Browsing Tag

courage

Courage, Faith, Fear

When you bite off more than you can chew…Chew it.

I seem to work in a pattern of taking on task bigger than myself.  This comes from a good place, usually my heart says, “Let’s do this!” when my head is taking realistic measurements and reminding me of my limitations. Yet, I trust my heart more times than my head for the basic reason of it operating from faith over fear.

This week was supposed to be a normal one, however by 10 a.m. on Monday I saw a post from a friend that her mom was being sent home on hospice, and three texts from other friends asking for prayers for they were all climbing a different mountain.  My heart hurt for all of them, and I yearned to take their pain away.  I kept uttering the same prayer for each one, over and over, “May we come to You from a place of FAITH and not false fear.”  I couldn’t shake the feeling of sadness, so I finally stopped my day and sat down with my Gratitude Journal.  This is something I normally do at night, right before bed –  but I needed an attitude shift, and they say it’s impossible to be grateful and anxious at the same time.  Usually, this is a really simple task – today I got to #4 before I just sat and stared.

That’s what fear does, it reminds us the size of our mountains and blocks the view of our blessings.  When faith is handing us our climbing gear and slapping us on the rear in encouragement that all things are possible.  Even this mountain.

A few months ago, I was headed to Fort Worth to see some friends for the weekend.  I was meeting them downtown, so I left the house dressed cute for the evening.  Meaning I had heels on – high ones.  As I left our neighborhood to head north, I had to hit the breaks to avoid hitting a huge bull in the middle of the road.  He was at the top of the hill, a blind hill if you are traveling from the other direction, so I was fearful for those people.  I knew who Mr. Bull most likely belonged to, so I quickly turned into their driveway and drove down to their house.  This isn’t a neighbor we know outside of the polite, drive by wave.  It’s an elderly couple who we have admired, simply based on how hard they work to keep their farm pristine.

So, down the driveway I went, parking just short of running over the sweet little man, sitting in his lawn chair.

“Hi Sir, I think you have a bull that got out!”

“Huh?”

“Your bull?  He is out in the road!”

“Huh?”

After a few more repeats of this, he got out of his chair and walked to meet me.  I pointed to the red bull in the road, he said, “Oh goodness!  My wife must have left the gate open when she got the mail.”  As he jumped into his golf cart, I hollered, “Do you need me to help get him back in?” He waved at me to follow him.  Once we got back to the road, I pulled to the top of the hill, put my hazards on, and got out to coral the bull back in the gate.  In my heels.  The owner of Mr. Bull told me to stand at the gate, he was going to run him directly towards me, and if I could just usher him to turn left, into the gate, that would be great.

Not a single thought went into me saying yes, my mission was clear.  Save all the travelers on Robin Road and direct Mr. Bull in turning left.  Nothing else – like death –  crossed my mind until all 1500 lbs of irritated Mr. Bull was trotting towards me, standing in my high heels and my red shirt.  I knew I should have worn the green one.  I threw up a prayer to my Grandpa Mason – who was most likely shaking his head and chuckling at me from heaven, but he handled his fair share of livestock when he was on earth, so I was counting on some direction from him.   I planted my heels, and started swinging my hands together, ending the move in the direction of where Mr. Bull needed to end his jog.  Clearly, being a cheerleader prepared me for this moment.  As he got closer, he also got bigger…and bigger, snot was slinging out of his nose as he ran.  He was making a bee line straight for my red blouse, so I quickly added a “Yaw-yaw” noise to my arm movements.

When I was young, I loved trying on my mom’s high heels and seeing how fast I could run in them.  That memory came to mind as I was watching Mr. Bull run at me, did I still have that talent?  Just as I was about to test my speed, Ol’ Red turned left, into the gate.  Thank goodness, he understood what “YAW” meant.  As the old man drove by in his golf cart, he paused and said, “Little Missy, thank you for stopping and helping me get him back in.  We just bought him, and I’d hate for someone to have hit a $2,500 investment.  Thanks for your help, glad you knew how to handle cattle.” And sped off to close the gate.

Yep me too.  Glad I could put my cowgirl talent to use for you sir.

Basically what I saw running towards me.

My friend Amy’s favorite saying is. “When you bite off more than you can chew, Chew it.”

Sometimes you have to do just that, chomp away.  When our faith is bigger than our feet, we simply need to widen our stance to hold our balance. When our mountains (or snotty bulls) seem to take up our entire vision, and fear is knocking on the door – that is precisely the moment to lean into the faith that caused us to take such a big bite in the first place.

