Showing posts with label Treasures of Darkness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Treasures of Darkness. Show all posts

Monday, July 25, 2011

Tuesday's Trust - Strength Amidst Suffering??? ~with Viktor Frankl





Tuesday's Trust


Strength Amidst Suffering???


~with Viktor Frankl






A client said something to me this week that absolutely shocked me. She was describing a grandfather (who is now deceased) and mentioned that her grandmother divorced him. Calculating in my head that this occurrence had to have happened many years ago ~ at a time when a woman divorcing a man was fairly rare ~ I asked, "So why did your grandmother divorce him?"


Her reply was,



"...Because he was laid up in bed and couldn't work, so he was absolutely worthless."



I was dumbfounded. How could anyone describe a beloved family member as "absolutely worthless"? The subject gave us quite a bit to talk about in our therapy session!


When I asked her to describe her grandfather in more detail, she admitted he was a creative and a very spiritually-attuned man who had used these gifts as best he could, but he suffered debilitating depression.


"Absolutely worthless?!"
(That does not a worthless man make, we both agreed!)


She conceded later a recognition of her mind's inner workings when she said,


"I guess that tells you how I see myself..."




Ahhh. Now we were getting somewhere...!




*****




We are child-loss grievers. Most of us, if not all, have had the proverbial rug jerked out from under us, our lives turned upside down, often rendering us weak and helpless, fragile and often quite dysfunctional.



Add to that already vulnerable state the sad fact that outside family members can't seem to "get it" when it comes to the degree of our suffering. Many seem to want to cast aspersions at our weakness, and even ~ in their arrogance ~ want to "give us advice."


(As if we could just snap out of it because they speak such "wise" words to us!!!) The height of IGNORANCE A-N-D ARROGANCE!




But what about us? How do we see ourselves?



  • What if we have been rendered so dysfunctional that we can barely eke out a living?
  • What if we have to withdraw from the world to protect our fragile emotions?
  • What if we are transforming into a "weak" person compared to the "strong" person we once were?



(All of this is basically where I am five years into my grief!) So, do we conclude that we are "absolutely worthless"? (Fortunately, I have more compassion for myself than that!)




Maybe it is a temptation to question our "value" at times. We certainly seem a lot different than we were before... weaker in many ways. And yet, our suffering is building inner strengths in us that many will never achieve as it requires dying to self, dying to this world's illusions, dying to the false gods that we know now offer absolutely nothing, dying to any illusions of having control, having power, having all the answers, or even having all our dreams come true...



And who is going to die to all of those illusions without first being thrown down to the bottom of the bucket of helplessness?





So now...


  • We know what's real,
  • We know what suffering does to people; therefore we have a new compassion for others,
  • We know who is authentic,
  • We know what is is to love, and lose a beloved child ~ So we know we have faced the world's hardest-possible loss, and thus far, have survived..., and
  • We know we need God to be able to even make it from one minute to the next...


These are all "treasures" in the darkness that can't be received in the superficial world in which most people live...




*****




Viktor Frankl




After his years of enduring the concentration camps at Auschwitz, Dachau, and others during the Holocaust of World War II, psychiatrist and himself a survivor, Viktor Frankl admits,



"The majority of prisoners suffered from a kind of inferiority complex. We all had once been or had fancied ourselves to be "somebody." Now we were treated like nonentities. Without consciously thinking about it, the average prisoner felt himself utterly degraded."



In such circumstances, there is a great temptation to helplessly react to our circumstances or to give in to abject helplessness.



Frankl wondered,


"(Can) man escape the influences of his surroundings?


Does man have no choice of action in the face of such circumstances?"



He concluded:


"(T)here were always choices to make. Every day, every hour, offered the opportunity to make a decision, a decision which determined whether you would or would not submit to those powers which threatened to rob you of your very self, your inner freedom."




He recognized that


"Man can preserve a vestige of spiritual freedom, of independence of mind, even in such terrible conditions of psychic and physical stress... (Man) may retain his human dignity even in a concentration camp... If there is a meaning in life at all, there must be meaning in suffering. Suffering is an ineradicable part of life, even as fate and death. Without suffering and death human life cannot be complete.



