Tears are enough

the-crown-of-sufferingMany months have gone by since I last posted here, but I am inspired to write here once more.

Romans 5:20 says “where sin increased, grace abounded all the more.” Sometimes I feel as if there is an endless ocean of tears uncried within me. I have kept busy all these years to avoid being drowned by the tsunami of grief and sorrow that is always just offshore. How did I become a workaholic? It took up enough time that I could escape the wave. Being busy, meeting friends, volunteering at our parish, reading endless books, watching TV, playing minesweeper or bejeweled for hours on end… all to keep running in front of the wave.

I’ve been stopping more lately. Many medical tests from the various specialists who monitor my chronic autoimmune conditions took place in January. Depending on the test and its prep, I found myself back in the trough of vulnerability and helplessness of my three major illnesses and hospitalizations over and over. Each time, I would be unable to stop the tidal wave and the tears would come. Copious tears. Buckets full!

My husband, God bless him, would remind me that God had told me in prophecy in 1976 (during our charismatic period) that He would catch every one of my tears and use them for healing. (Much the same thing happens with the Holy Spirit and the main character in the wonderful book, The Shack.) As I have grown in my faith these thirty-six years I have been Catholic, my understanding of the grace and gift God has given me has deepened.

Please understand that there are many times that I wish I did not have this gift and responsibility. My eyes hurt, I get headaches from my face being all scrunched up, and my nose gets sore from the Kleenex. Crying isn’t fun… When I am past feeling sorry for myself or wondering what specific incident in my life had caused me to feel sorrow, I remember that maybe it’s enough that I simply cry. Perhaps it helps and heals someone somewhere… probably someone in the Body of Christ connected to me through that infinite spiderweb of collateral damage caused by our sins.

I’m beginning to grasp the enormous damage sins do to us, as individuals, as community, and as a society. One of my pet peeves is abuse of any kind, but especially sexual abuse of anyone by anyone. The spiderweb of relationships of which I am a part has been impaired permanently and irreparably by incest, sexual abuse of toddlers, of pre-teens and teens, of full-grown women and men. There has been emotional abuse; neglect; mental illness; alcoholism; adultery; bullying; addictions–to gambling, to pornography, to drugs (prescription and street drugs). I look around some days at all the wounded people and my heart breaks. The news is full of stories about the collateral damage of sin.

It starts with lies. Like Fr. Ron Rolheiser said, “Lies warp the soul like a board in the rain.” Last week, it was a famous cyclist; last year, a famous golfer; today, a senator. The ramifications of their actions do not directly touch me, but they echo back from the woundedness of those I know and love. Some I know have healed, through their own spiritual and emotional work; some can never heal as the damage was too deep and it began too young.

The grief I feel for my own pain and for that of those I know and love can be  overwhelming. Words do not help nor capture the anguish, and there is no other thing to do but cry. To sit in the ashes of lost innocence and scarred souls, and to weep and wail and mourn. Perhaps my tears are enough.

Yearn for whole-hearted acceptance

I am struggling with accepting others these days. Instead, I want to change them. I want to “edit” them until they fit my idea of who they should be, because their rough edges or irritating mannerisms and habits bother me. If only So-and-so wouldn’t do that… or would understand that what I want is… I do realize I am being completely selfish when I act like this, too, and I don’t like it but seem to be stuck in a rut.

I know real life is messy. People are messy, fallible, imperfect,and unpredictable. certainly don’t like to do what others instruct! If it doesn’t suit me, or just to prove my independence, I usually want to do the opposite of what they say. What makes me think that any of the folks in my life would be any different?

One of Jesus’ traits that made him stand out from those around him was that he accepted people exactly the way they were. Jesus liked sinners (I am very glad about that!), and he got in trouble from the ‘authorities’ for eating and socializing with them. Now Jesus is the person after whom I’m supposed to model my life. So why is it so difficult to accept people the way they are — to just let them be their messy, unpredictable selves? Why do I find it so challenging?

Maybe it’s related to my propensity for ‘magic’ thinking. Magic thinking for me means imagining that a bowl of ice cream or bar of dark chocolate won’t show up on the scale eventually, especially since I seem to be allergic to exercise at the same time. I’m heavier than I want to be because I tend to ignore simple arithmatic about calories in and calories out. I want what I want, thanks — celery sticks don’t give me the same comfort as ice cream… I’m a smart girl. I know I have to burn more calories than I take in if I hope to fit back into size 14s sometime before Christmas. But I still yearn for that magic wand!

With my friends, colleagues, and family, I think I want that magic wand to do its work on them, too. Make this one less gloomy, that one less needy, him more realistic, her less self-centered, and me thinner. Funny that the word “disciple” comes from the same root as “discipline.” Discipline is an activity, exercise (!), or regimen that improves a skill. It’s hard to improve a skill without using it, so I guess I’d best unpack that load of gifts I received in Baptism and Confirmation and put them into use in a few more arenas of my life.

That’s our Christian mission: “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything that I have commanded you.” (Matt 28: 19-20a)

Lord, please help me to remember that nothing will happen to me today that You and I together cannot handle. “And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age.” (Matt 28: 20b)