Monday, December 1, 2008

Don't get your hopes up...

I'm not really posting. What I need is for you (yes, all of you, because the only people who read this are my close friends) to read this following narrative/personal inquiry and respond to it in the comments section.

Ok, so here's the deal: this thing is kind of long. I'm sure you've noticed that by now. If you don't have time to read it, I understand. No big deal. However, if you can and are willing, I would be very grateful.

Disclaimer: I have reservastions about posting this because it so personally examines me, and it involves Kris and Em. You two better know that I love everything about both of you, and this paper is supposed to be a commentary/exploration of me and me alone.

Anyway, without further ado, here it is:

Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Journal entry
Dear journal:
Today was a wonderful day, until now. I hate the walk back to the dorm after rehearsal. For some reason I get contemplative, and my post-rehearsal musings have ruined many an otherwise lovely day. Apparently today is no exception. Tonight’s musings carried me back to this afternoon’s juggling practice. So, I guess its story time. Once upon a time, in a land of college students, frequent Spanish speaking, and non-indigenous palm trees, there lived a young woman, and she was learning, among other things, the art of juggling…
“Hey Mark, are you using these right now?”
“Nope, go for it.”
“Thanks. I haven’t practiced all week.”
“Didn’t you get some clubs for your birthday?”
“Yeah, but they’re really cheap, so I just left them at my house in Gilbert.”
“I’m sure someone here could scrounge up three for you if you want to practice during the week.”
“That would be great! Thanks Mark. I’ve just been doing three ball tricks during the week. I still don’t have the reverse cascade. The balls keep hitting each other.”
“It’ll come. You just have to keep trying. One time it’ll just click.”
“Yeah. I’ll keep at it.” I walked over to Mark’s gear and picked up his clubs.
“You hit yourself in the head yet?” he asked.
“Oh yeah, but at this point I can usually get my head out of the way.” Mark smiled and turned to juggle his other clubs, and I breathed a deep breath before clumsily throwing the first club into the pattern.
“Hey, how long have you been doing clubs?” Leah inquired.
“A couple weeks,” I replied.
“Wow, last time I was here, weren’t you just starting balls?”
“Yeah, well I’ve known the basic cascade since April, but everything else I started learning when you saw me last.”
“Well, you’re doing a great job.”
“Wow, thank you!” At this point, Dave asked Leah where she had been the last few weeks, and I turned my attention back to the clubs, grinning with satisfaction. My first toss was solid, my second toss too low, and my third outside of the pattern completely. I frowned. “Such improvement!” I thought to myself. Scanning the jugglers around me, I thought, “This is demoralizing. I’ll never be able to do that. Why do I even try?” I sighed and gazed down at the clubs in my hands. After a moment, I looked up, pursed my lips, inhaled and exhaled slowly through my nose, bent my knees slightly, and began my haphazard three-club pattern yet again. Practice makes perfect, after all.
An hour later, I heard the campus bells ring out, indicating it was 5:45 pm. “Oh, I have to go! I have to get dinner and go to play rehearsal.” Miraculously, I arrived at rehearsal with a minute to spare, despite the sloth-like pace of the Chickfila personnel that prepared my order. Rehearsal proceeded as usual, and although there were no mishaps, I approached my director afterwards to address something that bothered me. “Karole, can I ask you something?”
“Sure sweetie, what’s up?”
“I was wondering if you have any advice for me on how to be a queen. I’ve been working on it, but some things just don’t feel like Queen Gertrude just yet, and I’m not always sure what a queen would and would not do.”
She nodded understandingly, thought for a moment, and then began, “Well, you’re smoothing her out a little every time. And you carry yourself like a queen, and you speak like a queen—you know, welcoming and kind but sharp when you don’t get what you want. I don’t know, I could pay closer attention, but I think it’s all good. Your costume will help get rid of some of your not feeling queenly, and the rest is just you playing with the lines until they feel right.” By now we were walking out the door and were fixing to go our separate ways.
“Alright,” I said. She tilted her head, and examined my face.
“You’re doing fine,” she said tenderly.
“Thanks…”
“Really, you’re doing fine,” she reassured me.
“Ok. I’ll see you tomorrow, Karole,” I said, turning to go as her elevator opened and she stepped in. “Why can’t I just be happy with my acting?” I questioned aloud once outside. “Gah, I am pathetic! No one likes an unconfident actor! Snap out of it, Lindsey, seriously!” I felt nauseous and dizzy, my temples pulsated and my stomach churned. My escalating tirade was abruptly interrupted when my phone rang. I started at the sound. Then, glancing at the caller ID, I rolled my eyes and smiled. “How does she always know when to call?” I wondered to myself. “Hey, Kristen.”
“Hi Lindsey! “How are you?”
“I’m doing ok.”
“What’s the matter?”
“Man, I hate that she understands my euphemisms.” I thought to myself. “Oh, I don’t know. I’m just frustrated with myself again.”
“How come?”
“Well, I haven’t been feeling great about the work I’m doing as Queen Gertrude lately—not bad, just not stellar—and so I asked my director for advice and she didn’t really have any to give me but she told me I am doing fine.”
“So you’re doing fine. What’s the problem?”
“Well, I’m only doing fine, for one thing, but she doesn’t have any suggestions for making it better than fine. And it just seemed like she knew I was feeling insecure and that’s why she told me I’m doing fine. I mean, she did say that I’m doing a little better each time, and that I walk and talk pretty much like a queen but…oh, I don’t know. I was fishing for compliments again, and I hate it when I do that.”
