Wednesday, March 18, 2020

The Box



A few months ago, a friend shared a book with me entitled “The Myth of Self Esteem” by Ester Rasband. She speaks of the fact that we all have a box under our bed - and inside of that, is something that we are holding more dear to us than our relationship with God. Something we don’t want to give up.

I haven’t always felt like I had great intuition or a strong sense of self. I had too much fear about who I was. But the past ten years I have really practiced trusting myself, and more importantly, trusting God. I know He will bring the experiences and people into my life that are needed for my growth. I have felt a deep longing to gain more mental clarity and let the fear and fluff fade away in my life, and a strong desire to turn inward and to God instead of others for direction, inspiration, and guidance.

Because of this desire for more clarity, I prayed about the most prominent thing in my box. I was tired of running from fear and hustling for worth. What I found in this box was this: As much as I didn’t want to admit this, I wanted Jed to love me again. I didn’t know what this meant - if I really did, or if it would just satisfy my feelings that I was worthy of being loved at all. I knew this trial was stretching me and helping me overcome some things I needed to, but it felt so real that his love was the answer to my unrest. As much as I knew intellectually this was incorrect, my heart was so set on it being the escape from pain.

I had asked for a divorce a few years before he did, and questioned our marriage again a year after that. I have justified this fact more than I should have. My feelings had little to do with how I felt about him. It was confusing and I spent months agonizing over why I was feeling the way I was when he really was a great husband. Now I see that I was looking for peace, and it would never come from my relationship with someone else. Nevertheless, it hurt him. It cracked the invinsibility of Jed and Tiff. That was my doing.

Which was confusing why it hurt so much when a few years later he had the same feelings. The fact that he didn’t want to be married to me was a big source of shame, contained so much fear, and ultimately dictated how I expressed myself and lived my life. I really felt if I gave up control of whether or not Jed would ever want to be with me again, whatever thoughts and beliefs about myself it stored, I would feel too big of a loss. Maybe I didn’t know how to function with peace because I had never really felt it. Pain was a part of me, and letting go of the pain of wanting him to love me, felt like it would leave too big a void. I can see it was serving a purpose. How would I function in peace?

So I knelt down in my closet, tears of fear streaming down my face, and I gave it to God. I gave up the hope that Jed would love me again, and that if I just kept trying to be who I thought he wanted me to be, I could prove to him that I was worthy of his love. The crazy thing is this: he never asked me to be anyone or anything else other than who I was. This all… came from the stories I was telling myself. But I gave up my idea of what I thought should happen because I knew it came from a very small, skewed sense of reality compared to God’s plan. It’s something I’ve tried to do for four years and felt like no effort was being heard or seen. But that day, I felt a release. Every effort, prayer, and hope to let go and be free was fulfilled at that moment. I think back now and I am just so thankful I didn’t stop listening to that blaring signal inside of me, and that it continued to haunt me so that it could be released and allow peace and trust in. Timing is everything. I slept that night for the first time in a long while without trying to come up with a plan for how I could prove I mattered. I knew I did, and it meant something because it didn’t come from anyone else telling me this. It came from inside, it came from an all knowing source.

When this burden was taken from me, I gained a new perspective. I was shown things that I had done that were a part of the demise of our relationship. I am proud to say I am not as innocent as I thought. I say proud because it feels good not to be a victim. Before, I tried to say, “It’s all my fault that we are getting divorced” because I felt that if it was all my fault, I could fix it and control it. Whether or not Jed loved me was still a gauge of my worthiness. I audibly said it’s all my fault, but internally I did not want to admit I had anything to do with it. I vacillated between it was all his fault and it was all mine. And that’s simply not true. I blamed him because I was hurt. Four years later, I can see that. And I can see how blind I was to my own human-ness because there was so much pain. Pain from childhood, pain from life, pain from things that were hard for me that I didn’t know how to handle, pain from divorce, but mostly pain that I didn’t need to carry - but did. Pain inhibited me - I couldn’t ever hear anything I did wrong because it cut so deep, I couldn’t handle it. Honestly. In a healthy mindset, I can hear criticism and see it as a behavior and choose to change it. In an unhealthy and unhealed mind, I heard, “You are worthless if he doesn’t want to be married to you. You will never be able to change who you are. You do not matter to him, therefore YOU do not matter.” But I can see how pain has pushed me to take a closer look at my life, and it has been good.

