My Mother

my mother

Afraid, but hopeful.

Broken, but strong.

Beaten down, but still standing.

Striped of dignity, but noble and full of grace.

Ancient, but full of youth.

Doubting, but faithful and sincere.

Inconsistent, but unchanging.

Wounded but kind.

Forgiving and

forgiven.

My Mother.

My Crooked Heart

“There is a sacred quality to words.  They are not information but revelation.”

— Eugene Peterson

I believe every person is on a spiritual journey.  In as much as we are human, we are spiritual beings.  Pierre Teilhard De Chardin put it like this:   “We are not human beings on a spiritual journey. We are spiritual beings on a human journey.”

That has completely been my experience.  De Chardin wrote that everything is sacred because God is shown throughout creation.  My life might seem quite insignificant in the grand scheme of the cosmos, but  human endeavors are epiphanies of the reality of God’s presence.  Though we may, at different times in our life, walk toward or away from belief or what I call faith in an “other” we each walk a unique path of belief and disbelief.  This journey depends on the individual , the people who influence them, and their spiritual openness and experiences with God.

Organized religion, actually, has ruined the journey of many beautifully spiritual people who I have known.  It has hurt them.  Destroyed their fledgling hope in a power greater than themselves. Fortunately for me, organized religion has been a process that has been good, bad and indifferent but not completely horrible.

As a child

I quite easily and naturally believed in the God of John 3:16, the first Bible verse I memorized.  My parents very forthrightly and consistently did things like thanking God for our food.  They gave God credit for home, food, and health, and they knelt in supplication to God for their needs.  God was their source. They gave God all the credit for anything good and never blamed God for difficulties.  Strangely enough, in my childlike perception, they seemed to live well because of knowing God. We never wanted for anything, although we were never well off.  God took care of us.  Yes, I believed that.

In my teens, I found I couldn’t relate to the God that I heard about at church, a southern United Methodist congregation who gave people the gift of speaking on tongues, but not me.  Who was powerful, immediate and super-charged.   I was full of longing and unrequited need, but I never found whatever I was hoping for in those years.  I was never confident of my “salvation” in my teens.  I knew my crooked heart — my huge insecurities.  I knew I was a bad person, so how could any kind of smart God love me?

I was pretty confident that God was real, but I couldn’t accept that Jesus had died on the cross  just for me. No way!  I didn’t fully believe it until my forties.  Yeah, wow, that is a long time. Looking back I realize this means that I did not “believe” but then it was ritual that carried me along.  I found acceptance in the church, but not faith.

During those years my father was constantly yelling.  Arguing with my mom about every little thing; like us kids, or mom’s spending of money, the house being a mess, or our grades.  (When I say arguing with I really mean arguing at, because my mom never argued, rarely defended herself or her children and never fought back.)  He had a generous heart, but he also had this unresolved anger — his Achilles — and although he had a strong faith, a great influence with his life, he never managed to change that behavior or allow God to change him in that area.  This was irreconcilable to me.

(And then I think of the things I have such trouble giving up: my addictions, ….  Did I hold him to a higher standard?  An impossible one?  More on that later.)

Perhaps, but this became a hurdle for me spiritually that probably took thirty or more years for me to resolve within myself.  It hurt me.  I had trouble with the belief that God was all-powerful and could heal, because he never healed my Father of his anger addiction.  And what Dad was doing to us was destructive, and cruel, and just plain mean.   Dad would be apologizing for the destructiveness of his anger, but it was clearly not a true repentance.  I know what repentance means — it is a spiritual u-turn.  A changed behavior.  He never changed.  Some would say that he began to change in his late fifties and early sixties.  I did not see evidence of it, though I was spending less and less time with him.

This spiritual disconnect altered me and impaired my foundational sense of God.  God didn’t change Dad’s anger addiction …  Admittedly I have always been über sensitive — a harsh look from my father would crumble me into tears when I was little.  For years I was afraid to talk, to speak up in groups or pray aloud.  I don’t know how I made it through school.  Perhaps that was a factor in my parent’s frustrations, and my father’s anger, about why such a bright kid did poorly in school.  Early on, I think I was too scared to talk and later simply no longer cared or believed in myself enough.  And looking back over records I discovered that I wasn’t a bad student so it is amazing to me that I got the message that I wasn’t good enough, ever, academically or otherwise.

It’s a tangent, my academic success, but it’s also central.  Deep, deep down I still fight to believe I have good enough ideas, can express myself adequately, or should be trying to say anything unique.  Down there, in the scary place of self-love or in my case -loathing, I have always hated myself. That’s no exaggeration.  In part, why I succumbed to alcoholism, to depression, to constant fear & anxiety.

What changed?  What dragged my sorry ass out of that morose place?  I can say I began listening for God’s voice because I needed to hear it so badly.  When I started listening, God spoke and when I responded (i.e. obeyed) my crooked heart was encircled by God.  It’s still crooked but God continues to  smooth out the roughness and my life is different.  This is an almost daily thing.

In those early years

I was guided down my spiritual path  by a youth pastor (Julian “Hule” Goddard) that helped by answering each annoying question I had about matters of faith. I had many doubts.  I’d sit behind him as he drove the bus on various trips and ask all my questions.  He conveyed to me that they were alright to ask and that he loved my questions!

A love, passion, desire, even craving for the scriptures started then and has been with me as long as I can remember.  I have always loved looking up original meaning and intent and when I learn those things it is as if something inside me grows. A spiritual person was developing inside me even then.  One that got stronger each time I studied.  It is difficult even for this wordsmith to find the words to express this but a similar experience happens when I pray.  And The the combination of prayer and study of the Bible, for me, are transformational.  I am a different person as a result.

And then I grew up and

I never felt farther from God than I did in the thirteen years that I worked at a Christian organization.  I would say my faith was conjecture.  I saw evidence of others’ faith and believed in that, but not in a God that has personal encounters with me.  Even as I floundered I felt dead inside.  I was afraid, working for Christians, when I knew there was no evidence in my life that I had a personal relationship with Christ.  I was afraid to pray.  I even refused to pray with my husband when we were first married, though I never said truthfully why.  Knowing my background, of being controlled all those years, he wisely didn’t insist though I know that it created sadness for him.

I knew nothing about addiction until my thirties when I began to see the results of alcohol addiction in my family.  I wasn’t cognizant of it before that, though a friend mentioned that he was the third gen in an alcoholic family and chose not to drink.  I was curious about, that but didn’t give it a lot of thought because I rarely drank in my twenties or the early years of marriage.   It was when we began to socialize with other couples in our neighborhood that I found there was always a bottle of wine (or five) involved, mixed drinks, open bar which proved to be more than I could resist.

My parents regularly had wine at the dinner table and I would have a glass, but in those days I found that wine made me feel “funky” or down.  At that time I didn’t want more.  I usually regretted drinking at all having a naturally melancholy tendency and didn’t need any help.  But it was always available and one’s glass was never empty at my parent’s place in Colorado.

We visited there for my parent’s 40th wedding anniversary.  It was a horrible weekend for the entire extended family, with a huge altercation breaking out, on our last night together.  My dad announced that he was “giving up the dream of moving to Beijing, China” because the pollution in the city would have been dangerous for my mom. She has a condition called Sarcoidosis of the lungs.  Someone made the mistake (I’m willing to say it was me, but honestly I don’t remember) of saying that mom had given up her dreams over and over for him for the forty years of their marriage. Dad went ballistic that we weren’t more empathetic to his feelings, a long argument broke out and then, finally, dad pouted shamelessly for the rest of the visit.  He made everyone else miserable which was his mode in this type of situation.  When I finally apologized, at Tom’s encouragement and in order to make peace, dad told me I didn’t apologize “correctly” for him (probably because I was saying it with bile in my mouth) and he was still angry.

finding my voice

I guess that story is important because it was fairly typical.  We did something that “made” him angry and then we end up apologizing.  I had so much I needed to say to my father.  I wanted to tell him he had gone too far this time.  I wanted this to be the excuse for walking away from him.  For saying STOP.  I wanted to say that he had gone too far and I couldn’t see him any more.  But Tom’s encouragement to apologize, instead of what I wanted to do, was compelling (and right). And I was not very strong, so I did.  At some point in my life I knew I would have to stand up to my father.  But not that day.

