Anger is a Vicious Beast


June 28th, 2023

š˜ˆš˜Æš˜Øš˜³š˜ŗ š˜¢š˜µ š˜µš˜©š˜¦ š˜“š˜µš˜°š˜³š˜®. š˜ˆš˜Æš˜Øš˜³š˜ŗ š˜¢š˜µ š˜µš˜©š˜¦ š˜øš˜°š˜³š˜­š˜„. š˜ˆš˜Æš˜Øš˜³š˜ŗ š˜¢š˜µ š˜µš˜©š˜¦ š˜¶š˜Æš˜§š˜¢š˜Ŗš˜³š˜Æš˜¦š˜“š˜“ š˜°š˜§ š˜Ŗš˜µ š˜¢š˜­š˜­. š˜ˆš˜Æš˜Øš˜³š˜ŗ š˜«š˜¶š˜“š˜µ š˜£š˜¦š˜¤š˜¢š˜¶š˜“š˜¦.

Today is this kind of day.

I’m angry. Not angry AT God but angry because this is the way that it is.

Anger is like a drug. When you’re at the peak, you kind of feel a little better for awhile. Raging over something detracts your attention from the primary emotion you’re feeling, just like drugs soothe the pain at the forefront of every thought process when you’re hurting. The sad seems like it fades just a little bit. But when the drug wears off…that’s when you hit a period of time where you feel worse than before even taking it; the anger doesn’t leave but retreats to the background, the heartbreak pours over you tenfold.

Fortunately, I know that God is bigger than my anger and all of my emotions. I don’t have to try hiding it from Him. Shame, fury, disappointment, fear, sorrow…He can handle them all.

I can rail on about anything and not expect anger back, not expect disappointment, because He created our emotions. Granted, there are a few I wish He had left out but they are what make us human.

I am not my emotions. They don’t define me and they do not control me. I do go through periods of time when they seem to have me in a chokehold (case in point: today) but I trust and believe that my God is bigger than any and all of them at once. When I choose to praise, even if it is angry-sounding, brutally raw praise, He hears me and honors that with relief. It may be a complete, unexplainable peace or it may be small little increments of lessening of the overwhelming part, but He is faithful.

Even in my brokenness, especially in my brokenness, He hears me and there is always a response if I’m seeking Him in what I do. I hope I always have the strength to seek Him, even when I don’t feel like I do. I hope you do, too.

Joy Isn’t the Same as Happiness


June 25th, 2023

I used to love to read.

I’d get caught up in a story and my amazing husband would get aggravated with me because he would want to do something in real life while I was caught up in something fictional and I’d be like ā€œOkay, yes, I know…but just let me finish this chapter, please…I CAN’T stop hereā€¦ā€

I really loved to read.

And now I just can’t love it.

I’ve changed books multiple times. I’ve looked up ā€œbooks you’ll love if you enjoyed _ (insert name of other book that had captivated me here.)ā€ I’ve started and stopped and started and stopped. Nothing works.

Food is like that, too. I’ve found it somewhat amusing (I guess maybe that’s the word for it) that many of the things that have caused me to nearly have full-on breakdowns have been various food items. Scott and I were definitely foodies so meals took up a good bit of our thoughts and conversations. When we traveled, we used to look up ā€œDiners, Drive Ins, and Divesā€ to see if they had featured any restaurants in the area where we were visiting and try to go there. My #1 favorite place to go in Miami was Atelier Monnier French Bakery. I’d get an almond croissant (it doesn’t just have almonds on it and in it, it’s a whole experience all its own) and Scott would get a chocolate covered one.

Now food doesn’t taste the same. I don’t long to try fun and exciting cuisine like I used to. My mouth doesn’t water just thinking about…well, anything. I have to force myself to eat a piece of bread with peanut butter just to throw down some protein so that I won’t feel faint…usually after I start feeling faint. And that’s just because I literally don’t think about food until then.

It often feels like the ā€œlifeā€ has gone out of life.

I’ve wanted to go to Heaven for a long time. I wasn’t in a rush to get there or anything. I enjoyed being here most times and was (and am) thankful for all that I have here. But I knew that was where I wanted to be after all of this. Before Scott came along, my boys were my Heaven on Earth. They were what tethered me here. Once Scott showed up, he was a big part of that thing that almost felt like Heaven here. I know real Heaven will be so much greater but it’s the closest I could imagine with my human mind. In fact, he made me feel like he’d been what was missing all along. My Missing Piece (a’la Shel Silverstein…if you haven’t read it, you should.)

