Tag Archives: prayer

Breathe, Live – A Repost

  • Breathe, Live.

So from my post yesterday I’ve decided to consider my words here:

“When I left the church I literally became an introvert, not my natural inclination. I literally went underground. If anyone thinks that spiritual abuse ends when you finally get up and walk out you are mistaken. It can get even uglier (depending on circumstances) after you walk away, even when you still call yourself a Christian. It can be brutal. I think this also can depend on one’s personality. I’m sad in so many ways for the days and weeks and years that I wasted grieving a world that never gave me a second thought after I left, while I sat on the computer looking desperately for help in Christian forums for the spiritually abused and hurting Christians which often can lead to further abuse. Ironic. I poured through books. Christian books, Christian authors who wrote about abuse, about legalism, about literalism, about denominations, about who is right and who is wrong, who is righteous and who is carnal.”

I’d like to climb back into this space to expand on this a bit. Yesterday’s post was a rant.  I’ve blogged about all that stuff years ago.  As the years go by though I often find myself shocked by the commitment of time and money that went into trying to sort it all out both intellectually and emotionally.  I’m not sure if I’ll ever be able to put words into the physical despair.  I always want to go there.  Always.  I likely will, probably have and can’t remember it and am too tired to bother looking through my archives for it.  Some of it will come out in my stories I will try to tell.

This post I think will be about the highlighted part above.

I noticed I typed the word “sad” in my above quote.  I’ve had a lot of sad in my life.  I remember when I wrote that word I wondered if I should change it to “regret.”  I chose sad.  After pondering it maybe the correct phrasing would be, “sad regret.”  Though I think most of us who regret are sad about it.  I want to paint a picture of who I am during those years in my 30’s & 40’s as a result of spiritual abuse.  I was devastated and wasted.  I was a stay at home mom with chronic illness and emotional stuff that was being poked day after day night after night year after year. In hindsight, bleak.  Our children were in school, Biker Dude at work, and I was alone for hours wandering in a house, a library full of books, Christian books, authors from various denominations and theological positions, and a dinosaur computer (though not at the time) that I turned to after reading the book The Subtle Power of Spiritual Abuse.  I found the forum that Jeff (co-author of the book) started many years ago.  This isn’t easy to admit.  I don’t like how I feel remembering it.  Tears well up in my eyes.  There were many years that I feel were wasted searching.  I was very much alone.

I developed social anxiety and a panic disorder.  I was suffering with *PTSD-like symptoms.  There’s more to all of this but will leave it at that for now.  One of my former friends use to say that God never gives us more than we can bear.  I use to think to myself, ‘Yes He does!’  I’d look around at my friends and think they’ve got their own burdens to bear that God allows.  I’m not adding to God’s load by sharing mine.

So what do I mean by “very much alone” . . . good question?  I think I mean I had too much time on my hands.  I wasn’t working out of the home (had my reasons) and what happened in the church paralyzed me with fear. There I was, stuck.  How did I spend my time alone?  I was a profuse reader and writer.  I took copious notes and studied.  It’s like I was getting ready to teach a university class or something.  It’s like I was trying to heal myself and heal the world all at the same time.  I was desperately looking for the one Christian truth that was true.  I didn’t know it was elusive.  I didn’t know squat.  Though I thought all these authors of books from then and now knew. Then I realized they all knew differently.  Then I tried to make the differences insignificant.  All the while there I am with my various Bibles at hand along with Strong’s and Unger’s and note books and note paper galore.  Ink, ink and more ink. Copious piles of ink and paper in this drawer, in that drawer, in the closet, in the library, in the desk, in the china cabinet, in the kitchen buffet drawers, in my Bibles, in my books, in my purse. The bookmarked websites, here, there, everywhere.  The underlining in my Bibles.  The notes in the margins.   The prayers. Oh the prayers.  Without ceasing. The prayers.  Prostrate on the floor, tears shampooing the carpet.  On my knees, sore as the knee caps bore the weight of this thin but often frail frame.

If Jesus can die by crucifixion I can damn well kneel to pray.  

