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Forever Beloved

Faith, Love & Truth

September 4, 2017

Finding Joy In Chronic Illness

How are you doing?

At least once a week, I’m asked that question.  Always by the kindest, most caring souls I know.  People that would be quick with an encouraging word, offering prayers and a sweet smile.  But every time I’m asked, it feels like a loaded question.

Should I tell them truthfully how I’m doing?

Maybe it’s because my health is ever changing.  Maybe it’s because I haven’t been sleeping well.  Maybe it’s because my stress level has become close to 2007 Britney.  Whatever the reason, I’ve grown tired of dodging the question, this week I decided to start telling the truth.

“I don’t feel well most days.” And that was just the beginning.

I told about the recent doctor appointment I had with a dismissive doctor that wasn’t good at listening, the frustrations that arose from that and the pain that came from a procedure she performed not once but twice.

I told about an upcoming surgery and the stress of having to plan that around my already booked wedding clients.

And I told about a new, really scary diagnosis that will result in a large and fairly serious surgery in the upcoming months.  But the excitement of how well I’ll feel after my healing.

Not shockingly, sharing with others began to lighten my load and was such a tremendous relief.  But it left me wondering why this doesn’t come more naturally to me.  Why is it easier for me to say I’m fine rather than share the burdens of my heart?

What am I afraid of?

I’m going to be honest here y’all.  I’m afraid my honesty will be labeled as attention seeking.  And I don’t quite believe my pain is worthy of attention.  I much prefer being the asker, the one who leans in to hear the pain of another.  The one who mourns with those who mourns, and weeps with those who weep.  Those people are my people and I want to be there for them.

But recently I’ve heard a still, small voice telling me to let others in.  That my pride, or what I’ve perceived as strength, has resulted in me not allowing others to do the same for me.  And encouraging me to share my story freely.

I was recently asked to share my story to a group of women through a live video.  During that live, words left my mouth that shocked even me.  Words that I can’t stop thinking about.

I have found so much joy in this journey, there isn’t anything I would change.

Now don’t get me wrong, it’s been hard in many ways.  It’s been physically, emotionally and mentally difficult.  I’ve lost friendships.  I’ve lost my job.  It has changed my appearance and it has changed who I am as a person.  It has changed my marriage.  It has caused my children to have to really think hard to remember what life was like before Mama was sick and they’ve had to grow up faster than they should.

Looking around at my circumstances, to be honest, sucked every ounce of joy out of me.  I was in pain, I was homebound many days, the friendships I thought I could lean on were gone and I was sad.  The only way out was to look up.  I knew I had to.  I needed to see something beyond what my eyes told me.  So I looked for Jesus, often.

In the darkest places, I found Him there with me.  Speaking to my heart.  Speaking life into the hurt places.  I’ve learned what it’s like to seek joy and find it.  I’ve learned that even in the hard times, He gives us enormous blessings.  I’ve learned joy doesn’t come and go with our circumstances.  But joy can be experienced despite our circumstances.  Joy is a fruit of the Spirit, second only to love, it flows from God, not circumstances.  We have a fundamental need for joy in our lives.  Life without joy is overwhelming, depressing and just plain sad.

Joy comes in knowing Jesus and experiencing His presence.  Joy comes when we fall more in love with the One who loves us most.  To experience joy is to experience Jesus.

So many times we want joy, but not trails.  We want faith, but not testing.

Y’all, I’ve thought many times how much easier my life would be without pain, without surgeries, without loneliness and without financial hardships.

But God often uses the hard to refine us.  To transform us into the person we were created to be in the first place.  More like Him.

In the short book of Philippians {only four chapters long} Paul uses the word “joy” 16 times.  I find this absolutely amazing.  Do you know why?  Paul didn’t write this book when he was on vacation at the beach.  He didn’t write it overlooking a sunset.  He was in prison in Rome, waiting to be executed.  In the darkest days of his life, he wrote the most positive book in the Bible.

When we find ourselves with Jesus, we can find joy in every journey.

Filed in: Christianity • by Amy • Leave a Comment

February 27, 2016

Piece By Piece

Sometimes a difficult day comes out of nowhere, surprising you with its emotions and frustrations.

Today was one of those days.

Today was hard y’all. It’s been a broken down, runny mascara day full of emotions, thoughts swirling in my mind and an aching heart.

Today began as every day does, me settling into my chair at my computer with coffee in hand. As I browsed Facebook, I saw post after post of the same video. Of course my interest was peeked, so I had to click play.

