Tag Archives: Parkinson’s disease

Bitterness: Drinking Poison and Wishing Someone Else Dies


Bitterness_poison

What happens to a person when they are exposed to continual invalidation, while feeling the pain of rejection, isolation and then made to believe that what they are feeling is  not important enough to be heard?

If you have not had that experience, you will not understand what I am talking about.   After serving others for most of my life in pastoral ministry and having the unfortunate experience of having Thyroid cancer, being diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease and subsequently, losing a wife to Cancer; I felt invalidated by life, the church, and everyone that I had given my life to serve.  My experience was that when I was transparent enough to share with the church, the deacons, and leaders that I was very sick,  I was pressured out of my  position by a group of religious haters. If it sounds like unresolved anger that needs expressed, let me assure you that I was angry and had good reason to be angry with people that I had invested in and who were only interested in what they wanted, while I felt so sick.  I am here to tell you from  an experience of wishing certain (unnamed) people would eat crap and die that bitterness is a counterproductive emotion and only hurts the person who is bitter.

So, I moved away and in my new location, I do not have the constant reminder that comes from seeing the people who  talk about expressing love, acceptance and mercy, but give judgment, pain, and isolation.  If that sounds serious, it is, the Bible says, “to shun the very appearance of evil” and they were acting evil so I obeyed the command and made a clean break.  As a recovering church and ministry junkie, I know now that I lived inside a religious life that only offered redemption as a concept and not as a practice.  Personally, I felt like I was  victimized by religious do gooders when, in fact, the problem was I had a distorted perception of reality.  I somehow thought Christians would be Christians when called upon. However, this belief could not have been further from the truth– people always act in their best interest and out of their own need justifying what they do.  The problem is that religious types do not want to admit that and believe that their actions are always spiritual.

Unfortunately, the assumption is not true and the result is misunderstanding, about the character of human behavior.  When a person has false expectations about people and life, then that individual ends up disillusioned and disappointed by the false ideas believed.  Disillusionment leads to failure in life, bitterness about experiences and alienation from the church.  What experience has taught me is that the church is ill-equipped at helping people who have problems. What the church is good at is creating emotional invalids, people who cannot think for themselves, and creating conformity.  The best organization in the world is the church of the Lord Jesus Christ, but it is made up of people who are a part of an organizational system that has no fail-safe approach for people who experience problems outside of the box.  What is a person to do when all that is right goes wrong leaving you in a pile ruins, then in one fell swoop everything is lost, hope is gone, and you’re left alone?

I remember when I sat in the hospice with Linda who was dying with colon cancer and thinking– remembering about how many times that I had been there with other families who had a family member dying.  I remember asking myself, “Where are those people that I served and where is the church, the pastor, the family now?  Death is one of those solitary experiences that you have to go through alone, but it is a time that no one should be alone.  If you want to invalidate someone, leave them alone when they get older and when they are dying.  I remember very clearly the isolation and loneliness of those moments.  I had just had a TIA, my sugar was out of control, my wife dying of cancer and life was ebbing away.  I sat there and waited hoping that someone would come.  I called and talked on the phone with my mother-in law who had told her dying daughter that she had received a word from God that she was going to be healed, repeatedly telling her that she did not have enough faith—she invalidated her in her dying moments in the name of a religious mysticism. Further invalidation came when she called and told me that I should take her out of Hospice because that was where people went to die– we did not have enough faith.  I understand that it was her fear of the reality of death, the children’s inability to deal with their mother’s death that explained the confusing behavior.  Meanwhile, I sat there day in and day out– around the clock wondering when someone would come.  People trickled through occasionally, sporadically– but no one really came who stayed, who invested, who made a difference.  It was not until the last week that Linda lived that her mother, dad, and brother finally came.  On the phone I had to tell her mom, if you do not come, you may never see her alive again– then she came.  How can a person ever get over that and get on with life?  What I discovered through this process is that I had faulty notions about people that made me believe that if they were really Christians they would show love, if they were family, they would show respect, if he was a pastor, he would show care, but it did not happen and I was disappointed.

