Tag Archives: Women’s ministry

Failing a Psych Test by Lauren Mooney

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

Lauren Mooney is a work in progress that definitely won’t be complete this side of heaven. She loves being crafty, seeing the moon in the sky during the day, and smelling the Earth after it rains. And if she’s brave enough, one day she’ll be a full-time novelist. But for now she’s content being people’s friend, Scott’s wife, and God’s daughter.

 

Mackie huffed at me as I handed him my computer on my last day of work. “You’d fail a psych test now if you were enlisting,” he said staring up at me over his wire rim glasses.

A life-long military man, Mackie parlayed his wire-tapping skills into a second career as an IT guy. And from behind his gadget-cluttered desk, he brazenly questioned my sanity. Working with Mackie for four years, I’d come to understand his often gruff, sarcastic approach concealed a fatherly heart. But to tell me I’d fail a psych test? That seemed a bit extreme.

“What are you talking about?” I played off Mackie’s insult. “I could totally pass a psych test. Besides, enlisting in the Air Force is the last thing I’d do.”

“Nah, man,” he laughed. “Do you realize what you’re about to experience? The Air Force would never take you. They’d see all the changes about to happen in your life and they’d say, ‘Nope!’”

Two and a half years later, Mackie’s words resound in my ears more frequently than I ever imagined. I’m definitely not crazy – well, not most days – but I failed to really hear Mackie’s advice at the time. He was trying to tell me extreme change can debilitate someone. Instead I puffed up my chest and told him the changes would be good for me; they were proof of growth, proof of something I’d long desired.

When you’ve been begging God to change something – anything – in your life for several years, here’s what I don’t suggest telling Him you’re capable of handling within 18 months

  • Meeting your future husband
  • Beginning a long-distance relationship with him
  • Asking for your job to be eliminated so you can move from your bachelorette pad into your boyfriend’s parents’ home three states away and live off unemployment
  • Job searching every day in a new city
  • Trying to figure out your role in a new family
  • Getting engaged
  • Planning a wedding
  • Getting married
  • Moving into your new husband’s house
  • Finding a job
  • Learning to be a wife while your husband works full-time and gets his Masters degree
  • Getting a promotion into a totally new job
  • And finding out you’re going to be an aunt for the first time

The majority of these changes created amazing experiences and I have precious memories from those 18 months. But the overall feeling I remember during that time is utter exhaustion.

And if I rewinded my life to re-listen to my prayers back then, I’d predominantly hear petitions for life to change just enough to be better with a few requests sprinkled in for life to stop changing all together. Mackie’s warning had become reality but I wasn’t quite ready to admit it.

The ironic part of praying for things to stop changing is that, well, they usually do, and right when life settled down and I began to find myself again and nothing much was changing, my prayers and conversations switched to ones of discontent.

I was desperate for something – anything – to change. Again. Just like I had been prior to Mackie’s warning. It felt as if I couldn’t breathe if something wasn’t changing.

In my eyes, so much needed changing. Everything was wrong with my job and I wanted a new one. I didn’t like the way I looked and resented the fact that I’d gained weight since our wedding. I wanted to get my Masters. I was beyond impatient waiting for my sweet husband to find a new job now that he had his Masters; I wanted to know for sure if we were moving somewhere or staying in our home.

Oh – and then there was all the anxiety over when and how to start a family. A quick glance at Facebook any day of the week proclaimed news of due dates, teething, and first steps.

When I’d have coffee with girlfriends and they would ask what’s new, I was embarrassed to admit that not a whole lot was new. Life hadn’t changed much and it made me uneasy.

I’m tempted to blame behemoths like Apple, American consumerism and tiger moms for my lack of contentment with life not changing. But the reality is somewhere along the way I mixed up my value and identity with my ability to prove my life was ever changing.

I had put discontentment up on a pedestal and glared down at God, threatening Him with continued tantrums if He didn’t change something soon.

I neglected to consider the fact that I can grow – that God can grow me – even when everything else remains the same around me.

Mackie had called me out on my addiction to change several years prior but I was too wrapped up in change’s whirlwind to see a different path to sanity.

Most days I still fight to stop myself from orchestrating or demanding change, but I’m striving to remember it’s not about thinking growth comes only from change. Growth, improvement, betterment, whatever you want to call it, is not necessarily synonymous with change. Even when everything stays the same, abundant growth is possible.

