Christmas 2019

“Mummy, do you know some people call Christmas-Xmas? That is just like taking Christ out of Christmas. I don’t like it.” These were the words spoken by the Ginger Kitten a few days before he finished school.

I was so pleased to hear him speak these words at such a young age. He realises the importance of the word and what it means to us believers at this time of year.

It can be a huge trigger for many, especially those who suffer from depression like myself or who have other physical/mental illnesses. I was determined this year not to dip as low as I had last year.

I am a facilitator for WRAP which is a recovery program. Wellness Recovery Action Plan. It is something I’ve done for around five years now and which I’m quite passionate about as anyone I’ve spoken to on the subject will know.

WRAP allows an individual to plan for situations which may trigger off a period in which they are unwell. Christmas as I said can be such a trigger.

So how did I plan? I wrote lists – lists of who was going to receive a present and what it was. I made a lot of presents this year, and that in itself helped me in a therapeutic way. I looked at who was coming to dinner and when which also helped with shopping. I rested. I took time out instead of running around like a headless chicken. I breathed – I downloaded an app to help me breathe and sleep and…I spent time with those I love.

All of this planning helped a lot but so did the love and support of those close to me. I belong to a small family but we are close and always there for one another.

This Christmas I was privileged to spend many happy times with another family. Not everyone shares these experiences. However, at this time of year we remember how Jesus left His Father and was born into a family here on earth. Family is important to God. He never intended us to live alone. He created the family unit to provide love and support and to make each day easier as we help each other practically too. I am also a member of God’s family. I am a daughter of the King and there are so many brothers and sisters in Christ for whom I am truly grateful who added to the joy I experienced this season.

There was a lot of fun this Christmas. Fun being off work, fun trying new things, fun seeing my boys open their presents, fun with family, fun going out for the day and fun making memories together.

Celebrating my faith, spending time with loved ones all have given me hope for the year ahead. But as 1 Corinthians 13:13 says:

“And now abide faith, hope and love, these three; but the greatest of these is love.”

Love has been evident to me this Christmas. God loved me so much that He let His only Son come to earth and be born in a lowly stable. Jesus left Heaven knowing one day He would die on a cross for my sins. So as I go through 2020 I want love to be more evident in my life as I live each day for Him and His glory.

Thanks for reading

The 3 R’s of February – Roses, Romance &Rejection

This may make you cry

February has always been a month I enjoyed. It’s shorter than January, my mum’s Birthday is in February, half term is in February and it’s Valentines Day.

Valentines Day has been a joyous occasion in my life for a long time, well, until now. On the 1st Valentine Day with my future husband I was given a single red rose and told from them on , each February 14th I would receive a rose for each year we spent together.

How romantic! Yes, he was. He wrote poems about me, got an eternity ring designed and made for me, wrote clues for the presents he gave me and proposed on the twelfth stroke of midnight on New Years Eve. This appealed to me greatly and made me feel special as not all men are like that , but then, not all women want this.

So the years went by and as well as keeping every card he ever sent me, I kept every rose petal – yes, honestly! When it got to a dozen, I told him e could stop. I knew all about the cost of roses from my mum’s job but he wouldn’t take no for an answer. Then at 20 white ones were introduced. The picture at the top is the last bunch I received – 22. That’s where the roses and romance ended and were replaced by another R – rejection.

Rejection is something we all struggle with . Most of us experience it for the first in the school playground. We have a falling out and suddenly our friend(S) reject us.

I remember being rejected by all of my university choices at 18 because of my poor grades. It was humbling. Most of my friends had done exceptionally well and had got into their 1st choice. At 18 it was easier to accept . God has another plan I said to people when they asked. He did. I just had to wait a few weeks until a place became available and I was able to share how God had worked everything together for His good and perfect will. Romans 8:28 paraphrased.

At 22 I suffered rejection again at 14 job interviews! That was demoralising but I still had my youthful optimism and felt God was just giving me practice on my interview technique.

Rejection in love however is another story. It’s not really a path many would choose if given the option but one I ultimately had to face after 22 years.

Rejection means ‘the act of refusing to accept, use or believe someone (or something); the act of not giving someone the love and attention they want and expect.’

The second statement is probably how the process of rejection began. He would take his hand away if I went to hold it, he did not spend as much time in the evenings with me and did not play as much with the Squid or Ginger Kitten. Over time it became apparent what was happening. He spent more time messaging on his phone than he’d ever messaged me. He was with us but not present with us. I felt like I was gradually being usurped. I was spending more time on my own; my attempts to give any love and affection were being refused more often; things I said were not listened to or responded to like they had when we first met or consequently. Even on days out, my role as my husband’s carer , guiding him along an unknown path or crowded street were now being taken over by someone else who was spending family time with us.

To be honest at the time there was so much else going on that although it annoyed me, I felt helpless and hopeless and after a conversation with a friend, I realised I had lost him.

