Wednesday, July 23, 2014

I Was Made For This

I am in the most serene, most reflective mood right now. I never blog during the day. I am usually blogging in my bed at a late hour. And I never blog about work. This space has been reserved for my most personal and spiritual thoughts. But today, I am breaking all the rules. I was touched in a surreal way during my second summer school session today and I wanted to get it on paper.

Even though it is summer and the hours are long, there is something eerily peaceful about summer school. (Even though my story below may suggest otherwise.) For one thing, the students merge from the six different high schools in the county, so everyone is a stranger, with the exception of a few. Different backgrounds, learning styles, and stories exist, but the common goal of passing this course for the second and sometimes third time is shared by all. By the end, after the first day jitters, initial reluctance, and downright pain of forfeiting summer vacation, a beautiful thing transpires. The space that was once strange and dreaded soon becomes a very safe and comfortable place.  In fact, some students become a bit too familiar. This was the context of today’s lesson. This lesson wasn’t written by Ms. Short. It was not guided by Common Core objectives, nor did it include a formative or summative assessment (at least not in a literal sense). As most teachers will tell you, the most valuable lessons learned in the classroom come directly from student interactions rather than course content.
                
Lesson: Student A (a robust white male) announced to the class that he wouldn’t stand being called “Billy” any longer. Earlier in the summer, a few of his classmates suggested he “looked like a Billy” and used Billy as his nickname. Student A never expressed any issues with the name, so the students thought it was acceptable. Today, Student A exploded. Apparently, he did not want to cause any problems in the class, but he did not feel comfortable with the nickname Billy. Someone called him Billy and he began yelling a few obscenities. In fact, he even threatened to punch the next person who used the nickname. The class was shocked. They did not understand the root of his hostility. Unfortunately, the student sitting directly in front of him decided to exacerbate the situation by saying, “what, you don’t want people calling you Billy? What’s up Billy? Hey Billy.” Student A jumped up, threw his hands up, and shoved the desk against the wall. Student B, the instigator, stood up as well. I directed Student B into the hallway. Another male student helped me. A and B argued and exchanged words. Eventually, with Student B in the classroom across the hall and Student A back in his seat, class resumed. Whew. I’ve never had a fight or even the makings of a fight in my classroom. I had a tough talk with Student B across the hall. All was well for the moment. I mentioned earlier that Student A was a robust male. Let me add some specifics. This young man is about 6’3 and almost 300 pounds. Initially, I wanted to question why he would let such a small thing incite him so. Then I started thinking back to the many stories that he’d shared with me through his journal entries as well as orally. Staring at him after the “big explosion,” I could tell that this young man was hurting. He was used to having to wear the mask of the tough guy, but as I looked at his face, I saw a young boy crying out for comfort. He bottled up much anger, so much hostility, and so much heartbreak because of what had transpired over the course of his life. Was it acceptable for the students to assign him a stereotypical “white boy” name? Absolutely not. Should he have handled himself better? Certainly. During our session break, he approached my desk, but didn’t say a word. Our eyes met and his gaze alone revealed signs of both remorse and embarrassment.  He gave subtle hints throughout the remaining class time to demonstrate his true feelings. Earlier, he withdrew himself from the class activities, but he slowly eased his way back in as class progressed. He continued assessing my behavior for traces of forgiveness. We established a certain level of respect early on and he wanted to make sure he had not ruined that. We spoke at the very end of class and my assumptions proved true. There is an art to understanding a student’s body language and non-verbal cues. 

Now for Student B. After this interruption, I started reading essays that they wrote yesterday. Let me also add that Student B is one of my favored kids this summer. (I know, teachers shouldn’t have favorites; you know what, it’s inevitable.) After completing this course, he will graduate this month. There is something that draws me to this kid. I told him once that many of his behaviors are almost childlike. Mischievous? Yes! But, he desperately wants my approval at all times. You can read it all in his face that he too wants the attention and approval of an adult. (similar to Student A.)  He is also a very hardworker and extremely passionate about writing. What’s not to love? So, as I am reading the first paragraph of his essay, I begin to tear up. An excerpt from Student B’s paper reads, “…I tell you, I was just swept away by the memories of my childhood back when mama was still alive. I feel looking back in your past can be healthy for you. You can reminisce on all the good and bad you’ve been through…” Eeeeek! Stop right there! Immediately, I recognized what drew me to this kid: the unspoken connection between individuals who have lost their mother during their childhood. I couldn’t even contain my emotions at that point. (I know, I’m a sensitive one.) Nothing else had to be said. I completely understood this child and all of his acting out. Although I didn’t carry myself in this manner, I have a younger sister that did, and I get it.