“You keep telling me that you fish for compliments all the time, but I don’t see that. What do you mean?”
“Oh, I insult myself or downplay everything I do to hear people tell me I’m doing great…I can’t believe you don’t know that, I do it to you all the time. I guess you just don’t notice.”
“Well, why do you do that if you don’t want to?”
“I don’t know…I don’t know where it all comes from…I just wish it would go away.” My voice trailed off, and I fell silent. I was afraid to keep talking. I thought that if I did, soon I would be fishing for compliments by lamenting the fact that I fish for compliments, and that is an ironic level of pathetic that I wanted to avoid.
“Are you still there?” Kristen asked softly.
“Yeah, I’m just thinking.”
“What are you thinking about?”
“I was thinking about something that happened during rehearsal for Twelfth Night sophomore year.”
“You gonna tell me what it is?”
“Sure. We were recently off-book and rehearsing without our scripts, which means we started making more drastic character choices. You know, playing with the lines, defining our physicality, establishing chemistry with others on stage, and so on. And at the end of rehearsal every day, Ms. Biederman would give us notes. And one of the only notes she gave me was, ‘Lindsey, stop looking at me.’
I knew exactly what she was talking about, but I pretended to be confused and responded, ‘What do you mean?’
Of course she gave me the answer I expected, ‘Every time you say a line or make a decision, you look at me to see if I reacted or approved. You are the character. Just be the character, don’t look at me for endorsement.’
I smiled at her and diligently took down the note like a good actor should, but honestly, when she said that, my heart stopped for a moment. I felt like I was going to throw up. I couldn’t believe someone caught me being honestly, inexcusably self-conscious. It was the first time it manifested without me being in control, or without me masking it as a light dig at myself or misplaced modesty or something. It freaked me out.” Suddenly I didn’t want to talk anymore.
“Lindsey, are you there?”
“I’m here. Hey, I’m pretty tired. I think I’m just gonna go to bed. I’m totally fine, don’t worry about me. Just my usual self-deprecating tendencies. Nothing new. No worries, Kris, I really am fine. Please don’t worry about me, because I know you will, and you really don’t have to.” Lies, all lies…but I needed to think. “For once, deal with your own issues! Your issue is always looking for other people’s advice, for goodness sake! How do you expect to fix that by talking to someone else? It’s ludicrous!”
“Ok, Lindsey. I’ll talk to you later then, ok?”
“Yeah, for sure. Of course, Kris, I’ll call you tomorrow.”
“Alright. I love you!”
“I love you too, Kris. Goodnight.”
“Goodnight.”
I hung up the phone, and plopped down on a concrete bench near my dorm house. The area was quiet, with distant voices and cricket chirps warding off the eerie silence of night. A tree draped overhead, and the small leaves speckled the seat of the bench. It seemed a good place to think, so I set aside my backpack, turned off my phone, and settled in. “Why do I do this to myself?” I wondered helplessly. “What makes me so bent on being dissatisfied with everything I do?” I realized that I was being hard on myself for being hard on myself, and that would lead me no where positive. So instead of continuing down the path of self-reprimand, I forced myself to remember something good about myself. The first example that came to mind was the variety show.
Countless hours, a couple nervous breakdowns, and many, many post-it notes later, I managed to instigate, organize, promote, and host “A Night of Heroes: a Charity Variety Show” almost entirely by myself, even as a mere eleventh grader. Mr. Jordan had no faith in me, which is why he removed his support and the support of drama club, and almost caused the ruin of the entire thing. He was irritated to discover I found new sponsorship for the show, even after he went to another organization to finagle a promise not to lend their support (he underestimated my abilities). Consequently, his best friend Brian, the auditorium manager (who had to work the light and sound cues for my show as a part of his job), shared Mr. Jordan’s disdain for my endeavor. I remember one incident particularly clearly:
“Lindsey, I need to talk to you,” Brian said to me sharply. I stifled my disinclination to speak to him, and patiently accompanied him to the side of the stage.
“I can’t do anything with these,” he snapped, sweeping his arm angrily to gesture at the microphones lying on the floor.
“What do you mean?” I inquired, straining to appear calm. “These are the microphones you told me you needed for Advanced Vocal. These are what the choir director gave me.”
“I need the chords,” he said, as if everyone in the universe understood his unspoken needs except me.
“Where are the chords?”
“In the choir room.” Of course they were. The choir director had made it expressly clear that she was leaving early and was not coming back. Now it was 5 o’clock in the evening, the show was two hours away, and my opening act had no microphones.
“Do you have a key to the choir room?”
“Yes.”
“Can we go in there and get the chords, then?”
“No, they’re in the closet, and no one has a key to that except Miss Flint.”
“Uhh…ok, I’ll see what I can do.” I hurried out into the hallway and began to pray, “God, I don’t know what to do. Please, please, please help me.” At that moment, I turned the corner, glancing into the choir room as I passed by. Inside was a small, wrinkled Oriental woman eating dinner alone. “No way…” I knocked frantically on the door. She jumped in her seat, turned to see my eager face through the small window, got up, and opened the door.
“Can I help you?” she asked in a melodic tone.
