I haven't blogged in a couple years, but I just keep wanting to say this and it's too long for Twitter.
A few months ago, I went to a conference. At this conference there was a breakout session for women in leadership. I was hesitant. I didn't want to sit in a room with angry people if it was going to be an angry sort of thing. That this was my first thought about what women in leadership are like, as a woman in leadership, was troubling. So I went. It was beautiful from the moment it began until the moment it ended.
Each of us were encouraged to investigate what it meant for us to lead as ourselves, not as any other person. We were given time to examine our own stories and callings. We were told that leadership is a skill that can be practiced. In all of this, I found immense comfort, challenge, and freedom.
I am not a meek or mild person. I can assert myself all day long, to be honest. This isn't something I would say that I struggle with. I charge forward into most situations whether I'm feeling "charge-y" or not, and usually it's the not. In fact, the more scared and small I'm feeling, the "braver" and bigger I get. Knowing this about myself, I have spent the last several years trying to punch myself down. I have tried to quiet this over-assertive self by piling contempt on her: "don't be the angry person," "don't be the critical person," "be a team player," "don't ask too much," the list goes on.
That day, in that conference, as I was given time to reflect on my story and on my calling, I realized that I've always been a person that needed to say what she felt was true. There are stories from before I can remember about me, not even in school yet, calling out what I saw as inconsistencies and injustice around me. And I realized, this is something good that God placed in me. This is not something to be piling "angry woman" contempt on. And just as strongly, just as early in my story, I remembered that God had also placed in me a need to draw attention to the beauty I saw. My mother is like this. I remember walking down the dirt road by our house as child with her pointing out wildflowers and the way their colors spoke to each other.
So I wrote down something I had known all along, but had never written down: "I am called to see and speak about the beauty and the [baloney] ...and I can PRACTICE THIS SKILL."
Those last words were accompanied by many exclamation points and underlining and stars.
Ever since, I have felt this challenge and this freedom, and I would offer it to you. The challenge is: what if you showed up to your life and relationships and work, without contempt for yourself or apology? What if you offered what you saw and believed and had to say with the increasing confidence and humility that comes from knowing it was God who gave you your eyes and heart and words, and it was God who gave you the person in front of you that you're speaking to?
The freedom I would offer is: this is a skill you are practicing. It is okay to not do it perfectly. If you have spent years pushing yourself down, of course you are not going to stand up perfectly in these first moments. Even if you come on too strong, sisters, AT LEAST YOU CAME.
We will learn, if we practice, and if we practice together.
My name is Kylee Rae Larson. In elementary school we did the assignment where we researched what our names meant. Kylee: Boomerang. Rae: Grace. (Son of Lars was not in the picture yet and does not fit into this particular poetry). It was many years later that I realized there is a very boomerang-like nature to grace. As much as you try to throw it away, it keeps coming back. Here are some chronicles of that particular phenomena.
Thursday, February 4, 2016
Friday, October 25, 2013
For the Perfectionists
I've been doing a lot of failing lately.
Or at least coming up seriously short.
Or at least-est feeling incredibly insecure.
I wake up at four in the morning and run this list of failures over and over in my head. Something stupid I said that day, something I missed, something someone misunderstood, something I could have done better, something I should have known that I didn't. Even typing this I feel a little sick about it. I could type lists and lists if it would be helpful at all, but it won't be.
There is a worship song by Hillsong United we've been singing at my church lately, and I really liked it when I first heard it. It's called "Oceans (Where Feet May Fail)", and the bridge of it, which I sang at least twenty five times the first few days after discovering it, goes like this:
Spirit lead me where my trust is without borders. Let me walk upon the water, wherever you would call me. Take me deeper than my feet could ever wander, and my faith will be made stronger in the presence of my Savior.
It's a prayer. It's a prayer I prayed at least twenty five times in a few days.
This hit me one day, in this middle of all this insecurity, that this was the prayer I had prayed. How funny that God listens to things like this and takes it seriously. To be honest, I think God took it a little more seriously than I did. But yes, I guess this is what it would feel like to be taken to a place where my trust is without borders. Yes, this is precisely what it would feel like to put my feet out onto something that will not hold me. To leave my little boat of self-assuredness.