As I felt the boys doing what we teach kids to do, becoming independent of me, Scott showed me that I was still going to be okay here when they all learned to fly from my cozy nest. I always knew I’d still have my baby boys but I also knew how different life was going to be without the continuity of raising them. Without the busyness of parenthood. Scott got me excited about what the future looked like. We were LOVING having a granddaughter and looking forward to the next one coming. We had BIG plans for what grandparenting would look like but also big plans for so many other things.

There is still a payment plan sitting around waiting for funds to be added again for our belated honeymoon next year. We were going on an all-inclusive vacation out of the country and we were counting down to it. I haven’t even asked yet if they’ll return the money we’ve already sent. I just can’t. That will mean it’s really cancelled. And I don’t want to go but I can’t bring myself to call and cancel it either.

So many of the things I used to want to do, they just don’t hold any spark anymore. They don’t hold joy. I still love being a Lolly (a grandmother) but it is bittersweet so often because he should have been here doing it with me. Lillian and Emory will never even remember him.

God intends for all of us to live abundant lives. John 10:10 says ā€œThe thief comes only in order to steal and kill and destroy. I [Jesus] came that they may have and enjoy life, and have it in abundance (to the full, till it overflows.)ā€ The thief is the enemy. And he did steal, kill, and destroy successfully. All of it.

But God is still here. He is successful, always, in His own endeavors. Revelation 1:8 says ā€œI am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End,ā€ says the Lord, ā€œwho is and who was and who is to come, the Almighty One.ā€ He was, and is, and is to come. He was here when I was happy. He is here while I mourn. He will be here, with me, until it is time for me to go to Him and worship Him ā€œin person,ā€ and then the bonus plan is that I can see Scott, too.

But God’s desire for me š˜©š˜¦š˜³š˜¦ is that my joy may be complete. ā€œI have told you these things, that My joy and delight may be in you, and that your joy and gladness may be of full measure and complete and overflowing.ā€ (John 15:11)

Scott isn’t here anymore, but that doesn’t mean that my joy cannot be complete. (Side note: I worship Jesus; I do not worship Scott as my husband…although I was extremely fond of him. Jesus makes my joy complete. What I mean here is that, without following the plan that God had for my life, my joy would not have been complete, lest anyone misconstrue my intent.) If I had never met Scott (as God designed) then my joy would not have been complete. He was part of God’s plan for my life. I cannot imagine the last ten years of my life without him and, even through the pain of losing him, I’d never want to. Even if I’d known I’d lose him, I would never want to have missed out on what he brought into my life. But even now that he is gone, I will still have joy.

Ephesians 3:20 says ā€œNow to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works in us,ā€ God has a plan to give us exceedingly abundantly MORE than we ask or think…and, before I met him, I had given up on finding anyone like Scott in my life. God brought me that joy anyway. (And understand that you can have JOY while not actually feeling happy…but that’s another story for another day. And that’s why I say it’s still possible without Scott here.)

For today…it’s after midnight so it is already Sunday, the Lord’s day…I will be grateful for my joy. Our children are part of my joy. Our grandchildren are part of my joy. Scott was part of my joy. And somehow, although I cannot see a glimmer of it yet, my future on this Earth is part of my joy.

What Kind of ā€œVertā€ Am I?


June 24th, 2023

My whole life, I’ve wondered what kind of ā€œvertā€ I am. Just stay with me for a minute…

Growing up, I always felt like an introvert but had to act like an extrovert if I wanted to ever have friends; I was an Air Force brat and we moved every 2-3 years. I needed to be able to make friends.

Once I get to know someone, they’ll tell you I could talk their ear off. Someone who is excessively loquacious (hush, it sounds better than ā€œchatterboxā€ or ā€œtoo talkativeā€ and I’ve been called all of them) instantly makes people think extrovert. But that’s not who I am until I feel comfortable around you. If I talk a lot around you, consider yourself lucky…just kidding; some would say that’s a curse.

So I guess I thought I must be an extrovert most of my life because that’s what everyone else assumed I was.

People think introverted people can’t get on a stage and sing because they don’t like attention. But I don’t have to really talk to anyone to do that.

They think that leadership skills makes you an extrovert. (Don’t tell your little girls they’re bossy; they have leadership skills.) Maybe it does. I don’t always want to be a leader but I get frustrated if no one is leading and keeping things moving properly so I will step up and handle things if I need to. I don’t know what that trait makes me.

What I was getting to, I guess, is that right now I don’t just feel like an introvert. I feel like a hermit. The counselor called it social anxiety disorder. It is likely temporary but it makes life difficult.

