Wednesday, October 29, 2014

The Feel of Salvation

I am a small person against the backdrop of this universe

I crush up my cruel thoughts and feed them to my cruel sins

I am small and in-between the cracks of what this is and what that will be

The ground has hardness to it, when I take my small steps
            I crush the ground as I crawl along, unable to sneak up
                        Unable to sliver silently by with my crushed thoughts and cruel sins

I spread it all out on this ground and grind it up to show I have a hard heart

I given what I’ve got
            I’ve gotten so small; I’ve forgotten how to stand

Seeing myself near the pavement, pressing against the cool night concrete

I remind myself, man made this
            It’s hardness, its nowhere-ness,
It’s cruelly cut through the natural world to bring us to more man made stuff

I sprawl out and weep, I cry, I pray
            Well, I wish this humanness in me would just leap out and run
                        Pound itself against the pavement
                                    Run hard and fast, furiously away with my cruelness,
Crushing out my sin

I am only this small person

I am staring straight up on the dark street,
Forgetting that the street light still shines on me

Forgetting blood seeps into everything,
It seeped in before I crammed myself into the cracks

            Blood had drenched me long before what any of this is
And what any of this will be

Pressing my arms out, I grope the ground for leverage

And find the serenity of soft flesh, strong and un-remorseful

Without my efforts I feel lifted and tilted forward.

I dared not look, I might evaporate

I dare not speak, I might scream out

I finally stood, on his playing ground
He stepped back, and hurled his strength at me

I thought I’d feel bruised, punished, banished

But I looked hard at the ground

I saw nothing but the blood, its might crushed hard against the cruel thoughts

The cruel sin that had pull so hard at my shaking hands
It seeped away into nothingness

He spoke, so softly

            “I did this for you long before this road was poured.”
                        “Now walk, child, and lay in this place no more.”

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

The questions life produces, what's that sticky thing on my sock and how to love a zoo.

There I was, in the bathroom, looking up and asked the age old question I always ask.

"Why is that there?"

'There' was the wall hanger, 'that' was an empty plastic Wal-mart bag.  There that was, just hangin' out on a coat hangar in the bathroom- doing nothing much and not really makin' any sense as to what it's purpose being there was.

"Why is that there?"
"Who put this here?"
"What's that doing out here?"
"Who put that out there and what's it doing and why would you do that?"

I am the poster child for stupid questions. I know this because every time I ask the questions, my family stares at me like, well, like I just asked a stupid question.  Typically I'm thought of just naggin', just patronizing, just startin' trouble where trouble didn't need startin!  But the truth is, really I am genuinely curious. I'm always scratching my head at stuff around here. I'm always confused. I'm always truly baffled at the decisions of how this home is in this state.  And really, how does this stuff end up where it does!

Let's just take a moment now. This is my home. I work relatively hard at it.  I try, really I do.  If you walked in now, there's a moment of normal-ness, but hang out for a while- you'll start to notice "the weird stuff".

There's an empty plastic bag in the bathroom hanging out on a coat hangar.  There's an old disposable camera on a small wall shelf with picture decals.  There's a bottle of hand lotion from some Christmas gift set tuck away in a corner of the frig and wall.  I find coffee mugs everywhere, half drank and varying degrees of age. I find them in the bathroom, on counters, on window sills, outside in the middle of the yard, on logs, on the back of anything with a flat surface.  There's underwear everywhere.  I don't know why.  I don't know why underwear is under the couch, on the couch, hanging off the couch, I don't know why it's in the shoes or even inside the playhouse in Zach's room. There are boots in the potty. There are sneakers in the drawers in the living room.  Sometimes I find packages of pasta in the toy box.

So, I have questions.  Lots.

But this is my home.  And the plastic bag, just made me laugh at myself. Have you ever really thought of your life and how your home functions.  I do.  I am.  Everyone has a way of explaining their lives. I do this with my day, my husband does that and the kids have this or that today.  We go to this, this is how we discipline, this is what we read, this is what we like, this is how we love dinner or special occasions.  But that's the general sweeping outlook of home and life.  I'm talking about the little stuff, the tiny fragments of everyday and every details that is literally your life.  The questions all around that make up home.

