Hi All,
I moved my blog site to a new site and won't be updating this one anymore. Feel free to look up the other site at www.andreabanandrea.blogspot.com
Andrea
Simply Life
Wednesday, October 12, 2016
Monday, October 10, 2016
Between Hope and Reality
Hope for love can be destructive. Dreams and thoughts can dance together
forming a beautiful and dangerous tango.
Both influencing each other until reality is lost in thoughts, and
dreams hold unrealistic hopes.
I tend to feel emotions quickly and strongly, including
these hopes that can be destructive. I have
learned to build walls in the past year to protect me from this type of hope. These walls have protected me from rejection
and from the possible pain of love.
Walls that have allowed friends through, but never love. These walls have allowed me to be
myself. They’ve allowed me to live in
reality without skewing emotions.
Hope for love can’t be locked up forever though. Abandoning hope can be destructive. Without hope the walls will swallow you whole
and can hurt more than unrealized hopes.
The dance is safer, but not as beautiful with walls. Perhaps hope of love
is worth the dangerous dance with reality; and abandoned dreams could still be a
reality.
A reality where walls were used for protection for a time,
but were knocked down by discarding pretenses. Where being open to the possibility of love allows
for a deeper unselfish connection. A
reality where just maybe he feels a little hope too and a small glance and a
shared smile turn into a shy hug. Where
hope puts a crack in a wall, and even if nothing but friendship comes, there is
a glimmer, a spark of feelings, somewhere between hope and reality.
Sunday, October 2, 2016
The Echoes of Pain
He is in pain. The worst type of pain, the type that
includes a loss of hope, a loss of faith in others and stems from a loss of love; it’s a
common life pain. This pain runs deep
and whenever it surfaces brings other pains with it. Pains from other areas of life that seem to be buried deep beneath the surface yet always rise to the
occasion and join in with the fresh pain.
This pain will go away, with time, but it may come again in the future,
as part of the past pains when a new pain comes. It could be prevented. A heart can be hardened and protected,
but can it ever truly be full then? It’s
a risk, to un-harden a heart, to try to remove the callouses and risk the pain. The pain in the pain is sometimes from
knowing it could have been prevented.
That it never needed to be there. But
it does need to be there. To fully love, it needs to be there.
There is pain in watching him. A pain in knowing his pain intimately as it echoes my own past pains. Echoes of pain that once slashed deeply and viciously with very
little hints of mercy. A familiarity with the loss of hope and love. I know it is not my pain, but for a moment it is mine as it hauntingly echoes. A shared pain, yet not shared. His pain real; mine from the past, wanting to cry out, "I know, me too!" and to soothe and comfort as the echoes resound through me. But echoes are different from the real pain, even though there is a familiarity with the pain, there has been healing.
He’ll be okay. He’s in God’s hands. The pain is in God’s hands. Someday,
his pain too, will just be an echo.
Tuesday, September 27, 2016
This Time I Will Praise the Lord
I’ve been thinking about prayer a lot
lately and my relationship with God.
Prayer is an important piece of communication with God, and I’m
recognizing that my prayers can be more “me” centered than God centered. While I think it is important to bring desires
and petitions to God, I’ve lately felt the need to bring more to God than
that. Specifically being thankful and
bringing praise for what has been going on in my life, or what He may be doing
in it without my knowledge, no matter the circumstances.
Every now and then I read a passage in the
Bible that I am familiar with, but it speaks to me in a new way. Recently, I have been thinking about women in
the Bible, and specifically the story of Leah and Rachel in Genesis 29.
For light context purposes, Leah and Rachel
were sisters. Leah was the older sister and we know that she “had weak eyes”
and Rachel was the younger sister and beautiful. Through a series of prior events, they end up
married to the same man, Jacob. Jacob
loved Rachel more and was ultimately tricked into marrying Leah first and then
married Rachel as well. This scenario is a reality TV show just waiting to happen (Sister
Wives, literally).
I’ve related a lot to Leah in this story
recently. No, not because I’m married to
a man who has an additional wife. Women
during this time period found their purpose in child bearing. Having children meant they were building
their estate and ensuring a future (especially if the children were male). While these two women were very different
from each other, they both wanted God to change their circumstances. Leah desired the love of her husband (which
Rachel had) and Rachel desired to have children (which Leah had).
