How Not to Fit In

Every woman has a story.  Do you know hers?  Is it happy or sad?  glorious or painful?  How does her vulnerability show up today?  How do you respond to her vulnerability?

She was 14 and alone.
The kitchen sink was full of sewage.
No one knew, but her … and the Lord.

Junior high had been a struggle for her, as it is for many a lonely teenager.  But her experience in 9th grade had rocked everything in her world.  The pain of her shame was so sharp she couldn’t sleep.  Night after night, she’d stay up ’til the wee hours, crying – sobbing – because she didn’t fit in.

And she never would.

She’d wanted so badly to fit in.  But she was poor.  Very poor.  Living in a middle-class neighborhood.  Pretending she was middle-class.  But she wasn’t.  How many of her friends knew that?  Only the one friend she’d dared allow into her house.

From the outside, the family home seemed quaint – some might even say it was charming.  Yellow unpainted stucco that, seen up close, looked like thick cornbread batter, dolloped and swirled in a more-or-less uniform pattern.  Perhaps the oldest structure on the block, its uniqueness stood out among the rows of neatly painted white houses that lined both sides of the street in a very quiet neighborhood.  French doors led from the small veranda into the living room on one side and into the dining room on the adjacent side, adding to its enchanting ambience.

If you looked closely at sunny reflections in its huge picture window, you’d see wavy places, revealing the fact that it had been installed a long time before its present tenant had been born.

The grass was green enough, except for the scattering of bright dandelions, which always seemed to pop up in defiance within just a few hours of being mowed down.  A closer look revealed that the lawn’s rich color was the result of a thick combination of clover, broad leaf, and volunteer grasses that had drifted onto the lot from other, more intentional plantings over the years.

The inside, however, told a different story.  The whole place reeked of wet wallpaper.  Layers and layers of ancient wallpaper that someone had tried unsuccessfully to strip away.  Here and there the bare plaster revealed an old and now-ugly past … stained with yellowed paste, chipped in places, and sometimes revealing the rough surface of the lathe underneath.

No central air.  No central heat.  Only a old gas stove that stood on the weathered wooden floor in the dining room.  The kitchen cabinets, painted with thick ivory enamel, were no longer squarely connected with their doors.  Behind the kitchen stove and the hot water heater that stood next to it, someone had attempted to pretty it all by tacking up a large piece of bright yellow linoleum trimmed with broad black stripes that made its crookedness all the more apparent.  Nothing matched.

The dark hardwood floors of the living room and bedrooms no longer shined.  Their varnish had worn away decades before.  The stairs creaked.  The lighting was dim.  Dark and lonely.  Hot in the summer and cold in the winter.  No wonder she escaped so often … sometimes to neighbors’.  Sometimes to her only friend’s house.  Mostly to her church.

She felt safe at church.
She knew it’s where she belonged.

To be continued …

 

3 Reasons I Hate Going to Church on Father’s Day

My own father was absent from my life for 37 years. Five months after we finally reconnected, he died of a heart attack. But it’s not personal sadness that makes me shy away from church on Father’s Day. It’s what I learned about men after my father passed away. And I cannot bear to sit there and listen. So I just stand up and walk out quietly.

Because the Father’s Day message
is not at all like the Mother’s Day message.

Furthermore, it’s not just one pastor. It has happened in every church I’ve ever attended.

On Mother’s Day, we’re told …

  • to honor & respect the woman who raised us, and
  • to show her appreciation & love for all she does.

However, the Father’s Day message is quite the opposite.

Instead of hearing how wonderful men are & how their families should celebrate them, men get a lecture – meant to be a pep talk, I suppose.

Therefore, fathers are told …

  1. You have tons of responsibility. (He’s painfully aware of that already).
  2. You’re not doing as good as you could be doing. (He already feels inadequate.)
  3. You need to “man up” or your kids will not turn out well. (He already feels emasculated.)

These are the 3 Reasons I cannot sit there & listen
without wanting to shout out “STOP!”

