So, quick personal experience lesson: That title?
It’s not a joke!
Before I started coming back to church, I didn’t
really have a good method of handling stress or insecurity. I’m that type of
mid-level anxious person you hear about, where I entertain irrational
assumptions and then fall for them like they’re real. After a couple of hours
agonizing and panicking about it, I’ll realize a solution and doubly realize
how much time I wasted crying about it. It’s very frustrating and it’s one of
those things where before, I didn’t really have a good defense against it. It
would kind of just take me for a ride for a few hours on any given day and then
I’d spend the rest of the day embarrassed by my inability to just open my eyes.
Coming back to church has given me a great
defense against this, particularly in regards to any negative thoughts I might
have towards myself. All I really have to do is remember who I am. I remember
that I am a daughter of a Father in Heaven, an heiress to great things, and
that He cares about me, loves me, and even if I don’t know the plan, I can not
only trust that He does, but also that whatever it entails, it is for my
ultimate good. And then all of those little insecurities go away, like magic.
It's weird to say that the stress and depression
I’ve been struggling with the last couple of weeks is a result of “forgetting
who I am” but in the context I’ve already outlined, that’s what happened. It
was like I was back in that spot that I’d been in before going back to church,
just riding the irrational, emotional rollercoaster, until it would come to a
stop.
Well, I really realized that something was not
right when my aunt Wendy and I went to take the written driving test at the
DMV(me for my learner’s permit and her to renew her license). After a little
struggle in finding out what we needed to bring to confirm our residency, we
took the test one at a time and we both passed. And yet, rather than
celebrating about it, I was stuck in a slump, thinking how am I going to tackle
the next thing on the list, which is, after I’ve practiced for a while, getting
my license. But in order to drive my aunt and uncle’s car, I will need to be on
their insurance. Yet I have no money for that because I have no job. And nobody
will call me back for the places I’ve applied to.
It occurred to me, as my aunt Wendy was
congratulating me on getting my permit, that this hollow feeling, my apathy in
regards to her pride in me, her celebration for me…was not right. Why couldn’t
I just let myself have this? Yes, there will be messy stuff to figure out in
the near future but this step, this one right here? Hot dawg! I did it! I got
it! I accomplished that sucker without breaking a sweat! Yahoo! Thank the Lord!
It was a big accomplishment to even realize in
the midst of this haze that there was a problem, and you cannot tell me that
the adversary doesn’t work very hard to tear us down when we’re filled with the
most potential because it was extremely hard then to figure out the solution.
And it was something that I should have been doing all along: keeping up with
daily scripture study and prayer. Every day here in Idaho is full, sometimes I
forget that we’ve only been here for a little over 2 weeks. It has been hard to
dredge up the motivation and time to keep up with my personal relationship with
the Spirit and Heavenly Father. Not to mention this last week in particular, it
feels like I’ve been carrying a heavy, swampy monster on my back, unable to
really think about myself. I remember one day, aunt Wendy was gone the whole
day earlier this week and I wanted to draw, so, I drew a picture halfway and
stopped. Because then I felt like maybe I wanted to read, so, I read a new book
by Sheri Dew that I got. It was hard to focus on it, so, I stopped after a
couple minutes and bought a YA novel on Kindle and read a couple pages of that
and stopped because I really wanted to write. I cannot adequately describe the
state of mind, except scattered, foggy, unhinged, and inexplicably melancholy.
You can see my struggle to even come up with a coherent thought about what I
was truly feeling and why I was feeling that way.
I tried to write update blog entries several
times but they kept on getting filled with this negative, irrational garbage. But
looking over my notes from Sunday sacrament meeting, I was curious about the
note at the top of the page, something I’d written but forgot. “As I Search the
Holy Scriptures – prompting during last verses.” I forgot what the last verses
were, so, I looked them up and I’ll repost them here:
“As I search the holy scriptures, May thy mercy be revealed, soothe my troubled heart and spirit, may my unseen wounds be healed.As I search the holy scriptures, Help me ponder and obey, in thy word is life eternal; may thy light show me the way.”
