So, I’ve been sick, as in really sick! I was down for
the count for nearly three weeks. I
haven’t been that sick in nearly 20 years.
Ugh! At first I tried to just gut it out, to keep pushing my way through
it until I felt better. When my body
rebelled and shut me down from action, I just slept, figuring that was my best
bet to get over whatever it was in a few days.
Then, as I started to feel better, I took a drug and had a strong
reaction to it. Translation – another 2
days down and another 4-5 days of feeling as weak as a newborn kitten. It was those last 4-5 days I found the most
challenging. I wasn’t tired so I couldn’t
sleep, but neither did I have energy to do
anything! I felt like a slug, and I was
feeling angry about it all.
Then I remembered a woman from my Mother-Daughter Bible
study group. She was a cancer survivor,
having just pulled through over a year’s worth of treatment. She not only was in remission, but she had
such an incredible spirit about her. In
our group, she shared about one key, perspective changing moment from early on
in her battle. Her mother had passed
away just a month prior to her diagnosis.
She went to her dad, feeling guilty to even cry to him about her fears
since her mom had just passed. But she
went anyway, and what he shared changed her world. After holding her and comforting her, he
looked at her with a smile and said, “The Lord says to be grateful in all
things.” The truth of those words
struck, and sunk down deep. She realized
that instead of mourning what was, she needed to rejoice in each day she
had. She decided to move forward with
faith that whatever the outcome, she had many reasons to choose faith and to
rejoice (though she obviously prayed for healing, too!).
As I recalled the bravery and peace that woman possessed,
it changed my perspective. Instead of grousing, I took the extra time I
had on my hands to pray and think through things I don’t normally have time to look
at more deeply. New ideas and plans began
emerging. I wasn’t exactly productive
because I still felt weak, but I came to peace in the space I found myself in,
trusting God would use it in some way (which He did – and I’ll share about it
in a few days!). I let go of the anger
and the self-pity, and chose to embrace my down time.
I don’t know that I healed any quicker because of it, but I certainly
felt much better on the inside.
You never know exactly how God is going to work. You never know how or when He’ll show up to
gently guide you in a different direction.
The key is to take the time to listen, to not allow the negative to
crowd out the realm of possibility and beauty all around you. I think God blesses us in some way every
day. The challenge is to keep our eyes clear
and our hearts open enough to find it.
For further thought: “Most of all, friends, always rejoice
in the Lord! I never tire of saying it:
Rejoice! Keep your gentle nature so that
all people will know what it looks like to walk in His footsteps. The Lord is ever present with us. Don’t be anxious about things; instead,
pray. Pray about everything. He longs to hear your requests, so talk to
God about your needs and be thankful for what has come. And know that the peace of God (a peace that
is beyond any and all of our human understanding) will stand watch over your
hearts and minds in Jesus, the Anointed One,” (Philippians 4:4-7). Do you have an area that you need to let go
into the Father’s capable hands?
Something challenging you need to turn around on its head and instead be
grateful for? Look for ways to do so
this week. And, take the time to read
the rest of the passage in Philippians (click HERE) so you can be
encouraged.
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