Within seconds, the emotions were washing over me like waves crashing on a beach. Three times I had to stop watching and try to gather myself together.

All day I’ve thought of it. I’ve went back and watched it three times, every time the same emotions rise to the surface.

Today I’m throwing wide open the door to my story and my heart.

It’s a little bit scary, it’s risky, and the thought of it makes my heart beat faster. But I believe there is power in your story and nothing brings women together and binds hearts fast like stories.

I was adopted at 3 days old by the most amazing, loving parents any child could ever dream of. My childhood was truly magical.

My adoption was never hidden from me, I grew up knowing I had two sets of parents when other children only had one. Oh, how happy that made me. It made me different! I have a sneaking suspicion that may have been where the seed of ‘loving to be different’ was planted in my heart.

While I was loved, truly and deeply loved, I still spent days dreaming of where I came from. I can clearly remember listening to the song Somewhere Out There and having my heart warmed, knowing somewhere out there my birth-parents were looking at the exact same stars I was.

My hearts yearning to find my roots grew stronger the older I became.  The day finally came, my Mom handed me a phone number…my birth-mothers phone number.  With shaking hands and a pounding heart, I dialed the phone.  And those first few spoken words will never be forgotten.

Hello.
Hi, is Lois there?
Yep, one minute….Hello.
Hi Lois, you don’t know me but I’m Amy…your daughter.

Finding my birth-father wouldn’t be as easy.  Five years of dead-ends, private investigators and calling what felt like every man in the country with his name.  The day I finally told my husband I give up, I came home to a message on my answering machine from his sister.  Y’all, God was in every single step of this journey.

Finally, my life felt complete.

I had 14 years of a life overflowing with family.  If you know me, you know that is my heart.  I had exactly what I spent so many days dreaming of when I was little, two sets of parents.

17 months ago, my dream fell apart.

And with that, my birth-father walked out of our lives.  He walked directly out of our lives and never looked back.  With one quick push of the delete button, we were erased to never return.

I wrote this blog post last year, while trying to heal my aching heart.

I thought my heart was healing, until today. Watching Piece by Piece by Kelly Clarkson cracked my aching heart wide open again.

He’s missed out on 17 months of life.  He’s missed my sons graduation from high school.  He’s missed proms and freshman dances.  He’s missed two Christmases, two Easters and eight birthdays.  He’s missed watching his grandson turn into the most amazing man.  He’s missed his granddaughter blossoming into a gorgeous young lady with a heart of gold.  He’s missed life, our life.

How do you walk out on that?

And here I am once again in the ripped pages and the reflection of a broken heart. But in all my broken places, God has turned a my mess into a holy offering by pouring Himself right in.  He has never left me down.  And now those cracks allow Him to pour right out.

I know in the middle of my messy mascara days, He’s busy writing an amazing story.

If you’re reading this, I forgive you. It’s the one thing I can do. It’s the one thing I have the power to do. It’s what I have to do. It’s what God wants me to do.

And with that, my heart will begin to be put back together piece by piece.

Filed in: Christianity • by Amy • 1 Comment

May 14, 2015

30 Life Lessons To Instill In Your Sons Heart

Boys will be boys, that’s for sure. But the concept “well what can you do, they’re typical boys” doesn’t necessarily resonate with me. I think so many times in this world, we give up on our sons before we give them a chance.

What we should be doing is teaching them to be gentlemen. A godly, respectful, kind young man. We are quick to remind our girls that they are daughters of the King, but how often do we remind our boys that they are a son of the King? How can we do that? By instilling important lessons in their heart.

