I'm sort of in one of those seasons and thus, I am pretty silent on the outside. It takes so much energy to keep up with my swirling mind that I retreat even further into myself. It's not intentional; it's an instinctive survival mechanism. The past couple of years have been hard, heck, the last near decade have been hard, and every once in awhile the craziness of life and the unintentionally stored up mental baggage collide and my life explodes. OK, maybe it doesn't actually explode, but it sort of feels like it. My body starts falling apart (This time it's random weird breathing problems and strange nerve issues in my leg, among other things.), I have sleeping problems, and I succumb to self-indulgent mental anguish.
I find myself in the metaphorical place of the disciples, in the face of the crashing waves of life and the whipping wind of my mind, and I cry out, "Lord, don't you care if I drown?"
Dutch Boat in a Storm, Titus Lunter |
Quiet. Be still!
Someone recently reminded me that praising the Lord is the best weapon for just about anything. Praising the Lord takes the focus off of myself, my anxiety, even physical distress. It doesn't let me take a victim's mentality to life's assaults.
Life is stressful and often full of pain...we weren't promised that it wouldn't be. But our God is good. He is powerful. And, He is worthy of praise.
I certainly don't have all the answers right now, or ever. I can't control life and I can't heal the wounds of the past by myself. I'm trying not to desperately focus on my need for peace, scheming all the ways I can force it into existence, and focus instead on the Prince of Peace Himself.
It's a life-lesson in process, a slow process, but in process none-the-less.
I loved finding your Christian INTJ woman blogs and it helps me not feeling so alone! Thankfully, God is faithful to fill our hearts, just the way He made us! At 55, God has helped me understand my personality so I can help loved ones know how I function best, and I can also try to understand where they are coming from. This honesty revolutionized some relationships when I could finally understand myself and explain it to others. We then had a basis for dialoguing about how to find a win-win situation, such as whether seven of us were going to pack into a van for a 6 hour drive both ways after a long, hard week to visit an ill relative (trapped in a van--a nightmare for me!). Thanks to everyone on this blog for identifying yourself and encouraging each other.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your authenticity! It resonates with this INTJ!
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