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Jono & Laynie

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When Disappointment Comes Knocking (Oh, it will.)

  Apparently there is a Japanese proverb that says, “Fall seven times and stand up eight.” I like this because it feels like the story of my life. Of this life.

 

To be clear, I was born an optimist.

 

Back in my school days, teachers and students alike would stop me in the hallway to ask what was wrong if I wasn’t smiling. My home life during those years was...ahem, pretty intense, but I wasn’t going to let it keep me down. I was almost always smiling-laughing, making jokes, making lemonade.

 

I was giddy on life and hope.

 

Maybe I’m just getting old, or perhaps just tired, but when I am honest, there are a dozen moments each week that leave me feeling lost and disappointed. I don’t smile or laugh nearly as much as I used to. Some days I'm a bit slower to just bounce back.

And I hate that.

 

A potential client who loved and raved about our work went with someone else because they were a few hundred dollars cheaper.

 

I had a Gigantic misunderstanding with someone last week and even though I tried to fix it and apologize, they won’t even talk to me now.

 

A well-known wedding blog asked us to submit a particular wedding (#bestmomentofmyweek), but then wrote back and said they already had one too similar lined up to showcase.

 

A close friend we’ve gone to bat for again and again hired someone else for some jobs instead of us. Yes, it feels personal.

 

I could go on. And we haven’t even talked about the Really Hard Stuff. Don’t get me wrong-my disappointments may all seem silly to you, (indeed they are ridiculous in light of what Matters in this life) but in my quiet moments, they matter to me.

 

The thing is, I know you have your own list.

 

So what do we do with this?

 

I cried yesterday, in the middle of a street in Brantford, because all “the hard stuff” just felt so...well, so dang hard. I’d made one too many mistakes at work; we’d just found out  the offer we made on a great property didn’t go through after all. I felt beaten up, worn down.

 

I walked and I cried a little and I prayed too.

 

I prayed for grace.

 

I prayed for hope.

 

I prayed for strength.

 

I didn’t immediately feel better, but I headed home with dry eyes. And then I ran into my sweet friend Holly. A hug from a friend-yes, it was exactly what I needed.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

I recently had a good convo with my friends Melissa and Laura about comparison. So many people we know are off doing amazing things and if we think about it, it makes our own lives look dull and unfulfilling. Their job pays better. They were given a bucket full of gold (yes, literally). They have the cutest babies. Life seems easy for them.

But this I know-comparison kills.

And I don’t want comparisons and disappointments to have the last word in this conversation, in my life.

At 30, I’ve experienced a depth of relationships that some don’t get in a lifetime. I have the sweetest husband, I’ve been able to travel a ridiculous amount, have attended university, have a downpayment for The Right House when it comes, have always had a roof over my head and eaten every day. (Often well!)

I have so much for which I am grateful.

Church-Stained-Glass-Austin

So I’ve been thinking about this a lot-this thankfulness and all this hurt. And then I was remembering that someone once told me that they saw my life as a stained glass window.

Stained glass, as an art and a craft, requires the artistic skill to conceive an appropriate and workable design, and the engineering skills to assemble the piece. A window must fit snugly into the space for which it is made, must resist wind and rain, and also, especially in the larger windows, must support its own weight. Many large windows have withstood the test of time and remained substantially intact since the late Middle Ages. (Wikipedia.)

God what sort of picture are you designing with my life?

When I think of stained glass windows, I think of a thousand intricate pieces melted into one big beautiful story. I think of light and colour, of a myriad of little wobbly bits, that come together in the most magnificent of ways.

So maybe my life is like a stained glass window. I think everyone’s is. Everywhere I look, I see beauty and pain, happiness and sorrow. I see disappointments and a million hard edges, but also life, joy and beauty.

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As I drove home a couple of weekends ago through northern Indiana and then Michigan, with Jonathan softly snoring beside me, I listened to music and couldn’t help but remembering all the goodness in my life.

It was magic. I know need more moments like this. But not every day comes with a quiet sunset and in the dreary days, I think these moments are just a conscious choice.

So even after all this rambling, I don’t have a magic formula for dealing with disappointment and I will never negate that our feelings are real. I hate to admit it, but I still have to sit myself down and say, “Perspective, Beckner!” more times than I care to admit.

And, let's be real...I will probably even still cry (sorry, Jonathan.) But I promise, I’ll wipe my eyes and get up again. I will take my messy, stained-glass-window life and I won’t give up. I hope you don’t either.

marthamchurchstainedglasswindow

tags: disappointment, essay, faith, inspiration, joy, life, love, marriage, quotes, rambles, writing
categories: grime life

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Tuesday 10.01.13
Posted by greeneandgrimeforever
 

No Matter What. #Ouchie

photo-1.jpg

 

I felt particularly challenged last year by a friend who said she had determined to live generously no matter what. Even if she was never thanked, even if she was taken advantage of, even if no one ever saw. She chose generosity as a core value of her life, bottom line.

I ponder this often.

At the blackest spaces of my soul I am selfish, I am weak, I choose myself and my demands before anyone and anything else.

 But what would my life and relationships look like if I fully and consistently committed to my proclaimed core values, the principles of this Jesus I claim to follow?

 ...to be loyal to and champion my friends no matter what (they do or don’t do in return).

...to love, serve and care for Jonathan before myself no matter what (he does or doesn’t do to deserve it).

...to only speak kindly of others no matter what (they have done to hurt me).

...to work hard, without complaints, and with excellence no matter what (even when I’m just plain tired).

...to live generously no matter what (even when we feel the tightness of our own budget).

...to choose positivity no matter what (even when the day has been black).

...to choose love and forgiveness no matter what (even for those who stab us in the back).

...to choose the higher road no matter what (even though it hurts like hell, hell, hell).

 To be honest, I love the music of these words, the idea of these virtues woven into my everyday, the beauty of such grace. But the reality of this is just plain hard. This I know.

But I am committed to trying, to carving these tenets upon my heart and letting them bleed throughout my life.

 I saw this sign the other day while I was walking through the small town of Winona Lake, Indiana-

photo (1)...to accept friendship is to accept the vow to give it.

...to accept love is to accept the vow to give it.

...to accept grace is to accept the vow to give it.

Freely you have received, freely give.

Alright then- let's get going.

tags: essay, freely you have received, friendship, grace, indiana, inspiration, life, marriage, morality, principles, quotes, relationships, scriptures, winona lake
categories: grime life

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Tuesday 09.10.13
Posted by greeneandgrimeforever