Life, please slow down yet speed up all at the
same time; there is not enough time in a day to get everything done but yet I
wish I could fast forward to May 2015 when I hopefully graduate with my BSN
(Bachelor of Science in Nursing). College has overtaken my life, leaving me
nearly nonexistent and savagely burned out but why —
because I’ve been fighting on my own insufficient strength out of adamant fear
and aversion. I am completely and undeniably incompetent but yet my stubborn
streak of relentless determination will not be squelched; life has passed by in
a mere blur, faster than my small mind can comprehend, and I have not taken the
time to slow down because it is, after all, what my soul destined for speed
hates most. Slowing down does not
come easy in any sense; when an extensive seven hour spinal fusion threatened
my sole existence, slowing down was not an option and four years later this unfortunately
hasn’t changed. Countless nursing classes and unending hours spent studying as
well as working, volunteering and writing a book are but a small glimpse of my
chaotic life. Time seems to be but a figment of my imagination as none seems to
be spared for my own existence and desires. A part of me wants to resort back
to the abounding comforts of childhood and a life free from obligation as well
as responsibility but then I remember that there is a time for everything and
that time has brutally expired.
After painfully reliving the endured yet still painful trials, I
have been distancing myself from the King of Goodness; reliving the nearly
unthinkable pain in order to bring freedom to others is emotionally draining
yet I trust the benefits will far exceed
the costs. Fear overwhelms me as I expose to this fallen world the abysmal and
exceedingly vulnerable wounds of my heart; fear seems to be ever-present as I
practice competent nursing care despite the abounding insecurities residing
within my fragile soul. Fear has become a part of my microbiota because God is
not at the center of my wounded
heart — the selfishly sinful desires of my fallen soul have taken His place
amidst the chaos of life. My pride has to relentlessly be shattered in order for impenetrable strength to be feasible.
The stabbing wounds of my past have ruthlessly come back to
haunt me and the devil loves nothing more than inhumanly beating me with
daggers meant to eradicate life. The book I am getting ready to publish is
filled with agonizing pain I’ve never yet enlightened — each page filled with
raw emotions and disregarded blood. “Courage is not the absence of fear, but
rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear” (Ambrose
Redmoon).
God,
use my pain to enlighten beauty in the lives of others; don’t let a single tear
shed from my once lifeless eyes be wasted but rather brought to purpose.
Restore the abysmal wounds of my shattered heart — protect its very existence
from the annihilating daggers thrown at it. Give me words to speak and
overwhelm every inch of my incompetent being with Your loving presence. Speak
through my pain. Give me strength to relive the past and approach the world
with a translucent heart. Rid me of myself. I pray most of all that I would decrease
so You could increase; let the world see Your faultless image of love and
purpose.
Despite the intensity of nursing school, I refuse to give up volunteering — it is the one place my heart brilliantly
sparkles. Last week I was voted to paint pumpkins with the Akron Zips football
team and have never felt so small in my life; it was quite hysterical to see
these giants in the presence of a children’s hospital, surrounded by nearly
microscopic chairs and tables merely several inches off of the ground. The
experience was awkward (scars of past abuse have left me vigilantly uncertain
of males) yet absolutely astounding — to see these young men sacrifice their valuable
time merely to paint pumpkins with oppressed children stuck in a hospital was
exceedingly beautiful, convincing my shattered heart that males are not the
enemy (at least not all). Volunteering this week as well was nothing short of
beautiful, reminding me of the future I have been called to; nursing may not be
easy but remains my unaltered calling. ““Behind
every specific call, whether it is to teach or preach or write or encourage or
comfort, there is a deeper call that gives shape to the first: the call to give
ourselves away - the call to die” (Michael Card).
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