About Me

Hey there! I'm a twenty-three year old Jesus follower, and this blog is to record all of the goings-on in my life within the next months. I recently broke both of my legs, and feel God leading me to tell my story - a story of redemption and grace, of hope and pain, of excitment and fear. May you be deeply blessed as you read. Shalom!

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Proof.


Today was bath day.
Ugh.  I dislike bath day.
And yet I love it at the same time.
Do you see how many stairs I have climb? 
On my butt?!
And I'm shooing dogs off of me the whole way up.
Man.  I'm pooped.

As such, I've decided that tonight's entry will be a picture story.  Plus, my internet connection is only quasi-connecting, so I'm gonna have to wrap this story up real soon.  Maybe it has something to do with the "Snowmaggedden" that's about to hit my city.  What a stupid name for a snow storm.  Really?  Really?  It's like people have never seen snow before!  Geez.  Anyway.  Below is a before and after of my legs.  I think it's kind of weird that I'm posting a picture of my legs on the internet, hairy ones at that.  On a website open to the public.  But, apparently, people want some proof.  I'll give you proof.



Man legs. 


                          

Not man legs.

 
See?  Told you it was real.  When I first looked at them I felt like singing "My Chains are Gone" by Chris Tomlin...  "My hairs are goooooone, I've been set free, my new pink razor rescued meeee."  Not to mock a really great song.  I'll show you the real lyrics.  They mean exponentially more to me.  The song is "Amazing Grace", but with a chorus, and the chorus goes like this:

"My chains are gone, I've been set free.
My God, my Savior has ransomed me!
And like a flood, his mercy reigns.
Unending love, amazing grace."

It's pretty funny because something as stupid as shaving continues to remind me of new beginnings, and the amazing grace that my God has given me.  I'm so thankful that he has set me free from the chains that the world put on me, and the chains I put on myself. 

That's my story, and I'm stickin' to it.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Kids.

All the girls in my house slept in this morning (my dad had to get up super-early...), we headed to iglesia, and then my sister N-Dizzle and I got to play rummy all afternoon with my grandma.  Glorious.

One of my favorite things about church this am was getting to talk to people afterward.  Sometimes I think that peoples perception of church is "you go, you listen, you leave".  End of story.  But, in my opinion, that is very incomplete.  The community that is found in a local body of Christ, (another way of saying "church"), is tremendous - something that I have come to greatly rely upon.  That's not to say that it's some sort of club that you belong to so you can get to know other people, or that my family and I never leave church right after the worship service.  It's not a club, and sometimes we leave without talking to more than a handful of people, but there are other times when I stay after the service and just talk to people I don't know, or people I haven't seen in a long time.  It brings so much joy.

Today I had the honor of conversing with many people whose heads barely came up to the handles on my wheelchair.  A little (like, maybe 4-year-old?) girl in this adorable pink mini-Chinese dress was flittering around the lobby like a butterfly when she almost bumped into me.  She turned to me and said in a super-soft voice, "What happened?"  How I explain it to most little kids is that "I hurt my leg, and I have to wear this black thing like a giant band-aid so that it feels better."  Little little kids totally get it.  They are also the ones that gape the most.  It's hysterical.  Like, mouths open and everything.  Another little guy that had seen me before (4?) came up to check in, and he said, "I see your toes!  Do they feel better?"

My heart just melted.  I was cracking up because kid after kid came up to talk to me.  Maybe it's because I'm getting fat, and I look like Santa Claus.  I think it's because I'm permanently on their level and, as such, they feel more comfortable talking to me.  After they get over the fact that I'm in a giant stroller that doesn't have any cool cup-holders. 

Yesterday, I took down all of the cards that people have sent me over the last three months.  I had them all hanging up on the dining room wall, (with blue painter's tape, of course) and they have been such an encouragement to me.  Dozens and dozens of people letting me know that they were thinking of me, and more importantly, praying for me.  I had to take a picture so that I could remember why it's important to send people cards.  One of my absolute favorites came to me in the hospital:





It's from a three-year old.   
(My other favorite is also from a three-year-old. 
Green one, top right, with the puffy balls.)


Noah came from HJ.  HJ came with her mom and dad to visit me in the hospital when I had first fallen.  Apparently, she had made it in Sunday school.  It made the perfect get-well card, didn't it?  The top of it says, "Noah's family and the animals were safe in the boat."  I can vividly remember getting it from her, and thinking about how fitting that line was.  "Noah's family and the animals were safe in the boat."  

