I began praying for that word or lesson I needed to learn this year. I already knew 2015 was going to be even busier and challenging than the previous year based on new commitments and current work, family, and volunteer demands. And it hit me hard as it rested on my heart—in so many areas of my life, I needed perspective.
Often, when I’m being challenged or just learned an important lesson, I imagine the Facebook post I would write (but never do because I don’t always think my “profound” thoughts are worth sharing on social media). However, that goofy little hashtag still pops up in my brain as though my mental post is worthy of trending. What’s even crazier is that over the last three months, I keep thinking #perspective after learning new life lessons.
#perspective
It might seem like a do-gooder kind of word, one that we use when we’re trying to make ourselves feel better or are looking for the silver lining. For example, when you hear that someone has lost their job, and while your job is crazy and stressful, you recognize how blessed you are to even have a job. Hmm. #perspective
Or, you feel nauseous one day at work and you want to crawl into a hole because being sick is the worst feeling in the world (or so you think at the time). Then you remember how the cancer survivors you work with have undergone countless rounds of chemo and felt (or feel) nauseous on most days. Wow. #perspective
And maybe long commutes or evenings away from the home for work engagements seem like a whirlwind, but then you think about all the people who are deployed overseas or who travel on business for days, weeks or months at a time and don’t ever have the time to be with family. Ugh. #perspective
At one level, taking a step back and praying for perspective forces us to stop feeling sorry for ourselves when life is hard or uncomfortable. In instances when my woes are stamped on my forehead, I need to be slapped with a dose of reality, as I am indeed blessed with so much. A selfish attitude is so much easier (and more common) than taking a second to stop before complaining about this or that. I say all this as a guilty offender, but I know I’m not alone in this struggle.
More recently, I've been even more deeply challenged with this idea of what it means to have the right perspective, or the eyes to see things clearly. Why is it that I am so prone to jump on the “life is hard and inconvenient” bandwagon? Why is my first instinct to judge what people do or how they do it? Why does it seem like this season of life is just a crazy merry-go-round that simply needs to pass?
I am learning that my eyes are foggy, and that I’m looking through the Diane lens, not the God-crafted lenses He’s given me.
This week, a speaker on a completely unrelated topic presented this verse: “Your eye is the lamp of your body. When your eyes are healthy, your whole body is also full of light. But when they are unhealthy, your body is also full of darkness.” Luke 11:34
My energy, passion, commitment, and pleasure in the home, the workplace, and service roles are so deeply tied to my perspective, or the health of my eyes. If I am viewing home as this space I can never maintain to perfection, it will never be a place of satisfaction for me. If I am perceiving my job as something that’s holds too many challenges for me to overcome, then I will never learn or grow during periods of redevelopment or transition. And if I view my roles at church or in other volunteer capacities as tasks rather than opportunities to use the gifts that God has given me, then I will see them as burdens rather than blessings. #perspective
In 2015, I am learning that what I perceived were insurmountable goals at the end of last year have forced me to grow and mature into a better professional and manager. Without several months of feeling like things were too hard, I never would have had to put on new creative hats and build some new relationships in the community. That was actually a blessing, not the burden I once thought. #perspective
This year, I am also learning that while my husband is going back to school and our time under the same roof is more limited, we are so much more intentional with the time we do spend together, and trips to the grocery store become dates rather than chores. #perspective
And while family members and many friends around us are starting families while we are both constantly slamming the car door in a rush—to head to work, class, meetings, events, church, and other commitments—we are being pushed and challenged in our personal and spiritual lives in unique ways. This may not be the season for a family yet, but it’s a sweet growing season for us that we know we have been called to live with joy and thanksgiving. #perspective
I know my life lessons aren't trending online, but I do hope that they do become a trend and lasting change in my own spirit. Therefore, as the year continues, I am reminded to meditate on these words, that my #perspective comes from above and not from within.
“I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know him better. I pray the eyes of your heart may be enlightened in order that you may know the hope to which he has called you, the riches of his glorious inheritance in his holy people, and his incomparably great power for us who believe.” Ephesians 1:17-19