Leah’s responses to God in her circumstances
have been resonating with me lately.
Genesis 29
31 When the Lord saw that Leah was not loved, he enabled her
to conceive, but Rachel remained childless. 32 Leah became pregnant and gave birth to a son. She named him
Reuben, for she said, “It is because the Lord has seen my misery. Surely my husband will love me now.”
33 She conceived again, and when she gave birth to a son she
said, “Because the Lord heard that I am not loved, he gave me this
one too.” So she named him Simeon.
34 Again she conceived, and when she gave birth to a son she
said, “Now at last my husband will become attached to me, because I have borne
him three sons.” So he was named Levi.
35 She conceived again, and when she gave birth to a son she
said, “This time I will praise the Lord.” So she named him Judah. Then she stopped
having children.
I specifically have been focusing on Leah’s
responses to having children. She names
her children in response to her circumstances and God.
- With Reuben she recognizes that God saw her. She also says that surely her husband will love her. She still desires the love of her husband which she does not have. God doesn’t change her circumstances and Jacob doesn’t love her as a result of her having Reuben.
- With Simeon she recognizes that God heard her. She again recognizes that she is not loved and still desires the love of her husband. God still doesn’t change her circumstances and Jacob doesn’t love her as a result of having Simeon.
- With Levi she hopes that her husband will become attached to her, since she has now born him his first three children, all male. Still, God doesn’t change her circumstances and Jacob doesn’t love her.
- With Judah, she simply responds, “This time I will praise the Lord.”
God didn’t change Leah’s circumstances and
we know from the passages that follow that Jacob continues to love Rachel
instead of Leah. Yet Leah’s response of
“This time I will praise the Lord” shows a heart shift within Leah. She will go on to struggle with her lack of
love from her husband and strife with her sister, yet she turns towards God in
it.
Ironically in this story, Rachel has the
love that Leah desires, yet does not have the children. Later on we see her taking matters into her own
hands and giving her servant to Jacob as a third wife in order to have children
on Rachel’s behalf. Leah ultimately
follows suit and also give Jacob her servant as a fourth wife.
The struggle between the women continue as
both women desires what the other has (love or children). Their struggles and circumstances ultimately
impact their entire family. We will
never know the entirety of what God was doing in this situation and in their
pain, but we can see some things that came from it.
In the end Jacob had 12 sons. Rachel, the wife he loved, did not have a son
until son number 11. This son was Joseph. Joseph was favored by his father as he was
the son of the wife he loved, but perhaps also because of the time it took to
even have a child with his favorite wife.
I think it would be a safe assumption that the strife between the wives
would have impacted the family dynamic and influenced the first 10 sons. They knew that Joseph was favored, and that
Joseph’s mother was favored, and ultimately their jealousy of
their brother led them to sell him as a slave.
This is a messed up family dynamic, but God ended up using it to put
Joseph in a place to save Egypt during famine later in the story. Rachel had to watch her husband have 10 other
children before she had Joseph. This would
be painful but ultimately it was what saved Egypt and their family in the long
run.
We sometimes will never know what God is
doing behind the scenes. It doesn’t ever
say that Leah was loved by her husband, but she was the mother of six of his
children (half of the tribes of Israel) and Judah, the son where she responds
with “This time I will praise the Lord,” ends up having Jesus in his
lineage.
I have definitely had my Rachel and Leah
moments in life situations. I’ve tried
to take matters into my own hands like Rachel and fix my circumstances, when
maybe they were exactly what they needed to be.
I have also cried out to God like Leah and asked him to change my
circumstances, over and over again.
Recently I’ve been thinking “This time I will praise God” in the
circumstances or desires that go unchanged or unfilled.
I’ve been recognizing that my responses, or my conversation with God, should really be an attitude of praise rather than discontentment. There are so many other things to be thankful for, and perhaps something bigger that He is doing that I cannot see, and will never see.
Saturday, August 27, 2016
Dear Andrea
Dear Young 21 Year Old Andrea:
Guess what, your life is not over. Currently in life you are struggling with who
you are as a person, being tortured from living a double life and deciding what
you really want out of life. You will be
okay. You will also be a completely
different person in a matter of years.
