My Lament

Hello everyone! This post is going to be a little different. I don’t have any big health updates or huge prayer requests. Many people ask me how I am and how I am really doing. That is a hard question for me to answer. I usually reply, “I’m fine” to keep it simple. Recently, I’ve begun to reflect on why it is so hard to answer that question.

I started this blog to post group updates to save time. Then I caught a glimpse of the dark chronic illness world, on social media, and decided to also use this blog to bring some hope to others who are struggling with chronic health problems. As I’ve shared my health struggles and some of the fallout from my diagnosis, I’ve tried to keep it in a somewhat positive light. While sincere, that is only part of my story.

Here’s my honest answer for, “how are you? These are some of my late night thoughts that loop in my head.

There is a heavy grief I carry around with me: the grief of the diagnosis, the grief of brain surgery, and the grief of exile. The hope of life being “normal” followed by the disappointment of a failed brain surgery, more complications, and then a second brain surgery with its continuing fallout. The grief has been hitting me hard. I’m sad for the life I lost and the future that will never be, I’m angry over that loss and I’m angry that I feel so off kilter. 

After my first surgery, I started therapy to talk through the trauma of the diagnosis and surgery. I learned that when someone is faced with a heavy medical diagnosis they go through the same stages of grief they would if someone died. Denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance.

  1. Denial That gut wrenching feeling of shock. Not being able to wrap your head around it. Pretending it’s not there or not that bad and trying to convince yourself there’s an easy fix or maybe pretend it doesn’t exist.
  2. Anger: I felt a little angry in the beginning, but I think I was in shock until I was wheeled into the operating room. Initially I felt like the rug had been pulled out from under me. But I’ve been feeling the anger more. I was told I would return to college and work after four months. I’m still waiting. It’s been four years and the path back is still not clear. So many “whys?” “Why is this going on so long?” When I had my second surgery the question was, “why do I have to go through this again?” “When do I get my life back?” I felt and still do feel anger at the medical establishment for how slowly things move and things getting missed. I am frustrated with the slow healing and my body that seems to have a will separate from my own. Wrestling with God’s timing being so different from my own. Deep in the late nights when my insomnia won’t let me sleep, all the questions, fears, and doubts come to a boiling point and I feel like I’m about to be crushed under the weight of it all. Why has this gone on so long? Where is the healing? Why are there so many unanswered prayers?
  3. Bargaining I’ve definitely had my fair share of “I’ll do anything” and countless prayers of pleading “what ifs?” or “if only.” I could do so much more if I wasn’t sick.
  4. Depression This one is a little tricky for me. This was my initial diagnosis when the doctors didn’t know what was happening so just threw that label on me. This one is harder for me to acknowledge, but come on, I’ve had two brain surgeries, it’s there.
  5. Acceptance There are times when I feel like I’ve accepted this whole thing and I feel a sense of peace. This is my life now and I am establishing how to cope and live with it. I see all the blessings in my life and how the Lord has carried me through all these trials.

Something I’ve learned about grieving is that you don’t always go through the stages in order. Or you can work through one stage and feel like you have moved past it only to cycle through them all again. You will run through the cycle multiple times. 

Before my second surgery and before I knew the first one failed, my therapist told me that I hadn’t allowed myself to lament. That I needed to let myself feel the grief. She encouraged me to do what King David did and call to mind all the good things and the ways God has been good to me. The prophet Jeremiah also did this in the book of Lamentations 3:19-23,

 “I remember my afflictions and my wondering, the bitterness and the gall. I well remember them, and my soul is downcast within me. Yet, this I call to mind and therefore I have hope: Because of the LORD’s great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness.

It’s hard for me to admit the struggle and the internal battle because I don’t want to drown in negativity and bitterness. That would be a pretty easy ocean to drift in. There are times where my faith is tested and times where I feel so weary that I feel I have nothing left in me. There’s a part of me I recognize as sometimes fronting it, that denial stage, and I just want everything to be what it was and “normal.” Then there are the moments of anger, when I feel the world moving on without me. 

I read a quote recently from C.S. Lewis,

I sat with my anger long enough, until she told me her real name was grief.

That was the lightbulb moment where I realized that this restlessness that I can’t quite put my finger on is grief. Grief over my diagnosis, multiple brain surgeries, endless recovery, all the fall out in my close relationships and grieving the life I lost to this illness. 