What I discovered is that, generally, people are the same inside and outside the church.  The difference is that people inside the church have one set of answers about life and people who are outside the church have another set of answers.  People do act according to their personal interests, needs, and beliefs.  I believed that, somehow, people would act as I thought that I used to– go sit, pray, or give support.  The result, for me, was I got disappointed.  The point is that I thought they should, would– show interest and it made me angry, and not for myself, but that people could show such a lack of interest or could not feel a need to inconvenience themselves for someone who had cared about them throughout life.  At the end of the day, the anger that I feel has not gone away about injustice, but I have learned to manage what I felt, experienced, and is a reality. The unfortunate thing is that when such emotionally charged memories become a part of existence that it changes life forever.  I will probably never get over what has happened, but living with bitterness is no more an option that living false beliefs and expectations about people.

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Filed under Abuse, Attitude, Index, Influence, Motivation, Perception, Relationships, Self Defeating Behavior, Spiritual Development

Finding Peace in The Holidays


A Danish Christmas tree illuminated with burni...

The Christmas holiday for many people is attached to a deeply embedded need that every human being has to experience the joy of connection with other people, especially family and those that we love and care about. In the religious world, especially Christianity, the message and symbols of the season point to a belief that Christ is the source of the peace that is the essential theme of the Christmas message. Indeed, it is true that faith in the person of Christ as redeemer and Savior is the path to personal peace between God and man. Therefore,  in that relationship there can be found, both a method and power to guide, structure, and build the elements of present peace, and eternal hope for peace in a person’s experience of life.

However, that is not the lived-experience of many people during the holiday season. Unfortunately, it is a time of when the void between the meaning, ideas, and symbols of the season are magnified in the experience of the Christmas season. A good question to pose in the holidays is why is there  such a disconnect between the message of peace and the experience of people.  Think for a moment, how much peace could be experienced in the midst of the celebration; if people who are without peace would surrender to the Prince of Peace during this wonderful time of year?

So Many Misappropriated Values

One of the issues that I have observed is that what seems to be important is not what people really feel or think is important. As a result,  a chronic problem in American culture is the belief that having more will make us happier. In fact, it is not what we get during Christmas that satisfies the need each person has within to experience joy and be happy. In contrast, it is what we give from the heart that is the source of true blessing received in life.  An effective axiom to cite here says, “blessed are they that give, for in giving, they shall break down the barriers that prevent the ability to receive.” Therefore, one of the evidences of culture disconnected from the value  of giving is the profound sense of entitlement that people possess in the 21st Century.  Many individuals hold the belief that they are owed something from others and when they do not get it, they feel that somehow they are unappreciated and are suffering unjust conditions in life. Indeed, every problem that we have is very real to us as individuals.  However, peace will never be achieved in expecting, it will come through how we respond to challenge of personal need and the grace of giving that will make the difference in how we experience life.  At the heart of a distorted misplaced values is the heart of a hurting person who believes that “I don’t deserve this to happen to me …. and this just is not fair.”  The truth is that life is never fair, but in the midst of an unfair life, world, and experience.  What we need to do is to stop and realize  that beyond our feelings of disappointment, i.e., that we should always receive the best outcome in life to experience joy there is a Savior who knows every pain that we feel.  Something to consider is that the times that produce the greatest faith are not when we are whole and everything is turning out right.  It is when we are broken, feeling the weight of life, pressured by circumstances–tempting us beyond measure, that we are able to value the wonder of life and what we have been privileged to have.  As a result, it is at these Divine intersections of life that we are able to experience the greatest potential for an expression of faith that enable the experience of peace.

The book of Romans says that because we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God. In the worst moment of Christ on the Cross, He surrendered all of life to God’s purpose in faith. Dying to self and living to God in a life of surrender is the greatest expression of faith, because when we have nothing else to give, we must trust God.  Therefore it is at that moment, we have found the way that lasting peace can be found in the act of surrender to God.

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Filed under Holidays, Index, Spiritual Development, Spirituality, The Soul