Thursday, March 20, 2014

Me Today

When I would write emails home as a missionary, my brother(s) would always ask for the "cliff notes" version (or, as he got further into college, "a summary").

For the first time in five and a half years I am going to honor their request. Mostly because or laptop keyboard broke and I have to do this from my phone.

Me today:
Woke up tired
Then got sick
Took a shower before noon (victory!)
Barfed twice and read ten books before breakfast
Watched Frozen fr the fourth time in two days
Tried to keep up with the toddler
Failed
Got frustrated at my lack of lunch options
Took a too-short nap
Woke up to the toddler who just wanted to play
Drove to Orbit
Got tortured (aka weekly shot) but had a nice conversation with my nurse (also a BMW missionary- I call that a tender mercy)
Ate too much dinner but didn't feel full
Almost had a meltdown at the pharmacy while paying for the newest round of drugs
Had a real meltdown in the car
Kevin said, "give her a show (phone), she'll be okay."
Felt guilty that my toddler thinks I am so attached to my phone
Was put back together by a caring husband
Who then let me spend too much on craft projects for the nursery
Drove home, checked the bracket, put the toddler to bed
Read some scriptures
Watched best upset this year
Blogged just to check it off my list
Finding it hard to be positive today...
Summarized again.
Bedtime at last.

And if that was too long for you Ben, here is the summary of the summary: woke up  tired showered barfed read and ate and let it go. Lunch, nap time, torture and Texas. Dinner, drug dealer rip off, meltdown, hurt, hobby lobby, march madness, go North Dakota St, blogged. Try again tomorrow.

Thursday, March 13, 2014

You can be both

We sat there on the couch. The apartment was a mess, a physical display of the chaos going on in Katie's life. We were there because she hadn't been to church in who knew how long, and we just happened to find her because there was an investigator we were trying to teach who lived in the same complex.

At first, we were there because she wasn't active, and it was our job to find her, a lost sheep, and bring her back into the fold.

Within a few days, a few visits, we were there because we wanted to be her friends. And, as her friends, we were worried about what she was doing to herself.

Pretty soon, getting her to come to church was the last thing we cared about.

"I ate some soup for lunch," she told us, motioning to the Lipton packet and still half-full bowl of soup on the kitchen table. "But it was too many calories, so I had to stop."

To look at her, you wouldn't know she was so broken because she was so beautiful. She was tall, blonde, and had what seemed to me to be the perfect body. But it wasn't enough, not in her mind anyway. She was killing herself slowly, starving herself on purpose just to get to that ideal weight. Each day she could function less and less. She was two inches taller than me and a good 80 pounds lighter. Every time we went over, we worried about how we would find her. Alive? Conscious? Breathing? This wasn't her first anorexic rodeo. It was getting so bad, in fact, that her mom was demanding that she move home, just so somebody could keep a constant eye on her.

And we were relieved about that, because we had learned to love her.

A week after Katie moved, I finally got brave enough to admit that my body was broken. Something was wrong and had been for two or three months. I knew what was going on, but I didn't want to hear the words. And when the diagnosis officially came, I wasn't surprised. I was angry, hurt, terrified, yes, but not surprised.

We went grocery shopping the next day. Every item I put in the cart was taken out by my companion, who then analyzed the nutrition facts and then put most of it back on the shelf.

"I have to eat something!" I told her, putting my animal crackers back in. I was desperate for food. I craved it. She was taking it away, and it was hard not to be mad about that.

What my companion didn't know, what she couldn't understand, was that my body had been literally starving for weeks. I could eat like a Samoan football player and it didn't matter, I was still hungry. I could drink three gallons of water every day (you think I am joking) and I was still thirsty. It wasn't until a nurse drew it out on paper for me that I understood--the food I was eating was making it into my blood stream, but my dysfunctional pancreas meant that none of the food was getting to where it needed to go. The doors on my cells were locked, and I didn't have enough insulin keys to open them. So even though I had been hoarding food and eating like crazy, it made sense that I was still hungry. My body wasn't really eating at all.
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Katie and I had more in common than I thought. "How could you hate food?" I wondered when we first met her and learned about her problems. I had been raised in a family with a love of food. Every achievement, every concert and recital and ball game and birthday was followed by a treat of some sort. Every holiday memory smelled like a certain kind of food--homemade pizza at Valentine's Day, Leprechaun cake for St. Patrick's day, and molasses cookies at Christmas. Food was just how we celebrated. How we socialized. How we comforted ourselves and others (funeral potatoes anyone?). Even as a missionary, if we wanted to do something "fun" or "different" it meant trying out a new restaurant, getting a Blizzard at the local Dairy Queen, or making cookies for our mission leaders.

