Did Jesus Take Vacations?

“Whatever you need to do to get through it.”

When I was young and in fairly good mental and physical health, this phrase sounded like the ultimate cop-out excuse for lazy people to avoid enduring hard things the “right” way.

But then, I went through an incredibly dark depression after my second encounter with cancer. The idea of taking my life inundated my thoughts in that pit, subtlety like fluttering butterflies in the distance but with the frequency and potency of rapid-fire machine guns. I was so spiritually weak that praying a full sentence felt too difficult to do as I lay in bed all day, every day, staring out the window into a blue sky I couldn’t see. So I turned to distractions – mostly TV. It was an escape that brought some color back into that pit, and I justified the days upon days bingeing Netflix and Hulu because, “whatever I need to do to get through this.”

TV was literally the only thing I believed I had within my grasp to help me survive. I believe some people reading this may judge me for such a statement, the same way I did when I was younger and healthier. I understand. I also believe that those who have been through a similar pit fully understand where I’m coming from when I string “TV” and “to survive” in one sentence. I am not saying it is right, but it was what it was for me in that moment.

I’m so thankful I haven’t returned back to that same pit (though I have had some run-ins with lesser-dark ones) but these days, my challenge is rest. Cancer has returned now for the third time, and I am tired and overwhelmed. Various medical appointments pepper my weekly schedule as I work 40+ hours a week. Every night I glance at the overflowing laundry basket and feel the crumbs under my feet on the way to bed and remember all the things I, yet again, failed to get done today. I sink into bed dreading the guilt and sense of failure I know will inevitably come around tomorrow. I am burning the wick on both ends, as is the hubs, and wonder how much longer I can continue living this way. When will our break come?

Some well-meaning people in my life recently encouraged me to take “me-time” to rest and “fill (my) bucket.” “After all, you need to be healthy in well in order to serve your family well,” they’d say. The invitation was tempting and the logic made sense, so I started making a mental self-care bucket list: Get a massage. Take a trip. Paint a mural. Go see standup comedy. Do a yoga class. Watch some more TV.

All of these things are fine. But it does nothing to change my reality, or help me endure through the hard. All they really are are temporary mental/emotional/physical escapes from my hard reality.

Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about how Jesus didn’t avoid hard things or suffering. He did the opposite and sought after them, and entered into them.

I’ve also been thinking a lot about the culture of today and its obsession with “self care.” Turn off the noise from the world and focus inward on yourself. Treat and pamper yourself. Stay in bed or bathtub; listen or read or watch or eat your favorite things; you do whatever your body/mind/spirit is telling you that you need. Take that vacation. Buy that gadget. Get that massage. Treat yo’ self.

I know the importance of pausing and resting. No one can go on and on without recharging. But is self-indulgence an adequate recharge? Is it even a re-charge at all?

The answer likely depends on who you’re working for. The Bible says that we can only have one master, and it is God, or the devil (who is master of the world and everything in it).

So if God is our Master, we are do to what he says – and that is to love him, and love others. In effect, it is to consider my life as nothing compared to the glory of the cross; it is to deny myself and think of others and their needs as more important than me and mine.

It is a completely obedient and selfless life. But how does anyone do it?

We look to Christ as our example.

The Bible does not tell of any account in which Jesus took a “rest and relaxation” boys trip into the mountains or sea with his disciples. There is no week or day or hour documented in which Jesus says, “good work boys – we’ve done more than enough of my Father’s work for the month, so let’s take a week away on the boat and just fish for a few days to chill.”

Rather, Jesus pressed in harder and deeper into the darkest nooks and crannies of the desert land. He went from town to town, seeking the hurting and rejected, and preaching the Good News of God’s wonderful plan of redemption for his people, whom he loved. It is easy to forget sometimes that he was fully human too, just like us. He had muscles and joints that likely ached from days of walking. He ate and slept and bathed and worked. He grew weary and needed rest.

But his self-care plan was much simpler than today’s world’s. He simply turned to his Father in prayer.

Man must not live by bread alone
But by every word that proceeds from
The mouth of God.

Come to me, all who are weary and
heavy-laden, and I will give you rest.

The LORD is my refuge and strength;
A very-present help in trouble.

Do not be anxious about anything
But in everything, through prayer and petition,
With thanksgiving,
Present your requests to God.
And the peace of God, which transcends
All human understanding,
Shall guard your hearts and minds in
Christ Jesus.

The Garden of Gethsemane was his self-care.
Withdrawing from the world was his self-care.
Daily abiding in and communion with his Father was his self-care.

