Don’t Flee Pain, Make It Your Friend

I stopped writing when my Mom got sick with cancer my last few years of high school. Looking back, I realize that it was one more way I tried to compartmentalize, that I wasn’t prepared to and didn’t want to process the loss, or my failures and selfishness during her illness. This approach, shockingly, did not help me grow anything but an unhealthy anxiety and mild depression as well.

Fast forward two or three years, nothing had really changed, and Andrew and my fledgling marriage hiccups were enough to deal with anyway. While our struggles were very typical for most Christian newlyweds, such as awkwardly transitioning from not having sex and actively trying to avoid anything to do with it, to switching our brains to trying to see it as a freedom and a blessing (gee, thanks, purity culture), to me they were monumental and I felt so alone in them. Money was also tight as we were both babies in our fields, just getting into the swing of this career thing, while paying off student loans. Also we had a cat we couldn’t afford to get fixed that was VIOLENTLY and loudly amorous, which our apartment building neighbours I am SURE loved, and brought me no end of embarrassment and discomfort in my own home. We were living what I didn’t then realize was an enneagram four’s worst possible nightmare: misunderstood, with no one who truly knew what I was going through, with no time or energy for any creative outlet, living surrounded by scads of strangers (some hostile) in a concrete box.

Jesus kept sitting down and offering me a hand to come sit down next to him, and I kept running on past Him with the excuse that I had jobs to do and other people to serve. His frustrated sighs must have shaken Heaven.

Through this whole period of our first year or two, I had told myself that a) our struggles were private and b) unique and we shouldn’t be failing in these ways, so best to keep up a good front, because no one was going to understand or be able to relate or empathize. Worse, that they would think we just weren’t spiritual or godly enough to handle these hurdles.

It took me eight years and a panic attack in a friend’s garage a few weeks after giving birth to my second child, our son, to have that eureka moment and realize that I hadn’t been lazy, or backsliding, or “adulting” wrong the last ten years. I’d simply been trying to pull myself out from under the weight of the trauma of my Mom dying, a new marriage that I didn’t realize I’d been bringing so much baggage into, and a few other bumps and bruises emotionally and socially along the way ALL WITHOUT realizing that I’d been fighting anxiety and depression and most likely mild PTSD to boot. And trying to do it all alone.

The first steps? Taking it all to Jesus and laying it all out and saying ENOUGH, I can’t manage this all, might you step in? (To which He cracked his knuckles and went to work, but not on my circumstances: on my HEART). I started asking for help. Just with dishes. Or a meal. Or babysitting for free. Allowing people to serve ME without feeling guilty for accepting. Not flinging myself through every emotion as fast as I could and just “getting on with it”. Sitting awhile in mourning, ACTUAL mourning.

I remember distinctly that I barely cried at all at my Mom’s funeral, that I went through the entire day just trying to remember to say the right thing, panicking I wouldn’t remember someone’s name, and actively trying to process everyone’s grief but my own, and making sure to keep it together so no one else felt put out or embarrassed. I was outside myself, exhausting my introvert self to the point of complete breakdown. I was terrified I would show some emotion the people around me wouldn’t be able handle. I loathed creating an awkward situation.

In the following months, I twisted my soul into pretzels trying to be ok for my Dad (who was actively seeking therapy for depression: I decided one of us struggling was enough, and hid my own angst) and for my younger brother, who had his own grief to work through and I figured, was worse off than me. I pushed my own soul away, resisted anything that looked like weakness, just “kept calm and carried on” and meanwhile, my heart was just shrinking.

If this sounds like your story, the most freeing thing I can offer is that you are not even remotely alone, and that it will be less exhausting to find someone to talk to than it will to keep pushing things down and just doing the next most urgent thing on your list. It took me over ten years to realize that I didn’t handle grief well, I didn’t handle it at ALL, didn’t let it in, didn’t let it do its work. Jesus kept sitting down and offering me a hand to come sit down next to him, and I kept running on past Him with the excuse that I had jobs to do and other people to serve. His frustrated sighs must have shaken Heaven.

