Sunday, September 18, 2011

Se Wa Teneo



Sorry to have dropped off the face of the earth like that.  It's something I do intermittently when I get the wind knocked out of me.  This time wasn't nearly as bad as it used to be.  This time, it was more of a blip on the map.  I just didn't call friends quite as often, and stopped blogging and Facebook-ing.  But not too long ago, it was quite a different story.

This is the way I see it:  All of us have a certain amount of emotional energy to expend, give or invest in our tanks.  For me, my initial allotment goes to Chatterbox right out of the gate, so I guard that and reserve it carefully, making sure that he will always get what he needs from me.  Then the remainder gets doled out -- job, family, friends, volunteer commitments, you get the picture (now, before all the Christians get riled up about the pecking order of things, I kind of look at my faith as a constant conversation with God that never turns off.  He's not on the list because without him I have no list.  He is the list...without Him, it all kind of evaporates).   What this means is when I receive a blow I wasn't expecting, I have to allot some of my "fuel" to deal with the Nasty.  It's like someone has siphoned fuel out of my tank, and there's not enough...so something or someone in my life has to go without for a minute.  It's not because I've stopped caring, it's just that there is only so much to give on any one day.

So I've learned that I can somewhat measure how I am doing with my healing process as to how much and to what extent I disappear when something bad happens.

It turns out that when a person goes through some kind of trauma (whether that be emotional, mental or physical), they go into kind of a survival mode.  They find reserves they didn't know they had in order to continue on in the face of the Nasty.  Some people take the Nasty and bury it deep inside so they can do better with their facade of normalcy.  But the problem is that the Nasty bores holes in their hearts and spirits...and the result is that it slowly eats them alive.  But the Nasty will eventually leak out....and when it does, it destroys everything in close proximity.

I decided early on through God's intervention that I was not going to go that route.  But the catch is, if you're going to deal with the Nasty as it comes, it is extremely hard work.  You have to be purposeful about it -- you have to pause and take time for introspection, and very carefully measure your response to the Nasty. 

That takes a lot of fuel from the tank.

So, anyway, I dealt with a lot of Nasty over a period of several years and it drained me to the dregs.  My tank was not only empty, but I was as dry as a 7-year drought.  I lived in survival mode for so long that it became my new normal. I knew I needed to find a better way.  Thankfully, this last year has been a season healing...of starting to come out of refugee-land and rejoining the world.  But although it has been necessary time, it has been a lonely time in many ways.  My social circle is smaller than it's ever been, and my friends know that weeks and months may go by without hearing from me.  The ones that are still around love me anyway, and for that I am thankful.  They know how battle-worn I am and that I sometimes need some time to let the tank start to move past the big E.

But the last few months, I have wised up to a few things.  This is not a place to stay in forever.  I realized that to really gain some momentum in my healing, I needed to venture back out in the world and be with people in a meaningful way.  I needed to start giving of myself again to others besides Chatterbox and my teeny tiny social circle.  I didn't feel like I could.  I thought, "There's just not enough in there to give right now."  My isolation was lonely, but it was safe and predictable...and not as scary as more people needing things from me that I knew I didn't have.

But God didn't put us on this rock to live in a Room.

God is kind of sneaky.  He speaks to me in all kinds of ways.  In the last couple of weeks, I've enjoyed some modes of entertainment that have touched on (actually, SHOUTED) this idea.  Chatterbox and I watched Tangled over the weekend, a retelling of the story of Rapunzel - the one with the girl who lives her life in a tower.  I also got my hands on a book called Room, which was recommended to me by my sister (who by the way, has one of the best blogs around, bar none).  It is a harrowing story of a woman kidnapped and held prisoner in a single room for years.  While in captivity, she becomes pregnant, and raises her son alone in this single room -- and it is the only universe this child knows until the age of 5.  The tale is told from his perspective, and is astounding in its honest portrayal of the perceived safety of a life in captivity.

Here's the takeaway.  When you live in just a Room, it limits everything you might have been.  Dreams become unnecessary because that might take you outside of the safety of the Room.  Inside, it is comfortable.  It is predictable.  Over time, the thought of anything else is downright terrifying.  But the truth is, whatever the circumstances of your captivity, there is only one person that can ultimately get you out.

You.

Every one of us at some time or another in our lives gets the short end of the stick.  We get beat up by the people who are supposed to love us.  We get treated unfairly.  Some are abused in the worst ways and some live through unimaginable pain. 

Because I feel I have some experience the area of pain, I can safely say this without hypocrisy:  What are you going to do about it?

"I guess it comes down to a simple choice, really...get busy livin'...or get busy dyin'."  - Andy Dufresne, "The Shawshank Redemption"
That's right.  Only you can make the choice to get on with it.  And don't kid yourself, it is a choice.  It's not something that happens to you, or that God will just drop into your lap like a neatly wrapped present.  You've got to do the thing that scares the crap out of you -- maybe not just one thing, but two or three or four.  You put yourself back into the world, because if you don't, you will never be the person you were meant to be.  You will never be the wife, the husband, the mother, the father or influencer you were supposed to become.
  
Ecclesiastes says there is a time for everything.  I've done lots of mourning and weeping lately...enough to last me for the rest of my life, if you want to know the truth.  But that season of my life is passing away, and something new is rising.  It is hope.  Hope is what make you move when you think you can't.  It is usually the catalyst for change, which is why some see it as salvation and others see it as dangerous.

For me, it is the permission to dream again.

Andy Dufresne's dream was to escape to Se Wa Teneo -- a village right on the Pacific...the sea with no memory.  It was a dangerous dream because of its audacity...its impossibility.  But for Andy, he knew if he couldn't find a way out, he would die.  Maybe not literally.  But he would cease to be himself...at least, the one that mattered.


It's the same for any one of us.  You can push your way out of your prison, however terrifying that may be; or put your dreams in a jar -- where they will be just another decoration on a shelf in your Room.

Once I gave myself permission to dream again, the first thing that I noticed was how much bigger they were than my dreams ten years ago.  The next thing that I noticed was that it didn't bother me that they would take significant time and effort from Yours Truly to come to fruition.  It's just time, after all.

Any dream that's worth having is bound to take some time, right?

1 comment:

  1. Hope is a brave thing. And the weird thing is that some people will almost hate you for it....because they are too cowardly to break out of their Nasty. And sure, dreams take a long time to reach, but 5 or 10 years are going to pass no matter what (God willing). You can either be stuck in the same place then or have made some progress.
    So I say, just do it.

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