Showing posts with label Forgiveness and Restoration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Forgiveness and Restoration. Show all posts

Saturday, October 4, 2014

The Talk: ANGER!

This transcript is the original that I wrote for my talk on anger this past weekend. I am sharing it here for your perusal.
In 1994, I began working for the Arizona Department of Corrections. After 19 years of service, I retired last September. No, I wasn't a Corrections Officer, I was the Warden’s Secretary – Clerical Goddess was the term I liked to use. In 2000, I successfully competed for and promoted to the Education Department and became a Librarian to the inmate population.

I loved my job working with the inmates. Like all jobs there were good times and there were bad times. I was known by officers and the administration and being “spot on” concerning the knowledge and application of policy and procedure. I became the “go to person” when there were questions surrounding policy and procedure for both inmates and staff.

In 2002, our 22 year old son became one of two defendants in a highly publicized and controversial case in our community. It was front page news in the local newspaper that morning. I remember reading the article and I felt a chill run down my spine. I knew, I knew my son was involved, even though no names were mentioned in the article. A mother’s intuition? Perhaps. I tore into his bedroom and woke him from sleep screaming at him, “Tell me this isn't you, tell me!” as I threw the newspaper on his bed.

He tried to assure me it wasn't him. By this time he was quite adept at deceiving his father and me. I wanted to believe him so badly, but my heart told me otherwise.

As the case progressed the next time it appeared in the newspaper, again on the front page, his name was listed as well as the other defendant’s. When I arrived at work that day, I entered the Yard Office and all conversation stopped and the officers avoided eye contact. I was crushed. I gathered up the library books, the mail and inmate letters, but before I left, I turned to my co-workers and said, “If you read today’s newspaper, you realize my son is in some serious trouble and will probably be serving prison time. Here is what I want you to know: I love my son, I am deeply grieved that he has made bad choices, but I want you to know that I am still the same Tamara that you've always known. I still follow policy and procedure and will continue to do so. I am hurting beyond belief and sometimes I may need you to come along side and put your hand on my shoulder or give me a hug.” My co-workers did indeed circle around me and hugged me and encouraged me.

In June of 2003, my son was sentenced to 2.5 years in the Arizona Department of Corrections. The other defendant served no actual prison time. Somehow that didn’t seem fair and it left a bad taste in my mouth and a lot of questions. Questions seek an answer, but what about when the answers don’t come? Unanswered questions can lead to anger and they certainly did in my case.

When we came home from the sentencing hearing, my husband and I sat in stunned silence. We questioned ourselves and asked what it was that we had done to cause our son to commit a criminal act. Were we such bad parents?

I finally got up, changed my clothes and went into my son’s room. I stripped the bedding, packed up his clothing and cleaned, and cleaned, and cleaned to the point of exhaustion. Cleaning is what I do when I’m angry. Cleaning and rearranging furniture.

Cleaning is good, after all, as women; we are to be the “peace makers”, the “reconcilers”, not the ones who become angry, not the ones who seethe and rage and weep uncontrollably. So I “stuffed” it.

My son’s bedroom became my prayer closet. The head of his bed became an alter at which I kneeled and prayed for him. It was also the place where I raged and screamed at God. I spewed out my anger to and towards God and raised my feeble, clenched fist in angst.

I also very effectively alienated people. Some very dear people, friends who were wise enough to know the pain I was going through and kind enough to give me space and to forgive my transgressions. (Thank you, Church Lady!)

The hardest thing I have ever done during my tenure with the Department of Corrections is to leave work on a Friday evening and then on Saturday morning cross that “invisible line” and become a visiting inmate family member. Our trek home was always accomplished in silence.

Our son was released in 2005. I wish I could say that “we all lived happily ever after” but that would not be the case. He now has a daughter and son (from two different women) and has never been married. He committed another felony and in 2012 he was again sentenced to prison for another 2.5 years. He was released this past April to our residence.

The Roman lyrical poet, Horace said, “Anger is a short madness,” and if that is the case, then bitterness is anger that has been boiled, simmered, and then found so unpalatable that it has been thrown into the deep freeze of our hearts and our unconscious psyches.

In May 2009, the Los Angeles Times printed an article called: “Bitterness as mental illness?” It stated: “Bitter behavior is so common and deeply destructive that some psychiatrists are urging it be identified as a mental illness under the name post-traumatic embitterment disorder.” I am that poster child!

We all know bitter people. None of us wants to be that bitter person. It sneaks up on us and robs us of any joy we can find or have found elsewhere.

