Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts

"Unlovely, Rejected" to "Lovely, Accepted"

I was always a sickly child. I had so many allergies, skin disorders, chronic nosebleeds, and asthma that it seemed I would come down with every illness that came across my path. I went back and forth to doctors to get weekly allergy shots. After a few years my health turned around and I thought I would finally enjoy a normal life. 
At the age of 6, my life came to a screeching halt when I was sexually abused by a neighbor. I couldn’t tell anyone! I’ll get into trouble, I thought. Coming from a military family, where children were seen and not heard, I felt I must have done something wrong. I was so ashamed I withdrew and acted out in anger. Soon after, we moved to a new area. I felt this was the way I would leave my experience behind me. Unfortunately, at the age of 9, I was at a friend’s house and the abuse happened again, this time by a visiting uncle. What was wrong with me? I cut my hair very short and began eating to put on weight. I decided I would make myself undesirable. No one would do this to me again, but I was wrong. While in the library of my middle school, I found myself cornered and sexually assaulted by three boys. After that, I began to get heavier and heavier. 
In my junior year of high school I decided to lose weight. I wanted to become more confident and build my self esteem. It was at this time in my life I was raped. This event threw me into alcohol and drug abuse. I had decided that I deserved all that had happened to me in my life.
When I got married I thought I had found the fairy tale, but it was just another place for me to feel unloved and inadequate. Through the years I tried desperately to be loved and accepted. I lived for everyone else. I tried to be the perfect mom and wife. Everyone thought I had it all together, but inside I was crushed. Years of pretending, hiding a series of tragedies, attending numerous funerals of family and friends, one after another was taking a dangerous toll on me. My life fell into a deep depression that lead me to alcohol and drug abuse once again to try and kill the pain. I couldn’t function or sleep until finally, one night I cried out to the Lord. ‘I can’t do this anymore, I give up, and I surrender.’ It was then the Lord reached down from heaven and saved me. The darkness passed and the true light was shining! I was involved in a Bible study two weeks later, baptized within two and a half months and I’ve been on fire for the Lord ever since. This all happened several years ago. I look back on my life and can see the Lord had placed Spiritual members of His body across my path and has called me for such a time as this. It is no longer I who live, but He who lives through me. I am loved, blessed, and highly favored of the Lord. I am victorious, over come by the Blood of the Lamb and by the word of my Testimony.

Signed,
Lovely, Accepted

Detour to Destined


This life we live is a journey toward our destination.  There are side trips or detours along the way that help to build character and to strengthen us.  This is one of those side trips I can share because the Lord’s hand is on my life.  I can thank him for this detour and smile at the future, praying that my King will be pleased when I arrive at my destination.

“So where is your sister moving to?” asked a mutual friend at a wedding reception I was attending. The conversation continued as the friend expressed her surprise after seeing the “sold” sign in front of my sister’s house.  Wondering if she noticed the incredulous expression on my face, I responded that my brother-in law got a job transfer.  After blurting out that they were moving to North Carolina (which later turned out to be the correct guess) I quickly ended our conversation in order to be alone.  

Once in the ladies room, I closed the door and prayed that the Lord would help me with the surreal feeling I was experiencing.  My sister, my once dearest and closest friend was moving away to an unknown destination.  This was yet another episode in the unraveling of a series of unbelievable events that had taken hold in the lives of the people I love.  After regaining composure I found the mutual friend among the wedding guests.  I told her there was something I needed to speak to her about and apologized for not being truthful earlier that evening.  I confided to the friend that I was unaware of my sister’s intent to move, as I had not seen nor spoken with her for the past several months due to a deep wedge within our family. Now that my sister and her family were moving, the distance would be greater and the wedge would be deeper than I could have ever imagined.  There was an ache within me that evening at the wedding but there was also a sense of freedom experienced as that friend and I took each others hands and prayed for reconciliation in my family. There was freedom because this mutual friend was the first person let in to this private area of my life and into what I had been experiencing and suppressing for the past year.  The friend was given a small, vague glimpse and generalities regarding the family turmoil but that was all. She did not learn of the greater ache and deeper wounds that began several years earlier in the life of my oldest daughter. 