Sitting on the bed gazing as the seasons passed by and sometimes not seeing anything but winter.  Page after page in my journal of poetry, things written meant for books, prayers wondering if this season, winter, would ever end.  The nights, in the dark, laying in bed, sitting on the couch, in the lazy-boy, searching the sky, the moon, the stars . . . grasping for Him. His truth.  The many spiritual baptisms in the tub and the shower.  Every moment, every cell, all Jesus all the time.  I never felt He left me.  I knew I had to keep praying, keep searching . . . the truth would come.  I’d find the right denomination, the correct exegesis, the true Biblical interpretation.  I’d find the people who were waiting for me, for our family.  God would lead.

In a very odd way the people who died at Jonestown just came to mind.  

I’m not churchless during this time.  Though we left the one church after years and walked away from our lay youth ministry, we remained.  I remained in church for many more years. At that time, I’m still surrounded by people, by activity, by shared beliefs and the hope that this church will work. Thing is, it was more of the same.  When I realized it, I walked.  But I still searched.  I, alone in the house spent hours everyday pouring through resources and praying.  The topic of spiritual abuse came out into the open. Books were written.  I read them all.

Picture me then.

I’m alone, curled up in the black computer desk chair in the computer room.  I read on the screen.  I glance at my Bible, I look outside, what season is it?  The clock ticks away the seconds, minutes, hours.  The kids will be home soon.  Didn’t they just leave for school?  You need to stop, to pull yourself away from this search, this place of pain.  You are alone here.  No one knows you do this.  God knows.  Yes.  Is there more to life than this?  Yes.  Did I miss it?  Yes.  There’s so much I missed by sitting there every day, my pacing the floor, praying, reading, studying, crying dehydrated tears, aching, sleepless, tormented, afraid, isolated and torn. That’s what I regret with sadness.  I stopped living.  I beat myself up for not being able to figure it out.  Everything became hyper-spiritualized. Everything was a spiritual war.  When I say I beat myself up I mean mentally and physically.   I felt like shit.  Listen, if you feel like that you are not living.  I use to be a fun loving person. 

Suddenly I found myself in an abyss I couldn’t climb out of but I didn’t know it at the time.  Part of me wonders if I’m still here in this blogging world for those who don’t know they are in an abyss.  Don’t hurt yourself. Don’t do it.  You are not shit.  You are not trash.  You are not stupid.  You aren’t.  Breathe.  Take a walk.  Pick up your camera.  Change the dialogue in your head.  I know it’s a huge task.  Take 10 seconds and change the dialogue.  It’s a start.  Find something that is creative.  I don’t care if your crocheting is crooked, nor should you.  Garden.  Paint.  Start a blog. Breathe.  Live.

  • *I was eventually diagnosed with PTSD and later with C-PTSD which is complex trauma. Not just one event, but several, one on top of another. Many layers, having their primary roots in the first 20 years of my life. I’ve resurrected this post since it’s resurrection time in the Christian community and though my profile here is low, I am reminded of those who are still hurting and it’s my way of saying that I’ve been there and I understand from my own personal experience.

I have added a new category on the blog, mostly for quick reference for me, titled: Zoe’s favourites.

This blog was first posted a few years back HERE.

Strange

Enlarge

Guessing the graffiti artist(s) would have to have this well planned out.  They’ve got to get up there, supplies and all.   Have to have some light to see, and enough time to do a half-decent job.  This appears better than half-decent to my eyes. Doesn’t look like they were in a terrible hurry.  I wonder if they got caught or got away scot free?  So I can see Pray For Our N(ation)  . . . (C)ountry Back.  What’s missing?

A Time To Laugh?

Sitting at a table with several people, I was asked how we (Biker Dude and I) met a certain couple.  After telling the story the inquirer wrapped it all up by saying:  “God obviously meant for it to happen.”

 

I wonder if I won’t laugh at some point at the bombardment of moments I’ve had the last two months or is it three months?  Right now I don’t have a sense of humour.

My friend from the past.  You were standing there and I saw you.  You didn’t know that I immediately knew in those surroundings I had no way of escape.  I had to have a conversation with myself while I carried on looking normal.  I said to myself, “Zoe, breathe.  You are okay.  Carry on.”  And I did.  I continued to move in your direction and you approached me saying hello and gave me a hug.  I hugged you back.  Not with the same sense of friendship intimacy of the past but still, I managed.  We talked small talk dealing with the reason we were where we were at the time.  Time has moved on.    Shortly before we happened to meet I brought you up in conversation during a therapeutic session.  I was feeling that I still needed to write you a letter.  I was urged not to . . . again.  We parted with a smile and a take care.  I didn’t cry afterwards, I didn’t panic, I had no anxiety.  I felt grown-up, like for the first time in a long time I was getting there, truly getting to a place much healthier than before.