Every single person has a story. All of us. We want to believe that our children have easy and carefree lives, but the reality is they have stories as well. As a teacher, I am my best when I take these things into consideration. I am a better teacher when I acknowledge these things about my students. Are these excuses for misbehavior? No. Does losing a mom excuse you from respecting the feelings of others? Of course not. The same way coming from a divorced family does not justify shoving a desk. But it does help us understand the idea that triggers are real. Knowing what triggers or ticks us off is vital in understanding our true selves. When things like this happen and I am able to reflect, it makes me realize that I was made for this. I couldn’t imagine doing anything else. I have so many ideas for reaching these kids outside of the classroom. I often try to deny my calling, but I will not any longer. You can’t sit on your purpose. I will admit I often become a bit complacent in my journey and think that this is enough. It is not. There is so much more that I can do; I look forward to it! Pray for me. 

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Let Them Walk

Beat of the Moment: I'm listening to "Let It Go," a sermon by Bishop T.D. Jakes 

Let me start by saying that God is beyond faithful and super intentional. Sophia Nelson, one of my favorites, hosted a class via telephone tonight on courageous conversations. I had no intention of calling in, but after seeing the topic, something told me to join the call. I did and thankfully so because it blessed my life. I'm going to give some background information then I'm just going to recap some of her key points. As always, I hope this helps someone.

(Whew, shaking off everything, so I can be transparent.)

I really get a little tense and even nervous when I have to share my private details, but I believe that comes with this calling and authenticity is key. I recently had a "conversation" with a guy. Actually, let me back it up a little bit. I had made up in my mind that I was going to take a serious break from dating because I had to get myself together. It was that simple. I realized that I had made many of the same mistakes over and over when dating and I wanted something different. If you've read my earlier posts then you know a bit about this. I was very absolute in my decision to wait it out for a while before getting myself involved with anyone, or even dating or seeing anyone. With that being said, I recently began praying for new relationships. Actually, my prayer was very specific. As I was driving to work one morning, I prayed out to God as I normally do, and I prayed for a very specific relationship. I detailed the qualities of the person I would be willing to date. Fast forward almost one week after that prayer and I was introduced to this guy who appeared to meet the requirements outlined in my prayer. (I'm still dealing with what it means that God answered that prayer.)

 I recently had a "conversation" with this guy and he said something to the effect of "he did not have to talk to me every second of the day or even every day for that matter because he did not want to get tired of talking to me." WHOA! Are you guys as offended as I was? I had two major problems with this. 1. Why are you being so rude? Even if this is what you wanted to say, did you have to say it that way? And IF this is what you want to say, then do you really even care about me? This just seemed brutal to me. My 2nd reaction was, "I never suggested either of those things, but I am calling you out on your flaky behavior." Beyond both of those thoughts, the thing that really got me was the fact that this guy was sounding exactly like a guy from my past. He is obviously my past for a reason. I truly believe that you will recognize a person by their fruit (Matthew 7: 16-20). Oh, the signs. Immediately, I knew that I had to end this because I knew this fruit all too well and nothing good comes from it. So that is exactly what I did-gracefully bowed out.

So that is the back story. Fast forward to tonight's call. I just want you to understand how relevant this message was to me. It was so timely and necessary. Of course, I discussed this with my girlfriends and favorite guy pal, but Sophia's words shaped my understanding. Sophia's key points are listed below.

1. "Keeping it real is never keeping it rude." I think this is self-explanatory. This confirmed my initial reaction of "are you trying to hurt me." When you care about someone, your goal is never to hurt them. Being honest doesn't mean being harsh. Courageous conversations don't require contempt. Plain and simple.

2. "Conversation is how we build connection." DUH! How else are you supposed to get to know someone if you aren't communicating with them? I am the type of person who will examine a problem or situation from every standpoint and try to understand the person's position. I completely understand taking it slow, but I can't figure out how avoiding conversation will advance a relationship. I use that term loosely. At one point, I started to beat myself up, but she made it clear. Andrea, you are not crazy, you must communicate with someone if you want to connect. Sophia harps on communicating via telephone and in person versus texting, emailing, and chatting. However, here you have a person who is closing every door of communication before even getting to know the person.