I’ve learned since to slow down. To have the awkward, emotional conversations. To say no. To say yes. To find how I communicate (hint, it’s not audible conversations, it’s in writing). That when a memory comes, if it feels shameful, to talk about it. To write about it. To take away its power. Confession is freeing. The only one who accuses us of something we’ve dealt with with God already is Satan. And Jesus keeps shutting him down.

There are so many layers to my story and I haven’t hit the end of what it looks like to truly process completely all the events and emotions in my life, but here’s a start. Here’s an honest look not to make myself look good (spoiler: there are many parts that make me look anything but) but to resonate with someone out there reading this that needs to know they aren’t alone. I want you to know relationships are messy and two-sided and grow in fits and starts and there is seldom a clear line between protagonist/antagonist in any story.

The hope I offer is that the Master Weaver is great at untangling threads that are so tightly knotted you can’t tell where on ends and the other begins. Hand him your mess. See what He shows you. “Learn the unforced rhythms of grace”: grace with others, and grace with yourself. Whatever you hand Him, He will never throw back in your face. He’ll transform your face to shine.

Using the Awkward

People say 2020 is a train wreck. Valid. It’s also been a year where the layer of subtle deception of the images people portray of themselves and the underbelly of much of society norms have been blown apart and exposed. So those who thought that 2020 would be, puns intended all over the place, visionary and clear, are partially right.


Watching the events of the last few months unfold to our horror has been a wake up call that I have needed, especially as a believer. There is much work to do. The first step is acknowledging the issues of racism and hate. The next has been listening to what I feel awkward about (writing this blog post, talking to my Black friends, adjusting my racially-undiverse TBR pile) and leaning into it as from the Holy Spirit prodding.

My word for this year is “abide”, and right now it’s showing up in how I’m abiding in the pain and horror and conversations and knowing the next steps of individual action as allies and accomplices to start making it a point to make being intentionally anti-racism in my own life. The Holy Spirit is convicting so many of this, and making us realize this needs to be on our radar more than it is. To know where it is subtly being played out in our communities. Our friendships. And beyond. Some will be called to speak into governments for the justice and reform needed. Some will only be called to teach their own children and their own heart. It is going to be a different fight for every one of us that were born into privilege, and it will never rival the fights and plights of those that are BIPOC and their families, but it is meaningful and needed.

This blog is mostly about introspection, about seeing God in creation, about developing our emotional and spiritual maturity, among other things, and this is one topic of systemic racism and all that it entails right now is one that hits all those points for me and is a turning point for my awareness. Humility is necessary. I’m thrown out of my comfort zone and have to toughen up my ego and at the same time soften my heart. I have to let myself be awkward or else I’ll never get from beginner to knowledgeable.

I read like a fish. So that is where I’m starting. Small encouragements here and on Instagram. Intentionally teaching about and celebrating other races and how they face equality issues to my children. Not being afraid of getting things wrong and having to back up, make awkward apologies, and starting again from where I messed up. And reading whatever I can get my hands on from those who are living these realities is a great start.

Currently Reading:
• Born a Crime by Trevor Noah
• Indigenous Canada (Online survey 12 week course offered by University of Alberta)

Currently Listening:
• Jo Saxton’s Tea Time on Instagram
• Latasha Morrison as a guest on Annie and Eddie Keep Talking podcast, and her Be The Bridge Podcast
• In The Light: The Podcast with Dr. Anita Phillips

Read Recently (on Race, or by BIPOC):
• Stolen Sisters by Emmanuelle Walter
• I’m Still Here: Black Dignity in a World Made for Whiteness by Austin Channing Brown
• Purple Hibiscus by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
• Pride by Ibi Zoboi

Now On My TBR Pile:
• What Lies Between Us by Lucretia Carter Berry
• Shalom Sistas: Living Wholeheartedly in a Brokenhearted World by Osheta Moore
• Me and White Supremacy by Layla F. Saad
• Chokehold: Policing Black Men by Paul Butler
• The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
• White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo
• Righting Canada’s Wrongs: Residential Schools by Melanie Florence
• 21 Things You May Not Know About The Indian Act by Bob Joseph
• Be The Bridge: Pursuing God’s Heart for Racial Reconciliation by LaTasha Morrison
• United: Captured by God’s Vision for Diversity by Trillia J. Newbell
• The Cross and the Lynching Tree by James H. Cone
• Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson
• The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin