This Inadequacy, This Gift
Laguna Beach, CA
November 2005
So, the story of this pruning year has developed quite a bit in the last several weeks. I'm gaining new insights into what God has been about these last 14 months or so. And I have to tell you, it's quite a marvel to me. It reminds me once again that God always knows what he is doing, even if I don't.
This is going to take a couple installments to fully articulate, so I hope you'll bear with me as I go.
As I've shared with you a bit before, I spent a lot of time in the last 14 months kicking and fighting against what was happening. I went from a pretty strong and beautifully fruitful place inside my soul to a place of utter chaos. I blamed myself for this chaos. I blamed my circumstances, too. Other times, I blamed God. I just couldn't seem to figure out what was happening, and I couldn't seem to get away from it or make it better. I hated it so, so much. I felt so weak and poorly. I couldn't show up for others in the ways I wanted to, and I couldn't seem to get a grip on everything vying for attention in my own life.
It was a hard year.
Then, as I've also shared with you, I reached a point where it was time for a change. I needed greater spaciousness and quietness for the restoration of my soul, but it had also become quite clear that the time had come for me to reclaim a direction for my life that God has clearly marked out for me. So Kirk and I agreed on some changes, and I set out into this new chapter inside my story.
However, I didn't expect what came next: I discovered completely new places of inadequacy, this time in places that had always been known and natural and familiar to me.
Primarily, this happened when I was listening. Listening is something that has always been like second nature to me, ever since I was a child. It is something I love doing for others, and it is something that somehow God always seems to use. For the last several years, I have come to embrace that truth more and more and have been walking deeper into the ways God can use this gifting in the lives of others more intentionally.
But here, in this new chapter of my story, a chapter that was to see me embracing that listening role even more, I felt inordinately clumsy at it. I felt like an old car lurching down the road because its fuel injection mechanism isn't working quite right. There I would go, lumbering in fits and starts down the street, lurching and then stopping, lurching and then stopping, with an occasional squeal of the tires and sometimes a blast of the horn.
It was so puzzling to me. And a bit alarming. Instead of being fully present to another's sharing, an interior monologue kept going off in my mind every time I was listening to someone, and that interior monologue kept chattering about all the things I ought to be doing or saying or not saying, and then doubting every last word and gesture and action and inaction I took.
In other words, I found myself far too focused on me in moments that were meant to be fully focused on the person before me.
This was not what I was used to experiencing in my listening practice with others. And so I would cry out to God in desperation, asking him to overcome my failings and my weaknesses, asking him to be all that was needed for them, since for some reason I couldn't do this listening thing well right now.
I kept bumping up against this fact over and over again: I was needing to relearn how to listen.
This bothered me because, again, listening has always been something I've intuitively known how to do. It's not ever been hard for me to focus on the other person, and prior to this last chaos year, I had begun to inhabit the sharing of other people's stories so much that I totally forgot myself while I was listening. I somehow came to feel and know their own experience as they shared it with me.
All of this distracted inner chatter and outer clumsiness, then, confused and frustrated me. I wasn't being the kind of listener I'd always known how to be.
A few weeks into this new (un)experience of listening, I shared all this with my spiritual director, Elaine. A few days after that, I shared it with another good friend who is training to be a spiritual director as well.
And both of them, quite separate from the other, asked me the very same question: Could there be gift here?
Gift . . . in this inadequacy? At first pass, I scoffed at their question. But then my mind turned directly to this: one thing every person kept receiving from me in this new place were those desperate, pleading prayers on their behalf for God to be everything that was needed because I couldn't know or do what was needed.
Yes, this was gift.
Those prayers were gifts that those individuals wouldn't have received otherwise, if I'd been in my stronger, more healthy place. When I listened to people before, I felt a distinct partnership with God in those sessions, and I certainly felt aware of his presence throughout and often asked for his help. God usually showed up in those listening sessions in ways that were unexpected and needed.
But this? This was new. Never has there been such a desperate cry for God to be everything because I felt myself nothing. All of this was utterly new. And I couldn't help but think those prayers on behalf of others, those prayers as a result of my inadequacy, were indeed gift.
Stay tuned . . .
Labels: Learning to Die


9 Comments:
It is so true that when we are feeling small God can really use us although we may not be aware of it.
It is awsome to see how God is forming and treating every one of us in personal, different ways depending on our personalities, and abilities. And He is working fast with some and slow, with alot more patience with ofhers. I am one of those he is having a lot of patience with...
I imagine you are simply going deeper into your listening practice. Whatever we practice ~ whatever we are trying to "perfect" ~ has so many layers, and these practices are ongoing, with bumps and tight spots along the way. I love reading about your process.
Oh yes! I'm sorry for your pain in all of this, for the sense of loss you experience, even as you see the gift you're able to give to others. I'm so glad you can see the gift, though - the pain would be so great without it. Love you, friend.
It is a strange thing, finding the gift in the chaos and confusion, and yes ... the pain.
I wonder at how strange it must have felt for you to feel like a novice in something that had always been second-nature to you. I wonder at the frustration, anger, and confusion resulting from recognizing the inadequacy. I'm so glad you found the gift in it.
Your gift of listening has been such a tremendous gift to me, my friend. You remind me always that this is such an important part of being a good friend, and quietly urge me to better myself in this area.
I hope you continue to plumb the depths of this mystery and this gift in you -- even if it brings more of the pain you've experienced.
Much love to you.
Oh, dear ones ... your words are so sweet to me. Thank you. I am taking each of them in, treasuring what they carry. Each of you, in your own unique ways, are friend and encourager to me.
xoxo,
Christianne
boy, can i ever relate to this. i've been going through something like this myself christianne. it's awful when the things that used to be so easy become difficult or impossible, especially when they are so much a part of our identity. i'm glad you've recognized the gift in this. i'm looking forward to hearing more. love you...
Christianne, I've had this post open in my browser for a day or so now, trying to figure out what to say as a comment.
All I can come up with is "yes".
And, as we've already discussed, that I think we would get along well. We certainly seem to be journeying different but somewhat parallel paths these days.
I've referred to this last year as my "year of deconstruction" on good days, or just my "year of destruction" on the less happy days. And I'm learning to listen and trust and be in the midst of that... and it's a terribly beautiful and painful set of lessons.
Lisa
Wow. I think it's all gift, Lovely. There have been occasions when some wise soul has turned around what had seemingly been loss and disappointment into something wonderfully providential. Grateful for other perspectives. Whether or not the listening gift you've been accustomed to returns, I have no doubt you have much grace to offer this world.
Hi Christianne.
Missing you.
T
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