Food was now my enemy.  My body had turned traitor.

The easy thing to do would have been to learn to hate food, and in turn, to hate my body.

Thanks to Katie, however, I had seen what that looked like and I had, from her, gotten a sense of what that felt like. I didn't like it. I didn't want to be in that position.

So I decided that I would take a different approach.

For my whole life up to that point, I felt that something was wrong with my body. I was too tall, too big for my age. I'd even heard my mom call me big-boned, multiple times. My brother said I had man hands and no boy would ever want to hold my hand because they were too big (hence one of the reasons why I wore gloves to my Junior prom). I had been told by numerous beauticians that I had a very round face and certain haircuts just wouldn't look good on me. The eye doctor said that my astigmatism meant that I couldn't get colored contacts, so even to make my eyes equal would take wearing glasses. My list of "what is wrong with me" was extensive, and now I had an old-person disease on top of that.

I had every reason to hate my body.

My diabetes taught me how to love it.

I started to understand that there were many miraculous things that my body could do on the inside, and that changed how I viewed my outside. Even though certain parts of me were broken, other organs picked up the slack to make up for it. A few months and the right medication (and love from my parents, dear friends, and bestest best-friend-not-boyfriend) and my body was suddenly a miracle. I was broken, but I could function normally. I should have had a host of problems, but I was okay. I could see. I could walk. My feet didn't hurt (that bad) even though I walked `10-12 miles a day. My brain still worked, and my talent for remembering names and addresses had never been sharper. And through it all, my smile never changed.

Suddenly it was easier to find the beauty in my appearance instead of focusing on my negative aspects. I started zeroing in on the things I could do instead of just the things I saw in the mirror. I was tall enough to reach anything I wanted. My big bones made me sturdy and strong instead of delicate and flimsy. My hands could write, play the piano, and give comfort (and, contrary to what my brother had always told me, I knew there was at least one boy that wanted to hold them). Even though I had lost half my hair and it was taking on a different texture because my medication was sucking the nutrients out of it, it could suddenly hold a curl for longer than an hour and I could style it much more quickly (I remember a meeting in the bathroom at a mission conference when I overheard a new missionary ask her trainer how I possibly had the time to curl my hair--if she only knew!). My eyesight, which had been constantly blurry before treatment, could suddenly make out objects more than 50 feet away.

Heavenly Father had created a miracle in my body when he gave me diabetes. He taught me to appreciate the good as well as the bad. I learned that I was beautiful to him, even if I was broken. So I no longer obsessed about my weight or my rolls or my complexion. I was a miracle, and I was healthy, and that was the important thing.

When my mission ended and my marriage began, I learned to appreciate what my body could do in new ways. I got pregnant. My body was creating a whole new human being. I  was still broken, and I had never felt sicker in my life, but there was a miracle taking place. Inside me.

And then, suddenly, something went wrong again. I started to swell. My water broke. She came too early. But I recovered, and so did she. And all of the sudden, my body was the main source of nutrients for this little person. I was still broken, but I was doing things I never truly thought I'd be capable of. And although it hurt to know that my disease hurt her, I marvelled at how quickly she healed and became her own person, a person whose body came from mine but wasn't diseased.

This month marks five years since I was diagnosed as a diabetic. The way has been rough and not at all easy. But it also hasn't been the hardest thing I've ever faced in my life. There are good things that have come along because of my diabetes, and I am a better, more peaceful person because of it. I can't say that I feel beautiful all the time or that I don't get frustrated because of the things I can't do or that food is never my enemy. There is a reality to living with this disease, you know.  But somehow that reality becomes easier to take when I focus on what I can do instead of what I can't.

