Showing posts with label forgiveness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forgiveness. Show all posts

August 3, 2013

perfectly imperfect childhood

it's funny to think that we all choose the flaws in our parents as we grow up that we vow to never repeated in our own character.... only to find that when all is said and done and hell has frozen over, we are more like our parents than we thought we'd be.

it's been a month now in vegas as a nanny and i truly love where i am and who i am with.

this last week as i was the sole caretaker of four children, with the parents on vacation, i found myself longing for a childhood i have acknowledged as imperfect. so many thoughts went through my mind and the lessons learned could fill pages and pages of a book.

--how in the world do people my age have more than one kid and keep their sanity??
(followed by: "oh yeah, i'm only just now getting to my actual emotional maturity :)
--will i ever be equipped to be a full-time mom?
(followed by: maybe not. i will just have a career that deals with families)
--it is surprising how many things you can accomplish with one hand and hip holding a heavy baby.
--tricking a child into doing or eating something is not technically a lie; you can still have a relationship built mostly on honesty
--i no longer judge anyone for using tv as a motivator/babysitter/entertainer --- not that i ever did and not that i use it frequently, but i have no idea how stay-at-home moms get anything done for themselves without a little bit of television being turned on.
--when they say potty training must wait for the child to be ready physically and emotionally, i had no idea how much emphasis was on the emotionally part.
--with the amount of poop i see and smell each day, i'm surprised the smell doesn't stay with me always.
--i didn't understand until this week how truly vital play-dates and playgroups are to moms, it totally kept me sane!!

as the baby grabbed a glass bottle of a1 sauce from the bottom shelf of the fridge and it shattered, i ached for the father i knew when i was younger --- who cleaned up broken glass and spilled milk and sang the song, "it's alright to cry."

as i rocked, sang, and read little ones to sleep i thought about what my parents must have felt when they were raising my siblings and me.

chaos and flaws aside, i have become the person i am today in large part because of the parents i have.
and what is life without its chaos and flaws?

through the topics i have discussed on this blog, i have honestly come to forgive and accept what was imperfect. this week i was able to reflect on how childhood doesn't have to be perfect to create a good person. none of my siblings had a perfect childhood --- it was chaos for all of us. but my two older sisters and my younger brother are truly some of the most amazing people i know.


yes, i try not to raise my voice and to manage conflict in a productive way.
sometimes i give up on the situation for a bit and walk away.
nothing is perfect and i am so very far from that mark of perfection.

but i guess to sum up my epiphany...

if i ever have a family of my own, i will choose to not worry so much about perfection and creating a perfect childhood. doing "everything right" isn't possible, but doing everything with love is.

May 29, 2013

updates {and} confessions

my last post was for darn sure!
the winds have been a'blowin mighty strong.
my life has been uprooted faster than i could have imagined it.
change is around every corner.

i'm not married at the age of 25 (*gasp*) and while of course that would be nice to be starting a family like all of my friends - my age, older, and younger than me - it's just not happening.
so my constant quest is to find a way to better myself while trying to make the world a little bit better, too!


well, bullet points will make for a much easier update: lately i...

*moved in with my parents because everyone got kicked out of the apartment complex i'd made my home for the last two years.
*moved out the same day as i got my tooth extracted (that was fun... ;)
*started taking two classes at the local university to improve my g.p.a.
*was living on the sofa for about 3 weeks because of the pure amount of my belongings and not enough space to put them away.
*decided to find a nanny job for a year before going to grad school
*found the best family to nanny for down in vegas - i leave in less than a month
*have been organizing/sorting/packing/storing/throwing away my copious amounts of ... stuff.
*still cannot see the floor to the "guest room" my mother is allowing me to stay in (this drives her crazy, but as long as the door is closed she tries to pretend it's not there -- hey, it's driving me nearly insane, too!!!)
*got to experience the joy of a colonoscopy & upper endoscopy
*went to visit my darling new niece and her parents
*started getting my life in order, ...well, "working order" is as best we can get right now
*decided i want to go to grad school at unlv for a master's in social work *fingers crossed*
*have progressed in leaps and bounds with my ability to accept, let go of, forgive, and shut the door on all sorts of aspects of the past.


i feel like my biggest accomplishment recently has been my ability to allow myself  the differentiation of my past self from my present self. i had been able to do that for others and i desperately wanted others to treat me as though they could see the difference, but still... i could not accept that i could be totally a different person.


i have so many, many memories. memories are what my life used to be made of.
you may not understand what i mean by that, and that's ok. it's better that you don't.
it's much darker in reality.


