Default mode

I totally dig Paul’s writings, and there are some verses from Romans 7 ringing in my ears tonight:

I do not understand what I do. For what I want to do I do not do, but what I hate I do… For I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out. For what I do is not the good I want to do; no, the evil I do not want to do—this I keep on doing.

Take a minute to digest that one. Can anybody relate?

This past Monday night Matt, our home group leader, taught on anger, and he made the observation that for some people anger is their default mode. When things get harried or don’t go as planned, they very quickly ignite into anger. That is not the case with me. I am quick to become angry, but that isn’t my default.

For whatever reason, life is particularly nutty right now. My life is this runaway stage coach that has me barely hanging on to the door, with my legs flapping behind me in the wind as we recklessly barrel down dirt paths. So I’m hurrying a lot, exercising very little, squeezing in quiet time, feeling guilty about having very little time for my girls, and I find myself slipping into default mode. When I am tired, stressed, bored, anxious, I eat. That’s my default.

And over the last year and a half, God has given me freedom from an unhealthy relationship with food. Not like a typical eating disorder but rather being in a place where my desire for food mastered me – instead of me being able to exercise self control and make wise choices about the food I ate. It was where I sought comfort and pleasure; it was a god in my life.

That is no longer the case, but I am finding it much harder to make wise choices right now. And I am splurging a lot more than I have in a long time. And I stood in my kitchen tonight and inhaled some Sam’s brownies like nobody’s business (from Campbell’s birthday). Now I’m not saying that Sam’s brownies are the devil’s vittles (though they may be), and it’s not even really about food. It’s about not allowing anything in my life to control me, and I know that it’s a slippery slope that descends very quickly from where I am to where I have been. So I’m afraid of what I see going on with me right now, much like the contradiction Paul shares in Romans, and I would certainly appreciate your prayers on this one. I value my freedom far too much to go there again…

And I was wondering…, what’s your default mode?

Dancin’ Queen

Still reeling from a totally fun and exhausting weekend. We celebrated Carson’s dance recital, Campbell’s third birthday, and Mother’s Day. Good stuff…

I decided on Saturday that there must be some statute like Dance Law No. 405: Thou shalt have at least one class dance “Rock Around the Clock” in pink poodle shirts at each year-end recital. Failure to comply with said ordinance may result in revocation of license. Too funny. I took dancing well over twenty years ago, and I’m happy to say that very little has changed in the world of dance recitals: the dancers are still not as synchronized and precise as you might prefer, many of the same songs are still playing, and the costumes are still bright and fun (I love dance costumes! And my girls do too). So I’m thankful that in 2008 in Flotown my dancin’ queen can dance to “I Feel Good” and “Best of Friends” without somebody tryin’ to dress her up like a tramp and make her dance to songs that are totally inappropriate. That ticks me off…

So my Carson did her thing. During the year, she’s not all that jazzed about dancing each week, but she loves to perform. She’s not terribly outgoing, but she can light up a stage. I think she dances well, but I am totally drawn to her smile. Her joy illuminates her little body, and I cannot think of any other thing that induces that smile. It is when she is dancing on stage that I most see myself in her; I remember feeling what I see on her face. I feel it again as I watch her, and as her mom I actually lose my breath as her audience. The pride swells in me so as to fill every inch, forcing the air from my lungs to make more room, and I am totally taken by her…

In Honor of Mother’s Day…

I am posting an article I wrote for She for the May 2006 issue. It’s my tribute to my mom…

Made to Mother

To borrow a line from a classic sitcom of a bygone era, “She’s DY-NO-MITE!” To be more specific, SHE is Becky Lane, my mother: wise, intelligent, creative, beautiful, cautious, and practical. She is a lot of things to a lot of people, but she was created to be a mother. That fact becomes more evident to me as I look back over the many miles we’ve traveled together.

Because my parents divorced when I was four, I had the unique opportunity to live alone with my mom in a small rented house for four years. Though we had very little money and sometimes she had to work late at night, I fondly remember this time when I could snuggle up close to my momma each night, listen to Peaches and Herb’s “Reunited” over and over on our mammoth stereo, and appreciate the fact that happiness was not dependent upon finances (a truth that serves me well today).

