August 31, 2014 - Milky white propofol

As promised, here is another re-visit for those of you that joined my journey late. Warning, It's rather emotional. I teared up reading back through it just now. This tells the story of the 24 hours around the actual mastectomy. You may have read this if you have followed me from the beginning. If not, here you go! (Note: it used to be 2 posts, but I've joined them together for one). 

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Day 0 Part 1: 
I realize I never captured the actual day of the mastectomy. Early on, I didn't yet know if I could commit to going public with this specific journey. I wanted to advocate, but was I truly ready to put it all out there, particularly something so very private by most standard? It seemed all to personal a topic. It seemed foreign. It seemed unreal. Well it quickly became very real when we got in the car that morning to go to the hospital. I don't even recall what we talked about in the car. I do recall my saying everything is going to be different when I wake up and I warned Ron I didn't know how I was going to react. I'd pictured it a hundred times by now and I knew it would be not so good but reality is powerful. This part made me very nervous. 

When we got there and walked in, there sat my mom, dad, sister, in laws, and sister in law. That got me! Just to know they came out of support for this decision we had made. It made my moment. It got me through the waiting room doors. 

"Mrs. McCollum, please come to the registration desk." I had put off signing in to the very last minute. I didn't want them to know I was there early for fear they would take me back earlier than planned. Delay, delay, delay.  There sat the kindest looking lady at the registration desk. She asked my name, address, etc. Then verified I was in for a double mastectomy. Well, darn it! Hearing that word "mastectomy", and I busted out into blubbering tears. The precious lady responded with "you're beautiful now and this won't change anything." And she had this watery look in her eyes as well. She knew to treat me as fragile. I could have kissed her cheek had I not been wiping my face so frantically. I knew that revelation that mastectomy wouldn't change my beauty, but boy was that kind for this stranger to say to the girl crying at her check in counter. Angel, I tell ya.

I had to go back by myself at first. I left everyone, including Ron in the waiting room. I was crying the whole way down the stupid cream colored hallway. They're always cream you know. Hospitals adore cream! And then there stood the poor intake nurse. She must have not even known what to say to me, the girl obviously all messed up in her hallway. She just shined her kind smile at me and held my arm. Another angel. Then, we are at the cubical room. Get changed into the lovely air conditioned gowns I adore. The scrub cap. Get my vitals. Start the IV line (it only took four attempts. I'm an iv line nightmare.) Then wait...By myself...While my mind wanders...Wait some more...Wait...Look at the monitors...Notice my super high blood pressure...Wait...Count the heart beats...Make up a song to the rhythm... Wait....Curse the iv line that is killing my arm...Curse Hodgkin's Disease that got me here...Curse medical literature...Curse me reading the stupid literature.....Wait.

Finally, there I see Ron smiling at the cubical curtain. He gets to come back so we can have our final consult with the Lead Breast Surgeon who also just walked in. Off comes the gown I so pain stakingly had just put on fashionably tying it in three places. Out comes her lovely black magic marker to start her art work on my chest. By the end of this, I look very much like a tattoo artist's playground who was testing every pattern available to a wishy washy client. Dots here. Lines there. X marks the spot. She even signed her initials on her handiwork. This is a requirement for all surgeries to verify patient and MD agree what is happening. She is amazing, but really there is NO dignity in this journey. Next, a chat with the anesthesiologist (she knew I was a medical clinicial) and in the end a spinal block would be my best friend and fate along with another arsenal of inhaled agents. 

Then, they ask Ron to leave. Now, why did they have to go and do that? Here come those stupid tears again! I'm a sap. A true sap. For the record: I didn't cry even once with my knee surgeries. If he leaves this room I'm going to lose it.

Lights, camera, action! I'm in the OR with about 12 clinicians all doing this and that. It's like an ant farm! Last thing I remember is the syringe of the eye catching milky white propofol being hooked in. They know I detest the taste and smell of milk, right? Wonder who that lady is that is holding that tubing? There are those cream walls again. Wonder what Ron is thinking.