however, as i have worked on this problem, i have been grateful to the local Christian radio station that has played this song by sanctus real a lot. it's called "forgiven" -- it's catchy and it has felt like it's speaking directly to me.






struggling with the past was my life.
no longer.

side note here: it came as a realization to me that as long as i could not get past my own "awfulness," i could not truly accept and love myself. if i could not do that, i could not have the authentic relationships i have desired all my life. i had been seeking for a deep connection, but there was not anything that would satisfy because the emptiness of my own ... "bucket," per se .... was such an immense black hole. what i was truly longing for was an eternally satisfying relationship with deity. one that could fill the emptiness and then overflow. all along i had been going to the wrong places for peace and comfort --- or trying to get those feelings.

the joy and relief that have come from the knowledge that who i was no longer matters because i am forgiven is astonishing. i have a firm and unshakable knowledge that i am a new, different, better person. i am cradled in the arms Christ, and i become new and better each day.

the new-found person i'm becoming is just that:
new and incomplete.



i get so excited with the prospect of learning something new to become better;
implementing a strategy that will help me get in-touch with myself,
and thereby my Heavenly Father more.


a delightful, heart-warming, thought-provoking article came out a little while back based on a blogpost by an lds bishop who wanted to share with his readers his overflowing heart. for the entire article go here to his blog - the title is "confessions of a bishop." though i loved pretty much everything he touched on, there are a couple of specifics i extremely appreciated:
  • i have learned that we believe it is a strength to conceal weakness. 
  • i have learned that it is easy to want others to overlook our flaws as we expect perfection in them.
  • i have learned that most of us bear scars from the failure, disappointment, and fear in our lives. and, we prefer to wear long sleeves.
  • i have learned that we feel like a failure when we make mistakes even when we profess a belief that the purpose of this existence is to make and learn from them.
  • i have learned that forgiveness is the greatest gift we can offer someone. and ourselves.
  • i have learned that the strongest among us are those with the cleanest mirrors.
  • i have learned that the sins of parents profoundly affect children. and are often repeated by them.
  • i have learned that affection from parents profoundly affects children.
  • i have learned that most communication between parents and children is what psychologists call “superficial.” Strong relationships are built on the “validating” variety.
  • i have learned that children desperately desire parents who listen.
  • i have learned that churches are not museums or catwalks for perfected saints but rather labs for sinners.
  • i have learned that “tolerate” and “love” are two very different verbs despite what popular culture professes.
  • i have learned that we want God to grant us space to make decisions but step in to stop others, nature, mortality, or illness from hurting us or those we love.
  • i have learned those who have made more mistakes have a great gift. Empathy. Now to the matter of searching out someone who hungers for it.


i love these lessons. i love that he shared them.
i love that even though i "know" many of them, it's important to be reminded.
i love that the Lord knows me and knows what i need.
always.

now i'm searching for people who hunger for empathy.
people i can help to find their own riches.

life is crazy...
and it just keeps on going.

November 7, 2012

forgiveness {and} gratitude

so, i'm in this class at uvu called "positive psychology" -- it's interesting, extremely applicable to real-life, and i can't help but truly enjoy it. this class has taught me incredibly important lessons.

these lessons have become recurring themes in my life as of late, most emphatically that of forgiveness.

a month ago, at the beginning of october, i gave a group presentation on "satisfaction with the past."
this topic included not dwelling on the past, learning to forgive, being able to forget, and finding gratitude.

when i signed-up for this presentation on august 29th i knew it was probably going to be the most meaningful topic for me to study, but i truly had no idea how far-reaching its affect would be. it seems Heavenly Father wanted me to have a full-fledged life learning course in forgiveness and its associated concepts so i could internalize them. every day of this semester these topics have weighed heavily on my mind and almost daily i experience opportunities to either learn or apply the lessons of leaving the past in the past, forgiving, forgetting, and being grateful for the hardships i've faced - for they have made me who i am.



over and over and over and over again
the Lord's hand-picked situations, circumstances, events, and people have left me in awe of His knowledge of me, His compassion and understanding of each one of us, and His continued patience with such a stubbornly slow-to-learn mortal. through these last two months He has taught me what i could not learn on my own. this has made such an impact on me that i thought i would share my thoughts and insights with you.
do with them what you will :)

clicking here will take you to the powerpoint i made for the presentation. but don't feel obligated :)



dwelling in the past --
we all do it. why?
because we all have regrets .... hurts .....
memories full of pain or embarrassment or offense.

