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Currently Browsing: Career

Hoping for Answers

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Last I wrote, I had a great job and things were looking up. Things sure do change in a hurry in my life. I spent the last month dealing with police, child services, cancellation of my health insurance and the threat of losing my children in a custody battle. Then yesterday, I rejoined the millions of unemployed. Things seem pretty bleak, huh?

Not really. God will pull us through, and I have total faith in his abilities to let us suffer only to the extent that it brings glory to his name. Someday I’ll be the story that the unbelievers look at in awe and wonder… how did she do it? How did she get through all of that in one piece? I’ll be able to say it was because of my Lord… because of my ability to let go of my life and let him guide me where he wants me.

Where is that now though?

I have no idea. I am so lost. Believers shouldn’t feel helpless and hopeless or lost, but we do from time to time. It’s easy to feel abandoned and tossed aside to be forgotten. It’s easy to think we’re being punished or that we don’t deserve the good in life that we know he can and does provide for others. But I know better. I know that when I was blessed… materially, with a home, nice car, more money than we could spend each month… I was more lost than I am now. At least now I know I am loved and accepted just as I am, poor and all, and I am thankful everyday for his love and the gifts he gives me in my children and friends and family.

However, these recent changes in events have me thinking… where does God want me? I honestly don’t know, but I’m going to be praying about it hard. I have friends and family who would love to see me move to Southern California for a fresh start. Others suggest Reno, where my ex-husband and I were building our home when we separated. My brother in Alabama wants me to join him out there with him and his family.

I know I have so many wonderfully awesome people in my life who want to help and suggest the path the girls and I will heal most quickly on, but I want to go where my future is. But I don’t know what my future holds. It could be love, it could be more children, it could be staying at home with a family or finding another job. It could be remaining single and serving only him and my children for the rest of my life. I have no idea, though I am aware of the gifts he has given me to share with the world. I only need to find how best to share them, and then I believe I will find my way.

I have to admit a change of pace and location would be ideal right about now. With all the heartache over the last year and a half and all the recent turbulence with my in-laws and the California system, I’m ready to run away. The school district is declining faster than could have been anticipated and I dread sending my kids to a school where they don’t have access to a library. Call me old-fashioned, but I believe books will never die and should not be eliminated because of classroom access to the internet.

Now that I have nothing holding me here in Paradise, I am considering relocation. My parents are here and I grew up here… but there’s nothing else. After six months I still don’t feel at home in my new church and after a year of looking for love, I have come to realize it’s not likely to find me here. After a year and a half of looking for a great employer with pay that will sustain me, I see that is just as hard to find.

Where is my future? Who is it with? Where is my happy ending?

Please Lord, send me some answers…

We are Never Self-Sufficient

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Some days I think I should have kept my blog, Crazy Mom’s Journal. Then when a month between blog posts comes and goes, I wouldn’t feel so bad. It would be self-explanatory that my life is hectic and I haven’t had time.

Truth is, sometimes I think I’ve written to you. I’ll write blog posts in my head and forget to ever get to the laptop to record them. But my mind thinks because I’ve thought it, I’ve already communicated it with you. Weird, I know. Anyway, that’s how a month goes by before I realize I haven’t updated anyone on my life.

The last 30 days have been an equal mix of good and bad.

The good: I got a great job. Spent a day role-playing as a pioneer teacher at the Gold Nugget Museum. Enjoyed many qualities afternoons with my girls. Hired a lawyer to take care of my legal problems.

The bad: My new job takes away a lot of time from my girls. I unexpectedly lost my health insurance, which necessitated borrowing $3,500 to hire a lawyer. I missed the opportunity for the girls and I to get baptized on Mother’s Day.

Overall, things are going pretty well I guess. After all, I am working and earning money and now I have a legal professional on my side during this difficult time. It takes a lot of weight off my shoulders. On the other hand, I’ve been feeling very disconnected from life and fellowship. A lot of it, I think, has to do with my lack of involvement at my new church.

It’s been about five months since we started going to Paradise Alliance Church. It has been difficult going from knowing most of the staff and a lot of the body of Calvary Chapel to knowing almost nobody at this new church. It did take me about 6 months at Calvary before I began to feel a part of the body, so I’m trying to remember that and take it slow… but at the same time, I walk the hallways and miss being able to say hi to friends and church family. I feel like a stranger in my own church right now; it’s not a good feeling.

However, when I met a few of the elders during a Getting Started session at Paradise Alliance, I found I wasn’t alone in this experience. I learned that this time may be a time to focus on myself and my relationship with Christ, instead of right away putting all my energy into serving.

Sometimes I think servants need this kind of recharging in order to keep being the best they can as a servant. I was giving a lot to Calvary Chapel, and part of the reason I left was because of how unbalanced my giving felt as compared to the receiving of the spirit I was feeling. So basically, I’m trying to soak in what I can during this season. Each time I catch myself wishing I could serve, I think it prolongs the time I will need to spend alone.

