Tuesday, September 10, 2013

when thrashing isn't a thumb war

{photo by dramaticelegance]
these past several months have been all about the Story for me. the funny thing is, despite the fact that my entire being is storytelling, it's really never been something that has met the criteria for my focus.

i've heard that phrase "let Him write your story...only you can tell your story" over and over as long as i can remember. i was raised in the Church; it's one of those things that fit in our little dictionary of words we all know. but it faded. and in some respects, my faith began to fade, too. 

writing that phrase made me nervous. i am loathe to write anything about shaky faith because i tend to hear the same things in response. it makes people uncomfortable, edgy, to think about faith being anything but concrete. we talk about it in whispers, as though it's a very dirty secret, casting furtive glances over our shoulders just in case someone might hear. 

my precious friend Mandy {who has written a book about her own personal thrashing which can be found here} wrote these words on her Facebook page ::  I don't have answers. I can't prove a thing. My faith is custom fit. Messy and mysterious. This is all I've got. 

ever since i read them, they've been humming in my soul. there's a strange sort of freedom when someone else speaks that same thing that's been sitting in your heart for a long time, maybe even before you knew they were there. 

part of telling my story is lifting my head up and acknowledging the road i've walked instead of keeping my eyes down to study the cracks in the sidewalk. the thing is, i didn't trip. i faded. Mandy uses the word "thrashing." and that's a good word. it brings up a picture in my head of a man on a mountain in the throes of a wrestling match with the Son of the Most High, from the darkness until the dawn. 

{photo by dramaticelegance}
and damn, that's powerful. the thrashing, the wrestling, the wandering....it happens in the night. that dark night of the soul. and then comes the dawn with Light shining down on the flattened grass and the bruises and bumps and bleeding places. thrashing isn't a thumb war. it's a guttural cry as you charge into the complete darkness. and sometimes you run into a tree. but you pick yourself back up and snap off a walking stick and pull yourself along.

sometimes pruning leaves you messy // right there on the inside //
and it's that moment in the shower // when you're crying to match the water 
// but then you come out // and the steam pours off //
and you're coffee and tea and warm blankets from the drier 
// fragrant and steaming and clean
words by me :: #mypoetryseptember

:: and it's all part of my story. 

it all comes back to the Lion. it's in that dark place where you have no idea what might come skulking out of those darkened doorways that He curls up quietly at your back. and sometimes, when you need him the most, when fear threatens to consume you and has crawled down your throat

He roars. 


7 comments:

  1. "you pick yourself back up and snap off a walking stick and pull yourself along." I like that visual. And this line gets to me: "i faded."

    ReplyDelete
  2. it all comes back to the Lion. it's in that dark place where you have no idea what might come skulking out of those darkened doorways that He curls up quietly at your back. and sometimes, when you need him the most, when fear threatens to consume you and has crawled down your throat

    He roars.

    Oh Rachel..... Those words I copied above. Those. I get the trashing. I've been reading Mandy's book and it's so beautiful it's tough to describe. This wrestling with Jesus isn't pretty, or clean like people want it to look like. We walk out with limps, scars on our thighs, up the backs of our heads and in our hearts from unanswered questions.
    Yet..... There's a yet NOT a but. Our faith doesn't stay shaky. It grows, like a firmly rooted tree that shoots out of the earth. It just needed time to grow. And a little fertilizer. And what is better fertilizer than a little shit :)
    ROAR on BRAVE one. Because it's heard. And seen.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I love this. I'm a fellow thrasher/wrestler. The last paragraph especially made my hairs stand up on end. Thanks, Rachel. (Over from Story Session).

    ReplyDelete
  4. So good to read those words. I visited from Imperfect Prose, but I'll be starting story 101 myself in a few days. I'm hesitant to write about my doubt too. Never can seem to get the words out. But I keep getting this feeling that that may be what the class will bring up for me, so we'll see. :) Thanks again.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Pruning is always difficult for me to perform on plants--- and hard for me to submit to in life. Loved your poem and your story. Jumped over from e's

    ReplyDelete
  6. Love the realness here. Love that you say damn. Love the sound of your friend, Mandy's book. Love the picture of you and your girl.

    Good to read your words, Rachel.

    ReplyDelete
  7. "It all comes back to the lion."

    This is a POWERHOUSE post friend. love it. i hear your heart, here. (And I love that Mandy girl, too)

    ReplyDelete

I look at you and see all the ways a soul can bruise, and I wish I could sink my hands into your flesh and light lanterns along your spine so you know there's nothing but light when I see you. :: Shinji Moon