Since we met I have had many triggers.  It hasn’t been smooth sailing.

Jesus.

I pointed out to Biker Dude that in all these recent encounters of the Christian kind I noticed something. Not once did anyone mention . . .

Jesus.

 

 

 

 

 

2012 Wrap-Up

I am currently otherwise occupied at the moment.  Attempts at blogging may? resume before too long.

A few things I’ll mention as a place holder until I get back.  I’m not getting around to as many blogs as I’d like and my reading as such around the net is limited at the moment.  I wanted to mention the prayer vigil for the dead in Connecticut.  Maybe someone else noticed this and wrote about it, but as I mentioned, I haven’t been out and about reading much so I don’t know.  The pastor/reverend/clergy-person who opened the vigil, I think he was from a Methodist church, included in his list of people who are gathered to remember the dead – “people of no faith.”  Not sure if those were his exact words and maybe there is a script available online somewhere that shows the quote.  I remember at the time wondering if any non-theist or non-religious people heard it and what they thought about ‘being included.’  I did not sense at all his inclusion of non-religious people as derogatory.  I heard an acknowledgement that we are out here.  That we too care and that we are around and helping too.  Compassion, mourning and activism do not belong to the “God-believers” alone.  At any rate, just wanted to mention that and see if anyone else out there heard him include us and if so please feel free to share what you heard and thought about it.

I also thought I’d mention the titles of books I managed to read since my last grouping that I posted about.  I decided to do some reading about bipolar disease by an author who has it.  I do not have bipolar but I have wondered for a long time about a family member of mine who though never diagnosed might be on the spectrum of bipolar, if indeed the term “spectrum” is part of the discussion regarding bipolar.  The author is Marya Hornbacher and I read her books titled Madness and Sane.  If you don’t have bipolar, by the time you finish the book Madness you feel like you do.  This is not any kind of suffering that I’ve ever had.  You can read more about Marya on her website if you are so inclined.  I don’t do good reviews of books.  I just know that for me, this was helpful in getting inside the lives of those with bipolar.  Her book Sane is basically a 12-Step book along the AA model for Alcoholics Anonymous.  I didn’t quite finish the book because I had to give it back to the person I borrowed it from and can easily finish it at another time but I am going to buy her book titled Waiting.  I’m more interested in her approach to recovery and wellness in that book because as I understand it she looks at it from a non-theist point of view.

Before I read the bipolar books I finished reading my favourite book of 2012.  I learned about this book at The Agnostic Wife blogAn Unquenchable Thirst by Mary Johnson is the story of a young woman’s calling to Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity Order and her journey to fulfill that calling.  I loved reading about the very simple and quite complicated way of becoming a nun and the austere experience it was in every way.   I could relate so very much to her young sense of calling and her efforts to obey not only God but those God put in authority over her.  Obeying unquestionably leaves ones bereft of their own reasoning and identity and she just seemed to never be able to abdicate neither reason nor identity.  I could relate.  There is so much to say and I can’t say it.  It’s because in so many ways I too have a book inside of me but still I can’t bring order to my thoughts.  They, my thoughts, are much too much clothed in emotion.    Mary starts her journey as a sincere young teenager who senses a calling and heads in that direction with the greatest of intentions and a heart that does not yet know what this calling entails.  She trusts in a God that is there and the faith of those who have paved the way – Mother Teresa.  In the end Mary leaves the order and pursues a life outside her Catholic faith.  I highly recommend the book for those who enjoy reading the stories of women who embrace a calling and later leave it.  Religion looks down on them as spiritually weak for leaving.  I look up to them as having the courage to look reality in the face and obey their own hearts and minds.

At some point after leaving the Order, Mary left Christianity.  That’s the part of story you don’t hear about in this book.  I can only hope one day we will read the rest of the story.

For those who are interested to read more about Mary, Adam Lee at Big Think interviewed her.  You can read that interview HERE.

