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Transitions & timelines
by Debra Farrington |
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My body wouldn’t function anymore. Life as I knew it would
be over. Intellectually, I knew this was silly. Emotionally,
that didn’t matter.
The panic lasted for almost six months. I felt as if I’d
failed some cosmic keeper of the deadlines. I wasn’t
married. I didn’t even have a serious boyfriend. I didn’t
have any children. I didn’t even have a dog or cat. I didn’t
own a home, wasn’t part of a church or any civic
organizations. I had a good job, but still, what had I done
with my life? I was supposed to have accomplished so much
more by this time, or at least, that’s how it seemed at the
time.
Those six months were some of the worst and best of my life.
I woke up on my 30th birthday and, to my relief, my body
seemed to be the same as it had been when I’d gone to bed
the night before. With that disaster averted, I finally
turned my attention to my life and began to take stock, and
discovered that some of my concerns were real, and ones I
could work on. Others were just cultural expectations, and
it was time to let go of them.
Perhaps the first expectation to go by the wayside was the
question of marriage and children. I’ve never really worried
much about having children, and I’m a firm believer that if
you’re not dying to have a child you shouldn’t have them.
It’s a little like writing a book: you’d better really love
the idea before you get started because that’s the only
thing that will ever get you through writer’s block and
other difficult writing days. Though now at the age of 49 I
have a wonderful
stepson, at 30 I wasn’t aching for a
child. Since the only clock ticking was the one of other
people’s expectations, and not my own biological one, I
stopped worrying about marriage and kids. They would happen,
if ever, when it was time.
In the meantime, I realized I liked the single life. I
enjoyed my freedom, and the fact that no one cared if I put
the cap on the toothpaste or not. I had friends. My life was
busy and enjoyable for the most part. If I got married some
day, so be it, but I wasn’t going to go to my grave
regretting my life no matter how it turned out. Whether
being single was a transitional stage or a permanent way of
life for me wasn’t in my control, and I was finally okay
with that.
Owning my own home turned out to be something I cared about
more. What was preventing me from buying a home?
I could
afford one. Primarily I was stalled by my own sense that I
wasn’t a grown-up yet. So I saved my money,
steeled my courage, and finally bought a condominium. I
bought grown-up furniture and real dishes, and finally got
rid of the orange crates I’d been using for bookshelves.
Living in my own space with things around me that I’d
chosen felt absolutely marvelous.
I looked back and wondered why I’d spent so many years
putting my life on hold, as if marriage was the only
legitimate marker of being a grown-up.
I made lots of other changes as a result of that crisis. But
the most important one was that after an absence of many
years I re-joined the church and started nurturing my
spiritual life. The church I joined held a class that taught
me a wide variety of contemplative prayer practices, and I
learned about becoming quiet and listening intentionally for
God’s voice and guidance in my life. It was in that course
that I began to understand the nature of the transition I’d
been living through. I had unconsciously set myself an
ambitious agenda based on cultural norms as I understood
them, an agenda that had very little to do with God’s call to me.
Midway through the course I woke up in the wee hours of the
morning and sat bolt upright in bed, realizing for the
first time in my life that God loved me exactly as I was.
The agenda I’d set for myself — like the New Year’s
resolutions we make every year — had little to do with God,
much less my own hopes and dreams.
The time I spent struggling with the expectations I’d set for
myself was difficult. Had I known the stories then, I
would have compared my time to that of the Israelites out in
the desert after leaving Egypt and before getting to the
land God promised them. The tale of their journey is a good
one for any of us in transitions; both their pitfalls and
their successes make for good story and are instructive. The
Israelites struggled so hard out there in the desert, trying
to find a way to stop being slaves and learn to be more
fully the people of God.
That’s the struggle for most of us in times of transition.
Letting go of the reins, dropping our vested interest in
the agenda we’ve set or let others set, and listening for
what God truly calls us to be and do — that’s the challenge.
There’s not one way of doing this; most of us have to figure
out what will help us let go. Perhaps the only constant is
that learning to let go and listen is easier to do in
community than it is by ourselves. For me, it was the
support and encouragement of others in the class on
contemplative prayer that helped me hear more clearly. For
you, it might be a conversation with a friend in the dog
park while your pooches run around.