3. "We drink our fill of people and when we're done we crumble them up, discard them and walk away."  It's true. We are a selfish culture and when we have received all that we need, we really don't care what happens to the product. Just so I don't sound like a crazy person, I want to provide more background. The signs that this person was sending and the things that came out of his mouth prior to this conversation did not align. He was saying and doing two different things. I'm not sure where this came from, nor am I going to wreck my mind trying to figure it out, but I will acknowledge that he wanted things on his terms. I am not so desperate that I have to agree to bogus terms or stand to be insulted.

4. Last but not least, "People that can cut you off and let it go without a word, let them go. Stop trying to make up with people that don't love you." She borrowed this from Bishop T.D. Jakes. This girl (Andrea) is super famous for giving the "wrong" people infinite chances. After this guy said his piece, I said something very classy and left.  His response was two words-"ok, cool." I have to laugh out loud now because it seems comical. He did not put up a fight. He did not provide any additional commentary; he submitted to my request. You will recognize them by their fruit.....easy come, easy go.

My final word. . . . . . . . . 

Even though I was a bit hurt, I am sooooooooooooo thankful for this interaction. It demonstrates my growth. I've grown so much. I was once very fragile. I'm still a tiny bit fragile, but I am growing a tough skin. I'm still dealing with God about the purpose, but right now, I'm just thankful for the process! Thank You for the test.

Metal is refined and purified in a furnace; the Lord purifies and tests the heart (Proverbs 17:3).


Want to go? Let them walk.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

The Weight of Your YES!

 When I was a child, my mother and I loved the song,  "I'll say yes, Lord, yes, to your will and to your way. I'll say yes, Lord yes, I will trust you and obey. When the spirit speaks to me, with my whole heart I'll agree and my answer will be yes, Lord Yes." WHOA! My kiddie self had noooooo idea what I was agreeing to. I was just happily singing along with my mom. 20 years later and it finally hit me.

 This three letter word, your YES, means so much to God. Yes, I will serve you. Yes, I will obey you. Yes, I will trust you. Yes, I will live by your rules. My heart is yours; my soul is yours. Opening your mouth and proclaiming yes may be easy, but LIVING out this yes is completely different. When you say yes, you are agreeing to follow Him in any circumstance. It doesn't say yes when it's convenient or yes when it feels right or yes when I can see the outcome. No. This commitment means regardless of my circumstance, regardless of my mood, regardless of the way things are looking right now, I have to trust and follow you.

I listened to a sermon yesterday (Freedom from Stress by Heather Lindsey) and she said, "many people think that once you get saved, you no longer go through tests." Whew! So far from the truth.

Here's my truth: I struggle with living up to my yes when I am tested. I know this. I acknowledge it. I write about it. I pray about it. I've analyzed the many instances when it's happened. I remember when "this" went wrong and I remember how I reacted. I remember that I neglected my bible, I stopped singing hymns, I sat curled up in a ball rather than prostrate before God. I probably prayed as a last resort and I probably cried and cried about it in church on Sunday, but I never handed it to God. I definitely shouted and celebrated when it was over and handled, but the process was devastating. This applies to any problem, by the way. The worst thing was when I recognized that I reneged on my YES, said I wouldn't let it happen again, but still made the same mistake repeatedly.

Listen, "insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results." That makes no sense. It took time....so much time. I'm still working on it. However, I am finally sticking to my yes! God, I trust you. You trust me with trouble because You've equipped me for it all. The tools and resources are already within me. I must turn to you to activate them. Now, I anticipate and also welcome tests. I see them coming and I'm ready for them. Job, Job, Job. I love Job for so many reasons. He went through a spectrum of emotions. BUT in everything, he recognized that His "trouble" was sent from God; therefore, He acknowledged that God would handle it appropriately.

Do you love him? YES! Do you trust him?! YES! Are you willing to serve him?! YES!!!! Will you follow his will and his way?! YES!!! Stay right there in your yes. Your yes carries so much weight. (more weight, more weight) Your yes activates your faith! I'll proclaim Yes a million times. I'll sing it over and over again. Saying yes connects me to the Father, the source. Saying yes means I trust you beyond my comfort level. Yes means I am yours and you are mine, and you will take care of me. YES, Lord, YES!

