Thursday, November 21, 2019
God's Sweetest 'I Love You's'
Awhile back I was saddened and hurt by someone and their interactions with one of my children. I ultimately forgave this person, tried to give them the benefit of the doubt, but felt it best to keep a safe distance from them.
Last week I felt an internal nudging, after learning of some trials they were facing, to reach out and convey my care and concern for this person and their family. So, putting our past differences aside, I set to work on mailing them a care package. As I was headed to the post office I wondered, “Is this weird? I haven’t spoken to this person in a long while.”
But then this quote popped into my head almost as quickly as I finished the previous thought. “Never suppress a generous thought.” We don’t know in life if people will receive us. But we will never look back and regret extending a kindness or an olive branch. I felt so grateful as I put that little package together to know that true forgiveness had taken place in my heart. It wasn’t an empty sentiment I convinced myself of after the offense, but a truth I could feel. Previous hurt was replaced with sincere concern. And it felt really right.
I thought about my Savior and His commandments... like forgiving those we feel wronged by. Sometimes those commandments feel so hard. But as we set aside our own agendas, and just do what He asks, we are rewarded with not only the sweetest peace for our own hearts; but oftentimes the ability to see the other person’s heart the way He does. And oh, how that changes everything.
Seeing others through His eyes makes all the difference. It doesn’t mean we put ourselves in situations were we are misused or taken advantage of. But it means hurt is replaced with compassion. It’s this compassion that frees us to see the other person through His lens, and feel the peace that comes from knowing He extends that same grace to us in our own flaws and shortcomings.
It’s this yielding of hurt for compassion that enables us to feel His love in such an unfiltered way. I was reminded yet again that His commandments, especially the hard ones, are also his sweetest I love you’s.
Monday, October 7, 2019
Listen To A Prophet's Voice
I was so very grateful for the opportunity I had to watch General Conference this past weekend. To be able to invite the Spirit into my home, to feel God's love and awareness for me and my family, and to be taught. My overarching impression was the gratitude I felt to have a living prophet, leading and guiding Christ's church in these latter-days. I felt specific gratitude to President Nelson for being that prophet.
President Russell M. Nelson
I find myself grateful for the steady stream of continued revelation given to him. Grateful for his willingness to address the things that seem so applicable to the happenings within the walls of my own home. Thankful for his steady example of loving others, seeking diligently, and showing a willingness to do the Lord's will. I have felt my love for this true disciple of Christ increase so much as he has taken upon himself the mantle of prophet, priesthood key holder, and mouthpiece for the Lord.
Image from Mormon Newsroom
President Nelson instructed women of the Church on their ability to have direct access to God's power through the power of the priesthood. He showed us what our heartfelt efforts to lift and help our brothers and sisters across the globe through humanitarian work has done. He provided clarity on the call to love our neighbors, whether or not we share the commonality of race, religion, culture, sexual orientation, belief, or other labels the world would use to separate us. He offered additional insight and inspiration on the continuing adjustments to the functions of the Lord's Church. With each address it felt like he was speaking to me personally. I love that at the heart of all his messages and each of his efforts, is the sincere desire to bring us closer to our Savior. To help cement in our hearts that this is Jesus Christ's church, and He is at the center of it.
We live in a crazy world. A world that can be scary to live and raise a family in. However, I love that the prophetic blessing and promise given, is that if we will live Christ's Gospel, follow Him, and let Him change our hearts, peace and joy will be the fruits of our heartfelt efforts. I know that as I have put this promise to the test in my own life I have received an edifying peace that could only come from heaven's help. I truly am so grateful to have the opportunity to listen to a prophet's voice and know that as I follow his counsel, I will be led closer to my Savior.
Monday, February 6, 2017
Random Facts
1. Who are you named after? My parents just thought Sarah was a
beautiful name. My middle name is after my Nana though. I love that.
2. Last time you cried? Listening to a talk by Elder Jeffrey R. Holland.
3. Do you like your handwriting? Yes
4. What is your favorite lunch meat? Turkey or ham mostly.
5. Coffee or tea? Neither.
6. Longest relationship? My husband Justin and I met and got engaged 18 years ago next week...CRAZY!
7. Do you still have your tonsils? Yes.
8. Would you bungee jump? Not unless I was being paid large quantities of money to do so.
9. What is your favorite kind of cereal? Raisin Nut Bran
10. Do you untie your shoes when you take them off? No, not unless it's necessary to extract my foot from my shoe.
11. Do you think you're strong? Yes, in the ways that it really counts.
12. Favorite ice cream? Blue Bell Cookies and Cream
13. What is the first thing you notice about a person? Smile or eyes.
14. Football or baseball? Neither, basketball.
15. What color pants are you wearing? Gray scrub pants
16. Last thing you ate? Homemade Chicken Noodle Soup
17. What are you listening to? The hum of my ancient computer. It might blow up at any moment...
18. If you were a crayon, what color would you be? Green
19. What is your favorite smell? Fresh herbs...they just make me happy.
20. Who was the last person you talked to on phone? Probably an insurance representative. I talk on the phone so much at work, that I'm kind of talked out by the time I get home. Unless you're in my inner circle, of course, then you can call any ol' time.
