Tuesday, October 21, 2014

I Love Random Stuff

IMPORTANT NOTE: To understand the purpose of this piece you must read my previous blog post “What do You Love?” Thanks J

            I love blankets. I love sweaters. I love my bed. I love cold nights where I have to pile blankets on me to keep warm.
            I love the warmth and happiness of summer. I love the refreshing smell of fall. I love the beauty of winter. I love the atmosphere of December. I love the flowering warmth of spring.
            I love learning. I love being surrounded by people at school. I love how school isn’t boring as long as you make it interesting. I love reconnecting with old friends. I love meeting new ones. I love when teachers are enthusiastic. I love the unknown aspect of learning.
            I love history. I love learning about past people, society, economy, and nations. I love the different opinions on past and present. I love forming opinions from past events. I love the increased sense of understanding and appreciation we have for the present after we learn about its beginnings.
            I love music. I love how a love of music is something the majority of humans share. I love the variety of music there is to choose from. I love 5 Seconds of Summer. I love fangirling over them with my good friend. I love listening to their CD with my little sister in my car. I love how she guesses what member is singing. I love telling her if she is right or wrong. I love how she is usually wrong. I love jamming out to their song “18” with my littlest sister. I love the catchy and popular pop songs (until they are overplayed). I love classic rock. I love Queen. I love Billy Joel. I love Journey. I love AC/DC. I love Elton John. I love listening to the classic rock stations. I love listening to the classic rock stations on long car rides with my Dad and older sister. I love when my older sister and I try to guess who is singing the song playing at that moment. I love how my Dad always knows the artist. I love how songs are more than the lyrics and music. I love how songs can be memories.

            I love driving. I love my ten year old car named Woodrow. I love the freedom. I love the independence. I love that my parents were kind enough to get me my car. I love that my parents trust me to drive. I love that my parents pay half the price of Gas. I love my parents. I do not love the price of Gas. 