"The way in which a man accepts his fate and all the suffering it entails, the way in which he takes up his cross, gives him ample opportunity-- to add a deeper meaning to his life.



"...Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to its problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individually...


"Sometimes man may be required simply to accept fate, to bear his cross.



  • When a man finds that it is his destiny to suffer, he will have to accept his suffering as his task; his single and unique task.
  • He will have to acknowledge the fact that even in suffering he is unique and alone in the universe. No one can relieve him of his suffering or suffer in his place.
  • His unique opportunity lies in the way in which he bears his burden.




He and his fellow prisoners talked with one another, consoled one another, and encouraged one another.


"...Once the meaning of suffering had been revealed to us, we refused to minimize or alleviate the camp's tortures by

  • ignoring them or
  • harboring false illusions and
  • entertaining artificial optimism.



Suffering had become a task on which we did not want to turn our backs. We had realized its hidden opportunities for achievement... getting through (the) suffering.



"...Whoever was still alive had reason for hope. Health, family, happiness, professional abilities, fortune, position in society -- all these were things that could be achieved again and restored. After all, we still had our bones intact. Whatever we had gone through --"




Then Viktor quoted to his fellow prisoners from the philosopher Nietzsche,





'Was mich nicht umbringt,

macht mich starker.'"



(That which does not kill me,

makes me stronger.)








Pictures of the concentration camp and surviving prisoners from Auschwitz, Poland, thanks to FotoSearch

Monday, December 27, 2010

Tuesday's Trust - Christmas Reflections: My Child's 5th Christmas in Heaven





Christmas Reflections



Tuesday's Trust


Christmas Reflections:


My Child's 5th Christmas in Heaven






When my child was alive, many times I felt I did not know how best to parent her.


Now I find I do not know how best to grieve her.


Both jobs feel like they are full-time, on-the-job intensive training. And with each "job," I find it holds the intensity of life or death. With such sacred callings, to love and to grieve my precious child, I find I can entrust myself only to my Lord who is Himself, the Way, the Truth, and the Life.



This child is a ball-of-energy, full of life, and I find that out of necessity, she challenges me to discover new energies, skills, and friendships which energize and enliven my life...both before...and after...her life in Heaven.



What an impact this precious child and hers-and-my precious Lord have on me. What joy she must feel to see that she so strongly impacts her mommy's life, ensuring her mommy takes up her own energetic pursuit of life and love that brings joy and fulfillment in this life, and even more-so in the life-to-come. Even now, it seems her life invests in mine much more richly than it feels I was able to invest in hers in the relatively short time she was here.




Thank you, sweet baby for loving your mommy even and especially when I hurt, and for being ever-ready with your show-stopping smile when you see me faltering in my deep grief.


It is amazing to me how just your smile can snap me out of the deepest traumatic grief, and transport me into a warm feeling, a smile, and sometimes even a laugh ~ almost instantaneously.


It seems like one of the Heavenly miracles God gives me through you. How sweet He is to share you with me and let you still be a part of my life! That you can bring such uplifting joy into the deepest, darkest grueling grief is truly one of God's greatest Treasures found in the Darkness.




Your smile brings not only joy into my grief, but it brings you and your enlivened spirit back into my life.


Providing ...


A rare glance into Eternity.


A peek into the Unseen.


A reminder of Light that overcomes our Darkness.


Assurance of what I hope for.


Certainty of what I do not "see."


Evidence of the Graciousness of God's Redeeming Love.




Thank You God for this gift of sharing my child with me in spirit, one of the many miracles that Your Son's birth brings to us ~ Your children still on earth, longing for Home!











