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Meditations on God

  • Robert Van Valkenburgh

  • The Gift Of Longing

    When someone who was supposed to love, protect, and comfort us fails to do so, it is only natural for us to be hurt. 

    But, it may not have been their fault. 

    It may not have been intentional. 

    They may have done their best. 

    They may not have had the ability to give us what we needed. 

    It may not have been in them to give. 

    We are all flawed and fragile creatures, after all. 

    To be angered or saddened by our experience does us no good. 

    Even if these feelings are entirely justified, they do not change what happened or did not happen. 

    They do not fulfill our longing. 

    In fact, anger and sadness over things we could not have changed if we tried actually exacerbate our longing for love, protection, and comfort. 

    This, however, if we allow it to be, is actually a gift. 

    It forces us to reach for something greater for what we need in order to satisfy our longing. 

    When people let us down, disappoint us, or hurt us, and when we can find no love, protection, or comfort in the world around us, this is an opportunity to turn to God for what we need. 

    This may have been His plan all along. 

    It is not that He wants us to suffer. 

    On the contrary, He wants more than anything to end our suffering. 

    That is why he is waiting for us to reach out to Him once we have suffered enough. 

    He was always there for us and we could have come to him sooner if we had chosen to.

    But, as strange as it may seem, we usually need to know that there is nowhere else to turn, that all other options have been exhausted, before we are willing to sincerely turn inward to seek love, protection, and comfort from its eternal source.

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    June 9, 2021
    comfort, disappointment, god, hurt, longing, love, peace, protection

  • Repost: What Makes You So Special And Why Do You Get To Quit?

    Originally written on June 8th, 2018 upon hearing about the death of Anthony Bourdain:

    Suicide is complicated. For those affected by it, either directly or indirectly, it can be very confusing to process and understand. As I write this, I fear that I have nothing helpful to offer on the subject and yet I am compelled to write. Even as my fingers type, I am conflicted. Suicide is so deeply personal an issue for me that I have no real way to step back and be objective about it. All I can offer is my experience. People, like myself, who have struggled throughout their lives with depression and suicidal ideations have an especially complex and conflicted experience when hearing that another person, perhaps a celebrity they follow or admire, has taken his or her own life.

    Inside me, right now, down to the marrow of my being, is conflict and confusion upon hearing that yet another person who has expanded and shaped my outlook on life and the world I find myself in has committed suicide. When this happens, and it happens all too frequently, a lot of folks talk. They talk about tragedy. They talk about loss. They talk about what a shame it is. They talk about the person’s life. They talk about how it’s difficult to understand or how “you never know what someone is going through.” Talking is important. Don’t get me wrong. However, to the person who knows, truly knows, what drives a person to suicide, words and sentiments are all too hollow and meaningless.

    Depression, the kind that can drive a person to kill him-or-herself, is not something that can be explained or understood from the outside because it is a feeling, not a thought process. It feels like who you are, not something that is happening or will pass or be overcome through any means. Depression is an experience and it feels like the only thing that is real in that moment, a moment that feels like it will never, can never, pass. When people talk about a person’s suicide and all they had in life – family, career, money, prestige, etc. – it is clear that they have not experienced this thing because in this thing there is nothing else. There no is one else. There is no past, no present, and no future. There is only pain, confusion, and suffocation. Depression is an existential state, an omnipresent and omnipotent reality, manifested as a feeling. It is all of the loss, all of the fear, all of the anger, all of the confusion, all of the sorrow, all of the guilt, and all of the shame in one single moment.

    In talking to Tim Ferris, who himself nearly committed suicide in college, Adam Robinson said, “One of the sinister things about depression is it works by getting a vice grip on your thinking. So you’re incapable of thinking outside of yourself… You believe that only now in depression are you thinking clearly and that before you were delusional. You hate yourself for it. You hate yourself for being deluded. Nobody understands now. Now, I am thinking clearly. Now, nothing matters. That’s really the devil at work. That’s why I say sinister, because depression traps your thinking. It hijacks your thinking like a virus and you despise yourself. You despise yourself for being deluded previously.”

    Depression makes you hate yourself for ever having been hopeful, for ever having been happy, for ever having felt innocent and like life was full of potential and promise. It steals everything you have or have had and fills your entire being with an evil poison that eats your dreams, your happiness, and your aspirations, no matter how good you seemed to have it the day before, even if nothing has actually changed. A person who has ever experienced this knows that it will pass with time, but inside it, it feels infinite, as if it extends from before your birth into your death and beyond. In the experience of a depressive episode, it feels as if this time, in spite of all of the times before, it will not and can not pass because this time is so bad that it is forever, a forever from which your reprieve, now past, was an existential accident never to happen again. It is exhausting and overwhelming because your heart is breaking itself while telling you that you deserve all of it and nothing else.

