- Watching the clock flip from 11:59 p.m. to 12:00 a.m. and welcoming November 1st
- Starting this 5th anniversary with a text message from a dear friend
- knowing deep joy and peace
- A beautiful book sent from a friend, inscribed to me by the artist, so specially appropriate for today
- having flexible plans
- "If the impact doesn't kill you, the sharks will"
- tea this afternoon with a long-time friend
- a lovely handmade collage/card from that friend (one of the few who was at the big party I threw to celebrate the first anniversary of healing all those years ago!)
- getting the news that I had been hired for a job I'm quite excited to do
- receiving an anniversary text from my dear friend and former roommate L, currently living in the UK
- Feeling well enough tonight to go out for the evening (not bad since earlier in the day I'd been feeling very unwell from some food I ate yesterday)
- the twinkling lights downtown
- eating Subway for dinner - I haven't had it in ages... so good
- a brief text message exchange with my friend J. - the friend who was with me in the car 5 years ago tonight, who let Jesus use him in my life so powerfully that night
- attending a "Concert of Hope" - seemed an appropriate way to end the evening - hearing about ministry themed around hope, and worshiping
- kazoos - nothing quite so funny as a great song with a kazoo solo!
- time to simply sit and pray for friends today
- comfy clothes
- a hug from a friend
- one last night's break from Grandma's house
Monday, November 01, 2010
Daily 5 - Year 2, Day 78
Today's Daily 5:
I Know Hope
I greeted the arrival of November 1st late last night, laying in bed and watching the clock flip slowly from 11:59 to 12:00. I watched one of my least favorite days of the year end, and one of the the most special days in my year begin. And there was deep peace and joy in acknowledging that the threshold had been crossed - that I'd reached that five year mark of healing that seemed so elusive at times.
A few minutes past midnight and my phone buzzed with a text message - a dear friend in a different country and time zone had been quietly keeping vigil too, and had waited up to send me a message celebrating 5 years of healing.
I've told the story before - of that night when I sat in a dark car with a good friend, and encountered God in a profoundly new way.
It's part of the dialogue of my life, this day. November 1st.
And it's been 5 years since that night in the car with my friend. 5 years since God intervened.
I'd lived with depression for 7 or so years. Every time I thought it couldn't get worse, that my existence couldn't become darker, it did. There had been a few brief reprieves, but nothing lasting. Despair and hopelessness were the emotions of the moment. The few prayers I still prayed were either colored with anger at God, or exhausted begging. I had good Christian guilt and would never have taken my own life, but I spent many a night trying desperately to sleep and begging God that this would be the night where any waking I did would be in Heaven.
Five years ago today my life changed.
It took me several months to understand the scope of that. To really be able to trust that it was true when I voiced the words, "I've been healed."
They have actually been five of the hardest years of my life. Many of them marked with days and weeks where I wondered if I would actually reach another anniversary of healing and still be able to say, "By God's grace I'm depression free."
This year has had many of those days and moments too.
But the overwhelming hopelessness that marked the days of depression has never returned.
And as I pause to mark this day, that is perhaps the greatest gift.
To know hope, even in the darkest places that I've walked and walk.
Today, I'm pausing to celebrate hope. Hope and healing, and a God who carries both and offers them as irrevocable gifts. A God who has offered those to me, and continues to teach me to stand in them, to delight in them.
It's been 5 years.
The cast of characters in my life has changed time and time again. Those who celebrated with me at year 1 are scattered. The friend who was with me that night is one I rarely see or hear from these days. Life today looks nothing like what I'd envisioned five years ago, or even one year ago.
But God has been faithful as I journey.
And I know hope.
A few minutes past midnight and my phone buzzed with a text message - a dear friend in a different country and time zone had been quietly keeping vigil too, and had waited up to send me a message celebrating 5 years of healing.
I've told the story before - of that night when I sat in a dark car with a good friend, and encountered God in a profoundly new way.
It's part of the dialogue of my life, this day. November 1st.
And it's been 5 years since that night in the car with my friend. 5 years since God intervened.
I'd lived with depression for 7 or so years. Every time I thought it couldn't get worse, that my existence couldn't become darker, it did. There had been a few brief reprieves, but nothing lasting. Despair and hopelessness were the emotions of the moment. The few prayers I still prayed were either colored with anger at God, or exhausted begging. I had good Christian guilt and would never have taken my own life, but I spent many a night trying desperately to sleep and begging God that this would be the night where any waking I did would be in Heaven.
Five years ago today my life changed.
It took me several months to understand the scope of that. To really be able to trust that it was true when I voiced the words, "I've been healed."
They have actually been five of the hardest years of my life. Many of them marked with days and weeks where I wondered if I would actually reach another anniversary of healing and still be able to say, "By God's grace I'm depression free."
This year has had many of those days and moments too.
But the overwhelming hopelessness that marked the days of depression has never returned.
And as I pause to mark this day, that is perhaps the greatest gift.
To know hope, even in the darkest places that I've walked and walk.
Today, I'm pausing to celebrate hope. Hope and healing, and a God who carries both and offers them as irrevocable gifts. A God who has offered those to me, and continues to teach me to stand in them, to delight in them.
It's been 5 years.
The cast of characters in my life has changed time and time again. Those who celebrated with me at year 1 are scattered. The friend who was with me that night is one I rarely see or hear from these days. Life today looks nothing like what I'd envisioned five years ago, or even one year ago.
But God has been faithful as I journey.
And I know hope.
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