it, I was on it. I found a new circle of friends and I
moved on. Though a large part of me still felt lost, I chose to ignore the
pain.
I graduated and headed to college. Somehow, even with this brand
new start, the empty, sad, lonely hurt found me there too. So, I explored the big city, found a job at the library, played the piano for hours - but I could not shake the pain. So I moved home.
I lived with my parents while attending a local university. I was sad, lonely, empty. I was at a new university and felt completely on the outside. So, I threw myself into church activities and Bible studies and game nights. I smiled and laughed and forced my feet into running shoes in the name of cheap therapy. The pain was stuffed away, left to be dealt with another day.
When I look back over my life, I have seen a pattern of running. Running away from the uncomfortable, running away from the pain. If I can distract myself with other things, it is almost as though I can deny the pain exists. Rather than face the pain, I either attempt to fix it or I flee it. A few months ago, in the midst of this crazy, heart-wrenching journey, a phrase came to mind that has stuck with me:
Sit in the pain.
I am a fixer. I am a mover and a shaker. And I get things done. If it's broken, I'll find a way to fix it. If it runs inefficiently, I'll change the process. If it hurts, I run, I distract myself, I numb it away. I don't let pain wash over me. Rather, I jump the waves and pretend like it's not splashing my ankles.
In this season of infertility, I find myself falling into those same tendencies. I could just "fix it" by continuing to run every test known to mankind or by jumping into the adoption process. I could run from it by continuing to immerse myself in work and ministry. But, lately, I've sensed that God is calling me to a third alternative: Rest. Sit. Stay. Feel.
Like gold refined, I want to force my hand to the fire to allow the heat of this trial to incinerate those human parts of me that cling so fiercely. I want the heat of suffering to build in me the character of Jesus for the glory of God. I want this pain to have purpose.
Sit in the pain.
I am a fixer. I am a mover and a shaker. And I get things done. If it's broken, I'll find a way to fix it. If it runs inefficiently, I'll change the process. If it hurts, I run, I distract myself, I numb it away. I don't let pain wash over me. Rather, I jump the waves and pretend like it's not splashing my ankles.
In this season of infertility, I find myself falling into those same tendencies. I could just "fix it" by continuing to run every test known to mankind or by jumping into the adoption process. I could run from it by continuing to immerse myself in work and ministry. But, lately, I've sensed that God is calling me to a third alternative: Rest. Sit. Stay. Feel.
Like gold refined, I want to force my hand to the fire to allow the heat of this trial to incinerate those human parts of me that cling so fiercely. I want the heat of suffering to build in me the character of Jesus for the glory of God. I want this pain to have purpose.
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