Friday, June 6, 2014

Still Allowed to Dream?

The condition fibromyalgia involves systemic pain, particularly soreness in the joints, soft tissues and tendons. The cause of the disorder remains unknown but it primarily affects females between 20 and 50.
-Definition of fibromyalgia, dictionary.com

The Lord is good to those who wait for Him, to the soul who seeks Him.
-Lamentations 3:24-25



I’m 30. I have a chronic pain condition.

Am I still allowed to dream?

These days, I’m tired. I’m in pain. I find that my dreams are small, shrunk by chronic pain, chronic exhaustion. Life feels much smaller, more about existence and survival. I was going to change the world, you know. I was going to do things. I was going to have a life marked by holy activity, sacred busyness. It’s hard not to feel I was promised a life of big things--in my teens and early twenties, life was all about potential. People tell you what you’re good at, what they can see you doing, what subjects you excel in and should pursue. Butcher, baker, candlestick maker-the world is your oyster.  You can be anything you want to be. You can and should be doing Important Things. As a follower of Christ, those Important Things should be all evangelical, mission-oriented, and sometimes full of Dos and Don’ts, Shoulds and Shouldn’t’s, depending on to whom you were listening at the time.

Now that I’m 30, my goals are not quite so lofty.

These days, I usually dream of rest. I dream of enough magical time and space to rest. I long for free time, down time, time enough to maybe just relax enough to feel good again. I go back and forth hoping for healing. Some days I muster up the courage to ask God for healing-to change the new make-up of my head that now processes everything as pain, everything as a deep ache. Most days, I don’t ask Him, so I don’t have to hear “no” again. Because that gets really old. And raises up age-old questions of faith, God’s intentions, and plain old-fashioned patience and trust. Most days, I chalk it all up to a broken world, broken by that terrible and glorious thing called free will; broken by illness and sadness, a world that doesn't readily invite God in. My pastor told me, straight-up, that asking for healing is a trippy experience. It’s just plain weird. But we are told to ask for it, so we must keep asking. Some days, I ask others to pray for me when I just can’t do it for myself.

But I've been starting to wonder if it’s OK to still have big dreams, even though life is clearly a lot more realistic. I’m a lot more aware of my limitations. I wonder that even if I didn't have fibromyalgia, would I still be overwhelmed with life and all its choices? Would I still have enough gumption to have a huge dream, to set a grand goal? To plan out an adventurous life, one that is full of grace and beauty and checking off to-do lists? Because I really like doing that last thing, too. Would I pursue my  beautifully sudden dreams of motherhood? To not be scared off by my miscarriage, to not listen to the fears that I probably wouldn't be a very good mother? Could I still set off towards my dream of writing? To shake off the heavy mountains of excuses, to find the silence and space required? Am I still allowed big dreams, at my age when things should be set, when minds should be made up, when the course of one’s life is already in furious motion? Am I allowed a different life than the one that directly in front of me?

Because I do want a life that is filled to the brim with the goodness of knowing God. I want a life that is full of good fruit from following Him and His words. I want to be saturated in His community, with His people. I want a life where I can recognize and use the talents and skills and personality that He has given me. It’s hard, in the middle of chronic pain, to even see those things. But even this chronic pain can be used for this good life that I so desire. Gary Thomas, author of Sacred Marriage, said so beautifully that while marriage limits what we can do, it multiples what we can become, and I believe that to be true of all the limitations and circumstances we find ourselves in, even something like chronic pain. I am holding on to hope that all things will be redeemed. This is the promise of the Cross. This is the promise that believers in Christ have always held on to. My dreams don’t have to alter; they are good dreams. They might just look different in the daylight.

4 comments:

  1. oh my gosh this is GORGEOUS and made me tear up. Friend, you are a writer of the best kind. Please keep your words coming. <3

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  2. I was trying not to cry myself while writing it! You inspire me, Bethany. You really do!

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  3. Oh my precious Sarah Marie, This blog broke my heart. This Aunty is crying as I try to express to you how this has touched me. I am so sorry that this stupid disease is afflicting you. It is impossible to understand the mind of God, but this I do know, Jesus paid the price at Calvary for your healing, NEVER forget that. "For by His stripes we ARE healed" That is a promise that no man can strip from us. Don't let someone/anyone tell you that asking for healing is weird, because then they are calling God weird! Maybe they choose to ignore the promises of God, I don't know. I do know that I personally have experienced the powerful healing hands of God and I have seen it happen in other peoples lives. Some people like to say that the days of miracles are past, but yet everyday we see miracles. Every breath we take is a miracle. You need to surround yourself with people of great faith Sarah. I have a great deal of faith and I will be praying that God gives you a miracle of healing and a miracle of becoming a mother, for you will be a wonderful mother, don't ever let the devil tell you otherwise. I know you love the Lord, you always have and He will never leave you nor forsake you. Believe Sarah, only believe. God has a plan and who knows what that is but that this time in your life will be used as a testimony to lift someone else out of a depression that could take them under. You are loved deeply by this Aunty and Kayla and Megha and I will all be praying for you. Megha is my 8 year old "adopted" daughter and she is an amazing little prayer warrior. If you can believe for your healing and we are praying for that healing, it will come to pass one day, we just don't know when, God sometimes says yes now or yes later or I have something special in mind, just wait my child and have faith. Keep holding on to that Anchor, even though it feels like your ''ship" is battered and torn, let the Anchor hold you as you hold It. I love you more than words can express and I pray my words will bring encouragement to your soul. Lovingly, Aunty Patty

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  4. Awww, thank you so much, Aunt Patty! I can truly hear your kind and loving heart for me in these words. Thank you for taking the time to write this out to me. I know you've always been on my side since day 1! God is so good through all of our circumstances and change-He is the same yesterday, today, and forever. He's been teaching me so much through this condition-and I know that healing will come someday-here on earth hopefully! Until then, I know He will never leave or forsake me. Thank you, Aunt!

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