Day 0: Part 2: 
Cream colored ceiling. Strange lady sitting next to me writing in some blue binder. Weird tight feeling on my chest. IV line hooked to a clear bag above my head. Awful sore throat. Beep. Beep. Beep. Must-sit-up. Super bad idea. Lady leans over to guide my head back to the pillow. Faint realization.... I must be in recovery and this strange lady must be my surgical nurse. More realization...Oh no, it really happened! Where is Ron???? I really needed him here when I woke up. That was so important to me. Where is he??? (you can see my flight of consciousness as I am coming out of anesthesia and realizing what is happening).

Glancing down, I can see every bit of my abdomen. My pelvis. My leg. My foot. But NOT my breasts! They really are gone. What in the world happened to those two humps! They don't just get up sprout legs and walk off! My thoughts were not of how great this is to no longer be at risk for breast cancer. Nor of how great it is that we have these medical advances available to women like me. Not of God's unfailing provisions. My thoughts were instead of my selfish human perspective of "they truly are gone." Under this surgical vest, there lie absolutely nothing. Nada, zilcho, zero. Instead, scarred leftover tissue that made the cut for use later in reconstruction. Deflated pouches of nothingness. 20 years of development gone in a poof! Abra cadabra. Zippity Zam. 4 surgical hours. Gone! Fast shallow breathing. "I need you to get my husband!!!!" "Please, I need Ron!" It wasn't frantic, just a super strong request that got her attention.

There is a lot of grey here. I remember bits and pieces. Some of this, some of that. Rolling down to my hospital room for my overnight stay. Climbing out of bed to go to the bathroom with four nurses helping my transit (I was super groggy and wobbly). I honestly didn't fully know where we were. That grogginess had an intense hold on me. Then, the unthinkable...vomiting. Nothing like vomiting while walking. Vomiting after chest surgery where every movement can be felt down to your toes. Vomiting on someone else's shoe. Vomiting when you haven't eaten in 12+ hours. Now, desperately wanting to make it to that bed two feet away without face planting myself in a drunken stupor on the not so soothing cream color vinyl floor. Why is my backside so cold? Please don't tell me I walked down the hallway with my gown wide open. Please, I know some of these people! I did NOT just flash these nurses! Tell me that! Chick-fil-A. Wonder if someone can get that for me? Can someone PLEASE make that beeping sound stop! (See, anesthesia really messes with your mind).

We made it through the evening with my thoughts slowly returning to rational with each passing hour. I did get my chicken sandwich, but I guess the airway tube scratched up my throat so much I couldn't really eat it. But, not for lack of trying. Then, it got dark. I have no idea what time it was, but Ron was sacked out in a recliner beside my bed. A faint yellow light trickled in under the door and blue lights from my infusion pump making the room an odd greenish hue. It's funny to me that I remember that so vividly. I lay starting at the ceiling wide awake feeling pretty lonely...and weird...and different. (Recall: I'd had a lovely four hour drug induced surgical nap earlier in the day so I felt no need to sleep.) Once again groggy from the repetition of pain meds every three hours. Because the continuously infusing IV fluids, I was ringing the call bell every 2 hours or less for yet another wobbly shuffle back to the bathroom. Surely, I was becoming a high maintenance patient nurses talk about out at the front desk. "Oh no, there's Old Lady McCollum's bell again. How many times can one person need to go to the bathroom? All she says is 'Get me this, get me that'. Rock, paper, scissors. Karen loses and heads to my room. But those nurses were oh so kind when they crossed my threshold. Happily getting me ice chips, or meds, or escorting me back and forth for the umpteenth time. Always smiling despite it being three in the morning on a super long shift with all rooms full. Grateful was I. Grateful. And I tried to consciously remember to thank them at every turn. I wanted to be low maintenance. But those stupid IV fluids...

