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Forever Beloved

Faith, Love & Truth

October 13, 2017

National No Bra Day {and why I hate it}

This is a day that I dread, one that makes me cringe.  As many of you know, October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month.  And October 13 has been deemed national No Bra Day or Free the TaTas.

I am the daughter of a woman who not only fought breast cancer but won that fight. And not only one fight, but multiple times. Her fight spanned across many years, each one being tough in it’s own way.  From 1981 through 1989 she battled and fought.  And throughout it all, she only asked God for one thing…to allow her to live long enough to raise her daughter.

From her perspective, those years had to be frightening.  The first surgery she had in 1981, she nearly lost her life.  The cancer was more advanced than they first anticipated, and a partial mastectomy had to be performed.  The next battle resulted in a complete mastectomy.  And the last battle included chemo and radiation.

When she first found out she had cancer, I was only six years old.  I can remember playing with the neighbor kids and waving to her as my Grandpa took her to the hospital for her first surgery.  I can remember hearing whispers of her condition when I was around.  I can remember crying, because I just wanted my Mama home.  I can remember the look on her face the first time she showed me her changed body riddled with staples.  I can remember the nights she spent sick from chemo and radiation.  The days her stomach would only allow her to eat rice.  And the morning I found her passed out on the floor because her white blood cell count had dropped.

The intent of this post isn’t to gain sympathy, but rather to give you a glimpse of what the reality of breast cancer is.

Her and I have had many, many discussions about ‪No ‬Bra Day and Free the Tatas. And to a breast cancer survivor, to a woman who fought to live so she could raise her daughter, to a woman that spent many days sick from radiation and chemo, these campaigns are completely offensive.  Not only offensive but also belittling and demeaning to the pain and suffering she endured.

This is a great post from a survivor and I think sums up most of their thoughts on this:

The thought of seeing bra-less women flaunting two body parts that I have lost to cancer — more than I already see this on a regular day — does not feel all that supportive.  In fact, it feels quite the opposite

I don’t understand how a day where women are encouraged to share photos of their braless breasts is to be “supportive” for women who are living with or who have died from breast cancer, or who have managed to ‘complete’ the arduous treatments and disfiguring surgeries required to put them into remission?

And as my Mama said:

It’s as much as them saying “Look, I have them and you don’t.”

This day, which many buy into, is nothing more than sexualizing breast cancer.  It’s sexualized by social media users who use the campaign as a guise to post pictures of themselves topless with no intention of promoting breast cancer awareness or donating to research charities.  And that, my friends, is sad.

Breast cancer isn’t sexy, it’s devastating.

I suggest we change October 13 to National Check For Lumps Day, or perhaps National Get Yourself To The Doctor Before It’s Too Late Day.  Cancer patients don’t have time for cuteness when it comes to the potentially fatal disease they’re faced with.  They do, on the other hand, have an appreciation for realism and action.

Ask a real survivor what you can do to promote breast cancer awareness or how you can honor her fight.  Their answers would include get a mammogram, run a race, donate to the Susan G. Komen Foundation or simply be there for someone fighting a battle.

Taking your bra off isn’t the answer.

Filed in: Uncategorized • by Amy • Leave a Comment

October 11, 2017

Surgery Day {Prayers Needed}

I would totally appreciate if y’all could spare a prayer for me.  I will be heading in this morning for a fairly big surgery.  I’m super praying this is an easy peasy surgery and to be home next week.  As is normal I’m sure, with my history surgery makes me anxious.  I have my pre-surgery worship playlist ready, I have my “Standing on the Promises of God” shirt on and I have my hand tucked inside my husbands.

But more than that, pray for God’s comfort for my sweet family as they wait during the surgery.  They have the hardest job of all, waiting and worrying.  Not to mention the added stress of not being at the hospital with me.  Pray for comfort, peace and that God wraps His arms around them.  Thanks so much everyone!!!  I know y’all are the best prayer warriors around!

Filed in: Uncategorized • by Amy • 3 Comments

October 6, 2017

When Your Heart Is Overwhelmed

I stood at the window, watching the leaves fall from the trees.  A gust of wind came, blowing the leaves.  First this way then the other.  They had nearly kissed the ground, now they are soaring through the air while twisting and turning.  The leaves can’t seem to find a solid place to land.

This is how life feels at times.

Overwhelming.  Blowing this way then the other, just looking for your solid place to land.

For the past two months my heart has been overwhelmed and craving a solid place to land.   It felt as if everything was blowing and changing around me, preventing me from landing.

Time and time again I tried to put my feet down and land.  Not realizing the power wasn’t in me to change it, but in Him.

My health has been on what feels like a roller coaster ride and it has taken most of my energy with it.  And it is easy in these moments of hard to get overwhelmed.  To wonder where the energy for the next moment will come from.  It’s easy to let the pain of today and the unknown of tomorrow take what energy is there and waste it away.

I can’t help but think about Jesus when he was in Gethsemane just before His arrest, trial, and crucifixion.  It was easy for Him to be overwhelmed, too, despite knowing and believing in and loving His Father.  My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death, He said to His disciples.  He fell to the ground and prayed.

And then I remember that even though He did get overwhelmed, even though He did ask for the cup to be taken from Him, He did something else in the middle of it all that night.  He gave thanks.

David also dealt with the feeling of being overwhelmed.  In Psalm 61:2-3 David said From the end of the earth will I cry unto thee, when my heart is overwhelmed: lead me to the rock that is higher than I. For thou hast been a shelter for me, and a strong tower from the enemy.  David prayed and then remembered the past goodness of God.

I’ve realized this season in my life, as every past season, is necessary.  In the necessary, I need to give thanks and remember the goodness of God.  He has a specific reason for every part of our journey.  The whole only comes after broken.  Healing only comes after wounds.

I am embracing unknown.  That in itself is a ridiculous statement.  I’m Amy, the girl that gets all twitchy, cranky and nervous at the thought of giving up the known for the unknown.  Which confirms again, it’s not me but all Him.  For the first time in months, I feel grounded and centered.  I know in my heart that I am exactly where He wants me to be.  And that, my friends, is an amazing feeling.  A feeling that is so welcomed!

But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us.

2 Corinthians 4:7

For some reason, I’ve always been drawn to this verse.  I always thought the jars of clay reference was beautiful, but I didn’t fully understand it.  In my mind, keeping treasure in a jar of clay was an odd place.  Clay pots are fragile and easily broken.  When I looked at the clay pots I have they are full of flaws, chips and cracks.

That’s when I got it.

We are simply empty jars of clay, fragile and full of flaws.  Until we have God.  Then kept inside that broken, fragile, ordinary jar of clay is a treasure, a priceless treasure of immeasurable worth!

Yet you, LORD, are our Father. We are the clay, you are the potter; we are all the work of your hand.

Isaiah 64:8

As we travel through this messy, unsettled, always changing, sometimes really hard and overwhelming journey of life, God gives us the choice to become clay in His hands.  I am so thankful that He loves us so much that He gently molds us and makes us into a vessel of honor.  We can come to Him with our cracks and brokenness and He will meet us right where we are and love us.  He will transform something beautiful out of our messy life.

Today, I’m giving thanks because I trust that He is making beauty in places my eyes can’t see.  He is molding me in ways I don’t even know about yet.  He is showering me with His amazing grace.  He can see into the deepest depths of my overwhelmed heart, He is holding it in His hands and He knows exactly what it will take to restore Hope into it.

And I am taking my thankfulness and I am sharing it with all of you.

 

 

Filed in: Christianity • 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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