Waiting in the wings, I’d like to finish the book titled Scared Sick; The Role of Childhood Trauma in Adult Disease by Robin Karr-Morse with Meredith S. Wiley.  I read up to Chapter 6 in 2011 and then put it aside.  This often happens with me when I read books dealing with trauma, recovery and healing.  I recognize that I can only take so much at a time and it’s okay to put a book down and come back to it later when it is likely that I am strong enough to continue.

My latest new purchase is Oliver Sacks new book, Hallucinations.  I hope to get a start on it soon.  I don’t know anything about Oliver but I plan on starting to get to know him with THIS VIDEO that I found.

So, we come almost to the end of the year 2012.  I want to wish my readers well for the upcoming year and to thank you all for reading (even the lurkers) and for participating when and if you can.  I’m always aware that any time I post it might be my last, but not necessarily because I planned it that way.  Life and death have a way of dictating our next day, hour, minute &/or second, right?  :-)  Though I don’t plan on not being here, one just never knows . . .

The Finger

I had a dream the other night.  In the dream I’m standing in the foyer of one of the churches we attended.  A man approaches me and it is someone I recognize from that church and he enthusiastically tells me a list is being made of unsaved family members and would I like my mom’s name on the list so we can all get together on this project and get our family members saved.

In the dream I point my finger at him (no not that one) and I start pointing on to his sternum.  Press, press, press.  While I’m doing that I’m saying, I’m am so sick and tired of you thinking you know who is saved and who isn’t.  Who do you think you are with your lists?

God it felt good.

Yesterday during a talk-therapy session I said out loud, I am so sick and tired of this God stuff.

That felt good too.

Dreams and talk-therapy.  Good places to find your voice.

 

 

 

And So We Wait

When I was younger and first learned through the Bible that Jesus was coming back I made a practice every night of praying that I’d be alive when Jesus returned.  I so wanted to be here on the earth to witness His arrival.  Come Lord Jesus, come.  I remember weeping as I prayed, picturing that glorious sight, Jesus arriving in the clouds, to Rapture unto Himself, those of us who were alive at the time.  All of us saved from the coming Tribulation.

The Baptist churches that I attended believed that Jesus was coming again.  Some of my very dear friends, many who are quite elderly now and others who are now dead,  just knew that the Lord would come in their lifetime.  I prayed earnestly that it would be the case.  I could think of nothing more exciting than to witness such an event and for that matter, get out of dodge before all hell broke loose.

I sometimes wonder what some of those nay-saying Christians think about my former prayer life and its authenticity.   Would they doubt it, or even mock it?  Meh, Bibles, prayer, study, research . . . so what?  If it was true, if you were really a Christian, you’d still be a Christian.  It’s impossible to try and help anyone understand.  I’d love to be understood but I know that there’s probably a better chance that Jesus will be back before I’d ever get that understanding.

In God’s Name

Has anyone seen on the news the footage of a woman who is videotaping an approaching tornado and doing spiritual warfare/rebuking prayers against it as it approaches?  It didn’t work.  The tornado hit hard and apparently her prayers were unable to turn the thing around or vanish it.  As I watched and listen to the story a rush of remembrance washed through me.  I use to buy into that kind of thing.

Here’s a small example of what spiritual warfare prayer is like:

I rebuke you in the name of Jesus Christ!  You will not hit our home.  I command you to turn left and not hit this community. 

And you say stuff like this over and over adding to it as you go.  The entire time  you are fighting in God’s name, the forces of evil and destruction.

You know, intellectually it is not difficult to move on from Christianity.  Emotionally it is, at least for me.  It’s not because I emotionally want or need it, it’s because emotionally I was wired for it.  And my beliefs and actions, reinforced those connections.  Emotional healing is not easy.  Laying down  and reinforcing new neurons and new connections is not easy.

I also heard a woman on the news mention that by the grace of God her home had not been destroyed.  She was helping another woman pack up what was left of her home that was hit by the tornado.  I guess God ran out of grace for those who were hit by the storm?

I only saw the rebuking prayer warrior on the news once but I’ve thought of her often.  I wonder if her faith in God and in her prayers was/is shaken?  Will this be the catalyst to get her to think outside her current mode of thinking, or will she just think that in this case, Satan was greater than God or that God used the tornado to awaken the U.S. to get back on their knees?  It may be though, that she puts it all aside and continues on reinforcing those old connections by not questioning anything at all.  Who knows?  Maybe it’s easier that way?