Then, at six a.m, in came the surgical fellow and I lit up like a Rockefeller Christmas tree. See, I knew that surgical fellows meant morning rounds and that was the only thing standing in my way from a paid ticket out of here and a car ride home to a comfy cozy no more wide open surgical gowns, IV lines, loud beeping noises, too tight compression stocking living room! Come in, say what you need to say. Blah, blah percocet every four hours, blah blah sponge baths, blah blah this and blah blah that. Surely Ron was getting all of this down. Come on very nice fellow, can't you be any quicker? My couch is calling my name.

Fellow : "Mrs. McCollum, I need to take off your vest so we can check the surgical incisions..." SCREECHING halt!!!!! Slam on the brakes! Hold all your stinking horses. Wide eyed terror filled expression (Me, not the fellow).

Me thinking: Huh? What??? Where's my lead surgeon who told me not to even THINK about opening it and looking? You are doing what and why? This very minute?

Background: Lead surgeon was brilliant in instructing me not to open it for any reason. She knew nothing good could come of me seeing her master piece (it's common knowledge surgeons love to show off their work.) Yet she, being the heart felt clinician that she was -as you would have to be working in breast oncology- wanted to save me from seeing the aftermath. She knew from my very first consult appointment that I was overly grief stricken about the period between surgeries. She had seen the tears as she described the before and after. She even got watery eyes with me. So she brilliantly disguised the true intent (salvaging my sanity) with medical lingo and reasoning to camouflage the plan. "Sally, do not look under this bandage".

Fellow: "It's policy for me to check the incision sight to ensure you are safe for discharge."

And there in lie my quandary. If I want to go home, I have to let this 20 something young man, fellow in training might I add, open up this surgical vest for him, myself, and Ron to view it's content. You see, I had absolutely no plans to let ANYONE see this handiwork. Surgery #1. Stay all bandaged up for two weeks. Surgery #2. Voila! Normal chest again! This silly surgeon wanna-be is destroying my brilliant, sanity saving, well devised and lead surgeon approved master plan. What-is-he-doing???

The unmistakable sound of Velcro. (Insert the now famous fast paced shallow breathing.) Right side off. Left side off. All I could think was Holy Moly! That looks awful. More than awful. Devastatingly awful. Unrecognizable. Not of this world. Embarrassingly horrible. First, one tear down this cheek, then their watery salty friends join in for good measure because they hate to be left out.

Super delightful fellow in training closes the vest back up, hands me my paper work with last minute instructions and quietly walks out the door with well wishes floating in the air behind him. I, however, sat dazed and speechless staring at my now closed vest. What once was a well concealed package with mysterious and only faintly imaginable contents now became a fully discovered, undeniable, messed up reality. The image now burned into every single memory cell of my brain ready to cause me anguish for some time to come. Don't get me wrong, Fellow was delightful and under any other circumstance extremely likeable. Professional and thorough. Rule follower. But at this very second, he was Judas with a shiny new coin in his hand after the last supper. And now my heart, my positive demeanor, and master plan sat crumbled on the hospital floor. And there sat my amazing Ron, who had just seen the unfolded package himself, holding my hand.

Afterward: As irony would have it, 15 minutes later the lead surgeon walked in with her trade mark friendly smile to check on me. "Sally, don't forget to just keep it all bandaged up until our next appointment. There's no need for you to ever open it or look at it. It will heal best if you just leave it alone until our next appointment." - She had driven in super early in attempt to beat the rule following fellow to my room. I tell her it's too late. She had just missed him. Her face falls when I told her he checked the incision. Now her well intended thoughtful master plan for me lie crumbled next to my pieces on the hospital floor. She, too, stood holding my hand.

