Showing posts with label friendship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label friendship. Show all posts

Friday, 20 November 2020

2020 taught me I can face my fears

What I've learned in 2020 is that I can face my fears. 




I can stay home for five months.  

I never thought that was possible, I struggled to stay home for one day, let alone five days, five weeks or five months.  But when you're told to shield you do it and I did it.  There were really hard days and weeks but with help from my GP, counselling, family and friends I did it.  I was blessed not to be entirely on my own because my husband and teenager shielded me by staying home as well.  However they found their inner hermits and actually loved the experience - in fact they would have continued for much longer and hubby is now working from home full time and daughter is currently isolating from school and very content.


I can cope without hugs

This was by far the worst part of shielding because I'm a hugger, I love to hug my friends.  I was really struggling with this but decided to try a weighted blanket after hearing how they were helping people.  Well all I can say is - give it a go.  When I lie under it I feel calmer, held, supported and my anxiety reduces. I never would have thought it could work but it is just what I need.  I have embraced the weighted blanket revolution so much that I now have two, one for bed and one for the sofa.


I have trauma in my past which I can heal from

I won't go into detail, maybe I will in the future, but not now.  Lockdown has uncovered trauma I didn't really know about and I have been diagnosed with PTSD and an awaiting specialist therapy.  It was terrifying when my counsellor and I identified this trauma issue but I've been incredibly well cared for by Talking Therapies and have been moving through two sets of preparatory counselling whilst I await the PTSD therapy.  Two months ago I wasn't sure that I would be able to face the past, I just wanted to lock it into a box in a box; but I have developed new skills for my toolbox and realised that I have been using lots for years which I can be proud of.  I am now looking forward to healing and living an even less anxious life in the years to come.



I still like my husband.

This may sound flippant but it's not.  Over the last few years I have been worried that we've been drifting apart and although we love each other still I wasn't sure we'd choose each other as friends any more.  We just didn't seem to have much in common and life was too busy to try to reconnect.  

Well being locked down together for all these months has given us time to hang out as a family and as a couple and it has been a joy to rekindle our friendship and know that we are an amazing unit just as much now as we were twenty years ago.  Of course we still argue, I'm a passionate red head after all, but we always make up.



I can go into A&E and face hospital admission on my own.

This might not seem like a lot to most people but A&E fills me with fear, I've just had too many bad experiences of not being listened to and that is even worse when you can't breathe properly or see properly.  When I realised there was a good chance I had Covid I had a counselling session focused on how I could help myself should I need to go into hospital.  I knew I could pray and use my mindfulness techniques and put an app on my phone in case I needed some additional help with that.  I knew I would have my phone and could message people.  But I needed more tools to be able to ground myself if my anxiety started getting out of hand.  My toolkit included:

  • A metallic heart with a bell inside (sounds like a meditation ball) which Rachel gave me - so both a gift from her, a tactile object and a soothing sound

  • A holding cross to help me in prayer and to hold as a way to self soothe

  • A weighted lap blanket to put on my lap much like a high l hand of a loved one

  • A blackcurrant tea light in a pot which I've had since primary school and still smells strongly bringing back very positive memories

  • iPad, long charging cable and power bank to allow me to mindfully draw and create digitally

  • A document with all my medication and conditions so I wouldn't have to worry about how to remember it all


Less than a week after preparing this kit I had to go to A&E.  I had to hug Rachel not knowing if I would get to do that again.  Then Mike drove me to A&E and had to drop me at the door and leave.  Just writing that I can't believe I did it.  But I did; and I was there for 4 hours and I didn't have even one panic attack.  I used my tools, I created, I was mindful, I prayed and others prayed for me, I was honest with the nurses about my anxiety and I did it!! I faced my fears and I am proud of myself and so thankful to all those who helped me.



The final fear I have faced is one I really hoped I wouldn't have to face….. 

I can survive covid!