“Do you have a key to that room?” I asked, pointing at the choir room closet.
“No, only head custodian have a key for there,” she explained.
“Who is the head custodian?”
“Bob.”
“Is Bob here?”
“Yes,” she replied gaily.
“Can you take me to him?” I asked, trying to suppress my giddiness until the chords were in my hands. Without saying anything, she smiled wide and led the way. After meeting Bob and quickly explaining my quandary, he gladly accompanied me back to the choir room and opened the door. Instead of retrieving the chords myself, I found Brian. “The door is open. Could you come with me and get whatever you need?” I cooed when I saw him. Appearing dumbfounded and slightly perturbed, he followed me to the room and got the chords.
“See?” I thought to myself, shifting into a cross-legged position on the bench. “Without my constant persistence, the variety show never would have happened.” For a moment I was satisfied. Unfortunately, I could not dismiss the issue so easily. “So why this confidence deficiency? If I am able to persevere in spite of obstacles in my path, like with juggling or the variety show, then why do I constantly long for overt, unmistakable, resounding affirmation from others? Why the unrelenting need for compliments? What moved me to ask Karole those questions? What caused me to unknowingly glance at Ms. Biederman’s face during rehearsals? And why are some compliments not good enough? Why were Leah’s and Karole’s compliments insufficient for me? Have I always been this way?” A breeze began to blow as I sat on the bench, struggling to recount a moment in my past that displayed the persistence with which I now attack everything in life, including myself. I drew my knees up to my chest, resting my chin between them, and let out a single shudder before adjusting to the cold and returning to my thoughts. “What about elementary school?” Nothing sprung to mind. “Maybe it wasn’t there yet…but then when?” As I mused over this point, I finally summoned one incident in the 5th grade, a story lovingly titled by those who have heard it, “The Band Aid Story.”
“Mr. Amerson, may I have a band aid?” I asked after he called on me.
“No.” He turned away and continued teaching.
“Is he serious? All I want is a band aid! Maybe he didn’t hear me…”
“Mr. Amerson,” I began again after he called on me, “can I have a band aid for my finger?”
“No.” Again he turned back to the lesson on the board. I raised my hand again.
“Can I have a band aid?” I asked after he called on me for the third time.
“No, Lindsey.”
“But…” I was cut off as he abruptly turned the other way. At this point my finger had lost hope of receiving a band aid and clotted itself, but it was the principle of the thing. I raised my hand again, wondering if he would call on me at all. For whatever reason, he did.
“Mr. Amerson, can I please have a band aid?”
“Lindsey, let’s say you’re a girl scout, and you are on a hike with them and you trip and scrape your knee. Now are you going to tough it out and keep going, or are you going to stop everything to ask for a band aid?” Without taking even a moment to think, I planted my hands firmly on the desk, looked him straight in the eye, and said,
“I’m going to stop and ask for a band aid.” He glared at me, and then quickly diverted his angry stare to the class, effectively silencing their giggles. Then, his head cocked and shoulders clenched by his ears, he walked back to the front of the classroom. A moment later, my arm was again in the air. Without a word, he marched over to his desk, opened a drawer, removed something, approached my desk, and set in front of me a band aid. With a slight air of triumph, I said sweetly, “Thank you.”
As my recollection ended, I felt a sudden chill, but the tree didn’t rustle, the leaves didn’t swirl, and it wasn’t cold outside. “When I got that band aid from Mr. Amerson, I got what I wanted—I accomplished my goal—but at a price. Now in various ways, I require band aids from people in order to feel accomplished in and of myself. Other people…the things I do are all defined by other people. I have reached the point where I need validation to confirm that whatever I am doing is correct, or that I am doing a good job. I need to get the band aid from people to prove that I needed the band aid. And I imagine my ideal band aid, inevitably setting the bar inordinately high, so that most compliments fall short of what I desired, and just make me feel worse! Consequently, I prolong every band aid request. Additionally, I have created a safety net for myself so that, if I am ever unable to pursue perfect correctness—if I ever stop asking others for band aids—then people know something is wrong, and the band aids are offered freely in droves. Like when I began college, I was incapable of mustering enthusiasm toward anything, and people recognized such a change in me that they rushed to offer their band aids…
“You’re strong, Lindsey. You’ll be just fine.” –Mom
“You can come home whenever you want.” –Dad
“I just wish I could make you feel better like you always make me feel better.” –Kristen
“You will make your best friends in college.” –Beth
“I know how you feel, Linds, but at least we’ll always be best friends.” –Emily
“How are you doing in college? Better?” –Jan
“Depression is not an uncommon thing, and there is no shame in getting help.” –Michal Ann
“I understand. It’ll get better.” –A slew of people
“Let’s bring this to Jesus together.” –Kelly
Wait…that last one wasn’t much of a band aid, but it stopped the bleeding. What Kelly said didn’t make me feel better about myself or my situation, but simply reminded me that Jesus is in me, and when I press into Jesus, even if I don’t get the band aid I am after, His ways are perfect and His life sustains me. I realized that, in order to stop needing band aids, I need to lean on Jesus. And that truth is still applicable! I guess I just forget at times." Rising to my feet, I breathed in the crisp night air and walked to my dorm, singing worship choruses as I went.