In hindsight, I imagine God even had a purpose for this expecting unveiling and for this Judas. I'm still sorting what that might be. Maybe I needed that experience. Maybe, I require a true vision of the mastectomy leftovers to better prepare other women that might struggle with the emotional adjustments of delayed reconstruction. Or just maybe that event wasn't even for me, but rather for something in the kind Fellow's journey. After all, I've always thought a Christian's life is rarely for the benefit of self but more about becoming a vessel focused on impacting the life of others. I may never know the true why of that morning. But I do know God has purpose. He has a strategic kingdom impacting plan. He sees my big picture and he sees your big picture. Even in the "awful".

August 29, 2014 - Provision even through Imposters.

I decided to revisit a post from this exact moment 2 years ago. Some of you may have already read this. To others it may be new to you if you joined me late in this journey. I found it to be a great reminder of God's provision in foresight, but now in hindsight. Happy Reading. And thanks for still being here 2 years later.

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Day #22: Yesterday, marks three weeks since the double mastectomy. I've had 21 days to contemplate each individual day of this experience. The day after the mastectomy which set my mental course (post # day 0 part 2), the first shower (did I even post about that?), the miserable little drain suckers (that's in about every post), but it wasn't until yesterday in the waiting room and then last night la ying in bed that I stepped back and looked at it all in one big album, instead of individual snapshots.

What have I done? Did I really make this radical controversial decision to have two breasts I had worked so hard to grow (smile) removed? Did I just allow two surgeons I had met once before decide what the physical future of my new "breasts" would become? These impostors I'm now supposed to know and love. Am I now a woman who has had a mastectomy? Equally as shocking, am I now a woman who has implants? The big picture feels life changing -at least temporarily at this very moment. It affects my marriage, my faith, my personal medical course, my topsy turvy emotions of today. It certainly, hopefully only for the short-term affects my view of self. It even affects me view of you.

Somehow, I'm supposed to return to work and the rest of the world and function as though I am who I was when I left August 3rd. Some people at work don't even know this happened. I have to admit I am changed. And I'm going to need time to transition. Time to settle out. Time to fit this new chest and all that comes with it back into the world. (Maybe there was some hidden rationale in my surgeon demanding I be on house arrest these last three weeks.) How did I even get here?

Back in June, on a Thursday, I was sitting in clinic waiting to see a patient. The Attending Physician I work with had just returned from a national oncology conference and was giving us the low down on some of the hot topics of discussion of the past week. Now let me step back it's interesting to note I'm only in clinic two days a week. The rest of my week I'm in another building with another life. So had this physician returned on a Monday, I would have missed this discussion in it's entirety and be none the wiser for some time to come. So the timing of these events this is lost on me. He was telling us about all the new pediatric oncology research that focused on exposure to radiation therapy and long term outcomes. We've always known radiation therapy is a yin and a yang, particularly when used in children. It's a terrific modality for curing certain tumors, but it carries it's own potentiallu negative risks while propagating the positive curative ones. Historically, Hodgkin's lymphoma patients received very large doses of radiation to the chest region, where primary tumor most likley lived. And we've always known these large doses, while needed for tumor kill, can lead to secondary risks later in life. For female teenagers, breast cancer is one of these risks. We've known this for years. What we didn't know was the magnitude of that risk. Back to the meeting highlights, the Attending Physician began quoting off the new statics on the radiation data.

Well, let's just say my ears perked up when I heard numbers that were much higher than previously published. (I had been treated for Hodgkin's Lymphoma when I was 16 so this was not only professionally relevant but personally relevent.) I simulataneously, while he conversed, went online to the meeting abstracts to pull the data myself. And there it read females treated with 20gy radiation doses are at least equivalent in risk for breast cancer as women who carry the brca gene for breast cancer. As I continued to read, and mentally calculating my own dose of 40+ gy being double that number, light bulbs start going off in my head like that on the red carpet. Percentages ranging from 30% up to 90% as you advance in age. What?!?! We had thought it like 10-30%. That was a risk I had known and even prepared for. Roll the dice, it may happen, but more likely not. I've done cancer once, surely not twice. But 90%???? Are you kidding me? That's a whole other ballgame. That not a statistic, that's a prediction! That's.............awful!