I use to really enjoy housekeeping and cleaning, honestly!  When it was the two of us and no kids and full time jobs, I had a safe handle on it.  But the kids came, I started to stay home and I entered a hilarious war zone I never imaged.  You know the slogan "You may have won this battle, but we'll win the war!!!!"  Well, I sort of have the opposite strategy for tackling this place.  I'll never win the war, so I win some battles.

Oh, I'm not throwing my poor boys under any "momma's got it so rough" buses.  Heck, a lot of my questions, the answer lays with me.  "Jen, why did you put the bottle of lotion on the frig?" "Jen, why did you leave the laundry folded out on the couch for two days, so little boys could flail through it and wave underwear around at each other, the dog, the cat, on top of the hot wheels?"

This house operates on the energy level of today.  I have little pet peeves and little anal retentive battles of organizing and keeping it all together.  I can not stand doors opened- not frigs, not cabinets, not drawers, not nothin'!  This is one of the battles I set out to win, I'll spend all day shutting things.  I try to make sense of my cabinets.  I have a cabinet for plastic ware and lids, I have a cabinet for dishes and bowls. I have a cabinet for food and even one for the pots and pans.  But just because I have these ideas, doesn't mean my household shares my affinity for keeping it that way. I find plastic ware with the pots and pans. I find the peelers, the mixing spoons, the can openers in with the flatware.  And the dishes and bowls! Oh, just forget it!

Once I tried to be really helpful! I had a questions!

"Huh, why are the bowls out of order?'
"Why are there large bowls on top of small bowls on top of various sized plates?"

Yep, I know-stupid questions.  I thought I'd be helpful and have a small demonstration on how to properly stack and organize plates, bowls and such.  I was wrong.  And the strangest fight of my marriage ensued.

So, this is my home. Its got a little rhythm to it, and a splash of insanity.  There are toys everywhere, despite my long day of picking up and putting away.  I wouldn't eat off my floors. No, really don't! They have hair all over them, something sticky lives in the corner and half the gravel pit is scattered about my place.  Random items have random spots, such as the lotion.  Things just get placed quickly down when running after a two year old that's about to dive bomb off the table on to the end table. And there that item sits, slightly forgotten, mostly un-cared about.

I don't like cooking. I don't pretend to and I doubt I'll ever bother to really care to try.  So, it's a safe bet you'll find nothing stewing, prepping or marinating in this house for any sort of meal on any given day (maybe once in a great while or if Marc's home to prepare us something yummy); however, if you open my microwave- you will open the gateway to love.  Splattered love of an assortment of meals all prepared for the nutriment and adoration of my family.  And please don't question what's in the frig, some questions I don't even ask.

I have Facebook, I'm privy to so many lives and in it I find I have no idea how so many live! I see snap shot of completed projects, of little children sitting sweetly in clean bedrooms, beautifully adorned tables, matching drapery and living room sets in freshly made over spaces!  Floors so clean I'd eat off them! I hear great moments of chores completed, task list check off! Photos of deliciously groomed gardens and landscaped lawns! I see order and routine to the extreme degree I could only dream of such things truly existing. An alternate universe where rooms gleam with detailed attention and shimmering shine.  I look around my house and all I see is my humble little war zone.

I see boys.  I see pets, I see my absent mindedness and my attempted projects.  I see my husband's whirlwind search for a pair of clippers.  I see Zach's curiosity of what happens when you unroll all the paper towels.  I see Isaac's desperate need to have everything tipped over or upside down.  I see plastic bags hanging out with no plan to be useful.  I see questions, endless questions of why? How? Where? When? Who?!