Saturday, April 19, 2014

My Most Personal Post Yet

Beat of the Moment: "Indescribable" by Kierra 'KiKi' Sheard 

"Indescribable, uncontainable, You place the stars in the sky and You know them by name, You are amazing God. All powerful, untamable, awestruck we fall to our knees as we humbly proclaim, You are amazing God" 
___________________________________________________________________

Entering into my room of transparency… Let me briefly say, I enjoy 'journaling' because it is extremely therapeutic and easy. It’s easy when you’re writing for an audience of one. I did not realize that blogging, especially blogging about my walk with Christ, would require such vulnerability.  I would say that I’m generally a pretty private person, so as I accept this challenging Christian journey, I also accept the challenge of sharing and “putting it all out there.” Of course, with the purpose being to help or reach someone else. I am working on this. 

I don’t think I’ve received any of the material things that I’ve prayed for in a very long time. Many times I catch myself focusing too much on these things that I lack and greatly desire, so I have to reprimand myself for being distracted. However, I recently realized that although I have not received any of the material things I desired, God is doing something serious with my heart. That’s the sacrifice? In the past year, He’s dealt with my forgiveness issues in a major way. He is showing me that guarding your heart doesn’t mean hardening your heart or being cold or cruel. It is amazing and almost surreal the way He has handled some of my personality hiccups. When/if people ask me if God is real, I have to give a wholehearted YES. There is no other way to describe some of the things that He has mended, repaired, and restored in my life. Wow. I sit in amazement at times. 

Transparent Moment:  I went almost 7 years of not speaking to my father at all. Currently, not a single day goes by that I do not interact with my father in some capacity. There is no other way to describe this repaired relationship other than God. I am/was way too stubborn to even conceive reconciliation. GOD IS SO REAL. The supernatural is so real. In fact, “the human mind cannot think of words to express how good You are.” I'm so thankful for forgiveness!

Transparent Moment: For many years, I struggled with the aftermath of the death of my loved ones. I could not understand the decisions people made or accept the effects that followed said decisions. Consequently, I cut that entire aspect of my life off. This included people and places that were once near and dear to me. Recently, GOD reconnected and restored those broken pieces. Again, my heart struggled with this in the past and I did not have the mental or spiritual wherewithal to even conceive this reconciliation, so I know it was all God. I’m so thankful for this rebuilding. 

Transparent Moment: I recently connected with someone who unknowingly was the source of a lot of my hurt, pain, confusion, and even envy in the past. We connected through church and ministry and it’s so amazing how much we have in common. I can’t even begin to explain the peace of mind and joy that has accompanied this friendship/sister-ship. I also hoped for a connection to other young adults embracing this Christian challenge and He absolutely answered this prayer. I’m so thankful. THIS RESTORATION was absolutely sent straight from God. The presence of God is so visible in my life and my relationships and I'm so thankful.

Reflections: It’s amazing what and who God uses as lessons and blessings. His doings are always intentional and purposeful. His work is never in vain. Even when we can’t make sense of it, even when we are going through what we perceive to be our nadir, He steps right in and shows us how our lowest point can give way to our strongest moments. God, I thank you so much for never giving up on me and all of my mess. Continue to use me. Mold me. Strengthen me. Deliver me. Soften my heart. God, I need You. My whole entire being longs for You in a dry and parched land. I only want You. I’m so in love with all of You. I’ve never loved anyone quite like you. I’ve never felt love reciprocated quite like this. Your love story is the greatest of them all! Thank you for the ultimate sacrifice. You are more than I deserve. Thank you for mending things. Thank you for new beginnings. Thank you for my brothers and sisters. God, you are perfection personified and I just want to be more like you.


-You see the depths of my heart and You love me the same :-) 

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

I'm Tired!

"Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest." -Matthew 11:28

"For my yoke is easy and my burden light." -Matthew 11:30

I AM TIRED. I am used to being very busy and involved in various activities, but this is a different kind of tired. I am at the point of both physical and mental exhaustion. It is getting harder and harder for me to wake up. My initial alarm sounds at 5:10 am and I usually snooze through it. Mentally, I am drained. I am forgetting things left and right; I'm usually not a forgetful person. I thought I lost my credit card and my license. As you can see, this is bad. I am participating in a 30 day independent bible study challenge and I've been forgetting to read. Sometimes I feel like I'm literally in a foggy or blurry state of mind. I have so much to do, so much to plan, so much to organize, so much to keep up with, and it is literally wearing me down. Usually, hot showers, scented candles, and long gym sessions help ease this physical and mental tension, but my staples aren't working this time. I've been feeling like this for the past week or so, but today I decided to address it.

