Sunday, November 14, 2021

1114-Day

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When I was in high school, I had a special number. My house number, 1114. It was a mystical, childish obsession with an arbitrary number. 

In high school, I went through a period of time during which my whole world was flipped upside down. I did not have many friends. I felt betrayed by everyone and everything I had ever trusted. I felt like I had lost my home, my house, my church, my family. One of the things I lost was that address, beginning in that special number. Just one of the many pieces of my childhood I felt had been stolen from me. 

That summer, I started working for an equestrian center - my dream job. Any of you who have been reading this blog long enough know that summer of work earned my first horse, Gambler (another dream come true). You can't imagine the joy and comfort I experienced when I discovered that this particular barn had no stall 12 or 13. Each stall was numbered: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 14 . . . 




During my time of questioning and loneliness, wrestling with my faith and my experiences, that number became a sign of God's faithfulness. Not only was He real and present, but He cared enough for me - of all people -  to "coincidentally" place this little number into my day. This was a priceless act of love in a time and place where I felt completely unloved and unlovable. 

I've shared my number with a few people here and there throughout my life. Some people definitely think I'm crazy (but are too polite to say it). Other people have attested to the way this particular number shows up at the oddest times. On a hard day I'll glance at the clock "randomly" to see 11:14. One day I was working at McDonalds, cleaning through the tears as a attempted to process a difficult friendship. One of my coworkers walked up to me and said, "There is some girl in the drive thru and she said to tell you that her total was $11.14?" One time my mom brought me an extra bag of chips from an event and the serial number on the bag was 1114.

When I was prayerfully considering college, I received my acceptance letter in the mail containing my "falcon number" w3111438. That's the main reason I went to college in the first place. 

Crystal Peaks Youth Ranch is another piece of my childhood. I read several of Kim Meeder's books when I was about ten. I dreamed of visiting the ranch and potentially starting my own similar ministry for years. While in my last year of college, I decided to pursue a summer internship at the ranch after graduation. I commented on a CPYR Instagram post about how excited I was to apply. 


Fast forward to October 2019. My own personal series of unfortunate events. First, I broke my finger. This became even more painful when through an insurance mishap I was charged over a thousand dollars for my visit to the ER. That's a lot of money for a broke college student! 

Later that same month, I was turned down from a colt starting class I had my heart set on for years. The worst part was the reason - I wasn't good enough at riding. For someone who struggles with shame narratives, that was devastating to hear. 

Only a couple days later I crashed my car into a deer. I was now a broke, brokenhearted, brokenfingered college student who was commuting to class without a car. That was one of the darkest emotional and spiritual periods of my entire life. It was in this season that I realized that for all my years of claiming to trust God, I didn't. 

I trusted in my bank account, my independence, my reputation, my skills and abilities. When those things were taken away I fell to pieces. Jesus wasn't enough for me. I gave up on my application for the CPYR internship. How could I serve in an unpaid position when I didn't even have the money I needed to buy a new car?

And then (if you were paying attention to the screen snip from earlier you might know what's coming) someone replied to my comment on the Instagram post. 


I immediately said something to God along the lines of "Um, do You even realize how little I have to work with right now? I thought I told You I wasn't gonna do this." And followed it with something along the lines of, "Okay, fine I'll apply but it's on You cause I have nothing."

I filled out my application and submitted it. A few weeks later, I received a request for a phone interview. I begrudgingly interviewed. It was one of the most wonderful experiences of my life. I knew only a few minutes into the interview that these were the kinds of people I wanted to surround myself with. These people loved Jesus and knew Jesus and trusted Jesus - something I was not doing. I was brutally honest during this interview. You know how you're supposed to talk yourself up in an interview? I was not doing that. I was honest about my shortcomings, my lack of experience, and my utter lack of money. To my surprise, this did not deter the ranch staff. I offered to serve the last three months of the year so I could work for a few months and save up the funds. We prayed together, they hung up, and I waited. 

They called me back and told me that the Holy Spirit told them to offer the position, but with a condition. I had to agree to take the position starting in May, right after graduation, with no idea how I would gather the money I needed. 

This was the moment I made my decision. I was going to say yes, and I was going to trust God to make it work. I didn't feel any trusting emotion toward God at the time. I decided to put everything on the line. I tried trusting in myself and it had failed me. I might as well try the alternative. I began fundraising. 

