"Art requires much calm, and to paint the things of Christ one must live with Christ..." - Fra Angelico

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

More Random Musings


Saying Goodbye to an Old Friend
My little gold Chevy Blazer is gone. The insurance company totaled it after Jessey's fender bender (still praising God that he was not hurt). We signed it over on Friday. It has been a fairly faithful vehicle for 10 years and I was a little sad to see it go. Oh well. Let the car hunting frenzy begin!

Just a bit of my kitchen.
Kitchen Remodel Update
Ceramic tile floor - finished! Painting, walls and trim - finished! Countertops and back splash - later! Decorating and hanging of pretties - in progress. We finished what we set out to do, namely tile and paint. Countertops and back splash can wait until next year. Other than some reorganizing and finding new storage homes for things that no longer fit in the laundry room, and hanging a few other things, we are done! The kitchen looks so different and I love it! Rick and I did a denim faux finish on the walls that we are very pleased with. My sweetheart even went the extra mile and added light to my formerly dark pantry! Yea Rick! And in an unexpected turn of events, the laundry room got a big boost with fresh paint and a...

Our new washer.

New Washer and Dryer!!
God made a way where there was no way. We were blessed with a brand new, secret desire of my heart, washer and dryer. They are incredibly easy, efficient, luxurious and so very quiet. They are even blue. Our 23-year-old, still working, but slow and noisy, washer and dryer were passed down to Rick's niece who no longer has to go to the laundromat! Yea God!!



Back Update
Yes, the kitchen cost me! After pulling muscles in my back and side while painting the walls, I rested for a week, got better; then painted the trim and pulled them all over again and worse! I could not raise my right arm, bend or twist without severe spasms. Yet, I couldn't seem to behave and it hurt for weeks in spite of the continual dosage of pain pills and muscle relaxants. Which, in my complete lack of any sense, I decided to stop all at once after a month solid. Let me just say - (shudder) horrible. It is a testimony to my family's love that they still live here. In any case, when I finally obeyed my wise husband and s-t-o-p-p-e-d lifting, bending, painting, cleaning and pretty much anything involving back movement; it got better. Imagine that! It is a purely wonderful, grand and precious thing to be pain free. I am behaving myself in order to remain that way. I have had to learn to work at the computer in spurts, because sitting in one place for more than an hour or two is a no-no.


Cool Weather and the Garden Beckons
My garden angel reminds me to rest.
I love Autumn!! Rick and I met in the Fall, just as the weather was cooling; so I am always reminded of romance (sigh). Anyway... with temperatures in the 60's and 70's, I would rather be outdoors than in and lately that means in the flower garden (I haven't graduated to vegetables yet, but I can dream). My wonderful guys Rick and Quinten actually weeded my flower bed for me recently because I couldn't do the work myself. So, I have been able to just sit in my garden, rest my back and enjoy!! Absolutely delicious!

Oil Painting... soon

You know, it's hard to paint when I can't lift my right arm without crying. My oil painting was put on hold for awhile during the remodel and subsequent physical fiasco. But, like the garden, it beckons. There was a dark period a while back when I could not stand to look at the unfinished canvas waiting on my easel. Thankfully, that has changed. I look at it and I SEE it. I am drawn in to the story it tells. I am eager for the feel of the brush, the scent of linseed oil and the sight of the colors of Heaven. Soon. I raise my right arm to test its readiness. Very soon...

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Note to Self... Don't Take It Personally

Why do we take everything so personally?

If we are doing what God has called us to do and we encounter resistance or outright rejection, it's not us personally that is being rejected. It's the light that shines through us. Jesus said that we would be rejected because He was. Why are we so surprised and hurt when it happens? Don't take it personally.

If we've missed it and have made a mistake and someone points it out or bawls us out, chances are that our mistake has reminded them of their own imperfections. Accept the correction and discard the emotion. Don't take it personally.

If we are falsely accused and our reputation is tainted, we are in good company. Jesus lived through it and so can we. He has promised to be our advocate and vindicator. Don't take it personally.

