Rebuilding faith while healing from religious trauma.

Ten Years or a Million Dollars — Deconstructing With Jesus

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Ten Years or a Million Dollars — Deconstructing With Jesus

There was a reason this question was so easy for me to answer. If you are on Facebook, you probably saw the ten-year challenge that circulated earlier this year. Every time someone posted a photo of themselves from 10 years ago alongside a current photo, it sent me back to 2012 and the heartache I was experiencing at that time.

The above photograph, taken on Christmas Eve 2011, is the closest I could find to 10 years ago, but I never followed through with the challenge. There were many reasons. I tend to hate current pictures of myself, so I could not find a recent photo that I was comfortable posting. Because of what was going on in my life at the time and in subsequent months, looking at this picture brings up a lot of painful memories and the emotions that go along with them. My grandma is in the background wearing a wig and relying on oxygen because of the radiation treatments she was undergoing for lung cancer, which would claim her life 11 days before Mother’s Day 2012. The smiles on our faces provide a stark contrast to the pain that we had been through and that we would experience in the coming years — the pain that my children and I are still trying to heal from.

I consider all of the things that I would do differently if I knew then what I know now. But then, how would I know what I know now if I had never had those painful experiences? My stomach knots up, and I get teary, depressed, and anxious when I think about those things. But I would not go back and change them. The simple truth is that there is so much I would have never learned without the difficult times.

No matter how hard we try, regardless of whether our intentions are pure, there is no way to understand the pain that another person carries without experiencing pain ourselves. It is human nature to sit on the sidelines of something we have never experienced and make all sorts of accusations. If we grow from our pain and trials, our opinions and attitudes will change. Mine certainly have. I have grown closer to Jesus and see Him through new eyes and a softer heart. Who I am now is a direct result of God granting me the strength and grace to learn from the injustice, abuse, pain, grief, rejection, and heartache that I have experienced. Who I will be in the future is dependent on whether I continue to learn compassion and grow in the love of Jesus, rather than allowing self-righteousness to take root.

So, I could go back and change things and take away much of the pain, but without that pain, I would not know the love of God the way I do now. God would not have had the opportunity to strip away my self-righteousness and judgmental attitudes. I would be unable to see abuse and corruption in the church. My fawning trauma response would continue to prevent me from standing up for myself and my kids. My heart would still be held captive by the idolatry that prioritizes institutions like the church and marriage above people.

I still have a long way to go and much to learn. One day, I will look back on this time in my life and realize the effects that the hard days, months, and years will have had on my future self, and I genuinely believe I will feel the same way I do now. Yes, the trauma, trials, and difficulties were nearly unbearable at times. Yet, despite the pain that I see reflected in my own eyes and that I feel deep in my heart, I would not trade the lessons and growth for anything in the world.

Originally published at https://www.deconstructingwithjesus.com on April 12, 2022.