Friday, March 15, 2013

Lean On Him

“He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty.  I will say of the LORD, ‘He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.’  Surely he will save you from the fowler’s snare and from the deadly pestilence.  He will cover you with his feathers, and under his wings you will find refuge; his faithfulness will be your shield and rampart.  You will not fear the terror of night, nor the arrow that flies by day, nor the pestilence that stalks in the darkness, nor the plague that destroys at midday.”  ~Psalm 91:1-6

Earlier this week, in Melisa Taylor’s Online Bible Study of Karen Ehman’s book “Let. It. Go.” that I’m participating in, we were asked to read this Psalm and then share what God spoke to our hearts through it.  When I read the description of the assignment, I thought it was going to be quick and easy - one that I could simply read and do in a matter of seconds.  I was really not prepared for the big way in which God was going to use this small piece of His word to speak into my life.

As I read through Psalm 91, for some reason I automatically zeroed in on the last two verses.  Initially, I didn’t see any application it could possibly have for me or my life; however, knowing how much I’ve gotten out of each prior assignment, I knew there had to be a treasure there waiting for me, and so I persisted.  Over and over I read it until I finally slowed it all down by pausing to pray and seek the Lord in between each verse.  Then, when I came to the last two once again, the words “terror of the night…arrow that flies by day…pestilence that stalks in the darkness…plague that destroys at midday,” suddenly crept out to me like critters that have been scared out of their hiding place under the shadows of a fallen log when lifted.  In that moment I knew the truth – that these words did, in fact, apply to my life…for these very words I had actually come to know all too well.

Most who know me are aware of the fact that the birth of my daughter, which will be four years ago next month (wow, where does the time go?!), did not go well to say the least.  While I could replay for you just about every detail of those days (Lord knows I’ve done just that a million times in my own head, and yes, I did mean to type “days”), what I’d like to share with you instead is the battle that has ensued since those dark moments of my life were painted and left imprinted so vividly in my mind’s eye.

After the longest, hardest, worst, sleep-less week of my life, my daughter was released from the NICU and we were finally allowed to go home.  While I can now praise God for that miracle, and under normal circumstances this would have been a joyful and highly anticipated time for a new mom, neither were the case for me at the time.   For me, the nightmare that had become my reality that week in the hospital followed me home and continued on – both metaphorically and literally. 

For many weeks afterwards I struggled with panic.  At night, when attempting to lie flat, I would close my eyes and instantly, in my mind, find myself back in that hospital struggling to give birth…the pestilence that stalked me in my darkness.  When I’d finally fall asleep, I was also bombarded with all-to-real and intense nightmares of dying…my own personal terrors of the night.  Then, in the day, the panic would creep in on me while breastfeeding – the time in which mom and baby are supposed to spend quietly forming that special new bond everyone talks about…the arrows that flew by day.  And though mum was the word, if I had actually brought light to all of this with my doctor, friends and family, they too would have been aware of what I had already known inside me to be true – post-partum depression was my plague that destroyed at midday.

As time went on, the panic attacks and nightmares did subside, and though I still faced many very real problems physically as a result of complications during labor, I thought that I had worked through, gotten over, and forgotten the emotional wounds that had been inflicted…I was wrong, and it has been proven to me time and time again since.  It never fails to amaze me how quickly all the buried emotions of those moments can come shooting to the surface with even the smallest of things.  Things such as: a facebook poster declaring the miracle of childbirth or reflecting the special bonds between mom and baby at birth, finding out that yet another person I know is pregnant with their second child, hearing others stories of how easy and seemingly perfect their childbirths were, pictures of new moms slimmed down so quickly, facebook posts and pictures of friends being physically active with their children and doing the activities I so love and miss but can no longer do myself, that all-to-often asked question of “when are you going to have another baby?”, and the greatest of them all – when my daughter asks me to pick her up or she’s hurt and all I want to do is follow my motherly instincts to pick her up, but instead having to see the look in her eyes and pain on her face as I try to explain for the millionth time, “Sorry honey, Mommy’s not supposed to pick you up because Mommy has an owie.”

All of these things and more are the arrows that have descended on me by day and plagued me by night.  Each time that I’ve been struck has caught me completely off guard and left me thinking - “what in the world?”  And then I find myself once again pleading with God, “Why is this still plaguing me?”  Even while typing this, though nearly four years have passed, I’m fighting feelings of anxiety building in my chest and tears threatening to spill over. 

There is a very real struggle going on about not wanting to share this very personal part of my life.  Sharing things of this nature has never been an easy thing for me.  Not even with those I’m closest to…sometimes especially with those I’m closest to.  That snare that Psalm 91 spoke of - I fell into it long ago - set by Satan to keep me trapped in a place where I’d buy into the beliefs that I can handle it all on my own, sharing makes me too vulnerable, and keeping things to myself, makes me strong and allows me to remain in control - all lies!  The truth is Satan will stop at nothing to keep a person away from living the will of God and spreading the truth of the Gospel.  And the truth is both sharing our struggles openly with others, and letting go of control, is required in order for a believer to be used effectively in the Kingdom of God.