Even though on the outside it often looks like things are falling apart on us, on the inside, where God is making new life, not a day goes by without his unfolding grace. 2 Corinthians 4:16 (MSG)

The Prompt by Melanie Dosen

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

You may remember Melanie from a couple months ago. Now you can see her because the pictures are working again! Her beautiful words from our open mic night inspired me and here she is again sharing her own transition and reflection on her dear grandmother. 

 

“Growth in change” spurns several images in my mind: small green sprouts emerging out of a sea of concrete, flower petals of vibrant hues blooming in the midst of frost, beautiful buildings constructed on devastated land. I saw bright colors contrasting darkness, symbols of hope and future existing in counter-intuitive places. Images of life, even though all things point to death.

Right now, death seems to be pointed to from every direction, particularly in the life of my grandmother, Nani.  Nani is experiencing a pretty significant, harrowing change: her body and mind are breaking down at an ever-increasing rate, and eventually will succumb to that degeneration.  Her body will not know what to do anymore; her mind won’t know what’s going on.  My grandmother has Alzheimer’s Disease—a devastatingly slow change that does not result in growth, but rather, it’s antithesis: in decay.

The funny thing about my relationship with Nani is that I’ve been anticipating her death for decades, as Nani has spent most of my life constantly reminding me of everything I’ll inherit when she and my grandfather pass away.  As children, she would take my sister and I on tours around their house, asking us to point out what we wanted to receive when they were gone.  Nani has gone so far as to write our names on the back of pictures and on the bottom of trinkets in the house.  “Everything, “ she would say proudly, “will be yours.”

Nani’s desire to prematurely delegate her things out to us was silly—a little neurotic, but mostly endearing.  It would be the quip I would use to contribute to the “Grandparents say the darnest things” conversations with friends.  It became rather taxing, however, to hear your still-quite-healthy grandmother constantly talk about the end of her life—focusing on the inevitability of her future death rather than on her present experience as one of the living.  I realized recently that my perception of Nani has not been as a woman who lives, as one who contributes to life or has a story to tell, but as someone who will pass away.

I’ve been carrying this conflict of Nani’s life and coming death around with me for months now, trying to sift through the typical mysteries that one toils with in the face of the death of a loved one.  Questions like, who was Nani?  What’s her history?  How does she know herself, and how does she want to be known?  I find myself wondering if Nani understood herself as someone whose purpose was to give to those who she loved, never to receive.  I felt that I loved Nani by receiving from her, and shamefully realize that I never established a habit of giving, of learning, or of asking.  Now, when I want to drink in every word she says, I feel awkward, bumbling through my questions and comments, trying to break the habit of many years of our relationship being based on shallow exchanges and (at times forced) smiles of gratitude.  My devastation is made even more acute in knowing that as I am trying to change and grow in our relationship, she doesn’t realize it, or can’t.  For the first time, I am the giver, but she cannot receive.

I am not sure what it means to attempt to find growth and life in the ashes of death.  The finality of everything is overwhelming, and I often wondering if I am just grasping for meaning when maybe there just isn’t any there.  In a world that creates meaning out of history and shapes understanding out of stories, it’s tempting to understand Nani’s quieting story as a tragedy—that all of what she is composed of is slowly slipping away, and once she is gone, she will never truly be known.  I really want to believe that all is not lost in the deep, inaccessible crevasses of Nani’s memory, but that her hopes, dreams, and thoughts that constitute the deep fabric of herself are held in the memory of God.  A God that generates life counter-intuitively, and when the creation He set in motion is fulfilled in death, there is still a promise of life.

Death is the changing of something that was once known in one fashion, but now exists in another—body to spirit, consumption to decay, active story to living memory.  In reflecting on her death, I realize that I am Nani’s living memory: her death will just be a change, a transition.  I will carry her life, her pride of her family, her gentle and sweet spirit, her desire to care for all who she loved.  I am her voice that transcends her death, that tells her story, creates meaning of her experience.  My growth emerges from her, and propels who she is into the future; we, everyone who she loved and who loves her, are the life that survives her death.  Which, maybe, is what she wanted in the first place.