We moved to Marion when she remarried, and at the ripe age of eight, I thought I had my mom right where I wanted her. The first time that I didn’t get my way after our move, I announced to her that I wanted to go live with my dad. Her face immediately registered the hurt, but she calmly offered to help me pack. In her wisdom, she called my bluff in an instant as I quickly began to wail and protest that I didn’t want to go. She firmly informed me that I would go if ever I threatened her like that again. I did not.

In addition to being wise, momma was always honest with me. Based on our early discussion of the birds and the bees, I took it upon myself to educate my girlfriends at day care about the origin of babies. One older friend assured me that her mother was a nurse, and she knew for a fact that women did not have eggs – only chickens have eggs.

Our life together took me through another adjustment period when mom gave birth to my sister when I was ten. I recall visiting the guidance counselor at Marion Elementary to lament the loss of my mother to my screaming baby sibling. I remember the counselor encouraging me to ask momma if we could bake brownies or go for a bike ride without the company of the new addition.

Though I was no longer an only child, she still lavished me with love. She lay in bed with me, holding me tightly, as I sobbed myself to sleep after the love of my life (at the age of twelve) danced all night with another girl at the seventh/eighth grade Spring Dance.

When I was a sullen, pouty, self-absorbed adolescent, she refused to allow me to sulk through the holidays. Once my mom sentenced me to stand in the corner (as a teenager, mind you!) and sing Christmas carols loud enough that she could hear them from anywhere in the house.

Though she was creative with her punishment, she was also aware of the temptations of a teen. She understood the concept of “cut days” in high school, but she also insisted on knowing where I was at all times and what I was doing. Therefore, she allowed me to take a couple of “cut days” each year, but she knew when they were and where I would be.

However, she did make mistakes as a mother. She made the mistake of allowing me to shop with her credit card – ONCE. I was instructed to buy school clothes, practical clothes that would suit many occasions. I spent all that she had given me permission to spend on one outfit to wear to a dance club, an outfit that I couldn’t wear anywhere but a dance club. That was the end of my independent shopping.

As I sought greater freedom, I loved to spend the night with my two best friends because their mothers were more lenient than mine. One night, my cohorts and I stayed out very, very late – assuming that my friend’s mom wouldn’t notice or care. Unbeknownst to all of us, my friend’s mom called the other moms because we weren’t home. My mom driving around the streets of Marion in the wee hours of the morning looking for me was not a good thing! The fact that we weren’t doing anything wrong did not help our case at all; I was grounded for weeks and weeks. However, when my mom found out that I was the only one who was being punished, she commuted my sentence – not because she was okay with what we had done but because she didn’t think it fair that I bear the punishment alone.

When I left home for college, I really struggled to learn to make decisions for myself. I was so dependent on my mom to tell me what to do. In fact, during my first week at Clemson I got locked in the campus library (nerd!). When I realized that I was alone and could not get out, I didn’t call my roommate. I didn’t call my friends on campus. I didn’t call the police. I called my momma, who was four hours away, to tell me what to do.

When I came home for Christmas, she knew that getting a job as a cashier at Rose’s department store was as valuable an experience as my college education, and it was!

Late one summer night when I was home from school, my mom was summoned by my friends to pick me up. I had made some poor choices that evening and was in no condition to see my mom. She stopped and bought me a Pepsi and cooked eggs for me when we arrived home. She showered me and held me in bed until I fell asleep. To my surprise, she did not punish me. She realized that no punishment she could issue would be as bad as how I was punishing myself the next day. She loved me without condemnation or judgment, and it was through this instance in my life that my mom taught me about how He loves us and forgives us without condemnation or judgment when we are truly sorry for the ways we disappoint Him.

And perhaps a greater testament of her love for me is the fact that she spent the night in a bare, rustic cabin in the mountains of Northeast Georgia the summer I was a camp counselor there. That certainly ain’t her thang!

I am certain that I hurt her feelings as I broke free of the cocoon that afforded me the security and safety to grow and change. I know that I was inconsiderate at times as I stretched my new butterfly wings to define myself. For many years, my momma was the god of my life, not because she assumed that role but because I assigned it to her – desperately wanting her to make decisions for me, needing her absolute approval. As a young lady, a wife, and a mother I am now able to free her from such an impossible task and cherish her as the treasure and blessing God intended her to be. Still appreciating her advice and approval but now understanding that He is my God, and she is my gift.