At the tender age of three my daughter was sexually abused.  She was abused by a member of my family.  Her world would drastically be altered.  The abuse repainted the bright colorful rainbows in her life a dismal, colorless shade of gray.  The insidious effects of the abuse tried to rob my daughter of her childhood and continued to try to destroy her future. She endured the abuse for nine years, until the age of twelve; it took another twelve years for the wounds that were buried within her to be brought to the surface.     Then He took the child by the hand, and said to her … “Little girl, I say to you, arise.” … for she was twelve years of age. Mark 5:41. 

My daughter experienced first hand as many other women have those deep, deep places that can only be healed by the love and compassion of Christ.  Only the power of the Holy Spirit could penetrate through the layers of pain, hurt and despair and guide the wisdom and advice of extensive Christian counseling that ultimately helped lead the way to healing and forgiveness. I know for my daughter that some days, the old memories try to resurface and are much more painful than others, but by the grace of God, she presses on.  This treasure of a daughter is a living testimony, glowing in the radiance of the Christ, assured in the Father’s love, precious in His sight and choosing victory over defeat.    Behold, I make all things new. Revelation 21:5

I too, am choosing victory over defeat.  Reflecting back on the grieving process my husband and I experienced after learning of our daughter’s abuse, I can truly thank the Lord for His grace, mercy and healing in my own life.

Initially learning of the abuse, the guilt we internalized as parents was insurmountable.  Questions we had were asked and rehashed hundreds of times.  How could we not have known?  How could this have possibly happened and why weren’t we there to protect our child?  Our days, our nights, our dreams our life, were all filled with anguish beyond belief.  One day blended into the next as we grieved the loss and pain in our daughter’s life.  There were days literally spent crying out, my face to the floor, moaning from the deepest places within my soul before the Lord. His timing is perfect!  During a spring vacation from work was when this grieving process took place.  I can thank the Lord for His grace in allowing me the time needed to be alone in His arms.  My husband had to prevent me from throwing away our photo albums.  To me they were reminders of the pain our daughter experienced behind the photos. It was too much to bear.   Evening and morning and at noon, I will pray and cry aloud, And He shall hear my voice. Psalm55:17  

When sexual abuse rears its ugly head it tries to destroy everything in its path.  After its attempt to destroy its victim it continues to tear through the whole family wiping out years of trust and cherished relationships, turning them into betrayal and alienation.    

Knowledge of the abuse was tolerated in my extended family as long as it remained within the family.  Once it crossed the boundaries of the outside world, the family ties took on a whole new dimension.  The family member that abused our daughter has been forgiven. That phase of the process did not happen over night, but he truly has been forgiven.  There was no longer a physical threat but seeing the family member ignited emotional reminders within my daughter.  When realizing the magnitude these effects had on her, we as parents would not let her go through one more second of anguish.  This time around, our little girl was going to be protected. This time we would be there for her.  

Upon making a reasonable request to prevent possible contact, the reactions from my family were totally unexpected.  The reasonable request became the catalyst for the family thought to be standing with us during this trial, to turn and step aside.  I went beyond the walls of the family to protect my child.  I would do it again. Arrows began to fly questioning the validity of the abuse, stating denials and more arrows of false accusations followed.  The blow was crushing.  After sensing the misguided rage during a sibling meeting, it was quickly realized there was nothing I could say to change their minds. It was not to be believed that we simply were asking for a request to be honored.  That was all.  There was nothing I could say to help them understand. They had taken a position based on their own beliefs and, drawn a line in the sand and closed their minds.  Abuse is ugly.  Sin is ugly.  The enemy’s plan is to steal, kill and destroy.  We have not spoken to each other for over a year. 