The Wisdom of My Ever Changing Good Body by Cissy Brady-Rogers

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

Cissy Brady-Rogers is an embodied woman who changed my life.  If you’ve read A Beautiful Mess, then you know her impact is amazing.  Her job title would read marriage and family therapist, eating disorder specialist, spiritual director, yoga instructor, and adjunct psychology faculty at Azusa Pacific Univ. However, she would say, “Personally, I am a woman with a genuine story of growing through my own food and body related challenges. My overweight childhood and puberty, a date rape in my young adult years, and a mastectomy for breast cancer at age thirty have been among my greatest teachers on the journey to loving my body. I have mined the treasures of the dark places in my story and gleaned much wisdom. I look forward to an opportunity to share these riches with you.” (from her website, which you should check out) This story is a precious one full of wisdom once again and I’m honored to share it with you today.

 

I celebrated my fiftieth birthday in March.  Twenty years of healing my own disrupted relationship with my body and accompanying others on similar paths has taught me that wisdom is born amidst both expected and unexpected changes. It comes through accidents, like the one that inspired this post. It comes through diseases, like the cancer that took my right breast twenty years ago. Yet most bodily changes are part of nature’s rhythm.

Our female bodies go through necessary bio-psycho-spiritual cycles that birth and sustain life. Our younger bodies abound in hormonally-driven changes that add fullness to our physiques, draw us to relationships, enable us to bear children and activate our nurturing capacities.  The reduction of those same hormones in our midlife bodies turns our energies to guarding and guiding the future generations in ways we could not if we were busy with our own children.

The world tells me to fear these changes and employ fat-fighting or anti-aging methods to stave off anything that doesn’t conform to current beauty ideals.  I am even told in a thousand different ads to be afraid of my body.  But my midlife wisdom tells me that no matter how much I work out, eat well, and do all the things Dr. Oz says will keep me young and healthy, my body is not what it was ten or twenty years ago.

I’m not the same woman I was in those years, thank God.  At thirty I was busy trying to save the world, or at least some of you, through my good works as a therapist and church worker–and in therapy twice a week trying to heal my inner turmoil.  At forty I was busy writing a book, leading workshops, building a successful private practice–and blaming and resenting my husband for not being the man I wanted him to be.  My body was more toned in those seasons and the skin on my neck didn’t droop, but if decreased muscle mass and sagging skin are the price of compassion, wisdom and joy, so be it.

My latest opportunity for listening to my body came on New Year’s Eve.  I didn’t plan to celebrate in the emergency room after dislocating my shoulder in a favorite yoga pose.  Arthroscopic surgery in early February and months of limited mobility sleep challenges, and dependence on others weren’t on my calendar either. But that is the nature of life. It happens while we are busy making other plans.

I could react to this with fear of my aging muscular-skeletal system that gave way on that fateful Saturday morning.  I could work harder and longer and fight my way back to practicing advanced inversions and backbends. Other fifty year old women do it–why not me?

Yet at this point in my life, working my way back to where I once was doesn’t feel loving or wise. Yes, it might look valiant and noble.  And it would surely satisfy my ego need to be admired for my high level of fitness and flexibility.  But that would be more about returning to my thirty or forty year old self than maturing into my midlife self.

I want to respond to this change with the soulful discernment of a wizened fifty year old, not ego driven reactivity.  My “good choices” to eat well and exercise regularly during my first thirty years were more about controlling my weight than good health.  My breast cancer diagnosis at thirty, along with clinical work with eating disorder patients, shifted the focus of my fear from fat to disease, but I was still more motivated by fear than love.

Over time, my relationship with my body became more compassionate as I walked alongside girls and women who had adopted the fear of fat messages and harsh body control offered by the health, diet and fitness industries and whose lives were being destroyed.  I learned from my clients that fear of fat or disease is never a good motivation for self-care.  It may make our bodies stronger, leaner and even healthier, but it sucks the life out of our souls.

We need to respond to changes in our bodies, whatever their source, with compassionate attention. The monthly upheaval of menses, the challenges of pregnancy, motherhood, (or non-motherhood when others are mothering) and menopause, invite us to reflect on our lives. Along with nature’s cyclical changes, injuries and illnesses also become opportunities to pause and listen more intently than we do during ordinary seasons.

  • What wants to be born in me through this change?
  • What needs to die in order to make more space for the new?
  • What is the hidden treasure in this dark place?
  • What do I sense, feel, need and want?