I was angry, but then even Jesus got angry, right? He drove the money changers out of the temple after turning over their tables and throwing their money on the ground! I’m in good company, right?

Only what Jesus did is called ‘righteous indignation’ and frankly there was nothing righteous about my anger!

My anger and bitterness only made my sense of wrong grow. It did absolutely nothing to heal the wound caused by the injustice. In fact, it causes that wound to become infected with anger; it developed into a raging, seething, oozing, putrefying sore.

Bitterness is wrath’s little sister. Where anger can be just and moral if it propels us to seek solutions for the wrongs we have experienced or witnessed – especially as it relates to social justice. Wrath is a deadly sin because it becomes anger that feeds on itself and adds to the wreckage caused by the original wound. Bitterness does this too, but instead of burning down the house with everything we value still inside, bitterness is quieter, slowly poisoning our life until we lose it one joy at a time.

A saying I use to quote is, “The circumstances of life are intended to make us better, not bitter.” Oh, I could quote it; I just didn’t apply it to my life!

Here are some things you might try to overcome bitterness and anger:

Learn to Forgive


Unforgiveness is like taking poison and hoping the other person will die. Forgiveness does not mean pretending everything is “OK.” It doesn't mean forgetting the hurt either. St. Augustine said that forgiveness is simply the act of surrendering our desire for revenge; that is, our desire to hurt some-one for having hurt us. Forgiveness is a gift we give ourselves. It enables us to stop picking at the scab and allow healing to take place.

If you are comfortable doing so, you can let “the person” know you have forgiven them. That can go bad however, if the person tells you they don’t need or require your forgiveness. Just remember, forgiveness isn't so much for the other party as it is for you.

AND – you don’t even need to reconcile with the person! There comes a point in our lives where we just realize we don’t need or want to be hurt anymore. Forgiving is one thing and forgetting is something entirely different. They are not one and the same. Forgiveness allows you to free up the energy you need to begin healing the wound.

Make a plan


It can be tempting to give into feelings of “woe is me”, “there’s nothing I can do” but resist those feelings and self-talk. In fact, if you feel this way and can’t think of solutions, talk to a professional to “check your math” before deciding that the only thing you can do is to grieve and mourn your loss. If, after consultation, you find that there really is nothing you can do to reclaim what was lost or taken from you, focus your energy on developing new goals that will help to reconstruct your future in a positive manner.

Stop Dwelling and Retelling


When we are hurt, we have a tendency to turn the painful events over and over in our head or tell anyone who will listen about our pain–over and over again. It is fine to talk to people we think can help us heal the hurt, facilitate reconciliation or help us rebuild our lives, but other than that, we should do what we can to stop dwelling on the story of our injury ourselves and stop speaking of it so freely to others. When we are tempted to “dwell or retell” the best course of action is to refocus on what we can do–TODAY–to take at least some small step toward the goal you developed in Making a Plan. The more you are focused on solutions, the less you will experience the sense of powerlessness that comes from pondering on the hurt.

Seek Grace


It can be next to impossible to heal some wounds without God’s grace. Bitterness causes us to ignore God’s grace in favor of obsessing over the wound. If you are holding on to bitterness I encourage you to take it to God in prayer. Please don’t be insulted by the suggestion. I know that you have a right to your pain. Still, holding on to anything except God’s love, mercy and healing grace can separate us from the life God wants us to have. If you can open your heart to prayer, you may receive the healing that God wants to give you. It can help you surrender the pain and powerlessness as you begin to discover new options. Stop hoarding your hurt and seek grace!

Seek Professional Help


If the bitterness won’t let go even after you've tried all of the above, it might be time to seek professional help. Working with a professional can help you see possibilities that your pain has blinded you to and give you new tools to heal the wounds that are holding you back. If you have a professional in your area that you have worked with before, it just might be time to reconnect. Perhaps one of our Spiritual Leaders could lead you in the right path.

That was my choice. I sought a counselor to help me work through the anger and bitterness. One assignment she asked of me was to write out “what is that thing up your nose”. You know? That awful feeling that there’s something up your nose that someone other than you can see! So I wrote it out (actually in the form of a poem) and gave it to her at our next appointment. That was when she and I both knew I was going to be alright.

That also began my habit of journaling. A journal is a good way to put it “in black and white”. By writing “down the bones” you can transfer it from your internal to the page. It is a catharsis, a purification of sorts. You can make it ceremonial by neatly folding it, letting it sit for a determined amount of time, perhaps re-reading it and then burning it in a fire pit or ash tray, then watch the smoke rise skyward… as if it were a burnt offering to God.