It’s only now that Im processing the act of rejection. The word only really popped into my busy mind a few weeks ago. I’m facing it alone. He has her but I have been rejected. Rejected by the one person I never thought would. I thought he accepted every thing about me: the good, the bad and the ugly. I thought he believed I was the woman who loved him, cared for him in sickness and health, helped him learn to drive, encouraged him to go for promotion, sacrificed work and my career to look after him and our children, made him believe he had the talent to write a book, told him it was ok his friends came over every Thursday night, encouraged him to serve God and be a role model to the young men he came into contact with. I thought I was the one he used as a lover, cook, cleaner, taxi, child minder, hostess, party organiser, personal assistant, prescription collector, shopper, bill payer, spiritual leader……..

It seems I was wrong. I’ve tried not to dwell on it. Then I remembered, I’m not alone. My Jesus knows exactly what I am and have gone through.

Psalm 118:22 says ‘The stone which the builders rejected Has become the chief cornerstone.’

Now this Psalm as speaking of how David the shepherd boy had been rejected. His own father hadn’t brought him to see Samuel the prophet and yet, this man who was rejected was elevated by God to a position of honour and usefulness in the land of Israel.

The Lord Jesus Himself is referred to as the rejected stone in the New Testament. He was rejected by His own people and yet through His death and resurrection, He was exalted and is indeed the cornerstone of our faith.

So, what about the roses, romance and rejection? There may not be any roses or romance this February. The rose petals are gone. They were put in the garden recycling bin when I moved house. The romantic cards? They too have been recycled. Rejection? It won’t have a place in my house on February 14th. The Lord and Saviour who redeemed me loves me with an everlasting love. He will never leave me or forsake me. He can truly empathise with me because He knows what it is like to be rejected. That word can no longer hold any condemnation over me because I’ve named it and shamed it. Even though there may be rejection in the future, here’s what it says in 1 John 4:4 ‘ You are from God, little children, and have overcome them; because greater is He who is in you than he who is in the world.’

Thanks for reading

Restoring a Masterpiece

At the moment I am feeling very thankful for being alive. I have much to be thankful for but why being alive? As a sufferer of a number of depressive episodes that I hinted to in my last post, I had many days I felt quite the opposite of thankful. I couldn’t thank God, I didn’t want to thank Him . I just didn’t desire to be alive anymore, to my shame. Yet each episode came and went and each time I’ve acknowledged God’s part in that.

But… I know you shouldn’t start a sentence with it , but each time, although I came through it, life wasn’t the same as before. Often I tried to convince myself that I never would be the same because you change as you go through life or depression changes you.

However this time it’s different. So that got me thinking. Dangerous I know but Why? How? This time I’m not living in the same toxic environment I’d found myself in. I’m living in my own home that the Lord provided me with. More than that, I’ve returned to my first love – Jesus.

For a long time I was trying to please a man while trying t make myself believe that I was a Christian; I attended church(albeit a Sunday morning); I read my Bible(not with the discipline my Pastor spoke of recently or with the hunger I had when first converted); I prayed(not with the fervency of the young woman on her knees surrendering her right to motherhood to the Lord or the student who organised prayer meetings and nights of prayer for CU) and I served the Lord(not with the urgency or dedication of my younger self who had taught Sunday School and took part in various other roles before marriage).

I had been trying to please a man, not my love – my Saviour, my Redeemer, the One with whom my relationship is more important than anything else. My relationship with Him is one that is going to last forever. After that, God came close and spoke to me through Scripture.

Our Pastor’s wife had given out the card in the photo at one of our women’s meetings and I’ve been using it as a prompt each week in my prayer journal which I began at the start of 2019. The title says – You Are Who God Says You Are. So far, I’ve covered You Are Beautiful, You Are Unique and You Are Loved which led to this post. The verse accompanying it is Jeremiah 31:3.

“The Lord has appeared of old to me, saying:’Yes, I have loved you with an everlasting love; Therefore with loving kindness I have drawn you.'”

Jeremiah was speaking of a time when the Lord was restoring the nation of Israel just as I am presently living in a time of restoration in my broken life! Wow! How amazing to think that the same God who loved a nation to restore it, also loved me – an individual, enough to restore me.

This was when my mind went into overdrive. I’m a visual person. I am an artist. Restoration made me think of a masterpiece in an art gallery. Over the years, dirt, dust, grime, moisture, pollen and particles of goodness knows what will silently adhere to the painted canvas until a curator decides it needs to be restored to its former glory. It is x-rayed and examined and worked on and quite often when the layers are taken away there may even be objects that had been hidden so long they change the look of the masterpiece.

What has this to do with me and my restoration process? I too am the a masterpiece. I’m not being vain, my Bible tells me in Psalm 139:14

“…I am fearfully and wonderfully made…”

Not only that but when I first came to Christ He made me new. 2 Corinthians 5:17

“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come,” ESV

I feel like a papier-mâché model covered in glue and sheets of newspaper with printed words. For years, words were spoken over me that I believed until I became someone I didn’t even recognise myself in the mirror. The Lord is restoring me. He is carefully dissolving the glue and peeling off the layers of newspaper. Every now and again ‘she’ shines through. Friends and acquaintances have remarked I ‘look alive ‘ or that ‘I’m enjoying life more’. Some people who have known me since forever have even stated that they can see ‘the old me’. I have to correct them there.

That is not the case. Just like the once hidden objects that change the look of the masterpiece, it’s not ‘the old me’ they see but a revelation of the person God wants me to be.

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Thanks for reading x