I quietly try to gather my wits and think rationally about this data. I formulate an email to a breast oncologist I work with in my other job. (Reminder, this life altering conversation happened on a Thursday when I happened to be present, I started working with a breast oncologist as of six months ago in my brand new job, I have access to brand spanking new medical literature..."I'm here God, it's me Margaret"?)

Email out: "Breast Oncologist, have you seen the new breast data that was just released for Hodgkins patients? What do you think about me doing yearly mammograms in addition to the yearly breast MRIs I'm already getting? I had lymphoma and was treated with more than 40 gy doses of radiation to the chest as a teenager."

Email in: "Sally, yes, I saw the data. I didn't realize you were a lymphoma survivor. I think you need to see a breast surgeon......"

And at that very second I mentally checked out. Stopped reading. Had tears pool at the bottom of my eyelids. Excuse me? What in the world did he just say??? A breast surgeon? What do you mean a breast SURGEON? Didn't you mean to say "yes, please schedule a mammogram at your earliest convenience."? Why in the world are you mentioning a breast surgeon? Ok check back in, compose yourself. Wipe the fluid from your eyeball and retype the email.

Email out: "Breast oncologist, did you mean to write the word surgeon in your email? I'm a little confused. Did you mean to say oncologist?"

Email in: "Sally, I think it would be wise for you to meet with the chief of breast surgery to discuss mastectomy options. Let me talk to her today about your case and I will get the appointment set up for you as soon as possible."

Hyperventilate. Mind racing. Punch in the stomach. Oh my gosh, please don't let me throw up right here in my laptop in front of everyone. Hold it together. Pull up your boot straps. Got-to-get-some-air-now. Walk out of the room to the bathroom and ball your eyes out. And then it also hits me while standing in that bathroom....Ron!

Let me insert here that all of this unfolded in a matter of about 3 minutes from the time my attending walked in all excited about the conference he just attended to me being set up in an appt with a surgeon. How does that even happen? Email Ron frantically. Email my sister frantically. Wait for response from oncologist. Pull up data on brca gene. What in the world a prophylactic mastectomy? Women actually do that????? I really don't think I had any idea that women were finding out about brca gene results and scheduling mastectomies. Why do they do that? And why would I do that? That is radical. That is crazy. That is taking matters into your own hands. Do I not trust God's plan for my life? If I'm destined to have breast cancer, we just deal with it when it comes. I'm not someone to run from trouble. I like to roll the dice and trust God in the decisions in life. I've got this. Mastectomy, no way. (This, another free flowing train of thought spanning about 45 seconds). Keep reading the article, Sally..unlike brca gene patients "hodgkins survivors, having already reached the maximum doses of radiation, will have limited treatment options for secondary breast cancer...(paraphrased)"

Let me re-read that. Again. One more time. Frantically email Ron a second time. Desperately watch the clock. I've GOT to get home! This room is closing in on me. I'm of no use to these patients today. Devastated. Confused. Frightened. Surprised. Blow to the stomach. (Little did I know that Ron was having the the exact same experience sitting at his work desk as he later told me).

So it was no longer IF I was going to get Breast cancer, but more likely WHEN. And when that were to happen, my treatment options would be limited to no radiation. Long story made semi short. Two weeks later, I'm sitting in an exam room with two surgeons discussing my mastectomy plans. Two weeks! Who gets an appointment with the chiefs of breast surgery and plastic surgery in two weeks? God does, with a little of "it's all who you know" thrown in for balance. By the end of the appointment I had a surgery date scheduled for August 7. The delay only because one of the surgeons was headed away on vacation for two weeks. Those four weeks would become very challenging for me with me subconsciously processing the what was to come. The radical procedure was going to happen! I chose the crazy option!