I understand their hurt and pain and continue to pray for their healing and wholeness. A decision was made to stand up for a child who in the not so distant past was left broken because we were unaware. We became aware.  She would be protected. Her wholeness outweighed the loss.        

When my mother and father forsake me (or my brothers and sisters) then the Lord will take care of me. Psalm 27:10

The Lord has taken care of me and given me scripture throughout this journey. Because of Him I can pray for my family.  I love them dearly, have forgiven them and pray for their destination. 

Perhaps, if I happen to run into the friend from the wedding and she asks me how things are going with my family, I can point her in the direction of the banquet table set before my King, looking across at a family that has been truly reconciled.  

… but the Lord comes to give life more abundantly. 
John 10:10

Thank you Lord!

Signed,
Destined

Violated to Valuable


When I was 3 years old, I was in a tap dancing recital named “Baby Take a Bow”.  My costume called for white tap shoes, but I only had black ones.  To remedy this, my mom bought white spray paint and took my tap shoes outside behind my grandparents’ garage and sprayed them white.  Being only 3, I was fascinated with watching the transformation.  I couldn’t wait to wear my new shoes, so I watched them alone behind the garage, waiting for the paint to dry.  My uncle found me behind the garage alone, and introduced me to the end of my childhood.  I was only 3.  I was only waiting for the paint to dry.  The sexual abuse lasted for 9 years.  There were times when I wanted to tell my parents, but I was afraid of my family finding out.  What would they think of me?  My uncle had also threatened to hurt me and told me it was our secret.  One time when I was at my great grandmother’s house, she caught my uncle with me and gave ME a very disapproving look, never told anyone else in my family and never said a word to my uncle.  I was about six years old when this happened.  She taught me that what was happening to me was shameful and my fault by the way she looked at me.  She also showed me that I wasn’t worth protecting or saving from the abuse.  In my mind, I continued waiting for the paint to dry.  Another time at my grandparents’ house, I walked in on my uncle playing a game with my sister in his room (she was only 4 years old and I was 8) and I knew from his behavior that he was going to try some things on her.  So I told her that she needed to go play outside and I took her place to protect her.  I determined at that time that I would never let him touch her.  I would do whatever it took to make sure she didn’t turn out like me.  When I was 12, my family moved into my grandparents’ house for a few months while my parents waited to close on the house they bought.  My sister and I shared a room upstairs with a huge walk in closet.  My sister was in the closet, and I was in our room after school.  My uncle walked into our room and wanted me to go with him.  For months now, I wanted the abuse to end, and on that day, I finally had the strength to stand up to him and say no.  When I told him to get out and that I wasn’t going to allow him to touch me anymore, he became enraged and actually body slammed me onto my bedroom floor.  My sister came running out of the closet and saw me on the floor.  My uncle got scared and left our bedroom.  I went downstairs and told my grandma that he threw me onto the floor and she brushed it off and didn’t do a thing.  However, she did tell me not to aggravate him, so he wouldn’t get worked up like that.  I went back up to my room and laid on my bed and in my mind I waited for the paint to dry.  Being violated had been a lifestyle for me.  I didn’t realize at this time in my life that the physical violation was truly nothing in comparison to the emotional violation that had taken place in my soul.  From that day on, he never touched me again, but the abuse continued to touch me for many years to come.  

John 10:10, “The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.”

One Wednesday night at church, I heard Pastor Jo Ann teach on this verse.  She mentioned how people live in part A of that verse, ‘the thief comes only to steal, kill and destroy, or part B of that verse, ‘I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.’

When the abuse finally ended, I wore the shame of it for almost 15 more years as a shield around me.  Shame was a constant companion for me.  I chose to hold onto my past and the hurts involved with it instead of the life that Jesus was offering to me.  I never believed that I was worthy of the second part of that verse.  