But I never did do that before he died.  I guess, no I KNOW my poetry is a small but important stance against what he did, even with him dead.  My way of telling my part of the story.  And in writing, I am being healed.  Slowly I am peeling away the layers of hurt by writing down my experiences.  Some day I may come to a place where I find myself well.  In a way, I am afraid of that day.  My need makes me open.  My weakness makes me stronger because I can depend on someone greater than myself.

I did tell my father, finally, the day before his brain  surgery how much he had hurt me over my life.  (I write about that here.) I feel I got the one genuine moment of grief, expressed by him, when I did that.  I know from reading his notebook, that he felt a great deal of pain from what I shared.  But doing that made it possible for me to serve him and my mom, as he was dieing, to care for him and to speak genuinely and yet respectfully at his funeral.

and then I was a falling down drunk

During those years I found myself drinking too much but it just resulted in stumbling to bed and dealing with a hangover the next morning.  How may Sundays did I sit in church totally hungover, in pain spiritually, emotionally and physically, and  full of remorse. Too many to count.

Over the years, as I was dealing with a major depression, I began to drink more and more.  I didn’t like being a stay-at-home mom, I missed the purposefulness of work, and I got depressed in a serious way. Ironically, in the recovery period from depression I started drinking more.  With alcohol being a depressant, this was seriously unwise.  But when are drunks wise?

Five o’clock couldn’t come soon enough!  And over time, the occasional glass became a shared bottle three or four times a week.  That led to drinking every day, sometimes harder stuff, like Gin or Vodka which can be so easily disguised with something innocuous.  And  we began hosting parties, a lot of parties, in those years.

About the time my father got sick, and then died, I started smoking.  I got my nose pierced.  I wasn’t reliving adolescence but rather starting to express myself for the first time.  I don’t know how it is all connected but it is.  And smoking and drinking became a daily pattern.  Neither are wrong in and of themselves, in my opinion, just ways of coping that were unhealthy.   I became more attracted to my habits than is easy to admit.

A slow recovery, a melting of my heart occurred as we began to attend a different church.  At this new church I would hear talks from the pulpit that I made sense, were real in an intellectual and mystical way.   I felt like this kind of faith I might be able to get my heart around.  I was in Bible studies with women that kept me searching, seeking and through that I didn’t completely lose my meager faith.  Over time, in a process that I can’t completely explain except to say that it was beautiful and profound I became open.  I was hurt, and lost, and self-medicating.  From that broken, openness God began to reveal himself to me.

I carried tons of pain through out my life — hard childhood, deep, deep insecurities, being a really lousy step-mother, being a perceived failure academically and not doing anything significant with my life, being a broken lover, a sarcastic and mean sister, I essentially hated my parents and yet was profoundly dependent on them even working for my dad for a number of years, my first experience of falling in love had ended in rejection.  I had concluded I was unlovable.  Bottom line, I had no idea how badly I hated myself.   And I thought God somehow hated me.

But I can see God’s big and loving hands on my life: the healer, the potter, the painter, the creator was at work on me. I know that I would not have learned the things that I have about myself and about God if I had stayed at work.  Work filled the hole most of the time.  And I replaced work with shopping (another story for another day), and other things along the way and then finally alcohol.

For forty years,

I equated all the pain I had experienced with God’s care for me and it didn’t feel very good.  I was hurt and angry. And ready to tell God to f-off!  Well, being a drunk is pretty much the last place you’d expect to meet God, but turns out Jesus hung out with people like me.  He kind of preferred the messed up.  My story changed at that point to one of personal redemption.

