Mean Girls

"Bwahahahaha!"

Her cackle pierced the drone of usual student activity in the combination gym/chapel/lunchroom. 

The victim, unaware she had been selected as today's target, looked to see if everyone was alright. It was such a loud and sudden noise, she thought someone had been hurt. 

What she saw was laughter. Great big gobs of gossipy guffawing hee-haw.

And they were laughing at her. 

Unwilling to explain what was so funny, they only pointed out that her chair was in the wrong place. 

"I won't tell you what I WAS going to say" one of the mean girls jeered in-between guffaws.

Then, lifting her hand to create the shadowy working conditions necessary for vile lips to spew, she  whispered to her loyal and listening friend whatever it was she had not been going to say.  

They laughed the wrong-chair-sitter back to her classroom, embarrassed and dismayed. 

~~~
This story is true. 
The bullies portrayed are not little girls. 
But they are,  most definitely,  mean ones, working in a Christian school.
~~~~

To those seeking light, 
I apologize. 
This is not what Jesus told us to do. 
Draw near.
To him, not them. 
He will not laugh at you. 
~~~

"...wisdom from above is pure, peace-loving, gentle, compliant, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering, without pretense. It is sown in peace by those who cultivate peace.
James 3:17‭-‬18 (paraphrased) 

New Mercy Mornings


Some days, we just survive. 

And we try to hide which days.

Make them all look alike.

" I'm fine, (Just fine. This is fine.) thank you, and how are you?" 

No one will know.  

And that's noble, right? It's what we're supposed to do: think on things lovely, good and true; count it all joy, my brethren, when life drops the other shoe. 

For me, I have noticed "struggle days" tend to follow highly productive, happy moments. 

Like shadow, stalking light. 

It is true that gratitude lifts our mood, but what do you do when the dark slinks in even in the midst of joy and celebration ? 

HOLD ON. 

Like a sudden thunderstorm, let it pass. 

If you can dance in the rain or jump in puddles, go right on out and do that. 

But if it is dangerous and scary,  with flashes of lightning, stay put. 

It is ok to curl up and wait. It can be comforting to talk with a friend when the power goes out. 

One way I've learned to pray over the last few years is this: 

"You've already paid the price for the joy that is mine today. You've already purchased my peace. Help me take hold of what I need and share your surplus love." 

It helps me see in the dark. It helps me hold on. 

And friend, I'm striking this match to say, you are not alone.  

"This little light of mine... "

The Whole Loaf


In the ancient books of Wisdom that have been forming my understanding of the world since I was very young, there is an adage to not withhold one's hand from sowing seed both in the morning and the evening, for we cannot know which will sprout, even, perhaps both. 

This is located very near an adage about casting one's bread upon the water without fear of loss. It is an admonition to generosity but I have always muddled it with the seed passage to an understanding something like this: 

Cast your bread upon the water - both in the morning and in the evening - whether you catch ducks or fish, there will be plenty to eat for everyone. 

And there you see the difficulty in teaching me anything: the muddling. I'm a muddler. Things get muddy. 

 ~~~

In July. I started massage therapy school.  I soon realized that the school is set up identical to what is referred to as a 'predatory for profit' college. I'm sure it is strictly coincidence, as there are a lot of fine folks at the school who wouldn't be a willing party to predatory behavior. I discovered the structure when it became increasingly clear that I would be unable to complete the amount of for-profit massages required by the school (not the state) to graduate in time and maintain a job for survival. As the limited slots for student massages got locked down by the school's first-come, first-serve, no personal reservation policies, more students were added to the "work pool" routinely every two months, significantly shrinking each student's chance at successfully finishing. 

In September,  almost as if by the school's design, I withdrew. 

The next week, I started a job as Graphic Designer. 

Four days in, I quit. 

The job required a lot more office management than met the eye, and while I have experience in that kind of work, it wasn't what I had applied for. It wasn't what was advertised.  The creative outlet I desire was stuck behind a firewall of emails and bookkeeping.  I asked my boss to call the guy he had interviewed before me, before he got hired somewhere else.  He asked me to stick with him a little longer because things were chaotic in a way they had never been, and once we untangled the knots, there would be more art and less loose ends... 

By October's end, I knew it was a job I could do and - with a little more time, probably quite well. I found myself skipping lunch, working late and becoming totally absorbed in getting the job done. I could see becoming a fixture in the office - my own office- and while that held its own appeal - I realized I didn''t want to find myself still there ten years from now. And I wanted to be a good steward of this season with my children - while they are around, I want to be around. I need to be around.  

So I quit, again.  This time he let me. He called the guy back who interviewed before me, paid me a few days to train him then sent me off with a smile and well-wishes. 

On the day I knew I couldn't be an Office Manager/Graphic Designer any longer, I started a business with a Wix page and a whim. One of my best friends in Florida is a professional nanny and had been encouraging me to "open a branch" of my own. I had dabbled with the idea but always got stuck overthinking the name, the logo.... everything. 

In my desperation to escape the confines of a cubicle,  everything snapped into place or simply didn't matter anymore. Suddenly, it was floating debris that just might save my life. 

And though I've had a lot of positive feedback for the idea,  I haven't had a lot of calls....yet. 

This week, I received an onboarding email for an internet company I will do remote work for. 

Today, there was an email inviting me to interview for a job through Freelancer. 

Over the next few weeks, I may finally finish that online course in Life Coaching. 

~~

I've jokingly said that divorce turned me into a quitter... but I mean it in the best way.  I've simply realized that I can.  When something isn't a good fit, when it is the wrong way to spend my time... I can try, try again. 

I've been thinking a lot lately about this season in my life - what my purpose is now that I'm not defined primarily as a wife, homeschooling mom or teacher. 

It seems I'm tossing the whole loaf onto the water  these days, sowing seed day and night. 

I'm content here on the creek bank, watching for whatever may bite.   

As I wait in the sunshine, or under a blanket of stars, I'm sure there'll be enough to go around. 

And I know everything's gonna be alright. 

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