Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Following the Call

My husband and I both are experiencing great job dissatisfaction in our lives of late, so much so, that our attitudes have been severely (and adversely, I might add) affected. We separately decided we needed to seek God for the answers. Are we supposed to change jobs, go into some sort of ministry, move, WHAT? My passion is to make a difference in the lives of others; to spur them on to what God has in store for them, to face their fears and follow HARD after God, because only in Him can we find true satisfaction. So I'm dissatisfied. Good one, Peggy.

Why am I dissatisfied, and what can I do about it? First of all, I prayed and sought God's voice both to my spirit and by reading the Word. The single word I felt spoken into my spirit was "patience." Not my favorite word! For those of you who know me, patience isn't one of my strong suites. My dad nicknamed me (sarcastically) "Patience" when I was a child. When I decide something needs to change or get fixed, it better have happened yesterday! I used to laugh when non-homeschooling parents would say to me, "Oh I could never home school, I don't have the patience." I'd reply that as the least patient person on earth-if I could do it, ANYONE can! So what to do about the nasty word I received? Swallow it and wait for Him to move. Yay.

During this time I also had a dream one night, and in it, the Lord chastised me for not following Him wholeheartedly. For letting fear stand in the way of complete and truthful pursuit of Him. Fear of man. Fear of disappointment. Fear I would freak my non-Christian and non-Charismatic (= believing in the manifested gifts of the Spirit) Christians out. But then, not trusting myself to hear clearly (we all can be easily deceived by the enemy, desires of our flesh, and just random thoughts), I spent time in the Word-VERY important. The prophet Jeremiah is my absolute favorite biblical hero. I LOVE that man. I can't wait to get to heaven and befriend him! Hopefully he'll like me :) Anyway, I noticed he spent SO much time patiently following God's orders and standing against popular (and sinful) opinion, even of those in powerful leadership (read Jeremiah chapter 38).

 Anyway, this scripture jumped out at me (Jeremiah 29:11, 13-14a) "For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you a hope and future...you will seek Me and find Me when you seek Me WITH ALL YOUR HEART." (Emphasis mine). Ok, Lord, I get it. I am allowing fear to stunt my growth, and even worse, to stop me from pursuing the call on my life. I am in amazed gratitude of the lengths God will go to get my attention and seize the moment to teach me something. His love is incredible, and the fact He loves me, one tiny, unimportant human in a sea of humanity, blows my mind. And the fact He has a big JOB for me, if only I get on board with his plans, stuns me.

For now, then, my plan is to (patiently) wait on Him. To pursue Him with all my heart. To proclaim His goodness and love. To TESTIFY to the fact that YOU ALL (or in Butte Lingo, "Youse guys") are just as precious, loved and CALLED as anyone, even the prophet Jeremiah. He has GREAT plans for us, plans to PROSPER us, to give us a HOPE and a FUTURE...but...we must seek Him with ALL our hearts. Amen.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

We're WORTH the Change!

I have a confession: I LOVE the show, "Hoarders" on TLC! I know that is some sort of sick voyeurism, but I can't help it...I'm fascinated by what makes those folks tick. I also have to confess that I feel a huge sense of relief (mixed in with some smugness) that at least I'm not that bad! But deep down, I have a sneaking suspicion I could be one of them, given the right circumstances. In fact, I struggle with at least one area of hoarding: photos and memorabilia.

I can hardly bear to part with a single scrap of paper my children ever scribbled on. I hate the fact that there are photographs out there in the wide world in the possession of others, and I don't have a copy! Those pictures could potentially capture the absolute essence of my precious babies and I have never even SEEN them! That realization almost sends me into a panic attack. And the fact I have a granddaughter now (and grandson on the way), and her picture portfolio is managed by someone else other than me (her own mother, of course), is a thought I studiously avoid entertaining. I recently confessed to my mom that I believe I am a "memorabilia hoarder" and she replied, "yes you are!" Thanks Ma. To further add to my collecting stress, I recently started a life scrapbook for my father. He was born and raised in Butte, and my compulsion is leading me to visit the Butte archives just in case there's anything up there about him that MUST go into his scrapbook. Good luck on that mission, Peggy!

So how does this hoarding confession of mine tie in with the blog topic? Memorabilia/photo hoarding does not make me happy, not really. Oh, it fulfills a longing of mine: the hope that I can gather and keep life trapped so it doesn't slip away from me...that the tangible evidence of history in my possession somehow contains vital parts of the people I love, and if I hold onto them, I have protected and kept their lives. But that is a lie.

Now there's nothing wrong with commemorating and celebrating the lives of loved ones with scrapbooking-in fact I think it's one of the greatest forms of honoring. But the fact remains that photos and physical evidence of accomplishments are NOT the person him- or herself. This truth is tough for me. I feel like those scraps are exactly that...pieces of that person, and then when I toss out that evidence of life, I'm discarding a piece of him or her, which kills me. I am constantly at war with this compulsion. I have to choose to toss unflattering or duplicate photos out and take out the garbage right away so I can't second guess my decision. I have to limit my grieving when event photos turn out badly. I have to fight the urge to dig through my paper recycling box and LEAVE the discarded scraps of my prolific daughter's childhood artwork IN THE TRASH. Sigh. Sometimes I hate being me.

The good news is that I'm changing. I really am. I'm not completely free of my compulsion, but I'm getting better. I'm holding myself to a higher standard and talking myself through sorting decisions. I forced myself to go through my 7,000 digital picture collection on my computer, deleting duplicates (slight changes in subject's facial expressions ARE still duplicates, Peggy!), moving photos of non-family members to cd's to distribute personally (which I wish others would do for me!) as I couldn't bear just to delete them (once again, the notion that those pictures ARE that person!), and trashing the pix that are just plain bad shots. I'm also working on strengthening my deleting muscles as I practice discipline in this area.