21. Hair color? Dark blonde/Light brown
22. Eye color? Greenish Blue
23. Favorite foods to eat? Anything made with love. Minus raw onions. There is no love in raw onions. Just stink.
24. Scary movies or happy? If I have to pick, happy. My imagination is too active for scary movies.
25. Last movie you watched? Sully
26. What color shirt are you wearing? Gray scrub top
29. What is your favorite holiday? Christmas, minus all the commercialism.
30. Beer or Wine? Neither, water please.
31. Night owl or morning person? Both...as long as those around me aren't being crabby.
32. Favorite day of the week? I love Saturdays... it's my only day to be a bum, or get stuff done at my own pace, or go for an adventure.
2. Last time you cried? Listening to a talk by Elder Jeffrey R. Holland.
3. Do you like your handwriting? Yes
4. What is your favorite lunch meat? Turkey or ham mostly.
5. Coffee or tea? Neither.
6. Longest relationship? My husband Justin and I met and got engaged 18 years ago next week...CRAZY!
7. Do you still have your tonsils? Yes.
8. Would you bungee jump? Not unless I was being paid large quantities of money to do so.
9. What is your favorite kind of cereal? Raisin Nut Bran
10. Do you untie your shoes when you take them off? No, not unless it's necessary to extract my foot from my shoe.
11. Do you think you're strong? Yes, in the ways that it really counts.
12. Favorite ice cream? Blue Bell Cookies and Cream
13. What is the first thing you notice about a person? Smile or eyes.
14. Football or baseball? Neither, basketball.
15. What color pants are you wearing? Gray scrub pants
16. Last thing you ate? Homemade Chicken Noodle Soup
17. What are you listening to? The hum of my ancient computer. It might blow up at any moment...
18. If you were a crayon, what color would you be? Green
19. What is your favorite smell? Fresh herbs...they just make me happy.
20. Who was the last person you talked to on phone? Probably an insurance representative. I talk on the phone so much at work, that I'm kind of talked out by the time I get home. Unless you're in my inner circle, of course, then you can call any ol' time.
21. Hair color? Dark blonde/Light brown
22. Eye color? Greenish Blue
23. Favorite foods to eat? Anything made with love. Minus raw onions. There is no love in raw onions. Just stink.
24. Scary movies or happy? If I have to pick, happy. My imagination is too active for scary movies.
25. Last movie you watched? Sully
26. What color shirt are you wearing? Gray scrub top
29. What is your favorite holiday? Christmas, minus all the commercialism.
30. Beer or Wine? Neither, water please.
31. Night owl or morning person? Both...as long as those around me aren't being crabby.
32. Favorite day of the week? I love Saturdays... it's my only day to be a bum, or get stuff done at my own pace, or go for an adventure.
Friday, January 27, 2017
Still Loving
How do you write a serious-ish post inspired by texts regarding a late-night chocolate cake run? Well, I'll attempt. Justin and I have been married for seventeen years. I've known him longer than I've not known him. In those seventeen years there's been some really great times. There has also been some really difficult times too. We have had to actively welcome and work on love to keep it going at different phases of our marriage, instead of waiting for it to spontaneously happen. We know love takes work, and I love that. I love that we've had times that have made us re-discover what we love about each other. I love that the same guy that happily goes for walks with me, or will do a workout in the basement, is the same guy that I can rope into eating chocolate cake with me at midnight. I love that his tunes are my tunes. I love that he's got smooth moves. I love that he irons my scrubs for me in the morning. I love that he has big, burly man shoulders. I love that he loves my butt and tells me so daily. I love that we've learned how to talk about all the thoughts that bump around in our heads. I love that he is such a hard-worker. I love that he is learning humility. I love so, so much about him. But mostly I love that he is still here with me. Still trying, still working, still loving.
Sunday, January 15, 2017
The Past
"As a new year begins and we try to benefit from a proper view of what has gone before, I plead with you not to dwell on days now gone nor to yearn vainly for yesterdays, however good those yesterdays may have been. The past is to be learned from but not lived in. We look back to claim the embers from glowing experiences but not the ashes. And when we have learned what we need to learn and have brought with us the best that we have experienced, then we look ahead and remember that faith is always pointed towards the future."
