Flip Failure on Its Head

How We Hate to Fail

Disappointments caused by failures, misunderstandings, or calamities can hurt like the dickens. Sometimes pain drives all the way deep inside and causes injury to the emotions. Its ugliness is something dark, harsh, and tangible. I don’t think anyone is ever quite prepared for the disappointments that come their way.

Reactive in the presence of injured emotions, they may experience a variety of sensations: tears, anger, depressed feelings, overwhelming tiredness, shattered nerves, sleeplessness, stomachaches, or whatever. They may seek to remedy their distress with some sort of comfort, like binge talking, drinking, eating, shopping, electronic entertainment, or you name it, their go-to thing.

No one likes to fail, but fail we do. To fail is to be human. Along with any failure comes the above mentioned disappointment. That ‘let down’ feeling can ruin days, weeks, months, and sometimes, if it is of major consequence, it can follow them through many a year or even a lifetime.

One of my peers in high school was a cute silken-haired young lady who was part of the ‘in’ crowd. She frequently vocalized her aspirations for becoming a varsity cheerleader, and said with a confident air. I assumed it would happen for her. In the spring of our junior year after the competition when the votes were tallied for the next year’s varsity cheerleaders, she wasn’t one of them. Shocking stuff. Probably, I was almost as surprised as she was. It had seemed a slam dunk. I imagine she was crushed.

Most of our failures and disappointments aren’t quite so noticeable, unless you’re running for public office. Employment-related incidents where a person is overlooked or not chosen for the position they’ve expected is an unpleasant go. The person has angry questions about why they didn’t get it, and they are likely to make judgments about the upset. When it seems or is unjust and unfair, bitterness and resentments may take root and build. That is not any fun, to say the least.

When It’s Our Fault

When it is your fault and it is you who caused the failure to happen, then it is you who gets to choose how you will feel about it. This can take many forms. You can blame others (scapegoating) or you can blame the circumstances (it’s not your fault) or you can accept or ignore the injustice you’ve done (Ok, I wonder what’s next), or you take ownership (address your part in it). Any of those choices are the consequence of the failure. A healthy outlook can look at the issue with an eye to learning and growing, improving and moving forward.

You can make that kind of healthy choice, one that brings health and well-being where you need it. Deep inside the real you is a need to be recognized and appreciated by others. Comparisons and your reactions to disappointments can knock you down and make you feel less-than and not fully appreciated. The tendency to react as a result may allow for aggression, distancing, vengeance and all manner of negative behaviors.

When It’s Their Fault

When you’ve been wronged in some way, it is important to handle it in a constructive manner. How we take it, to take it well, will take acknowledgment and prayer. It is smart to ask God for the best words and right attitude. Praying adds strength, courage, and wisdom and minimizes blame, accusation, and angry expressions. Sort through the cause and effect and come at it from your and the others’ involved, perspectives.

When your ‘own’ stuff crowds in, when you take the offense personally (because it’s unjust), and you can’t quite get over it, this provides an excellent opportunity to look at the incident with a critical eye. Look at it with care. What is true? What is not true? How can you deal with it in a healthy, non-accusatory manner? Have you given it to God and released the outcome to Him? Do you need to address it for the benefit of the other person, for their knowledge, understanding, and growth? What should you do? What must you do?

How to Flip Failure on Its Head

How we view ourselves during a disappointment or failure is extremely important and a real part of this conversation. I think the self-perceived, inferior, self-status this fuels in one’s interior self is a need in us to be acknowledged, treated fairly, and to be appreciated. But, do people really care? Ethel Barrett says it this way, “We would worry less about what others think of us, if we realized how seldom they do.” She goes on to say, “Humanly speaking, the easiest person to fool is one’s self.” She hits the nail on the head. That means, it is up to the wounded person to deal with it. Any individual can take a failure, disappointment, or mistake and make it into a positive. Undoubtedly, this takes courage and a willing-to-go-there mindset.

Anyone can re-order their thinking. The power rests with them. God will help you if you ask Him too. Remember the prophet Elijah? Elijah, after a tremendous victory over the prophets of Baal at Mt. Carmel when God sent fire from heaven to devour the water, stone, and sacrifice, Elijah took to running for his life when threatened with death by wicked Queen Jezebel. Mountaintop to valley floor, he plunged into defeating fear and lived in desperate despair. God saw Elijah’s weakness while he flailed in the storm of life, and He ministered to him. Elijah listened to God’s voice and then trusted Him to take care of his needs.

You, as God’s child, serve this same God. He protects and ministers to needs. He restores broken people and heals their wounded hearts. God gives a mission and becomes their adequacy to accomplish it. He’s all that. God takes a defeat and makes it a cause for celebration. Chuck Colson did this, from prison to developing a prison ministry and becoming a leading Christian voice. Joni Eareckson Tada did this, from quadriplegia to representative voice for the physically challenged and marginalized. Joni and Friends is listened to world-wide. Their life-giving passions rose from negative defining experiences.

