09 May 2014

In Honesty

Graduate student life inevitably entails a high volume of hours spent toting library books and notes and computer cords around Chicago's coffeeshop scene. With the communal table trend, I have often found myself sitting directly next to two people meeting up for an exchange in the form of business or casual conversation or a first/second/married date... And while it appears as though I'm deep in study (to be fair, sometimes I am…), I simultaneously have questions spinning curious webs around my mind directed towards these two neighbor stranger friends. Sometimes it's moms in the neighborhood, which gives glimmers of hope to my city-rooted life to stay in Chicago toting a baby around in a stroller; other times it's business partners "working from home" and taking regular calls outside the shop; it's also been husband and wife, meeting up for coffee or lunch mid-workday… Whatever the situation, it always seems as if bits and pieces of their communication float into my space. It's fun to be an unexpected bystander, a listener, an observer of the way others tick and the process they undergo in their present circumstances.

A thesis proposal in the works... 
And while most days, I gladly assume this role of harmless eavesdropper content to be partaking on the sidelines, today I overheard a conversation in which it was all I could do to hold back my tongue (and concurrently control the urge to scream…) The conversation took place between two friends - dads in the neighborhood meeting up for a morning cup of jo at the local Wheaton Starbucks - they chatted sports and kids, the weather and church… until one man's voice got slow and heavy, and with a sigh of difficulty he surrendered the fact that he was going through a divorce. While this presents the opportunity for a myriad of responses, the one his friend chose was: "Just remember, this is hard right now, but there's a light at the end of the tunnel. It will all be over soon. In a few years, this will be in your past and things will be better."

home office.
The walls of my throat tightened, my heart pounded, my eyes swelled. Do I tell him the hidden non-truth in that statement? The lie of "it will all go away"after the divorce papers are signed feeds the empty notion "my life will be better if…" While I am obviously not in the position to judge the grounds of this man's divorce or provide any such advice to a stranger whatsoever… I do know one thing: divorce doesn't go away. It lingers like a storm cloud ready to burst each holiday, birthday, celebration, funeral, special event… It is there in each return home, around the family dinner table, and tainting even the happiest memories of the past. Divorce is a monster that tears apart families, breaks trust, and brings relational discord.

The Cubicle. Where I have resigned myself to actually get work done...
Maybe it's because I'm in the throws of research on the topic of "divorce" or because of an assignment I just completed on the topic of "parenting," or a counseling class with a recent study of "compassion" or simply because of my own story… But the idea of everything disappearing with time is a facade that promotes a false sense of future happiness. God is certainly Redeemer; He brings beauty to ashes, light to dark, joy to mourning... But he also calls us to lean into the process of suffering and find Him there. There might be a time when the turmoil doesn't feel as present, but the circumstances do not resolve themselves... They play into the future bringing reminders of the past. God uses these low moments of life to teach us something He could never teach us if life coasted at Comfortable. He teaches us that He alone is Emmanuel; He is God with us, in the beauty and in the pain. We were not made to look ahead to the Resolve, or believe a false hope, HE is our very present help in time of trouble; HE alone is our hope: right here, right now.


Blooms of campus remind me of His Promise.
While divorce is a destruction I do not wish on anybody, I pray that God shows up in this stranger coffeeshopper's life so that he doesn't claim to the world's advice of "someday it will go away," rather asks God "be with me here." That is the Redemption He offers as we walk day-by-day by His side so that we do find the fullness of life He promises for those who seek Him.

7 comments:

  1. So sad, Rebecca. Overhearing uncomfortable exchanges can be heartbreaking, but I am so happy that they just happened to sit by you and you can be the hope for this man, even without him knowing.

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  2. Wow-poignant words beautifully written!

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  3. So so good Rebes. I stand with you in that prayer.

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  4. I share your coffeeshop, eavesdropping frustration at some of the conversations I have overheard. Often times they are postmodern and modern sociological misunderstandings of truth...which obviously peeve me hahah, but often times they are stories of personal heartbreak. There is so much brokenness in this world articulated so well in this post. Thanks for praying for the redemption of God and showing us all what it looks like.

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  5. I am grateful for your God-given inspiration Rebecca. I have been reading your blog posts for a few years now and I always come back when I need inspiration, encouragement, advice...
    Keep up the good work.
    God bless.

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    1. Hi Eleonora! Thank you so much for your sweet encouragement :) I'm so glad my blog has offered some inspiration to you - how did you hear about it? I would love to follow yours too - if you have one? Let me know!

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    2. Hi Rebecca,
      I hope this finds you well.

      Many apologies for such a late reply, but I never use the email address I signed up with Blogspot.
      Honestly, I can't remember how I came across your blog, I know it was a few years ago. Since then, I keep returning to it. It's so refreshing and inspiring.

      Unfortunately I am not good with words as you are, but I am good with music, I guess. Here's my youtube account if you would like to check it out: https://www.youtube.com/user/eleonorarosca

      Blessings,

      Eleonora

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Lately.