Got a hankerin’…

When I get a taste in my mouth, I am not easily pacified with anything else. Like when I am salivating for Town House on a Saturday (closed), Chick-fil-A on a Sunday (closed) or Starfire on a Monday (closed). That doesn’t sit well with me. Woe is me…

Well, I’ve got a hankerin‘ now, but it isn’t of the culinary variety. I am hankering (is that an oltimey word?) for Summer Break. I have been either a student or a teacher for most of my life, so Summer Break is programmed into my biological clock. My body, my brain, my shred of sanity expects Summer Break. But this year is the most anticipated one ever…

No, there won’t be any short-lived summer romances or eventful weeks at camp like in my younger days. But I am stoked (maybe that’s a little more current word choice) about alarmless mornings, pajama days, day trips, volleyball evenings, and late nights. We have nowhere we have to be for two months. No schedule. We will take a short break from living by the clock, and I rejoice!!!

This has been Carson’s first year in big girl school, and I genuinely had no idea it would change our lives as drastically as it has. I am not lying when I say I didn’t fully awaken until December. I was so tired from early rising, late night preparing, and endless shuttling that I wondered about the sudden onset of narcolepsy. No more business trips to Charleston, no more spur of the moment overnights at Grammie’s, no more frivolous reasons to play hooky. This is serious business…

I’m bringing back frivolity! I’m ready for a little summer adventure or two or three. Anybody feelin‘ me?

What are you stoked about?

WARNING: I am such a structured, routine-driven freak somebody will need to slap me around mid-July when I am bemoaning the purposelessness of my life, standing in a puddle of sweat induced by the 742 degree temperature. Just so you know in advance…

Let us run with perseverance…

A while back some friends and I were discussing the upcoming Cooper River Bridge Run (which was April 5). The race is 6.2 miles long and includes two miles on the bridge, the first of which is a pretty good incline. A friend who does not run jokingly said, “I bet running six miles on the Rail Trail is a lot different than running it in the race on the bridge.” He was dead on but not in the way he suspected. He assumed that the flat shaded course in town would be easier than the race course, and that line of thought seems quite logical; however, that is not the case. I would run that race any day over running the Rail Trail, and here’s why…

1) I am participating in an event with about 40, 000 other people.
2) There are hundreds of people lining the course to cheer me on.
3) Each mile is marked so I can track my progress.
4) The view from the bridge is amazing!
5) Adrenaline, baby, adrenaline!
6) There are volunteers handing out water throughout the course (and there are Port-a-potties should one need such facilities).

So, I’m not promoting the race here (though you can register for next year at www.bridgerun.com once registration opens again). I think there is some application here for our lives.

1) Life is easier and more enjoyable, even if the circumstances are harder, if people are cheering for us to persevere, to give it all we’ve got, to finish well.
2) I didn’t even have to know the people who were cheering during the race to feel encouraged by them. Application: We can be meaningful encouragers to people we don’t know. A sincere compliment to a girl at the gym I have noticed working hard to lose weight. A nice note on a receipt to a waitress. A card in the mail to a new neighbor. An encouraging comment on the blog of someone I don’t know.
3) I think monitoring our progress spiritually is a pretty healthy thing to do. Sitting down at the table of fellowship with the Lord and having an evaluation conference, “Father, we’re at mile three and I feel like we’ve overcome these obstacles, but these are the things I feel like you want to focus on for the next mile or so…”
4) Running the Rail Trail is boring to me because I do it a couple of times a week. It’s comfortable. It’s routine. It’s mundane. There is no adrenaline involved. I think there is totally something spiritually energizing about jumping out of my boat of comfort to do something new and exhilarating and uncomfortable to please my Father.

So I dare you. I double dog dare you to leave this site and send one person an encouraging email (get more creative if you please), to intentionally encourage one person this week you do not know, to sit down and have a straight up evaluation powwow with the Lord, and to do something for Him that is totally out of your boat of comfort. I think He’ll be tickled…

The author of Hebrews compares our life to a race (12:1), and he understood the role of the Hampton Inn bellman I affectionately searched for this year during the race. Last year, as I was running the last half mile I passed the Hampton Inn on King Street and this jolly bellman stood on the sidewalk under the HI awning smiling widely, giving high fives. I made my way to his side of the street, straightened myself up, and gave him a hearty one. That was memorable to me. He spurred me on, and I looked for him again this year. He was there and I got my second annual high five. So as Hebrews commands and the Hampton Inn bellman illustrates, “let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds” (10:24).