Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free. ~John 8:32


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Our “Normal” is Not Your “Normal”

And I know that whatever God does is final. Nothing can be added to it or taken from it. Ecclesiastes 3:14

My “normal” is not your “normal.” In fact, I would go so far as to say that there is no such thing. Everyone with a pulse—so that includes every human being and every creature in the animal kingdom—has been given “something.” We all have our trials, our burdens, and our time in the desert.

I have seen the burden God has placed on us all. (Ecclesiastes 3:10).

We all are forced to wait at some point and we are all put in uncomfortable circumstances. No one is exempt. These are the inevitable facts of life.

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But there are those few, let’s call them “chosen ones,” who seem to be given more than their fair share. Those are the people you read about on social media who have suffered tremendous amounts of pain and have endured more than enough strife for two lifetimes. For these people, it seems that they can’t catch a break.  It almost seems unfair. We read their stories and shake our heads in disbelief and maybe we say a prayer, but then we go back to our “normal” problems and think to ourselves, “My life isn’t so bad.”

I used to not identify with people like this; I used to hear their stories and have pity on them. I was in a lot of denial then. I’m not anymore.  Maybe it was a matter of acceptance, an unwillingness to see myself as a spectacle to others.  But the truth is, my family, my husband and our children, and even my extended family, our story is a spectacle. It is one of those things you hear about, and it makes you thankful for your own problems.

If you are just catching up to our story, you can visit my daughter’s FB page fightlikelivvy. But to make a long story short: I was sexually abused by my father and aunt during my childhood; my parents divorced well into my adulthood; my second daughter was born with a severe heart defect, had 5 open heart surgeries before age 3, the last one being a lifesaving heart transplant. My mother remarried a wonderful man, but he passed away after only 3 years of marriage from colon cancer. The same week we lost him my daughter with the heart transplant was diagnosed with lymphoma. We briefly lived in a place that couldn’t take care of her medically so we were forced to separate the family so our daughter could receive proper care (hubby is military). Oh, and we are expecting our 4th child in October! This is only the big major stuff without the details. There is so much more!

The truth has been scary to me and to my husband and extremely hard to accept, but we have had to come to terms with the truth about our Olivia; she is a very sick child. She always has been and she will always have to fight for her life here on earth. We have had to accept that God is the one who made her this way, not because He is a vengeful, vindictive God, but because He is, in fact, a merciful God.

The hardest thing that we have had to surrender to is the fact that we, my husband and I, will most likely bury our child. We don’t know if that is a year from now or twenty years, but we have had to be honest with ourselves for Olivia’s sake, that this is a likely possibility for her future.

Our “normal” is not your “normal.”  We have to have on-going conversations with Olivia and our oldest daughter Natalie about mortality, not only to prepare ourselves but, more importantly, to prepare Olivia. She is the one going through this. Death is not something to be ashamed of or something to deny. We believe in God’s power. We have seen it too many times not to believe it and trust it. But that doesn’t mean we are to be blind to the realities of her life.

Olivia needs an environment in which she can freely express her fears and emotions during her journey. She doesn’t need her parents and siblings limiting her experience because of our fears. It’s ultimately her journey and we are given the privilege to walk alongside her and help prepare her for her eternity. As parents, that is our job; we are supposed to be raising our children with the kingdom in mind, but for our family, our eternity isn’t a thing for the far-fetched future.

Now, don’t get me wrong. We don’t walk around talking about death all day every day, but it is a part of our weekly, nonchalant conversations, along with sexual purity, drug addiction and Christian world views. We are just in the position in which we have to have the conversations that no parents want to have: helping our children understand and cope with dying and leaving this earth to a place that we don’t really know much about.

He has planted eternity in the human heart, but even so, people cannot see the whole scope of God’s work from beginning to end. (Ecclesiastes 3:11).

The Scriptures are rich, full of beautiful imagery of our destiny. We are excited and giddy when we speak of these things, but it is still scary.  Let’s face it, everyone will die, no one is exempt from it. There is a time to be born and a time to die. (Ecclesiastes 3:2).

We are all going to die. My children will die, my mother and husband, and I myself, will all die. Olivia is going to die. But I always tell her it won’t be a second before or a second after God has planned to take her home.  Our “normal” is not your “normal.” I hope that because of our story you look at your own lives with a greater appreciation and gratitude. Life is a gift!