I was experiencing postpartum depression, I was coming off being a workaholic to being a full-time nursing mom of three in diapers.  My identity issues which had trailed after me all my life flared their ugly head and all of a sudden I felt irrelevant.  When dad got sick with brain tumors I was trying to figure out if I should go on an antidepressant which was a heart wrenching decision and at the same time I discovered I was pregnant.  I flew off to Colorado to be with my parents, knowing I was pregnant and clinically depressed.  I did finally go on the medication.  And for four days I considered an abortion.  Other than feeling I was an unfit mother, I don’t know where the thoughts of aborting the baby came from but six weeks later the baby self-aborted.  A miscarriage.  In the end dad passed away and my mother got help at Hazelton.

things got ugly-er

And I was back with the problems I had before it all started.  Still depressed, confused, lonely, insecure and angry.  Still drinking daily and waking up hung over.  I began to have blackouts after being in settings where the alcohol was flowing.  Having a family history of alcoholism, I have learned, means 1 in 4 are likely to become an alcoholic.  So, I got it and it meant that I did NOT  have that internal meter most people have that says you should slow down, or stop now…  After two drinks, … I go blank.  No conscience.  No internal meter.  No memory of past bad experiences.  No care.  Not one.  Nada.  Just the next drink.

I recall one party where we had colored rubber bands to mark our glass.  I thought it would be funny to add a rubber band for each glass of wine we drank, so I did.  At nine bands, Tom told me it was time to go home.  I remember wondering why?  We just got here. Was I behaving strangely?  When we got home I passed out in our bedroom, which my kids saw, and vomited all over the bed.

Believe it or not, but even then I was denying my problem.  The next day, I would feel bad and have remorse, have those “I never do that again” thoughts or internal conversations.   But, I couldn’t stop myself.  It was just a matter of time.

I don’t think my drinking problem would have gotten so far if I had a full-time job.  I hardly drank when I was working.  And I do believe looking back that the opportunity for ‘abuse’ came with too much time on my hands, boredom, the stress of little ones under foot, the genetic propensity, the almost manic depression that I was getting help for at the same time.  But also the pit in my soul, that hurt so badly, which I was trying to ignore.  To cover up.  To make go away.

I thank Tom and

I am grateful that I had the last ten years to slow down enough to actually know and feel my feelings ; to stop achieving long enough to realize how badly I felt about myself.  When I was working I was a maniacal over-worker.  If I had a slow day I would get this crazy black cloud over me that I had to run from and so I just kept running.  Doing.  Achieving.  I stopped feeling.   I stopped believing in the purpose of my job.  I stopped experiencing God.   My faith was so disintegrated at that point that I remember feeling I had better leave, before someone finds out what a hypocrite I am.  I was constantly fearing that someone would pull the wool off and I’d be revealed for the fake I knew I was.

A part of that while I was working at InterVarsity was allowing  pettiness and bitterness to dominate me.  I overworked people.  I knew there were people on my team who were hurting and I didn’t know how to help them, so I didn’t.  I just took on new things, projects, areas of influence and control, because like my father that is where I felt competence.  I was too proud to ask for help.  And the few times I did ask for help, I was so filled with bitterness and anger that it is no wonder no one could hear me, understand the issues and resolve anything. I disparaged those that I felt were my competitors.  I grew bitter.  I allowed anger to dominate me.  What a hypocrite.

I stopped listening for God and wasted so much time with my dark heart issues.  Strangely I am glad I fell on my face cause when I looked up God was there .  I have sought forgiveness. And I am slowly coming alive spiritually, mentally, emotionally, and in a mystical way I am finding my voice.  For the first time in my life, as I write I see myself for who I really am and I am being healed from the pain I have carried all my life.  I have a voice.  I create things.  I create beauty in my garden, in my photography, in my words.

For each of us, every day is an opportunity to step toward God, and the life of the spirit, or away.

Even with my belief , I have days when I turn away. And a shadow creeps over me, a shiver of loneliness and a wisp of memory darkens my heart.  Then, swiftly I turn back and I am comforted.  Then I am able to express my creativity, to grow things, to ponder, to write.

And I know God is with me.  And I write this, and other things, to be free.  And to help others become free.

Be not judges of others, and you will not be judged: do not give punishment to others, and you will not get punishment yourselves:  [make others free, and you will be made free. ]

Luke 6:37

Is my story one of faith and disbelief, alcoholism, dysfunctional families, or self-loathing or  – love?  I would have to say it is all of those things.  I set out wanting to write about how my faith made it possible for me to give up my addictions. Ironically I had to have that addiction in order to restore my faith.  But this story is about so much more.  How I became a person of faith and just a little about why I believe.  It doesn’t feel like I have been clear, because it’s a story that is difficult to write  linearly since it wasn’t lived that way.  And is much easier to talk about so if that interests you, let me know.  And most of all, I have to say that this God I found, or who found me, this God is so good, so full of love for us, that all the crooked spaces are can be filled.  God will fill you too if you ask.