In the midst of this darkness, this unvoiced
struggle, this struck me with a relevance that I didn’t really have a hold of
at the time of writing it, but felt prompted to write down… Because someone knew I would need it and He knew
that I would review my notes to write a blog entry about it. So, I read my
scriptures along with Believing Christ
by Stephen Robinson(I’ve been going through and reading and marking the
scriptures he mentions, to help with my over all pondering on the Atonement of
Jesus Christ). Guess who’s not inexplicably sad and beating herself up anymore?
…Yeah, sure, probably her. But me too, I was talking about me.
I’m in the part in Believing Christ where Robinson talks about how those who make an
either/or distinction between what the covenant requires for us to be party to,
either faith or works, are misguided and misunderstand what it means to
participate in the covenant. He takes the stance that faith itself is an action
word, that even though we cannot save ourselves by our works it is enough of a
token of good faith to establish the covenant with our Savior. He uses the
analogy of two people on a tandem bicycle and how one person will always be
doing more work than the other. But if the weaker person just pulled up their
legs and rested them on the handlebars then “by definition the arrangement ceases
to be a partnership and becomes exploitation.”
It made me realize that I haven’t been feeling
close to my Heavenly Father and I haven’t been trying at all to make room for
this relationship. It also clearly illustrated to me how dire this situation
has become just from these couple of weeks not keeping up with it for my personal
study and prayer. Here I was, blessed with great food, a wonderful house,
surrounded by loving family, making reasonable strides on my goals and unable
to celebrate, unable to see anything good in the future. How dark do the clouds
overhead have to be to think “I’ll never make it” as you’re literally taking the steps towards doing it
and accomplishing those steps one at a time?
I just want to bear my testimony that it is
serious when people talk about building and maintaining a testimony and
dialogue with the Spirit by reading scriptures, praying, and serving others.
These things are not optional and you never know when you will find yourself
susceptible to that loss of faith. Knowing what I know in my heart about the
truth of this gospel, it did nothing to help me during this week in those times
I felt like I was emotionally drowning. Because I wasn’t doing what I was
supposed to do. I wasn’t doing what I needed to do in order to fortify myself
against these moods.
I had the idea for the title of this entry last
night when I went with my cousin, Macy, to work in the laundry room at the
temple. There was another girl folding clothes in there with us, a vocal music
major at BYU, and she hummed beautifully the song, “I Need Thee Every Hour.” So
comforting and soothing in that environment as we folded the clothes and her
voices lilting in perfect pitch, wordlessly the tune to that beautiful song. I
went with Macy to the YSA ward that she goes to(not for much longer though,
since she just got engaged last week!) and I felt an encouragement from the
Spirit was we sang this song as the closing hymn for sacrament meeting. It
seemed to highlight the exact realization I’d had: I need thee every hour,
Jesus Christ. I cannot be without you for even a little bit.
I also had the prompting to write down: “How
Great Thou Art – last 2 verses prompting.” I don’t know if this will have
relevance for later but I couldn’t help visualizing the emotions associated
with these verses.
And when I think of God,
His son not sparing,
Sent Him to die,
I scarce can take it in;
That on the cross, my burden
gladly bearing He bled and died
to take away my sin
I like that part where it says “I scarce can take
it in” this amount of love that I’ve been shown by His sacrifice.
When Christ shall come
With shout of acclamation
And take me home
What joy shall fill my heart
Then I shall bow
With humble adoration
And then proclaim My God
How great Thou art
I love the jubilation at the end here, the
sensation I can feel in my heart and the way my imagination takes hold of going
home and Christ being so proud of me.
I leave these thoughts and testimonies with you,
in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
Your perspective and insight is a gift to each of us who love you, Sweet Amanda. Your dedication to your quest towards independence is well underway....give yourself credit and rejoice in even the small victories you win....I am rejoicing here for you. Love you brave lady.
ReplyDeleteThank you Amanda, for sharing your experiences! You have uplifted my soul today. <3
ReplyDeleteThis is an inspirational post you are awesome and I will re-read this often.
ReplyDeleteThanks