This is blogpost number three. And
by that I mean that I have started this same post three different times. The
first time I started writing it, I was on fall break. Sitting in my house,
luckily with nothing to do, but I couldn’t think of a coherent post to actually
publish on the Internet. The second blogpost, I am going to be honest, I
probably fell asleep during. I just couldn’t get my words out and eventually
got stuck and gave up. So, I’m going to finish this one. I hope.
Last time I wrote, I had just gotten
back from a crazy hurricane break. Tabb was just starting school, and things
were just getting into a slight swing. Now, the semester is winding down,
YoungLife at Tabb is in full throttle, and life is moving way, way, way too
quickly. I could never sum up what has happened, what I’ve learned, and how
I’ve grown in one blogpost. And that is completely my fault, not writing for
two months. It was my intention to write on here constantly, but then life
came. And if there is one thing I have learned, it is that when life comes-
don’t step back and ignore it. I kept wanting to write that I am sorry that
I’ve been such a bad blogger but, for lack of a better phrase, I am sorry
I’m not sorry. Life came and it was bigger
than my blog, and that is my only excuse for not being on here.
I’ve felt more life this year that I’ve ever felt. I don’t ever think
of life as boring, and I don’t usually slump in misery for days. But I’ve been
stumped this year with the amount of life I’ve felt. What the heck does she
mean by life? Well, I’ll tell you. This year, in particular, I’ve realized what
it is to live as if my life isn’t mine. And it took some hard realization to
actually realize that this was a problem in my life. I found myself on anxious
rants about how I didn’t want to do stuff that made me uncomfortable. How I
couldn’t do everything because I needed time to relax. How I was content where
I was and did not want to move. A realization left my anxious heart right in
it’s confused heart when God made it clear that this life is not my
own, it never was, and it never will be. I
can hear that phrase over and over again and pump my fist that I get to live
like that. But when on earth was I actually going to live like
that? When my words became actions, that is when it all made sense. I’m in no
means saying I live my life selflessly
every day. In fact, I still live for myself everyday. But, there comes a time
when everyone has to grow up, put their big girl pants on, and do stuff that’s
going to exhaust them. We’ve all got to do the things that are going to be
uncomfortable, things that will seem fruitless and dumb. We’re going to have to
step out and step back to realize where we get life, and how to live in the
most life-giving way.
What did this mean in terms of this
year? Well, in a big way, this changed my perception on contact work. In the
beginning of the year, it was extremely uncomfortable for me to go to the
school. I raged that it was a waste of my time, that kids were already gone
before I could even walk in the school, and that I didn’t have time to drive a
total of 30 minutes just to wave at a kid whose name I may or may not remember.
Then, a wise soul said to me, get over yourself and just do it. “You have
to.” She said, when there is an option of
going or not going, count not going out. At first, I was mildly angry that this
was the truth. Angry because I knew I would have to stop being such a baby and
just go to the school throughout the week, even if it meant I only saw one kid.
Then, the you have to turned
into a this is a freaking privilege, why wouldn’t you? I get the privilege
of entering the halls of Tabb. I get the privilege of knowing and loving high
school girls. This is not a task, or a volunteer service: this is life. That I
may consider it a privilege that I get to help high schoolers understand where
to actually find life. That is why I needed to get over myself. Why do I have
to show up? Because showing up is the gospel. Above all, showing up is what is
different about YoungLife leaders. We show up when others don’t, and we show up
when friends don’t expect us to. That’s what makes us disciples of the ultimate
truth: showing up with Jesus Christ in our hearts. By all means, I never did
not want to go to the school to see and love my friends at Tabb. I just didn’t
want to be asked the question “what are you doing here.” I didn’t want to be
uncomfortable and possibly forget that girls name. I didn’t want to get looked
at or make weird comments on accident to the new girl in the halls. But, where
is the fruit in staying away from being uncomfortable? Answer: no where. I had
to get over myself and realize that the only way I was going to share Jesus inside those
school walls is by showing up. And by showing up, I was going to be
uncomfortable. For about a millisecond. Seriously, what was wrong with me! I
was such a baby. I am called to be uncomfortable. God will carry me. How
come I couldn’t see that truth? I was blind to it, but now I am not. And going
to the highschool, meeting new girls, getting excited hugs from ones I already
know, and even getting to explain that I am just there hanging out, it all brings
me life. High school kids bring me life.
They take it out of me, but in that I can be refilled even more, over and over
again. They bring me life that I
wouldn’t have gotten by just sitting around and waiting to meet people when the
time wasn’t uncomfortable. I want to be present. I want to be real. I want to
be different. And the only way I can do that in the high school is forgetting
about myself, and walking in there with a heart of my Fathers.