And even though I am NOT one of those women who loves being pregnant (in any way, shape, or form), I can truly say that I have never felt more beautiful--because with each appointment that tells me what can go wrong, I hear that my body is still doing something right. With every prick of my finger, I am aware that if I lived 50 years ago this baby would not make it and neither would I. Every time I have to think about what I am eating, I marvel that my body can digest food at all and that I can still be full. I remember what it felt like to be starving. I might be constantly hungry right now, but I am not starving.

For me, body image isn't about being beautiful and it isn't about being ugly. It isn't about the things that are wrong with me, but focusing on the things that are right. It is about confidence and ability, about flexibility and positivity. I can be broken and I can be beautiful. Those two things don't have to be separate.

I don't know what happened to Katie. I honestly don't know if she is alive or dead. I don't know if she is still fighting with her body or if she has learned to be healed. I am grateful, however, that Heavenly Father let us be friends for three short weeks when I needed her most.

When we sat on her couch and listened to her talk, there were many times I had to hold my tongue to keep from shouting, "But God loves you! No matter what! He created you, and you are beautiful!" Over and over and over again. "God loves you! God loves you! God loves you!"

Maybe He wanted me to repeat those words to her over and over and over again so that a short time later, when I had to repeat them to myself, I would believe that they were true.

God loves you. No matter what. He created you, and you are beautiful!

You are broken, but you are beautiful!

You can be both.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Why I Don't Want My Children to be Happy

Hi all. Sorry for not posting last week. I don't really have a good excuse (unless five doctor visits in the space of a week counts as an excuse? I think it sounds more like bragging...even though it is not a very fun thing to brag about). I am hoping to make up the missing post today and get back to posting on Thursday. I have a lot on my mind.

Some big things have happened in our lives since the last time I posted. Okay, maybe only two big things, but they are huge things to me.

One, we found out we are having a boy! I am all sorts of excited and nervous, but that it is another post in and of itself.

Two, Kevin is two years old now. Does that sound as crazy to you as it does to me? We knew it was official when two of the four times we went to put her back in bed last night she had completely taken off her pajamas so she was wearing nothing but a diaper.  Yup, she's two.

Naturally, I think about my children a lot. As Scott and I were driving home from a visit "home" (aka, my parents house in Cache Valley) on Sunday, I was watching Kevin sleep and I mentioned to my husband that she seems so little still but I just know I am going to blink and she'll be twenty instead of two. He was kind enough to point out that she'll be on a mission when she's twenty, so I won't need to worry about looking at her then because she'll be gone. Um, not a helpful comment. I mean, I hope she goes on a mission, but that is her choice, and I am not really looking forward to letting her go. Then he talked about how the day he is dreading is when "The Boy" (aka her sweetheart) comes into the picture. Then we both decided we were getting ahead of ourselves and we needed to stop talking about her growing up and just listen to her snore in the backseat.

But I still think about her future all the time. I wonder who she is going to be. I wonder what her struggles will be. I wonder if she will become the person I want her to become. I wonder if I even have the right to determine who that is.

I wonder all of these things about our son too. Mostly right now I am just wondering what his name is going to be and if he will look more like his dad or my dad. But I also wonder about the kind of life he will have, when it hasn't even really begun yet.

And these wonderings have lead me to some conclusions about what I want for my children. I think you sometimes hear parents say, "I just want my kids to be happy."

Let's get this straight right now.

Happiness is not what I want for my children.

Let me explain.

There are many, many people in my life, people I care dearly about, that are not happy. They each have different struggles. For some, it is financial. For others, it is poor physical health. For others, it is unfulfilled dreams, or perhaps not being where they thought they would be at this point in their life. Still others are unhappy because they are constantly thinking about what they don't have. And the most heartbreaking of all to me are those that aren't happy because of mental illness--their bodies literally will not let them be happy.

And if it were just happiness these loved ones were lacking, I guess that would be one thing. But the lack of happiness is often overshadowed by an absence of peace.

And that, my friends, is what I ultimately want my children to have. Peace.

I want to raise my children in such a way that they know that it is okay to be unhappy. It is okay to feel negative emotions, as long as you don't let those negative emotions lead to poor choices. It is okay to fail. It is okay to miss the mark--and to miss it over and over and over again. It is okay to doubt, to question. But when you let your doubts overcome everything you have already learned in your life, that is when you find yourself missing peace, and when you are missing peace, that is when all you have is misery.