Having not gone anywhere since March to avoid catching Covid I sadly caught Covid.  There has been an outbreak at Rs school and sadly she must have caught the virus, was asymptomatic and I caught it.  All of her cleaning and care, the systems she put in place and the responsible way she balanced going back to school with protecting me could protect us from her actually catching it in an exam hall.  We knew it was a risk and it happened.  We still believe it was the best thing for R to go back into school for her GCSE year and thankfully as I write this I am on day 12 with medication working and I am breathing much better. The doctors, nurses and I now believe that I can and will survive Covid.  I will have to rest for many weeks and months, but it won't beat me. 


A few people have asked whether I regret shielding for all these months since I caught it anyway and the answer is NO.  I have caught it from one person only so have had a low viral load, I have kept away from all other bugs and so am as healthy as I could be to help me fight it, and I have learned a huge amount about myself in the process.  There are no regrets, they are a waste of energy, there is only thankfulness for the blessings in every day and the hope for the future.


 



There's one other thing I want to share about 2020 which has never been a fear of mine, but I know other people worry about….


The world is full of people who care.

Watching the news and reading the papers we'd be forgiven for thinking that humanity is selfish, ungrateful and uncaring.  But that is not what I've ever thought and the covid pandemic has brought to the fore the innate goodness of people and the way we care for each other.

Neighbours have helped neighbours, community groups have sprung up (such as our own a Earley Help Hub) and have been inundated with volunteers, people have stayed home to protect the vulnerable, family and friends have supported each other physically and emotionally, and we've all realised the value of key workers and carers as well as our amazing NHS.


Of course there are exceptions to the rule, but I believe that where people aren't behaving in a caring way that's probably because they need to be cared for themselves.  


One of the most maligned groups of people are young people and especially teenagers.  Well I want to big them up.  My daughter was absolutely committed to shielding me to keep me safe, I was blown away by that gift she has given me.  But more than that, her friends have supported her in supporting me.  They have worked together online, they've chatted together online, they've group called, they've arranged socially distanced meets in our garden and more.  Her best friend even kept herself safe in order to come to a social distanced separate tents sleep out in the garden for Rs birthday.  They have supported each other and by following the rules they have protected the vulnerable in the community, not just me.  They rock.  And I know that the majority of teenagers and young people have done the same, because they care! I have no fear for the future in their hands



Thursday, 17 September 2020

More than friends, we're sisters

 



More than friends

We're sisters

Not by blood

But through choice

Shared experiences

Developed over time

Confidences shared

Theirs and mine

Whispering stains of sin

Fearless of judgement

Resting in the hammock

Of love and acceptance

Texting fevered daydreams

About living ghosts

Walking close to the precipice

Held back from the edge

Listening with our hearts

Making no assumptions

Shining lights of truth

On darkest oceans

Moon tides swell

In light and shadow

Together we still waters

Tame rapids in flow

Mutual support

No empty promises

Seeing ourselves completely

Proving hypotheses

Crying in laughter

As well as in pain

Funhouse of life

Not a video game

Lifting hats for each other

When life brings us down

Trusting truths told clearly

From sun up to sun down




I took a doodle from earlier this week and used it as the centre of a new digital creation today. I was enjoying the process of drawing squares and rectangles and then the way they were interesting intrigued me and this poem emerged. I hope you have someone like this in your life. I'm lucky enough to have a few of these special people in mine.
Who knows you fully
Who is allowed to see your absolute truth
Who shows you their truth?
Value that soul!
Who intersects without dissection
Who is close enough to feel your pain
Yet never breathes a word?
Cherish their heart!
Who can be called any time
Who connects immediately
Even after months without conversations?
Call that friend!

Thursday, 13 August 2020

How are you feeling today?

How are you feeling today? An image of a mask divided in two with a sad little guy on the left and a happy little guy on the right


How often do you ask yourself

"What am I feeling?"

Several times a day?

Every day? 

Occasionally?

Never?


How do you manage

Changes in your mood?

Do you notice the movement

From bad to good?


Do you see moods approaching

Like storms on the horizon?

Or are they suddenly upon you

A shock; like lightning?


Do you fear the low

The anxious, despairing?

Or accept the reality

Just part of living?


