Tag: love

  • Reclaiming Joy, Peace, Hope and Love

    Reclaiming Joy, Peace, Hope and Love

    Someone once gifted me handmade Christmas decorations with the words joy, peace, hope, and love carefully stitched across the front.  Growing up in a family that had many Christmas traditions, I was familiar with candles, angels, and tinsel but never decorations that were words.  Shops then and now lean more towards snowflakes, reindeers, and Santa Claus, so I didn’t expect to see words there. 

    It got me thinking.  From a Christian context, I wanted to know why these four words and why not a bunch of others: like faith, grace, Jesus?

    It wasn’t until I started to research Christmas traditions that I discovered why we use these four words and why they are so significant at this time of the year.  Do you know why? 

    These words are connected to the tradition of Advent.  Some Christian churches who follow a liturgical calendar include this season called Advent, in the lead up to Christmas Day.  Advent is the Latin word for coming, arrival and birth.  Evidently, this season is one about remembering the birth of Jesus Christ and because he has already come, the anticipation of his second coming.  What I had forgotten was those four candles on the Christmas wreath in my childhood church, represented these four words.  Sure, wreaths have roots in folk traditions of Northern Europe, but the symbolism of each of these candles is worthy of reflection.  And the message behind these words is timeless.  I don’t know about you, but I believe everyone is seeking joy, peace, love, and hope. I am and do. Who better to find that, than God with us-Immanuel- Jesus Christ? 

    The reality is that if I possess any of these qualities at all, they seem to disappear when I get caught up in the expectations of Christmas celebrations and the end of year wrap-up. Hope might be the most tenacious, or then again, it has possibly morphed into wishful thinking.  Joy is the first to go, as I press on to meet the expectations and demands I place on myself this season.  Love of self and others is hanging by a thread, especially on a day when I dare brave the hustle and bustle of the shops in our summer heat.  Peace: well that went out the window when Joy walked out the door.    

    I am calling joy and peace to come back into our home and asking love and hope to stay. I am planning to start this with new Christmas decorations. The tired me, was going to skip them this year, and start fresh when my first grandchild is on the scene in 2021.  Besides, it was all feeling too hard to decide what I needed to spend money on; especially when I don’t particularly want Santa Claus or reindeers as centerpiece.  I want to reclaim the spirit of Christmas; and I have decided to give it a name; or names.  Centerpiece this year is peace, hope, love, and joy- in no specific order, and established in Jesus Christ- God with us.

    Photo by Alexandra Fuller on Unsplash

  • For the love of a pet

    For the love of a pet

    This is Frank.  He is a very affectionate mini dachshund . I call him my ‘grand-fur baby’, as he belongs to my future daughter-in-law. He is gorgeous. But then I’m a sucker for pets; especially cute dogs.

    I grew up in a family that always kept pets. We had both dogs and cats, chickens, guinea pigs, budgies and a cow. The latter was kept so we had milk, the chickens for eggs and the rest were just pets. I can recall many days feeding one pet or many as a daily chore.

    It seemed natural when I started married life to keep pets. First came the kitten, rescued from the storeroom of my workplace. Then came the pup that was to go to work with my tradie husband. Later on, when our children came along I got my first little, fluffy, white dog. Then, for reasons forgotten, we added Spiky the pet white rat… then a cockatiel, followed by a chicken.

    Before children, my husband and I travelled Australia for 6 months. My parents would pet-sit for us. But first, we had to relocate 2 dogs and a cat 4,600 kilometres. That meant a 3 day journey in summer heat by road in a wagon that was not air conditioned. Can you imagine? The back seat was down, as were the windows. The cat was sedated and lay in her basket, shoulder to shoulder with 2 dogs sprawled across the seat, also catching the breeze.

    Today our pets are softer. They, like us, prefer an air conditioned car and bedroom. The queen sized bed is a little wider than the old double bed; although I suspect no matter what size our current bed, the blue healer would take up the most space.

    We have buried 3 dogs and one cat, euthanised 1 rat, given away birds and lost another. I have lost track of chooks lost to old age, dogs, a fox and snakebite.

    No matter what shape or size or how cute, every pet holds a special place in our heart and memory. My favourite pet though is the dog. I am inclined to agree with this saying” A dog comes into our lives to teach us about love. They depart to teach us about loss. A new dog never replaces an old dog, it merely expands the heart.”

  • Is it possible to be kinder than God?

    Is it possible to be kinder than God?

    Somewhere along the way I have got confused about what love is and I have tried to be kinder than God! (@David Riddell)

    I am a slow learner.  I have to be reminded again and again how upside down and back to front I have got this loving thing.  I have subconsciously believed that because I have tried very hard to ‘love’ others they should reciprocate. And when they do not, I am left believing I am unlovable; so, I try harder to love them back in the hope that they might love me. This ‘love’ comes from neediness rather than out of abundance.   

    This love is more a counterfeit love than akin to God’s love.  God’s love is not a lopsided sentimental love; it is a love balanced with justice.  It is a love that does not mean granting another their every desire and it is balanced with consequences.

    Some of us in particular have a real problem with this. Many of us slip into this because we are women and have an innate maternal instinct.  Others have said it is a post-feminist issue, where we as women over function in our relationships which in turn creates under functioning men. As a parent, we help create young princes and princesses. How we love impacts how we function in our marriages, as a parent, as a colleague and how we function in the community and our churches. 

    This does not mean we stop caring for others but the problem is when we repeatedly do for others what they should do for themselves! This is actually not loving. In doing so we may also be protecting others from the consequences of their own faulty choices.  We can become a stumbling block to the other person’s maturity and unwittingly support their irresponsibility. 