Part of my current self- conversation with is about honoring the limits of my body.  My midlife body isn’t the same as my young adult body.  My weight and general fitness level have remained steady throughout my adulthood, but hormonal changes, wear and tear from years of an active lifestyle and natural aging processes need to be respected as I consider my mid-life pursuits.  Athletic yoga poses, like the handstand dropback to backbend that injured my shoulder, were safe when I began a serious yoga practice fifteen years ago.  They might not be most advantageous now.  Perhaps the risk of injury outweighs the benefits.

So I choose to take time to see where my yoga practice will go from here. Each day, I choose compassion and curiosity as I recover mobility and strength in my shoulder.  Last week I experimented with downward facing dog at the wall.  It felt good. I tried happy baby pose and decided I wasn’t yet ready.

I choose to be present, vulnerable, and open to what each day, each moment brings on the path of healing. I choose to receive the fullness of life that comes in ways I didn’t ask for and wouldn’t expect. I choose life in my good midlife body, with my good shoulder, just as I am.

Upcoming Events

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Workshops/Retreats

Be sure to check out the EVENTS page for the latest information about upcoming workshops. 

May 19th – Contemplative Gardening Workshop

June 22nd – Summer Solstice Open Mic/Art Show

Would love to have you join us!

 

Changing Days by Sara Honda

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

Sara Honda works at the University of Colorado Denver.  In her free time, she loves mentoring teenage girls, exploring the beautiful sunny state of Colorado, and watching Survivor. She secretly loves professional golf, hates onions and Crocs with a passion, and wishes she was a hip hop dancer.

 

“How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives.”
― Annie Dillard

 

A few months ago, a good friend shared this quote with me.  At first, the quote made me uneasy.  I could see the truth of it, and that’s what hit me.  There are a lot of my days that feel routine, that feel mundane.  Do I really want my life to reflect the hours I spend riding the train to work every week?  That makes me seem too ordinary.  Or the hours I spend sitting in front of a computer each day?  I’m not exactly saving starving children.  What about all those nights I go to bed before 10pm? Does that make me lame?  (I swear I’m cool, people.  I just like my sleep!)

 

The more I thought about the quote, the more I began to welcome Dillard’s idea as an invitation rather than a conviction.  What if we treated every day and every decision, little or big, relevant or not, as though it really mattered?  Not with the pressure that everything is make-or-break, but that the decisions we make will, over time, tell a story of who we are.  What we buy/say/do/read/think are indicators of our values.

 

Our childhood and young adult years are marked by milestones: sweet-16, first car, first kiss, graduation, college, and first job.  Many of my friends are encountering adult milestones: engagement, graduate school, marriage, babies, and travel.  But I’ve been without any significant cliché life-changing milestones for a few years now.  I had become a full-grown adult, and yet for a long time I was waiting for something else to make me feel like I’d reached adulthood.  Would the perfect job do it?  Maybe I wouldn’t feel like an adult until I was married, or at the very least in a serious and committed relationship.  Does it happen when you have a baby?  Perhaps if I lived on my own (which I am currently doing, and yet I still feel like a kid)? 

 

I am sure the fact that I sometimes like coloring in coloring books and watching Harry Potter movies has nothing to do with it, nor the fact that I still don’t know how to order an alcoholic drink.  “I’ll take one of those alcohol-thingys.  Um, the wet kind.  Do you have anything pink?”

 

Over time, I have come to appreciate (with much prodding from God) that my life has already started, and that the seemingly-mundane decisions I make today are in fact  meaningful.  It’s hard to pinpoint a particular moment over the past few years that significantly changed me, but somehow I’ve evolved.  It has been nearly three years since I graduated from college, and in that time I’ve gained confidence, new lifelong friendships, a deeper understanding of God’s presence in my life, and assurance of the ways God has called me to minister to others. 

 

As we get to know ourselves better (and I truly believe this process lasts until the day we die), we are able to recognize when we are not growing.  For me, I begin to feel frustrated and ask that ever-present “Why am I here?”  It spurs me to get to know someone new, get plugged in to a new group, or take on different responsibilities at work.

Change in my life is not marked by milestone moments, but by the little decisions I make every day that dictate who I am, and who God is shaping me to be.  Change is gradual, fluid, and welcome.  I know there are still milestone moments to come (good and bad), but I have come to the understanding that these are just another part of the long and constant growth known as my life.  God has promised us that a life lived for him will be meaningful and worth living.  That has been my journey; appreciating consistency and recognizing that sometimes growth is gradual and occurs without my immediate knowledge.  I hope that if your story is similar to mine,  you can recognize growth in your life, and that if you do experience change on a more significant level, you can still recognize the change that happens in the quiet lulls in between. 

