Friday, 27 June 2014

DEATH OR DIVORCE: which is worse?

Death Or Divorce: Which Is Worse?

Posted: 01/16/12 02:04 PM ET

This column is based on an article which first appeared at Daily Plate of Crazy.

I have never been a widow. I can only imagine that it is horrible, otherworldly, incomprehensible.

My logic tells me that the arduous process of reconstructing a life after widowhood is heavily dependent on individual circumstances: your age, your spouse's age, your support system, your family, your finances, and whether or not you're prepared for the death. Of course, there's the nature of the relationship itself (which may be complex), and when there are children, the issues multiply.

Though both of my parents are now deceased -- one died much too young, while the other died older and in her sleep -- I know these losses to be a different matter. But I observed my grandmother after her husband's death. They shared nearly fifty years together. When he passed away suddenly, she was brokenhearted.

Once, I was acquainted with a woman who was mid-divorce when her husband died. She quickly transformed from unhappy participant in a drag-on fight to someone whose sorrow was to be respected. And by the way -- her troubles were over.

So why compare death and divorce? What might we see if we actually do so?

In death we confront the finality of a loved one's passing. In divorce, though we don't generally wish our partners dead, we sometimes realize that life would be easier if that were the case. And those feelings add to our confusion, our guilt, and our difficulties in co-parenting.

In death and divorce, we face the palpable destruction of the familiar: the structure of marriage, the family home, and loss of "self" in the role of partner. The identity issue is heightened for women who must choose to keep or shed a married name.

It seems to me that divorce twists our grieving in turns and term; we're mourning illusions and we confront regrets -- perhaps a lack of generosity in the bedroom or an inability totolerate a breach in vows.

Self-esteem will take a hit. Legal battles may rage for years. Logistical nightmares (shuttling kids) may wear us out. And friends? They weary of our dramas. Often, they desert.

And for the midlife woman left to raise children alone, where is the light at the end of the tunnel? What if she's juggling kids, job, and aging parents? What of woman's greatest fear at 50 regardless of marital status -- that she won't have enough money to just keep going?

Man or woman, we're licking our wounds. We absorb blame and we place it. We relive matrimonial death -- in waves of unknown duration.

None of this is to say that death is easier to survive than divorce. There may be years sacrificed to a loved one's sickbed, as well as medical bills, lack of insurance, and little means to generate income. Still -- when contemplating widowhood versus divorce, I wonder why we demonstrate more compassion when it comes to the former, though the ghosts of the latter still walk the planet.

Rabbi David Wolpe writes on his own divorce in a 2011 piece which appeared in theWashington Post. He cites a letter written by his former wife Eileen:

"Divorce is a hard path, a long, circuitous journey that is not something you can control... and your married friends look at you like you have leprosy. It threatens their world view for you to divorce. It threatens their marriage... everything changes. In ways you can't imagine or anticipate. Everything. Everything. Everything."

Eileen Wolpe goes on to describe divorce as:

"... the destruction of together-dreams, forever-dreams, family-dreams, love-dreams. You cannot leave a marriage without doing violence to all those things, no matter how amicable the divorce."

I am well aware that this is not the emotional terrain of every divorce. Yet I find these words to be a spot-on depiction for some of us -- of the subtle (and not so subtle) ostracizing, the ways in which we must find new footing, and the bitter surprise at the losses that just keep coming.

In offering these thoughts on widowhood and divorce, I don't seek to pit one against the other but rather to equalize them in a way, recognizing that both involve life altering change which we treat respectfully in one case and callously in the other.

Shouldn't loss be the great leveler?

Perhaps divorce generally isn't worse than losing a spouse, though both leave us in turmoil, and facing practical adjustments of indefinite duration. But the words spoken by Eileen Ansel Wolpe highlight the death-like impacts of marital dissolution, suggesting (to me) that divorce in many cases ought to be considered the "exit" of last resort -- neither dismissed nor taken lightly. And in any case -- perhaps every case -- those who pass through its doors, met with compassion.

 

Follow D. A. Wolf on Twitter: www.twitter.com/BigLittleWolf

Wednesday, 21 May 2014

GOD'S HALL OF FAME

We live in a World where fame is fleeting...........
God’s Hall of Fame


Your name may not appear down here,
In this world's hall of fame,
In fact you may be so unknown
That no one knows your name!
The Oscars here may pass you by
And neon lights of blue,
But if you love and serve the Lord,
Then I have news for you.
This hall of fame is only good
As long as time shall be,
But keep in mind, God’s Hall of fame,
Is for eternity!
To have your name inscribed up there
Is greater yet by far,
Than all the Halls of Fame down here
And every man-made star.
This crowd on earth may soon forget
The heroes of the past,
They cheer like mad until you fall,
And that’s how long you last.
But God, He never does forget,
And in His Hall of Fame
By just believing in his Son,
Inscribed you’ll find your name.
I tell you, friend, I wouldn’t trade
My name however small,
That written there beyond the stars
In that celestial hall,

For any famous name on earth
Or glory that they share;
I’d rather be unknown here,
And have my name up there.