I had this terse conversation with myself while I was driving home from work. Yes, I'm always talking to myself.  I simply said, "Andrea, what are you doing to yourself? This isn't at all healthy. You have to make some arrangements because you will surely kill yourself at this pace." If you don't know, my mother died of a heart attack and my older sister constantly reminds me of this when she feels I need to slow down. So, I decided I needed to slow it down and prioritize some things. I am queen of the to-do list. There's a certain joy that comes with writing things down then crossing them off, but I do realize that my to-do lists are sometimes overwhelming. I also have to be in control of every minute of my day. I decided to scratch my list and figure out what I was going to do right here and now. At that very moment, I just wanted to get home and get dinner. I also was trying to make my 5:45 Zumba class. I wanted to wash my hair before class and I was hoping to grade a few papers beforehand. I was doing it again-being too freaking busy. A text message from a close friend played in my mind at this point. My dear friend said that she was going to stop texting me because I was too busy and slow to reply.  I'm  seeing the signs. Something had to give. Something was still missing.

Then it hit me. Did you pray? Have you prayed? Do you plan on going to GOD with this problem any time soon? I hate when I do this. I hate when I use my Savior as a last resort. I hate when I neglect Him. He is perfection. His bible is a manual for life. Tired? Hungry? Overwhelmed? Sad? Depressed? Jealous? Insecure? It's all in there. There are so many scriptures about being tired and stressed. His scriptures are our instructions. So instead of talking to myself and planning my own strategies, I started praying to Him.  He told me to take the night off. I never do this.Take the night off. Take care of yourself. Get back in His good word. Regroup. I did just that. I am feeling a million times better. "Truly my soul finds rest in God; my salvation comes from Him."

Thank you Lord.

Thursday, March 27, 2014

a prayer for everything I've lost. . .

Beat of the Moment: J Moss, "Good and Bad"

I had a serious revelation the other night while I was driving home. Sidenote: I have some of my best shouts in my car. There is nothing like screaming out and crying out at the tippy top of your lungs. Whew! It is so refreshing. Driving home last night......and I begin praying out to God. During this prayer, I realized that it is in Christ Jesus that I learn, "everything I thought I wanted, needed, deserved, and didn't get was completely wrong for me.." So I prayed: God, I praise you for everything I've lost. Usher me into my season of maturity (it takes a certain level of growth and maturity to even utter these words or acknowledge this). God, I love you for what you've kept from me. And I apologize for whining and throwing tantrums like a child  (yes, so guilty of this...far too often) when I didn't receive it. I promise to trust you with all of me even when it doesn't look right to me. God, you're amazing!! Thank you for what I didn't get! Thank You, thank You, thank You for every single thing that escaped me. Your plan. Your promise. Your perfections.

I'm deeply, madly, ridiculously in love with the King of  Kings.

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Why I Love Lent!

 I love Lent. I think it is one of my favorite spiritual observances. This season is a period of intentional self-reflection and repentance. Not that these things shouldn't take place daily, but this time is specifically dedicated to cleansing your inner self. Many people love the idea or the hype of fasting from some "thing"  (fried foods, soda, chocolate, alcohol, cursing, etc.) for 40 days, but it's so much more than that. My pastor described this fasting period as a time when "the outward man perishes so the inward man flourishes." The objective is to simply get closer  with  Christ...to be still and listen to His voice and cutting off your worldly desires is one way to achieve this goal. This is a time of forgiveness. A time for a new start.  A time of Grace (my favorite word) and Mercy. My pastor taught from Psalm 51 on Ash Wednesday. In this psalm, David cries out and begs for God to have mercy on him. David acknowledges that repenting means being forgiven. Too often we fail to repent because we don't want to admit that we are wrong, raggedy, and most of all sinful by nature.  My favorite time of day is my God time. My late at night or early in the morning moments of sitting with God. It is in this moment that I am able to offer my entire self to Him, so it is only right that I would absolutely love an entire season set aside just for this purpose. I thought long and hard about what I wanted to "give up for Lent" and I honestly couldn't decide on anything. One- because I am ridiculously indecisive, but also because I couldn't think of anything that is  completely blocking me from hearing God. I am in no way perfect or arrogant in my walk with Christ, but I sort of dealt with this stuff before the new year. I gave up social media for the month of January. I thought that was my biggest distraction at times. I thought about a few other things, but didn't think they would truly do anything in the area of drawing me closer to God. So instead of giving something up, I decided that I would simply commit to Christ even more and I've been doing just that. During this Lenten season, I am learning that you are not defined by your sin. I am learning to love myself more than I ever have before. I am learning to focus wholeheartedly on Christ. I am learning to not accept any old thing because I deserve so much more. Finally, I am learning to be still and listen to His voice. It is in my quiet place when I am most open and obedient that God makes His presence known. I thank God for this season. It is in this season that we prepare ourselves for the Resurrection.