For now, I’m doing my best to focus on my spiritual recharging. This past week has been hard, and part of that has to do with difficulties with the divorce process I am going through. (After all, I was supposed to have closure in this area a good 8 months ago.) The frustration I felt for my ex translated to general dismay with the entire male species, but I realize I am wrong to do that. I don’t hate men and I never have, but I no longer wear rose-colored glasses thinking they’re all knights in shining armor.

Now that I’m comfortable in my own skin, being single and raising my kids… I find myself thinking that men are an unnecessary distraction. Every time I tell myself I don’t need a man in my life, every time I shut men out of my life, and every time I give up on getting married again… God shows me I’m wrong. His work within my heart is amazing, but it’s such a vulnerable and at times painful feeling. I think he wants me to be open to love from another human being, but guarded enough to not go looking for it. This tells me that I must wait and keep my heart soft, because He will send someone into my life when I least expect it. I will not find him, he will find me. I’m not sure how or where or when, but the expectant hope is exciting.

So in the last 30 days, I’ve learned that the Lord will always continue to carry me, even as I become more self-sufficient. He will continue to provide, even when I don’t think I need it anymore. God is good. I’m excited to see what my future holds, so every time I think I have the answers… just ignore me. I don’t know what’s good for me, but He does.

The Path is Narrow, but Not Straight

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When I was 15, I worked in the guidance office at the high school I attended. In my spare time, I would spend hours in the career center library, where they stocked college catalogs for the most popular colleges, universities and communities colleges in the state. A few were from out-of-state. I remember wanting to go to Oregon to study Architecture. It only took me a minute to realize I couldn’t move that far away from my mom without putting a huge strain on my umbilical cord.

It was about this time that I began hatching a plan to get out of school. I tricked my parents into signing the consent form for me to take the California High School Proficiency Exam — which back then was available to students 15 and older. Students who pass are legally allowed to leave high school with the equivalent of a diploma once they turn 16 or finish their sophomore year. Of course, I passed, and after my 1st semester of my junior year, I left high school… much to the surprise and disappointment of my parents.

I did go on to college though… but it was too soon. I wish I had known then that kids are not necessarily ready for college straight out of high school. I certainly wasn’t ready at 16 years old. I thought I knew what I wanted to do, but I was still so young that I hadn’t been able to experience life and all the wonderful things in it. After a couple semesters of struggling, I quit school and began working. I was 19 when I went back to college… this time knowing what I wanted to do but not having the discipline to see it through. After three wonderful semesters at a private art school in San Francisco, I gave it up because of an interfering engagement that ended up going nowhere.

My plans have never quite worked the way I had envisioned them, which is why to this day, I hate planning for the future. Sure… it’s nice to daydream and wow, the things I imagine. But time and time again, I’m disappointed and let down. Oh, the list of things I have visualized, began and failed to accomplish. The harshest reality came when I lost my dream home… the one dream bigger than all the others — to not just become a homeowner, but to pick a lot and design your own home from the ground up. After I lost that home six weeks before escrow was to close, along with my marriage (which was much less of a loss than the home, I’m afraid)… I discovered something.

First, and most importantly, I rediscovered God after a 15-year absence. On my knees I came home to welcoming arms and a loving embrace. In the year that followed, I then discovered that my plans never worked out for me because they were not God’s plans for my life. Some things I lost in the past may be a part of His plan for my future, such as owning a home, but it will all happen in His time.

I have a hard time remembering this, so I’m always bummed when things don’t go my way. In the last six months, I saw plans for a single mom’s ministry and two of my top career choices go down the drain after an injury to my wrist. Even with freelance writing, my hand hurts after a day of typing. I’ve come to the point where I’ve realized writing will not sustain me forever. I also find it’s time to admit to myself that there’s so much more I could be doing for myself and my kids.

So, I’m doing it. I’m going back to school in the Fall, as I have planned for more than a year now. Waiting had a lot to do with the divorce and financial aid, but I’m ready and excited. I’m trying not to form expectations, though. I’m also trying to remind myself that I can’t make firm plans about what will happen after I complete the program I’m going to attempt. I’m going to remain flexible and prayerful, believing that God will lay my path out for me. I believe He has already shown me the way and I’m walking towards it, but I also know first hand how straight a path looks until you get to that very end and see a 90 degree turn.

One step at a time. I’m enrolled and next month I’ll be registered. We’ll take it from there, the Lord and myself. For now, I know what I want and what I am physically capable of at this point — to get back to my original love. Before writing, before law, before being a mommy was a twinkle in my eye. A love I discovered in an A-frame cabin on Bass Lake in Minnesota during a cross-country vacation with my grandparents when I was 14… the same trip I discovered the truth about my father’s suicide. And only now looking back can I see just how life-altering that trip was almost 20 years ago.

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart; do not depend on your own understanding. Seek his will in all you do, and he will show you which path to take.” Proverbs 3:5-6

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