-Walt Huntley.





XxxxxxxMargs


Monday, 3 February 2014

We, as the Church, really need to pull up our socks!

I came across this life story today and it hit a note within me. My heart really longs for those of us who call ourselves Christ- followers to demonstrate it. This is not to bring condemnation on Christians but awareness that there are hurting people looking to us for help. Let's change the face of our churches by changing our own face. I want to be more aware of the lonely who walk into a meeting, just wanting someone to care and not judge!

This is the story:

"I remember as if it was yesterday.
I wanted nothing to do with Christianity and the church and their Jesus.

And I had a long list of reasons but they made it abundantly clear that there was a series of events I 
had to go through before He would ever be mine.

It seemed as though I was living in the land of "you have sinned and you are going to burn in hell" - where I belonged mind you, and all of the church ladies were living life high on the hog by way of the front row and never having sex before their wedding night.

I can remember pulling into church parking lots again and again and sitting there bawling my eyes out as I watched married couple after married couple walk inside the holy doors of we have it all together -sorry about your luck.

I never had the courage to actually go inside.

Then finally, I can remember it taking everything I had to walk in those dreaded doors one Sunday morning with my baby girl in my arms. I was an unwed single mama raising a baby on about $6.00 an hour and no support of any kind. I left the trailer that morning and looked at the gift that I didn't deserve and told her we were going to give this Jesus a try. I cried the entire way there and wondered if I looked nice enough, good enough, clean enough, churchy-enough.

I wondered if all of the perfect people would be able to see me past the missing wedding ring and the beautiful baby girl on my hip.

I wondered if they would embrace me. Accept me. Allow me in- in spite of my circumstances and in spite of my mistakes.

I'm sorry to share that I walked into a sea of judgement and condemnation during that season of my life. 

And unfortunately it caused me to leave the church for nearly a decade.

Because when you are struggling with the lie that is "there is no way that a holy God could love a girl like me." And you are hanging on by a thread because life has just been too much....

Every moment counts.

The way you are received and welcomed or not.

The way the caregivers receive your child with kindness or not.

The way a seat is made available for you or not.

The way you are looked down upon, questioned or interrogated by church members or hopefully not.

The way someone took the time to speak with you or not.

The way you are shamed and condemned or accepted and loved.

All of those things and so much more are some of the reasons that people will give church and ultimately Jesus another chance.

But one of the biggest reasons I walked away was this.  I didn't want what they had.

They made it loud and clear to me what they were against.

But they failed to demonstrate what they were for."

Written by Sibi pearlsandgrace.blogspot.com

Thank you , Sibi, for being so courageous in stating what many others have gone through.

It makes me want to change, I don't know about you! 

Xxxxx Margs

Tuesday, 7 January 2014

WHAT SHALL I SAY? WHAT SHALL I DO?



I enter 2014 with one thought racing through my mind....there is one situation I really need to change. The situation is one which brings continuous pain, anxiety and reoccurs intermittently every few months. How do I change the situation?.........
I need to change.

Four little words ....yet they are weighty. One of our greatest challenges is to bring about change in our lives. So many people I speak to feel that they are stuck in situations which seem impossible. They allow their circumstances to reach breaking point and then make wrong decisions under duress. We tend to watch and wait rather than act, and cycles of destruction are never broken.



Change = Intent + Ability
I can be responsible for change. I have the intent and ability....so let's unpack 'the how' of bringing change:

C- Consider with courage what steps should be taken to bring about this change. Are there conversations that should take place, are there relationship issues that need to be discussed? List the steps necessary for change.

H- Hope in God that He will give you the courage and strength you need to bring about this change.

A- Aim high towards fulfilling certain goals that will enhance change.


N- Nostalgic reflection is counterproductive, press on towards your objective.

G- Guessing what others think and feel will dishearten your spirit, ask good open-ended questions (Who? What? Where? When?) and accept the answer. Peace of mind comes not from what we think we know, but from what we accept.

E- Expect change to occur. Expect God to intervene. We so often give up at the last hurdle.



Disappointment = Reality- High Expectations
Is it possible that there are some people who are unable or maybe even unwilling to change?
We have to accept that we can only change ourselves, we can't change other people. We are 50% responsible for all our relationships therefore finding contentment in the fact that we have done what is necessary to bring about change is paramount to our peace.

Letting go is hard but necessary. This year do not carry that same burden you carried last year, let us all let go. Let us be intentional, embrace change and lay our burden down.



"WHAT CAN I SAY? WHAT CAN I DO? BUT OFFER THIS HEART, O LORD, COMPLETELY TO YOU."




XXxxxxxxxxxx Margs