Skip to main content

Wholeness

I hate my flaws. 

I hate having them, hate seeing them, and the work of hiding them.

But life seems to breed the issues I'm so eager to conceal, as though every day is a walk through a thorn bush wearing a pale silk dress.  I just want to make it through the day with my clothing in one piece, but the environment makes that impossible.  Of course I'll lie down at the end of the day bloodied and scraped with rips and tears.  But why do so many other people around me seem to reach their beds unscathed?  Is it something wrong with me?

So I'll stay awake late into the night, needle and thread hacking my frayed dress back together.  Because what if they see?  I can't let them see the holes.  Because that's the message out there: You must not be flawed.  Why else do more than a million people a year inject Botox into their aging cheeks?  People flash white smiles and don't talk about their teeth whiteners, just like magicians don't reveal their secrets.

That's what we want.  We want The Secret.  That Secret I pretend to know while I'm stitching my shredded dress.  We may be adults now, but we still play Pretend.  All we did is sophisticate the rules.  We're told that we should not be flawed, so we strut like we aren't, lest they all see the patches.

We lie to each other.  We go to lavish lengths to prove to others, and ourselves, how "good" things are.  We tell each other about all the good things we have, like our money or our wives or our children or our beachside cottage.  And we genuinely believe that satisfaction comes in these forms.  Yet even those who have all that lie down at night with holes to patch.  And worse, the patches ravel: divorces, death and bankrupcy...  We don't have enough fingers to plug the dam.  

Oh, what we would give to be whole.

Isn't that what drives us?  Isn't that what all this frenetic boasting and American Dream-ing is all about?  The holes of our brokenness throb to be filled, so we seek to find what fills them.  We seek wholeness and contentment.

But with all our effort there's still a draft, still a leak.  We remain unfixed and disrepaired.

An ancient fable tells us that demons are fallen angels.  Man is described as "fallen" as well.  And wherever we started from, falling into the thorn bush means something was broken.  What good is a patch for my bruise when the bleeding is internal?

Here's the paradox that comes with healing and wholeness: I must admit to my tears and breaks, and admit that I cannot fix them.  Physically, what else is a doctor's visit?  After 3 days of limping around on a broken ankle insisting that "I'm fine", I will have to reach a point where I admit that my body is broken and that I cannot fix it myself.  That principle translates spiritually.

We don't like that. We want to fix ourselves. We want to own our wholeness with pride, because everyone else seems to have it. But everyone who struts is lying, and at the bottom line it just doesn't work that way.   An engine cannot fix itself - there has to be a mechanic.

What a terrifying thought to people who think that they themselves are their only hope, to sit on their broken ankle with no doctor to go to.

The God called Yahweh claims to be a jack-of-all-trades, the key to that wholeness our souls cramp hungrily for.  If He had a truck, he would have everything from bolts of cloth to bags of concrete in the back.  And when we admit that we cannot fix ourselves, He claims to be the one who can.  I picture Him wearing a leather jacket and having grease-stains on His hands from all the work He does.

He'll wait for me to call before He comes.  And when I show Him the muddied bloodied tatters of my thorn-wrenched dress, He trades it for a beautiful new one.  Because wholeness isn't patching the rags I have.

It's admitting I need to be given something new.

Comments

Tricia Jean said…
Thanks for this. It's timely.

Popular posts from this blog

The First Stages

2 days ago I had a coffee date with the girl "in charge" of the house I'll be moving into this Sunday. Snuggled down in a sweatshirt over a white chocolate mocha during a drizzly afternoon we went over last minute details to make sure she and I were on the same page. As we wrapped everything up, she told me to wait and dashed to the car; coming back in with a polka dot gift bag I had only eyes for what lay behind the curled red ribbon tying the two handles together: two shiny silver keys. Inside the bag was a beautiful red journal and a heap of candy from all the girls to welcome me into the house, but I couldn't get over the feel of those keys in my hand with fresh cut grooves. I marveled at the sight of them threaded onto my keychain as Sarah Brasse's eyes danced from across the table. I looked up, feeling the warmth of the mocha spread from my abdomen to my fingers and toes and the ends of my hair. "It's real, isn't it?" I said. "It's

The Core Four

What a wonderful delight - the Core Four are back and typing about their lives. Nothing makes my day quite like reading a fresh entry - or two even! - from Tricia AND Traci AND Jans. Nothing compares. Especially Jans; that was what, a two, maybe three month difference between entries? It made me sad, but I checked as often as I thought of it. What a tremendous treat to click your link and find my name invoked in the first sentence - I'll be on a high from that for hours to come. To the rest of you wondering what names I'm referring to, check on my links sidebar; the three of them and I used to live in three different cities and two different states (now three cities and three states), and our little-traveled blogs kept us connected. These girls are the reason why I started writing a blog at all; it's hard to imagine that I once was the worst at updating consistently...now I can't get enough of it, and I run out of stories to tell (which is saying alot for me...) We all

I Watch You Smile - You Steal the Show

Anyone ever see "Mean Girls" with Lindsey Lohan? When she was pissed off, she suffered from a symptom she dubbed "word vomit". Hers was the result of her convulsing anger, but I have a different word vomit. Mine is basically the result of my vocabulary and emotions upchucking at the same time. I'm not quite sure what to tell you guys; what's appropriate to say, what you don't need to know, what's too much to tell you. This is probably gonna be a pretty long entry, which might scare you off, but after hearing my unusally discouraging tones I have no doubt that many of you are now riveted. I guess...you guys love me and want to know me, and for some, this is the only way you keep up with me. I'll figure out the limit as I go, I guess. I had a very good talk with my momma today, which is a good sign for our relationship. It was violently and starkly splintered for quite a while, but it has progressed in leaps and bounds lately as I've better und