Friday, March 17, 2017

The Pink Room, Chapter 20, Jesus' Eyes; The Last Part



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The Pink Room: Thoughts About Intentional Living  
Chapter 20/ Jesus’ Eyes.
The last part.
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From your potential to looking back over a lifetime of ups and downs, there are things we can decide. We can decide that when life is down-right hard, and your step-sister never comes around again, that you can choose to not understand and still have a good live. When co-workers or co-volunteers are a constant source of negativity, that you can hand them the power to change their circumstances and not take it on yourself. When reality is a little too real; we continue to keep living with integrity and following your internal moral compass.

And as faith evolves for us and things that were once a mystery seem like common sense. When we sense that the prayers of others were finally answered, when we see the wisdom of those who are older generous souls in our lives and we choose to repay the favor by pouring into someone younger. A generous man saw potential in Billy Graham, and asked him to drive him to the town revival, and the rest is history.

We may not understand why sometimes holding on feels like holding sand, but we can rest in the fact that God will not waste anything. At some point there will be a season where ashes become beautiful and redemption. Even when failure seems huge and the wounds are deep there is hope—we just choose to walk with Him, even when we walk wounded.

Grace abides and sometimes even in the valleys we come across wonderful people who bless us and sustain us. We take in what we can and we get through those days—we choose to believe there is a greater story, a greater purpose in all of life if we are patient enough we may see some of the purposes be unveiled.

The seasons of life and changes of heart are all made easier if we live with a sense of humor. Filling life with joy and keeping priorities in order in the midst of constant change is difficult but that intentionality is what makes it fulfilling. We even have to be intentional about enjoying it. Even if that means occasionally making a recipe that needs four sticks of butter.

For me, truly enjoying life requires generosity. Of time, talent, money and affection…generosity is a theme in my story and leads to more stories. Even in the midst of seasons of lack, where there was not enough money, or time, or emotion to give—those are the seasons when Jesus can show of in our lack. The widow’s pence did not go unnoticed, and neither will your sacrifice. If we commit those, and all, moments of significant generosity to Lord, there is no telling what He will do with it.

I worked for a very large company a few years ago. I was a retoucher on high end campaigns for well-known products. Retouching is a strange job where you take out all the imperfections in a photograph, change things that should be present, and remove “artifacts” and dust. Sometimes the whole image comes off the background and is placed in another environment—a composite. It bothered me that the work was not meaningful; it was not real, that it was all about producing an ideal that could never be attained.

Work started well, I was treated like a rock-star. I could do nothing wrong. There were a few years of that treatment. Things changed in my third year. Gossip harmed the team, and facts were massaged to appear a certain way--suiting specific agendas--there was always just a hint of truth, so exaggerations were not a complete lie. People failed to realize that much of what was said no longer resembled “truth” either. It was not healthy. I was not okay anymore.

I struggled to keep it going. It was supposed to be my dream job. It was supposed to be the apex.
In my heart, I grieved --it all started so well. It ended with betrayal. My boss became my tormentor and a bully; if that wasn’t enough, there were the looks and whispers. It was depressing to see the character flaws of powerful people. It was heartbreaking to know; my request to leave the department sent her on a tirade and became a very real reputation problem for her. I asked to leave the department, all the doors slammed shut. I had a boss who was out of control and no one there would help me, no one else could.

It was time to go. (How do you let go of a dream?) I never have felt so alone and despondent. The situation was taking a toll on my health, for sure on my happiness, but also on my relationships. I couldn’t sleep and I cried and cried—I was hopeless. I did not understand why no one would acknowledge the actual record: Over the previous year I was recruited from a contractor to a staff member, received a signing bonus, two pay raises, publicly pointed out for hard work, given a high profile project leading 200 people, and had approximately ten certificates from peers nominating me for exceptional work in some way. It did not make any sense.

Looking back I realize I was placing my value in achievement. It was utterly devastating when it didn’t work the way it was supposed to. I hit bottom. Nothing could be fixed, I wanted to fix it.