Noah stepped out in obedience to God, even though everyone around him thought he was a loon.  I really admire that about Noah.  Because I'm a chicken.  The first neighbor that would come over to question what I was doing with a crap-ton of wood, and I'd be like, "Okay God, I'm done now.  I can't build this thing."  Don't even lie.  You'd give up soon after.  Like, when you found out that you'd have to quit your job, and devote your week to building a really big boat that all the animals in the world would come to.  It's almost laughable.  The story of Noah is one that (I think?) is pretty well-known, and pretty well-made-fun-of.  I mean, I'm not laughing at God.  I respect him, and I think that his plans for our lives are the ones where we find the most joy, and the most clarity.  But sometimes when God asks me to do something crazy, I am tempted to say, "Yeah right.  Oh wait.  Really?  You weren't kidding?  Oh.  Okay."

I'm a CHICKEN, I tell you!

But.  When we are obedient, God truly does great things.  I think that if God can redeem an entire planet through one family & a gigantic boat, he can redeem a broken leg sitch.  Sitch is short for situation, in case you didn't know.  And, in this sitch, it has been easy to be ashamed or discouraged by many things.  Phillipians 1:20 has something to say about this:

"I eagerly expect and hope that I will in no way be ashamed, but will have sufficient courage so that now as always Christ will be exalted in my body, whether by life or by death."

Cuh-razy cool that I found this passage tonight.  "But I will have sufficient courage so that now, as always, Christ will be exalted in my body..."  I pray earnestly that Christ is exalted through me - I have seen his faithfulness in so many ways.  Ways that I have talked and talked and talked about, and I can't seem to stop.  I'm so thankful that he uses even the craziest of things to exalt himself, and that he uses cotton-balled covered pictures to point me to himself.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Focus.




Or, if you are more scientifically minded:






That is your daily dose of sunshine.

For those of you in the midwest, you are probably missing the sun as much as I am tonight.  I haven't seen it in so long, and the Chicago news has started this "Countdown to Spring".  I just want to be like, "Stop.  Please just stop.  51 days away is ridiculously far, and you're just making me more depressed."  Spring is 51 days away.  I guess that's not too long.  I'm trying so hard to live in the moment - winter is wonderful, and I love the snow.  I'm just missing the sun right now.  (I found out tonight from a Nurse Practitioner babe that you can use a blue garden light to simulate sunlight, and that it produces seratonin!  Home Depot, here I come!)

Just in case you don't have a blue light in your house, I'm sending a few rays your way.

Last night I fell asleep prematurely: didn't brush my teef, didn't pee, didn't take my glasses off, didn't get my pillows right (I sleep with two fluffy ones - I only had one flat one under me), and I didn't take my meds/vitamins.  Let me tell you.  I woke up like a grumpy bear.  I felt like I had gotten hit by a truck.  Or a hunter?  And...I'm not sure how exactly that would feel (thankfully), but I'm sure you would feel really sore the next day.  I couldn't get my internet to work, and I couldn't find my cell phone...Then, I thought I was going to be walking on crutches at my PT appointment, but I think I must have heard my PT helper wrong - not until next week. 

All that to say that my day was off to a weird start.  Isn't it amazing?  How so many little things can distract you from what your day could be like?  I mean, really.  Who cares how many pillows I like to sleep on?  Do I need my cell phone and internet to survive?  No.  Why do I let those little things make or break my day?  I am so easily distracted by those things.  I'm working on focus.

You know who has focus?  Angels.  Seriously.  Tonight during my small group time, we were talking about angels, and how people in our culture today have an easier time believing in angels than they do Jesus.  Some people revere angels a little too much, but I acquired an appreciation for them this evening.

They do the bidding of God with no questions asked.

I mean, the respect is not really mine to gain, but I did gain it for angels tonight.  I think I am just way to pessimistic about spiritual things.  I'm learning that more and more about myself.  Angels are not something that I typically think a lot about, but they are a good example for me to follow.  They are humble, but they know their place.  They are strong, yet they are willing to serve humanity (in all their stupidity).  They are focused, and yet so many different things go on in their lives all the time.  It's so bizarre for me to think about!

Angels are something that God created before he created humans, and because God cares about said humans, angels do too.

   “He will command his angels concerning you to guard you carefully;
   they will lift you up in their hands, so that you will not strike your foot
   against a stone."
                    Psalm 91: 11 & 12  (also quoted in Luke 4:10 & 11)


This may sound a little ironic coming from the chick that broke both legs, but it's SO true!!  I can't tell you how many times I have seen God's careful protection in my life.  I can't tell you how many times I have seen his provision and his grace.  How many times I have been able to count on him when I could count on no other.  God is so attentive.  To every little detail.  To details smaller than humans will ever see, or be able to even conceive.  I just think that is so amazing.