November 25, 2008
Facebook quandary
I am at a loss. How is it that I can’t even set my Facebook status anymore? This is ridiculous.

Lindsey is too sad to work…but she has to…

No way, that is a huge band aid request. Everyone and their mom and their dog would comment that status, attempting to make a good showing as a friend, not to mention Kristen and Emily would mobilize into Lindsey-is-depressed-we-better-pray mode and I don’t want to lay that on them.

Lindsey is feeling a little funky.

No, still too needy. I don’t want sympathy from Sarah and Laura, I want them to communicate with me freely of their own accord.

Lindsey doesn’t know what to say…

Well, obviously it is true, but it sounds depressed. They will know, and I will still feel like I elicited any communication they “initiate” which means the band aid will not make the bleeding stop. I want the bleeding to stop. What I really want is for the bleeding to stop starting!

Lindsey is confused.

Also true, and also too depressing. Why can’t I bring myself to type something that is neutral enough to satisfy me? Probably because describing my current status would include some emotional something-something since all I can think about at the moment is whether or not Sarah and Laura and the others in the cast like me enough to keep in contact with me and be friends with me on their own, away from the theatre department. But the only way to find out is…well, to lie about my status, for a start.

Lindsey has a lot of work to do.

Crap, I can’t leave that either. It just feels too deceptive, like all that I am thinking about is homework. That could not be farther from the truth.

Lindsey really needs Jesus.