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

....help me overcome my unbelief!

This is for my biblical scholars, or anyone with advice. Help! I've always been drawn to Mark 9:24, "I do believe; help me overcome my unbelief." I am not sure why, but there's something about a paradox that I love. Then again, Toni Morrison IS my favorite author. So I think about this scripture from time to time and try to understand why this father would say I believe and I don't believe all in the same breath; then it kind of hit me. Today, I was thinking about all of the things, moments, people that my mother never got to even witness or meet. I then thought, "I still don't understand why people die." Then I thought, "well I understand why people die, but I don't understand the "when" aspect of death." I'm not sure if this statement is completely true, but I think that if I lost my mom when I was 40 or 50 as opposed to 15 then it would have been easier, but who knows. Back to my original point. I believe in God for everything, ok most things, most times. When it comes to death and taking people away and destroying families then like the father in the text, I'm asking God to help my unbelief. I'm a believer. I've given my life to Christ, but there are still things I don't understand, hence my "unbelief." I have moments when I trust that God knew exactly what He was doing and that all of this has purpose even when I don't know exactly what that purpose is, presently. On the contrary, there are moments when I think "why  me" and "what did I do to deserve such a catastrophe?" As always, I will continue to pray that God makes His plan clear. But beyond that, I will pray that my trust in Him....my faith in Him does not waver when I don't understand His workings. 

Suggestions? 

Monday, March 3, 2014

WHY?

"You God are my God...earnestly I seek You." I started my day declaring that I wanted all of God. I woke up this morning with Psalm 63 on my mind.  I had a pretty decent day, very lazy snow day. However, my night was not as peaceful. There's way too much background information needed to tell the whole story, so I'll keep it very brief. The bottom line is yet again, I returned back to a situation (read situation as boy) that I had no business dealing with. Now God has already clearly revealed to me that this man is not for me in any way, shape, or form. In fact, I studied 2 Corinthians 6:14-16 today and it became even more clear that this man is not for me. What do righteousness and wickedness have in common? Or what fellowship can light have with dark? Now I'm not saying this man is wicked or unrighteous, but I do know that he is not helping me in my walk with God. While I don't think he is  "a" demon, I do think he is  "my" demon. He causes me to question my morals and values and I am almost willing to compromise my spirituality for him. Nothing about this screams Godly. 

For whatever reason, this situation with him has been the struggle of my life for almost 4 years now. Insane, right? I know.  Although I don't intend to beat myself up about it, I do realize that this fight I'm in is primarily with myself. I've given this man/this situation too much power and space in my life. I'm declaring that today was the final test. I've decided that  I would like to actually please God and pass the test. I'm not writing this blog tonight because I want to tell you all about this chaotic confusion, but because I want to discuss the purpose behind it. I've been walking with God long enough to know that every single thing that happens in this little life of mine is for a purpose. So tonight, I asked God, one three letter word-why. Why  do you allow this happen to me? Why do you send me back into the eye of the storm? Why do you think I deserve this? Why do you find it necessary for me to fight this same battle over and over again?  And He replied, "I have to hurt you to help you." And I immediately understood. It's like getting a needle at the doctor's office. The nurse says, this will hurt just a bit, but the shot is designed to heal you. That's just it. Without this sting of pain, I would never pay attention. Although I was torn and confused all along, I kept rolling  with it because it wasn't hurting enough. You see what happened? I had to get your attention.  That's the only way you come running back to me. And He's right. For the last two hours, I've been sitting with God, face all in the Bible, blasting sermons and hymns through my Beats, mouth worshiping Him. He knows. This is the last time. He has my attention.  I can't tell you how many times I've failed this test, but I'm proclaiming tonight-never again. 




[When I get to that crazy place of chaos, I put on my Beats to tune everything out, and open up my Bible to get in God's presence. What do you do?]