Almost all those powerful people have “resigned” have now. Forced retirements, recommendations to move to other business units and requested resignations…

I prayed and prayed and prayed and God was quiet. I promised God things and asked for His help. Nothing changed or occurred to me, sometimes I’d have moments of peace but then the chaos started all over again. I felt like a failure.

One night as I lay in bed, it was too much; I called out to God from somewhere so deep it might have been my toes. There’s a verse about that, groans that words cannot express, and I have been at that place, but never before like this.

I saw Jesus in a dream that night. He did nothing but stood in front of me, and looked at me. His eyes were so big and loving and full of care. He saw it all, the brokenness, anger, despair and hopelessness and what they were connected to--I felt like a failure in every possible way but He didn’t care about shame or depression—He saw me. He loved me. He though I was incredible through and in the midst of all of it. He dismissed all my shortcomings. You would think the flaws being over looked would be the most overwhelming and memorable part but it wasn’t. The overwhelming part: just how overwhelming His love is for me, us, and that He loves all of me completely.

Jesus doesn’t care that I chased dreams of success as much as that I would receive Him when He was near. What I placed my value in shouldn’t be in me at all, what I can do, who I know or what I look like. There is almost always a hint of truth twisted into the Devil’s lies. That makes simple answers and clear direction difficult a lot of the time. Love, something miraculous wrapped in the mundane; it seems so easy and cliché but it isn’t. He sees all that is inside of us and wants us to know how much love He has for us. The problem is it requires trust and vulnerability, to face fears we’ve been pushing down, to say and do things that require risk. We need to do this because of a greater purpose, worshiping a fully loving God, and not wasting our time here on earth.

We need to learn to love and enjoy life when it delivers pain, adversity and nothing we want. Unimportant would fall away and people would become precious. We have all the power to receive it, or not: transformational love--and we can walk through a life well-lived with just that tool. When we are empowered by the full love of God, nothing can stop us.



Acknowledgments
First and foremost, I would like to thank my mom for standing beside me throughout my low points, many of which were covered in the writing of this book. She has been my inspiration and motivation for continuing to improve my life and not let my career ups and downs become my identity. She is my rock.

I also thank my wonderful cousin, Abby, for always making me smile. I hope that one day they can read this book and understand why I spent so much time in front of my computer.

I’d like to thank my church family for allowing me to follow my ambitions presently, which has given me the desire and courage to re-look at the past. I really appreciate it. 

My siblings, Beth and Paul, who showed me the ropes in life; without that knowledge I wouldn’t have ventured into learning which ultimately led to this!



Oatmeal Fudge Bar Recipe
Section 1:
1C Brown Sugar
1C white sugar
1C margarine
2 eggs
2 C flour
1 t baking soda
3 C 1min. Oatmeal
3/4 t salt  

Grease and lightly flour 15 x 10 pan . Mix together  sugars, marg. And eggs, Add flour, soda and oatmeal and salt. Press 2/3 of the mixture into jelly roll pan (15x 10). Set the other 1/3 of mixture aside for later.

Section 2:
Stir over low heat: 1 ( 6 oz) pkg. or semi-sweet chocolate chips, 1 can of sweetened condensed milk, 1 C margarine, 1 t vanilla  Heat until melted.
Pour over mixture in pan, dab the rest of the 1st mixture on top in clumps.
Bake at 350 for 30 minutes.
Approximately 3 dozen bars. Cut medium to small.

Mildred Borchardt



Saturday, March 11, 2017

The Pink Room, Chapter 19, Accepting Me, Part 3



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The Pink Room: Thoughts About Intentional Living  
Chapter 19/ Accepting Me.
Part 3 (Previous post contain the previous chapters.)
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There is a scripture, Rev. 2:17b: I will also give that person a white stone with a new name written on it, known only the one who receives it.  Dan Allander, a psychologist and writer, asks: what might be the “name” God calls you—what do you reveal about God?  He had a tragic car accident, when asked what his name was at first he couldn’t remember the only thing he could remember was he was a teacher. He said that was what was written on his heart, his calling.

There is something about fully accepting a calling, looking doubt in the face and moving in faith toward what is written on your heart. Being disqualified because of your past, your failures, the things others have told you about what you are capable of—none of those are valid if God says it is what it is. He won’t force us but will make it difficult for us not to acknowledge and address what that calling is in His timing.

