"Instead of bread I get groans for my supper, then leave the table and vomit my anguish. The worst of my fears has come true, what I've dreaded most has happened. My repose is shattered, my peace destroyed. No rest for me, ever—death has invaded life."
Job 3:20-26 MSG
The months leading up to Togo had been rough but not unbearable. A medical diagnosis coupled with a couple other random events had me struggling with questions of value and worth. Before this diagnosis I was doing better than ever before. I felt like my feet were finally starting to find solid ground but for some reason the medical reaction knocked me right back off my feet. Unfortunately there was not a simple take this and three days you will be better for either of my issues.
My first few weeks back I needed Jesus and I needed people…desperately. A note went out that said “We are looking for people who would be able to stay with her, especially overnight…at her family's home ...” At first I tried to pretend like I never saw it…because fact was I wish I never saw it. I wished I had never asked for people…because no one came…and that hurts more than no people coming when one has not asked.
Part way through the week when things took yet another turn for the worst in an act of desperation I wrote a status that said I didn’t know what I needed, but I did know I needed people. That may have been one of the hardest things I ever wrote. I was begging God for help. I needed it and did not know how to get it. Again no one came.
I felt unloved and abandoned. I already felt completely abandoned by God…this was just icing on the cake. So I retreated far into my cave. Very far. Pretended I didn’t need people…that I liked being by myself. Fact was I hated it. Hate hate hated it. Twenty-four hours a day for over a week I was alone. Tears were my most frequent companion. I would lay down at night and soak my pillow in tears only to wake up the next morning and soak my pillow in more tears. One morning I came across Psalm 30 where I read “Weeping may last through the night, but joy comes with the morning.” At which point I hurled my bible across the room and proceeded to cry even harder. There had been no joy with morning’s light in days. It was the start of the worst months of my life.
Also, to be clear I do not blame anyone for not coming. And I know that my communication skills are awful, which definitely played a huge role in the problem.
Anyhow, thankfully I made it through the first few weeks. Without a shadow of a doubt I know that I would not have made it through that week without the love of handful of people reaching out to me from all over world. From north, south, east, and west there was at least one person who contacted me that first week and to me their actions said our role may not be to be there next to you, but we are there for you and we are praying for you. They had me covered in prayer on all four sides. And it kept me from completely running away from Jesus...
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