you’ve come a long way, baby.
in I Lift My Eyes Up, Thoughts and Feelings
as break, bridge, drew, faulty foundation, hell, life, musical chairs, mutual friend, something, suspension bridge, unsinkable ship
Yesterday marked six months since Drew and I broke up.
And shortly after, I remember hearing from one of my good friends that a mutual friend of ours asked if Drew and I had broken up. She said it like that: did they break up? Like we were in high school and relationships were more like musical chairs than anything else. At the time, I found that term so strange. How does something break that was never supposed to, I wondered? It’s ironic. Like the Titanic, billed as the ‘unsinkable ship.’
And it hurt like hell.
Yes, like hell. Or at least the closest I had ever been to hell on this earth.
But then one could wonder how something that was built on such a faulty foundation managed to stay together for that long, anyway. It’s like walking across a bridge and, once you’re on the other side, you notice that it’s sagging. Which wouldn’t be that terrible, except that it’s a suspension bridge. And now you’d rather not live your life in that kind of suspense anymore–the kind that leaves you waking up wondering if this is the day the bridge is just gonna fall and take you down with it.
Like what almost happened.
So you decide not to ever go over that bridge again. You hope the bridge gets fixed, you really do; but you cannot risk your life on it.
And now it’s been six months, which is incredible. Both because it’s weird to think about how life was and now it’s even weirder to think that life wasn’t always like this. And I am not sure, exactly, how one is supposed to go about celebrating a break up like this, but what I did was quietly text my brother, letting him know it was six months.
To which he said: Wow I can’t believe it’s been that long! In some ways it seems so recent. How are you feeling about it? What a crazy six months.
Which was an understatement, to say the least.
And I thought about his question before telling him the truth: Feeling grateful. Both because I’m not with him and that I never have to live through that winter again.
And then he gave me a good and a Me tooooooooo!!!!! yes, with exactly nine ‘o’s’ and five exclamation points because that’s what we do around here when we want someone to know we’re serious about what we’re saying.
Or, I should say, texting. When we’re serious about what we are texting.
So, right. Six months. So grateful. Life has so much color and I can’t help but appreciate it. I can’t help but live reverently here, because look at it.
It’s good, right?
Right.
so sing your story; sing it until it goes from here to better and then sing about how it’s good
in I Lift My Eyes Up, Loved Ones, Thoughts and Feelings, Uncategorized
as beginning, content, finality, fragments, God, heart, hell, hell hath no fury, journal, journals, kind, life, little girls, million pieces, million years, nightmares, peek, post, scor, trusting god
At the beginning of each new journal I often wonder about the content that will fill its pages.
Sometimes I would even like a peek at it.
I don’t anymore.
I’d rather live hoping for the best.
I’d rather live being shocked at the worst.
I’d rather live trusting God to handle both. To handle it all, really.
Because I never thought–not in a million years, as the saying goes–that I’d be writing this post. I never thought my journals would be filled with this content. I was just like a lot of you, I think. I’d dream of him, spend my nights wondering what he’d look like and how it would feel to fully love someone.
What I never thought about was how much it could hurt.
What I never thought about was how after you meet him, after you fully love him, he can shatter your heart into a million pieces and then throw them into the sea, leaving it up to a miracle to ever put those fragments back together again.
I guess those aren’t the kinds of dreams that little girls foster.
Those are the kinds of nightmares that women survive, and now I am one of them.
I came home from tour to the worst kind of evidence of the worst kind of choices my husband has made. And because of these choices, we can no longer be married. Because of these choices, we have both known pain that seemed reserved for a special kind of hell.
And because of these choices, God has shown up in ways that has humbled me and carried me.
We are both trying to heal, both trying to take the next best step for each of us. And though it’s true that hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, I want his life to be good. I am not even mad, really. Not now, anyway. Ask me again in five minutes. I feel…so many things. But pervasively devastated, like someone in mourning. Oh, and shocked at how my sweetest of comedies could turn to a tragedy with seemingly no warning and who’s writing this script anyway? And though the word over has never held such weight, never rang with such terrible finality before, I am believing for something new and even good.
For both of us.
And I will say this: Never before in my life have I experienced such a startling contrast of love and pain. Though I have been hurt to the point where I didn’t before know it was possible to stand back up, to smile and say hello to those you see, I am also being loved. Immeasurably and in ways that I can never repay. Everywhere I turn, it seems, I am brought face to face with another kind word, another selfless act on my behalf, another encouraging note that makes it’s way inside of me and chips away just a little more of the arrows that have landed there.
God knows that I am the desert and these harbingers of love are the rain.
I have cried because of the pain and I have cried because of the love and I don’t see myself stopping anytime soon; I have felt like nothing, wondering how all the parts of me could drain out so quickly and leave my heart still beating–wondering why my silly heart didn’t get the memo that I had died, that my spirit had flown to a safer place; I have wanted to close my eyes to the world, close my eyes to the many days that stretch before me like some kind of impossible life sentence to endure; and I have also seen, despite everything and against all odds, a bit of beauty brake through. A bit of beauty that had the audacity to tell me that my life isn’t over.
That’s right, my life isn’t over.
Because there are still dumb jokes to be made.
Still people to whom and with whom I need to share my story.
Still songs to be sung and outfitted to this new adventure upon which I am embarking, ready or not.
And still blank pages in a journal.
A journal that will be filled with content that says everything about redemption and nothing about bitterness.
I hope, anyway.
And hope. Isn’t that the point, anyway?