But I love my questions, I love them because they have so many answers.  They answer the questions to how my home breathes, lives, functions and gets about day to day.  Battles, ladies and gentleman, battles of love is how you run your household.  Don't even bother to try win the war, that's about as successful as living in a dream of getting your own way and having clean floor to eat off of and matching furniture.  Just find a battle you can win, ask some questions and prepared for the blank looks and the feeling you might be a little dense.

Just enjoy the joy that you live in a zoo and your its keeper. Besides, who has time for all the routine, order and cleanliness when there's an riveting game of hide-and-seek and tickle monster afoot!


(And yes, the plastic bag is still hangin' out, I'll get to it. Eventually.)

Sunday, October 5, 2014

Us

He was so nice.  He smiled down at me, jumped up and bounded down a few steps to introduce himself and shake my hand. 

I was twenty-two, full of myself and taken back by his friendliness.  I had just returned from my excursion in Colorado and was moving into my mother’s apartment.  She lived downstairs and he lived upstairs.  I can’t remember my disposition to him, knowing what and who I was back then- I’m sure I was friendly enough, but my sincerity would've been skin deep and I’m sure there was coldness to my response.  But he was Marc and he didn’t care. He’d be charming and friendly despite me.

I lived downstairs for nearly a year. We didn’t hit it right off.  I was loud, brash, reckless and wild with my youth.  I was vain and did foolish things I don’t dare or care to confess this go around for a story.  This story is about Marc, not my dark and sordid tale of how I spent my teens and twenties. 

This is our love story and how I never could or would stay away from my best friend.

After nearly a year, we did spend a few evening out with friends together, enough so the ice was broken and we at least had more then one passing conversation.  In honesty, I had developed a small crush on my upstairs neighbor, but I didn’t pay much attention to it.  Mostly, I hated his loud, screaming music.  I thought his friends seemed immature and obnoxious when they’d visit (although, in time, I grew to adore and love most of them) and I probably, actually, frankly thought there was someone out there better for me.

Boy, was I wrong. God knew the truth. I wasn't too good for Marc, he would be too good for me. But he’d love me anyways.

I remember being angry and drunk.  I remember feeling alone and mad at my life.  It was two am. I was sitting by myself in my apartment and I thought I heard movement in the upstairs apartment. Maybe he’s up, I thought.  I stumbled upstairs and knocked on the door. I didn’t know what I thought I’d say or how he’d react to me standing there, but he answered.

And this is my line.

“Can I come inside and watch some anime with you?” 

Yep, that what I said. 

He smirked at me, “Um, sure.”

Marc and I weren't Christians. We didn’t make good decisions. I spare you details of what sort of lives we had lived.  Let’s leave it at this- I’m sure Marc was thinking it was his lucky night to have his drunken neighbor come up to his apartment so late.  I didn’t know what I was thinking; I just knew I didn’t want to be alone. I sat on his floor and he started the movie.  He was sitting on his bed; I was lying on the floor with a pillow. And that was the end of me that night; dead asleep, probably snoring.  I’m sure Marc fell asleep thinking, “What was that?”

I woke in the morning and went home. And that was the first night of us.  So a few days meander on…..

It was sunny and crisp outside. I was probably hung-over, but I enjoyed being up early. I was hanging out my wash when Marc came home from his night out.  We talked for a bit and he asked me to breakfast with him.  We walked to the Coach House Restaurant. I watched Marc consume large quantities of chocolate chip pancakes and bacon. It made me feel sick just watching it, but he was so nice. And this started our history.

We had our honeymoon period. We spent countless days together, we laughed a lot, we camped all the time, we had our wild nights together- spending too much money and drinking ourselves into stupid memories. Marc thought I had a spontaneous side, as one night he looked at me and said, “Hey, there’s a show in Boston, let’s go now!”  And I said, “Sure!”  We hoped in my ’94 Chevy Z24 and found ourselves in Boston having a blast. We camped out on the side of the road on the way home; cops came by in the morning to tell us we needed to be on our way (ah, memories!).

Yeah, it takes time to get to know someone. Marc learned, I’m not spontaneous at all. I’m barely adventurous and I have nervous breakdowns if my life has no routine.  But he loves me anyways.