I cannot be a perfect person. Why do I run after this like it's a thing? It's not a thing. Why do I look at the holes in my boat and think that my salvation lies in my patching them? We weren't made this way-- to hold our own weight, to save our own selves or anyone else, to be gods. The call was not to be perfect people, the call was to be faithful people.
Faithful is a race worth running--to keep showing up after I make mistakes instead of hiding, to turn and go the other way when I've taken the wrong road yet again, to remember when I've forgotten, to return when I've run away, to trust God when I cannot trust myself, to look to Him when I'm out of myself and ideas. Faithful is a thing.
Take me deeper than I could, would go on my own.
Faithful is a race worth running--to keep showing up after I make mistakes instead of hiding, to turn and go the other way when I've taken the wrong road yet again, to remember when I've forgotten, to return when I've run away, to trust God when I cannot trust myself, to look to Him when I'm out of myself and ideas. Faithful is a thing.
Take me deeper than I could, would go on my own.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
On Turning 29
I would say that most of twenties were
spent learning how to stand up. What does it mean to live my own life
and be my own person? What does it mean to be different, to think
differently, to react differently, to have had a different experience
than those around me? I formed my own thoughts and strong opinions. I
made my own plan and I worked it. I got married and we struck out
together. So much newness and trying things for the first time. My
first real jobs, my first real failures, my first real
disappointments and triumphs. There are so many choices to make in your twenties.
So much adventure and drama and so much learning about the world and
yourself and God. And in all of this, the slow rise of my own voice.
There has been a lot of anger and cries for justice. There has been a
lot of asserting myself, creating boundaries, and work towards
forming a community of people I love who love me. In this last
decade, I have made the choices, built the foundation, set the
course. Stood up. There was a lot to learning the act of getting up.
And then, the last few years have been about staying up. Standing still. Standing firm. Standing on God when everything I worked so hard to make for myself falls away. Leaning on others when I can't take it another moment by myself.
And now, in this year on the brink of 30, a new phrase has entered entirely. Not get up or stay up, but, bow down. Bend the knee.
And then, the last few years have been about staying up. Standing still. Standing firm. Standing on God when everything I worked so hard to make for myself falls away. Leaning on others when I can't take it another moment by myself.
And now, in this year on the brink of 30, a new phrase has entered entirely. Not get up or stay up, but, bow down. Bend the knee.
Phil and I took a trip to Minnesota a
few weeks ago to attend my college roommate's wedding. We walked
around my college campus one afternoon. Being with Laura at her
wedding, seeing how far and different our lives had come from those
days in our dorm rooms, walking sidewalks I walked as a nineteen year
old, I couldn't help but reflect on how different my life might have
been in a million ways. I might have picked a different major,
different friends, boyfriends, social groups, activities, housing,
jobs. It all could have been so different. I thought about how I
didn't know any of this at the time. I thought about how then, all
those doors were wide open and there was this tremendous and exciting
energy and boundlessness about the future. It struck me how different
it is now. I still, obviously, have choices. But it is not the same.
I have set the course.
This is my life.
This is my life!
It is something I've both had to grieve
and celebrate. Maybe this is what every turning of the decade should
be for a person: an acknowledgement that many doors are shut, and a celebration that I love the doors I've walked
through.
I look around my devastatingly messy
house as I write this, and I think, this is my house. This is no
longer some duplex I am renting for 3 months and passing through.
This is my chosen, beautiful, gift of a house. I think about my
husband and I think, this is my husband. My chosen, incredibly
talented and kind, gift of a husband. I think about my church, my
family, my friends, my LIFE, and I think, okay. The time for always
thinking of change and what the next door is, that time is over
somewhat. Now, the task is not to make my way or create something new. The task is gratitude.
The task is taking care of what I have. The task is worship,
acceptance, and daily service and maintenance to this life I have
been given and have made.
My twenty year old self would be in
full scale eye roll to read this, but I seriously think that a large
part of my thirties will be about discipline and housework and loving
my husband and friends well. It will be less about opinions and more
about community. Less about making my own way in the world and more
about allowing God and people space in my life, as they come and not
as I would have them. Hopefully I can learn to offer myself this grace as well. Less demanding, more inviting. Bowing down, not in oppression or fear, but in gratitude and graciousness and worship.