I wish Walmart was open all night like before C*VID because I would go at midnight to avoid seeing people and having to talk to them. People text me and want to call or come over but I stress out over what I’m going to say to them. How silly is that?

But everyone says ā€œSo, how are you doing?ā€ And that is ABSOLUTELY a normal thing to ask. There is NOTHING wrong with that! But I don’t know how to answer it. Do I say ā€œI’m okay.ā€ Because I’m not okay. I don’t feel ā€œokayā€ at all. I feel like my world was ripped apart and no one has the glue to repair it…but I can’t tell people that.

Grief is uncomfortable for people. When it’s not your grief, it’s uncomfortable because of two things.

A.) What if it was your grief??? What if this happened to you??? Oh, dear God, what if it was you? How would you live through this? How is it survivable? (Trust me, I felt this exact same way when my sister lost her son just barely over two weeks earlier!)

B.) What do you say? How can you help? Nothing is going to make it better so how can you just not make it worse??? What phrases are ā€œoff limitsā€ because they WILL make it worse? (We understand. You’re right; nothing will make it better and words can’t help. And we also understand our own sensitivity to words and phrases you may say. The thing is, nothing actually makes it š˜øš˜°š˜³š˜“š˜¦ either. It’s just š˜øš˜°š˜³š˜“š˜¦ all by itself. Everything just feels ā€œworseā€ right now.)

So, no, I don’t want to say that I’m not okay to anyone. They feel better if I just say ā€œI’m doing okay.ā€ And I’m alive and breathing so it’s not like I’m technically lying. ā€œHey…I’m okay over here. I’m good. I’ve got thisā€¦ā€

And listen, I’m going to survive this. I haven’t ā€œgot this,ā€ but somehow I know I’ll survive it. It SUCKS, but I’m going to survive it. Don’t call for a welfare check. But just because I’m surviving doesn’t mean I just feel all hunky dory.

It’s OKAY that your life keeps moving and things go back to normal for you; he wasn’t your person. I totally get it. It’s okay. YOU’RE okay. And that’s good.

But please don’t just expect mine to go ā€œback to normal.ā€ There is NOTHING normal about this life over here. Nada. Nix. Nuh-uh.

And that whole ā€œnew normalā€ that everyone keeps talking about is a bunch of hogwash. I get it that you want me to find a ā€œnew normalā€ but I HATE what that is theoretically supposed to look like. š˜ š˜©š˜¢š˜µš˜¦ š˜Ŗš˜µ š˜øš˜Ŗš˜µš˜© š˜¢ š˜±š˜¢š˜“š˜“š˜Ŗš˜°š˜Æ. I don’t want to just build a new normal around the idea that he is not here. Around the idea that he will NEVER be here. How am I just supposed to make everything normal without him in my picture. It was its own version of ā€œnormalā€ before I knew him but it will never be the same now that he is gone.

I’m guessing that, at some point, I’ll just make a new picture. The thing about that picture is that I see it like one of those photos where someone is still there but kind of faded, like when people make them sort of transparent for the photo because they’re gone? You know? Because I do want to be able to be happy, truly happy, again one day. I HATE FEELING LIKE THIS BUT I CAN’T JUST STOP. Who I am will always have a piece of Scott. I truly am who I am today because he became an integral part of me.

I believe in true love because of him. I believe in soulmates because of him. I believe in real men existing because of him. I believe in grace existing in people and not just in God because of him. I believe in chivalry still being alive and well because of him. š˜ š˜£š˜¦š˜­š˜Ŗš˜¦š˜·š˜¦ š˜ š˜¢š˜® š˜“š˜µš˜Ŗš˜­š˜­ š˜¢š˜­š˜Ŗš˜·š˜¦ š˜µš˜°š˜„š˜¢š˜ŗ, š˜­š˜Ŗš˜µš˜¦š˜³š˜¢š˜­š˜­š˜ŗ, š˜£š˜¦š˜¤š˜¢š˜¶š˜“š˜¦ š˜°š˜§ š˜©š˜Ŗš˜®. That’s a lot, right? You probably didn’t know that part.

So…

Maybe being an introvert or an extrovert is fluid. Maybe you’re not born one or the other but you become who you are, how you are, what you are, because of what you’re going through. Maybe being an ā€œambivertā€ who can go back and forth isn’t such a foreign concept, after all.