I think that the greatest way that the angels are an example to humans is that they are in awe of God.  This is why they are obedient & faithful to him, and to him alone.  They see his wonder, and they see how good he is.  

In both Isaiah 6:3 & Revelation 4:8 (Revelation is quoting Isaiah) it says,
"Day and night they never stop saying:
  ‘Holy, holy, holy
   is the Lord God Almighty,’
   who was, and is, and is to come."

That.  Is all I need to focus on.  Can you imagine the sound?  Of millions of wonderful voices gathered around the throne.  Holy, holy, holy are you, Lord God.  I stand in awe of your wondrous love, and I thank you that I can bask in the warmth of your presence.  I can't wait to stand before your throne; help me to focus on you alone.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Shaving.

So apparently the last few days have been all about progress.  It started with standing (even if only briefly), then continued on with exercising and stretching of muscles, and now...?

I shaved my legs. 

I know, I know, you thought this day would never come (ahem, family).  Well, it has.

When each family member separately mentioned how hairy my legs were last week, I just sort of chuckled because I just took it as teasing, but when my grandma was grossed out, I knew it was time to forge ahead.  Can I just say how much I have enjoyed not having to shave my legs for three months?  I was kind of sad to have to finally have to give in to cultural and societal expectations, friends.  Some call it hygiene; I call it forced expectations on women.

I went through a phase a few years ago where I wouldn't shave for weeks, in quiet rebellion...well, actually it was kind of loud.  But I refused to put the blade to my leg because I felt pressure to do it.  I mean, who invented shaving in the first place?!  It's pretty ridiculous when you think about it, "Durrr...I'm gonna take a sharp razor blade and SCRAPE my lower extremities so that the hair gets CHOPPED off, and my legs look smooooooth.  Here, feel it."  Give me a break.

And I'm not being dramatic here, people.  This is serious!  I'm not kidding!  And!  My legs were FREEZING tonight!  Ice cold!  No joke.  The hair kept them insulated, and I just hacked it all off.

But, alas, my perspective on shaving changed today.  Rather than viewing it as a stupid, time-wasting routine & an unfair expectation that is placed on women in today's society, I saw it as rebirth.  As my dad's hair buzzer cut through each one of those suckers, I was actually glad to say goodbye.  My skin started peeking through, and I saw freckles that I haven't seen in months!  It was rather exciting.  I'll post pictures soon, so you can see my beastly legs. 

I have no idea how to tie this in with a passage.  No clue whatsoever.  There is this holy fear inside of me that doesn't dare tie "shaving rebirth" to the rebirth that Jesus talks about in John 3, but part of me really thinks it could work.  I mean, it's not the same thing, and you know that, so I'm gonna go for it.  Jesus is sitting (or standing) (I always imagined it on a rooftop), talking to a teacher-of-the-law-Pharisee, named Nicodemus.  Nick, we'll call him, acknowledges that Jesus is from God in the very beginning of the conversation, and they talk back and forth about rebirth.  I love it that the Bible allows you to eavesdrop.

In verse four, my buddy Nick says, "How can anyone be born who has already been born and grown up? You can't re-enter your mother's womb and be born again. What are you saying with this 'born-from-above' talk?"

Jesus said, "You're not listening. Let me say it again. Unless a person submits to this original creation—the 'wind-hovering-over-the-water' creation, the invisible moving the visible, a baptism into a new life—it's not possible to enter God's kingdom. When you look at a baby, it's just that: a body you can look at and touch. But the person who takes shape within is formed by something you can't see and touch—the Spirit—and becomes a living spirit."

 (Hey!  That's what I talked about yesterday!  I didn't plan this, guys.  I'm not that organized...in case you were wondering...)

 Jesus goes on..."So don't be so surprised when I tell you that you have to be 'born from above'—out of this world, so to speak. You know well enough how the wind blows this way and that. You hear it rustling through the trees, but you have no idea where it comes from or where it's headed next. That's the way it is with everyone 'born from above' by the wind of God, the Spirit of God."

I would like to encourage you to take five to seven minutes and go to the following link to read the whole conversation:  http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=john%203&version=MSG

Just highlight, copy, and paste into that magical little white rectangle. 