But I’ve also learned the Bible is a book of suffering. Oftentimes, we tend to focus more on the victory we have in Christ and the celebration and neglect the parts of suffering. Jesus himself was described as a man of sorrows acquainted with the deepest of grief. He cried out on the cross in his final moment,

“My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?” (Mark 15:35)

I’ve begun to try and model some of my journal entries like David’s laments in the book of Psalms. To bring my troubles and anguish to God. All of it. The hurt, the anger and sorrow, and then to write about what I know to be true of the Lord’s character. The tender mercies in my life. I’m definitely struggling. Adjusting my view on how my life would go and changing my expectations.  My schedule stays the same each week. Four days of physical therapy plus any additional scans or appointments. Then the rest of the week I am at home resting and managing my symptoms as they come and physically recovering from my PT workouts. I can feel pretty isolated and cut off from the “rest of the world.” I feel lonely and I struggle with wanting to do more, but still being limited by my symptoms. Sometimes, everything just feels monotonous, even my prayers. It’s hard to admit that. 

I realized I can’t keep waiting for some big shift or change to happen in my life. I feel like I’m always waiting for something barely in the distance that I can’t quite see that will change my life. I guess I’m starting to work towards the “acceptance” part. So, perhaps that is a prayer request.

Recently, I went to a concert and did my usual concert preparations by googling all the artists and listening to their music. I found a song that hit so close to my heart that I had to pause it and breathe. It beautifully and hauntingly articulates the sorrow and grief of loss. The struggle of believing, but lamenting the loss. The song is called, “Nowhere to Be Found,” by Australian Christian singer/songwriter Nathan Tasker. After the concert we were able to meet Nathan Tasker and talk with him about his song and the impact its made on me and my family.  

I took a fall with no safety net
I felt my face hit the ground
After a second to catch my breath
I felt you kick me when I was down

Losing a loved one is hard enough
Three pushed it over the edge
So I carried the footprints of my daughter and son
To the place where they say you live

But you were nowhere to be found
Nowhere to be found

When the long line of dinners came to an end
We made a meal of our own
Out of cold habit we both bowed our heads
And felt the silence of our home

Where you were nowhere to be found
Nowhere to be found
Nowhere to be found

Am I not shouting loud enough?
Is there more than the top of my lungs?
Oh I used to feel your love
Where has it gone?
Nowhere to be found

Now I look at the world like a crystal ball
Usually from the outside in
I see people I love get the life that I lost
And I try to be happy for them
But it feels like a town unacquainted with grief
Protected like a child in the womb
Oh but looking for you hanging around on those streets
Is like looking in your tomb

Where you were nowhere to be found
Nowhere to be found
Nowhere to be found
Nowhere

This song says everything I can’t. The parts of my grief that I am still processing and don’t have the words to describe. The doubts of where is God in all of this? The pain of watching those you love move on while you feel stuck and hollow. I love the part of feeling like you’re in a town acquainted with grief and the comparison of how looking for Jesus there is like looking in His tomb, where He was nowhere to be found.

There’s still an empty tomb and there’s still joy and new mercies that come in the morning. That is the pattern of lament. You address God, issue a complaint, a request, and then an expression of praise or trust in Him. We pour out our hearts – all our grief, anger, and sadness- to our God who listens and cares. We turn to him in our sorrow and then conclude with the hope of what we know is true of Him and His character. Lament turns us towards God while our grief and sorrow tries to pull us away. But, we know that God loves us and this life and its troubles are not the end for us.

Your Sister in Christ,
Shae

Come What May

I love concerts, the planning and anticipation. Going to events is different for me now. I have to time it and plan for days of rest before and after the event. At a concert, I am trying to be fully present in the moment, but at the same time tuned into my symptoms and trying to manage them, so I can be there. I have polaroid sunglasses that my physical therapist recommended I wear, even indoors, to help with overstimulation. Often, I have to leave and find a quiet place to take a break. 

Isla and my mom are my music buddies. We always share new music and talk through everything about the songs. One of our favorite bands is We Are Messengers. We’ve seen them in concert several times and love them. Their songs were on my playlist I listened to in the hospital after my first brain surgery. 

They came to Oregon back in October, so Isla and did some dog sitting to get tickets. 

The week before the concert was when the first MRI came back with the findings of a fluid collection. I was scheduled for a neurosurgery appointment, but still had to wait a few weeks. I was already feeling very sick at that point and could tell my physical symptoms were getting worse. 

I was disappointed that I felt so sad and heavy during this concert that we had all been waiting for. I don’t go to many big events like that, so it was a big deal. A lot of planning of symptom management and coping went into this. My doctor says it’s good for me to have an event or something to look forward to that will help keep my mind occupied. 