Letting Go by Sarah Scheidler

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Filed under A Beautiful Mess, Growth in Change

Sarah loves all things organic… Her soul is fed by a good challenge, coffee & old dusty stuff with potential. She meddles in all things artistic… but adores photographing people (you can find her work here)… She is a mother x 3 and a wife to a wonderfully creative type. Former avid blogger… gone hotwheels racer and baby chaser…

 

Growth in Change: Letting Go

It was slow as molasses…yes in January…  A change that came out of nowhere and yet… over much time and many discussions, in retrospect, my husband and I should of known what was coming…

God wanted to do something different than we had planned… Damn. It. All.

I am not a risk taker by nature. I am loyal, responsible & calculated and I married a man who is equally conscious, reliable and planned. Together for nearly 8 years we lived together happily buying and selling homes, living within our means, wanting for nothing, sharing and enjoying all that we had, the best we knew how…  It was a good life.

We remodeled our craftsman house (read: 2200 sq ft beauty with 3 car garage) in Pasadena, Ca… and as we moved back in… in to a much larger, better planned out space… I kept finding myself wanting to purge… and purge more of the things we did not use regularly… I didn’t really think much of it as it happened but gradually it became obvious… we had plenty of space to store things… and few things to store…

A few months later, during my husbands sabbatical from pastoral work, my sweet but entirely burned out husband, and I began to do some soul searching… and real questioning… you know the kind that starts with “Do I really have a need for 15 pairs of jeans?” and moves to “How can I be a good steward of  today, Lord?” and “God how can you heal my soul?” and “What do we really value & desire?” and maybe even “God help us to dream..” … My husband also took a motorcycle training class… we tried to connect with others… but made very few connections, after many attempts…

In this space there was much hurt, more loneliness and layers and layers of disappointment in people who were called to care for others, but did not care for me…

So we prayed. And prayed. And at the end of my husband’s sabbatical we agreed that we needed to begin a conversation with the church about what we believed God had done and was doing… Quite honestly, he wasn’t sure exactly WHAT God was calling us to but he was pretty certain it was NOT his current position/job…

I remember sitting in the living room of our lovely craftsman home…  sharing tears… realizing we were going to have to move… away from our neighbors… 8 months pregnant with our third munchkin…  and down size our living space, significantly…

The purging I had started a few months prior to this was nothing compared to this mass purge, lots of tears, putting our craftsman up for rent, saying bittersweet goodbyes to our church family of 10+ years and the hope that God knew what He was doing even if we had only a glimpse. I revisited our finances a few (million) times, we met with wise folks to make sure we weren’t overlooking something… I researched places to live… From Portland, OR and the greater Los Angeles area… We searched for housing and jobs…

God was calling us to something new… something unknown… something ridiculous really… something creative…

 

We trusted and we leaped.

 

Exactly one year later, we have found ourselves surrounded by an amazing community. Literally. Surrounded. Our church community lives sprinkled among the streets surrounding our sweet little postage stamp sized rental home.  There there are people who live what they believe… humbly and intentionally… and it heals our souls… It heals me to walk down an unmarked alley to even more nondescript doors… down stairs into a basement to meet for church… in a place where my children, who may be found brake dancing in the back during worship, are joyfully greeted… It heals me to have ladies that will let me contribute to their lives… if even by a grocery run… It heals me to be invited to showers (baby & wedding) where guests are welcome with or without a gift… welcome even without knowing the one celebrated.

Tim is slowly, but surely, pursuing his own creative journey…  I continue to search for time (& literally space) to carve out for my love of all things creative… and/or growing… my children included…

Our little family has LOVED learning to love being together so much, so closely.  The boys have learned the neighbors have a small farm, clubhouse and trampoline.  Tim’s appreciation for the little things like a good cup of coffee has grown. I have learned to shop for less, less often.

Shortly after we moved into our little place, I remember saying to a new friend “We are exactly where God wants us”… but it stung quite a bit… I welled up with tears often when speaking of where we came… how we came… where we are. Even now, some days I daydream and wonder if one day we will suddenly find ourselves in our former life… With the big house… enormous yard…  our own master suite… a custom made place for everything and then I remember.

 

I am EXACTLY where God would have me… and I. Love. It. Right. Where. I. Am.