looking through me

Category: Uncategorized

oceans

One song always evokes the same image in my mind: an old map. The kind with sea monsters lurking off the murky edges of a flat earth.

You call me out upon the waters / The great unknown . . . Spirit lead me where my trust is without borders*

Mysterious creatures hovering along the undefined edge of known reality waiting to swallow whomever dares cross the border of I’ve-got-this and this-is-bigger-than-me.

That’s where I say I’m willing to go.

Really? I, the one with a frustrating fear of heights and a great discomfort on open water, am ready to head into the vastness waiting to engulf me?

Where feet may fail and fear surrounds me

Fear. I understand fear. But You’ve never failed and You won’t start now . . . that’s true. Because fear has failed me. God has not.

It feels like the opposite. Fear feels like the sure thing. God feels like a risk. But fear doesn’t pan out, it doesn’t go down the way I anticipate—it deceives. God’s great faithfulness never wavers.

Your grace abounds in deepest waters / Your sovereign hand / will be my guide

True.

The sea is dangerous. The waters are deep and perilous. They could overwhelm me.

So I will call upon Your name / And keep my eyes above the waves . . . And my faith will be made stronger / In the presence of my Savior

No map—with or without monsters—will keep me safe or give me the courage to move beyond the shallows. No proper round earth understanding will teach me how to step beyond what my own abilities can support. The One who told the waters how far they could come, and no farther; it is He calling to me and leading deeper than my feet could ever wander.

Let me walk upon the waters / Wherever You would call me

 

* Hillsong United. (2013). Oceans. On Zion [song lyrics]. Hillsong Australia. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dy9nwe9_xzw

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normal vision

One July evening years ago I sat on the couch reading through pamphlets about the risks and possible side effects of Lasik surgery. I’d decided to have the procedure and had met with the surgeon, but to be a responsible almost 19-year old adult I read every word and looked at every picture.

And then I laughed. I looked at my mom and asked, “Why would they say halos around lights are a possible side effect?” Holding up the sample picture I said, “That’s what lights look like.”

I believe the ensuing conversation went something like this,

“What do you mean ‘that’s what lights look like?’

“I mean lights look like these pictures—why would they call it a side effect?”

“That’s what lights look like to you?”

” . . . yes . . . ”

And then we were standing barefoot on the front-porch bricks looking at the streetlight in front of the neighbors’ house, which indeed looked just like the halo-ringed light in the picture.

Apparently there was nothing normal about what I normally saw.

After Lasik the halos got bigger. Headlights on cars became one giant Cyclops staring me down. But as the weeks passed they started shrinking, and then one day I saw halo-free lights.

I used to assume I was like everyone else. I thought I saw life as they did, so it never occurred to me to question it. As I get older I tend to do the opposite. I assume no one else could possibly see what I see . . . struggle with what I struggle with, feel this way or think this way. So instead of keeping halos to myself because I think everyone sees them, I don’t bring them up because I’m afraid no one sees them.

And yet, every time I take the risk and mention what life looks or feels like from my place on the porch the resounding answer isn’t, “you see halos?!?”; it’s, “you too? I thought I was the only one.”

It makes me wonder . . . what else do I accept as normal, that isn’t? What else do I accommodate that I might not have to? What else—in light that is true—will change shape?

 

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