That is always true, but Kristen’s Lindsey-is-invoking-her-reliance-on-Jesus-something-must-be-wrong antenna will go up, and unfortunately she would be right.

Lindsey is a dork.

Fine. I can live with that. “Dork” is my euphemism for “pathetic” and “needs to stop caring what people think” and “is dwelling too much on stupid things” and “should grow a spine!!!” and a myriad of other things, but it is nondescript enough that it should slip under everyone’s concern radar, so I feel secure that any communication after that status post will only happen if the person wants to talk to me.

Wait, how about this one: Lindsey loves Jesus!

Yes. It is accurate, it is impossible for it to evoke anything resembling sympathy, and it is still the truth at the core of my heart, even in the midst of my deep desire for band aids from people. Did I learn nothing from my night under the tree? And besides, neither Sarah nor Laura is a Christian, so this status won’t precipitate anything from them, which means if they do talk to me, it will be because they want to talk to me. I know in my mind that with Jesus, I don’t need it. I just hope my heart apprehends it so this doesn’t happen again…

November 25, 2008
Journal entry
Dear journal:
I am making cuts in other people! Every time I reach out for a band aid, I scratch the person giving it to me, but he or she loves me too much to say anything, to even make a sound or let loose an involuntary, “Ouch!” This very second I insulted my physical appearance in a text to Emily, and the reply was this: “Oh shut up. I’m going to be honest with you: it all starts with you. Before you will see any improvements (in your eyes) you first need to stop being so cynical towards yourself. You are at a healthy weight and you look fine. I am sorry to lecture but I tolerate the way you treat yourself but it is getting to be too much. I don’t know what is going through your head, but as your best friend this is me being honest to you.” Whoa. How did I screw this up so quickly? And someone finally said, “Ouch!” This has to stop.

Jesus, I see now that my desire for perfection in every aspect of my life has not only hurt me and made me question everything I am—everything you have made me!—but it also hurts the people around me. Even though my intentions were sometimes good, like with juggling and the variety show, and other times were not knowingly bad, like when I talked to Karole or commented to Emily, the problem is that I have made everything about me. I am so concerned with how others perceive me! That is why I work so hard to be good at everything, and when I feel like I am not doing well, I reach out to others to assure me that I am. Jesus, I don’t want to rely on the opinions and reassurances of other people. I don’t want to define who I am by the things I do. The things of this world, the effort I put forth in my own strength, is temporal and will pass away. And perfection—for all but you, Jesus—is a superstition, and I have blindly chased after it in hopes of validating myself, when all the time joy and peace that surpass understanding are in you.

4 comments:

Emily-Ann said...

Well, I like it! Someone who doesn't know you very well might say, "Whoa, what's her deal." But I know you and understand you and this is a great piece of work, Lindsey. I love the band-aid metaphor!
To comment more on the content...
You didn't "hurt" me, what hurt me is seeing you the way you were at that time. Watching you stab yourslef over and over again hurts me. You don't deserve what you do to yourself, but I know you can't just stop. So, instead of lecturing you on my opinion of the matter (since I am not going through it, I cannot tell you how to feel), I will lecture you on leaning on me and Kris (and everyone else who matters) and Jesus to help you through it. You want to change, I know you do. I am here for you. whatever you need.
Regarding the issues you are facing:
As a fellow actor, I understand your search for accomplishment. Always wondering what is good or bad, wrong or right, needed or unneeded, etc. Not having an answer is crippling. Not being able to flat out ask the question all the time is crippling to the already present cripple. We want to pursue this, and we can only hope and pray that the answers will come in time. We picked a career where the answers are rarely accessible up front. Mostly, the answers will come from experience. Many heartbreaks and few breakthroughs (at first...hopefully). It is our goal to stick by it and not give up while also working our hardest to please others. There is no other career like this one. You need to have the motivation first and then the talent. It doesn't come overnight either. I sometimes wonder if I can ever reach the point I dream of, but then I realize before I can get there, the ultimate step, I need to take the smaller steps that will lead to the dream. By focusing too much into the future I am bringing myself further from it. If I don't focus on the now, there will be no tomorrow. But I have hope, and Jesus (not to mention you)and that hope and that want motivates me to keep going. When you feel less of yourself (in acting or whatever) remember why you do what you are doing, and when you feel like all hope is lost, realize that if you go back to that last place in your heart (the place where you didn't look before) you will find your hope again. It will never go away, it will only hide from you. It is your, and my job, to bring it to light and make it feel at home. Without hope, without that first step, we will not go anywhere. Also, as much as we tell you that you are crazy for thinking of yourself that way, you are only trying to make yourself better. And again, without the answers there is no way to tell what is there. But, at the same time, you cannot cover yourself in these thoughts and bring yourself to the point of no return. It's life though. And we will look back someday and remember what we go through now and we will be able to say I know have the answers I was looking for, and as much as I searched back then I would have never found them there, they came finally, just when the time was right. Then we will teach our children what we are trying to learn, but they will still go through the same search for answers that we cannot give them.