And I’m still going to say that, whoever I am, through it all, God knew before I was ā€œa twinkle in my daddy’s eyeā€ that I would be exactly that person at precisely that time. He was prepared to be with me and walk me through it. I go through periods of time when I feel 100% alone (and even want to be) but I know 100% that I am not. He is with me withersoever I goest. He’s here. I’m more grateful for that than I can express in words…imagine that for an ā€œextrovert.ā€

I may be lonely and still not even want to be around people, but I am not actually alone.

Reality is an Evil Houseguest


June 22nd, 2023

I thought I was figuring this thing out.

I thought that I was really trying to get myself to see the truth. That it is real and that he’s actually gone. Forever, from this world. I thought this because, in the numb place that I often seem to live, I would say to myself ā€œJen, this is real life. He isn’t coming back. He won’t just walk in the door. This isn’t just a dream.ā€

How can someone who was so ALIVE and so consistent, and so steadfast just be GONE? Disappear. How?

As if truly believing it would check off some box in a list of necessary chores in order to reach ultimate healing, I tried to persevere in my quest to find ā€œhealingā€ from these wretched battle wounds. As if it meant I had risen one more rung on the ladder that would lead to my being capable of living again.

I was wrong.

There is no ladder, no list. They tell you about the stages of grief but they’re not sequential and they’re not one trip only. They’re just willy-nilly, all over the place and there is no structure to them at ALL!

But the strangest part is that, although I consciously thought I was trying to figure it all out, to definitively make progress, it was all a ruse. My brain was somehow playing a double agent. What a crock.

Apparently, my subconscious has other plans for a surprise reveal all on its own. I feel like I am on one of those makeover shows. ā€œHere comes the new you! Hope you like it! But if you don’t, TOO BAD. What’s done is done! Enjoy! Annnnnd, heeeeere’s Jennifer!ā€

For the last couple of days, I can’t really explain it properly in words, but I have been feeling The Truth about my life and my future trying to break the door down. It’s like certain smells (especially), music, things I’ve seen are trying to push through and devastate me with some big news. It feels like standing at the precipice of a giant cliff, leaning back as far as I can, and swirling my arms madly, backwards and in circular motion, to keep from going over the edge. It feels like a knobby, old, gray hand with long, ragged fingernails is flexing around a slightly open door and trying to push inwards as I lean, with all of my strength, against the door to keep it closed.

STOP!!! No!!! I don’t want to know! Don’t tell me! I like this numb, fantasy world better! STAY OUT!!!

And yet I thought I was trying to ā€œmake progressā€ by letting it in…

…

I know that, at some point, The Truth will cross that threshold and it won’t be gently. It will be in spectacular fashion, crushing me beneath the heavy door and the door frame as it crashes and pummels its way in. It will be far from painless. It will be devastating.

Somehow I know that the sadness and loss I have felt so far is minuscule, insignificant, microscopic compared to what The Truth will bring as it breaches my consciousness.

As I now fight off the entering darkness, it is a strange feeling. I thought I wanted ā€œprogressā€ in this grief journey, to move ahead toward healing and some sensation of ā€œnormalityā€.

What it is instead resembles a severe burn patient who knows that the time for debridement is coming nigh and that this is the only way forward but is a treacherous, painful, horrific pathway to submit to just for ā€œhealingā€. What scars will I be left with when it’s over? Will people even know it’s still me? Can I survive the onslaught of misery that comes with it?

There is another Truth that is alive and well, though. It is the Truth that matters and Scott is already viewing His countenance.

The Way. The Truth. The Life.

No other truth surpasses the importance of this Truth. Jesus, Jesus, Jesus.

So, again, I turn to the only place my help comes from. Hear my cry, O God; listen to my prayer. Lead me to the rock that is higher than I, for you have been my refuge, a strong tower against the enemy (Ps 61:1-3). He brought me up out of a horrible pit [of tumult and of destruction], out of the miry clay and He set my feet upon a rock, steadying my footsteps and establishing my path. (Ps 40:2)

This song is an old one, from when we lived in Saudi Arabia and had private worship in people’s homes, when we weren’t allowed to have church. It still sticks with me when I need it.

ā€œOh, Lord, in the morning, will I direct my prayer unto Thee and will look up.ā€

How. Can. This. Be. Real. Life?


June 22nd, 2023

I’m going to give a GRIEF TRIGGER WARNING on this one again. Stop here if you don’t want to potentially be thrown back into your own space of grief. But know you aren’t alone if that happens sometimes.

Some nights the flashbacks are bad. I can’t make them stop. The last moments, even the last hours…but especially the last moments, were bad, the stuff of nightmares. It was a nightmare…except it wasn’t.

