Sunday, February 5, 2017

Conundrum

Alright, disease update—that sounds fun, doesn’t it? Funny, I’ve shied away from talking about my disease for so long; shied away from referring to it as a disease, even. It used to be sort-of a side note in my life but unfortunately, right now it seems like a defining aspect.

Anyway, I’ve felt like crap for a while now and by a while, I mean ten months. For reals.  Turns out that Valley Fever on top of MS will kick your tushy.  And the not feeling well has just gone on and on and I’ve been grappling with the question of, what if this is just the new normal?  And I’ve had some MRIs done and I saw five different doctors in January, trying to answer that question.

I received good news and bad news.  The good news is that the Valley Fever is finally improving. The bad news is that the MRIs showed three new lesions.  And my neurologist wants to switch my medication. And I’m scared. And I’m pissed. And that’s why I’m writing. 

I really don’t want to tell any of you about any of this but I do want to figure out where God is in it all and if I can, that’s what I want to share.

So, I’m scared because the two choices of medicines that my doctor proposed look, on paper, like nightmares. Risky. Terrifyingly so.  And rather than switch, I want to bargain with God. Make a deal that if I just live a better life, maybe he could heal me.  I just was teaching the kids about what a conundrum is the other day: a problem that has no satisfying solution; this appears to be a good example.

And I’m pissed.  Pretty much at everybody.  I’m angry with my friends for not understanding—though I haven’t shared much about it.  I’m angry at my mom for not knowing what a lesion is eight years after diagnosis—even though I don’t fully understand the disease. I’m angry with myself for not taking better care of myself on a regular basis; at my body for betraying me.  And at God? I don’t know.  I did whisper-scream at him, in the bathtub, through sobs, the other day that I didn’t like Him. And then I spent the rest of the weekend asking forgiveness even though I knew He already had given it.

I really don’t think I’m mad that I have this disease. I think I’m mad because it requires that I trust Him.  And He scares me and I do feel angry when I think of a friend who lost a child and when I think about Job or Abraham and Isaac, which were all the things I was accusing Him of in the privacy of my bathroom, through tears.  Because I know there are no guarantees here.  No promises of an easy life—in fact, there’s a guarantee of the opposite.  A surety that we will suffer in this life.  And I kind of don’t want to suffer.  But more than that, I don’t want my suffering to affect others.  That’s the thing.  I have these children. I have this husband.  I have plans on how my mothering and wifehood should look and it does not include a disease.

But what if I don’t like God but I love Him?  And somehow, right now, that’s enough?  I need it to be.  The pastor went through Romans 8 today and He said everything I needed to hear.  And he brought up Abraham and Isaac and he proposed something I’d never considered.  What if God asked Abraham to sacrifice his son to prove to Abraham how much he loved God.  I’ve always thought it was God wanting to prove to Himself in this sort-of narcissistic way how much Abraham loved him but actually, God already knew.


So what if, in my life, God isn’t throwing this stuff at me to see if I’ll love Him through it but to show me that I will.  I can’t say I understand that concept completely but I do find it comforting and worth meditating on as I continue this journey. Things change.  I’m not in control. So I might as well get out of the way and trust.

2 comments:

  1. I found this on my private journaling blog from August 2014. It's still very real today, and I want my children to know.
    Matthew 6:16-18
    16 Moreover when ye fast, be not, as the hypocrites, of a sad countenance: for they disfigure their faces, that they may appear unto men to fast. Verily I say unto you, They have their reward.
    17 But thou, when thou fastest, anoint thine head, and wash thy face;
    18 That thou appear not unto men to fast, but unto thy Father which is in secret: and thy Father, which seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly.

    -*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-

    In my acquaintance circle is a women my age that tragically and abruptly lost her husband a couple months ago. She has never complained to me nor ask why would Heavenly Father allow such pain. Instead, when I see her, she smiles. She takes care of herself, and she always looks beautiful. She does not show her pain.

    I am still dealing with the reality that I will always have an autoimmune disorder. Pain and fatigue will always be on my daily agenda. As I visit new doctors, we continue to add more problems to my list.

    I wanted people to know my pain. I wanted their love and support, however, I feared I was appearing like I was always complaining. I did not want my burden to be my friends and family's burden.

    I did a google search for murmur.

    I found "Murmur Not" by Neal A. Maxwell. If I was looking for a partner to commiserate, I was looking in the wrong spot. Instead, I was gently reprimanded.

    "A basic cause of murmuring is that too many of us seem to expect that life will flow ever smoothly, featuring an unbroken chain of green lights with empty parking places just in front of our destinations!"

    "Perhaps when we murmur we are unconsciously complaining over not being able to cut a special deal with the Lord. We want full blessings but without full obedience to the laws upon which those blessings are predicated."

    How can one love God, but not trust His plan? Or not trust His timing? Instead of criticizing God's plan, we must develop our patience. Do not let our murmurs drown out our spiritual signals.

    Every morning I will still have to convince myself to put on my happy face and silence my murmuring. I pray that my lips may be closed, so my eyes can be opened.

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  2. Thank you for sharing your heart, Ruth.

    ReplyDelete