And people should eat and drink and enjoy the fruits of their labor, for these are gifts from God. (Ecclesiastes 3:13).

Life truly is not ours. It is solely God’s business, His authority, to decide what to do with it. Please don’t feel sorry for us—we don’t—but be thankful and joyful for not having our “normal!”

 


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I Need Recovery!

But everything exposed by the light becomes visible and everything that is illuminated becomes a light. Ephesians 5:13

It occurred to me the other day how low my self-confidence really is.  It caught me off guard and reminded me just how much I need continual recovery, not only from my childhood abuse but from my own thinking.

I was getting into the shower when I discovered there was no hot water. I checked the hot water tank and sure enough it was off. So I began to reignite it by following the very specific instructions on the tank. It may seem silly but this was a huge accomplishment! I am very insecure and have many “obsessive thinking” types of fear. I was terrified the entire time that the hot water tank was going to blow up in my face. I had gone to lengths in my mind how I would try to escape the flames and save my children. Ever do that? I hope I’m not the only one!

I shared this story with my mom and a few days later she reminded me of our family history, our family’s disease. She planted the seed that my lack of confidence in myself to perform a simple task is deeply rooted in my behavior and thinking that has been passed down from generations through alcoholism.

12417535_10154031575859933_1855565112789213995_nI have been in recovery from my childhood sexual abuse for the past 6 years. Although I have overcome a lot, I still have much more work ahead of me, work that requires a lifetime of attention and yet, I will likely die before fully healing from it all. Some things require Jesus’ return to have full resolution and justice.

For my family, alcoholism was a generational disease on both my mother’s and my father’s side, along with physical, sexual, and emotional abuse. Generational disease, or as the Bible refers to it, generational sin (Deuteronomy 5:9), is a very real cycle passed down by our parents and grandparents through learned behavior.

In order for the cycle to be broken, someone has to be willing to stop the previous behavior patterns and choose something different. This requires one thing: to speak the truth. It’s simply said but a very lonely, not-so-traveled road. Most of the time, it is hard for other members of the family who are not quite ready for the truth.

In my family the brave person who chose to step into the light of truth was my mother. After she began recovery it was like a permission slip for me to do the same. I could not wait to finally start talking about what we never talked about. As difficult as the truth was and as painful as it was for my other family members to hear, it felt much better than keeping the truth inside where it ate away at me daily.  I began to slowly realize why I was in so much pain and why I made such poor choices.

Jesus meant it when he said, “the truth will set you free.” It did for me. Not everyone was in the same place as me when I began recovery, and many of my relationships were strained. However, through the strength Christ gives when you choose this journey, I was able to hold firm boundaries while maintaining a loving perspective and acceptance of where they were in their lives.

The truth is funny, though; it has a way of making itself known without demanding attention or bullying its way in.  It reveals itself with such incredible timing in grand, undeniable ways. That’s because God is the truth and His Son, the light. When we choose to walk in God’s truth hand in hand with His son lighting the way, it ends up spreading and affecting everything it touches, including the relationships surrounding us.

The truth hurts, but only temporarily. Through it I have reached a place of acceptance and forgiveness and will continue to move through past hurts from my childhood and adulthood. I know I have a long road ahead of me, but I have put many miles behind me already because I’m not doing it alone but with a Savior who understands my pain. Remember, Christ became like us so we could become like Him.

On days when recovery is hard and my character defects are overpowering me, I remind myself of God’s promises for my future. John shares with us in Revelation 22:2, the new city of Jerusalem, the streets of gold and the tree of life that bears new fruit each month. Then he says, “the leaves will be for the healing of the nations.” Our God knows that our pain is great, so great that we will continue to need healing even in our eternity. I pray we keep hope in that we will be completely healed one day.


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Blessings in Pain

How do you deal with your pain in the middle of the night when there’s not enough staff in the emergency room and you have to wait in excruciating pain for five hours? Then you see the mom sitting across the room with her crying baby. You can’t help but wonder what’s wrong, how long the crying has been fraying this poor young mother’s nerves, and what prognosis the doctor must give her later.