Each January we hear about and are encouraged to come up
with New Year’s resolutions. They’re almost always about
the things we hate about ourselves, and they’re often
culturally conditioned. We’re overweight, or we don’t
exercise enough, or we’re not patient enough with friends
and family. My suggestion is to skip the resolutions this
year. Spend some time this January taking stock of your life
in a different way. Make a list of the things you thought
you’d have done by now, the things that weigh heavily on
you, and talk with God about that list. If your list
includes things that you don’t really care about, and you
don’t sense God investing a lot of energy in them, let them
go. Maybe the time isn’t right, or maybe you’re spending energy trying to fulfill other people’s dreams. But
if there are things on your list that really grab you and
you’re not pursuing them right now, make them part of your
ongoing conversation with God. Those things that really have
your attention may be clues to the place to which God calls
you. Be open to creative ideas that might come your way, or
to windows or doors that might open up. Try to be open to
pathways you wouldn’t have anticipate as well; God is an
expert at surprising us.
In the midst of my own crisis I discovered that I had been
spending entirely too much energy focusing on myself, and
that it was time to turn my attention outward a bit. I
ended up becoming a youth leader as a result of my crisis,
which was just about the last thing I would have expected.
It was also one of the best adventures of my life, one it
would have been a shame to miss.
Debra
K. Farrington is a freelance writer, and the author of seven
books of Christian spirituality, including The Seasons of a
Restless Heart: A Spiritual Companion for Living in
Transition.
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Faith Reflections
by the Rev. Joy McDonald Coltvet
And a voice came from heaven, "You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I
am well pleased." And the Spirit immediately drove him out into the
wilderness.
Mark 1:11-12
Jesus is baptized and named the Beloved and then is immediately driven
to the wilderness.
Comforting or disturbing, this is life. From one moment to the next,
we are celebrating a wedding, then grieving a loved one not present.
We are feeling calm, cool, and collected, and then are thrown off
balance by a horrible news report. We are bathing in the refreshing
waters of baptism, then all of a sudden are driven out into the
wilderness.
In
each community where I’ve lived and done ministry, there has always
been transition. In college and at seminary, we went through
presidential search processes. In a former congregation, we completely
restructured our way of doing ministry together. At Holden Village, a
retreat center in Washington, we called directors, a pastor, and new
staff, and said both hellos and goodbyes every day to guests who came
and went. These experiences seem to have prepared me well for campus
ministry, where there is constant change and transition: different
schedules every semester, students coming and going, people rising to
leadership and then moving on. I’m beginning to think that this is
more and more not just a way of life for young adults but increasingly
for many ages.
Whether dramatic or subtle, whether gradual or immediate, life is
changing and we are changing. We are called to places we would never
choose. We suffer and wonder if we’ll make it. We stretch and grow
stronger.
In
all of this a voice calls out from heaven, “You are my beloved
children.” We remember how water splashed on us has claimed each one
of us forever, no matter what. Wherever we are on the timeline of
life, God claims us. We are not protected, though, by some kind of
magic that keeps us safe and secure from brokenness and the cruel
realities of this life. Instead, we are called immediately to struggle
in the wilderness.
"For if you keep silence at
such a time as this, relief and deliverance will rise for the Jews
from another quarter, but you and your father's family will perish.
Who knows? Perhaps you have come to royal dignity for just such a time
as this."
Esther 4:14
Esther is a beautiful
young Jewish woman who becomes queen of Persia. Throughout Esther’s
dramatic life transition, she has a valuable mentor — her uncle
Mordecai. When he hears of an evil plot to kill all the Jews, he asks Esther to go before the king on behalf of her people. Esther is
afraid and tells Mordecai that she can’t do that because she
could be killed. Mordecai responds with strong words, telling her that
she must do it, not only for her own safety but also because this may
be her purpose in life. To this glimpse of her reason for being,
Esther responds with courage. She not only does what Mordecai asks
her but wisely arranges a series of events so that the king will know
the truth about both the corrupt leadership within the palace and her
identity. She saves not only her own life but the lives of her people.
Times of transition often present us with opportunities to step
forward in ways that we would not have imagined before. When it seems
that we are hard pressed on every side, God makes us bolder. We find
strength and courage that we didn’t know were there. Think of the Rev.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; he was born of water and the Spirit, but
it was the injustice of white supremacy that propelled him to bring
his faith and convictions into the public arena.
In our day, what is God calling you to courageously face?
You have been raised from death to life for just such a time as this.
The LORD will keep your
going out and your coming in from this time on and forevermore.
Psalm 121:8
There are times in life
where we would just as soon not get out of bed. We are consumed by
grief or fear. We cry out like Job for God to hide us or take us or
save us. Despair looms close by. In those times, as we’re looking to
the hills wondering where we’ll find help, we need to be reminded that
God keeps us. God keeps us in community when we want self-obsessed
isolation. God gives us solitude when we want busy distraction. God
provides a way out and reminds us that neither life nor death nor
anything else can separate us from God’s loving embrace. Not now, not
ever. God calls in transition; God calls right on time.
The Rev. Joy McDonald
Coltvet is campus pastor at The Corner House: Lutheran Campus Ministry
at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. |
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