Be well,

Melody

I write poetry and they are found here. Read them for my full story – there are about fifty poems there which I have written off and onsince 2005.  Someday perhaps I’ll get around to organizing them and getting them printed.  Anyone interested in publishing?

days without god (a poem)


days without god

Originally uploaded by M e l o d y

she walked away from hope,
traveled the road of unkept promises.
and god was far away.

days without number

she ran down that road,
of fleeting pleasures
and god turned away
unable to see
unable to be with her.

tho she can never deny going,
after a time, she turned
and walked back.
she was broken and bleeding.

the moment she turned back
she felt the presence
and then, god forgave.

melody harrison hanson 3-aug-2007

this poem is a metaphor for the choices, paths we choose without acknowledging God.

You Change My Dreams (a poem)

All of my life, and even in my dreams

I find myself searching.

Dream after dream – night after night – year after year I find I am

often longing.  Longing for love.

Today, as I heard myself once again asking why,

I see that you can fill that life long yearning.

You are the seeker.  The changer.

The one who transforms.

You fill me with hope.  You are

The healer.

You long for me.  You change my dreams.

May you find me

day after day – night after night – year after year – even in my dreams

full of longing for you.  May it be so.

Written 3/21/2010 in response to/during a sermon by Chris Dolson on Luke 19 “Jesus Inspires Change”

linger :: slow and sober (a poem)

The main expression of my spirituality has been this little church that I go to, and my sobriety.  The path of recovery and—I’m a terrible Christian and meditating is very hard for me, and I do it.  I do it badly, like I do a lot of things.  I believe in doing things badly.  I believe in listening to the—what calls you from your heart and your spirit and if you do it badly, like learning to dance, you do it badly or you’re going to kick yourself when you grow old and you meant to do it.  — Anne Lamott.

Listening to my heart, even if done badly

is better than never having done it.  My heart is glad

to be sober.  When I consider how many mornings I woke

with a hangover present

and the headaches. Dread and regret were loudly

pounding on my soul.  God woke me up, as he has done so many times.

Asked me

what was most important.  My hunger.

The black hole of fear and isolation?

I knew I wanted something.  But not this.  Broken-hearts are so unimpressed

with being sober.  But finally

it was, in the end, better to let go.  To know

that I was awake.  Loved.

And I remain with him.  My need.  I give it all.

I look for beauty now and find it.  Some day I will stop

searching.  For now I am just with him.  And it is enough.

to linger.

I don’t know. (a poem)

I don’t know, oh, there is so much I don’t know.

I don’t know if I will ever feel good, really good.

But I know I’m whistling while I work, unbidden and that’s some small joy.

I don’t know the lyrics to most songs,

but I know I love to sing.

I want the music on all the time.  No matter whether it’s ska, indie, classical, rap, reggae, world or even opera.

It’s what makes me feel safe, the sounds.

And books they make me feel alright.

I know I like order, but I”m messy.  I’ve never learned routines.

I don’t know if I’d change if I knew how.  But I know I like order.

I don’t know if the money will last the month.  Or what we’re having for dinner.

But I know we are here together.

I know, you’ll come home tonight and every night.  And I know you will always have me.

I don’t know if my sister will talk to me or if I’ll ever meet my nephew.

I don’t know what family means any more.  No patriarch, no matriarch.

I don’t know what will happen to us all, what I am supposed to do about it.  I just don’t know that at all.

I don’t know my parent’s history, only the results on our lives.

I don’t know why my dad was so angry,

but I know I stopped it at the door of my home.

I know I have that control and yet I know I’m not the One in control.

I don’t know if what I believe is true, the Truth.

But I know it gets me through.

I don’t know who I’d be without that belief and so I choose to believe.

I don’t know why I had children, but I know that I wouldn’t have found myself without them.

I know I am becoming the mother they need and I am so grateful that I am entrusted with their minds and hearts.

I don’t know what I can give them, but if it were just one thing

I would give each one

confidence.

I wake up most every day scared.