I beg to wake up a lot. I think about how maybe I passed out in his hospital room and they had to put me on a ventilator and maybe this whole thing could just be me, tripping on propofol or fever dreams and whatever else they’re using to keep me sedated until they can extubate me. Maybe I’ll wake up as they wean me from the meds and he’ll be standing there over me, worried but thankful to see me coming out of it. He’ll be holding my hand and asking me to squeeze his so I will. And I’ll tell him about the worst and longest nightmare I’ve ever had.

And we’ll go home. Together.

I know. You don’t have to tell me because I already know. It sounds crazy. It’s a ridiculous concept but oh, what if it wasn’t? And so, on bad flashback nights (not as infrequent as you might think), I allow my mind to wander through scenarios like this; it is easier than the alternative.

I’ve started counseling and she has worked up a treatment plan based on some fun mental health diagnoses that have been precipitated by the events of that fateful May night. I have assignments to do between appointments and specific goals we’ll work toward. They feel pretty unattainable right now but God did not give me a spirit of fear but of power, and of love, and of a SOUND MIND. I am healed and whole, in Jesus name. And I’ll keep claiming that until I see the results of it.

The point of this post is this: if you are grieving a huge loss, a life-altering one where nothing will ever be the same again,

YoušŸ‘šŸ¼arešŸ‘šŸ¼notšŸ‘šŸ¼crazyšŸ‘šŸ¼oršŸ‘šŸ¼alonešŸ‘šŸ¼

The swirling, raging, tumultuous thoughts in my brain cause physical symptoms that feel unbearable at times. It sort of feels like it’s in your stomach but sort of in your chest but sort of in your arms & legs. Your hands shake uncontrollably. There’s a wrenching ache. It’s terrifying. But it’s not crazy. Are the symptoms psychosomatic? Maybe. Maybe my brain is making me feel this way but that doesn’t mean the symptoms aren’t real. It doesn’t mean that reliving that night over and over doesn’t make you have very real, physical feelings.

And there are irrational fears of something happening to someone else that I love. Something sudden and that I personally have no control over, just like with Scott. Thoughts that are difficult to tamp down but that I also use scripture to fight. And sometimes I have to get out books to find them or Google parts of the verses to be able to read them because, in my panic, the whole scripture won’t come to me. When I find them, I read them over and over…and over and over and over…

When I do this, eventually a peace falls over me. I feel comfort around me. I get sleepy. I fall asleep. Unfortunately, I often wake with dreams plagued with the same flashbacks.

And yet some mornings I wake up in the numb place again, my mind not believing that this is all real.

How. Can. This. Be. Real. Life???

Subconsciously, my mind can still convince me that he’s on assignment at work and will be walking in the door any minute now. I’m not sure how this works because we never, ever, since we began dating, have gone a single day without talking at least twice a day. We either saw each other or were on the phone or FaceTime, at the very least, every morning and every night. How could he be coming back home if I haven’t even talked to him in over a month? But my mind seems to accept this silly charade for periods of time. Another strange mind trick. When I’m wrapped inside the numbness, I can tell myself, ā€œJennifer, it is really real. He is gone. He’s not coming back.ā€ and even then I can’t FEEL it. I don’t fall apart or lose it or cry or scream or throw up then. I just don’t even feel it. š˜›š˜©š˜¢š˜µ š˜±š˜¢š˜³š˜µ makes you feel like you’re going crazy, too.

It’s funny how your own mind can protect you.

And then the guilt hits because it’s part of the cycle I’ve come to recognize. The guilt over not feeling it sometimes. The guilt over still being able to smile at my granddaughter or hug the kids or just be here, in this place he can’t be anymore. Guilt over not doing enough before he died. (Yes, I know, there was nothing else I could have done…but just like the numbness doesn’t make sense, the guilt isn’t something you can talk or rationalize away.)

Tomorrow will be a better day. I’ll be back in the numb place by morning. My brain will keep me wrapped in bubble wrap all day and then I’ll have no idea when the cycle will start over.

Tonight I pray for peace. I pray for comfort. I will read scripture from the anxiety and grief and depression chapters of my categorized prayer and scripture book. And then I will eventually sleep after my angels battle the enemy and take over within my warring spirit again.

This grief thing isn’t pretty. It’s brutal. It’s consuming. It’s a Cat 5 hurricane barreling through your heart over and over again, day after day. You will have to do some parts of it alone and that is okay. Just remember that you’re NOT alone. God is with you, no matter what it feels like at the time. You can also reach out to people to listen when you’re ready to talk it out again. Don’t give up.

