There is a darkness hidden deep in my heart that I am not
proud of. It makes me selfish, a character trait often born of the strange mix
between vulnerability and pride. This shadow makes me bitter, it makes me angry
towards myself and others. It makes me feel like a professional hater, which is
mostly a projection of self-hate onto others. I’ve never understood people who
were so confident in their right-ness, people who would go down fighting,
people swearing through and through that they are correct. This idea is so foreign to me, this complete and utter
loyalty to self-preservation, this certain belief in one’s own goodness.
Psychology has a great deal to say about our fight and
flight from self, most of it rooted in attachment theory. We either understand
that we have a secure base or not—and this leads to different forms of
attaching to self and others. The ideal attachment would be that we can see
ourselves as primarily OK, and others as the same. But so often this balance
gets hijacked, whether by life or circumstances or the chemistry in our brain.
Because of this, our attachments are skewed. We may think that we are OK, but
no one else is. Or we may think that we aren’t
OK, and no one else is either.
More common than not, we believe that we aren’t OK, but that everyone else is.
Our okay-ness is wrapped up in the other, defined by what we
perceive and believe to be true about the goodness of those around us in
comparison to ourselves.
Silence perpetuates this myth. As humans, we aren’t exactly
in the habit of sharing our secret darkness with others. We are so afraid of
this part of ourselves that we can’t even bear to bring it into the light, lest
someone discover who we really claim ourselves to be.
So, we go on believing, behaving, and becoming based on our
assessment that we are not good—while strongly clinging to the idea that everyone
else is.
We call this shame.
We keep on weighing our faults, our failures, more and more
heavily until all that’s left on the scale is a heaping pile of self-loathing
and guilt, with some bitterness sprinkled on for good measure. And the weight of this becomes so heavy, so hard to carry,
that we give up all together.
We isolate, we numb, we go to sleep.
Because the thought of living with ourselves is just too much.
And the idea that we could believe something different is
out of question.
That we could believe that maybe, just maybe, we are OK?
Never.
I have shame to carry, don’t you understand? It’s mine, no
one else’s, and I did it to myself. If I let it go, it’s like letting myself
off the hook, like believing something that’s not true.
What?
When did our mistakes start outweighing our successes?
When did our propensity for bad start deciding that we are
no longer good?
That we are no longer worthy?
Where did the grace go?
The truth that says we are loved, forgiven, whole despite
our sufferings?
Sometimes, when I get this way, I like to pretend that God
is in the room with me—and He has a voice. I ask God, what do you think about
this, this ugly thing I did? This thought that I had? This badness within me?
I say, it’s wrong that I’m angry, sad, bitter, depleted, fed
up—aren’t you disappointed in me?
Ashamed of the way I’ve been reacting?
Carrying on? Responding?
And God says to me—what are you responding to?
So, I get quiet for a moment and think:
Everything, I
whisper. The brokenness, the fear. The uncertainty of life. All of it. I’ve been pushed down and
kicked around and labeled and ignored and I’m angry all the time.
And God says, me too.
I know how you feel.
And I’m angry too.
With me? I ask,
afraid to look up, worried to see the disappointment in His eyes.
And God, takes me by the face, looks at me with love, and
gently says:
Remember the cross?
And I say, well, yeah. I know a thing or two about grace.
But God looks at me knowingly, at the words and mess and shame that I’ve laid before him in this
moment.
And that look says, you
do not.
You do not know about grace, because you haven’t accepted it
for yourself.
You may think that others deserve it, that it is a gift for
them, but.
It was also a gift for you.
A gift that was given because God himself was angered by the
suffering of the world.
By your own suffering.
By the fact that you kept acting like you were bad, when God knew that you were really good.
Because he had once created that good in
us.
And believed that we could be whole again.
So He brought down that goodness in the form of grace and gave us a secure base.
He wanted us to know, we
are OK.
That He knows how we
feel and is also angered by the suffering we've endured.
The suffering we've placed willingly on ourselves.
So, he responded.
And his response, His grace speaks louder than our feelings.
Than our thoughts.
Than our behaviors.
Sometimes, I think God is more offended by our lack of belief in His grace than our everyday shortcomings.
More angered by the shame we let ourselves endure when the weight of glory is right there, ready to change the scales for good.
Because, in this world, we will feel.
Sometimes bad, sometimes good.
We will act.
Sometimes bad, sometimes good.
But ultimately, the good wins in the end.
Grace wipes it all out, leaving nothing but light behind.
I want to live out of that light.
I am free to believe
that I am OK.
That I am light shining
in the midst of my sufferings.
Not darkness.
That I don’t need to be uncomfortable with the goodness that
God sees when He looks at me.
I can run with my arms wide open and my heart to the sun.
You’re OK.
I’m OK.
May we live out of this security each day.
hey Snickers... can i tell you something. after reading this, i'm more aware of the grace we've been given despite our lack of faith. and that everyday we are blessed by God's love for us.
ReplyDeletethank you for being transparent 🙏🏼 - eli
oh, hit me up... i have to talk to you about something else too
ReplyDelete