Learning to let go of control seems to be the key to unlocking so many of my struggles – many of which I’ve shared with you here on this blog.  But what is the key to unlocking my actual compulsion to control?  What is ultimately going to open that door to freedom and allow me to step out onto the path that the Lord has planned for me?  Well, that too was answered for me in Psalm 91: 1-6. 

When I think about the battle of taking and maintaining control, a picture comes to mind of a tug-of-war.  In this tug-of-war, I’m on one side, God is on the other, and His word is the rope that He uses to tug us and pull us towards him.  When we hold onto that rope/His word, but let him have control, there is essentially no tug-of-war taking place – just Him pulling us into Him.  However, when we take control, we are actually pulling back on that rope and alas, the tug-of-war begins!  If you’ve ever played tug-of-war as a child, you’ve probably noticed that when you’re pulling harder you’re able to lean back away from the other person, but when they’re pulling harder, this causes you to automatically lean forward into them.  Well, it works the same way with God.  When we allow Him to have control, we will automatically start leaning into Him, but when we pull back and take control, we essentially start leaning away from him in our life. 

This is fundamentally what I’ve done for the last four years and really for most of my life.  It is by engaging in this tug-of-control-war, that I have found myself placed in my current battlefield where I am left fully exposed and vulnerable to the cascading arrows surrounding me.  If I had instead, relinquished control to God and chose to lean on Him during my traumatic experience, He would’ve been able to pull me into His fortress and taken me under his wings, where I would’ve found refuge and rest rather than plague and pestilence.  Thankfully, now that I have been awaken to this truth, I can  begin to do and experience just that, and when the arrows of hard to take pictures, comments, questions and posts start flying by day, I can be protected by his shield and rampart and then I can begin to truly “say of the LORD, ‘He is my refuge and my fortress, and my God; on Him I lean and rely, and in Him I [confidently] trust!” ~Psalm 91:2 AMP. 

While this may not be a story of victory YET, I know that it WILL BE, for “I can do everything through him who gives me strength.” ~Philippians 4:13 (4-13, as a friend of mine has pointed out, is my daughters bday :-) ).  As I learn to let go and lean on Him, it may look like, to the world, that I’m losing the tug-of-war.  However, in the view of the Lord, I will truly be winning because, “Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.” ~Mathew 10:39.  So when we find ourselves in a place in our lives where we are asking “what in the world,” we should stop and ask instead “what in the Lord?”  In other words, what in my walk with the Lord has gone wrong or is missing that is causing me to feel like life is spinning out of control?  It is in those times that we’ll likely have found ourselves to be engaged in a tug-of-control-war with God.  And it is in those times that we again have to remind ourselves to just “Let. It. Go.”

As this study comes to an end, I’m very much aware of the fact that my journey of learning to let it go is really just beginning.  Truly there are many more examples and stories I could share of my struggles with control, and even in this particular chapter, what I've shared only begins to scratch the surface of the whole story...perhaps over time I will continue to share more, but for now I’d like to leave you all with a song that I heard for the very first time just yesterday and it couldn’t be more perfect for this Let. It. Go. journey…God’s timing is always perfect J.  I hope that it blesses you as it did me!  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1voPbg3zOCY
(Sorry about the ad that plays before the song.  Hope you wait it out though, the song is worth it! J)

                (poster credit: http://www.daesofourlives.com/2011/08/ilove-life-word-of-god.html )

4 comments:

  1. Katrina thanks for sharing your heart. WOW! I had troubled pregnancies too so understand some of what you are saying but not the anxiety etc. I had miscarried and waited on children for over 10 years. I especially love the part where you said, .instead of asking"“what in the world,” we should stop and ask instead “what in the Lord?" Thanks for sharing your heart today. I shared mine too this week. Debbie W. (OBS Leader)

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  2. Thank you so much Debbie for supporting me in sharing my stuggle. Your comment reminded me of something I had intended to include, but didn't. While writing, I kept falling in the comparison trap and feeling that maybe I shouldn't share my story. Through this study I have read and been blessed with so many incredible stories of ladies who've been through so much more and have come through it better women for it because, unlike me, they leaned on God. After all, both my daughter and I survived and she is perfectly healthy today. What the Lord has been speaking to me through this is that yes, it's good to realize that it could've been so much worse and I'm truly blessed. That keeps me humble and praising Him. But it is equally important for me to realize that my story is what it is, God is at work in me, and that being willing to share this is part of my Let. It. Go journey. I just hope that it's my heart that is heard in all of this, rather than my mistakes...I look forward to reading your heart today in your blog :-)

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  3. Katrina, I am giving you a BIG hug here today girl! Yes! I heard your heart loud and clear! What an ongoing struggle you are experiencing and very bittersweet it seems. Your pregnancy and the birth of your daughter, while joyous and miraculous is also a source of difficult memories and ongoing battles for you. You are so right in your tug-of-war analogy. Lean into God, every single day! He will carry you when you are weak and help you soar when you are strong! Be well my friend! Thank you for sharing your most private feelings with us. <3

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    1. Erin, thank you so much, your words mean a lot! There is so much for me to learn about leaning into God and I've gleaned a lot from reading your blog and the example you've set through your own personal struggles shared there. Again, thank you!

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