It's a complicating thing, life. But we were given the gift of Jesus, and the gift of loving friendships to help us through it. don't feel like you aren't moving forward, you are just at the pace that is meant for you. He knows what He is doing. we just have to keep relying in out faith of Him and of each other.

I love you. And This release will be good for you. You writing this down instead of keeping it between us will be beneficial.

I love, sis. Nothing can ever change that. When we are old and decrepit we can smile knowing that the lives we have lived were the ones that were intended for us and that we accomplished what was in store and we, most importantly, kept the things that truly mattered close to heart. And when we face Jesus himself, we will get the true answer. I can bet you it is something so simple yet beyond our reality.

i don't remember half the stuff I just said, I hope it makes sense and is useful to you personally.

Bah Humbug...! lol

amsherer said...

Well, Emily's response made me cry. Seriously. What can I say? I freaking cry in Peter Pan...but nonetheless, I agree with her wholeheartedly. Really take to heart her response.

I agree that this will be beneficial for you to write this down; you are finally coming face-to-face with something you have struggled with for years (I have seen it since junior high. Not because it is blatantly obvious, but rather because I know you well). Don't feel alone--I have--and do--struggle with the same thing myself. My largest turn-off to people is selfishness and my greatest fear is that I, too, am selfish. In my greatest attempt to be selfless, I put myself down or think of myself as nothing. Because I am doing so much time thinking about the ways in which I lack, I in turn do the very thing that I am trying so hard to avoid; I think so much about myself and my faults that I become self-absorbed, and ultimately, selfish. I feel that this could be another insight as to why you do the things you do. I have found that when I devote my thoughts to the only One who really matters, the focus comes off of me and He is able to work through me without resistance. When your eyes are on Him, all that can be seen (by you and in you)is His glory and His love and His grace, and really, that's all that needs to be seen. He will be glorified through you, His beautifully and wonderfully made creation. There's a song by the band Failing Perfection entitled "To Lose Myself (A Love Song)," and I think the title explains it all. Losing yourself for the Lord so that He may increase is your love song to Him. And He is going to be glorified through the wonderful, beautiful, uncorrupted, sinless YOU that He originally created you to be as you continue to let Him be the one that clears away all of the dirt that this world has placed on you (namely insecurity, inferiority, and self-disdain). The last line of the chorus reads, "You are everything that I need and I could lose myself in You." Let Him be the One who is the focus, the forefront, the visible force guiding your life. I know you have that in you already, but when self-destruction arises, remember that He is the One you are living for and the One who bore all of your struggles on His shoulders at Calgary. And like Em said, that's why you have us to help you focus your eyes on the Lord and not to yourself. I love you very much, Linds. Forever. Until and through our eternal RAVE in Heaven. :)

As far as your writing goes...unique, articulate, saucy, and well-written as always. The only thing that I was like, "Say what?" was the part about Mr. Brian. Didn't really understand how that fit in with what you were talking about...because it seemed like more of a God-thing than a Lindsey-thing...which I guess is another "rely-on-His-strength-not-your-own" point. :) But nevertheless, I would replace it would something about Jordan being a bonehead and you getting things done regardless of his negligence. Anyway, just thought. But overall, kept my attention the whole time and really was remarkable in an organically honest way. Bravissimo, bella.

Anonymous said...