I am amazed that this sounds good and
right to me. God is strange and surprising, and I am up to follow.
Let it be so.
Thursday, August 15, 2013
That's a Fine Looking Kneeler
There are these really nice kneelers at
my church.
Someone made them out of pew wood when
the pews got taken out and chairs got put in.
You might not be a kneeling or
appreciative-of-kneelers type, but it's okay, just go with it for a
minute. I grew up in up in a church of altar calls and lots of
kneeling, so, I have an eye for this sort of thing.
Last week, I felt like God was saying,
hey- you should go kneel up there. And I totally saw God's point. I
could finally pray (It's been awhile). I could finally get unstuck
(I've been a little stuck). I could finally confess all that pride
I've been writing blogs about and talking about and thinking about
and admitting to everyone (but God).
Here's what stopped me and stops me
quite often: I do not like being told what to do. By God or you or anyone else.
Last blog post, my pride had been made
known to me. And it was like, oh my gosh, yes, this is what we are
dealing with here: I have a pride problem. I understood something I
hadn't understood and I agreed with it. Veil lifted.
Thing is, I am still quite stuck with
my pride problem.
Turns out, understanding and agreeing
with something does not equal believing it or changing because of it.
Today, I drew a diagram. I will
recreate it for you:
Understanding the truth and agreeing
with the truth is an important and necessary beginning, but it is not
faith. It does not lead to new life. Faith is harder. Faith is
pushing past my “Don't tell me what to do” wall. Faith is pushing
past this pride in my rebellious side (I really enjoy being a punk).
Why? Because I'm afraid and that has kept me safe.
Here's the thing: it's not working.
And God is saying there is more for me.
What's that? You'd like another diagram? Sure.
Come to me, Kylee. Pray to me. Seek my face. Be quiet. Sit still. Bow down. Follow. (IF YOU'RE FEELING IT OR NOT).
There is no resurrection without death.
I confess because He tells me to, not because it's easy. I worship because He tells me to, not because I am an excellent singer or I like the song or the person singing it or feel the moment. I kneel because He told me to, not because I feel an emotion and want to respond to it. I do what He tells me to, because I signed up to follow Him. And this bowing down, this laying down of my refusal, is the path to the cross. To life.
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Forgiveness: Stage 3
I start a new blog any time a really
hard thing happens in my life. This one started after I lost my job.
I meant for it to be about grace, but really it's been about
forgiveness. Maybe they are the same thing. Almost two years later
and I am still trying to figure this out—forgiving. Here's the
rundown of what this process has been like for me:
1. At first, I felt hurt and
graceful. I was sure I was right, the offender was wrong, and
that this was so obvious to everyone involved that all would be
repented of and forgiven quickly.
2. Then, that didn't happen. Nothing
happened. So then I felt hurt and pissed. The anthem of my
hurt and pissed stage has been, “I can't even imagine ever treating
anyone like that and then doing nothing.”
This comes in variations, but overwhelmingly, “that person is
scum.”
3. Next, I started writing this blog post (stage 2 has lasted a long time).
In-between
and during all of these stages, there has been one thing that has
made the movement to whatever this new phase is possible: gratitude.
Gratitude is saving me from a life of hurt-pissed-off-ness.
Gratitude
for what I have (easy):
I
am grateful for my husband. I am grateful for how much closer we are
than we ever were before. I am grateful that he is in a workplace and
community where he is celebrated and respected and able to bring
every good part of himself to the table. I am grateful for my job. I
get to write Bible studies and shop at Hobby Lobby and cry with
people and braid their hair and celebrate success and say “me too”
and watch God do what God does. I do that every day. I work with
dedicated, genuine people. I am grateful for my dog, who is perfect.
I am grateful for my church. I am grateful for the wise and beautiful
women there who teach me, who love me, who welcome me, who say “me
too.”
Gratitude
for what I had (harder):
Cynicism
steals the glory of God. The glory of God being this: He works a
perfect plan through an imperfect people. It is easy, in the pissed
stage, the only see the imperfections. Focusing there, I was missing
the point. God was working his perfect plan. Isn't it amazing that he
could do it through them? The person-who-is-scum? There were good
days. I was loved and I loved. God did amazing things. We found so
much of ourselves and so much healing in that place, with those
people, because of our God. I can be grateful most days now.