Because these well-meaning pastors are actually increasing a father’s pain & vulnerability – without realizing it. He doesn’t recognize that his fellow man’s secretly-held self-perception is just like his:

  • I am weak.
  • I am inadequate.
  • I am filled with shame.

Can we please turn this around? Please?

Research in the psychology of men shows that men respond better to empathy & affirmation than to criticism & shame. Duh.

Empathy for how hard he works & affirmation of what he’s getting right will actually make a man want to be more, to do more. But a man rarely – if ever – gets either one.

So here’s my outline for the perfect Father’s Day Sermon:

  1. We celebrate who you are and acknowledge your incomparable contributions as husbands and fathers, coworkers and friends.
  2. The world doesn’t recognize how truly amazing you are. Nor are you affirmed and encouraged as much as you should be – even within the church.
  3. You protect and provide for your loved ones, helping them solve problems, with a deep desire to see them become the best they can be.
  4. We admire your dedication to keep on keeping on. Even when your own needs (far too often) go unmet.
  5. We’re here to affirm – to cheer you on – and to support you on your journey.

The Good News is …

No matter what your pastor says on Father’s Day, you can put this to work in everyday life. Then watch your man transform into the leader he was created to be – right before your very eyes.

How cool is that?

“For this reason I kneel before the Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth derives its name. I pray that out of His glorious riches He may strengthen you with power through His Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith.”EPHESIANS 3:14-17a

Day 5: Why Me?

why me?

You know My Story. I was raised apart from my father. Married at 18. Divorced by 35. A single mom with 3 sons, very little work experience, and a high school diploma. I don’t know if I ever asked, “Why me?” Honestly, that shipped sailed so long ago that I don’t remember. But I did ask questions. A lot of questions.

Perhaps your story is similar in some way. Your dreams didn’t come true, and you’ve tried to understand. Perhaps you’ve asked one (or more) of these questions:

  • Why did this have to happen?
  • What did I do to deserve this?
  • What am I missing out on because of this?

So why do bad things happen?

Asking why – or any of those other questions – will never get us anywhere.
In other words, how you see the problem is the problem.

Consider it pure joy?

Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters,
whenever you face trials of many kinds,
because you know that the testing
of your faith produces perseverance.
(James 1:2-3)

[callout]How does that work?
Ask a different question instead.[/callout]

“What does this experience make possible?”
Some examples …

  1. Failure develops humility.
  2. Waiting develops patience.
  3. Grief develops gratefulness.
  4. Hardship develops strength.
  5. Opposition develops fortitude.

All of which will bear fruit in a practical way.

For instance – although I had never ever wanted to go through divorce – that experience made something new possible. My dream of going to college was always simmering on the back burner. But I hadn’t the freedom to go to school and manage my marriage at the same time. My then-husband opposed all my attempts for self-improvement. His decision to leave freed me to become who I am created to be.

Failure. Waiting. Grief. Hardship. Opposition. It took me 4 1/2 years more to actually get started, but once I did, I fairly flew. My experience had developed New Stuff in me. Humility. Patience. Gratefulness. Strength. Fortitude.

PLUS a Bachelor’s of Arts degree. A Master of Arts degree. And a Doctor of Psychology degree. All back-to-back!!! Who could have seen that coming?

And where I am now in the process of life
is deepening who I am in Christ!

[callout]Jesus has given me Beauty instead of ashes.
Just as He promised.[/callout]

The Spirit of the Sovereign Lord is on me,
    because the Lord has anointed me
    to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted,
    to proclaim freedom for the captives
    and release from darkness for the prisoners,
to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor
    and the day of vengeance of our God,
to comfort all who mourn,
    and provide for those who grieve in Zion—
to bestow on them a crown of beauty
    instead of ashes,
the oil of joy
    instead of mourning,
and a garment of praise
    instead of a spirit of despair.
They will be called oaks of righteousness,
    a planting of the Lord
    for the display of his splendor. (Isaiah 61:1-3)

So here are my questions for you:

  • What does your current (or past) experience make possible that you would have missed without it? What is The Lord wanting to give you instead?