Give it to God, whatever it is. Listen for His whisper. Draw strength from Him. Yes.

Trust God for the journey.

Where There is Peace on Earth

Peace on Earth

“Peace on Earth” by Casting Crowns, on Youtube here

The song keeps playing in my head. Casting Crowns recorded it years ago, a rendition of  “I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day.” This song on their Christmas CD is one of my favorites. It speaks to my soul. The lyrics express the doubt we feel at times. “There is no peace on earth, I said. For hate is strong and mocks the song, Of peace on earth good will to men.” They point to the fact that the world is a mess. How do we relate then to the rebuttal, “God is not dead, nor does He sleep. Peace on earth.”?

“Where have I seen peace on earth this year?” I asked myself three days ago. I could picture only snippets, like in a slide show, piecemeal. You would think that is an easy one, but it isn’t. This year has been anything but peaceful for me. But for God. But for God, despair would be my lot.

For three days the song has played nonstop in my thinking. Over and over I have asked God, where have I seen peace on earth? Blank. Just “blank.” Nothing. I’ve seen it around me, but for me personally? Nothing much.

But then. Pictures began to form.

Peace-Endowed Moments

  • A friend telling me that she’s finally becoming the mother she always wanted to be, after years of not getting it right;
  • Sitting by my mother’s bed, silently weeping, touching her arm and lightly stroking it… knowing this might be my last time with her still living…and it was;
  • Praying in the Vina monastery’s chapel on a Sunday morning. God meeting me there, giving me an extra measure of peace in that sweet sanctuary of peace;
  • Singing with my two sisters for Mom’s memorial, Grandma’s song, “Dearest Mother” and knowing its words were true of my mother;
  • Letting it go. Forgiving the one who wounded me in an area where I feel “less than”…and knowing the healing was in place by the peace that passes all understanding replacing the hurt;
  • Seeing smiles on faces, beauty in nature, star-studded skies, eating good food, singing and reading, writing what’s on my heart.
  • Talking about the struggle and the joy. Praying for friends and them praying for me; listening and talking about important matters, doing life with these precious ones;
  • Holding the grieving person in my arms while they sobbed and we clung together in that understanding of the heart … a connection that needs no words. Five funerals, I’ve attended in recent months, peace was present at all of them.
  • Listening to my father recount his earlier years each night at the dinner table; telling me about his boyhood, life on a dairy farm, going to town with his dad, swimming in their reservoir…filled with spring-fed water, attending to the citrus groves, buying his first car at age 14 that cost $10, adventure with his buds, and so forth.

Peace on earth is not so easy to see when our lives and the world are in turmoil. To be honest, I’m drained. My role this year has been that of assisting and supporting my folks. It has required of me to go deeper in the depths of my being to keep myself in a good space. None of it has been easy. But all of it has been rewarding.

Some days I have drawn upon my Heavenly Father like a much needed resource when overwhelm and insufficiency have caused me to feel weak and vulnerable. Then the beauty of God came in and His loving peace descended on me. The peace is found in the little things and in the God of the little things. He is the Giver. God gives and gives and gives. We receive, receive, and receive. Beauty, grace, love, life, being, all come from Him.

I conclude with these five areas where I have found ‘Peace on Earth’ in my daily experience this year.

Where Peace Lives

  1. LIFE – Life is full of surprising twists and turns. I experience the best of life those times I embrace life and let it flow as it is going to flow instead of allowing pressure and plans to constrain it. God is the author of life and His Word is life to us. We all partake of this amazing gift of life.
  2. LOVE – Love is the key to almost everything. Extending grace out of love is a selfless motivator that speaks life to others. Hard things shut this down, and then I can’t stand it. I reboot the love. Love is a gift from God.
  3. RENEWAL – Aw, how we need renewal, refreshing in our spirit. I love watching this happen in others. They start to get it, to experience it, and then, wow! So precious. This is a gift to the soul.
  4. PEOPLE – People need people, even introverts (hear, hear!). I may seem self-sufficient, but I need you–my new friends, old friends, on-line friends, and family friends. You are a gift to me. It is my desire to be a gift to you.
  5. NATURE – Nature breathes life in me. I love the sunrise, the sunset, walks around the perimeter of my father’s almond orchard, blue skies with fluffy cumulus clouds, mountains to the east, to the west, trees in the valley, the Sacramento River as I drive over it every day, and the flowers and bushes and trees, rock formations and all of nature’s natural topography. Nature is a gift that speaks its life every day.

Blessings to you and peace. Merry Christmas to you and yours.

Norma