I came to a breaking point when I was about 24 years old.  I knew I couldn’t go on the way I was.  If God is who He says He is, then how could I go on wearing the shame and fear like a favorite coat?  Pastor JoAnn gave me a book called Hinds Feet in High Places and I cried through the whole thing and read it in a few days.  I was the character, ‘Much Afraid’ in that book and I knew that my Shepherd was leading me on a path to my freedom.  That book was written for me.  

At a time not of my choosing, the delicate house of cards that I had built came tumbling down.  The realization that through all of those years since the abuse ended and the paint still hadn’t dried was overwhelming.  I began counseling and started my path to freedom.  I began to understand the depth of things that had been taken from me.  At this point, Paul, my parents and sister were the only ones in my family that knew this abuse had taken place.  

A few months into this process, my grandfather died, and my grandma was going to sell her house and move to a Senior Care Facility.  I went there with my mom to help clean and prepare the house to sell it.  My mom was helping with something in the basement and didn’t realize that I was assigned to clean my uncle’s old bedroom, where a lot of the abuse had taken place.  I defiantly wore a very strong ‘I am Fine’ mask, so no one in my family could really tell how hurting I was on the inside.  I was determined not to let anyone see the shame that resided in me.  When I was in his room, I was in the closet where much of the abuse took place, wiping down his floor.  I swiped my left hand behind his dresser, and a piece of broken glass caught my ring finger.  I went to the sink in the bathroom and got most of it out, but a small sliver remained in my finger.  From that day on, every time I bumped my finger, I was reminded of all of the abuse that I had suffered.  The pain in my finger was a constant reminder of my friends named shame and fear.  I didn’t know how to function without those companions.  

When my counseling had reached the point that I knew I wanted to move forward and evict shame and fear out of my life, I agreed to have some of the pastors pray for me to be set free from those things.  In my heart I tried to believe that God would heal me, but I doubted so much.  I silently prayed that if God would really heal me, my sign would be that the glass, that was there for over a year now, would come out of my finger.  God brought me to a verse in Mark 5:39-42, ‘39And when he had entered, he said to them, "Why are you making a commotion and weeping? The child is not dead but sleeping." 40And they laughed at him. But he put them all outside and took the child's father and mother and those who were with him and went in where the child was. 41Taking her by the hand he said to her, "Talitha cumi," which means, "Little girl, I say to you, arise." 42And immediately the girl got up and began walking (for she was twelve years of age), and they were immediately overcome with amazement.’ 

When I read these verses, I was overcome with emotion.  I felt like this girl represented me.  She was 12 years old when Jesus took her hand and told her to arise.  I was 12 years old when the sexual abuse ended, but my battle over my mind and emotions lasted another 12 years.  I believe when these pastors prayed for me, Jesus reached out and took my hand and said to me ‘little girl, I say to you arise!’  I really felt God’s presence wash down over me.  In my heart I believed that my emotions were healed.  When I went home that night, in faith, I squeezed that finger and the glass sliver popped right out!  He refreshed me and because of His grace and mercy, I can say here today that I am free from the shame of the abuse in my life.  His freedom came rushing in like a flood.  The paint had finally dried.  I realized that God had always looked at me as a valuable, cherished and loved child.  I could never see that for myself.  I finally understood myself to be someone who was valuable, and I was able to embrace how God viewed me for the first time.  I now know my self worth and value was never in what happened to me in my life, but always in God alone, and His love for me, just because I was His.  

One of my favorite verses is Micah 2:13, “The breaker is come up before them; they will break out, Pass through the gate, and go out by it; their king will pass before them, With the LORD at their head."  The Hebrew word for Breaker is parats.  Some of the meanings are:  to break through or down or over, burst, breach; to break or burst out (from womb or enclosure); to break up, break in pieces; to break out (violently) upon; to break over (limits), increase; to use violence; to burst open; to spread, distribute.  God is the Breaker in this verse. God takes the lead and breaks open a way for us to be free from those things that bind us.  That is what God did with the shame and fear, He annihilated them.  My passion is to see women walk in freedom from shame and fear. Most of my life I was primarily confined by those things.  When I was set free from them, it was because I finally believed that God is who He says He is and He broke through on my behalf so I could confidently walk in His authority and follow His lead for other women.  Because of that freedom, I have authority over shame and fear. I want to see that same freedom and authority with the women I come into contact with ~ and to see women effectively perpetuating that authority in their families and generations to come!