Embrace the life changing experiences that are about to come your
direction.
Right now you are in your “recovering home-schooler” years
and ultimately you will realize how much the home-school years actually provided
a foundation for life going forward.
Yes, you should move with a band to NY when you are 23. In this move you will discover that there is
more to life than you. You will also
discover that there are different types of love. You will develop unbreakable bonds with the
friends you move with and spend the next few years with. Cherish the friend Thanksgivings, the Laundry
Mat nights, the Erie Canal walks, the band nights, sitting on the porch during
warm thunderstorms, and getting stuck in the snow in your Honda
(repeatedly). Wherever life takes you,
you will always have the time in NY and the sense of joy / friendship /
community and pure love that was experienced even though times were hard. Also, when you are stuck in a Walmart parking
lot/camping in South Dakota for a week……buy the red camping chair as soon as
the van breaks down. Trust me on this
one.
By the way, you will break your heart repeatedly. By breaking your own heart, I mean that you
will like guy after guy…..really like them, and think they are the one…..never
date them……they will be oblivious to you or lead you on…..and then they will
meet someone else and fall in love. So
they won’t break your heart, but you will break your own by placing so much of your
identity and future dreams on the person you currently like. I’d
tell you not to do this, and your friends will tell you not to do this, but the
reality is that you have to do this in order to move forward in the future. You
will learn from emotional pain and it will be hard. You will also learn your real identity and
Who it is based in. Some tips for
recovery are bubble baths, baking/cooking new foods, girl nights, coffee with
your good friend and also connecting/arguing with God.
I know you always wanted to be a stay-at-home mom to a bunch
of kids, have a country house in a small town with gardens and pets, and be
really involved in ministry. While this
is a noble ambition, it won’t occur in the next ten years. You will actually have a pretty intense
career and be involved in many leadership roles (who would’ve thought?) that
will stretch and grow you. You will
begin to realize that God has other plans for the next ten years, and possibly
longer. You will however have lots of
young people in your life to cherish and love (12 nieces/nephews and godsons on
top of that!). You will also be more
involved with ministry than you ever thought and connecting with others in your
mutual pain, joys and life moments. Even
though it will sometimes not seem like it, God knows what He is teaching you.
I don’t have much that I want to tell you, because I don’t
want to ruin it. I want you to always
have hope for what could be and always stay positive, even in the devastating
times. There will be devastating
times. You will become a beautiful
woman, no, I don’t mean that you will be a hot model (but you’ll be decently
cute, at least a little). I mean that
the different types of pain you will go through will lead to a woman with endurance,
encouragement, love of others, confidence sprinkled with shyness, generosity,
driven/hard-working, with hopefully some wisdom and a reliance on God. Honestly, you will have many faults and
failures too, but I’ll let you figure out what those are and continue to bring
them to God. You won’t be perfect.
I know you will constantly battle with thoughts of why you
remain single. I’m going to let you in
on a secret. There will be times that
you think it is because of your weirdo personality. It’s not.
That personality will be cherished by many. There will be times you will think it is
because you are ugly and some guy just hasn’t seen past your ugliness to see
your personality. It’s not. Just stop.
There will be times you will blame God.
There will be times you will blame yourself.
Here is the secret.
You are single because the timing is not right for you. You may feel like you are waiting, and
waiting, and waiting for life to start.
You’ll continue this thought process until you are about 30 and then
snap out of it. There is and never will
be anything “wrong” with you and it is not because you are not good enough for a man or relationship. You are human with flaws, and so is whoever
you will end up with. God only knows the
right timing. Think of everything you
will learn over the next ten years and things that you wouldn’t learn if things
were different. Who knows, maybe you are
single because your future husband is still learning things that he needs to
learn before meeting you. You’d rather
he learn them now since you’re stuck once you’re committed! Maybe, someday you’ll meet a guy that you can
be yourself around and instantly connect with rather than shutting down and not
talking to. My advice: Don’t wait.
Live life instead and love and enjoy those around you. Live life with others and constantly seek
God. But don’t painfully wait.
Lovingly,
Andrea (ten years from the future)
PS, I’ll write to you again when I am 41 to see how those
ten years went!
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