I want them to face the world bravely.  That I know.

Most days I don’t know what I don’ t

Know.  But today, I am sure that these things are true.

I love and I am loved.

I am a mother and that is the  most serious thing I will ever do.

I am profoundly aware of how my parents made me who I am.

I am undaunted.

In the end I don’t have to know as long as I keep whistling and choosing to believe.

My Secrets (a poem)

When I was a small girl I loved heart-shaped ice cream bars, story books read aloud,

and running barefoot all summer long.  I remember back scratches and hugs after bad dreams.

I believed the world was good.  I knew nothing

of sorrow or regret; that someday I would need to forgive.

As I grew I began to see my father was never satisfied and he was afflicted by a secret rage.

Mother grew sad and afraid, there was no-one to tell; no-one who could help.  My world began

to crumble; secrets became bigger than life.

I discovered I could disappear, hiding from him I’d read a book all day long.

And later, hide

in work, shopping or a glass of wine.

Just like Mom, it was safer to be invisible, silent, placid.

I used whatever I could find to make the crushing sadness stop.


After years and years of hiding, love found me.  I began to write, to create, to grow things

and finally to heal.  Then I found my voice.

By telling this story I would flourish and reach, timidly at first for forgiveness.

At nearly forty I accepted that I was the one Jesus loved.  I never believed

that could be true.  You can’t be cruel to a person and share that truth.

My secret life of sorrow and lament;  the constant melancholy has become something else.

Though I still cannot understand why my father was angry, why life was so hard.

Today, in the early morning quiet, I know who I am now matters most.

I remember, which hurts.  I forgive, which heals.

When your grief overwhelms and possibilities are gone, what you choose then matters.

Somehow love found me, but I chose to receive it.

Bad things will happen, I can’t stop them.

In choosing Jesus and hope, I have a world of possibilities ahead.

In choosing to forgive, I live.

by Melody Harrison Hanson.   https://logicandimagination.wordpress.com

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A World of Possibilities (my poem edited from “When Life Was a Bad Dream”)

When I was a little girl I loved heart shaped ice cream bars, storybooks,

and running barefoot all summer long.

I remember back scratches and hugs after bad dreams.

When I was a little girl, swinging, playing happily I had no thought for the future.

I believed my parents loved me and each other; they would never hurt anyone.

I believed the world was good and safe; I couldn’t conceive of sorrow or regret.

I didn’t know that some day I would need to forgive.

I began to understand that some Daddy’s rage and are never satisfied;

that Mommy’s can be sad and afraid, and that children are a problem.

I learned that the world was scary.

I began to wonder if this would be the fight that ended everything,

their secrets exploding the world I knew.

If this time she would sink down so far she might not come back; like Alice in Wonderland

shrinking to a place I couldn’t find.

When I was older I discovered I could find that place myself.  Sometimes I would hide

in bed with a book all daylong.  And later, much later, when I got so used to hiding

from my pain, I would hide in alcohol, or work, or shopping.

I would disappear into a crowd of friends and a glass of wine.

Whatever I could find to make the sadness stop.

It was safe to be invisible, silent, and placid.  I began to hide, just like Mom.

After years and years of hiding, I was finally coaxed out into daylight by love.

I began to write, to create beauty, to grow things.

This was how I would learn to forgive.

I began to consider that I was the one Jesus loved;

the Jesus I never knew.  You see, when someone cruel tells you about Jesus,

you can’t believe that God would really love you.

And if Jesus did, why did he allow years of lost days and nights?

Sorrow.  Melancholy.  Lament.

That mystery, I have considered for years.  And years.

Why was my father so angry?  Why was my life so difficult?

Here’s the thing. It happened.

What I have learned is that who I have become is important.

And so I sit in the early morning darkness,

In the quiet of this beautiful new life, remembering.

It happened, the past.  It hurts to remember.

When life is most terrifying, when your grief overwhelms,

when your possibilities are gone, what you choose matters.

Somehow, I found love.  Or love found me.  Either way it’s good!

And bad things will happen.  I can’t stop them.

We make a world of possibilities for our children and ourselves.

In choosing hope,

choosing the life that Jesus offers,

choosing to forgive,

I will live.