Signed,
Valuable

Worthless to Precious


After being woken up from a strange dream that brought me back in time, I found myself looking into an old dusty briefcase where a black book, a journal made its home.  I battled within me to pick it up and read it.  At the time I didn’t know why, but as I did, I found myself hiding from no one else but me in the bathroom glancing at it.  Just one glance at mere words on the pages and my heart began to palpitate.  I found myself not only shocked but disgusted at what I was reading.  The truth of who I was, a negative and deeply hurt and wounded being.  “Me”.  My first thought was to shut it as if to hide it from the world.  But I was hiding it from no one else but me.  I quickly put the journal back in the briefcase as to hide from others what I saw and read.  But the words of a deep hidden wounded and negative girl could not leave my memory, for I lived it.  Bent over holding my stomach I just wept for her.  For the ‘me’ and who I was. It brought to the very surface the past of which I tried to hide.  The ‘me’ I tried to forget and hide from others, the pages.  The shameful ‘me’ only God was able to change. 

My heart raced as I remember those moments of anger and rage when deep depression was too strong for me to fight.  I would find myself on my knees praying for hours. Desperately asking God several questions, to guide me to a new and different path from the spiral road I was taking.  I begged Him to please get me out of this crazy maze of a box I found myself in.  I specifically stated ‘I don’t like myself.’  I did not realize it but my own self; my own hatred for me was not only causing a lot of unhappiness in me but problems in my relationships with friends and family.   I hated myself to the point of suicidal thoughts.  To add to this I found myself in legal battles over my stolen identity paying off a debt caused by a family member I was taught to trust. The only solution out of this trap was to end my life.  To make matters worse I found myself pouring all of myself into a toxic relationship. How I got there began ever so subtly but quickly slid into a spiraling endless road.  I found myself in an altered relationship I felt was only good enough for me since I should not expect anything better.  I found myself in an alternative lifestyle even if it was not what I believed in.  Though I felt what I know now to be the fumes of toxic waste, I convinced myself to accept this, creating more insecurity, fear, anxiety and negative emotions to me and those who tried to get close to me. 

Today I can say, Colossians 2: 13 – 14,  When you were dead in your sins and in the uncircumcision of your sinful nature, God made you alive with Christ. He forgave us all our sins; Having canceled the written code, with its regulations, that was against us and that stood opposed to us.  God truly has forgiven all my sins and cancelled every record of the debt I had to pay.  

So what was it that caused me to shut that black book so quickly and weep for that girl? As I prayed for this answer in the moments of reminiscing I saw as if a mask, my old mask that gave me such an ugly and shameful identity broke into many pieces.  Looking back it was truly a challenge, a struggle between the spiritual and toxic nature.  Looking back seeing everything thrown to me at once was only the enemy trying to keep me in that box to intoxicate me even more and make me stay in the unvalued and worthless state of mind.  Though it did not happen overnight I needed to make a decision to let go of those things that take hold of my past.  I needed to open the pages for me to see.  The “me” I was. The “me” I am no more. I then began shredding all my old things that no longer had a hold on me.  Although it did not feel good at the moment because to be honest every girl wants to hold on to memories, shedding it brought true cleansing for me.  It was truly a rebirth.    