Here's a simple tool

To help you observe

Feelings you're feeling

Get ahead of the curve


Make time each day

Each hour, if possible

Stop, be still

Your feelings are acceptable


Don't fear your emotions

Or pretend they're not true

They're telling you something

Embrace their value


If what you notice

Worries your mind

Ask someone you trust

To yourself be kind

Sunday, 2 August 2020

Oh to be free, as me

Between these lines
Ten things about me
For you to find...

Oh to be free
Untangling memory
Once lost from sight
Faded by stellar light

Terrifying dreams
Sketch creative themes
Of french sophistication
Dying in actualisation

Fantasy books
Float down babbling brooks
Kissed by gossamer wind
As blue sky light's dimmed

Scientists profound
Over boundaries bound
Seeking leftover hopes
For healing isotopes

High spring tides
Frustrate chariot rides
On spring time breeze
Across universal seas

Big top expectations
Spread around nations
Animals trapped in cages
Saved by silent accomplices

Come what may
Girlfriends save the day
No matter what trouble
They're around on the double

My body is broken
Yet God clearly has spoken
That He has plans for my life
He'll uplift me in strife


Sunday, 19 July 2020

friends: a poem


Some friendships grow steadily
Nurtured slowly, not rushing fast
Some friends are lifetime long
Through so many turns and twists
Some friends are for a season
Though we never know that at the start
Others are evolving friendships
Through all they persist

Tuesday, 14 July 2020

Little Guy, Hope and You

I'm working on some Little Guy resources for small groups to use to think about mental health and hope. I would appreciate it if you could give me some feedback on this first activity please.


The first session starts with this image with 6 of the Little Guy images (Little Guy on a cliff top, on a swing, on top of a skyscraper, on a beach, in a boat and walking in a forest) and asks:
Which of these images speaks to you right now?
Spend a couple of minutes in that image
Put yourself in the place of Little Guy
Ask God to speak to you in that place
What have you heard, felt or thought?

Wednesday, 8 July 2020

How do you pray?

Was on Twitter answering a request for tips on prayer.  I suddenly realised I had almost written a poem so thought I might as well finish it.

Pray however feels easy
Exactly the same way you chat
Just be with God like you would a best friend
Let it all hang out
Sometimes it's comfortable silence
Sometimes it's a massive rant
Whatever you want to tell him
God's glad that's where you're at


Wednesday, 1 July 2020

Your perfect place



A little sketch I did this morning which inspired this thought

Everyone fits in somewhere
You just need to find
Your perfect place

I hope you have people in your life who make you feel perfectly at home, perfectly accepted, perfectly content, perfectly you. 

Sunday, 28 June 2020

Dream community

Where would you choose to live if you could live anywhere?




Three reflections on Hope

I started recording daily reflections early on in lockdown to share a bit of hope and encouragement and prayer with the church community.  After a few weeks I ran out of inspiration so asked some other church members to join in, which has been a huge success and meant I've only needed to find inspiration every fortnight.  This week was my turn and I had hope on my mind but couldn't choose just one bible verse so I recorded three reflections on hope.







Reflections on hope


Today I'm going to share the first of three reflections about hope, drawing on what the Bible says about hope.


Today I'm thinking about Romans 15:13 


“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.”


How often do you think of God as a God of hope?  


My go to word when I think of God is love - God loves the world and everything in it.  God wants us to feel loved and then to give that love to everyone else.  That's been a central part of my life for many years. 


But here Paul talks about the God of hope who fills us with joy and peace.


A God who doesn't judge the world, doesn't despair at our actions, but a God who sees the goodness of our hearts, who blesses us with joy and peace so that we are full of hope and can't help but share it with others.


I am an optimist, I like to think positively. But, as many of us do, I sometimes struggle with my mental health.  It's been difficult in these times of lockdown, and that's when I can start to worry about everything and feel less hopeful about life, the universe and everything.


I made a conscious decision about a month into lockdown to be hopeful, to look for hope in the every day.  