I should insert here, I'm a unique case. I got massive amounts of radiation as a teenager. Dose is everything. Timing and age of exposure is everything. Not every radiation patient has these risks. There is a lot of data that has to be sorted through for any given patient. I am NOT advocating mastectomy for radiation patients. I'm not even advocating mastectomy for hodgkin's patients. I'm advocating that you research the data. Determine your risk. I'd bet for most women, mastectomy is a bit drastic for your statics. For me, it became a very reasonable option that dropped my risk from up to 90% with limited treatment options down to about 5%. Less than that of the average reader reading this post.

I'm advocating support for women who choose this crazy life saving option. This is a radical life changing choice, and women need support in that. No judgment. No gossip about the "did you hear". No questions about implants and a boob job. Don't ever ask "how big are you going?" Please only allowed yourself to offer Support! Encouragement. Belief that this hard choice is able to be done successfully. Cheers of "you can do this" should be shouted through your telephone, your open front door, across the restaurant table as she sits there telling you her incredible delimma and suppport that she can be open about this extremely personal journey. Understand that this is an awful decision to have to make and that this surgery is not knee surgery. I know, I'ev done both. She needs Love. She needs to know what she feels is justified, even if on some levels it seems trivial.

What she (now me) is feeling is something I never previously understood. Fear of the what ifs. Guilt for her thoughts of vanity. Shock that this is happening. Concern over her spouse and what he may think. Disappointment over reconstruction options. Guilt for feeling that disappointment. Shame that having no boobs affects her like it does. Shame that this journey impacts her like it does when she didn't even have breast cancer like some women have to struggle through both Breast Cancer and mastectomy. Confusion as to why this affects her so drastically. Worry that God may have wanted her to choose differently. Frustration over the physical limitations now present. Anger at her lack of control. And the list goes on. Trust me, it's best to justt sum it up and say "She feels a lot!"

Anyway, back to the original point of all if this. In order to process the big picture, I have to understand how those first few weeks played out. How timing is everything. How God chose a Thursday for this discussion to take place. (Reminder, this was brand new literature your average person would not know about for quite some time to come. I work in oncology.) How God, not even six months before crossed my path with that of a breast oncologist that I work on several projects with. That God would grant Ron and I wisdom to recognize His role in placing me at the right place at the right time and his offering this option to us. That Ron would make his decision that I should go through with mastectomy before I would and that they would match up. Maybe God had a specific plan not only to save me from a tremendously difficult journey with breast cancer, but to change me, challenge me, grow me. Was Sally going to let fear of a drastic surgical procedure guide her? Was Sally going to trust that God had big plans for her or even someone else by choosing the hard road? Who was Sally going to put her faith in? I'm changed. I'm challenged. I'm broken. I'm restored. I'm accepting my new breasts...as strange as that sounds. But most importantly, I'm allowing this journey to be whatever vessel God chooses in growing His kingdom. I may kick and scream along the way, but I'm still moving forward. I take steps back. I doubt things, but I'm committed for the long haul. Come what may.

Now, pray that these next few weeks are smooth. I have a great bit to accomplish in a short amount of time. Pray for my transition back into life. Monday, I start removing some of my restrictions. In two weeks, back to the surgeon to assess everything. Will the skin survive, is my mobility and strength back, have the impostors settled in their new home. Is the swelling and pain gone. Can I handle going back to work? Can I drive? Can I shower in my own without falling apart emotionally in the process? A lot happened in three short weeks. More than I could ever have imagined. I hope to be a better person on the other side of this. I hope you found a new understanding of preventative mastectomies. And maybe you saw a glimpse of God's provision in the awful (and incredibly amazing.)

August 11, 2014 - BAMMM, smack upside my head!