God took my pain away, and with that, gave me new eyes to see the pain I had caused someone else. Never in my life have I not hated who I was if I had done something wrong, or hurt somebody. Until I included God - and no longer judged myself according to whether someone wanted to be with me or not. I feel regret at things I have said that have made it seem like my divorce was one-sided. I sincerely feel sad for the ways I unintentionally hurt him. As each layer of victim mentality is washed away, comes a realization of reality-that the way I view myself dicates the way I behave in a relationship. And that we each have our own beliefs and perspectives that sometimes we do not understand from the other side. But it doesn’t make us unlovable. It’s further evidence to me how important it is to heal - so our pain doesn’t spill out onto others unnecessarily.

I could not have realized the things I have about myself, Jed, and my thoughts and behaviors, especially being able to approach it with compassion, in the midst of pain. And I could not take that pain away myself. I had to trust that God would in His timing and I just had to keep moving forward. And I did. And He did.

New Job


I got my first full time career job today. I will be the office coordinator for Brigham-USU campus. I am excited, and I just wanted to share how I got it because it has been such a freaking cool experience. There is such power in surrendering.

I have always felt very strongly about staying home with my kids. I felt a lot of fear thinking about leaving them in someone else's care. But I have always felt so much guilt too. Guilt for not making more money... (I told myself I was only home with Griff for two more years and this was just this phase of life." Guilt my kids were on state insurance... (I will be giving back for the rest of my life and it's just this phase of life)... Guilt that Jed was working two jobs... (But I'm caring for Griff and that's got value, and we are not paying daycare), etc. etc.

It has always been a very fear based experience for me. I have always had a side job, and this year I have had 5. I work for an amazing therapist in Salt Lake as an office assistant, do bookkeeping for a business owner here in town a few hours a week, babysit for a half day Tuesdays, teach piano lessons, and substitute teach. I did all of this so I could stay home with Griffin for the most part. And I was so thankful for each of these jobs! They have been perfect. And now there's a new phase happening.

But something inside of me was just relentless. The guilt was getting worse no matter what I did. And I was having so much neck pain where I was carrying it all. It boiled down to two things: I wanted to provide for myself and I didn't want to stay home anymore. That was hard to choke out. I felt like I would disappoint my kids, and I was worried they wouldn't feel loved and taken care of. Even though there is so much evidence from my friends that work full time that their kids are lacking for nothing in the love department. This was a me thing.

So I surrendered this to God. I told Him I was willing to let go of this fear and see it in a different way. What am I supposed to learn from this guilt?

I have felt fear just surge through my body as I think about taking this next step. For about a week, it just showed up randomly when I thought about leaving Griff. But it didn't feel wrong. Fear was in BrEaKdOwN mode.

And everything fell into place. A great job with benefits, a great babysitter, and the fact that Jed is a teacher and will be home with the kids after school is so important to me. And my neck pain is completely gone.

Man, I am so grateful for inspired friends and family that have listened as I have weighed all of this out, told me about job openings, let me use them as references, watched Griffin for me while I finished my degree and worked these side jobs, and offered support.

I made my decision and was in the process of a few other changes in my life that I felt would lead to more clear thoughts, and a woman I didn't know but had seen around stopped me one day when we were both in the same place, and said, "You're Tiffany, right? I don't know why I'm supposed to tell you this, but you are amazing and are doing good things. Someone is really looking out for you."

Like, WTCrap? I know life is rough right now with the uncertainty, but God is showing me He is there. He is as he always has been, in the details of MY life. And I know He is in yours too.