Jesus was not deceived. He knew that his Father was the only source for rest, strength, peace, endurance, and love he needed for his exhaustingly difficult journey on this earth. Jesus did not take vacations – but he always knew where to plug in to receive all that he needed.

We do, too.

The beginning

My first 24 hours here in Germany have come and gone, and the themes thus far have definitely been:

  • Eat lots
  • Sleep lots
  • Potty lots
  • Needles and pills (lots)

Due to COVId protocols, I’ll be in quarantine for the first week I’m here. Meals and jars of drinking water are left outside my door. Machines and IV drips are wheeled in and out of my room by nurses covered from head to toe. The hours go by slowly in between, and I lay in my bed in my small, tidy room to read a book or write an email or watch the clouds outside my window only to fall asleep, over and over again.

There is a dominant narrative playing out in this Round 3 in which I am utterly dependent on everything and everyone but myself. I have zero control over my schedule, the cruddy internet connection, my diet, the bills, the hives on my ankles and legs. I can’t ask J to grab some aloe vera gel at Target for me, or step outside for a cooling evening walk around the block, or go to the kitchen and make some scrambled eggs for breakfast, or order a yoga mat from Amazon with 2-day Prime delivery, or work a few hours during my downtime. But!–I can eat, potty, sleep, repeat.

I feel like a baby, vulnerable and utterly helpless.

And in so many way, it feels appropriate: that God would strip me of everything I’ve ever had control of (or thought I had control of) in my life and the toxic self-sufficiently that comes with it all, to re-birth me from that humble heap of rubble. It is appropriate that God would remind me in his gentle fatherly manner what my priority is right now and where I must look to for my needs to be met. In my nakedness and hunger, like a typical baby whose only demands are ever to be held and fed, I look to my Abba Father and know he alone always will.

And this reminder is how I will sleep like a baby tonight.

Paxton

Woke up this morning to an epic downpour happening outside our windows. Not the warm, sticky kind, but the refreshing, almost-feels-like-fall kind. The best.

Things are a-changin.’

Summer is closing out, and S is surprisingly not in protest. He had an exceptionally exciting one this year (especially in contrast to Covid Summer of 2020) – camps, VBS, his first real sleepover, making new buddies, visits with out-of town friends and family, play dates, and enough swimming to leave him with epic goggle tan – and he came out on the other side a changed boy, I think. Calmer, more pensive, less reactionary. Like, this whole being-okay-with-Epic Summer-ending thing? This is not his norm. He is definitely growing up, and I have all the mixed feels about it.

But sometimes, change means returning back to original things.

S: (getting into car at camp pick-up) Dad! Guess what?
J: What’s up?
S: One of the counselors I have, his name is Mike, and guess what? He has a PAW PATROL backpack!
J: That’s pretty cool. Did he like Paw Patrol when he was little?
S: Yeah, and he still does. And he’s in high school!

It was as if a little lightbulb went off in his head, which we didn’t realize until that evening, when J found him unusually quiet upstairs in his room. S had dug out his box of old wooden train tracks and his Thomas and Friends trains, which haven’t seen the light of day in years, and had them sprawled across his floor.

Mike the Counselor’s backpack was enough to free S from his shame of his love for his childhood treasures. And I love it so much.

S: I think I know what I’m going to spend my birthday money on.
Me: Oh yeah? What is it?
S: Paxton. He’s such a friendly little guy, and he’ll make a great addition to the crew.
Me: I think that’s a wonderful idea.

While I’m honestly hoping you won’t be toting a Thomas backpack as a high schooler, my thoughts are on the here-and-now, where your shoe size is almost as big as mine and I just want you to play with your wooden trains to your heart’s content. Thanks Bud, for the sweet little reminder that despite time and changed circumstances, it’s possible to return back to original things.

These are the things I remember

We decided on Monday that we would live out our two days of oblivion to the fullest. No fears or worries, no what-ifs, no planning. We would laugh and enjoy the hours as if nothing in our world had changed, because aside from a bandage and some bruises, nothing had changed. For now.

We binged the Olympics and Korean dramas. We stayed up and slept in. We let the kid go wild with friends and video games. I’m not sure I ever brushed my teeth.

I woke up on Wednesday fully alert, aware that our oblivion-fest was over. The clock was reset, and now we would wait.

We went about our morning routine, but it felt different. I threw on some clothes and put my hair up in a bun. J and I grabbed our morning drinks and we went out the door for our daily morning walk, leaving S sprawled out on the couch with his blanket and PBS cartoons. We made it past our driveway in silence. Our conversation was awkward, lacking its familiar flow that matched the cadence of our steps.

