I’m still learning how to live. Learning how to not get mad when my body doesn’t let me be me. There are days I can do it… days I accept that I can’t do everything. The days I make the most of what I can do, and know that even if I can’t do it today, I might be able to do more tomorrow, or next week, and if I can't, then that's okay, too.
Then there are the days I forget. The days I make plans to live my life the way I want to live. To do things and go places! Then just as I’m walking out the door, it slaps me in the face. Maybe it’s pain, maybe it’s nausea, maybe it’s the overwhelming fatigue that saps every bit of energy. Or maybe it’s just remembering. Remembering that I can’t do things because I want to do things, or even because I need to do things. Remembering that I can only do things if I can do things.
I’ve been focusing too much on what I can’t do. This week I was trying to think about all the things I can still do. But seems like that backfires. I start forgetting that I have to be careful… I overdo it or make grand plans only to get sick or realize I can’t after all.
Last week one of my teachers suggested I go volunteer at a camp for Deaf Blind adults in Seattle this summer. It’s a wonderful experience and they desperately need more volunteers, she explained. I asked my language tutor about it during group tutoring, and he too raved about how fun it was, and how it would build our skills while helping others. “It would be a great experience for you all,” he told us, looking at my classmates.
Then came the slap.
“But Amy,” he looked at me, “I don’t think you could do it. It’s long hours, hard work. It would be too much for you, I think.”
I got mad then. Not mad at him--it was sweet of him to be watching out for me--but mad that I need to be watched out for. Mad that I can’t do what I want to do…even what I need to do to build my skills. My learning disabilities mean I need even more practice and work than the teachers recommend, but my health means some days I can’t even manage the minimum requirements.
So here I am again, back where I started. Learning to accept the life I’ve been dealt. Learning to live life to the fullest when full isn’t always very big. But most of all I need to remember the things I’ve already learned. The things like how God will use my health problems to make me lean on Him. How He’ll use them for His glory, to let me encourage others because I can understand a little of what they go through. And how when I do succeed, everyone knows it’s because of Him, not because of me.
I recently wrote a short story with this same lesson: When a Lifetime Comes. It’s a lesson that keeps coming back for those of us with health problems, one that somehow never fully gets learned. But step by step, we grow a little more every day, becoming more like the person God is molding us to be.
Life isn’t about how much you can do. Life is about how you do what you do… how you choose to live the life you have. May I have the grace to live completely.
.
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
4 comments:
Oh Amy, I am so sorry, my Sweetie-pie. I know exactly what you're talking about. So sorry Amy. I wish you didn't have to walk the road you do but I am so glad that our paths intersected. So very very glad! Wow! Very glad!
Love you darling and guess what! 41more days!!!!!
And how when I do succeed, everyone knows it’s because of Him, not because of me.
This line is so true, Amy. Thank-you for being open. Praying that God will open doors for you that are just perfect Amy opportunities.
I'm so sorry that you struggle so much, Amy.
I am still praying for your healing, but I know that God will continue to sustain you until you receive it. You are an inspiration to me and to many others, so hang in there.
God is using your situation for his glory, and He doesn't disregard your hard work and devotion to him.
You and Laury both are continually in my prayers...
So true. I could relate to what you wrote here so much. It doesn't seem fair sometimes, does it?
(((Hugs)))
Post a Comment