It challenged me to think about what that actually meant and I came up with two images

1. Light in the darkness - finding the good things amongst the troubles

2. Trust - hope is the trust that things will be good, that God has got us safe in his loving care and that we do not need to fear


Every day since then I have spent time finding the light in every day, the good things, the blessings, the hope.


And I've held onto God, trusting that all will be well, not necessarily quickly or in ways I can comprehend yet, but knowing that God wants me to trust him that hope is alive and well.


I hope this blesses you today and that you can find the light, love and hope you need.



XXX


This is the second of my reflections about hope, a word which has been so important to me in lockdown and which I want to learn more about and share with others.


Today's Bible reading is from the book of Job.


Those of you who know the book of Job are probably wondering why I've chosen a verse from a book of the Bible which is all about the suffering of a good man at the hands of Satan.  


Well let me share the verse


Job 11:18

"You will be secure because there is hope; you will look about you and take your rest in safety"


These words are not words of Job but of one of his friends who has come to try and help Job in his pain, grief and suffering.


In my first reflection of this series I shared about finding hope every day.  It was a decision I made to look for hope myself.


This verse draws on something else which has been so important to me in lockdown - other people.  


I believe that God acts in the world, that the Holy Spirit is alive in the world and that much of this work is through people.  I believe that God often blesses me through family, friends, and strangers.  


In this verse we see Job being offered words of comfort, reassurance and hope. We hear about someone who wants to help a friend.  


I have been blessed through lockdown to not be alone at home, but also blessed by already being connected to friends near and far on social media.  It has not been a big adjustment to me to share online and sustain friendships online. 


When I shared about finding lockdown challenging I was blessed with an outpouring of love, prayer and hope from people around the world; and in turn I have been able to do the same for others when they have been struggling.


Why am I sharing this? Because I want to remind us all that we are sources of hope in the world. We are God's love and hope in action.


In person or online, when we share the blessings we receive, we are sharing God's hope - we never know who that might encourage.  


And that by saying when we need help, we are allowing others to share their hope with us - we are not burdening others but instead we are blessing others with the ability to help.


So please, do not think that sharing is boasting or demanding, showing off or burdening others; know that God is with us when we tell others about our lives and that by sharing we are enabling God to bring hope alive.



XXX


This is the third and probably final reflection on hope and what the Bible says about it and how that has encouraged me over the last 110 days or so.


There have been many low points over the last 4 months, times when it all got too much.  Too lonely, too frustrating, too anxiety inducing.  As those of you who read my blog or Facebook posts will know, a month ago I noticed that these days started to get closer together and my hope was getting less.  I reached out to my GP and got help, I referred myself for counselling and I shared with friends to get the support I needed.  But more than that I kept praying, earnestly praying and singing hymns which lift my heart to God.  In that time I held firm to this one verse  from Psalm 71:14


"As for me, I will always have hope; I will praise you more and more."


It's not one I've ever held onto before, but I stumbled upon it - or perhaps God put it in front of me, and it was exactly what I needed to hear.


At a time when I couldn't hold onto hope, when hope felt far away, I was reminded of the struggle of the psalmists and how they held onto hope in their struggles.  And so therefore would I.  I would find the hope in the smallest things; the dawn song of the blackbird, the fleeting hug of my teenager, the message of a friend, the meal cooked by my husband, the encouragement and prayers from friends.  Points of hope, of light, of God at work in the world. 

Thursday, 11 June 2020

Simply breathe

Shout it from the rooftops
Truthfully
Rearranged constellations
Unconcerning when
Greater fireworks are
Going off inside my mind
Listen when I tell you, then
I breathe freer
No fear or embarrassment
Give me that blessing

Stolen mindfulness
Heavy heartedness
Are bumblebees stealing
Ripe secrets of bliss?
I'm feeling: Ca va
Natural truth to be heard
Given in whispers not tears

Hummingbird anxiety
Ever darkening shadows
A bear wakes early bemused
Life of uncertainty
Is karma confused?
No reason do I find
God why do I feel so abused?

Help is a journey
Over mountains and valleys
Protective umbrellas
Enveloped with
Friendship
Uncertainty
Less frightening
No choices demanding
Energy expending
Solutions.
Simply breathe....