In December, rumors of Covid-19 started to appear. I chose to trust God. 

In February I started to experience weird physical symptoms. I chose to trust in God. 

In March, my boyfriend shipped to boot camp. The week after he left my symptoms increased. I told myself my vision was failing from crying, and that my lack of appetite was to blame for my sudden decrease in body mass. I was so thirsty all of the time and so hungry - especially for sweet things I normally didn't like. I became more and more weak. 

In April my digestion stopped completely. My mouth was so dry all the time. I couldn't even swallow food without drinking something to wash it down. My bones started to show and I became too weak to work. My doctor prescribed my laxatives and electrolytes. I guzzled Gatorade even though I hated the taste because I didn't want to go to the hospital and have an IV placed. 

On April 25th, 2020 my mom drove me to the Emergency Room. We called ahead for a wheelchair because I was too weak to walk. I barely managed to give my insurance information to the receptionist because my mouth was too dry to speak clearly. I was taken into a room, stuck with an IV and several other needles as they took various blood tests. The whole time, I felt peace. I was scared and lonely and in more pain than I've ever been in before, but also feeling more peace than I ever have before. 

I was diagnosed with Type One Diabetes. This means that due to a genetic flaw, my immune system turned on the cells in my pancreas that make insulin and killed them. Without insulin, all the food I ate turned into sugar in my blood that had no way reach the cells in my body. Without sugar, my body was starving to death. With all the sugar stuck in my blood, my blood became acidic, putting me in diabetic ketoacidosis, a condition which results in a coma and eventually death. Thanks be to God, I was diagnosed in a day and age where diabetics can live long healthy lives thanks to the technology and injectable insulin available to us. 

I'll be honest, the first morning in my house after being released from the hospital, I woke up and immediately burst into tears. I felt like my life was over. I felt like I could never work again. I felt like I had to give up on the internship. For days I struggled to inject myself. I cried, I screamed, I punched walls. It wasn't pretty. I didn't survive because there is anything special about me. I survived because no matter how afraid I was I trusted God. Even though there were struggles, the most memorable emotions tied to my diagnosis story are peace and joy and courage. That same first day back from the hospital, I discovered a familiar number on a bottle of glucose test strips. I knew at that moment, that God was still with me. Still weaving together every tiny detail so that a silly little number showed up on a prescription.


Insulin is a beautiful picture of the gospel. Food and water are necessary for survival. We are made to eat, to enjoy food and nourish our bodies. However, if you don't have insulin, all the water in world will never be enough. The most healthy food can only kill you. This is what I know to be true of Jesus. There is so much good in this world: horses, relationships, college degrees, physical health - but without the relationship with Jesus that we were made for, it can only kill us. 

Is anyone thirst?
Come and drink - 
even if you have no money!
Come, take your choice of wine or milk-
it's all free!
Why spend your money on food that does not give you strength?
Why pay for food that does you no good?
Listen to me, and you will eat what is good.
You will enjoy the finest food.
Come to me with your ears wide open.
Listen, and you will find life.
I will make an everlasting covenant with you
I will give you all the unfailing love I promised to David. 
Isaiah 55:1-4 NLT

This is already a long story. To be honest, I could probably fill a book with all the plotlines that God wove together in my life from 2019-2020. This is how it ties into today. I was perusing Instagram and I saw something that caught me off guard. It was a post from another diabetic celebrating World Diabetes Day. It seemed like too much of a coincidence so I googled it to fact-check. 


One of my close friends replied, "He loves you so much!" I still tear up writing about it now. Because it is true. There is a God, a God who know everything, who controls everything, down to the tiny coincidences. The God who knows me and cares enough about me enough to weave this little number into my life over and over. The God who knew all along about my broken finger, my broken car, my broken heart, and my broken pancreas. Nothing caught Him by surprise. He knew all along that Covid was coming. 

What kind of love would see me as I am and love me anyway? What kind of love would subject Himself to life on earth, to walk through all the scary, weak, painful places that I have walked? What kind of love would suffer and die for me? And as if that wasn't enough, what kind of love would care enough to send this silly little number all those years ago?

To wrap it up, I made it to the ranch and it was one of the best experiences of my life. God proved over and over that He can be trusted. He doesn't promise to give us everything we want or to make it easy. He promises to be present. 


Happy World Diabetes Day!!

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

I Miss You!


