end of the old, beginning of the new (part 2)

Update: If you are here from the Lettered Cottage, Welcome!  This is part two of a two part wrap-up and new beginning post that also includes my word for 2013.  You may want to start with Part 1. Thanks for visiting and please feel free to leave a comment!

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When I started my out with the old, in with the new, state of Sadie address yesterday, I had no idea the direction it would take.  I had jotted down some random thoughts earlier in the week and had caught up on several blogs which gave me food for thought.  I basically meant to do a little discourse about my 2012 word and introduce you to my 2013 word(s) and my thoughts about that and lessons learned and so forth.  You get the gist.  I just thought I’d serve up something clever and be on my merry way into 2013.

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What I wasn’t prepared for was the depth of emotion that looking back welled up in me.  In looking back at 2012 I had to actually dip into 2011 for it to make sense.  Everything just came together in one big blur.  I say blur because I actually cried.  I wasn’t expecting the tears or the path I found myself on, but I went with it.  I figured it needed to be said, at least for my benefit and since only about five people besides me read my blog I thought maybe I could be indulged.

I don’t apologize for yesterday’s rather long post or the content because it did help clarify some things for me.  And I think it was necessary for me to deal with the emotions in order to move on.  I realized that over the past few years I have gone through some things (who hasn’t?) in a way that got through them, but didn’t actually deal with them.  They were filed to sort through later.  I also realized that in October of 2012 I began dealing with them in a non-planned sort of way.  I think the cracks in the dam finally gave way and I had no choice.

I came to realize that I had to totally depend on God and trust Him for everything, which led me to the epiphany that I had to rest in him, wait on him, trust in him, and listen for his truth.  Of course I knew all this, but it sank deeper into my soul and found roost.

Around this same time, I remember reading John 15:4 – “Remain in me, and I will remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me.”  The word “remain” lodged in my heart and my first thought was that this would be my word for 2013.  It would be a reminder to rest, wait, trust and listen.  I even wrote it on my kitchen chalkboard wall to remind me, so it sort of became a word for me in 2012 too, along with Joy.

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I think Joy will still linger in 2013; Remain will definitely be big this year and I’m pretty sure a word lover like myself cannot be satisfied with just one word, so stay tuned.  I am excited about the possibilities for 2013 – to grow, to learn, to heal, to discover words, but most importantly – to remain.

Remaining in Grace,

Sadie

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Are you choosing a word for 2013?

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end of the old, beginning of the new (part 1)

That is what I want the lessons of 2012 to teach me: To realize that every day is sacred to my Lord, to not grieve and to let His joy be my strength.

So here I sit, finally, writing my end of the old and beginning of the new post.  It seems the thing to do in this land of blogs.  Not that I have to be trendy.  But I do have to write because it’s part of my survival. If I don’t write my soul shrivels a little.  If I took the time to captivate every thought in a journal it would be all consuming.  But, if I let thoughts escape unpenned I lose some of the essence of me and my purpose. It has been a struggle.

For months, even years I imagined sitting in a room with a view and a writing table, penning great thoughts that would somehow work themselves into a publishing house.  It seemed lofty on the one hand, but why not, on the other.  Not working so I could write seemed frivolous. But that is what I wanted more than anything.  Due to a series of circumstances this past year, I was given the opportunity of uninterrupted writing time.  I have a room and a table and a view of my childhood home across the lawn.  I’ve written very little.

Family home - view from my writing room window.
Family home – view from my writing room window.

Writing for me has always come from a place of pure joy.  You have to give yourself up to the abandonment of the words and let them thrive.  You have to look deep within and write from your truth.  If you can’t it creates a word block.  I’ve written, but not enough.  Some of it I have enjoyed, but most of what I’ve written has been on automatic pilot because it has hurt too much to go deep.  I’ve written a couple of things from the deep, but they weren’t for sharing.  Even now, when I read them, I think I should throw them out, but I can’t because they are a truth I have to live with and they involve memories and hurt and realities that were ripped from my soul that shake me to the core.   I wish the circumstances that birthed those words didn’t exist but it is my reality.  And writing them did not bring me joy.

The irony of it all is that I chose Joy for my 2012 word. I know, everybody with a blog seems to pick a word for the year. Again, I don’t have to be trendy.

I tried to pick a word in 2011, but that year was such a blur that I don’t even remember the word.  Due to my near death experience with pneumonia early in 2011 and the real death experience of my cousin in the late summer,  I pretty much lost that whole year and as 2012 was approaching I was still struggling with living.  I was a nervous wreck, until after the anniversary of my pneumonia had passed, that I would get it again in 2012.  Even so,  I was determined that the New Year would be better than the previous and I had so much to be thankful for.  I had hopes that 2012 would be joyful.  So I chose joy.  Then, I almost promptly forgot that I had a word.