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When Life was a Bad Dream (a poem)

When Life was a Bad Dream

When I was a little girl, swinging, playing happily I had no thought for the future.
Children live in the now.   And believe.
I believed my parents loved me and each other; they would never hurt anyone.
I believed the world was good and safe, even as I couldn’t conceive of sorrow or regret.
I didn’t know that someday

I would need to understand my parents and forgive.

When I was a little girl I loved heart shaped ice cream bars and storybooks,
and running barefoot all summer long.  I remember back scratches, and hugs after bad dreams,
and I remember a sense of wonder about life.
I began to understand, though,

that Daddy’s get very angry,
that Mommy’s can be sad and afraid,
and that children are a problem.

I learned that the world was scary,
even as I couldn’t conceive of bad things happening to me.
Then I began to wonder

in my confusion.  Wondering
if this would be the fight that ended everything.  If this time she would sink
down so far she might not come back.  Like Alice in Wonderland
shrinking to a place I couldn’t find.
And then, I wanted to go with her to that sad, safe place of no return.

When I was older I discovered I could find that place myself.  Sometimes I would hide
in bed with a book all daylong.  And later, much later, when I got so used to hiding
from my pain, I would hide in alcohol, or work, or shopping.
Whatever I could find to make the sadness stop.  I was being crushed by it.
I had no hope and never realized life offered possibilities.
I would disappear into a crowd of friends and a glass of wine.
It was safe to be invisible, silent, and placid.
I began to hide, just like Mom.

After years and years of hiding,
I was finally coaxed out into daylight by my husband’s love.
The sun felt warm, the world was a place of promise.  And in time, I found
I could hear the birds, taste and smell again, and popping into my head
were opinions, feelings, and judgments.  Sometimes they would erupt out of me
shocking me and those around.

I began write.  To create

beauty, to grow things.
At first I didn’t want to admit this story.  But I had hidden for so long, denied

what truly occurred.
I knew, telling this tale was a part of forgiving.

It was then, I began to consider that I was the one Jesus loved;
the Jesus I never knew.  You see, when someone cruel tells you about Jesus,

you can’t believe that God would really love you.

And if Jesus did, why did he allow

forty years of lost days and nights?

Sorrow.  Melancholy.  Lament.

That mystery I have considered for years.  And years.  I asked

why was my father so angry?  Why was my life so      very      difficult?

And will life ever be easier?  Here’s the thing.

If it didn’t happen that      way.  To      me.  I wouldn’t be Me.
What I have learned is that who I have become is important.
And so I sit in the early morning darkness,
In the quiet of this beautiful new life,  remembering.
It happened, the past.  It hurts,
to remember.  And to say out loud

that fear was my life story.  I was Fear.

I close my eyes to look back more clearly.  What I see
is a fusion of good and bad, there was laughter and there were tears.

The jumble of heartache, worry

even terror became an argument for hate.  But sitting here I know
when life is most terrifying, when your grief overwhelms,
when your possibilities are gone

what you choose matters.

Somehow, I found love.  Or love found me.  Either way it’s good!
We scratch each others’ itches.  We smell and taste life as fully as we can.

And allow our little ones
to run freely, some might say wildly.  But we are exuberantly facing life,
believing, and mostly living      in      now.
Bad things will happen.  I can’t stop them.
We make a world of possibilities for our children and ourselves.
And it is in the choosing Hope,
Choosing the Life that Jesus offers, it is in the doing

differently

that I know I will forgive.   And I will live.

being right isn’t everything (a poem)

Growing up, I thought being right

meant getting my way.  It never occurred to me to be otherwise.

My father always won, so it took a long time to learn my father might not win.

When I finally let go of my ideas and the argument was over,

there would be peace and quiet — at least for a little while.

My father

was one of those people for whom to be right was his last breath,

his complete and final concept of himself.  It gave his life meaning.

I wonder what was done to him?

What terrible memory dogged and rattled him?   What was he afraid would happen if he stopped

for just a minute? Something was chasing him all my life and years and years before

commitments, kids and a wife entered in.