Bob Goff says that most of our decisions are driven by either love or fear.  Figure out who’s doing the talking, then decide what you’ll do.

Lean into love beloved.

Stare the Bull in the eye, smile a little, and chomp on that faith.

For any cowgirl gigs you need help with, feel free to contact me anytime.  I just hope I’m not busy washing my hair that day.

No bull.

 

 

Boundaries, Brave, Courage, Crazy Cycle, Forgivness, Lessons, Pause

Practice the Pause

For God is not a God of disorder but of peace.”  1 Cor 14:33

Disorder = chaos, mess, confusion, disarray, shambles, discombobulation.

I cannot breathe during times of chaos.  I can function, because I am a mom, thus giving up the option of bailing during messy times.  I am a functioning champ on auto-pilot during times of disorder, but I cannot breathe.  As it turns out, breathing is necessary to live peacefully.

To invite peace into your life, you must step off the Crazy Cycle. And make a conscious decision to not participate in the games anymore.  I’ve gotten off of the Crazy ride before, but didn’t step away – thinking that was enough.  But, the cars on the Ferris Wheel continued to bump the backside of my head on each turn of the ride.  I’ve never been accused of being a fast learner.  Friend, don’t just stand beside the exit sign, walk away.

Walking away is always sad. Especially if you are accustomed and conditioned to the chaos.

Walking away takes bravery and courage. Walking away isn’t giving up, it is setting boundaries.  Boundaries are healthy, with perimeters that can bring peace towards a situation that hasn’t been resolved.

A friend lovingly referred me to the book, “Keep your Love On!” by Danny Silk.  In it he states, “If you cannot set boundaries with “consumers” (of your time and energy), you are going to be exploited.”  Ring a bell?  The wrapped package for me ended with “The more you respect the value of your own life by cultivating your garden, the more you will create an atmosphere of respect around you.”  Respect doesn’t look like selfish agendas or manipulation.  For the love of yourself, your family, and your sanity – respect your values.

I’ve learned the long, dusty way, that my words are safer if I keep them.  When I hold on to them, they can’t be twisted and turned into something they weren’t used for.  Miscommunication is one thing, but taking words and turning them to fit into your agenda is a whole ‘nother ballgame.  It’s mean and spiteful.  I’ve been guilty of doing it myself, until I recognized this behavior and knew better.

We’ve all been in conflict and used a line, spoken out of context, against another.  Almost as a tag line, a defensive one.  “I mean, and then they said this…”, said with a sad look, expecting to invoke sympathy.   Just stop.  Own your part. Get off the wheel.  Go lick your wounds in your own corner, with your safe people.  Then get up, and move on.  Walk towards peace.  Forgive.  Forgive when it’s hard.  Forgive if it’s only for your own peace of mind.

I wish passive aggressive would be recognized and treated like the plague.  I recognized how passive aggressive I am with my sarcasm only when I married someone who doesn’t own a passive aggressive bone. In his whole, handsome body.  Black and white with no passive gray.  I love the black and white, it is safe, I know where everything stands.  While I appreciate his black and white, I don’t live there, I reside a lot in the shades between.  Not just the short, gray side, but the whole rainbow side.  We balance each other.

Learning to separate passive aggressive from my sarcasm has been more difficult than learning the Chinese language.  I’m still progressing.  I reach for sarcasm more than chocolate somedays.  This is more of a confession than a proud stance.  Sarcasm is a love language of mine that keeps the world at bay, it is a much-needed buffer.  Hubs doesn’t speak this love language, and sometimes that requires a translator for us to communicate.

Pause. That’s the key.  Not your circus, not your monkeys?  Pause.  When the monkeys belong to you?  Take one-hot-minute to pause, to gather and ground yourself before you reply.  Otherwise you are going to do what you have always done, thus another round on the Crazy Cycle Ferris Wheel.  And those rounds are enough to make anyone nauseous.

Practice the pause. Learn to love the pause.  Allow yourself to grow within the pause.  Breathe in the peace, and exhale the chaos. Chaos will eat you alive, it will block your view of the beauty that this life is filled with.  Pause and breathe.  I love the thought that deep breaths are like little love notes to your body.  Pause to send your body affirmations of love and peace.

“Loving yourself through the process of owning your story is the bravest thing you’ll ever do.”  Brene Brown

You are valued my friend.

You are so brave.

And everyone deserves to have their boundaries respected.

Now, kindly follow the exit signs on your right, and get your butt off the Crazy Cycle Ferris Wheel.  We hoped you enjoyed your ride.

*Piece by Stefan Sagmeister: The Happy Show