I’ve seen people sabotage themselves because, deep down, they don’t want what they have or because they don’t believe they deserve what they are called to. Either case is heartbreaking.

I recently lead, what our church calls, a Life Group—it is sort of like a small group Bible study. In it we talked about redeeming the low points in life, allowing God to move through them and use them for good, because God will not waste anything. The exercise was, chart the events in life along a timeline, the lowest moments, write a sentence about how God can use it in your future—then over the lowest moments write a scripture verse about God being with your or having a plan for you.

I asked the group to talk about their experience doing this. One student said, “Where was this sixteen years ago?” Another one said that she felt encouraged and clear about the future.

Their countenances were different, lighter. Weights were lifted and people were encouraged.

I watched a YouTube video where students were filmed as they were told they were appreciated. The students were asked to talk with a teacher who said they were the reason that they loved their job that semester. To be the reason someone loves what they are called to, what a huge compliment, and what an encouraging message to receive. The message: I love what I do, I’d do it for free; but YOU make it fun, you make it worthwhile. There is something about making the treasure, inside others, come to life.

The Grotto in Portland sits on top of a huge hill, for Wisconsinites it'd be a mountain. Inside one all glass building there is a replica of Michelangelo's Pieta. Of course, being a master work it is remarkable but it is so much more striking in person than in this photo--in some respects it is almost too perfect.

There was this angle, where the figures were both separate and linked, where you can feel the weight of Jesus’ lifeless body on Mary. This piece sits in a room that is nearly empty, save a few viewing chairs, and the view of the trees, which somehow becomes a part of the room. The place is mysterious, holy, beautiful and serene. It is a great place for reflection. It is incredibly quiet.

I am captivated by the people of the Christmas story, their honor and faith are outstanding--and totally mind boggling. I look at images from the Renaissance and Enlightenment and wonder how close the artist got to the real individual's look.

This particular image showed both beauty and pain. This helped me realize how often that is the case. And it is also like the Bible verse that says He will make "...beauty from ashes," a literal example is this classic piece of art that clearly shows anguish in a remarkably beautiful sculpture.

But it is like that with all of us—we are the creation (the art project) and we are beautiful as we struggle to do well with our lives; to honor God with all of our time, even the time that needs redeeming.
I have had some lows that needed redeeming. I am more compassionate, more accepting, more humble, more cooperative—the brokenness in those seasons has turned into fertile soil for the next season. And I am thankful.
 
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Imperfections, low points, things that need redeeming can point to beauty; they help make it obvious that the beautiful thing is beautiful because they are not. If we are willing to let God work in our imperfections, our shortcomings, as we pursue our individual callings, those redeemed things also become beautiful pointers to God.



Friday, March 10, 2017

The Pink Room, Chapter 19, Accepting Me, Part 2



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The Pink Room: Thoughts About Intentional Living  
Chapter 19/ Accepting Me.
Part 2 (Previous post contain the previous chapters.)
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I’m mildly obsessed with a newer Bible translation called the Voice. I find the whole thing fantastic. It is a derivative of the word “logos,” which the team doing the translating intentionally translated to “voice.” It is often translated to “word.” They realized that did not include the identity of the person speaking and felt it was more appropriate to use a word that incorporated the personal-ness of communication.

In The Message, another Bible version, Mt. 5:48 says: Live out your God-created identity. I really like that. I think the two thoughts are connected. Using your innate voice and living out a God-created identity go hand in hand.

Right as I heard of this voice Bible, when I went back to school to get my teaching certificate, I was able to do a single gallery student gallery exhibition show. There was a small open room with nothing in it where I hung one large piece of artwork entitled “Voice.” It was made from several small squares lining the wall for ten feet across and four feet down.

Ken Coleman, who used to be on the Catalyst podcasts, a leadership oriented non-profit, often said that you should operate in your sweet spot, the place where your developed skills (resume skills) overlap your natural gifts--the intangibles that are reinforced by those around you. I’d like to take that one step further: look for themes in your life, things that seem to be reinforced or people often encourage or praise in you. 