So Lindsey...this is how I responded while I was reading it. ("Ha ha, that's so true!, Whoa! Intense moment! Ha ha, I would think that exactly! Wow I really get what she's saying!...) Basically I was bounced back and forth between audible outbursts of laughter and intensely serious moments where I understood exactly what you were saying. One favorite moment... " I was afraid to keep talking. I thought that if I did, soon I would be fishing for compliments by lamenting the fact that I fish for compliments, and that is an ironic level of pathetic that I wanted to avoid." I remember having that conversation with you and thinking the exact same thing! I was thinking to myself that I couldn't say much without "complimenting" you while trying to tell you that you didn't need and shouldn't have to receive words of praise. Statements like "Lindsey, you don't fish for compliments" would be a lie (not always; I'm basing this off of your own statements in this paper) or I could say "Lindsey you're so amazing! You don't need people to affirm you," which would be a completely contradicting statement in itself as I would be doing the very thing I was telling you you didn't need. AHHHHH!!!! It was definitely a confusing moment. However, I thoroughly enjoyed how my comments were cut to meaningless one-liners which does happen occasionally but I hope that my comments are not typically that pathetic. By the way, after you told me not to worry about you I remember specifically saying that I wouldn't but that I would just be thinking about you and praying for you.
So I have something to say about the whole praying thing you mentioned during your facebook quandary (which was slightly amusing and yet not). First of all your comment about the "Lindsey-is-invoking-her-reliance-on-Jesus-something-must-be-wrong antenna" was perfect! That is exactly what I would think. However, I declare my right to pray for you at any time even when I don't think you are going through a hard time. You know, the whole "Pray at all times" passage kind of applies. :) Thus, I will pray for you whenever and wherever I want thank you without having to be concerned for your emotional and/or spiritually well-being.
Also, I love how all...lost my thought because of your text thanks! :) Oh yes and then we talked for like two minutes. Yet another conversation to add to your story?
Back to what I was saying if I can gain composure enough this late in the morning to sound cohesive...
Ok so I can't. All I have left to say is that you have heavy thoughts dear one. I have felt and do sometimes feel like you expressed in this paper but never quite to the extreme level with which you speak. Although I know that could be your excellent writing skills at play (not a compliment) I know better. I think I know you so well Lindsey for everything you have expressed here is nothing new and you even know this. I believe you have been struggling with this idea of needing outside praise and that you may continue to face it but both you and I know that God has something in this moment for you to learn. You have been leaning on Jesus for a long time and I encourage you to continue. Who's to say we only "lean on Jesus" in the tough times? Although I am always here for you or at least plan to be I am an imperfect sinner and can't offer you what you need at all times. God is moving and has been moving in you with this idea so let Him take control of it. Just give it to Him once and for all. It may always be a struggle for you but if you train yourself to just let go and trust God to lead your thoughts into less of wanting self praise I know you will have so much more peace. Our idea of "peace" is skewed. We think it means we have to be or feel okay at all times but really it's just that at all times we know God is taking care of us like as He leads us through the valley of the shadow of death. We look around and think there is no hope but Christ is with us and He is leading us the whole way through. You know this but still we can only actively think about so many things and I think we need to be reminded of things at times. I can't just go "blah blah blah" though and have you understand it the same way I do so of course I am praying for you and not even because you need it but because we should pray. I love you Lindsey! Let us be awesome sisters in Jesus and just overflow with love towards others because of the love He has given us. As you have already declared the need for it, you must realize that you are enough in Christ and that you don't need others' confirmation to find satisfaction with who you are. Let us pray that this not only penetrates our minds but our hearts as well!

Unknown said...

So i was bored at work and decided in my four hours of spare time to finally look at everyones blogs.

This is not to say that I merely waste my time reading about your lives, its just that I managed to find myself a wedge of time in which to do nothing (aka I left my reading at home.)

therefore imagine my surprise to come across this entry. I skimmed the other two, my eyes protested over the vastness and tininess of the writing. wondering what this post which so "personally examines" Lindsey would be about, I decided to read it.

And now, you want my reaction...

I would like to use a single word, but I'm not a modern poet and can't sum up my thoughts into a single word. Yet.

Until then, my jumble will have to suffice.

I actually will only say I agree with your conclusion. And offer advice. I decided to do this when I got to Yale and was overwhelmed by the sheer awesome. Despite my stories, its not easy going to school with a jeopardy champ, a New York Times crossword writer, etc.

So, I decided to put my insecurities aside and do five things that terrified me. I could list them, but I've typed too much already. Suffice it to say I have no regrets.

Neither should you. Do something that terrifeis you. Like audtioning for the Fine Arts program. Or whatever that things is called. If you don't you will regret it...

Also, I love you.