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

The Pleasure in Pain

             Lately, I have been struggling to understand the concept of pain. Pain is more complicated than just an unpleasant state of being. There are different types of pain. There are different emotions attached to the different types of pain. There are different ways of dealing with pain. There are different people who experience different types of pain. However, I have been relatively ignorant to the essence and complexity of suffering. Pain is a relatively unfamiliar topic to me. There have been a great deal of times where I have suffered from sadness, anger, anxiety, exhaustion, and many other forms of emotional pain. There have also been a great deal of instances where I have suffered stings, aches, soreness, bodily illness, and many other forms of physical pain. I just haven’t experienced pain with as intense severity as others have in the world. I am very grateful that God has spared me of such extreme pain. However, I hate, more than anything, that millions of people do experience intense suffering. I love and dislike my relationship with pain. I love how we are just acquaintances, but I don’t love how we are not friends. If we were friends, I wouldn’t be ignorant to pains character. If we were friends, I wouldn’t have the guilt of not being friends with pain while millions of others are. If we were friends, I would have a greater level of empathy for those who are also friends with pain.  I pray to God every night asking Him to end the pains of others and to allow the sufferers to allow God to strengthen them. Can I righteously ask this? Although I have had such little experience with the coexistence if pain, God, and faith, can I honestly just assume that their suffering can easily be subdued by faith in God. The correct is no. I can’t. I lack the basic understanding.
            Having faith in and praising God while life is going well is so blissfully easy. God has granted me glorious peace and happiness in situations where if I didn’t allow him in my heart I would still have peace and happiness. Please don’t misinterpret this as me saying I don’t need God. Every moment of my life when I feel Gods presence is infinitely greater in value than moments where I shut God out. The logic of my relationship with God would make it easy to assume that in moments of pain I would remain strong through faith and maintain a certain level of peace and happiness. Well for me personally quite the opposite happens. I have experienced incredibly intense physical pain before. I felt as though my stomach was being twisted, stretched, and burned all at the same time. This is not a common occurrence, but it has happened. I tried praying to God, but the pain was too much. It shames me to say in that moment of weakness I told God that I was ready to die if that meant my agony would end. My soul gave up trying to fight my suffering, but even worse I gave up on God. My surrender to pain validated that I wasn’t strong enough to let God strengthen me. I let God down.
            Months go by and I am training for a 5K with my mother. She got this app called “Couch to 5K”, and it is meant for non-athletic people to build up the endurance to run a 5K. Each workout gets harder as we slowly begin to walk less and run more. When we first started it was relatively easy, but as weeks went on it increasingly became harder to complete. I again was experiencing moments of great suffering. I tried to pray, but I found it easier to be consumed by my discomfort. It was like my pain was demanding to be felt.** I could only remain focused on my burning lungs and how every breath only fueled its fire. I couldn’t stop thinking about how my heart was beating so fast as if on the verge of explosion. My mind couldn’t begin to understand how can and how has anybody survived this kind of exhaustion. After you run, the body’s and mind’s sense of accomplishment motivates you to run another time. This is how many runners find the strength to run frequently, but I was not okay with just running for the feeling afterwards. I realized how I dealt with hurt during my runs and in general needed to change. If I want a strong and durable relationship with God, I must learn how to allow him to help me deal with pain.
            I listen to music when I run, but instead of interpreting the lyrics literally I manipulate the meanings to reflect my relationship with God. For example, the song “I’ll Be There” by Jackson Five played, and I imagined it was God singing the lyrics directly to me. God helped me this way by giving me the tools to help myself while simultaneously remaining attached to him. Each time I ran, each time I suffered, the pain consumed me less until my praise and communication to God consumed me more. While each run became more physically demanding, my spirt was lifted and distanced from the hurt by God. Each run I tried to run faster than the last, and paradoxically I suffered a little less with each run. However, listening to music while running seemed like an accessory I couldn’t afford if I wanted to genuinely receive Gods help. On the day of the actual 5K I knew I had and could run without any musical assistance. It was just me and God. I completed it to the best of my physical ability and also with a happy heart. Pain didn’t defeat me. God protected my spirt.
            Completing the 5K was not the greatest accomplishment achieved through my training process. I learned something extraordinary. Something I never thought was possible, but was the answer to my question-“How do we deal with pain?” God has answered this question, in my favorite way… A PARADOX. Thanks to Gods endless grace, I know now there is pleasure to be found in pain.
            Running has become an amazing spiritual activity for me. I have become closer to pain and effectively closer to God. Moments of pain were once the moments when I was most separated from God because I felt as though He wasn’t there. Now moments of pain have evolved to become the moments where I am closet to God because I have never been more aware of His presence. I hear God in the lyrics to songs. I feel God in my rapidly beating heart. I taste God in my dry mouth. I smell God in the crisp refreshing autumn air. I see God running alongside me and cheering me on. That strong and beautiful connection to God is the pleasure I find in pain. Faith in God exceeds experiencing only the easy and peaceful times. Having a relationship with God involves all the painful and hard situations God can change into pleasant moments. After my last run before the 5K, I did something I have never done so seriously before. I actually fell to my knees to pray. I thanked God for increasing my understanding of pain. I thanked God for the strength He has given me. I thanked God for the stronger sense of empathy for those who suffer He has blessed me with. I thanked God for giving me hope that people who are experiencing pain can reach out to Him and gain pleasure from the pain. I feel so enlightened now that I have gone through this process of confronting pain directly and coming out victorious because of God. There are personal flaws in this lesson. I know that pain shouldn’t be a goal, and I shouldn’t intentionally make myself suffer. I also know that there is so much more complexity to pain that I have yet to encounter. However, I have found a source of attainable hope. When I look at the world and see the inevitable and excruciating suffering of my neighbors, I can confidently and happily say that God can graciously give the sufferers "the strength to face all conditions" Philippians 4:13. We just have to spread Gods love.



**Credit for this idea goes to John Green (an awesome human being). It is featured in his book The Fault in Our Stars

Sunday, September 28, 2014

I Love My Dad

           I love my Dad. I love all the hard work he does for me and my family. I love how much he has sacrificed for us. I love that he is a good model of what a father should be. I love how my Dad works a stressful job to support us. I love how he never brings that stress home. I love that he always puts his family before his work. I love how he takes my little sister to doctor’s appointments. I love the amount of time and effort he gives to coaching my other little sister’s softball team. I love his effort to stay connected with his family in Pennsylvania. I love how he is almost always in a good mood. I love his attempts to be funny. I love when he actually says something funny. I love how much he loves my Mom. I love when he gets her flowers. I love when he makes sure his daughters are doing enough for her on mother’s day and her birthday. I love how my Dad finds ways of connecting with each of his daughters. I love how he has read my littlest sister every single Harry Potter book even though she can read perfectly fine. I love how he acts like a ten year old boy when he plays Clash of Clans with my other little sister. I love the personality traits my Dad and my older sister share. I love watching TV shows with my Dad. I love how he has introduced me to most of them. I love watching superhero movies with him. I love his constant support. I love that he knows he can trust me. I love how I couldn’t have asked for a better Dad. I love how God choose him to be my Dad. I love how God choose me to be my Dad’s daughter. I love how it’s my Dads birthday today. I love how it is the perfect day to post this post. I love how today I can say, “Happy Birthday Dad! I love you.”   