-Jeffrey R. Holland
Saturday, January 14, 2017
Learning to Reconnect
The most amazing thing happened about a month ago. My friend's children had the lead parts in their elementary school production of Peter Pan. So Justin and I decided to load up the girls in the van and go support our friends in their big moment.
While I was there something completely bizarre, and wonderful, and totally unexpected happened. I ran into my very best childhood friend, whom I had lost touch with over the years. I had thought she was still living in Denmark and then suddenly there she was, standing in front of me in a small school gym in my quiet, little town.
Long story short, she wasn't in Denmark, she had moved back to Atlanta after over a decade away. She was there to see her nephew, who happened to go to the same school and was in the same production as my other friend's children. We had lost touch because of distance, because of life, because of me; because when I feel like I've hurt someone, even if it's not on purpose, I don't just step back, I full on retreat.
Such was the case with this friendship. I had pinpointed the estrangement to an e-mail that I had sent her years ago, commenting on how much our lives had changed. The purpose of my email was well-intentioned, and I had hoped to convey to her that no matter where she went, or what she did, or who she became, she would always be so dear to me. Dear to me because my memories of her were so very good. There are so many parts of my growing up years, particularly my teenage years, that I have compartmentalized and forgotten, or care not to remember. But my years with her are some of my most precious. When childhood was it's best. When I felt the most loved, the most understood, the most grounded.
When I penned that e-mail, I was at a very raw stage of life though, trying to rebuild after the carpet had been pulled out from underneath me....again. The one-dimensional view from social-media and blogs had her life pegged as charmed, glossy, and perfect in my eyes. I didn't know how to relate. At that point I was sleeping on a mattress on the floor and praying I could scrape together enough food to make my kids' lunches the next day. I just yearned from all that perfection to just have a day with her the way I remembered her. Someone I could just be my weird, awkward, un-glossy self with.
Something that I must have said must have not translated well though, because I never received a response. Maybe she thought I was criticizing her for changing? For becoming someone who seemed different? I don't know. My way of licking my wounds was the same way it has been with every other failed friendship I've had in life... because I've had a few. It seems like every decade of my life has been punctuated with friends that abandon me. And it seems that there has been a common denominator in all those relationships... me. So I must be the problem.
I've carried the weight on my heart for years that I'm the girl no one ever stuck around for. No one fights for. There must be something about me that is inherently not good enough. So, I disappear. I disappear because rejection hurts; and I disappear because I never want to hurt anyone. Sometimes the surest way to not hurt people is to not open yourselves to them. It's warped, but somehow over the years I've convinced myself that it's a logical solution to the fear of being less than what people need.
Suddenly though, this failed relationship that was so important to me, but that I was so scared of, was standing right in front of me. With nowhere to hide, there was nothing to do but swallow my fear, walk up to her, give her a big hug, and tell her how good it was to see her. Because it was.
I gave her my number before leaving and told her to text me if she wanted to reconnect. On the way home Justin asked if I thought she'd call? I told him I didn't know, but that I put myself out there, even when I was scared, and that's all I could do.
She texted me about a week ago, after getting through the holidays and moving into her house, and invited me to grab a smoothie with her and catch up. I thankfully agreed and walked through a door this morning not knowing what to expect.
We talked for two and a half hours, and probably could have doubled it if we didn't have lives waiting for us outside the rustic walls of that corner coffee shop. I've really spent the last couple of years kind of isolating myself. As I talked to Justin on the phone as I drove home, I told him how good it felt to just talk to someone who knew me. Who knew my backstory. Who has known me since I was six years old. When life was simple and I wasn't yet battered by some of the hurts of life.
Here we were, thirty years later, and I could still just talk to her. I didn't have to put on a face, or only talk about the good parts of my life. I could be real. And that's what I so desperately needed; to just be real.
It made me sad to think that I had convinced myself that being lonely was safe. Because in my isolation I have cheated myself out of connection. I don't care how old you are, how introverted you are, what battle wounds you carry from relationships, we all need to feel connected. And it's worth the fight, it's worth the time, it's worth the fear.
I have some work to do, and I know old patterns, old thoughts, and old lies that I've told myself aren't going to disappear over night. Connection takes bravery and courage and vulnerability, and all those things are hard. But I can feel myself being strong enough to do hard things... and I can't even begin to tell you how good that feels.