But the biggie is that I must fully realize I have great value, simply because I exist, and that great value translates into the fact that I cannot afford to waste my life spinning in circles, ignoring the potential and power placed in me by my Creator!

Do you realize who we are? We are FORMED people. Crafted by One much more vast, powerful and intelligent than we are. One who, in spite of His incredible power, wisdom, and creativity, loves us as we are, but also loves us too much to let us stay the way we are. Here's the rub, however. He won't force change on us. We have to pick up our bag of inertia and partner with Him in realizing what He has for us. We were not crafted to slog around in the muck of self-hatred, complacency or futility. We have a calling, a life, potential, and purpose. At what point do we stop believing the lie that we can never be more than we are? That we can never change the fallout of our personalities and upbringing?

Today, realize who and what you are. That you are created in the image of GOD, a perfect being who makes no mistakes, period. Rise up to the challenge He's placing before you...to live a joyful, victorious life. He has handed us victory over the flesh, the earth, and those who oppose us. We just have to grasp the baton and start running (or maybe baby stepping!) Hebrews 12:1b-2a says, "...let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us RUN with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on JESUS, the author and protector of our faith." Run baby, run!

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Change Really IS Good!

I have been mulling over the word “change” lately, and what actually motivates us to succeed at permanent, personal change in our lives. I have attempted to come up with a process that makes sense intellectually to me, as well as appears to be reasonably realistic and achievable. Much of this is based on my recent coaching training which has already proved extremely helpful in my own life. My husband suggested I call this blog entry, “the Tough Love Blog”!

Most of us profess we “should” lose weight, exercise more, eat more healthily, cut down on spending, alcohol, cigarettes, etc., but what actually motivates us to initiate real change? There are the obvious outside motivators that create fear or desperation in us (health scare, loss of job, DUI, divorce, death of a spouse or other loved one, etc.), forcing us to either change or face catastrophe. Then there are internal motivators such as arriving at a place of dissatisfaction or discomfort and realizing that we must and WILL alter our behavior. It is the second motivator that I want to lay a hold of…to harness, so to speak, so that we stop spinning our wheels and go for the gusto! How does one consciously grab the need for change and use it as a spur for action, rather than wait for a crisis to kick us in the backside before we get busy?

Just like AA’s 12-step program, I first have to admit that change is necessary! I need to stop denying the facts: Do I weigh too much? Is my health poor because I have made it that way? Am I digging myself into a debt hole, spending more than I make? Do I have a bad marriage? Am I friendless? Do I hate my job? Is my house a disaster? During this step I take a hard look at my life and admit it’s not what it should be and it’s time for change.

The second step is to realize that I possess what it takes to fix my life. I can exert myself in ways I may not even realize. I have huge potential inside me to do great things, no matter how much I doubt that. Low self esteem doesn’t alter the truth about my ability to change.

The third step is to recognize that I am the problem! Not my spouse, job, the IRS or the economy. I must own my life choices, period. No more excuses, blaming others or wasting time dwelling on my handicaps. Of course, after I say this, I realize that some of us face health issues that we cannot fix, and that is a huge hurdle to overcome, but even in the face of health problems not of our own making, we can still choose to live our best life.

The fourth step is to focus on one aspect of life I want to change. Is it my health, marriage, job, house organization or finances? Just pick one. The principle here is, “baby steppin’, Doc” (I loved the movie, “What About Bob?”!) As an example, let’s say I decide my health needs changing, pronto.
The fifth step is to brainstorm several solutions to that one issue I want to change. Initially, I’ll list as many solutions as I can think of; I can eliminate the ridiculous later. Say I brainstorm such things as quitting smoking, getting more sleep, exercising, improving the quality food I consume, getting a
muscle transplant ☺, etc.

The sixth step is to pick ONE solution to implement. Don’t be disappointed. ONE is enough to start with; more than that and it’s easy to become overwhelmed. Remember Rome wasn’t built in a day. So I decide I need to exercise.

The seventh step is to set a goal and a time frame during which I’ll implement my change. Let’s say I decide to exercise for 30 minutes, 3 days a week, for 3 months. I’ll ask myself a few questions relating to my goal: When should I do this? Where can I carve out the time and know I will be able to commit? So I choose to use my work lunch hour. I commit to walk for 30 minutes on my lunch hour. I will either ask a co-worker to be my walk buddy, or I will accompany myself with music or downloaded books on my iPod. I will bring an umbrella and waterproof shoes in case it rains. I will bring warm clothes in case it snows. I will not be deterred. If I am sick, I will reschedule for the next day. I will persevere for 3 months.

The eighth step is to assess the results at the end of my goal’s time period. I’ll ask myself some questions: How did that work for me? How do I feel as a result of meeting my goal? What were the benefits of that change in my life? How did my health improve (did my blood pressure/cholesterol/weight go down)? Am I sleeping better as a result? Do I feel more peaceful and in control of my life? If the results are positive, congratulations, I have incorporated a change in my life, time to celebrate! And then, keep on keepin’ on! If I don’t feel like this worked out very well, I need to go back and brainstorm another solution to the problem.

The ninth step is to repeat the process and initiate another change. Only I can come up with a reasonable solution and timeframe to test it in. Studies show that new habits are formed after 21 days after implementation. This is good!

So here's the tough love part: Don’t give up too quickly; most of the time, that’s the pattern of our lives. We suck at persevering. Don’t cave to your spoiled child tendencies. Tell yourself, “this is boot camp, baby, and you’re gonna suck it up for awhile!” You only have one life to live, so why not live it to the fullest?