When they told him he was dying I thought

finally!   He might stop running.   And all the trips to help

with doctors and medicines, the chemo and radiation that stole his energy

and memories,

that stole my name, still

cancer gave me the gift of sitting, finally time to simply be

with him.  But rather than rest, accepting

he had mere months to live

he still thought he could win.  What was he thinking?  In those last days

the cancer broke him.

Finally, something got the best of all his striving, his knowing.  Being right.

Whatever it was that chased and tortured him — I will never know.

I thought being right would feel better than this.

Perhaps that is why he died still believing

he would live.

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Forgive like you have been forgiven – 70×7

Description unavailable
Image by M e l o d y via Flickr

“It is not easy to forgive,…but bitterness is corrosive. Like a container filled with salt, it will destroy everything because the Lord cannot forgive us if we cannot forgive others. Life is wonderful if we let God heal us.

I am thinking and mulling about forgiveness and a poem I have been asked to write.  I have never written a poem this way, so I’ve been anxious about it.  Part of the problem is that God has kicked my butt on the topic of forgiveness and I’m learning a mile a minute.

Some of the prose I wrote earlier on my blog were only the beginning.  Who knew!  It’s a difficult but good experience and I look forward (that doesn’t seem to be the right word) to seeing the outcomes in the form of a poem. (I do not envy preachers, as whatever topic you are preaching on the Lord would be convicting you about in your own life.)  I have been given several opportunities lately to ponder and carry out (or not – we always have the choice) the act of mercy.  The act of forgiving.

Sometimes we fail.  Sometimes the things we struggle with from our past seem bigger than that seemingly puny thing – the act of forgiving.  I think it’s a strange thing and it is not a human act.  I can intellectually decide that I want to forgive my father because it would be good for me and I believe in it out of religious conviction.  But it is only in that miraculous moment that it becomes something.  I choose, God works and God’s timing is unknowable.  We obey, we open our heart, we clear our mind, we “say” to God ‘take this x, y, and z because I’m sick and tired of it’ and in some incredible, unknowable, magical, miracle it is done.

The power of this miracle in my life — in my faith, relationships and personal health has changed me as a person.  How forgiveness has changed you?

This is not my typical way of writing a poem.  My poems erupt out of the experiences of my life.  This thoughtfulness and care is good and difficult.

70×7. Unimaginable in some situations.

I will continue to write and see what comes.  I am hoping a poem, but we’ll see.

Here’s a link to something else I’ve written about forgiveness recently which you may have read.

The quotation above is from an incredible article I read on the Faith & Leadership website at Duke University. A description and an excerpt is below.

After her daughter was kidnapped by the Lord’s Resistance Army in Uganda, Angelina Atyam realized that her mission was not just to secure the child’s release, but to forgive her captors and work for peace and reconciliation.

by Sherry Williamson

Sevens surface as a motif throughout the transformation of “Mama Angelina” from a soft-spoken nurse-midwife and mother of six to an international activist seeking the release of all Uganda’s abducted children.

Atyam’s daughter was among an estimated 35,000 youth, some as young as 6, that the Ugandan government believes were abducted by the LRA during nearly 20 years of fighting. From 1987 until a ceasefire was signed in 2006, the LRA used children as human shields in battles with government troops. Boys were forced to become soldiers; girls were enslaved as “wives” to rebel leaders.

The path Atyam pursued to negotiate the children’s release — and to further peace and reconciliation within her country — was inconceivable for many other parents, but she was resolute. Guided by the Lord’s prayer, she and other parents of abducted children began to pray for forgiveness of the rebel soldiers.

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[Lenton Series] Winter Slowly Recedes (A poem)

WINTER SLOWLY RECEDES

by Melody Harrison Hanson, March 8, 2010

As winter slowly recedes

And sunshine makes certain promises,

I find myself wistful which is improbable, to be sure.

I am grateful for a long cold hibernation.

For the unlikely beauty of the frosty, brisk days.

The blue, icy nights that were endured.

I reflect on what didn’t come.

The monster, the unwelcome and frequent enemy.

I did- not- sink.  I did- not- fall- down.  I did- not, oh no!

Yes, I have returned to spring

enduring, resolute and full.

Able.

Even so, I am

More and more dependent on the One that came.

Who lost everything.

Who went to the dark, cold and frightening places

For me.

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