Peace can come in many ways. For some people, peace comes in a cure, or correct treatment. For others, it might come in having a plan, working toward getting to where they want to be. And still, for others, peace might be found in the arms of someone who can hold them up and keep them going for a while longer.

But what happens when that peace can't be found?

Peace can always be found, you say. Peace is in living the gospel, right? Peace comes in following Jesus Christ.

Wrong.

Sometimes, living the gospel is not a peaceful choice. Christ himself explained that his followers would find that "The father shall be divided against the son, and the son against the father, the mother against the daughter, and the daughter against the mother...." (Luke 12.53). He tells us to "Think not that I am come to send peace on earth. I came not to send peace, but a sword" (Matthew 10:34). There you go. Words of the Savior himself busting that myth.

You may live his gospel to your very best ability, and you will still have hard times. Just because you've been modest your whole life doesn't guarantee that you will never be raped or that those that you trust won't ever look at pornography. Just because you've always paid a full tithe doesn't mean you won't have financial struggles. Just because you've always kept the Word of Wisdom doesn't mean your body will be free from any illness, disease or ailment. Just because you are a good person doesn't mean you are guaranteed a hassle-free life.

If bad things happen to you, it doesn't mean that you are a bad person. If trials are there, it doesn't always mean that you deserve them. God never promised us that bad things would only happen to bad people, and that good things would only happen to good people. Why? Because in His eyes, we are all His children, and that means that there is good in all of us, even when we can't see it in each other.

I feel that it is important for me to teach my children that life is not always going to be fair, it isn't always going to be easy, and they aren't always going to come out on top. Just as important as knowing that there will be mistakes and failures, however, is knowing that there is peace to be found in the struggles. And they will be loved regardless of the things that go differently from the way we planned.

I will love them. Heavenly Father will love them. Christ will love them. And He will give them peace.

How does that work if Christ also tells us to "think not that I came to send peace to the earth"?

Let me quote the Savior again:

"Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid" (John 14:27). 

This is the conclusion I have drawn, and that is that the answer comes in the phrase "not as the world giveth." The world teaches us conflicting ideas: we need to earn everything we get, so therefore we are always getting what we deserve, even when what we deserve is negative. There is also the mindset, growing increasingly popular these days, that we are somehow entitled to happiness. But Christ's peace comes "not as the world giveth." That means we don't have to do anything to earn it, but that also means that we aren't just entitled to it. How does that work? I'm not exactly sure, but I think it goes something like this.

We ask Him for peace. If our hearts are open to accepting it (meaning we have let go of fear and anger), He gives it to us.

That's it.

Sounds simple, right?

It's not.

But I testify that it works.

We might not always be happy, but we can always find peace, and that is what I want for my children. To be happy all the time wouldn't be happiness at all. After all, as a father once taught his son 2600 years ago,

"It must needs be, that there is an opposition in all things. If not so, firstborn in the wilderness" (in other words, the son that was born while he was experiencing opposition and trial) "righteousness could not be brought to pass, neither wickedness, neither holiness nor misery, neither good nor bad. Wherefore, all things must needs be a compound in one; wherefore, if it should be one body it must needs remain as dead, having no life neither death, nor corrumption nor incorruption, happiness nor misery, neither sense nor insensibility" (2 Nephi 2:11, found in the Book of Mormon).

I don't want my children to always be happy. I do want them to know happiness, but I know that their lives will not be full unless they also know something of misery. That thought, well, it hurts. I don't think any parent wants to contemplate the challenges that will come to their children. And if you are worried for your children and their trials, just know that they have a Father in Heaven who is probably just as worried and heartsick as you are.

I read something a few weeks ago that really struck me (especially being in the middle of the biggest medical dilemma of my life thus far). Someone had made a comment (at a funeral of all places) that "you can be cured without being healed, you can be healed without being cured."

That changed my focus on a lot of things. I no longer wonder (very often, at least) why this particular trial is mine that this time, why it is so much harder for me to do a good thing (aka having a baby), something I have been commanded by God to do, than it seems to be for everyone else. Instead of asking why He can't just cure me, I am asking him to heal me, to heal my heart. To give me peace.

And so to Kevin and her brother (my firstborn son in the wilderness), I say this:

I don't want you to be happy.
I want you to find peace.

And I want you to understand the difference.