This has been a challenging few weeks for me. It seems one thing after another rolls itself into my front door. I have a door knob lock. I have an additional dead bolt. I even have a glass door on the outside with its own latch and key. Yet muck seeps in under the door like a sly stealth spy to find me. I don’t even hear it coming, but BAMMM smack upside the head there it sits on my shoulder whispering not so sweet ridiculousness into my demeanor.
Last week Ron and I set out to celebrate a few milestones. I was hitting my 23rd anniversary of my lymphoma remission and simultaneously the 2 year mark following double mastectomy and the birth of Boob 1 and Boob 2 (now 2.2 after a quick switch out last year). We had arranged dinner out at a local restaurant that had this great outdoor patio setting. I got there a little early to scope it out and found a great little booth on the edge of the patio where we could get the cool breeze we have been having this unusual August. Ron arrives a few minutes later and we start the magnificent evening. Menus investigated, selections placed, and sit back and wait for the delights to arrive. Wait for it….wait for it… food arrives and immediately boxed right up as Sally decides she would like to add an emergency room visit to the festivities. What romantic dinner out is complete without a visit to your local ER? Nothing says celebration better than one eye in absolute acute pain (as in came in about a 2 minute span), tears and red goo streaming down your face. Slide out of the booth and into the bed gurney with grace and excitement. Diagnosis: something had flown into my eye from that amazing cool breeze –which we never discovered what- and scratched the surface of my eye and conjunctiva. Eye ointment, eye rest, and a boatload of money later and we are back at home with a deflated demeanor. The following morning, I felt worsening and headed back to the ophthalmologist to discover the eye was now infected and in need of $100+ of steroids and antibiotics (24 hours, 3 MD visits, and 3 pharmacy visits later). I was mad, I was cranky. I was feeling entitled. Best milestone celebration ever!
It became very obvious to me as we were going through the last few weeks of new “surprises” (upcoming imposter surgery for slipped boob, eye infection/abrasion, dishwasher failure leading to warped kitchen floors, foot MRI, house projects gone astray, etc), of how we as a culture allow every single tidbit of life that enters our orbit throw us off kilter no matter how trivial or how great. We are a culture of passive impact. Dropped spaghetti bowl can shoot us into major strife. An unexpected bill can catapult us into major collapse. The boss asking us to resubmit a form can lead to 3 hours of cubical complaining. We feel every single rivet of life with passion and intensity and at times have difficulty getting one foot in front of the other after a celebration dinner was interrupted.
I am feeling eager after some sharp perfectly timed conviction to step back and compare my warped 2’x2’ section of kitchen floor to walking out into a city park in Iraq and seeing the speared head of a 4 year old who was decapitated for religious beliefs. Or hearing the sirens across town at 3 a.m. knowing you have to get your family down to the bomb shelter in the next 5 minutes, but you can’t find little Sara who you know was brushing her teeth on the back stoop with bottled water only 5 minutes ago. Or the friend whose husband was handed a lymphoma relapse last week when all he was hoping for was a single stretch of 3 months year of normalcy without a visit to the MD. Kimberly is facing divorce. Tonya is wondering if her Marine husband has been found.
We are constantly comparing our body shapes. We live in a world of “her hair is just so much better”. We compare pay stubs to vacation houses and children’s honor rolls to soccer tournaments won. If we are so good at comparing the lively aspirations of life to each other, why do we not compare our assumed turmoil as well to see how ridiculous we can be at times? One look at national and international news quickly reminded me that my eye infection now almost healed is a “trouble” over half this planet would greatly trade in for without a single tear and instead shout a hoopla of winning the lottery.
Dear God, thank you for continual reminders of perspective. May I find my life so full of these riches you have already allowed me and these perceived “setbacks” a moment to show your grace and triumph. What can I turn into an opportunity to model goodness? Show me to be satisfied with little bumps in my day. What can I quit complaining about so that I have time to hear of and help someone else walk through their real life events? May the joy that comes with a life so richly blessed trump all trivial circumstance. Focus me to understand the true word of “trouble”.
John 16:33 - "I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world."