What do you do if you have to watch your baby suffer? What do you tell her if you know the outcome is not going to be what you’ve hoped and prayed for? Or maybe you’re never given a diagnosis and you have to live your life wondering if the horrible waves of pain will come again with no warning.

Then you get pulled up short when you enter a tiny room to wait for the doctor and you see the representation of Jesus on the wall. You realize that God had to watch His Son suffer; then He chose to turn away, and He did it all for you. How can you appreciate the depths of sorrow God can feel not only for His only begotten Son but also for you, His beloved child?

It’s difficult to deal with your own pain, but it’s also extremely difficult to watch someone you love go through pain that you can’t stop, that you know you have no control over. That was the task I chose last week. As difficult as it is to endure, God always brings something good out of the pain in our lives and in the lives of those we love. At the very least, we can learn some important life lessons by watching and listening to others as they process their pain.

Here are twenty important things I learned (or was reminded of) while spending twenty-four hours in the hospital with my friend:

  1. hands-loving peopleLoving people is more important than doing important things!
  2. When I’m in pain, I can be extremely self-absorbed.
  3. Five hours of pain, even a full twenty-four hours of excruciating pain, is nothing compared to what Jesus endured for me.
  4. The little things are what make the difference in life.
  5. Loving people is more important than doing important things!
  6. Babies can still make me smile—even during times of great pain.
  7. Friends & family are the most important assets we have.
  8. God is still in charge.
  9. Loving people is more important than doing important things!
  10. I don’t have to allow my pain, whether insignificant or immense, to take my attention off the only One who can heal me.
  11. I may get a spiritual do-over because of Jesus but my body may not get a physical do-over, so I should take good care of the one I’ve been given.
  12. It’s important to care well today for the things and, especially, for the people I’ve been given because they can all be gone in a heartbeat.
  13. Loving people is more important than doing important things!
  14. All the stuff I worry about and the things I think I have to have and do are nothing compared to the joy of being there for someone else.
  15. When I’m in enough pain, it doesn’t feel like a bad option at all to think about God calling me home.
  16. It feels much better to have a clean kitchen when friends stop by unexpectedly to visit the sick.
  17. Loving people is more important than doing important things!
  18. God still reigns in heaven—and in my heart—even when all is not right with the world.
  19. It can be a joy to let people have the run of my house and my heart, but first I have to give them permission to do so.
  20. Loving people is the important thing!


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Beautiful Pain

“I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us.” Romans 8:18

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She was born in mid-September at the Med in downtown Memphis. It was fast. She looked perfect. But hidden just beneath the surface was a tiny heart that was, oh, so broken!

Olivia Ann.

She has suffered more pain than most would ever endure in a lifetime. But like Jesus, her pain was not in vain. She had a very complicated heart defect. It required many surgeries that held no guarantees. By the time she was two years old, her tiny, fragile heart could no longer keep pace with her growing body, and she was placed on the heart transplant list.

Like Olivia’s heart, broken and underdeveloped, my spiritual heart was in the same condition. It wasn’t long after she entered the world that I began to understand some of the characteristics of God that my pain had kept me from seeing.

You see, I was broken from my childhood—scarred from abuse and living in a constant state of torment. I carried with me the pain that I had suffered and the choices I had made based on that abuse. Being witness to Olivia’s life and watching God faithfully restore her with a heart transplant gave me insight into why suffering is a beautiful part of life.

Jesus’s suffering on the cross was tremendous, bloody, the worst. Yet the beauty found just outside that pain is awesome, cleansing, the best. It’s life wrapped up in the highest of glory.

Olivia’s surgeries were terrifying, gruesome, the worst. But worth all the agony. She’s alive because of them. Her pain was my calling from God. His outpouring to reach me. I believe it was His attempt to restore my heart as well.

It’s been six years since Olivia received her new heart. After years of walking hand in hand with Christ through the pain of my childhood, I have discovered the deep connection between tremendous, life-changing pain, the daily pain of dying to yourself, and the gospel. Paul says it best in Romans 8:17: since we are “co-heirs with Christ,” we can experience his sufferings and share in the glory of that suffering!

I want to be transformed through the pains of life. That transformation brings purpose to the pain. As Philippians 3:10 says: “I want to know Christ—yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participate in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death….”

Sarah Apa

Sarah Apa