i am horribly guilty of dwelling in the past.
this prevented growth and happiness that could have been mine.

what kept me dwelling in the past???

the people who left me hurting inside and often my own actions leaving me embarrassed and unable to forget.
so ultimately the answer is: my inability to forgive, both.....
myself  and others.





forgiveness helps us get out of the past.
forgiveness is an act of charity.
forgiveness, just like charity, is a Christlike quality.


when others hurt us, leave us in so much emotional and/or physical pain, it is difficult to comprehend forgiveness. well, i have learned that forgiveness is not what i once thought it was. forgiveness is....

not reconciliation
not a pardon
not condoning (justifying, minimizing)
not excusing the offense
not denial of harm
not a decaying of memory


if all of that is what forgiveness is not, then what is forgiveness?
it definitely feels like it is supposed to be many of the above explanations when forgiveness seems to be expected of me.



joanna north defines forgiveness as:
“a willingness to abandon one's right to resentment, negative judgment, and indifferent behavior toward one who unjustly injured us, while fostering the undeserved qualities of compassion, generosity and even love toward him or her.

**this definition includes the emotional aspects {overcoming resentment}, cognitive aspects {changing negative judgments} and behavioral {ending indifference}.



........sooooooo...... really? i get the good news that i don't have to reconcile with the person who brought me pain and suffering, nor do i need to pardon or condone their actions. but now i find out there's a catch! forgiveness means i don't act indifferently? that's the easiest way to deal with the offending party if forgiveness must be granted due to a guilty conscience.

great.


let's get on with it, then.
:)




there are many different ways to process through our hurts or anger toward forgiveness. my powerpoint discusses a few of those ways and goes into a bit of detail.
not covered in my presentation is the four phase model of forgiveness applied in forgiveness education:

  1. uncovering phase – discovering how chronically holding on to resentment, anger, or hate has a negative impact on your own life.
  2. decision phase - making a choice to try and forgive.
  3. work phase - trying to forgive by reframing the incident, accepting the hurt, and trying to find an empathetic understanding of why the offender acted the way he or she did.
  4. deepening phase - where you try to gain a deeper sense of meaning as a result of having gone through the injury. a sense of universality prompted by realizing that many people have experienced many hurts and that you are not alone.
**research with this model and incest survivors who completed this forgiveness education showed an increase in their ability to forgive and to hope and a decrease in their scores on anxiety and depression.




the following is a poem i feel expresses forgiveness quite beautifully.
a roommate, who has helped me in countless ways make progress in this area of my life, showed it to me and it rings true to my soul.

"to forgive"
--by mestup poems
to forgive
is not to forget.

to forgive
is really to remember
that nobody is perfect
that each of us stumbles
when we want so much to stay upright
that each of us says things
we wish we had never said
that we can all forget that love
is more important than being right.

to forgive
is really to remember
that we are so much more
than our mistakes
that we are often more kind and caring
that accepting another's flaws
can help us accept our own.

to forgive
is to remember
that the odds are pretty good that
we might soon need to be forgiven ourselves.
that life sometimes gives us more
than we can handle gracefully.

to forgive
is to remember
that we have room in our hearts to

begin again ……
and again



life is so hard.
why make it harder by keeping the gift of forgiveness wrapped and stowed away, never to be given and instead to rot as resentment in our hearts?


buddha said, "holding on to anger is like grasping a hot coal with the intent of throwing it at someone else; you are the one getting burned."



here is a lyrically clever song, one that i have come to love and that comes to mind at random times during my days. you should really take a listen :)
matthew west "forgiveness"




learning to forgive others helps teach us how to forgive ourselves.
how ironic.
God knew all along that we'd need this understanding.

when we forgive others and others forgive us, we understand a little more how important God's grace is in our lives. He forgives us for everything we do - and no matter who you are, i think we all know that everyone sins. God forgives us each.

how incredible!!
i sure need His grace and i'm so grateful He gives it to me.



i believe this is where gratitude comes in:

  • finding the lesson in the hardship can bring gratitude.
  • this gratitude helps us leave the past in the past.
  • leaving the past in the past brings happiness to our present and our future.


i am so grateful for everything life has thrown my way.
i have learned forgiveness because of my adversity.
i have learned true friendship, strength, and what great joy comes from the peaceful times.


i want to live my life full of gratitude.













gratitude is a decision.


gratitude changes us. it changes others.


and..... i think we all know forgiveness changes everyone.
it sure has changed me.