Monday, 27 April 2020

What do you see?




What do you see
When you close your eyes
Darkness of nothing
Colours that mystify?
Do you rely on your lenses
To show you the truth
Does the mirror abstract
Who gives you the proof?

What do you hear
When you block out the noise
Trying covering your ears
No more distracting toys
Your internal voice?
Someone from the past?
A whirring or thumping?
Nothing that lasts?

What do you smell
To escape being pained
Do you enter a time
When happiness reigned?
Old books, really old
With their scent of the ages
All of those people
Who read through their pages

What taste evokes
Pleasure and pain?
What food do you return to
Again and again?
For me it was chocolate
That decadent beast
Now it's cheese
On which I would feast

How about touch
Essential connection
That's what I'm missing
In this isolation
I can't wait to hug
My friends and family
Just touching hands
Quite casually

Thursday, 9 June 2016

Yesterday (praying it away)

This came to me in a few minutes as I was waking up this morning.



The background is that yesterday was a very rough day missing Rachel, who is away in France with school for a week; and feeling extremely overloaded with lots going on at church.  But yesterday evening was mums and more home group where we're following Brian Maclaren's "We make the road by walking" and we were looking at chapter 44 all about self care.  I opened up about my feelings and received amazing prayers and prayerful advice.  I pray that this blesses many others who read this as it has blessed me.

Yesterday (praying it away)
To be sung to "Yesterday" by The Beatles

Yesterday all my troubles got on top of me
I was tempted just to hide away
But I asked for help, yesterday

Suddenly, I am not alone in my stress
There are great women praying for me
And it really helped, yesterday

Why, I always forget, to ask for help, I just don't know
When I say something's wrong, people pray and I'm okay, ay, ay, ay

Yesterday, prayers took the fear from in the way
Now I don't need a place to hide away
Oh I believe in praying it away

So when you're overwhelmed, just reach out and ask for prayer
Do not second guess yourself, just ask a friend to pray away, ay, ay, ay

Yesterday, prayers took the fear from in my way
They can do the same for you today
Oh I believe in praying it away



   

Sunday, 21 February 2016

Saturday, 17 October 2015

Perhaps I care too much

Perhaps I care too much
I can't just let it go
The fact that I upset you
Tears me apart with guilt
And if it's you that upset me
Then I'm sure it's still my fault

Perhaps I care too much
It goes around my mind
Every comment thrown away
Or look that I can't define
I know it's my wrongdoing
And it takes up all my time

Perhaps I care too much
I'm weighed down with memories
I can't just let it go
No matter how I try
My mind will not forget
I cry my eyes bone dry

Perhaps I care too much
Every single thing I say
I analyse all day
Every stupid thing I do
I worry and obsess about
Is this not normal, don't you?

Perhaps I care too much
But I've always been this way
Grieving at every famine
Curled up in pain at disasters
Wishing I could mend the world
And feeling like a failure

Perhaps I care too much
You can't make everyone like you
I'm told, and I know it's true
But I'm not built to ignore
And it matters so much to me
I take it to heart till I'm sore

Perhaps I care too much
And if I didn't I'd feel relieved
But I've learned that this is me
I can't thicken my skin and not care
Even though I'm sure I'd feel better
So in my pain I have to share

It drives me mad
On Facebook I hang
Wondering how to act
Don't want to upset
Yet others do it to me
That must be my fault
What is it they see
Am I am awful person
I really must be
Friends lost in time
Their fault or mine
I feel such guilt
Wish I could mend
But don't feel good enough
That's it in the end
I don't like me
So how can they
And when they turn away
It's another proof today
Of who I am
Like she always said
Not good enough
I should be dead

But no
Not now
That's not the way to think
It's written down but I won't act on it
Because I'm stronger right now
And I've written it down
I know I'm OK
I'm loved and liked
Those who turn their backs
They're missing out
That's the mantra
If I believe it or not
That's what to repeat
Repeat it a lot
And remind myself
Through family and friends
That I'm worth loving
Because I care so much

Not too much
How can anyone care too much

Monday, 4 August 2014

Holiday Club Crafts #messychurch #children #kids #families

We've had a lot of fun the last two Mondays at Noah's Ark @St Nics Holiday Club.  As well as the usual toys, chat, coffee and cake there have been crafts for both the older and the younger kids (and the adults).