Monday, September 22, 2014

I Love God

            I love God. I love everything God does. I love knowing I can trust God. I love how God puts different and wonderful situations in my life for a reason. I love discovering signs from God. I love that God cares enough about me to strengthen our bond. I love how when I wonder away from God, God comes and finds me. I love how when I am the lost sheep, God is the shepherd. I love God’s consistent forgiveness. I love God’s mercy. I love how God welcomes all. I love the peace I find with God. I love praying to God every night. I love how my prayers are like conversations with God. I love God’s Son. I love Jesus. I love how Jesus saved me from my sin. I love how Jesus was willing to suffer so greatly because he loves us. I love how Jesus teaches me how to be a better person. I love the happiness God gives me. I love the places God gives me. I love the things God provides for me. I love the life God has given me. I love how I can elaborately elaborate on each of the things I love about God. I love how much he cares about me. I love how much I care about God. I love that God is always there. I love how everything I love is a gift from God. I love God with all my heart. 

Thursday, September 18, 2014

"What do You Love?"

(Before Writing)  
            Last Week I found myself sad. I wasn’t exactly sure why, but there were so many negative thoughts surrounding me. I was tired of being upset for unjustifiable reasons. My recurring worries and issues were becoming too much for me to hold. So I turned to God and asked what do I do? My mind instinctively went to writing. I have had this one blog post idea for a while where I would write about how a terrible historical event could have been prevented, through faith and peace with God (I will write about it eventually). However, negative and angry thoughts would be the basis of that post, which would be counterproductive to the problem at hand. So I was stuck. “God, what do I do?” Well he answered my question. The best way to defeat negativity is to battle it with positivity. Many of my blog posts have been… I don’t know… not super positive and joyful. Do I regret writing them? Absolutely not. It is just time for a change. Asking God questions during difficult times is an action most religious people do, and I do not escape this generalization. “God, what do I do?” God answered my desperate call for help. However, he didn’t answer it the traditional way. He didn’t give me a statement, order, or suggestion that would clarify my confusion. He answered me with another question. “What do you love?”

**Here is where I would have put my list of everything I love. I started every sentence with, “I love…” For example, “I love God.” I would then elaborate on what exactly it is I love about God. I also wrote about nature, objects, experiences, and people I love. 

(After Writing) 
            Wow. Just Wow. I only generalized what I love, and I wrote more than I ever could imagine. We are talking around 3,000 words. God has taught me an immense amount from this love filled writing process. I originally thought I could put everything I wrote in one blog post. I understand now that it is simply too long. So I am going to break up what I have written in to smaller sections, and I will post each section at different periods of time. Okay moving on. Have you ever been told to “count your blessings”? I sure have… plenty of times! Whenever I heard the suggestion I would think, “Yeah that is a good idea. Okay thank you God for everything you have blessed me with.” I made an ignorant and unemotional statement of gratitude, and consequently I did not really understand the extent of my appreciation. Actually counting my blessings has healed my blindness to the variety of love I have to be grateful for. I now feel happier and more content with my life.  There is so much to cherish in the world, and I thank God that I can clearly see the beauty of my existence. I have also learned how exactly what we love impacts our lives. Does it shape who we are? Well what we love definitely influences who we are, however, what we hate does to. What aggravates us. What we want to change. What makes us sad. They are all ingredients in the recipe for “Who We Are”.  For instance, I wrote, “I love that I live in a place where I can eat food for pleasure.” I did not say, “I hate that there is hunger in this world.” Both sides of the story influence who I am. So what does only love do for us? What does love do that is uniquely loves? After writing what I love, I began to imagine my life without my blessings. Imagine my life without my sources of happiness, without my friends, without my hobbies, without my family, and without my faith in God. I would live a life full of anger, disappointment, mental instability, and misery. It would be full of nothing I value. Nothing of worth. What we love makes our lives valuable. Our blessings make our lives worth living. When we look at the world and see the injustices we hate, the wrong we want to make right, and the hurt we want to heal, we can look back towards our blessing and say, “Hey this life isn’t so bad.” Writing what I love has truly been too great a gift from God not to share. I HIGHLY suggest taking the time to write about everything you love. I know that I have many blessings, but I know everyone else does too. Take the time to focus on the positive side of life. The side that makes life worth living. 