The truth is that you are unique and your voice, spoken and revealed, is unique. There is only one you. There is a unique message in you to reveal, I believe God has something about His personality or character that He reveals through each of us. Our lists from above overlap—and there is a uniquely developed, uniquely shaped, unique sounding message only you can deliver. It could sound like this is about us, but this is really about worshiping God with your life. Even if it is like some other messages, only some will be able to receive it through you.

There was a story I heard Dan Allendar, a counselor, deliver at a conference where he said he was in a terrible car accident and was asked what his name was by the EMT. He said he could not remember, but what he could remember was that he was a teacher. When we know without a doubt something that we are meant to do, it is as though it is written on our hearts.

“Voice,” my art piece was mixed media on nine inch squares. It was an independent showing at UWGB at the student gallery. Voice became a concept to me as I explored art and outsider art. When I returned to school to get an Art Teacher’s license I became aware of this subtle theme coursing through all this art around us.

Even people with little or no awareness of why they were creating something, when asked, would say these revolutionary things about life and meaning; they’d just spew them out. Unique ideas about life and culture, society and the way things should be or could be.

I realized that we are all given a voice. That might be writing, music, art, business, math, it may be loud or have no sound at all but it is something we are intended to communicate through our life, voice, and breath. All of these are similar in that they can express love and worship God but all are unique the person. Even if you and I have the same gift of creating art you and I will not say the same things through that art at least not in the same way.

It is important we use whatever we've been given; because you, your life, and your voice reveal something about God to those around you. There is a special reason you and I were created.
 
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I came to the conclusion that it is critical that we all express our voice, whatever that is. No one is going to do it for you and no one can fill your place.

Monday, March 6, 2017

The Pink Room, Chapter 19, Accepting Me, Part 1



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The Pink Room: Thoughts About Intentional Living  
Chapter 19/ Accepting Me.
Part 1 (Previous post contain the previous chapters.)
----------------------------

Listening to the radio, I stopped at this station with a preacher talking about pain and life. He said "I don't know who to attribute it to," so I don't feel bad about not attributing it to him either, "but I heard this quotation once: He's never closer to the vine then when He's pruning the branches."

It is an interesting visual, the gardener kneeling under the vine, His face up close inspecting which branches and blooms and leaves to trim. My aunt, who is a great gardener said you trim one third of the oldest growth and then all the new growth down to the previous trim marks. I’m not a gardener, although I wouldn’t mind trying it, so I believed her. I tried it on my parent’s hedges and it made them look terrific.

If we pruned out one third of the old outdated stuff to make room for new things, and cut back in all the areas that have gotten out of control, we’d actually be in okay shape. It is a good principle. But the closeness of God’s face comes with pruning according to that preacher—inspecting and making decision on what would be best to keep and to prune.  

I felt the closeness of God when I walked in on my trashed apartment moments after it was burglarized. I also felt a different closeness of God when my father had a massive heart attack and almost died, when I decided to move across the country for college. When so many things had gone awry, in a year, that one night I just about lost my mind; I felt God there too. I think in the good times, the ones filled with love and peace we forget that is God. Love and peace, we assume are moments and we know and enjoy them—but if I am honest with myself there is a distinct similarity to the restful love and peace feeling to the feeling when I knew God was with me during trauma.

Brother Lawrence wrote "Practising the Presence of God" and talked about being cognizant through the moments of each day and continually practicing awareness that God was in the present moment. Is it possible to know peace and love during all moments of the day? And it is a wonderful and transformational idea when we begin to realize the care and love God feels for us in the mundane moments of laundry folding and making toast, but there is a different depth in those other moments.

Maybe there are dark places when God shows up because the pruned places are raw and vulnerable; all our emotions are accessible and God knows we will feel Him with us. Maybe because He knows our needs, and just really really wants to be near and love us and help. Maybe because we need to believe, I need to believe, I'm lovable.

His love does change me, the moments when I knew He was near changed me.

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I guess then it doesn't matter so much about all the details, it just matters that He loves me enough to come close.