I continue to journal to this day. I try to make it a daily practice and in the course of journaling, I have a practice that I call “seeking everyday grace”. I look for a gift from God and jot it down. A beautiful sunset (or sunrise), a hummingbird at the feeder, a kind word spoken, or an unexpected note or card in the mail can all be an everyday grace.

I can write this, I can share this, and I can believe this with my whole heart. However, I still have a tendency to slip back into the comfort of bitterness. It takes an act of faith and prayer everyday to not look back, but step forward.

Yes, indeed, the circumstances of life are intended to make us better, but not bitter!
That sums up the talk I shared with the women whose lives have been impacted by prison in one manner or another. 
Wishing you everyday grace... Every single day!

Tamara

Sunday, November 27, 2011

The Prayers of a Child

Now I lay me down to sleep,
I pray the Lord my soul to keep.
If I should die before I wake…
If I should die before I wake?  If I should die before I wake?  What a scary, frightening prayer for a child!  Yet this is an all too true statement for children who are victims of custodial / parental abuse; the children who were or are being threatened with, “If you tell anyone about this, I will kill you.”  In a scenario such as this that prayer has become all too real and all too frightening. 

If and when the child does make the effort to tell someone, often they are not believed.  I know this on a personal level. At the young and tender age of nine I learned a valuable lesson about the old adage of “damned if you do and damned if you don’t”.  One must remember the year was 1961 and families, communities and generally John Q. Public didn’t speak of such things let alone discuss them publically.  

Current statistics say that one out of every three to four girls has been sexually assaulted by the age of 18. One boy out of every six will be abused by the age of 18.  

* Although we have some reports and convictions to base these statistics on, they are actually not accurate. So many cases of child molestation go unreported each year, so we really cannot estimate the real numbers. The FBI reports that the National Institute for Mental Health found that only 1% to 10% of victims ever tell that they were abused. Boys report far less than girls. 
  • The average child molester will molest fifty girls before being caught and convicted. 
  • A child molester that seeks out boys will molest 150 boys before being caught and convicted and he will commit at least 280 sexual crimes in his lifetime.
  • The standard pedophile will commit 117 sexual crimes in their lifetime.
  • Most sexual abuse happens between the ages of 7 and 13.
  • There are over 491,720 registered sex offenders in the United States.
  • 80,000 to 100,000 of the above offenders are missing.
  • Molesters known by the family or victim are the most common abusers. The “Acquaintance Molester” accounts for 70-90% of reported cases.

This website also defines Child Molestation and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and the common “signs” of childhood sexual abuse.

My constant companion since I can remember had been guilt, depression and low self esteem.  It wasn’t until I was in my forties that I was formally diagnosed with clinical depression. 

For years I felt victimized until I read an article about situations such as these.  I more than likely was not the only victim of this person and it was not against me personally.  Crimes such as these are based upon power and control.  Somewhere, somehow I developed the mentality that “you can be a victim once, but the next time you become a willing volunteer.” 

I remember anger at God for allowing this to happen, especially since this person was a deacon in our church.  I raged against God (and society) during my tumultuous teen years.  Certainly there was no God if things like this are allowed to happen to children, I reasoned.

Through all of this the miracle was that God was calling me, speaking to me, drawing me into a deep and profound relationship with Him.  He had a lot of filth and crust to penetrate, but He did it ever so gently, peeling back the layers as if they were the skin of an onion.  He somehow taught me to recognize those who also had been abused and victimized as children and more importantly, to reach out to them.

Then the Lord was faithful to forgive me and to show me how to forgive others, even the perpetrator of these crimes.  I learned that forgiveness is not for them, but for the victim.  What we call “The Lord’s Prayer” in Matthew chapter six, verses 9 – 15 reads as such:
9 In this manner, therefore, pray:

Our Father in heaven,
Hallowed be Your name.
10 Your kingdom come.
Your will be done
On earth as it is in heaven.
11 Give us this day our daily bread.
12 And forgive us our debts,
As we forgive our debtors.
13 And do not lead us into temptation,
But deliver us from the evil one.
For Yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.

14 “For if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. 15 But if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.
~the New King James Version 

For years I ignored verses 14 & 15.  Later in Matthew 18, verse 6 we read: 
6But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea.
~also from the New King James Version 

Forgiveness is my act of obedience.  Judgment belongs to God.

