"But He knows the way that I take..."
Job 23:10
"Not
that I'm over it but little by little its getting easier to pretend it's easier
which means easier must be around the corner...". so often that's our
temptation, if we can't make ourselves better maybe we can at least pretend
that we are better? Of course that won't actually make us feel better but it
will take off some of the pressure we feel from those around us that we feel we've
exhausted with our seemingly endless grief. We might resort to small talk or
maybe just isolation so we don't have to face the impending waves of grief,
sure to topple us over if we face them.
We want to control it, to confine it to terms and stages, we don't want to believe that we're at its mercy. As I've observed grief in the last year, in my own life and those I love, I have learned that it is anything but predictable. We may determine to pick ourselves up and be well but the wave of grief is often stronger than our determination. We may shove our grief into categories but we'll find ourselves disappointed when we go "backwards" and wind up at the beginning. But the reality is, grief is unpredictable, it follows no pattern and no set of philosophies can pull us out of it.
I have longed to learn how to grieve well, in a way that brings hope and healing and hopefully a growth of character. The temptation is to cover it, hide from it and do anything but feel it and let it bring us to our knees.
There is no magic formula, no five or twelve step process, no words or phrases that if repeated enough times will pull you out. Even saying that grief is a "process" is in some ways our attempt to exercise some control. If it's a process, it must have a determined end. If I take all the steps in the process I'll get there. But the truth is, grief is messy and inconvenient and certainly untimely.
We want to control it, to confine it to terms and stages, we don't want to believe that we're at its mercy. As I've observed grief in the last year, in my own life and those I love, I have learned that it is anything but predictable. We may determine to pick ourselves up and be well but the wave of grief is often stronger than our determination. We may shove our grief into categories but we'll find ourselves disappointed when we go "backwards" and wind up at the beginning. But the reality is, grief is unpredictable, it follows no pattern and no set of philosophies can pull us out of it.
I have longed to learn how to grieve well, in a way that brings hope and healing and hopefully a growth of character. The temptation is to cover it, hide from it and do anything but feel it and let it bring us to our knees.
There is no magic formula, no five or twelve step process, no words or phrases that if repeated enough times will pull you out. Even saying that grief is a "process" is in some ways our attempt to exercise some control. If it's a process, it must have a determined end. If I take all the steps in the process I'll get there. But the truth is, grief is messy and inconvenient and certainly untimely.
We're
afraid that we'll never come up again. Afraid that we can't pull ourselves out.
And the truth is, we can't. We would give anything to let go of the doubts,
fears, anxieties, what if's, the crushing sadness...to find peace, to trust and
hope in the unknown. And there are moments where we have all that, but then,
without warning, the wave of grief can topple us over and we find ourselves on
our knees again.
And
we feel guilty that we're still sitting in it. Like we should have done
something to pull ourselves out and it's our own fault that we're still here.
And maybe in some cases there is some truth to that, we can certainly make
things harder on ourselves and slow our process but often times it's just the
unpredictability of grief. It's three steps forward and two back, it's a lack
of control and a realization that we are not all powerful and life doesn't
follow a set of rules and despite what our culture tells us we can't have
everything instantly.
Grief
is hard and unkind and very very unpredictable. We respond with our fight or
flight reflexes because anything is better than admitting that we are at our
end, that we don't understand, that the pain is unbearable and we have folded
under the weight of it. We want to be strong, to move on like everyone expects
us to, to feel joy more than pain. And we will. We will feel joy, and freedom
and a lightness that is currently foreign but there's no telling when or how
we'll get there. And there's no proof that getting there faster will actually
be good for us. Sometimes we need to sit in it. We need to stop masking it,
replacing it, denying it and we need to sit and let the waves wash over us,
until gradually, without us even realizing it, they begin to recede and we find
ourselves able to breathe, able to see, able to stand with sure feet on solid
ground.
In
the meantime, though it may not feel like it, we can be sure that God has us.
That while our grip is loose, His is strong. That while our vision is clouded,
His is clear and He sees us. That while there are no easy answers, no formulas
to heal our hearts and take away the pain there are answers. God is with you.
God is working. As much as you'll be unpredictably taken out by grief, you will
eventually find a surprising relief. It will come. He is faithful to deliver
you, whether through or out of your trials, He will deliver you. In some ways I
think we'll always grieve our losses but hope will find a way through the
grief, over and over again, hope will find a way.
It's
ok that you can't hear him, that you can't see him. He's still there. It's ok
that you don't know how to pull yourself out of the fog, you don't have to. Sometimes
our most powerful prayer is simply, "God, help!" We need His help and
we need to be willing to wait so that He can work out His purposes, he will not
be late and He will come. Grief is unpredictable but our God is trustworthy,
unchangeable and as much as we can count on the surprising blows of grief we
can count on our God to meet us in our weakest moment and to bring us
through.
"But he knows the way that I take; when he has tried me, I shall come out as gold...he is unchangeable, and who can turn him back? What he desires, that he does. For he will complete what he appoints for me, and many such things are in his mind." Job 23:10-14
"But the Lord was my support. He brought me into a broad place; He delivered me because He delighted in me." Psalm 18:18,19
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