I was still struggling with extreme fatigue. And on top of that we were making fairly regular weekend trips to the Little House so we could help my parents.   My husband was still a full time student and I encouraged him give up his three part time jobs for 2012 so he could focus on his dissertation and graduate already.  I figured the sooner he graduated, the sooner I could finally rest.  (My need to rest was not his fault, it was residual from the pneumonia wiping me out, but I figured he was the solution.)

Going to work was about all I could manage.   I struggled daily to be motivated enough to care.  Somehow people’s issues with their lawn furniture didn’t seem all that important anymore (I worked in customer service for an upscale garden furniture firm).100_1339.3   I went through the motions but my heart just wasn’t finding the joy.  My boss had known for about a year that my husband was to graduate in May, so it was pretty much understood that I’d be leaving sometime in the late spring or early summer.  When we realized that my husband would not be graduating in May after all, we talked about when we should officially move.  We decided to wait until December, but my boss didn’t think he could give me work that long, so rather than keep up an apartment on campus and the Little House near my parents two hours away, we made a major decision to move full time to the little house.  Without jobs.

I cannot even describe the feeling of freedom I felt when the decision to leave my job in June was pretty much made for me.  I somehow knew that God had been the one to really close the door.  It was like a weight was lifted off my shoulders. It was a change that had been a year in the making.  I had struggled to be on top of my game since coming back to work the year before, following the pneumonia.  I knew I was stressed to the breaking point, but I couldn’t worry my husband because he needed to finish what he had started as that too was a God move. So we went out on faith that the money we had in savings would last as long as it needed to and that when the time was right God would provide the work.  He has always provided our needs, so there was no reason to think he wouldn’t this time.  I know there are probably those that don’t understand why we decided to take time off work, but we know it was the right decision and I don’t worry anymore about what others think.

Looking back at resigning, I realize the freedom I felt was a moment of pure joy.  So, even though I pretty much forgot to focus on my word for 2012 and only gave it fleeting thoughts, I know that joy was present on the journey.  There have been many parts of the journey in 2012 that weren’t so joyful.  There have been many hurtful moments that have brought me to tears and anger.  Yet, somehow the joy became the foundation that ultimately made the hurt bearable.

It is the same with the deep writing that I couldn’t share. Although it didn’t bring me joy, the foundation of joy made it bearable.  If that is the only lesson learned in 2012, it is enough.  The Joy makes the hurt bearable. And so we grow and move on.

the foundation of joy makes the hurt bearable
the foundation of joy (Nehemiah 8:10)

Joy in Grace,

Sadie

PS – come back tomorrow or the next day for Part 2 – there may even be a part three – we’ll see.

Joy is the Word

“The Joy of the Lord is Your Strength.” This verse came to my attention back around Christmas. I ran across a note pad I had been given a few years ago and that verse was on the front.  I took it to my mom’s to share with her.  On one particularly stressful day, the notepad was lying on the table and  I pointed it out to her as an encouragement.  That verse stuck with me and I found myself whispering it often.

I just love all the connotations of this verse.  It is found in Nehemiah chapter 8 verse 10.  Ezra has just read the law to the people; they had bowed their faces to the ground to honor God. They were weeping. They have resolved to repent and turn to God.  Sound familiar? But Ezra tells them this is not a day to mourn, but a day to enjoy – he tells them not to grieve because the joy of the Lord is their strength.

So many times in life, I find myself grieving or mourning instead of enjoying. I tend to dwell on my imperfect living and I allow the joy to be zapped out of just simply living.  I don’t believe God intended us to live in mourning.  Yes, we need to grieve our sins and repent and sometimes we have go through a time of seeking to be right before God.  But, he wants us to find joy in our relationship with him.  He delights in us and our joy in Him is a source of strength.

I had been thinking for some time that I wanted a word to focus on for 2012. That seems to be trending right now across Christian blogs and it’s not for everyone, but I rather liked the idea, so I started thinking about my word.

I kept coming back to this verse in Nehemiah and the word joy.  My pastor touched upon this topic in a sermon early in the year and it made me realize that I don’t spend enough time in joy mode.  One night while searching for the reference to this verse I came across a blog written several years ago on this topic and it resonated with me. A book I had been reading also had joy as one of their words for the year.  All words kept leading back to joy.

So for 2012 my word for the year is joy and my theme verse is Nehemiah 8:10 “…This day is sacred to our Lord. Do not grieve, for the joy of the LORD is your strength.”

That is what I want the lessons of 2012 to teach me: To realize that every day is sacred to my Lord, to not grieve and to let His joy be my strength.

What about you – what lessons are you learning in 2012?

With Joy,

Sadie Grace