“It’s such a perfect morning.”
“Yeah, it already feels a bit like fall.”
“I mean, it really could be nothing.”
“Totally. Even Dr. H said it might just be scar tissue.”
“Yeah.”

Permeating our awkward chit-chat was a weighty understanding that our world might change today. And it did. At 11:37AM, we received news that the cancer has returned.

Fear can have so much power over our minds. It deceives us into believing lies. I know truth extinguishes fear, and truth is what I choose to cling to in the darkness.

These are the things I remember:

  • God is with my family – he will help us and strengthen us; he will uphold us with his right hand. (Isaiah 41:10)
  • God will never leave us or forsake us. (Deut.31:6)
  • God is our refuge and strength; our very present help in trouble. (Psalm 46:1-3)
  • His peace will guard our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus as we present our requests to him in prayer and thanksgiving. (Phil 4:6-7)
  • God will give us wisdom when we ask him in faith. (James 1:5-8)
  • He tests our faith through trials to bless us with steadfastness. (James 1:2-4)
  • God is working all things for our good and his glory. (Rom.8:28)

Cancer is a mighty beast. But God is mightier. God is love; he is unchanging; he is true. And God has everything moving according to his good and perfect plan.

November

I woke up slowly this morning. Lying in the dark quiet that is my room at 4am, my brain crawling out of what felt like a thick, hazy dream, a sudden bright thought came to mind: November is finally over. A deep breath escaped from my gut through my lips. Relief— and—sadness washed over me.

You see, November used to be my favorite month.

It has pieces of so many of my favorite things: clear, crisp mornings; warm drinks and cozy introverting opportunities; the excitement of nearing holidays; and of course, those magnificent autumn leaves. November is gentle and delicious, intriguing yet subtle, leaving us wanting more while overwhelming with too much. so much to explore, riding on the coattails of its magic. If there were such a thing as a spirit month, November was mine. It‘s the month I‘d come alive.

I can’t pinpoint when its sparkle began to fade. All these things that make November magical to me are all still there—that hasn’t changed—but the lens through which I experience its magic has become scratched and soiled beyond repair, the clock I use to measure its days is stuck in time.

A week or so ago, I had this strange yet incredibly realistic dream. In my dream. Husbandman and I planned a trip out to California to visit a man my dad’s age, because he was grieving the loss of his daughter, Zoe. He was so thankful that we thought of him and anxiously waited for us to arrive. I woke up just after we got to California and saw his face.

The strange thing about this dream is that Zoe and her dad are real. I only of know them from a distance that‘s made possible through social media. Zoe, who was 5 years younger than me, was suffering through stage 4 breast cancer when the lines of our digital lives crossed years ago. It was through these same crossed lines that I came to learn two years ago that she’d passed away.

It was a hard week, the week that Zoe passed away. I was going through chemo then and it was hard to keep hope alive.

But getting back to my dream: what’s stranger about this dream is that I hadn’t thought about Zoe in at least a year, if not more. My brain had erased my memory of her during this pandemic year. The dream felt so random and meaningful in equal measure that I couldn’t shake it; I went on social media for the first time in months to check her account.

My jaw literally dropped. My dream was almost exactly on the anniversary of her passing.

It blows my mind how we carry these heavy, invisible things with us through life; how our minds keep track of pain and grief deep within our subconscious, then causing us to forget just enough to enable us to continue moving through life on this earth.

A few weeks ago, I lost another dear friend to cancer. My sweet friend Ashley passed away. She fought cancer with such an honest strength and smile. I can’t believe she’s gone. I can’t hug her or hear her soothing voice ever again.

To top it all off – November is my birthday month. The month celebrating my life is marred with the harsh stains of death.

Come, Lord Jesus – come.

The Great #COVID19LockInOf2020

Son: Ughhhhhh! I don’t geeeeeeet iiiiiiiiiiit!
Me
: Really? Because I literally just explained it to you three times in a row. Just now. Literally, three times in the past minute.

Of course, it would take something like a pandemic to force me into the role of homeschooling mom. I never thought either thing possible.

We are on Day 4 of our lock-in/homeschooling. We cover math, reading, handwriting, grammar, foreign language, and some music theory. It’s not easy; S hates making mistakes and can be a volatile little dude. You can imagine the choppy waters we sail on every day, from 10-11 and 2-3:30, when I’m trying to teach him something new. Or even just simply having him erase and re-write his “a” because it looks like a “q.”