Marc and I were wild and selfish.  We were both immersed in a culture of alcohol and wild nights.  We handled each other’s personalities and differences terribly.  We could be cutting and cruel to one another.  We were young, immature and defiantly independent.  We had worldly views that skewed our thinking “Me first, then maybe you.”  We misunderstood love as a feeling, not the act of sacrificing.  We split up several times, both us engaging into destructive patterns at times and making painful choices that should have destroyed any chances of renewal, let alone even friendship.

But at the heart of each of us, the idea of not having each other always proved to be too painful. That was unbearable.  Through tough times, long break ups and miserable memories; somehow, we held on to the friendship. It like knowing you can’t let go of family, our love was blood to us- necessary for our life.  Between the hard times, we had genuine and honest times. We knew how to have fun with each other, we knew how to listen to one another and though we struggled, we knew how to care for each other.  We poured ourselves into each other, so when the bad times struck (and boy did they strike)- the work we had done wasn't lost.  At times, we may have lost the romance or physical side of ourselves, but at the heart of it- the friendship was strong and survived.  And you’re darn right I have thanked and thanked and thanked God for that. I won’t share Marc and I tumultuous times.  They were painful, wrong and nasty.  They’re our memories- we've forgiven them and let them go- and in the past is where they belong. They did nothing for us then, and they’ll do nothing for us now.

The road to us has been long with a lot of crazy, but a lot of beautiful too. The worst of the years were behind us as we pushed into fifth and sixth year, we settled into a groove of being us.  We married in 2006 and I’d love to share a great proposal story with you- but I think it goes something like me telling Marc I was planning a wedding and Marc say “Ok, sounds good!”  It was just us, flowing with life with me in control doing my will and my way- Marc just being himself- loving me and letting me do my thing.  My thing- rarely was there stopping it. I did what I wanted, when I wanted and however I wanted.  I loved Marc, sure. I loved our marriage, sure. But I loved me more.  After all, aren't I suppose to? Isn't that what our culture teaches over and over and over. Love yourself, love yourself, love yourself- so I did.  Some would argue that my behavior and decisions are a reflection of how I didn’t love myself- being that destructive and abusing alcohol at times- I didn’t love myself enough and therefore made bad choices for me. That’s a bunch of crap. I just flat out refuse to shovel in spoonful of that garbage. And if you feel like debating, I’ll spare you some wasted time- I won’t.  I loved myself just fine, therefore I didn’t love Marc properly or our marriage properly.  But God would change that. And change it in a blink of an eye- or as fast as a simple prayer.

I had a bad night. A night I don’t really talk about, but I drove home to Marc at 5am.  My father had invited me to church the day before and I said I’d go. I wanted to go, and I’m not even sure why, but it had been pressing on me a lot back then.  I still justified myself a lot and certainly held on to a lot of wrong views of what I should be as a good person, a good wife and have a good marriage.  Humility has never come easily to me, so when God needs to teach me a lesson on learning his righteousness- typically he’s got to beat it in me a bit-I’m a stupid learner.  But he was about to save not just me, but Marc and our marriage.

I drove home and Marc heard me say what I had said a trillion times before, “I’m not drinking anymore.”  But he didn’t realize I meant it (heck, I didn’t realize). He didn’t know God was about to bless my life and take away evil from it.  I went to church that morning and life as I had lived it for 31 years died.  I went to church and heard God. I didn’t respond to Him immediately. I was still a controlling and self-loving worldly girl. But I started to hear Him.  And I wanted more of Him, despite my defenses and despite my justifications and anger- I suddenly wanted Him.  I’d be mad about what I’d hear at times, because it cut me to the core and I had to acknowledge some damning truths that I simply never faced before.  But I committed to study, committed to Church and I committed to not walking away from God without giving Him his fair shake at me. After a few weeks I was broken down, hadn't touched a drop of that evil drink and was desperate for God to change me. I found myself just on my knees confessing it all out loud and begging for Christ to forgive me and take over. He did. God answers.