On the first Monday we thought about friendship with loom bands and button caterpillars and heart pictures.  This week we focused on how we can look after people and the world and made pet rocks and corks and button wind chimes for the garden.

Here are some simple how to guides:

Button caterpillars
- cut a length of elastic
- thread on buttons of a similar size
- put on one larger button for the face
- tie knots at both the ends of the elastic



Button wind chimes
- tie a fairly long piece of elastic or string to both ends of a stick
- cut three shorter lengths of elastic and knot one end of each
- thread five or six buttons onto each length of elastic
- tie these pieces of elastic onto the stick so that they hang down
- hang the wind chimes in a tree or on a chair or anywhere



Pet rocks and corks
- you can collect rocks in the garden or beach
- or you can do as I did - make rock shapes from clay
- I got craft corks cheaply but you could collect you own
- paint the rocks and cork any way you like
- paint on or stick on eyes
- give your pet a name


Wednesday, 2 July 2014

They don't believe in God but they miss Him!



This post again draws on the talk by Bishop John at the llm conference (June 2014).

48% of under 30s answered none to the religion question on the last census. And yet less than half that number said that they are atheists and a large proportion said they were spiritual.

Spirituality is alive and well and these spiritual people are looking for something. These are the people many churches refer to as spiritual seekers.

These people, and many others, are sad that they don't know God or even know where to go looking for Him. This is where we are needed, we the body of Christ, we the Church; we are the ones who know God and can make God accessible.

How do we do this?
1. Befriending
We go out into our communities and meet with people.   We meet them where they are and we get to know them, person to person.  Through friendships we can share our faith and allow others to know what we believe.  We can be as explicit or subtle as we wish and as is appropriate for the relationship in question; we are guided by them and ourselves and God.  The best way to help people understand God is for them to see our relationship with God.

2. Opening the doors
We no longer live in a culture where the church is a known and understood entity which anyone is happy to visit.  Most people are extremely unsure what they will find if they go into a church, in fact they're not even sure if they're allowed to open the closed doors they find facing out into the community.  And that's the first thing every Church can do; open the doors of the church every day, and better still, have doors with glass which people can see through.

3. Helping our communities
There is a huge shift in morality in our society, even for Christians.  Instead of the church being a valued part of society, the church is now seen as toxic.  We need to renew our church and be clear about our non toxicity.  One of the best ways of doing this is to be active in our communities helping those in need.  This could be food banks or kids clubs, elderly lunches or community choirs.  What it is matters much less than the fact that the church is alive and seen to be a positive part of the community.

4. Accepting requests readily
The Church at a local level had always been in the business of helping society hatch, match and dispatch.  However not all of the Church of England 16,000 churches are happily accepting one off requests from the people in our care.   It may seem like they are "using us" for their life celebrations, but we need to see it more as us caring for our communities.  Let's accept the request for a christening and invite them to toddler services and Messy Church or other family services.   We never know who might just be waiting for the invitation.

There are so many ways we can be the conduit for faith for our communities, these are just a few; what matters through it all is that we are open and loving and genuine in our desire to reach people and help bring them to faith and see them become disciples.

Monday, 3 February 2014

Love is ....... #messychurch #God

Yesterday at People Prayers and Potatoes Messy Church we explored Love.  
What love is.  
What love feels like. 
Who we are loved by.  
Who we love.  
Why we love.
How we can love more.



We started with these powerful words which so many of us have heard at weddings; words written by Paul to the church in Corinth.  As I read them I was struck by the power and beauty of these definitions of what love is and what it isn't.  It's a challenge to each of us.

But then I read these simple words from 1John "Love comes from God" and I relaxed in the knowledge that if love is all those things, then all those things are given by God to us. They are a gift, they are not a challenge.  They are a truth, not a tick list.