While I was there something completely bizarre, and wonderful, and totally unexpected happened. I ran into my very best childhood friend, whom I had lost touch with over the years. I had thought she was still living in Denmark and then suddenly there she was, standing in front of me in a small school gym in my quiet, little town.
Long story short, she wasn't in Denmark, she had moved back to Atlanta after over a decade away. She was there to see her nephew, who happened to go to the same school and was in the same production as my other friend's children. We had lost touch because of distance, because of life, because of me; because when I feel like I've hurt someone, even if it's not on purpose, I don't just step back, I full on retreat.
Such was the case with this friendship. I had pinpointed the estrangement to an e-mail that I had sent her years ago, commenting on how much our lives had changed. The purpose of my email was well-intentioned, and I had hoped to convey to her that no matter where she went, or what she did, or who she became, she would always be so dear to me. Dear to me because my memories of her were so very good. There are so many parts of my growing up years, particularly my teenage years, that I have compartmentalized and forgotten, or care not to remember. But my years with her are some of my most precious. When childhood was it's best. When I felt the most loved, the most understood, the most grounded.
When I penned that e-mail, I was at a very raw stage of life though, trying to rebuild after the carpet had been pulled out from underneath me....again. The one-dimensional view from social-media and blogs had her life pegged as charmed, glossy, and perfect in my eyes. I didn't know how to relate. At that point I was sleeping on a mattress on the floor and praying I could scrape together enough food to make my kids' lunches the next day. I just yearned from all that perfection to just have a day with her the way I remembered her. Someone I could just be my weird, awkward, un-glossy self with.
Something that I must have said must have not translated well though, because I never received a response. Maybe she thought I was criticizing her for changing? For becoming someone who seemed different? I don't know. My way of licking my wounds was the same way it has been with every other failed friendship I've had in life... because I've had a few. It seems like every decade of my life has been punctuated with friends that abandon me. And it seems that there has been a common denominator in all those relationships... me. So I must be the problem.
I've carried the weight on my heart for years that I'm the girl no one ever stuck around for. No one fights for. There must be something about me that is inherently not good enough. So, I disappear. I disappear because rejection hurts; and I disappear because I never want to hurt anyone. Sometimes the surest way to not hurt people is to not open yourselves to them. It's warped, but somehow over the years I've convinced myself that it's a logical solution to the fear of being less than what people need.
Suddenly though, this failed relationship that was so important to me, but that I was so scared of, was standing right in front of me. With nowhere to hide, there was nothing to do but swallow my fear, walk up to her, give her a big hug, and tell her how good it was to see her. Because it was.
I gave her my number before leaving and told her to text me if she wanted to reconnect. On the way home Justin asked if I thought she'd call? I told him I didn't know, but that I put myself out there, even when I was scared, and that's all I could do.
She texted me about a week ago, after getting through the holidays and moving into her house, and invited me to grab a smoothie with her and catch up. I thankfully agreed and walked through a door this morning not knowing what to expect.
We talked for two and a half hours, and probably could have doubled it if we didn't have lives waiting for us outside the rustic walls of that corner coffee shop. I've really spent the last couple of years kind of isolating myself. As I talked to Justin on the phone as I drove home, I told him how good it felt to just talk to someone who knew me. Who knew my backstory. Who has known me since I was six years old. When life was simple and I wasn't yet battered by some of the hurts of life.
Here we were, thirty years later, and I could still just talk to her. I didn't have to put on a face, or only talk about the good parts of my life. I could be real. And that's what I so desperately needed; to just be real.
It made me sad to think that I had convinced myself that being lonely was safe. Because in my isolation I have cheated myself out of connection. I don't care how old you are, how introverted you are, what battle wounds you carry from relationships, we all need to feel connected. And it's worth the fight, it's worth the time, it's worth the fear.
I have some work to do, and I know old patterns, old thoughts, and old lies that I've told myself aren't going to disappear over night. Connection takes bravery and courage and vulnerability, and all those things are hard. But I can feel myself being strong enough to do hard things... and I can't even begin to tell you how good that feels.
Thursday, January 12, 2017
Still Water. Still Mind.
The water on the lake was still this morning. It was so beautiful, as it reflected the ever-lightening morning sky. In the past couple of days I've been able to have some conversations I needed to have. Being a listener and being trusted is a gift, and I'm grateful to have access to people like that in my life. It's amazing how sometimes once you can get things out of your brain and out in the open, it frees up all kinds of space inside us for new thoughts and new emotions. It frees up space to let go. I woke up this morning and felt good. My mind was quiet and still, and I could feel the things that were weighing on me ease and lighten. I get to start over today, and that feels really good.
Labels:
lake,
letting go,
listening,
morning walks,
trust
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