ENTROPY.
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CONSTANTS.
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CREATIVITY.
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TITHE.
The other day, I seriously felt like an emotional wreck. I was impatient, snippy, sarcastic, and cranky. And for the life of me, I could not figure out why. I knew I was tired and, of course, sick, but that is not different from any other day. What was different?
It was not until a few days later that I realized I had been going out 1-3 times every day for the entire week, whether it was to run an errand, see a friend for coffee, hang out with my boyfriend, etc. This may not sound like a lot, but for my body and my health that is WAY,WAY too much to do in a week. (To give you a point of reference, when I was sick last fall, I only went out for about 20 minutes every couple of days…) While I am no longer completely housebound, I have seriously limited energy and have to really watch how much I am out and for how long. The last thing I want to do is to hold back my recovery by putting unnecessary stress on my body.
I have a friend who is always texting me a phrase that has been very helpful to me as I’ve been recovering. It is: “Save 10%.” By this, she means save 10% of your energy, your strength, and your sanity. Don’t let your tank go empty. It’s like how in the Old Testament, God asked his people to give him the first tenth or “tithe” of all their crops and any sort of income they made in the year. This was an act of obedience that showed commitment and trust in God and his provision and, in turn, he blessed them for their obedience. Similarly, I think it is wise to save a “tithe” of my energy. I have found this is really good way to live. When I do this, it makes feel slightly more sane and definitely less cranky.
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WANDER.
One of my life’s greatest luxuries is allowing my thoughts to wander. When I am busy, my thoughts are always related to action. When I am tired, my thoughts cannot usually drift, for they are always pointed directly at sleep, like an arrow. It is when my mind is truly clear, when the only sound I hear is the faint sound of the Swell Season, when I can smell the aroma of a fresh cup of licorice tea, when I am bundled in a huge blanket of warmth…It is then and only then can my thoughts wander to things I truly care about. To me, that is when I am most at rest.
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CONFINED.
So recently, something changed for my little niece Tegan, and she began crawling. It is not a complete crawl yet. My mom calls it a “soldier crawl.” She uses her arms and pulls on the carpet with all her might and then kicks her feet a bit. Somehow, she can maneuver fairly well with this approach.
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VALIDATION.
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GRACE.
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UNCONDITIONAL.
So many times, I have seen Tegan lie on her stomach and kick her legs and try with all her might to crawl. She can’t even imagine trying to walk yet; all she wants is to crawl and even that, she is not ready for. And so she kicks and cries and becomes very frustrated, until I pick her up in my arms and tell her “It’s okay, Tegan. I promise you will crawl soon. Just keep trying.”
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SUGAR.
So apparently people with Lyme are not supposed to eat processed sugar. I have had Lyme for over a decade and I did not know this until this past year. I was reading about it in a Lyme book and they said something like “Don’t worry- if your friends are eating cinnamon rolls, you don’t have sit out! You can just eat a mango instead.” This sentence only proved to make me very angry. I mean, I can handle sitting on the sidelines from almost all physical activities, taking large amounts of medications that make me even more sick, and going to the doctor all the time. These things I have learned to accept. But come on. Don’t take away my cinnamon rolls or my frozen yogurt. That’s just mean. Oh, and I hate mangos.
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ATTAINMENT.
God is more concerned with WHO you are ARE than what you DO. I state this not as a lesson I have learned and can pass on to you, but more as a reminder to myself. I have to keep reminding myself of this each and every day that I am sick. I feel so worthless sometimes, as I lie sick on the couch, watching TV or movies.
Let’s be honest, if you don’t work and you meet someone and they ask you (as they inevitably do), “What do you DO for a living?” it makes you want to shrivel up and die. I feel like saying “I do NOTHING, okay! I do NOTHING!” Usually what I DO say is “I used to be a teacher.” I don’t know which one of these things is worse: the fact that I can’t do anything NOW or the fact that my life is defined by what I USED to do. Sometimes I feel like Charlie on LOST, always talking about what he used to be good at… (If you are sick and watch LOST, you understand what I mean…)
When my Lyme came back over a year ago, I had to give up the best job in the whole world: teaching first graders. I LOVE to teach and when I got my own classroom, I felt like I had found my calling and my deepest passion. Yes, it was exhausting. Yes, leaning over those tiny desks all day made my back hurt. Yes, I really hated making those tiny little crafts. But it was all worth it when my students grasped difficult concepts, learned to read and write and shared their creativity with me. I felt like I was born to teach them. It was my gift.
And yet, the thing I have been forced to accept in giving up my job is that I am still “me,” apart from teaching. Teaching is just one of my labels, one of my gifts. I am a daughter. I am a sister. I am a girlfriend. I am writer. I am a teacher. These are all things that are very significant and I regard them as important and significant to me and to God. But the truth is, I am more than those things. While God gave me the gift of teaching, it is still somewhat external to my being. In my deepest part, I am a unique soul created by God to bring worship to his name. All the other goals and labels I have for myself pale in comparison to that.
It also has occurred to me several times this year that even without my sickness, there will probably be times in my life when I don’t teach (if I have kids, if I retire, if I lose my job, etc…) Careers are way more uncertain that we perceive them to be. I know so many people who pour themselves so much into their careers or their children or whatever it is that is most important to them and then, when their job is done (i.e. they retire, their children move out, etc.), they don’t know who they are anymore. While it is entirely natural to go through this, it causes me to pause and wonder: where do I find my identity? Is it in WHO I am in Christ or is it in WHAT I DO?
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WHOLE.
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WHY.
Confession: the idea of making my own blog scares me to death. It’s such a strange concept to bear your soul and thoughts over the Internet when you do not know exactly who will be reading them. Yet there is something within me that desires to share what I have learned about life through my battle with Lyme Disease. Whether you are healthy or struggling with chronic sickness, I hope that some of the thoughts that I share will meet you in some helpful way. If you have Lyme, I hope I can be a resource and encouragement in your healing process as so many people have been to me. If nothing else, I think that people who are sick need to know that they are not alone- not only in a general sense, but in the very specific emotions that accompany chronic sickness. I think we all need that kind of connection with one another. As C.S. Lewis says, “Friendship is born at that moment when one person says to another, ‘What! You too? I thought I was the only one.”
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