It's been a while since I published a post - even longer since I read some of your blogs. How have you been? Spring is here for sure now and every spring I get horse fever all over again. Maybe it will keep me young. 

Seriously though, drop a comment and tell me how you've been. Horse people, non-horse people, bloggers, and blogless alike: I want to hear from all of you! 

Meanwhile I'm working on some updates myself. Here is a snapshot for those of you who don't have me on Facebook:


I'm deadly serious. Let me know how you've been! So much has happened to all of us in the last year and a half. We have all been through a tumult of difficulties and experiences. I don't think we can possible overestimate the power of community and connection after 2020. 

Monday, February 15, 2021

We Got a New Puppy!!

This is slightly old new, but in December I gained a new family member! Meet Precious Rapscallion. Here is a little joy to brighten the cold February winter. 











I haven't been out to the barn in a long time (the -22 Fahrenheit temps without wind chill might have some influence on that). Meanwhile I've been working on something new and exciting! I'll be posting about it soon. For now I'll leave this here

Sunday, January 10, 2021

3 Challenges: A Response to Political Unrest in the United States

 


Wisconsin is beautiful right now. We've had several days of foggy mornings that freeze into frosty afternoons. The whole neighborhood for miles looks like Narnia. It's a harsh contrast to the ugly realities (and fantasies) we're living with. I find myself in a similar situation to last spring. I don't have anything to say regarding specific policies, parties, or politicians. I have lots of opinions (anyone who knows me knows that I have many, many opinions on many, many things). However I think the last thing the world needs right now is one more political opinion. 


I have three challenges for you. 

1) Listen. 

Listen to your enemies. Listen to the idiots on Facebook. If you are on the right, listen to the left. If you are on the left, listen to the right. If you love Trump, consider why people hate him. If you hate Trump, consider why people love him. If you are white, listen to the black voices. If you are religious, listen to atheistic and agnostic voices. Listen to the conspiracy theorists. Hear out our fellow Americans no matter how wrong or misguided or terrifying or outrageous you think they are. You don't have to agree. It is possible to listen and to care enough to hear while being 100% opposed to someone's views. Hate injustice. Hate stupidity. Don't hate each other. Don't use someone else's mistakes or wrongdoing to excuse your own wrong behavior. Again for the people in the back: Stop using other people's behavior as an excuse! This is only ever going to get worse unless we choose to be the bigger person. 

It is easy to be outraged. It is easy to feel good about getting angry and passionate about a topic in the name of truth and justice. It is so much harder and more powerful to listen with compassion. 

Believe it or not - none of us are right about everything! There are many beliefs I hold that I am wrong about. I will change many of my beliefs in the following years of my life. Heck, I've changed many of my beliefs in the last twelve months. 

I'm still working on this. I am more prone to talking about myself than actively listening to the people around me, but I'm learning to change my own heart and hold space for the people around me. 



2) Do Something

Do something for the community. Maybe that means staying home, wearing a mask (even if you don't personally feel like you should). Maybe you donate time or money to a charity. Maybe you buy coffee for someone or write a loving letter to a friend you haven't seen. 

We are full of opinions and heated emotions. Fear and doubt and anger are racing through our veins. It is time to put that emotion to a useful purpose. Let's take all the time we spend writing political Facebook posts and Instagram stories and start writing letters to our politicians, praying, buying from local businesses, or buying food for families who are struggling. 

We need each other. We need to support and actively love each other. If you care about a political issue, take productive action that does not result in destruction or death. Take action that lifts us up as a nation. 

3) Choose A Childlike Joy

Joy is not determined by circumstances. No one and nothing can make us feel anything that we don't choose to feel. It's okay to be angry and sad and devastated and exhausted and everything else that we have felt in the last year or so. Joy and sadness can coexist. You can be pissed off and still take a moment to recognize the comfort of a warm blanket or the beauty of frost. 

One of the hard things about wearing masks and being socially distant is the effect it has on the development of young children. In Psychology we learned about "critical periods". There are certain times in our development during which we need to experience certain stimuli in order to develop properly. The next generation may struggle with communication for many years. Despite this, I find comfort whenever I see young children. They feel the effect of the stress and trauma in the environment, but like my hazy 9/11 memories, they will only vaguely remember these events. When I encounter young children, I am stuck by how carefree and joyful they are. They don't fully understand what is going on, and they are still learning and growing and finding joy. 