We know what love feels like because we receive it, in abundance to share with others, to pour out to those we love.  In fact we receive love in such huge quantities that we long to share it with others.  We are commanded to love one another, but actually it is something which is almost impossible not to do when we open our hearts to God's love of us.

And how do we know God loves us?
Because He gave His Son, Jesus Christ to the world as a man to live and teach and die for us.


That's a valentine message and a half isn't it.
God gave of himself to us all as a perfect gift of love.

And so we responded to these words, these truths about love in the world.





Through these crafts the families left with full tummys and full hearts telling who they would give the cards and creations to.  Love going out into the world from God, through us to others.


Monday, 6 January 2014

Don't let Blue Monday get you down

Don't let Blue Monday
Get you down
Give it love
Smile don't frown
Add red to blue
Purple you'll create
Think of the happiness
You can make

Monday, 30 December 2013

2013

Two thousand and thirteen
What a crazy year it's been
Full of ups as well as downs
Lots of smiles and a few frowns
In this verse I do recall
The year that's gone once and for all

January
Cold and bright
Change of meds
Brought me fright
Didn't know
What would be
Had no choice
But wait and see
Every day
Took in turn
Would I fold
Or could I learn?

February challenged me
With overwhelming anxiety
Depression lifted, that was great
But fear it had me in a state
Specialists said I had to cope
Only prayer gave me hope

March brought sun
And determination
I made a plan
But needed patience
It came along with
Special assistance
To help my journey
And remove resistance

April saw a breakthrough come
A break away made me feel young
Full of hope of what could be
We tackled it as a family

May saw me
On my feet
Walking again
Along the street
Fear was there
Not yet gone
Hope gave strength
To keep moving on

June saw smiles
And celebrations
I might survive
With medications
It wouldn't be
An easy ride
But I wasn't alone
With friends beside
Again I knew
What had been hidden
Life's a horse
It needs to be ridden

July was hot, a true heat wave
How we enjoyed those longer days
Especially since, at last I felt
Much more like my real self
Every day I woke up well
Felt like emerging from my shell

Into August
This all continued
Though sometimes
I had a high mood
So much better
Than falling flat
Nothing could be
Worse than that
Made the best
Of the energy
Went to Europe
Friends to see

Back to specialist in September
Asked about mood, as I remember
Suggested that we "tone it down"
This received a simple frown
Instead agreed to watch and learn
Mindful of any low return

October was a tricky one
Very pleased when it was done
Had to get a grip on workload
Better than burnout after overload
Balance is as balance does
Keep my mind from gaining fuzz
Getting rest a useful tool
My new number seven rule

November saw anxiety raised
As the diary became quite crazed
Had to sort it out quite quick
Managed it, almost slick
Only thing that slipped the net
Was getting cats to the vet

December, well it's always manic
But this year there wasn't panic
Everything was fully enjoyed
Sang the carols over joyed
Of course exhaustion did result
But I bounced without a catapult
Think I'm learning, slowly yes
At least I can reflect, with jest

This is the year
That now is done
Would I repeat
This specific one?
Yes, and no
I'm not quite sure
I'd never close
A single door
But for all I've learned
And that is much
I'd prefer to avoid
The pain I've touched
Would I change it?
In many ways
Especially the
Harder days
But then again
They give me truth
God will take that
It'll have a use

And as for what I'll take with me
That is knowing what me I'll be
How I tick
What I need
When to rest
When to lead
Where I'm needed
Where I'm not
What I've got
(I've got a lot)
What is sane
Does it matter?
By God's grace
We're all in tatters

This is the year
That has now gone
That is the year
I'll build upon
This is the year
Of heaven and hell
This is the year
I nearly fell
This is the year
I learned to crawl
This is the year
I stood up tall
This is the year
Held by a net
This is the year
I'll never forget

If YOU read this and understand
Take my thanks and let it land
Without your help in many ways
I'd have reached the end of days
Thank you for your company
Thanks most for letting me be me!