Gratitude
for my own forgiveness (hardest):
I
have written a lot of other things in order to get to this—the one
thing I wanted to say. This is the newest thing. It was pointed out
to me that—despite my raging anthem otherwise, I am very capable of
treating someone that terribly and then doing nothing.
I
have held it against the offender—his pride. “How proud would you
have to be not to apologize?” I say this in an incredulous tone.
And
now, I confront my own. Because the next sentence in that line of
thought is, “I would never do that. I am so much better than you.”
We
become the things we hate.
I
am a prideful person. An arrogant, angry one. I thought maybe, “I'd
never act like that” would solve the problem for me—make me into
a different sort of person from “them” but it doesn't work at
all. It isn't true. That thought, in itself, is me being part of the
exact same cycle of pride and anger that I was so wounded by. No
thank you. I need a new way.
Gratitude,
again, helps me find it. I've asked so long now, “how?” How am I
supposed to forgive this? Stage 3: Realizing forgiveness for others flows out of my own
forgiven-ness. Stage 3: I take my pride and say, yes, me too.
Monday, June 10, 2013
Today, I Was a Beast (Not In a Good Way)
I heard off my own lips the new words that have been so graciously and faithfully offered to me, "you have a good heart, and we see it."
Her shame answered me. Her guilt. More old words.
"It is your good heart that feels the pain of what you've done; it is your good heart that is turning itself in; it is your good heart that wants a new way," I said and I've heard said to me.
It's funny how you can say good things when you aren't feeling good at all. Praise God.
I've been having a tough time lately. In fact, I was sort of a beast today (not in a good way).
It's amazing how fast the old ways come back: how quickly the darts start flying and the earthquakes shake me and all the sudden I am back to the old scared, lonely, self-protecting, proud, offended, balled up self.
I hate this self. I hear words coming out of my mouth and I hate them. I feel anger and anxiety and arrogance and violence rising up in me and I hate it and I can't stop it and I'm naming myself names and telling myself lies: nothing lasts, no one cares, you were tricked, you can't trust, you are alone, you are bad, wrong, worthless, and everyone knows it, or they soon will.
All day I lived like this.
Then I came home and let Hashbrown, my dog, out of his crate.
He grabbed his yellow blanket in his mouth, whole backside waving in greeting. He leaned against my legs. He waited for me to start walking, led me into the living room. He rolled onto his back on the rug, looked at me and waited for his belly rub. He licked my hand. This lasted a long time.
If I could go back, today, I would have given myself a time out. I would have been kinder to myself. I would have asked myself what I was scared of, and I would have thought about the old words and the new words. I would have told myself I have a good heart, even when I'm being a monster, and that it is this good heart that will melt when my puppy licks my hand. It is a good heart that repents. It is a good heart that remembers and is grateful. I would have taken a moment to realize I wasn't okay, that I needed to ask for a hug, a break, some more coffee and a quiet room. This is the new thing: not perfect, faithful. Faithful to return, to God, to others, to myself.
"Keep me gentle with myself. Keep me kind in disappointment." -Kathleen Norris
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Firefly Seas and Rock Hunting
Once, my friend Justine and I laid on the hood of my car on the side of a country road. We listened to Mumford & Sons and watched the sun set and the fireflies light up the soy bean fields until it was waves of lights, an ocean.
Once, my friend Marcia and I went on a rock hunt at Shadyside park in the rain. We climbed river banks like we were ten years old, shouting to each other, "look at this one!" as we waved them in the air. We made piles of rocks and only took home one each.
Justine lives in Texas now. Marcia is moving to Oklahoma.
I wish I could keep these soap bubbles of joy in my hands forever. Stay there in the light sea and river rain. Joy comes and then joy goes and I am left in the between trying to keep my hands open to the next happiness, trying to give thanks for this grief and that there was joy to be had. Trying not to miss what is here now. My heart is breaking but I am trying to whisper blessings. Trying to ignore the old lies that nothing lasts.
Communion cup in my hand, the wine and the bread, I eat and remember. This symbol becomes part of me in this act. His body part of my body, His blood part of my blood. "We cannot be separated," He whispers to me. I nod and I try to remember.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)