Rebirth is something that we submit to, and it is found only in Jesus.  When we see the invisible moving the visible, trusting that the wind is wind even though we can't see it - trusting Jesus even though we can't see him or touch him.  That's when we are reborn, our lives are made new.  I pray that God would increase the amount of trust that you have in him, whether it's absolutely nothing, or whether you would be willing to hop in a wheelbarrow and tight-rope across the Grand Canyon.

It's 2:30 am, and I've spent the last two hours watching Regis & Kelly bloopers.  I looked at my clock and I was like, "Oh wow, it's 12:30 already?  Whoa."  Then I did a double take.  "TWO THIRTY!?"  Yikes.  Time for bed, Fred.

Sleep well, dear ones!

Monday, January 24, 2011

Body.




I strongly dislike video recordings, and I strongly dislike the sound of my own voice, but I'm biting the bullet so you can get in on the action.  The sacrifices I make. 

: )

I spent a good chunk of the morning relaxing & exercising, and then I spent the afternoon reading.  Normally I watch the news as well, but all they were talking about this afternoon was Cutler, the football game yesterday, and how Oprah found her long-lost half sister.  No news for the rest of week - all this football talk makes me want to hide out in a mall somewhere.  Judge Judy will have to suffice. 

One of the things I got to thinking about today as I was watching my feet bounce back and forth while I was doing my exercises was how the body functions.  It's such an amazing machine, isn't it?  I mean, think about it.  My leg bones were broken, and right away my body sent blood to clot the fracture, which gave way to fibroblasts to producing collagen, which led to chondroblasts,  Then, my body used the chondroblasts to create a hard shell called a bone callus.  After the bone callus is finished forming, osteoclasts and osteoblasts are going to spend months remodeling the bone by replacing the bone callus with harder compact bone.  Isn't that AMAZING?!? 

(Info taken from:
http://health.howstuffworks.com/human-body/systems/musculoskeletal/heal-broken-bones1.htm
Go there if you want to read exactly how bones heal.  It's cool stuff.)

The human body is one amazing thing.  James (the guy I talked about yesterday) talks about how the human body is dead without the spirit.  (I'm kind of freaked out by spiritual things, I'm not gonna lie.  The word "spirit" has taken some getting used to in the last several years as a Christian because it makes me wriggle.  I think that most people would say that every human being has some sort of "soul" or "spirit", something that connects us to a higher being, and to one another.  Right?    

It seemed to be a little out there for me, but once I actually started to experience the change in my life because I was doing things like praying, and trying to still my heart so that I could hear the voice of this Christ through things like reading the Bible and trying to remember what it said, I started to realize that there was so much more to me than just me.  So much more to my life than just living it for myself.  The Bible talks about how we become one with Christ when we commit our lives to him - he infiltrates every nook and cranny.  Our heart, our mind, our soul.  I started to learn about what it meant to worship him "in spirit and in truth".)

James says, "As the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without deeds is dead." (2:26)

I think about how my body would be dead without my spirit - devoid of life, cold, and hard.  This verse isn't saying that in order to please God, or in order to get to heaven you have to do good deeds.  I think what it's saying is that you have to put your actions where your mouth is.  To say that I will live my life for Jesus is one thing, but to actually do it is another.  I always try to ask myself, whenever I feel stale & cold, "What am I doing to put my money where my mouth is?  What am I doing to truly embody the kind of life Jesus lived, and to actually do the things he told me to do in his stories & in his conversations?"  Because to embody the life of Jesus means to completely let go of self, to surrender all for his sake. 

It is an ongoing process that takes time - a lifetime actually.  

Kind of like the mending of bones.  Except that even though it feels like it's going to take a lifetime for my bones to mend, it will hopefully only take another handful of months.  So I guess it's not exactly the same, but it's a process.  Sort of like becoming like Jesus.  : )

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Do.

"My dear brothers and sisters, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry, because human anger does not produce the righteousness that God desires." -James 1:19 & 20

This verse today in my life?  Epic, epic fail.

I just deleted a really petty list of reasons why I was so cranky today.  I have no excuses.  My new goal this week: to be incredibly quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to become angry.  Slow to become irritated, and more apt to be less focused on myself.

James goes on to say: "Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says. Anyone who listens to the word but does not do what it says is like someone who looks at his face in a mirror and, after looking at himself, goes away and immediately forgets what he looks like. But whoever looks intently into the perfect law that gives freedom, and continues in it—not forgetting what they have heard, but doing it—they will be blessed in what they do." (22-25)

Another pitfall in my life?  Doing what I know I need to do.  Seriously, I can't remember what my face looks like when I try to picture it in my head.  I am this person that James is talking about.  What would help is to look more intently into the eyes of Jesus, and listen to him more as I'm reading his word. 