    Over functioning can include mentally thinking for another by often reminding them of their functions and responsibilities.  Physically we may decide it is just easier to do it yourself so we end up doing everything from chores, to meal planning, to banking, shopping, organising and making appointments and even waking them up.  Emotionally, we are second guessing and counteracting in an effort to keep someone else from feeling a negative emotion. 

    When we do for others what they should really do for themselves we are over functioning or rescuing. As a result, we rob the other person of the responsibility of looking after themselves, the sense of accomplishment and competence they could hope to receive and the resulting sense of sufficiency and confidence. 

    Any wonder our loving feelings crumble and we become resentful and ignore our own hopes and dreams. None of these exemplify love.  This is not a sustainable love. It is not a love that can last. 

    God’s love is a perfect love; it is a deep abiding love that is also just and right.  If I; if we, are going to love out of abundance and not out of our own neediness, then we need to first let ourselves be loved by God.  How do we do that?  That is a question for another time.

    Photo by Jez Timms.  

    This blog post was adapted from a speech I gave on Valentine’s Day several years ago.  

    I would like to acknowledge the following sources that influenced my message and this blog:  

    * Living Wisdom by David Riddell

  • On loving a less than perfect mother on Mother’s Day

    On loving a less than perfect mother on Mother’s Day

    Today is Mother’s Day in Australia. The sentimental phrases about mothers started on Facebook about two weeks ago.  Instead of warm and fuzzy feelings I felt a deep sadness settle over me. Not just for my loss through my mother’s death six years ago, but for my loss during her life. I am ashamed that I have so few good memories of my Mum; hurt and disappointment seem to have got in the way. I want to honor mum; as I should. After all good girls honor their parents.  Why then am I struggling to do this?

    Many people loved my mum; including my siblings and I.  However, not everything was perfect behind closed doors.  Mental and emotional health was not something that was talked about when we were growing up nor was the impact on the children often considered. Even now I struggle to confess that my mother suffered from mental health issues.  I am still learning the impact this has had on my siblings and I.

    Growing up as the eldest of four children born within four years, I took on an idealistic and unrealistic mantle of the responsible one; the good girl.  I don’t know when I crossed the line and became responsible for my mother’s happiness and became the family’s peacekeeper?  I believe it had something to do with my mother’s struggle with anxiety and depression, my temperament and the dislike for conflict. What child does not want their mum to be happy and their parents to stop arguing?  As a teenager, I would often plead with her and retrieve a knife, a rifle or pills from her hands.  I would also clean the house first thing on a Saturday morning, before she could yell at us kids.  I did lots of things as an adult too to try to make my mum happy.  It feels like I could never quite get there. No matter what I did, it was never enough.

    At some stage I moved from wanting to make her happy to helping her to change and find happiness herself.  At the wise age of twenty-seven, I thought that if I could make changes then mum could too.  It was her GP that told me to let go of the mother I thought was inside and accept that this was my mother.  Sadly, I do not think I ever did this.  There was too much frustration in the way.  I struggled all my adult life wanting my mum to be somebody else and failed to accept her for who she was, flaws and all.  I think my sisters did this so much better than I. 

    I harboured frustrations, resentment and hurt for the loss of the mother that I would have liked to have had.  Sometimes it felt like she had an uncanny way of throwing back my fears and flaws when it seemed I was not good or responsible enough.  Shortly before her cancer diagnosis, Mum was unhappy with me because I had not spoken up in a family falling-out.  She punished me by not wishing me a happy birthday.  And she accused me of only doing my religious duty when several months later, I dropped off a gift and a card to her for Mother’s Day. I was trying so hard to please her and please my God by honouring her. It felt like I had failed.    

    I had put all my energy into pleasing her and others and pushed down or ignored my needs, my desires and my ideas.  It took me years to discover and accept who I am when I am not being the responsible one or the good girl.  This was and is not healthy for me or my relationships with others; including my mother. Forgiving my mum for not being perfect was essential to letting go.  Finding my voice has been an important part of my healing journey.

    Along the way, I have shed many tears in private and I have called out to Jesus to come and heal my very sore heart. I learnt to press into the pain, own my feelings and not stuff them down.   For someone that liked pleasing people; especially my mother, I had to get used to the feelings of being seen as the mean girl when I set boundaries; especially when I was used to the role of peacekeeper and one who usually rescues the situation.   That lesson did not come easily. Learning to express my needs requires honesty and can mean rejection; a feeling I have to downgrade. 

    Compassion and empathy for mum has come in waves.  It came at unscheduled moments. It came while watching Sandra Bullock’s character wrestle with her relationship with her mother in the movie “Divine Secrets of the Ya Ya Sisterhood”.  It comes when I recognise in myself similarities to mum as I age.  It came when reading a Brene Brown book and accepting ‘What if she was doing the very best she could?’

    When we found out mum was very sick, I dropped everything and loved my mum the only way I knew how; I did things for her.  I drove her six hundred kilometres to admit her into hospital. I often visited with her; sometimes giving Dad the opportunity to return home for a break and look after their home.  When she was released to come home to die, I drove to Brisbane to pick her up.  For the last few months, she was in palliative care at home, I bathed her and changed her sheets. I visited her most mornings and every afternoon to check in on her.  We never really talked about things she said.  Somehow, they were not important anymore.   

    I am learning to live with the sadness of a mother gone.  I am grateful for a loving God that is at work healing my sore heart and helping me to forgive and understand. My heart is encouraged knowing that mum loved each of her children, grandchildren and great grandchildren, as best she could. She loved being a mum. And I loved her.   Happy Mother’s Day Mum.