Where was Marc? Well, he was sitting back and watching me. He saw me changing, it may have even scared him a bit- this wasn't the Jen he’d known for so long. He humored me in it, but later confessed to me that he had been thinking about divorcing me. To put it bluntly, he didn’t sign up for being married to a “Jesus freak”. But he’s Marc and he loves me anyways.

Out of whatever sort of love and support he had for me, Marc started to go to church with me. He started to listen too and he started to hear from God. He couldn't believe it. How does an atheist hear from God? He didn’t get it. He had doubts, lots. But you know, when God calls you- it’s sort of tough to turn back. And God was calling Marc.  He met with a pastor, who guided him and was patient with Marc’s doubts and questions.  And before I knew it, my Marc was the Jesus Freak. Amen!

It took us time. I had to learn to unlearn myself. I had to shed the control, the brashness. I had to learn that I wasn't righteous and submitting. I had to learn that this word love we say so much, has little do with feelings and all to do with submitting and sacrifice. I use to think submit was losing myself. I didn’t realize submitting was an act of loving, simply saying I trust you and know you love me- so therefore, here is my heart- I submit it to you. I didn’t realize it was a gift.

God build our marriage new. Marc and I learned to give up on the evils, sin and world that had damaged us for so long and give into the Word of God. And our lives were blessed for it. We grew strong and the tumultuous years of our youth became like recalling a bad novel you read eons ago- you have a faint memory of it with bits and pieces, but overall, you don’t recall it and it wasn't worth remembering anyhow.  The thing that had held us together for years, our friendship became the root of what makes us, us!

Marc has always been nice. He’s always smiled at me, mostly given me my way. He’s never given up on me, even when he should have and no one would've blamed him.  He’s held my head in bad moments; he’s held my hand in blessed memories. He’s driven across the country with me. He’s taken his time to get to know and care about who I’d turn out to be. He’s helped shape my world and cultivate my personality.  He’s loved me and shown me how beautiful I am to him when I’m at my worst and feeling pitifully low.  He’s listened to me scream and seen my face distort with anger and rage. He sat there and been my friend. He’s left me at times, when I needed to be left- but he always came back to me. 

Genesis 2:23
The man said,
“This is now bone of my bones
    and flesh of my flesh;
she shall be called ‘woman,’
    for she was taken out of man.”

One flesh, this world might scoff at the idea of this. Melding two into each other creating one flesh simply doesn't fit. It may look for the individualism, the self-identity and the self-love. It may say “Don’t lose yourself in someone else” “Hold on to who you are.”


Well, I know who I am, I love myself just fine and as far as my identity, I have this to say- You take away Marc- you no longer have Jen. I would be someone else. I don’t want to be someone else. I like this me, for Marc is the very best part of who I am. 


Sharing a poem I wrote for Marc about 5 years ago or so, when we were first saved.  
Marc
Love
To re-define, dirty words changed to become amazing

Submit

I saw bondage, destruction, I saw the lose of self
I saw wrong

Love, is nothing short of the glory of submitting

I trust 
My God
My Faith
My ability to break bondage
To overcome destruction

Realize, it was never about “self” You can not have “self” and have Love

The lighted path come from death of “self”
            The “me” of it all led to him not worth a name,
            Glorifying self simply means deception of Grace, 
                 It’s a cheat,
                      Its bad journey on such a beautiful moment.
           
Can’t you cry? 
     Can’t you just die? 

He did
            Humbly, patiently, heart broken.  
He ripped open the beautiful moment, pouring    
     His blood over the likes of us.

And through Mercy, We are here.  
Right here, unworthy and so small

I have become US
One flesh

I love
I submit
I trust
YOU
You are my husband, I adore

God cleansed me to see

I belong on my knees
I belong bent and backwards

My will was silly and trite, 
     Full of contempt and drunken hell
          My will was the end of us.

God broke me to open my eyes, This is how you love.
He lifted my sight, 
     Showed me him through the love of you.