Last Fall, I took a pause from work, walking, and much of the busyness, laid up for 8 weeks after a foot surgery. What often happens when we take a pause is that we gain vision and perspective in ways that are not possible when our minds are cluttered with the busyness. It is in moments of pause that we can often hear the whispers of God with greater clarity. Unfortunately, the busyness came back as I returned to work, went back to school, and life happened.
So here once again, many of us have had a pause thrust upon us due to the Corona virus pandemic. I was furloughed from my job. My reaction was at first a bit of panic mixed with a relief. Panic out of fear of the unknowns, fear of loss of income, fear of possibly losing my job down the road. Relief in knowing that I could get done all the things that have been on my to-do list, that I would have more time with my family, and that I could once again tune in better to the whispers of God to my heart.
When I was laid up after foot surgery, the pieces of the following story came to me. They came together in one of those moments of clarity, which I cannot explain except as a whisper of God, who so gently and compassionately brings the pieces of our lives together and gives them perspective and meaning. I recently shared this story in an article for the organization with which Jim and I served overseas for many years. Last night, pieces of this story took on new meaning in the context of the Corona virus pandemic. So here is the story:
The man was stout, strong, and covered in tattoos. He
wore a leather jacket, and he sported long hair and a beard. The kind of guy
your mother would have told you to avoid at all costs. He was escorted into the
emergency department by policemen, clad in handcuffs, resisting their every
movement. He smelled of alcohol and was shouting obscenities at everyone that
crossed his path. His crime involved violence toward his wife. He was a
wife-beater. You could feel the tension in the nurse’s station, comprised of
all female nurses. Some were divorced from wife beaters and drunks. The hatred
was palpable. The other nurses all said “not it” as the officers sat him down
in one of the exam rooms and cuffed him to the bedrail. But for some reason,
when I looked at this man, I felt differently. I could relate to him. I gladly
volunteered. The other nurses just shook their heads at me, like I was foolish
and naïve, and would soon learn how rough these types could be. The officers
were afraid to let me be in the room with the man alone. But I wasn’t afraid.
Usually, I would be. But not this time. I felt alive and on fire. Undaunted. I
needed to talk to this man.
I approached him and spoke calmly to him as I took his
blood pressure. As I assessed his arm for a site to start an IV, I noticed a
tattoo. What did it signify? I asked. His tone of voice calmed, and he told me
it was from Vietnam. I asked him if he had been traumatized in Vietnam. Then he
looked up at me, and tears started forming in his eyes. He began to tell me
what he experienced, and how no one understood him, not even his wife, and that
is why they had had so many conflicts. For years he had bottled it up inside
and felt so alone and misunderstood. I reassured him that what he went through
was awful and that I understood. I told him briefly about how I, too, had been
traumatized by events in Africa. I told him there was hope, that God loves him
deeply, and that God is the God of second chances and forgiveness. There was
even hope of being reconciled with his wife, I told him.
I spent a good part of 19 years living and working in
West Africa. Over the years, multiple traumatic events and culture-stress had
worn away at my psyche. I had bouts of depression. I developed PTSD. I can’t tell you how many times over the years I questioned
God. Why me? Why him? Why her? Why did these things happen? Is there a purpose
in all of this? Can I trust You, God?
As I sat there in that emergency room with this
leather-clad drunk, I realized at that moment that my trauma had meaning and
purpose. It was as if I was suddenly pulled backward to see a larger view of my
life – seeing the entire forest rather than just the trees – and what God was
doing all along. Perspective is everything. And I had no regrets. This was my
purpose: I was the one for the job. My journey through fear all those years in
Africa was on-the-job training. I finally got it.
As I left the room, the man thanked me. He was cooperative
with all the staff after that. The officers looked at me in disbelief. The
other nurses asked, “What did you do?” I said that I simply listened and let
him tell his side of the story. In no way was I excusing his abusive behavior.
I just knew there was a human in there somewhere, one that had been wounded and
didn’t know any other way to respond.
A year or so later, I had the opportunity to meet this
man again. He was sober and cheerful. And the best part was that he was walking
hand-in-hand with his wife. She was all smiles. He recognized me and, in a very
gentle voice, he thanked me again. He said he would never have believed it, but
what I told him was true, and it was the one thing that made everything start
turning around for him.
I cannot tell you how many other suicidal, overdosed,
depressed, and hurting people I have encountered in my role as a nurse here in
the U.S. over the past 11 years. The number of occasions is staggering. God has
given me divine appointments with so many of them. He gave me an opportunity to
start and lead a local support group over the past four years. My perspective about ministry has broadened. The truth is,
every person we encounter is a mission field. Life’s struggles are real for
everyone, and I understand that better now. God had changed me. And He has
changed my perspective. As Christians, we are called to
incarnational ministry to people who suffer greatly in ways we are often unable
to understand. As we have the privilege to walk in their world, sometimes we
get a taste of that world and its cruelty in harsh ways. Experiencing those
hardships gives us empathy and a deeper understanding of their pain, and
insights into how God can use us to walk alongside them in their suffering, and
ultimately give them hope.
As I look back at what God has done in my life, through
all those traumas, it reminds me of a tunnel in Switzerland that I traveled through some thirty years ago while visiting colleagues in Italy.
In order to get from Switzerland to Italy by train, you have to travel through
several tunnels. One of those tunnels is exceptionally long. The first time I
went through the tunnel I had no idea it was coming or how long it was. Inside
the tunnel, there is total darkness. As the train enters the heart of the
mountain, the train begins to slow down for what seems like an eternity. When
this first happened, I became anxious. Why was the train going so slow? Were we
going to get stuck in here? How long would this last? I turned and asked
another passenger who explained the train would take about 30 minutes to get
through the tunnel. In this tunnel, you could feel the weight of the air get
heavier and more difficult to breathe as your lungs were deprived of oxygen.
Eventually, the train came out on the other side of the mountain into the
bright sunlight, fresh air, and rolling hills of northern Italy. This tunnel is
the only way to get to the other side of that mountain. The tunnel is long,
dark, difficult, and sometimes frightening. But there's no way to get it to the
other side without going through the tunnel. Having been in the tunnel, the
light of day seems so much brighter, the air so much fresher, and the rolling
hills were a sight for sore eyes. Everything was more inviting, and so much
more appreciated.
This tunnel is much like my journey. Your journey. Maybe the journey you are experiencing now as you sit at home in quarantine with no end in sight. Let me remind you that there’s no way to get
to the bright light, the fresh air, and the rolling hills on the other side except
to go through the tunnel. The journey through the tunnel is necessary. Once in
the tunnel, there's no turning back. You can only move forward. And the tunnel can give us perspective. But once you
are on the other side of the tunnel, you realize how wonderful the brightness
of the sun is, the freshness of the air, and the beauty of the hills. You can see that the journey was worth it as it changes you, shapes you, makes you better, gives you a different view of things. Can you see that the tunnel is part of your journey? Do you know there
is light, and warmth, and sunshine, and rolling hills at the end of that
tunnel? Don’t get distracted by the darkness all around. Don’t get discouraged
by the length of the journey. Don’t give in to despair as you struggle to
breathe. And know that the journey is necessary to get to the other side, to become the person God is shaping you to be.
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