Thursday, March 12, 2015

Story time


Is it narcissistic to share your personal story? To talk openly about things that are wholly and completely you? To confidently express your hopes, your dreams, your desires out loud?  To bravely reveal your fears, pains, and heartaches to others? To candidly admit your flaws, failures, and shortcomings with ownership? Is it egotistical to open up your life and expect others to give two flips?

I’ve experienced many internal feelings since I started this blog a couple weeks ago. I’ve had a lot of self-doubt and concern of who would even be interested in my silly life and why would people take the time out of their busy schedules to read a few poorly constructed sentences of my thoughts. (Or more like a small novel in each post, because I’m super verbose and don’t know how to be concise. I can admit the facts. #sorrybytheway) I’ve chastised myself for being so arrogant to think that anyone would be interested in my internal opinions or remotely invested in my world. Or that anything I would ever have to offer could possibly apply to another person or provide comfort to someone hurting or guidance to anyone searching.

But here’s the deal: It matters.

My story matters.
  
And so does yours.

Our stories are what make us who we are. They matter, because they are the tales penned by the Master Author. We’re each a breathtaking mosaic comprised of broken pieces of a lifetime of experiences: feelings, joys, pains, victories, losses, transformations, longings, love – our stories.

I’m not composing this blog so that the world can gather in masses and fawn at my feet in adoration. Not at all. I’m compelled to write these posts, because I want to live in a world where people, especially women, are honest and transparent. I want to exist in a community where we can strip away the surface and dive into the guts of what make us human beings. Because when we’re merely human, we’re all the same; we’re all in this together; we’re all brethren enduring this human condition on earth as best as we can. I realize that if I want to live in a culture of acceptance and grace, I have to do my part to cultivate the love. Thus, this blog.

When other people are vulnerable with their truths, it boosts my courage to unveil my reality in kind. Likewise, at times when I have been upfront about the deeper parts of my humanity, I have proudly witnessed others step up and join me in that raw space created with tears of joy and of sorrow. On both sides of that coin, the authenticity has not generally been exposed in a public manner, but every time, the ability to lay down the burden of disguise for even just a moment in the presence of another human being has been a massive relief to the soul. That freedom to be yourself is worth pursuing with ferocity.

In any situation, one person must take the first step toward genuineness, or else we all continue to meekly parade our charades of the life we think others expect from us. Someone has to break the status quo and lead that conga line off the dance floor and into the basement of hidden things.

Could it be you? Could you initiate a Revolution of Reality in your world?

I’m certainly not the first one to call bullshit on that sparkling, cumbersome façade we proudly and shamefully uphold, but I want to stand up loud and proud and join the movement toward authenticity. That’s the world I want to live in, so that’s the life I will choose to lead. #bethechangeyouwanttoseeintheworld #clicheandtrue

I’m no longer going to listen to Satan’s casual lies about how self-centered I must be to have the audacity to put my words into digital ink or to verbally express them to those around me. I won’t succumb to the insecurity that what I have to say isn't worth saying or being heard. Or that the exposure of such grit would turn the world away in horror. This is my story, dagnabbit, and it’s real. It’s hard, and it’s broken, and it’s painful, and it’s beautiful, and it’s mine, and it’s real.

It is not narcissistic to share your story. Because I long to hear the stories of others, I’m learning that it is selfless. It is courageous. It is strong. And it is necessary.

We need each other. We need each other’s compassion and acceptance and love and space. We need your stories to know that our stories are valid and welcome and permitted. (Disclaimer: I will later contradict this statement by arguing that we do not need anything from anybody at all, but, instead, to find our personal integrity from within ourselves and our value from Christ alone. But for the purposes and language of this particular discussion, I’ll still stand by this statement.) Getting to know each other on a more intimate level helps us to further acquaint ourselves with the Author of our lives, and at the very core of our beings, what we most intrinsically need is to know God.

We do not need to feel like we must fit into a particular mold in order to also fit into a community. We do not need to feel like everybody else has it all figured out and we’re the only idiots who can’t ever seem to get it right. We do not need to continue pretending we’re someone false just to find a place in the world where we can artificially belong. We do not need to be judged by other people’s perceptions of our lives, nor do we need to pass judgment on others based solely on our limited awareness of their particular situation. We do not need to put on a happy face when we’re broken inside, because we don’t feel we are able to show any unpleasant emotions. We do not need to constantly keep our composure for the sake of someone else's comfort and hide our true selves in the process.

What we need is each other. We’re all people. We’re all humans. We’re all children of God created in His image for His glory. What we need is a safe place to be our true selves. What we need is the courage to be our true selves even when there is no safe place available. What we need is the freedom to discern who our true self even is.

Sharing our stories with one another helps accomplish all of these things. It uncovers hidden realities. It removes clouds of secrecy. It shines light into the shadowed corners of our fears. It joins individuals who have been dwindling away in isolation. It allows us to show compassion to others, because we know what they’re really experiencing. It helps us understand the purposes for behaviors and reactions. It eliminates pressure to conform to an ideal that is exposed as impossible to uphold. It lets us know that we're not alone.