Son: (erasing his mistake violently) This is the WORST thing EVER!
Me
: (to myself, thinking about the next 24 days) With you 100%, buddy.

God bless the souls of all his teachers, past, present and future.

There have been some sweeter moments, though. We start our day with a morning walk around the neighborhood, and spring is in bloom. S and I bundle up and head out, hand in hand, and take it all in.

S: It’s just so amazing how God made all the animals and insects to know how to survive! Like, no one taught them how to fly, or collect food, or build their homes. They just know!
Me: Isn’t it awesome?
S: Yeah…I love nature!

And in moments like these, I’m thankful. Despite the hard things we’re walking through, we have eyes to see beauty and marvel at God’s hand in it all.

Deep, dark pits

I’ve been in a deep, dark pit for several weeks. There is no light, and hope is gone. I am a hologram, fading in and out of the scene of life that busily moves by. My brain knows there are bright truths that I can cling to but there are some days when the darkness overwhelms.

Why is joy so challenging? It is like the wind, impossible to capture and always fleeting. I know the truths of the gospel in my heart. I believe them fully. I have such hope for the future. But if so–why is my spirit trapped in these dark pits for days on end? Why do these joy-filled words fall flat on my dehydrated heart? I feel like such a fraud, such a failure. I want to quit everything but can’t, and this steals breath from my deepest core.

Depression is mysterious and evil.

Doors

God closed a door today before I had a chance to approach its threshold.

I was unsure if it was right for me, this big, beautiful door–but it’s a door I desperately wanted to pass through. It stood on a hill, wide open, and beyond it I saw a land flowing with milk and honey, freckled with glimpses of what I believed were meaning, purpose, solution. I had prayed for weeks, staring up at it from my valley below, wrestling with whether or not I should lug one heavy foot in front of the other to climb up to its threshold. Hope looked bright beyond the door. I wondered if my eyesight needed to be checked. I’d prayed that God would close this door that stood so invitingly before me if what I believed to be beautiful and full of meaning turned out to be a mirage of the heart.

Weeks of staring up at this door from my valley, and today, the door gently closed, simultaneously snuffing out the flickering hope of my daydream, and, giving me some space to breathe again.

This closure is a blessing. It’s what I’d asked for. It’s one less thing to worry and stress over, one less decision to make, one less thing on my table. He closed the door for me, an act dripping with gentle mercy and tender love.

And yet, it’s still so hard.

Letting go of dreams will forever be hard. And in this moment of childlike disappointment, looking out into the gray rainy sky through this coffee shop window, I’m resolving. To learn how to dream better dreams. Dreams that God would never have me let go.

Threads of hope

Dear God,

You were with us this afternoon, in that cramped, cold patient room that’s become too familiar, when we heard my oncologist say the words “no evidence of cancer.” Oh—what bright hope that’s held in this delicate string of four little words! Thank you for weaving this soft, warm, sparkling thread into my humble story. It is so precious.

You are with me tonight, displaying in front of me this tapestry that is my life. We inspect it together. It’s taking a long time. I come up close, my finger grazing the fibers as I try counting all the non-pretty threads, brown and gray and fraying. There are so many. Honestly, Father, I would have chosen a whole different color palate for my life story. I kind of wish you would have invited me on a Michael’s shopping spree so I could pick out all my colors myself….

You let me linger here, but not for long. You draw me back. And from this distance, I see—it is beautiful. The odd mix of colors, the intricate pattern, the fraying edges all come together, masterfully woven to spell one word: hesed.

My life’s tapestry tells the magnificent story of your loyal, steadfast love.

Those muddy grays and browns tell of cancer’s pits and valleys into which the enemy threw me, and it was in those dark, lonely places that I saw your face clearer than I ever had, even from the brightest blue of the tallest mountaintops. Alone in the pit of deepest fear, you lifted my head and pointed my gaze heavenward, filling my heart to the brim with hope and a longing for eternity by your side.

I see all the times I doubted you, forgot you, did not praise you; the many nights I lie awake without enough peace to drift into sleep. I was foolish, putting more trust in my research and knowledge and plans than in your omniscience. Yet you did not condemn or abandon me; you gently wrapped your arms around my shivering figure, never leaving this arrogant sinner’s side. Hesed.

You are always with me and for me, and the grays and browns of this tapestry testify to this. In a deep, sincere way that only you will understand, I cherish them more than I do the sparkly thread of hope you added in today. For every thread that you’ve chosen for me, I trust you, and I thank you. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

In Jesus’ precious name I pray,

Amen.