  1. Love the Lord. Love Him with all your heart, mind and strength. {Luke 10:27}
  2. Respect her. She is a lady, please treat her as one. {1 Peter 3:7}
  3. You are unique. You are God’s handiwork, crafted by Him and for His good pleasure. He uniquely designed you to be you alone, comfortable in your own skin. {Psalm 139:13}
  4. Respect your elders. Look them in the eye. Take the time to listen to what they have to say. I mean really listen. Shake their hand. Heed their advice. And defend them if needed. {1 John 4:4}
  5. Choose a spouse that is also your best friend. That will make you happiest in the end.
  6. Control your temper. When you get angry, calm down and start doing what God has called you to do. You can be bitter or better—it’s up to you! {Proverbs 29:11}
  7. Do what needs to be done. Without being told. Don’t wait to be asked when you know what you should do. If you see it, do it. 
  8. Take telling. Consider it an opportunity to learn and grow. {Proverbs 3:11}
  9. Create your own path. Be ready to create your own path in life. You can choose the wide path or the narrow path, it is your choice. Just be sure you choose wisely.
  10. Life is not a fairy-tale. Life, love, and relationships are not like the movies. 
  11. Have a servant’s heart. Give back to your community. While you’re doing good for others, it really does the most for you! To humbly serve is a very manly quality. Don’t let anyone ever tell you differently. Follow Christ’s example. {Mark 10:45}
  12. Have integrity. Strive to be honest and just. Work to develop a strong ethical foundation. Have a code of morals that you stick to. To be respected a man must be a person of morals and live a godly life. Someday you will be the head of your household and will need stability and common sense. A leader that is followed willingly is a man who has character and integrity.
  13. Love your neighbors. Leave your mark by loving each and every person your life touches, those who love you and those who don’t. Love has no conditions. It expects nothing in return. It gives freely, multiplies and grows. Do this and everything else will work itself out. {Mark 12:31}
  14. Your wife should be the #1 woman in your life. As much as it breaks my heart to say this, she should be before even me. I’m confident that I’ve raised you with enough love in your heart for both of us. {Genesis 2:24}
  15. Don’t give in. I’m sure you’ve already experienced this pressure more than we know. Pressure to talk a certain way, to treat girls a certain way, to be disrespectful, to smoke, drink or do drugs. You don’t need any of those to have a good time. You possess the strength and character to walk away. God will help you stand. You don’t have to give in.
  16. Laugh! It’s the best stress reliever. One of the biggest gifts God has blessed you with is your sense of humor. Seriously, cannot even count how many times I’ve laughed to the point of my stomach hurting. We’ve had soooo many great times laughing in this household. Don’t ever forget how to laugh. {Psalm 126:2}
  17. Keep your word. A gentleman follows through on what he says he will do. {1 John 2:5}
  18. Don’t just settle for a spouse. Wait. God has just the right one for you. We’ve been praying for her. She is out there, right now, praying for you. {Proverbs 18:22}
  19. Go on vacation with your family at least once a year. Families need to learn how to vacation with one another. They need to learn how to spend time together, unplugged, and just enjoy each other.
  20. Be polite. Like Thumper’s mama said If you can’t say something nice, don’t say nothin’ at all. 
  21. Be creative! You grew up with a mama wielding a glue gun in one hand and sequins in the other. And a dad who sang crazy, made-up songs. 
  22. You are known by the friends you keep. Bad company corrupts good morals. {I Corinthians 15:33}
  23. I believe in you. I am so super confident that God is doing so many amazing things in your life, things you can’t even fathom right now. God has a purpose and plan for your life. Always follow His lead and He will take you amazing places. 
  24. Work hard. Be known as a hard worker. God wants us to work hard and do our jobs well. He wants us to be an example to the world of what good hard work can bring. Remember, dirt washes off. {Proverbs 6:6}
  25. Credit cards are evil. Seriously. Live without debt. Money problems ruin marriages, friendships and jobs.
  26. Be a gentleman. Step back to let her in the door first. Hold that door open for her. Offer to carry heavy items for her. Protect and defend her. 
  27. Friendships are important. Invest in strong, loyal friendships. The kind of friend who “sticks closer than a brother” {Proverbs 18:24}
  28. Be soft. Don’t ever be too “manly” to hold your wife’s hand, say I love you and kiss her goodnight. Don’t ever be ashamed to let your daughter put makeup on you or have a tea party with her. 
  29. Take that second chance. Sometimes it might even take a third, fourth and fifth chance. Every day is a new start. Use that brand new day to get it right, to kiss her face, to say no, to say I’m sorry, to ask forgiveness, to do it over and to make a new start. I want you to know that this is what God is about. Grace. He wants to give you as many chances as it takes, just don’t ever stop taking them.
  30. It’s okay to cry. It really is. Boys are always pushed so hard to be tough. But I want you to know real men are tender, they defend those who can’t defend themselves and they care about others. They cry when their beautiful wives walk down the aisle and when they see their sweet babies face for the first time. And it’s okay!


Filed in: Christianity, parenting, Uncategorized • by Amy • 1 Comment

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Wife & Mama • Iced coffee seeker & curator of chaos • Collector of words & magic • Obsessed with laughter & bright lipstick • Dreaming & homesteading in the hills of PA

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