The privileges of flight this week held stony vistas. I remember the days when I snuck my "real" camera out of hiding to take photos from the airplane window. In those days, it was like computers now--stowed during takeoff and landing. Today? Cell phones!
On one of the many flights in the last week (7 in total), the familiar script caught my attention: "In the event of an emergency, leave all personal items and proceed to the nearest exit."
It sounds like the rapture to me. It also sounds a little like my life. I diverted my attention so I wouldn't have to divert tears momentarily.
My knee-jerk reaction went to the current situation with my house. Leave all personal items and proceed to the nearest exit. Yep. That's what I had to do. Even now, my body responds with a flush of adrenaline--I think it's adrenaline at least. It prickles my entire body from the top of my head and down my spine where it seems to shoot out to every limb.
But that wasn't really the first time. I'm kind of shocked at the memories that have flooded my mind. None were as extreme as right now, but is an element of "leaving and proceeding" as far back as I can remember! This is a blog, not a book, so I really shouldn't dive off of this board right now or I'll be swimming in words for a long time!
But I would be remiss to acknowledge my part in the extreme home situation. I invited my kids to live in my home while we (my dad and I) found a starter home for them. I knew it would be hard for them to change their chaotic way of life, so I intentionally prepared them and myself for a new round of parenting. The hope was to make up for the lack both kids had experienced (my daughter's by years of crisis in which she missed out on coping skills of all kinds, and her husband's very literal lack of parents at times). Implement was a surprise--I was unprepared for the reactions that came and the lack of reactions that were needed.
We navigated a monstrous situational change when my dad died. I traveled back and forth--gone weeks or months at a time. My ways of dealing with a deteriorating household seemed to create a lose-lose scenario. I resorted to peacekeeping. I tried to make progress happen when I was there. It wasn't enough. I bought them a trailer home, and by the time they fixed it up and moved, my house was far beyond a simple cleanup and exterminator. I hadn't been there most of the year.
I learned the very hard way that there is a difference between peacekeeping and peacemaking. There was no peace left! I had to begin disaster-level remediation. The contractor in charge texted, "I absolutely hate writing this ... what we are facing is worse than we thought. It's much like clients who have gone through a fire."
So as a result, I quite literally had to "leave personal items and proceed to an exit" while a team cleared my home of everything but a piano.
As I rebuild my life, I will be MAKING peace. It will no longer be a surface peace, kept at the expense of myself, my home, and my livelihood. And it may ruffle feathers, but I am determined to learn this and set an example so my legacy will not be one of destruction at the hands of helping others. It stops now. And the loss will be recovered many times over--not just me but my entire family. I am learning the ways of a gentle warrior.
Today the window went white soon after the plane's wheels left the tarmac. We were immediately in the clouds. This too feels like life. In my life, looking back to the specific decision of marrying G, the road ahead seemed clear--and in a way it was--but as soon as the launch happened, it was clouded, and I could no longer see. I trusted him to pilot our plane.
[MY GOODNESS! As I typed those words, I semi-remembered a dream I had with us flying a plane. That's another topic to explore offline!]
But I had the sense in the airplane, as I watched the whiteness for some time, that it matters who you trust. And if one can listen to the Holy Spirit within, it is possible to navigate well without physically seeing any clues as to where you are going. If I had known how to listen and trust the Lord, I would not have married G. How in the world did I get so deceived? I was making decisions based on what I could see or understand through my senses. I didn't know how to discern the inner spirit man.
Looking back, there were absolutely warnings! But I thought I was being either selfish or awful. Oh if only I had known how to listen! I listened to logic. I was open to the logic because it looked like what I desired.
Now I have this moment etched in my mind: the takeoff, the clouds, and the trust. Yes I trusted the pilot, but even moreso, the pilot trusted the design of flight--and he had radio contact to help guide all along the way.
I got a double breakfast at a bagel shop with a voucher from being delayed a day. The first one was a breakfast sandwich, the second, a bagel with cream cheese, was a lunch for later. My flight left at noon, and midway through I ate. Toward the end of my bagel, it was like the previous day's pretzels--my mouth felt dry, and it was a chore to eat.
I wondered, Is that my signal to stop eating?
My spirit man reverbated with an inner witness.
I responded on the inside, But I saved the best for last!
I always saved the best for last and cleaned my plate. I grew up that way. It was the reward for eating everything, I suppose.
I heard inside, "Enjoy the best first."
Hmm. I considered what that would look like in reality. I saw how it wouldn't be as hard to give up the rest when that dry feeling came if I had already enjoyed the best. But in this case, the "best" that I saved was a meager clump of cream cheese that happened to be thicker than most areas, which was almost none. It bugged me that I requested "heavy" and got less-than-adequate cream cheese.
My 'what-I-didn't-get' mindset was presiding! It affected my attitude and actions regarding food (and probably more). I wasn't even enjoying what I did get! I imagined through the process of what I could have done differently and realized I could have consolidated the spread and actually enjoyed a portion.
I ate the rest of the cream cheese off the top and let the dry bagel go. It seemed backwards, but it felt right.
"Enjoy the best first," I heard again with a follow-up 'knowing' that the Lord was about to edit and explain. "Enjoy the best." Not first--just best. With those words, I knew if I wasn't enjoying something, it wasn't the best, and it wasn't for me.
Pretzels aren't for me! I felt the Lord laugh with me.
"Use this guide, and you'll never go wrong."
I thought of things that were taboo land wondered about the guide. Could it really work with just the caveat of 'enjoy'? I guess it wouldnt be true enjoyment if my conscience was pricked.
"You are in a new place," the Lord reminded me. "To the pure, all things are pure."
This is true.
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