Fix Me. I’m Broken.

The thing with having a healthy love relationship with someone that you hope to spend the rest of your life with is in having to reveal the bad and the ugly. What sucks is that it’s usually not a one-time deal either. Lately I’ve been feeling like the Awesome Blossom Chili’s used to have on their menu. There are like a hundred layers of fried crap and fat sticking out of a vegetable that slightly resembles a flower. If you pluck off and eat one layer of this fried beauty, guess what? There are 99 more layers you can pluck off and eat.

It seems every now and then (or a lot in the past few weeks) I have to talk with my beau about something from my past that affects me in some way still today. (One layer of the Awesome Blossom is ripped off, only for him to see more layers of crunchy-bad-for-you-friedness right below and around it). Sometimes the conversations revolve around things that I’m dealing with today that, though will make a better and healthier person, are just embarrassing to admit. Or things I have to apologize for. Or things that put my emotional scars on display. Or things that make me look like I don’t have it all together all the time (which I don’t, but still…)

This type of vulnerable sharing makes me feel tired. Frustrated. Used up and washed out. It makes me feel broken, like I need to be bubble-wrapped, duct-taped, packaged, and UPSd to a remote factory where they fix people. Hmmm, what does this broken instrument need? How about we wind AJ up top, take the bottom screw out of her right ventricle, insert a metal pin in the left side of her brain, throw her in the wash, let her air dry, and give her an apple. Except that’s not gonna happen.

When I expose my inner issues and struggles and fears and doubts and subsequently feel like a stopwatch that’s been mauled by a Rottweiler, I have to remember it’s just feelings of inadequacy that make me feel broken, the razor sharp lies from the ghosts of yesterday and today that can make my self-worth crumble like a Graham cracker. But that insecurity doesn’t dictate the beauty and juicy goodness that embodies who I truly am, nor the beauty and juicy goodness of G-d, who has so lovingly and carefully designed me from even before I was born.

And you know what else? The truth is, sometimes digging deep into those dark places of confession, the breeding ground for secrets and things that have the power to control us, is the best way to bring them into the light and maybe take some of that destructive power away. Maybe the bad and ugly stuff is like vampires. Maybe, like those creatures of the night, my sharings go nuts when they see sunlight and are rendered useless. I hope so.

For now, I’ll keep on being open and honest and willing to walk into the fissures of my being that I so desperately protect and keep roped off. Though certain things are uncomfortable and annoying to share or discuss, I think they’re necessary. Exposing your true self (to the right people, of course, and in a healthy way) is probably one of the most empowering things you can do. It takes chutzpah. It takes courage. And there’s a certain element in freedom when you take the stuff you’ve been carrying around on your back for a long time and chuck it on the ground. But it shouldn’t stay there. I need to remember to kick that baggage toward G-d instead of allowing it to make me feel broken. He may not be a fix-it repair guy, but I hear he’s a pretty good recycler.

3 comments:

Ann Voskamp @Holy Experience August 26, 2009 at 12:39 PM  

And sometimes I wonder if we don't wear the burden like it's our clothes, our armor.

It can be terrifying to expose one's true self.

Did He mean for us to come back to The Garden and live naked? That kind of revealing, unashamed kind of existence?

You make me think about these things... and the courage to return to Eden.

All's grace,
Ann

Gina September 1, 2009 at 3:55 PM  

I love the post, but I stopped by to tell you how much I love your book Messy Faith!

It is a powerful commentary on grace. What I loved most is your willingness to share parts of your story along with the scripture. Sometimes I read books on "working out our faith" and authors share lots of examples with few personal stories.

I mean this so much....GOD BLESS YOU!

Amy Gregory September 2, 2009 at 4:25 PM  

Ann....wow. "The courage to return to Eden" very powerful thought. Scares the you know what out of me, but makes me kinda excited too...wow!