Monday, September 1, 2014

Flyin By

Really quick post, but it is necessary! School starts tomorrow and I am experiencing many different emotions. First utter disbelief at how fast the summer went bye. One of the downsides of enjoying life in the present moments is things just seem to fly by. However, I would rather live a short and happy life than a long one where I am always anticipating the future. This summer has been too good. God has been so good to me. I am so humbled by his love and the support and strength he gives me. Yes I am feeling sad that summer is ending, but I am also excited for what is going to happen, and I trust that everything will work out according to Gods plan. But I need to cherish the moment I am in right know. This school year is like a delicious ice cream cone, and once it is all gone I will I wish I could have it all over again. I will wish that the cone is not empty, but full of ice cream and potential. I now realize I am in that moment that I am going to want to relive again. The moment where the ice cream cone is fresh, and hasn't been licked. The moment where I know an abundance of enjoyment will follow. So tonight as I fall asleep, I will try not to spend the night thinking and anticipating for the new school year. I will spend it cherishing the fact that a new wonderful  journey is standing right in front of me. A journey that hasn't even begun, but one that is is full of promise and potential. Thank you God for allowing me to see the value in all moments of life.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

In the Moment

“Live in the present”. “Life is too short to be worrying about the future”. “Today is a gift”. Those are just a sampling of the cliches that have never stopped being told, but at the same time they are not listened too by the human ear. If anyone has never been told told to live in the moment, because life is a gift and worrying about the future ruins the present, then this blog post isn’t for you. Go explore the world. Find people to tell you to live in the moment and then come back and read this. Why? I am not here to tell the already told. This post is for people who have heard and believed in the ideal all their lives, but struggle to put the word to action.
I and many others believe that being fully engaged in the present moments of our lives is the ideal form of existence. The classic cliche is a book we have read that proved to be an enjoyable and agreeable read. It was so widely accepted and beloved they even made a movie adaptation of it. However, the movie didn’t do the book justice. Parts were left out. Favorites things were overlooked. Important parts were not emphasized. Nothing turned out the way you imagined and hoped it would. But what can you expect. Putting words to action is a difficult task.
I believe I have been receiving signs recently telling me to stop worrying about the future and focus on the present. I know I should. Life is too short. We need to cherish the time we have now. One day we will look back at these moments and miss them. The logic and beauty behind the philosophy is undeniable, but it is hard to give the philosophy life in our reality. It’s just simply hard to stop worrying, imagining, or hoping for the future. Its hard to not fear what tomorrow may bring. It’s hard to not worry about the pain that might be encountered. It’s hard not steal time from the present in attempts to prevent future misfortune. It’s also hard not to hope for a future better than the present. It’s hard not to try to imagine what a better life will entail. Its hard to stop trying to do the impossible and live in the future, and consequently distancing yourself from the present. Its too hard. However, struggle can add value.
All of the wise men and women who tell us the wise statements I am addressing usually leave out how one would actually become successful in forgetting about the future and fully living in the present. But I think the how is an open ended question on a test. Answer it how you want, but you might not get it right. Jesus, as usual, has something to say on the subject. In the passage titled Trust In God (hint hint) Jesus asks, “Can any of you live a bit longer by worrying about it?” Luke 12:25. Now imagine this is an open ended question on Mr. Jesus’s final exam. Now the obvious correct answer is no, but what if Mr. Jesus pulled the oldest and cruelest teachers trick that there ever was. What if he added one simple word to the instruction. EXPLAIN. His students have been stumped for years trying to figure it. We know the answer. We know what we should do. We just don’t know how. Some have succeeded and some have not. Only if we students actually listened to our teachers lessons. Answering that question on Mr. Jesus’s final exam would be much easier. If we listened to our teachers lectures,we would remember when he talked about the human need for food and clothing and telling us not to worry.“Your Father knows that you need these things, Instead, be concerned with his Kingdom, and he will provide you with these things.”Luke 12: 30- 31.   In this passage Jesus addresses the common human worry of obtaining the necessities of food and clothing. Here we are 2000 years later and our worries for the future have multiplied dramatically, but that doesn't mean that God can’t be trusted to provided. Jesus tells us we need to become focused not on future needs, but on our present relationship with God and his people. He tells us we don’t need to worry so much about the future as long your faith in God remains stronger than our fears. Sometimes finding the answer to the question is as easy as opening up the textbook.
“Trust God and everything will turn out alright”. “God has a plan for our futures”. “Focus on your faith in God”. I realize I have just presented a new set of classic cliches that need acted out in our lives. There is a question that still reigns. How? I don’t know. I only know how I have personally come to trust God. This is a new open-ended question, but everyone’s answer is going to be different. Some answers might still be wrong, but there are also multiple right answers.  Everyone's path to discovery, faith, and trust is different. I do not know other followers paths, nor do I think it is my business to know. However, despite the many different paths the destination is the same. The destination of trust in God is what's going to offer us deliverance from fear or anticipation for the future, and allow us to be truly connected with our present state, our present relationships, our present beliefs, and our present trust.