If people are talking about us behind our backs and speculating on our lives through gossip and assumption, then they don't know us well enough to speculate or assume anything in the first place. Don't take it personally.

If people are talking us down in order to bolster themselves up and cover up their own guilt, then they are more concerned about themselves than about us anyway. Don't take it personally.

If our feelings are hurt, our emotions are all in a jumbled mess, our anger is flared and we feel an overwhelming urge to defend ourselves and tell everyone how right we are and how wrong they are; then we have taken it personally.

If we find ourselves short on patience and compassion and annoyed by anyone and everyone that does not see it our way; then we have taken it personally.

If we find ourselves leaving a trail of hurt, discouraged people in our wake... people who we don't associate with anymore, are glad that they're gone, and hope we don't run into in the future; then we've taken it personally.

If we can remember that we are caught up in a battle that is greater than ourselves, an ageless battle between Good and evil; then we will know that it is not about us. We won't take it personally.

If we can remember that we don't live in and of ourselves, that Christ lives in us and our life is hidden in Him; then we will truly see that He is our shield and nothing can harm us. We won't take it personally.

If we truly love God with all our heart, our soul, our mind and our strength; then we will be empowered to love our neighbor as ourselves. We won't take it personally.

If His love is perfected in us; then all fear of rejection, failure, insecurity and the like will be cast out of us. We won't take it personally.

Why can I know this, write this, but not live this?

Lord, Your love is perfect. Please, help me to decrease myself, so that You are increased in me.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

A Tale of the Tongue


Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers. And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption. Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamor, and evil speaking, be put away from you, with all malice: And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ's sake hath forgiven you. - Ephesians 4:29-32

Many years ago, I learned a very valuable lesson about relationships. I was working with several women and four of us had gotten very close by working on several projects together. One woman, I’ll call her Monica, was always telling me how helpful I was and how good I was at certain things – always very positive towards me. And when we were with the other two women, I’ll call them Rachel and Phoebe, she was the same towards them – very positive. However, after some time, I began to notice that when Monica and I were alone, she had nothing good to say about Rachel or Phoebe. She pointed out their flaws and told me personal information about them that always seemed to be negative. Now, me being me, did not really catch on to this for quite awhile. Monica and I got along, we had several things in common that we enjoyed discussing and we were real encouragers for each other. And I have to admit, when the negative talk got started, I often took part. I listened to it and I even added my own observations of a negative nature. Thankfully, I can honestly say that I never spread any of this any further than my husband (who listens to such conversations by letting them in one ear and out the other, never remembering a thing – he just nods in the right places) and I never shared confidential information (I still don’t ever do that). It’s also important to point out that when I was alone with Rachel or Phoebe our conversations focused more on projects or situations, not on people. We encouraged one another occasionally and there was even the occasional negative comment about someone, but not nearly to the degree that this went on with Monica.

My day of enlightenment came when I was talking to Rachel and Phoebe about a certain project and I referred to something regarding Monica. I saw a look pass between Rachel and Phoebe that instantly told me I had been slammed. It was one of those occasions when my mouth stepped out ahead of my head and I said, “so what has she been saying about me that’s bad?” Their mouths fell open, their eyebrows shot up, and one of them whispered, “how did you know?” My response was, “she never has anything good to say about either of you to me, so she must be trashing me to both of you!” I was exactly right! We three had a good talk about what Monica really thought about us. We were very sorry for having listened, participated and fallen for the whole thing.

I remember being very disappointed in Monica. I was also disappointed in myself. The saddest part to me was that I had believed that Monica really meant all the positive things that she had said to me and that she had valued my friendship so much that she could confide in me. I was devastated to find out that Monica’s comments to the others negated all her compliments to me. I realized that I had been used and manipulated. I lost all trust in Monica. I never confronted her with the information, and I don’t think the others did either. I honestly don’t think it would have done any good. Knowing her, she would have denied it, turned it against us and made herself out to be the victim. My friendship with Monica was over and I avoided her company until, shortly after the incident, I moved on to other things. I did not pursue keeping up a friendship with any of those three women. In fact, I avoided friendships with women in general for some time afterward.