 I was so upset that to have this MRI  hanging over me the whole night. I always have this feeling of wanting to be fully present and not miss anything, but I feel like I’m always able to be fully in the moment. I think that comes from losing and missing out on so much because of my illness. 

It was an amazing concert and we had so much fun. There were a few times I had to sit down and close my eyes. I popped an instant ice bag on the back of my neck to help calm some symptoms that helped. They played one of my favorite songs, Come What May.  But standing up and singing “come what may” while you’re waiting on an appointment with a neurosurgeon to discuss a collection of fluid in your brain, was easily the scariest moment I have ever experienced in worship. 

I couldn’t sing it and I felt so angry. Angry with my life, for the life I lost, the life I have with this illness and how unclear and scary the future seemed. This is not the life I ever imagined for myself and there’s times I resent it. I resent my illness and the struggles it brings both physically and in relationships to with people who are close to me. It’s so isolating. 

I wrestled with God so much during that song. I think I was angry with Him too for how heavy everything felt and how I can never see a stopping point for this pain and struggle. Angry with how abandoned I felt. I was also angry at myself for not wanting to sing the phrase “come what may”. It was just too real and too scary. I kept thinking to myself can I do that sing that with sincerity and I am dreading my future. 

I remember pleading with God that I wanted nothing more coming my way and begging for a break and for some relief. To let things be calm for a little while so l could feel like I wasn’t constantly barely keeping my head above the water, about to go under any moment. 

I remember during this song feeling a heavy foreboding feeling sinking into me and I just knew something was wrong. Something was wrong with my body. I knew then the MRI scan was something more serious than I wanted it to be and that something was coming. In the middle of the song, I felt an overwhelming panic and despair, I dropped into my seat and wept. My mom and sister sat with me and we prayed together. 

On the way home we talked about the concert and that moment. I explained how that was one of my favorite songs, and my thoughts in that moment. It’s easy to sing songs like that when you feel far removed from trials, but it’s different when hardships they feel like they’re about to drop on you at any moment and crush you. 

Isla in the back seat quietly says, “it doesn’t change the meaning of the song. The truth is still the same.” She’s right of course, but I have struggled with that song ever since that night. It honestly made me feel angry and restless. I didn’t want to be confronted and think about the possibilities and questions it brought up. The big one was if my faith strong enough to be able to proudly and fiercely say to God, “come what may” knowing that I was probably up against another brain surgery and brutal recovery. 

I think I was feeling guilty for my faith feeling worn and lacking. I know that God is perfect in His love and would be faithful to me, but it all felt like too much. I didn’t want any more pain and suffering. I want my life before all of this illness back. 

A few weeks after that concert, is when I found out that the fluid collection is caused by a leak in my dura (the inside lining of your brain) and is still actively leaking and slightly growing. There’s scar tissue, and decreased CSF flow, which could be caused by the scaring or the fluid, possibly both. This is why I feel so sick and have developing mobility issues. I’m using a cane now. 

I heard “Come What May” on the radio a few days ago, right before we left home to fly to Colorado for surgery. My family was in the car, so we listened to it. 

This time though I heard it differently. The part of the song that I heard the loudest was “you’re still my rock, my hope remains, I rest in the arms of Jesus. Come what may.” The truth of that sank deep. 

He’s my rock in this time of suffering. There is nothing I can do to change this situation. I can’t stop the need for brain surgery or cure this incurable condition, and the changes and new symptoms, God does not change. God’s love and faithfulness to me has nothing to do with any of my abilities or lack of, it has nothing to do with my fears and the endless questions of what if’s. My hope is in Him and Him alone. He is the same on the mountain tops as he is in the valleys. 

We are now for CO for me to have my revision brain surgery TOMORROW. The surgery is to remove the fluid, scar tissue, and part of it is exploratory to see exactly where the leak is and what is going on and causing the blockage. 

Please pray for me.  Pray for my family. It’s not my first brain surgery, so we know in some ways what to expect, which is terrifying, but there is still so much unknown. I feel scared and dread for what’s coming, but also hopeful that this will be that last surgery and bring some physical healing and improve my quality of life. 

So, while this is not at all what I would have chosen for my life and I’m scared, and don’t know what the future holds. I can say that God is still good to me. I see his tender mercies and His love for me. 

Sometimes sorrow is the door to peace

Sometimes heartache is the gift I need

You’re faithful, faithful

In all things

In every high, in every low

On mountaintops, down broken roads

You’re still my rock, my hope remains

I’ll rest in the arms of Jesus

Come what may “

Thank you all for your continued support and faithful love and prayers.

Shae