I began to realize that if I was going to experience any success in my life I was going to have to involve God in every part of my life.  God was tearing down walls and taking me out of the box in addition to adjusting my lifestyle.  God healed me in many different ways!  2 Corinthians 5:17 – Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, He is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!  God is working in me continuously, making healthy change and positive adjustments.  I will never forget what happened.  In 2002, a dear friend took me to church at The Tabernacle. I noticed the sign – “One People One Call to Heal the Broken” She introduced me to an inspirational person, Pastor Jo Ann, and she started to pray for me.  I followed her prayerful advice and I was able to take many positive steps forward.  I began to accept myself.  It’s very true! I am not the same anymore, my life has begun.  I was freed.  God unlocked the “gate” that held the “me” in the inner self created prison, in darkness and anguish.  Thank God, I finally realized that God is positive and having Him in every part of my life is much more fun and fruitful than living trapped in those negative emotions and toxic fumes. Galatians 5: 22- 23;  But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness,  gentleness and self – control.

I have begun to see myself the way God sees me.  My mind is off the past.  I opened my eyes up to what God wants me to do in my life today.  I now believe that God has a plan and new beginnings for me.  I must choose to look away from the past and look forward to what God wants to do in my life.  God wants me to look from where I am to where I am headed. 

In everything I do whether as a teacher, co-author and many different roles, I know God is with me and always using me in all those areas I touch.  I know that He has something more for me.  I believe God will call me to do even more in my life.  I often remind myself that God loves me and wants me to use me in powerful ways to help other people. He will prepare me for whatever comes my way.  He has increased my confidence in amazing ways and given me assurance.

My purpose is to encourage women, to let them know that it is time for women to take your rightful place in society.  It’s time for you to have healthy self respect, and a  balanced  God-given love and a firm, unshakeable confidence in God and the gifts, talents and abilities that God has placed on the inside of you. 

YOU ARE WOMAN!  Remember God loves you.  You have a destiny.  It’s time you realize who you really are!  Romans 15:13 – May the God of hope fill  you with all joy and peace as you trust in Him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power the Holy Spirit.

Signed,
Precious

"Cry of Silence" to "Cry of Freedom"


Cry of Silence was brought up in a Christian home. I did what I was told and followed all the rules that were set before me. I always was an obedient child, the one who did what was right. However, I never developed my own relationship with the Lord or personal convictions.  I was trained to marry a Christian man, like many of us were. So this is what I did, but I was deceived. I quickly learned that every man that names the name of Jesus is not of His.  So here I am now, married with my so called "Christian man"- thinking all was perfect, but was I wrong. 

Now this is where my wilderness experience begins, the training that God had to take me through. In this marriage I was abused emotionally, mentally, physically and sexually.  I also was a victim of infidelity. Within this time all I knew to do was to seek God's face, through prayer and reading God’s word. During this time I developed a TRUE relationship with the Lord. I got to know him as my redeemer, a deliverer and a mind regulator. No one but me knew the pain or the amount of suffering that I was dealing with in my Cry of silence. 

One day in my car, I heard an advertisement for a local Christian Counseling Agency. The Holy Spirit lay upon my heart to call them. This is when my healing began.  I realized that God did not want me in this situation that I was in; He loved me too much to have me suffer. I was so confused because I know that God is not a God of divorce.  I would hear messages at church on how we are to pray for God to heal your marriage, and I spent 13 years on my face asking for this.  I had to let go of being concerned about what Man would think, and I had to grab hold of the Word that says, who the Son sets free is free indeed!!!  

My personal song of redemption is Alabaster Box.  One of the verses in that song says, ‘you don't know the cost of the oil in MY alabaster box’.  This is when I knew I had to remove myself from the Hell I was in.  So you see I know what it is to be in a place that it hurts so bad that I want to take my own life- and yes, I was saved.  I just got to a place where I was emotionally bankrupt, but no one ever knew because I wore my masks very well.  I wasn't ready to remove these masks until I personally sought out the qualities of God, for myself- I cried out to God for 13 years, and he lead me out of the wilderness with all the scars to show and to let woman know that God is able to bring you out in your right mind. Ladies God is ABLE- more than able- to bring us through.  No matter where you are or what you are going through, God will carry you through!  BUT GOD-- always remember there is always, a BUT GOD in every and all situations.

Signed,
Cry of Freedom

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