As it turned out, the incident had a rather profound impact on my life. I was able to look back and see similar situations in other relationships I had had earlier. A few involved men, but mostly such circumstances involved women. After that, I hesitated about getting involved with groups of women. I tended to hang out on the sidelines of women’s organizations and watch carefully without really getting involved- in fact I still do. I recognized the same pattern cropping up again and again with other women. For several years, I managed to avoid anything other than minor incursions. But, I eventually found myself getting sucked back into the very same thing again, much to my frustration and anger when I finally recognized it.

I believe there is a behavior involved that is rooted in a deep lack of self-esteem. It seems to go something like this: “I’m OK and you’re OK, but everyone else is really not. You and I can create a bond based on this. I can tell you how wonderful you are which fills your need, in hopes that you will reciprocate and fill my need. And if I talk about how bad everyone else is, we’ll both feel better. We share a secret and that bonds us together. And if I tell you how bad my other co-worker, sibling, friend, etc. is it’s validating that they were the problem rather than me.” There tends to be an instigator – the one who gets the pattern started, as Monica did. But, there is also a participant – the one who goes along with it and adds fuel to the fire. Each one can have this same dysfunctional relationship with several different people at the same time. A major give-away to this behavior is that the conversation is emotionally charged. Displeased facial expressions, groans and exclamations are signs that the conversation has crossed into the territory of unforgiveness, insecurity, frustration and accusation. In contrast, there is also the whispered monotone while the speaker's eyes dart around to be sure no one is hearing.

Guess what? I’m guilty!! I’ve been on both ends of this. Because of my passive nature, I tend to be the participant more often than the instigator; but I now recognize that I have been both and both are equally guilty. After all, it does take two to gossip!

As I’ve written this, my eyes have really opened to recognize this behavior in so many areas of my life. It comes in different disguises. Some of it is outright gossip, but some is not. Some is disguised as “so you can pray” or “you need to know” or other even more subtle forms. I think it’s important to expose this destructive behavior and grow past it. For too long I have watched, and participated in, this tactic that people, particularly women, use to manipulate and control a relationship in order to get emotional needs met – without even realizing we are doing it.

I have come to a place that I detest this behavior – in myself and in others. It grieves the Holy Spirit when we speak evil of others. It is as if we are holding our own opinions above our Father’s. He sees us through the blood of Christ and the eyes of love. He asks us to do the same with our neighbors.

Does this mean that we can never talk about problems? No. There is a way to do that in love. I remember a pastor once sitting down with Rick and I to tell us about a situation with a friend of ours who had taken a bad road. The pastor wanted to warn us, so that if this friend came to us for money, we wouldn’t be taken in. He told us what had happened in a very straightforward way that expressed compassion for our friend rather than anything negative. I’ll never forget how he paused in the middle of his story, looked at me and said, “You know, we can talk about situations without talking bad about people.” Then he continued as if he had never paused. That stuck with me in a very powerful way and I’ll never forget how he handled that situation. I believe that his pause and interjection directed to me was straight from God. It caused me to mark that incident as the right way to communicate about negative circumstances.

My desire is to please God, rather than grieve Him. I deeply regret all the times that I have failed at it.  I have asked His forgiveness and I know that He has freely given it. I know that there will be times in the future when I will have to choose not to participate in that old pattern, even if it means stopping a conversation with someone. As much as I hate to make waves, I would rather please God.

Father, thank You for forgiving my sins and loving me past my shortcomings. Thank You for exposing the iniquities in my life and teaching me how to change. I forgive those that have spoken evil against me. I forgive those that have instigated me or participated with me in evil conversations. I ask You to place a coal on my lips so that I only speak words that are edifying and bring grace to the hearer. Please help me to be kind, tenderhearted and compassionate towards others in person and in speaking of them. Teach me how to control my tongue. Please give me the strength and boldness to separate myself from any conversation that is not pleasing to You. ~ Amen