Picture of Christmas Reflections:
http://media.photobucket.com/image/christmas%20reflections/LynnViehl/ChristmasReflections.jpg?o=15

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Thursday's Therapy - Rekindling Friendships: Grief Amidst the Holidays






Thursday's Therapy


Rekindling Friendships:


Grief Amidst the Holidays



~Tommy and Angie Prince





Taking a break from our TRAUMA Therapy Toolbox posts, we want to address some issues around the holiday, and what was for us this week, a therapeutic way to "celebrate" this Christmas season.





This will be our 5th Christmas holiday in our 4 1/4 years of grief over losing our precious 19-year-old and only daughter. For the FIRST time in the 5 Christmas seasons, we were able to go to a get-together with our close friends last night. It was extremely casual, low-pressure, and graciously open-ended as to whether we would be there or not. These friends are extremely authentic people; there is no pretense about them at all. Some of us were dressed up for the holiday. Some were not. And that was okay.



The conversation was real just like the friendships are real. Several we had not seen in awhile. A few we see fairly often. All have a great sense of humor, so we were laughing at one another's foibles and tell-tell stories we all told on ourselves. Somehow, we were able to tell "kid"-stories without either Tommy or I getting triggered. We even had some time to share grief stories of new losses in the group of which I had been totally in the dark. So, there were hugs and condolences, and stories of what our friends have been going through in regard to their losses.



There was a love and acceptance of us with no need of direct acknowledgement of our deep pain because these friends KNOW and their actions were more than enough to show their deep love. Many of these friends have been faithful over these years to show us their love in oh-so-many-tangible ways, and it has been incredibly touching.




Last night was a great reminder of life's gifts by which we're surrounded.



And now, even closer bonds are formed "through-the-fire," serving as reminders of God's "Treasures of Darkness" in our lives.




*****




(A)nd I will give thee the treasures of darkness, and hidden riches of secret places, that thou mayest know that it is I, Jehovah, who call thee by thy name, even the God of Israel.

~Isaiah 45:3 ASV











http://www.fotosearch.com/photos-images/fireplace.html

ASV: American Standard Version of God's Holy Word from http://biblos.com/

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Friday's Faith ~ God Saves...In the Womb and In the Tomb







What the caterpillar sees as the end of the world, the master calls a butterfly.


~ Richard Bach ઇઉ




Friday's Faith


God Saves...In the Womb and In the Tomb


*****




A grieving mother, Sharon Throop related the following:

We lost our only daughter, Wendy, (14) years ago (11/12/96). I was just sent a prose, that sums up so much for so many who walk this road. You may have read it before, but if not, send it on to some of your friends and realize that it sums up the loss of our children.


Feel incomplete? Life in suspense? Can you accept the anxiety of not being in control, while trusting in the "slow work of God, our loving Vine-dresser"?

Can you "give our Lord the benefit of believing that His hand is leading you, and accept the anxiety of feeling yourself in suspense and incomplete"?



*****




God Saves...In the Womb and In the Tomb



God who saved me in the womb,

Saved my baby in the tomb!


"I will help you. Do not fear.

Call on Me, and I'll draw near."


Draw near when TRAUMA o'ertakes,

Shatters peace ~ my spirit quakes!


"Draw near, My baby girl...

Hide in Me like th' oyster's pearl."


Father God, I'm so afraid,

Thrown down by Satan, flat laid...


"Trust Me. Treasures in Darkness

Will meet you in Death's Starkness.

I who carved you in the womb,

Will not leave you in Death's Tomb.

Follow Me and I will lead,

Come to Me; upon Me feed.

Though you're helpless as a babe,

I'm your God, mighty to save!"


Jesus, hold Your little lamb,

I'm Your child, weak as I am...




*****




"I will give you the treasures of darkness,

riches stored in secret places,

so that you may know that I am the LORD,

the God of Israel, who summons you by name.

For the sake of Jacob my servant,

of Israel my chosen...

I am the LORD, and there is no other,

apart from Me there is no God.

I will strengthen you...

so that from the rising of the sun

to the place of its setting

men may know there is none besides Me.

I am the LORD, and there is no other.


~Isaiah 45:3-6 NIV



*****



Faith is the bird that feels the light when the dawn is still dark.


~ Rabindranath Tagore