
One wilted rose remains. It’s wound its way among the limelight hydrangeas. I’ve been greeted by the beauty every morning this week. Soon, the petals will drop and not so long away, the green will be dried up by Autumn air and the tiny rose will just be a memory, but also a hope.
Could it be as simple as choosing forward looking more often than back?
Could this be the blessing over the curse?
“See, I am setting before you today a blessing and a curse—”
Deuteronomy 11:26 NIV
How we see things matters. Interactions, relationships and our part in the ugliness or beauty of them.
Exchanges linger in our hearts even if we’ve been long separated from the person or people.
We are marked by ugliness and yet, we can choose not to be forever marred.
We can choose to see the joy and lightness in looking forward.
I was frozen in the driver’s seat. I could hurry to catch up and engage in casual talk or I could sit and wait, not have the guts to simply be near her.
“How are you?” might be my question or maybe they’d go first.
Or there might be no words offered, no interaction for the sake of one another, just a layer of stifled breath between us.
And that’s quite okay.
Because hurt lingers long in the hearts of one betrayed, cast aside or used for another’s climbing the ladder advantage.
There was a time when my face was well known, known for the work I represented and recognized in the “right” circles.
Now, I’m just “someone people used to know” becoming the woman not needing to be “known”, just me being me.
I’m not sure what prompted the thought, the realization.
I’m sort of okay with this new “imageless” image. Maybe all the other roles, women I tried hard to be were actually in a way
Imaginary.
This morning, I read a review by Michele Morin of a book by Christine Caine, “Don’t Look Back”.
Caine writes of the ways we can get stuck in our tracks (turn to an immovable block of salt like Lot’s wife) when we continue to look back.
Maybe looking back is good if we use it as a choice to decide.
To look back and see the distance you’ve gotten in your healing from hurt, to look back and think for a minute before reacting, I’m better, stronger, wiser on this forward facing side of that person’s hurt.
To look back, not stuck and staring but to look back and confidently reposition our gaze, to view the harm of our pasts as a reflection of our empowered decisions…
What was meant to harm us will not destroy us.
What was bad is on its way to more very good.
Decide to believe in the good you’ve already seen. Choose a sort of self-assessing.
Quietly measure the sense in your soul that keeps saying to you
All is well and all will be well with me.
So well said. It is easy to live in past hurts or regrets. Sometimes we need to forgive and then look forward.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hi
Nice to meet you. I know Michele. I agree that looking back can cause trouble. Unless you are willing to take a close look at what you might do now. No “what ifs.”
Blessings on your decisions,
Janis
LikeLiked by 1 person
I checked out your art. I am an artist as well with two children’s books. Is your book published? I have recently finished painting for 100 days – 100 birds. I am still seeing where God wants me to go with this. You can contact me at authorjaniscox@gmail.com
Blessings
Janis
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you! Yes, I self-published “Look at the Birds” in 2020.
I’d love to see your art.
LikeLike
HI.
I’m on Instagram at janis_cox, my website it not updated at all. http://www.janiscox.com
Thanks.
LikeLike
Deciding to believe in the good and to trust God is always wise. Not always easy though. Thought-provoking post. Visiting from FMF#12
LikeLike
And so is set before you
a blessing and a curse,
and we set out to pursue
the better or the worse,
which can be quite hard to see;
we all reach for the blessing,
but sometimes it seems to me
that we should be confessing
that our curses made us more
than any blessing ever could,
that the pain opened the door
to something more than passing good,
to suffering that in its toll
made us holy, made us whole.
LikeLike