    A person who has experienced this depth of depression, hopelessness, and loneliness experiences something quite different from a person who has not when hearing about someone else’s suicide. To Robin Williams, Chris Cornell, Kate Spade, Anthony Bourdain, and everyone else who felt compelled to take this way out, I am sad, hurt, angry, but mostly scared that your choice will lead someone like me to take your way out instead of riding out the storm one more time to see the sunlight on the other side. It saddens and angers me that your choice, even though I understand that it was not really a choice but a compelling need beyond all other needs, might be the glimmer of hope someone without any other hope finds and the excuse he or she needs to follow your path. I am sorry you felt that way, in that moment, truly sorry. But… what makes you so special that you get to quit while the rest of us are here struggling through, now without you to tell us that this moment will pass once again?

    This moment will pass once again. Please hold on.

    Written by,

    Robert Van Valkenburgh

    Resources

    • National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (confidential): 1-800-273-8255
    • https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/
    • https://afsp.org/

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    June 8, 2021
    anthony bourdain, anxiety, depression, suicide, you are not alone

  • Helping Where We Can

    We cannot help everyone. 

    In fact, we should not even try to help everyone. 

    Not everyone will want or need our help. 

    And, sometimes we do not have the resources to help. 

    But, when, where, and who we can help, we should. 

    And, we should do so without hesitation, expectations, or regret. 

    If someone wants or needs our assistance and we have the resources to assist them, our life and theirs will be made infinitely better by our doing so. 

    This is merely a byproduct of our service, however. 

    Reward should not be our goal. 

    Although, it should be said, that this ideal is difficult, if not impossible to attain. 

    We always want some kind of credit for our good deeds, even if it is simply the prideful satisfaction of knowing we did them. 

    If sin is an inevitability, a foregone conclusion, it is far better to fail on the side of the angels than on the side of selfishness and self-centeredness. 

    We should not avoid being helpful simply because we will feel good about it. 

    God wants us to be happy, after all. 

    We just have to know that the joy and satisfaction we get out of being helpful, like all emotions, will pass in time. 

    This is because joy and satisfaction themselves are not infinite. 

    Only God’s love is infinite, but we can tap into it a little bit at a time by loving one another as purely and selflessly as we are capable of within and through our flawed and fragile humanity. 

    This is a good place to start anyway. 

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    June 7, 2021
    altruism, god, helping, love

  • Ready To Persevere

    If we wait for the perfect timing to make our move, we will never go anywhere. 

    Opportunities do not arise when we are ready. 

    Opportunities arise when they arise. 

    When they do, regardless of our readiness, we have the choice to either act or hesitate. 

    If we act, we may fail. 

    In spite of what people tell themselves to keep their hopes up, failure is always an option. 

    In fact, failure is necessary. 

    Failure often teaches us more than success ever could or will. 

    On the other hand, if we hesitate, if we fail to act out of fear, over-cautiousness, or lack of preparation, success is absolutely not an option. 

    Without action, no matter how well prepared we may think we are, we simply cannot succeed. 

    Success is quite often not really a question of readiness. 

    It is a question of willingness. 

    If we are willing to act when opportunity arises, we will find that we become ready through action itself. 

    Readiness is not some magical state we arrive at someday wherein we find that everything we were waiting for is also waiting for us. 

    Readiness is a mindset, an attitude, and a belief that no matter how unready or unprepared we are, we will adapt and persevere. 

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    June 6, 2021
    perseverance, preparation, readiness, success

  • Letting Our Needs Be Known

    We have to know ourselves and our limitations. 

    We cannot assume that others will consider what we need or what is best for us. 

    Most likely, they have a difficult enough time figuring out what they need and what is best for themselves. 

    We must, therefore, know ourselves and speak up for ourselves. 

    If we do not, how can we expect others to? 

    We have to be clear about our boundaries and our expectations. 

    And, we have to be consistent with maintaining them. 

    No one else is going to know what we want or need from them unless we tell them and then follow through as if we meant it. 

    We cannot expect to be taken seriously unless we are actually serious. 

    This is not an excuse to be harsh, aggressive, or mean-spirited, however. 

    There is no excuse for those attitudes or behaviors. 

    We have to find the delicate balance between saying what we mean, meaning what we say, and doing so in a way that produces harmony instead of dissonance. 

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    June 5, 2021
    desires, integrity, limitations, needs

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