Rainy Days & Mondays…


June 21st, 2023

The rain changes your mood. It has definitely altered mine this last week and it looks like we’ll be seeing it every day for the next week.

On the day of Scott’s funeral, there was a chance of rain but it stayed mostly sunny. I remember thinking that it should have been a full-on thunderstorm because that is the way my heart felt. Angry lightning, terrifying and soul-crushing thunder, howling, damaging winds, and torrential, fast floods of rain from tears and sorrow. I felt like a thunderstorm of epic proportions was raging inside me and, just like weather, there was nothing I could do to quell it, and the nausea that accompanied it.

But I have prayed for rain before, too. When our grass was dry and yellowed. While I was waiting for all of the varied colors of our flowering trees to bloom and our flower beds to blossom. Rain reminds all things to grow. Rain reminds us that you cannot stop the things you cannot stop. The rain will fall. The world will turn. The seasons will change. The rainbow will come. Rainstorms are fierce, consuming, and unable to be ignored or interrupted. They have the ability to completely change the scenery.

It was disconcerting how, as I moved through the days after he died, everything just went on about me, moving at normal pace and continuing a propulsive motion that had started while he was still here. I felt like my world, everything as I knew it, had stopped on a dime. I felt like there would be no tomorrow because things weren’t as they should be. But the world kept spinning, cars kept driving by, people came in and out, and nothing else slowed down at all…only me.

There have been times when rain has felt comforting. It’s a good time to cuddle up on the couch and watch a movie with someone you love, popcorn and movie candy included; I like Reese’s Pieces with movie popcorn. Scott just loved popcorn, period. We always said that we wanted to build a screened-in patio, overlooking our pool, with a tin roof. Rain is so soothing on a tin roof with a cup of hot coffee in your hand. Something about the rhythm it plays as it drums away like a fine percussionist allows worries to float away. Rainy days are also perfect for cozy naps. Snuggling up under your covers and listening to the sounds of the storm can seem to flush the cares of the world away, if only for a time.

Rain has a way of cleansing things. It rinses away dust and pollen. It washes away children’s chalk drawings, creating a clean slate to make something new another day. The thing about washing away is that sometimes you like what was there before. And then sometimes you begin to draw and realize this new art, this new creation, has a different but astounding kind of beauty all its own. Not better, but resplendent in its own right.

Ultimately, there are two things you can always eventually count on: rain falling, and the sun coming back out. Without being too Annie-esque, the sun will come out again, maybe not tomorrow but it will. The sunshine will return. Just like today’s weather report, it doesn’t look like it will be today and maybe not even much this week, but it will return, in fits and starts. I wish we could predict the return of joy like we can predict the weather, even though weather reports can be faulty.

I have faith that my joy will one day return, probably also in fits and starts. I have a tattoo that says Romans 15:13. In The Passion Translation it reads: ā€œNow may God, the fountain of hope, fill you to overflowing with uncontainable joy and perfect peace as you trust in him. And may the power of the Holy Spirit continually surround your life with his overwhelming abundance until you radiate with hope!ā€
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Somehow, some way, I will have uncontainable joy someday. I have faith that God’s promises are true. John 16:20-24 says this: ā€œTruly, truly, I say to you, that you will weep and lament, but the world will rejoice; you will grieve, but your grief will be turned into joy. Whenever a woman is in labor she has pain, because her hour has come; but when she gives birth to the child, she no longer remembers the anguish because of the joy that a child has been born into the world. Therefore you too have grief now; but I will see you again, and your heart will rejoice, and no one will take your joy away from you.ā€
And sometimes it does feel like the world rejoices while I grieve, but though my sorrow may last for the night, joy comes in the morning (Psalm 30:5b). Obviously the ā€œnightā€ and ā€œmorningā€ are figurative; I wish they weren’t. But joy comes…I’m going to choose this rainy day to trust in the coming of the inevitable sunshine.

Joy Comes by Francesca Battistelli:

ā€œā€¦ Joy comes; tears fall.
I’m learning there is beauty in it all.
It’s not hard to find it, you just have to look
Oh, God is goodā€¦ā€

Missing My Heartbeat


June 19th, 2023

I went to the next town over to eat lunch with a sweet friend today and so I drove around thirty minutes home afterwards. As I was on the way home, a song I like came on. I turned it up…loud. This used to drive Scott crazy so I didn’t do it often when he was in the car but sometimes you just need to hear a song LOUD. You need to feel it inside of you.

One of the biggest selling points when I bought my vehicle was that it came with Bose speakers. There’s nothing like it. An old dirt road, sunroof open (not today, it’s rainy), and good music. Singing at the top of your lungs. It feels like freedom and sunshine and sparkles and love sometimes. All things good.