We aren't going to be able to forget what has happened and is still happening, but join me in taking a few moments every day to find joy in the little things. The pandemic and unrest will still be there. On the flipside, no amount of stress and frustration will make it go away. So find joy. Covid-19 could kill you, but stress will kill you. Cortisol significantly shortens lifespans. So choose to look at the world through the eyes of a child, just for a few moments. 

Sunday, January 3, 2021

The Joy of the Lord is my Strength: T1D, 2020, and the Internship of my Dreams

[I found this post wasting away in my drafts. It was written in October, but it's far too meaningful to leave unpublished. This reflection on 2019 and 2020 seems well suited to the New Year season.]




"I will praise You on the mountain
And I will praise You when the mountain's in my way
You're the summit where my feet are
So I will praise You in the valleys all the same."
~ Highlands (Song of Ascent) by Hillsong

This year has been full of change and challenges. My heart is torn between the greatest joy I have ever experienced, and the pain I see in the world around me. I arrived in Bend, Oregon on May 29th. The ranch is far beyond my expectations. 

Last fall, I was full of fear and despair. Medical bills and car loans combined with missing college classes left me feeling desperately unstable. I was not allowed to take a horse training class because I wasn't good enough at riding. My safety was threatened without transportation and finances. My reputation was threatened by falling grades. My emotional, spiritual, and physical health failed.


In the chaos, I realized that despite calling myself a Christian for many years, I did not trust God at all in my day to day life. Every decision was made by my own will, sustained by my own strength. The result: a life dictated by the fear of shame, rejection, and abandonment. As events outside of my control ripped away the trophies I had collected, my heart found itself experiencing all of it's worst fears. 


This realization guided me through the next few months. 2020 barraged us all with uncertainty, fear, and chaos. The threat of illness, financial instability, confinement assaulted my community in March. For me, this challenge was coupled with watching my boyfriend ship away to boot camp, with no idea when I will be able to see him again. Because of my prior experiences, I chose to respond to all the fear and uncertainty with faith and praise. The songs Keep Making Me by Sidewalk Prophets and The Shepherd of My Soul by Rivers and Robots became my anthems. Instead of living by my own strength, I surrendered everything for perhaps the first time in my entire life. I began using the phrase "Lord willing" unironically. 



You know what happened next. While I was learning to trust God in my every day mundane activities, my body began to fail. From sometime in February or Match until the end of April, I experienced worsening symptoms that I could not explain. The spit in my mouth dried up. I drank over a gallon of water a day, peeing at least once an hour. I was overwhelmed with fatigue and apathy. I felt extremely weak. My eyesight became blurry. I lost twenty pounds, nine of them in one week. I was admitted to the hospital in diabetic ketoacidosis. I've already described that experience in more detail here

The peace I experienced in the hospital was unlike anything I have ever experienced before. The events of October seem so small compared to my diagnosis, yet my response to them was so much more dramatic. The difference? Faith. Resting in the truth that my life does not rely on my own strength or my own worth. I can't heal a broken finger, fix my financial problems, stop a global pandemic, cure my incurable disease, solve racial injustice, stop devastating floodwaters, or earn my own worth. I can choose to praise the God who can do all of those things - whether he chooses to do so or not. 


That brings me to these five glorious months. I thank God everyday for the food and insulin I need to survive one more day. Life after diagnosis is full of joy I can only attempt to explain. What kind of love would care so deeply for me? What kind of love would die for me? What kind of love would provide everything I need and so many wonderful things that I don't? What kind of love would work in every part of my life, weaving together a beautiful work of art despite my shame, fear, anger, and pride? Only Jesus offers satisfaction that cannot be taken away. Only the Lord of Hosts offers love that cannot be earned. The joy I have in him is enough to carry me through the rest of my life. I cannot keep from praising him, even if I tried. 


I love the story of Gideon in Judges 6 and 7. God called Gideon to free Israel from the Midianites. Gideon gathered 32,000 men to fight an army "as numerous as sand on the seashore". It looked impossible. But God sent back the 22,000 men who were afraid. Then he sent back another 700 men. God made the task even more impossible, so that when the victory was won, no one could claim that they won by their own strength.

In October, I didn't want to apply for the internship because I didn't believe that I could get to Oregon. God's response was similar to the story of Gideon. He made the dream so much more unattainable and brought me this far anyway.