I often struggle with how much do I or should I share on this blog?  How transparent do I want to be?  Or maybe this issue is how exposed do I want to be?  Some of you may be offended by the subject of this blog.  That is your choice.  I am merely sharing the amazing grace of God.  I, after all, am the Wretch the song is about. 

Tamara








Monday, September 19, 2011

Cataracts of the Soul

Last Wednesday I had cataract surgery on my right eye. I was frightened at the thought of someone messing with my eye.  This even though I did all the research and knew this procedure to be highly successful.  I was, however, to the point where my vision was such that I could no longer read for even small periods of time.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Thoughts and Questions

The agency I work for has carried out the executions of four death row inmates this past year. What is the Christian response to the law, criminal justice and Capital Punishment? Then I ask myself the proverbial question, “What would Jesus do?”

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Cha-cha-cha-changes!

Have you noticed how often I change the backgrounds to this blog?  I get it to a point then think perhaps I'll tweak it a bit, then end up scrapping the whole thing for something new.  I suppose it is a lot like dressing each day.  A different day, a different outfit.  For now, for this moment in time - I have selected Black & White!

In my line of work (state service) we have a number of policies and procedures.  They are to help guide us and to keep us from doing something that would cause embarrassment or even criminal charges.  There are a number of them and if placed end to end with the Bible, I'm sure it would exceed the number of words in the Word of God.  

Some people find the policies and procedures restrictive and consider them to be "suggestions" rather than what they were intended for.  I happen to like policy and procedure - everything in 'black & white' - no grey areas.  And it is available to all employees.

Like the Word of God, however, you have to read them to know them.  That is time consuming.  All too often we hear, "But I didn't know that was in policy!"  Does that excuse the infraction?  By no means.  Sometimes employees have even been dismissed due to the severity of their actions. 

The wonderful part of God's Word and work is Grace.  The marvelous Grace that that attends our soul.  That is not to say that we do not have to suffer the consequences of our actions or our non action.  It merely means that we can be forgiven and then covered with a mantel of Grace.  Grace, however, is no license for continued defiance against the Word of God.  This makes me think of the old hymn "Wonderful Grace of Jesus" which is now swirling about my head in four-part harmony!

Wonderful grace of Jesus,
Greater than all my sin;
How shall my tongue describe it,
Where shall its praise begin?
Taking away my burden,
Setting my spirit free;
For the wonderful grace of Jesus reaches me.

Refrain

Wonderful the matchless grace of Jesus,
Deeper than the mighty rolling sea;
Wonderful grace, all sufficient for me, for even me.
Broader than the scope of my transgressions,
Greater far than all my sin and shame,
O magnify the precious Name of Jesus.
Praise His Name!

Wonderful grace of Jesus,
Reaching to all the lost,
By it I have been pardoned,
Saved to the uttermost,
Chains have been torn asunder,
Giving me liberty;
For the wonderful grace of Jesus reaches me.

Refrain

Wonderful grace of Jesus,
Reaching the most defiled,
By its transforming power,
Making him God’s dear child,
Purchasing peace and heaven,
For all eternity;
And the wonderful grace of Jesus reaches me.

Refrain
This hymn was written by Haldor Lillenas in 1918.

So there it is the reason I am in Black & White today.  And maybe for tomorrow, and the next day...

May your day be blessed,

Tamara


Matthew 11:28-30 (NIV)
28 "Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Today's Devotional Scripture

Today's Verse
In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God's grace that he lavished on us with all wisdom and understanding.
~Ephesians 1:7-8 NIV
Thoughts on today's verse...
Are there times when you need forgiveness? I have those times when I desperately need forgiveness. Oh, it doesn't matter what for, just know that I know that my sin (or sins) keep my prayers from being heard. And there is nothing worse than praying and knowing that your prayers just hitting the ceiling and going no further...

Then, when we do ask for and receive forgiveness, the problem is: (1) we usually just don't feel forgiven and (2) having to deal with the consequences of our sin. It all comes down to our focus. If we focus on our junk, our lack of worthiness we have difficulty forgiving ourselves and in accepting God's forgiveness. We need to shift our focus to Christ and his redemption for all sin on the cross.

If we're struggling with forgiving ourselves or even someone else, we need to remember the Jesus died for all of us - equally.
My prayer...
My Lord and My God, help me to remember that your forgiveness is for one and all. The only sin that will separate me from You is the one I haven't confessed. May I be humble enough to bring all those things before you and lay them at your feet. In Your name I pray ~Amen!

Yours, because we're His,

Tamara