You know what else is weird about
this year? I get up every morning… early. Clearly something is changing in my
heart if that last statement is true. This is coming from the girl who
complained about having an 11am class last semester. All this is coming from
the girl who used to plan her day around getting up late. Nope, not anymore. I
rise while my apartment is still dark inside. I plug in my soft, white
Christmas lights around my room. I make my bed. I turn on the shower (because
it takes about 10 minutes to heat up) and I pop in a coffee pod into the
keurug. I shower, get dressed, and usually listen to some worship tunes
throughout it to get my heart set right. Then, the biggest gift of my day. Time
alone with Jesus. Quiet, calm, personal time in the word where I am the only
one around. I know, I should’ve made this way more of a habit before. I would
attempt to read my bible every day last year, but usually after lunch or in a
free break between classes. Never early, no way Jose. But now, I look forward
to this part of my day more than anything. That I can win myself to Jesus first. That is what brings me life. That every morning
fulfills the promise of bringing me new mercies and word of His unfailing love,
that is what brings me life. Its
my time, sometimes the only part of my crazy day that is just for me. And I’ve
learned so much from it. I’ve seen changes in my heart that I didn’t even know
needed to change. I’ve seen a difference when I don’t get into the word and
when I do. My heart is protected from the negativity and evil of this world
when I do this before anything. I am calm, I am focused. Again, I’m not
perfect, but I get to follow a perfect God who, by having this time every
morning, I get to gaze longingly at, wishing that He would perfect me to be
more like His son. I love this time; it is literally what gives me life (with
the assistant of the coffee I mentioned). I have found my life to be so much
more giving when I have this time before anything else. Understanding the
promises that God has for me that day, before anything in the day has happened,
that is what brings me life.
Taking wisdom and truth from the person who gave His life up for me to find
life, that is what brings me life.
And getting time, alone, before others awake, to journal out my struggles,
excitements, prayers and fears: that is what brings me life. I have seen it with not only my own eyes but I have
seen it with my heart. Time with to understand, know, talk to, and listen to
Jesus is the only thing that will give me the life I am looking for in that
day.
I am also learning how much life I
can find by being present. I’m not exactly good at this yet, but it is
something I am working on. On my 20th (weird) birthday, I spent some
time reading through my old notebook from last year. I was so torn only a year
ago. Broken in many places and working through a painful part of my
sanctification, I was longing to be somewhere else. And as much as remembering
that pain breaks my heart again, it also creates a surpassing joy about where I
am now. And where I am now is not necessarily just my state of content with
being at CNU. Where I am now is where my heart is, how I’ve moved on and grown,
and how I’m learning such different, bigger things only in a year. I’m learning
how to be here, and I prayed for so long that I would understand how to be
here. I never want to be completely content, because if I was completely
content, my faith would be stagnant and my life would be still. But, I am learning
how to be where I am, in my relationship with God and physically at CNU. I know
I’ve written about it may a times before, but clearly it is clear that it is
just a reoccurring theme in my story. I yearn to be available and not thinking
about where I could be or what I could be doing. I want to be thinking about
what is going on in the moment, not how I could be somewhere else or doing
something else. I’m not the best at this, but I’m working on it. One way I can
see this working out is that I’ve been able to stay at CNU and only go home for
fall break. Last time I went home about five times first semester. This time?
Twice. That is ludicrous for this homebody mamas girl, but it happened. And it
has allowed me to be way more content with being present here. It has also
allowed me to see that if God is going to change my location, He is going to change my heart to be in that location. That my desires become His,
and His desires become mine. I’ve been carried through that truth. I’ve learned
what that means by being present. I’ve found so much more life by being completely where I am, spiritually and
physically.
I
don’t even know if those made sense. It doesn’t even sum up my year so far, or
do it justice. I guess that is the penalty I have to pay for not keeping my
blog updated. But, I guess above all, this is what I want to say: It is my
privilege to live my life. Nothing I am
doing is being forced on me. Right now, I do not have to do anything that
doesn’t give me life. I hope, for as long as I live, that last statement stays
true. I am given life because someone else gave up His life for me. Someone
planed my life out to be fruitful and giving, not dead and boring. Someone, my
heavenly Father, knew I’d understand how to live a giving-life with Him, and
knew that it would be quite the journey to get there. I don’t care what the
journeys looked like right now. How many times I’ve thought I could find life
doing other things. All I care about is that right now, in this present moment,
I am experiencing the most life. Daily. And I can owe that all to the One above
me, giving me the daily gift of a life with Him.
boom. encouraging. our friendship is life-giving to me. love you so much.
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