But today, as it rained, I turned it up loud and this particular song had a strong bass beat. The kind that, when you turn it up, you feel that beat in your chest. The vibration, for me, is soothing. It’s like the presence of something that you can feel but cannot see: music, rhythm, love, joy, peace, God. All of these are things you cannot see but can feel their presence.

Today, that rhythm suddenly felt like my heartbeat. And I realized it was the first time I have felt my heartbeat in over a month.

I’m not exaggerating when I say Scott still made my heart beat faster when he wrapped his arms around me and told me how much he loved me. I could physically feel what some people describe as butterflies but, for me, was the pitter-pat of my heart speeding up. I’m no young, spring chicken so some of you would think that’s something I should have had checked out but my heart is fine, physically. It just recognized his nearness.

Today, as that beat vibrated in my chest, I remembered how much I’ve missed that feeling.

We were not perfect. We weren’t the perfect couple. We fussed and argued sometimes. We got aggravated with each other. We said sorry. We got used to each other’s quirks and peculiar idiosyncrasies.

What made us perfect for each other is that we both wholeheartedly believed that this was forever. We knew we were in it and there was no backing out. There was safety and trust in our togetherness. I could be in a mood and act like a brat; he wasn’t threatening to go anywhere and I knew he wouldn’t. He could be in a mood and be negative and uncompromising; I never said I’d leave and he knew I never would. Now, we both tested those boundaries a bit early on because we’d been through some difficult relationships and situations prior to meeting each other. Long before we decided to get married, we talked at length and decided there would be no backing out. And then, neither of us took advantage of that promise by doing things to hurt the other. We took the commitment, the covenant, seriously.

There is always going to be something that you don’t like about someone. Sometimes Scott could be negative. He would say he was being a realist. I would say he was jaded by past circumstances. I’m generally an eternal optimist. I give people the benefit of the doubt too often sometimes and that bothered Scott because he didn’t want people to hurt me. His ā€œrealistā€ would butt heads with my ā€œidealistā€ a lot of times. We decided that, rather than separate us, we would allow it to balance us. Opposites attract sometimes because you need each other. You can choose to let those things balance you or to let them tear you apart depending on whether you’re willing to meet in the middle.

Missing my heartbeat does make me sad but I’m not in a dark place today, not now anyway. I told my sister that I know that the grief won’t really shrink but that I hope that life grows bigger around it. I hope we can learn to weave it into our lives and use it to help someone else rather than trying to cut it out. Cutting it out would feel too much like forgetting the people who were so important to us. I want to use it to remind me every day that unexpected things happen. They can happen today or tomorrow. So I want to tell everyone that I love them, frequently, and I want to share the things I want them to know. I hate this thing called grief but there has to be something to salvage from it. I want to use it as fertilizer (like we use cow manure that you couldn’t use in any other way, the excrement that would otherwise be waste) to grow something worthy of being thankful for.

Unfairness


I’ve made it through two graduations, Mother’s Day, Memorial Day, and now Father’s Day.

There is something inside me that wants to sit down and count how many holidays (including birthdays) are in a year and start counting them backwards. Like, if I can get through one of each of them, it’s suddenly going to be easier. In the past I’ve heard people say that all of the firsts are the hardest. Now that I’m in this place, people who have lost husbands are telling me, ā€œOh, no…I feel like the second year is harder than the firstā€¦ā€. I want to say ā€œNO!!! You can’t go changing the rules now! That’s not fair!ā€ because I just want it to stop hurting so much every day.

Not fair…so much is ā€œnot fairā€ about this. When I was a kid and I’d complain about something being ā€œnot fairā€ my daddy would say ā€œLife is not always fair and school is not always interesting; that’s just how it is.ā€ That’s just how this is. It’s not fair.

I’ve complained to God before that it wasn’t fair for Scott to be taken away from here when there are other people on this earth whom it would have been more ā€œfairā€ to have gone away. Instantly, God said ā€œJen, that’s all about perspective. He was good, yes. And he is in Heaven, with me. He’s happy, free, worshiping, and in no pain or emotional distress. That’s fair, right?ā€ Me: (grumbling, begrudgingly, under my breath) ā€œWell, I š˜Øš˜¶š˜¦š˜“š˜“ if you put it that way then, yes, but from where I am seeing it, it doesn’t feel like that.ā€ God: ā€œThen shift your perspective.ā€ Me: teenagery (((sigh)))

Sometimes I don’t want to shift my perspective. I want to sit in the ā€œunfairnessā€ of it all and be mad about it. It’s odd that I don’t want to change my perspective because I DO want to feel better. I hate this constant sadness. I don’t want to feel this way forever. But I already know that I’m going to have to work through the fact that I don’t have to feel guilty for feeling better one day. He’s not here to enjoy the things I will enjoy, that š˜øš˜¦ should have enjoyed, so how can I be happy about that? I wonder if he could be up there thinking he shouldn’t be enjoying it there because I’m not there to enjoy it with him yet? Aha…no, he’s not. There is no pain or sorrow there, so there is no guilt. He is happy. He is enjoying it. His perspective has changed.