I'm so thankful for worship, and the way that as I bring my crud before the Father, I can lay it all down at his feet.  That he comes and takes all of my stuff, and makes me clean.  And it's just amazing how he knows what I need to hear.  I've been singing this song all week, and we sang it at church this morning.  It's by a guy named Charlie Hall...

Oh Christ, be the center of our lives.
Be the place we fix our eyes,
Be the center of our lives.

You're the center of the universe,
everything was made in You, Jesus
Breath of every living thing, everyone was made for You

You hold everything together, You hold everything together...

Oh Christ, be the center of our lives!
Be the place we fix our eyes,
Be the center of our lives.

We lift our eyes to heaven,
And we wrap our lives around Your life
We lift our eyes to heaven, to You."

I distinctly remember singing this in the hospital the night after my surgery, and it is still my continued prayer for this very week.  Nearly three months in, and I'm still praying it.

Christ, please be the center of our lives.  Please be the place we fix our eyes; be the center of our lives.  And not just by our words, but by the way that we live our lives.

Blanket.

It is freezing cold.  My toes have been in cozy socks, and they are still frozen.  Along with my nose.  My toes and my nose.  I know how to rhyme!  But seriously, they are the only things that get cold on my body, and I can't get them warm.

So I grabbed an extra blanket for tonight.  It was given to me by my grandma quite a few years ago.  It's sort of a throw, I guess you might say.  It is cream and forest green with sheep sewn around the edges, and a Psalm stitched into the center.  Psalm 23 to be exact.

Huddled underneath my warm layers this evening, I started to peruse Netflix.  I found myself watching "David" (with Richard Gere) tonight, mostly out of curiosity.  It may sound like a ridiculous movie, but it wasn't that bad.  Richard Gere is one of my top-ten favorite male actors (as I'm sure he is for many), but I was interested in the fact that he starred in such a movie because he is a practicing Buddhist.  I think he was in "David" before he stepped into Buddhism.  Or he is just a really good actor.

Anyway, the movie's beginning includes David's encounter with Goliath, the gigantic Philistine man.  He starts to say Psalm 23 out loud, and it occurred to me that I was laying underneath exactly what this man was saying.  It was weird because the very words that came across David's lips thousands of years ago are stitched into my blanket.  Isn't that so bizarre?

Here it is, Psalm 23:

The LORD is my shepherd, I lack nothing.
 He makes me lie down in green pastures,
he leads me beside quiet waters,
 he refreshes my soul.
He guides me along the right paths
   for his name’s sake.
Even though I walk
   through the darkest valley,
I will fear no evil,
   for you are with me;
your rod and your staff,
   they comfort me.

 You prepare a table before me
   in the presence of my enemies.
You anoint my head with oil;
   my cup overflows.
Surely your goodness and love will follow me
   all the days of my life,
and I will dwell in the house of the LORD
   forever.

(Emphasis is mine)

I have so much more to understand about this chapter in the Psalms.  David wrote this one; he was a shepherd himself.  I've always wanted to try shepherding, ever since I saw a family do it on National Geographic.  It's no easy task mind you, and, out of frustration, I would probably abandon my sheep.  Seriously.  They're stupid, and they smell.  But the thing I admire about shepherds is their ability to have compassion on their flock, and to take care of them in spite of themselves.

I have only been a Christ-follower for about ten years.  At so many points I have looked up at my Shepherd after traipsing off, and getting lost, and I have thought, "Is now the point at which you are going to abandon me?  Is it now that I no longer will receive your love?  Will I never see your rod and staff again?  Because I feel stupid, rank with disobedience & selfishness." 

Time and time again Jesus has shown his faithfulness to me.  Sometimes people will refer to him as the "Good Shepherd".  It's not just the title of a ridiculous movie with a white, pasty, blond-haired Jesus; it's the truth.  This was one of the first Psalms that I ever heard, and I still have yet to comprehend parts of it.  Part of me is afraid of this Psalm.  And yet, part of me revels in the fact that the Creator of the Universe treasures me as one of many sheep in his flock.  It feels so wonderful to be blanketed, literally, in these words.  To know that as I fall asleep tonight, Jesus sings this song over me: as my Lover, my King, my Friend, and my Savior.  My Shepherd.

To be blanketed in his words is to live a full, content life.  Warmed by his love.