I have recently made a conscious decision to actively pursue the woman I want to become, and I want to grow into a strong, bold woman who has the courage to explore, discover, and claim who I truly am. I’m realizing that it takes genuine strength to evaluate, identify, and express your emotions, and I’m up for the challenge.

I long to rest in an environment where the honest stories of people’s lives are openly and bravely shared, so I’ll open up the floor by starting with mine. This blog will explore my ragged and wonderful story, which God is perfectly authoring.

I humbly invite you to join me. I would love to have some company here.

What is your story? What aspects of your life make you who you are? What have you experienced? Witnessed? Endured? Accomplished? What has shaped your perception of the world? Of Christ? Of yourself? What are you scared to reveal to others? What are you hesitant to explore even internally? You don’t have to share your story with me. (Although I would love for you to and would be greatly honored if you did.) You don’t even have to share it with another person at all. (However, for the sake of humanity at large, I certainly encourage that you do.) But I implore you to at least share your story with yourself. The more you recognize the components of your own story, the more confidently you can identify your true self.



10 comments:

  1. I'm thankful that you're willing to share yours...it's beautiful. :)

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  2. I'll bite I promise, when I have a larger keyboard and it's not midnight.

    Visit a BOLD website and be authentic and true to you. It will help you find you on your journey. Boldtranquility.com

    Seriously though. I LOVE what you're doing, grammar, incomplete thoughts, the possibility of a typo (oh my!) the raw honesty of it all. And when you decide to publish it into a book, you'll know where to find me. (I hope, I'm still around at that point with this paralyzation happening I'm a little scared).

    But I'll tell you my story.

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    1. Thank you so much for the positive reinforcement! I'm a bit ashamed to say how much I need and appreciate the encouragement, but it's certainly the truth. I'll have to check out that website. And paralysis be damned, I pray you stick around for many years to come. :)

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    2. Everyone needs encouragement, and a shoulder to lean on. It's nothing to be ashamed of though, you are handling this with an amazingly positive sunshine that I've never seen anyone do, a transparency that most would hide from the world. Your raw emotions and the beauty of your BOLDness is amazing, inspiring and truly authentically you.

      My story, I actually wrote a small book, Was it worth it? Fifteen and Pregnant. (you can find it on Amazon) it's only 65 pages and it was wrote out of shear panic, raw emotion and because I literally felt like my world was crumbling. After everything I've been through, all my struggles, my son walked out on me, taking my first grandchild with him - I missed the birth of my first grandbaby, it sent me into a dramatic hate spiral. But that's only a tiny tiny piece of my story. It started at age 15, I was pregnant at age 15, yes, FIFTEEN. My dad wanted to send me away, everyone else pushed for abortion, I quoted Madonna - I'm gonna keep my baby. and I did. It was HARD. (Don't listen to MTV kids!) I dropped out of high school, ended up in an abusive marriage, he tried to kill me, he hurt my son (I didn't know it til YEARS later and still don't know to what extent), was a widow by age 28, I was sexually assaulted in high school (never actually told anyone about that), lived through a house fire, my son had severe ADHD, I worked 4-5 jobs while going to college with a 11 credit hour schedule all to better my life and prove I wasn't a stupid teenage mother who needed welfare to live.

      In 2003 I had to have back surgery because I couldn't walk, a disc went dead in my back, I still managed to pull a 4.0 GPA and work full time from my bed - with the help of technology - and determination, then 6 months later climbed a mountain. After each struggle I get stronger.

      but the one thing I apparently needed through everything, I can't be alone. No matter what I do, I cannot be relationshipless. No matter how hard the breakup, how much in love I am, my fear of being alone sends me immediately on the hunt to have another person with me.

      I have an incredible strength to overcome and survive, but it has limits, that limit is that I can't do it alone. My struggles continue, I have incredible months/years then I have times of downward spirals. I've recently found GOD, something I know you've had your whole life, but not something I've had, consistently, or believed whole heartedly in.

      You have a strength that I will never have, because you a light that you've had your whole life that has never waivered, I'm still finding my strength in Christ, you have that foundation that I don't so you are never alone.

      I am not the writer you are, I have you the seriously broken down version of my story. - I could have a week of airtime devoted on the lifetime movie channel to my life -

      It WILL get better, I promise. You have a sunshine and a light that follows you - you CAN do this. I appreciate you and your transparency so very much - I look forward to reading your posts.

      P.s. I'm not letting a "neurological abnormality" kick my butt anytime soon. :)
      P.S.S I do have 2 beautiful grandchildren now AND it took about a year, but I am allowed to see BOTH of them. Time DOES heal and helps.

      much love <3

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  3. I love this and I love your disclaimer :) We do need each other AND we do not need each other! This is so encouraging, validating, and true!

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    1. I'm glad you totally get me. :) Thanks for the encouragement!

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  4. So true. I struggle to write more intimate posts because of many of these reasons. Here's to being authentic! I'll join you in that goal.

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    1. Oh, yay, Stephanie! Please join me! You can do it! And we need people like you in the fight. You just made my heart so happy. Love you so much!

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  5. I love it. All of it. Can't wait to read more!!

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  6. Excited to see where God takes your story! Love you through the good times and the difficult..

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