There is a specific paradigm shift that I need to lean into. A new way of thinking is necessary. I do miss him. I miss him so much each day and in so many circumstances. And yet, I am still here. I have to shift my perspective to a place where I can see this from a different vantage point. If I had gone first, I would not have wanted him to stay sad and be unable to enjoy the rest of life. Of course, I would want him to remember me; remember the love we had, remember the smiles and the laughter and the joy we brought to each other. But I hate even thinking about how sad he would have been.

We were supposed to spend the rest of our lives together.

Instead, he spent the rest of his life with me.

He gave me everything he had until his final day. He gave me all the love, all of the security, all of the protection, all of the happiness, all of the ā€œScottā€ he had left in him until the day he left this Earth. What more can you possibly give besides ā€œthe rest of your life?ā€ We certainly never knew how short that would be but he gave me all of it, the rest of his life.

That’s a whole change in perspective, all by itself.ā™„ļø

Father Knows Best


June 18th, 2023

My husband, Scott, was a great father. He was the kind of father who taught our boys things they needed to know. How to change a tire and your own oil, how to manage money, how to hunt and fish, survival skills, how to accept Jesus as your Savior, how to be a great husband and provider, how to love with your whole, entire heart and being, but also with boundaries that keep you safe.

Even when they didn’t know they were learning, Scott was teaching them things just by being himself. He was just someone you were proud to know, a war veteran, a fearless patient advocate and caregiver, a man with integrity and honor, a dad who loved them more than life itself, a friend who never met a stranger, a listening ear when you just needed to talk something out in order to better understand.

Today, his first Father’s Day in Heaven, he has the opportunity to celebrate his Heavenly Father. Although his dad and his children are here missing him, every day must be Father’s Day up there.

Happy Father’s Day, Scott. None of them will be the same here, going forward. I am thankful for my Dad, missing my stepdad, thankful for your Dad, who taught you to be the dad you are, and thankful for the opportunity to watch our boys be dads (now and in the future,) but I am missing you today. I’m missing watching you help them become the men they are now and your ability to keep reinforcing those lessons every day you walked the earth.

You Were a Song to Remember


June 16th, 2023

Everything was going pretty well.

My boys asked me to come over to their house for dinner. We laughed about a few things. I got Lillian ready for bed after her bath. Then I decided to go home.

On the way home I randomly decided to shuffle a country playlist, giving no thought toward what that would mean.

If ANY of you knew my husband, you know he was a country boy. I don’t just mean that he listened to country music a lot. I mean he WAS a bonafide, tried and true, country boy, born and raised.

It’s no surprise that some songs he loved came on. Songs he ā€œdedicatedā€ to me. Songs he said were about us over the years we were together. Some oldies but goodies and some newer.

Snapback. My T-Shirt. Body Like a Back Road. God Blessed the Broken Road. Meant to Be. Like I’m Gonna Lose You. In Case You Didn’t Know. Made. The Day Before You. God Gave Me You. Let’s Make Love. I Can Love You Like That. I Love the Way You Love Me. I Need You. I Want Crazy. It Goes Like This. Wanted. It’s Your Love. Waitin’ On A Woman. My Person. My Best Friend. Take Me There. She’s My Kind of Rain.

Every single one is a song that, at some point or another, Scott texted me or told me saying ā€œthis song is about usā€ or ā€œevery time I hear this, it’s like they wrote it for me and you.ā€

I only heard two of them (they came on back to back) on my way home but, oh, music carries weight. It holds memories and dreams. It holds love, happiness, and promise. Some promises that we don’t have anymore. And so I began thinking of the rest of them.

They make me thankful for what we had, something that I know some people never find in a lifetime. They make me sad for what we have senselessly and suddenly lost. They make me remember and never want to forget. And I know that, anytime I hear these songs, I never will.

Please…tell somebody you love very much that you love them, very much, right now. Don’t let a moment go to waste. ā™„ļø