permission to grow

Permission to Grow: How We Grow When Growing Is Just Plain Hard by Helen Kerr

Today’s “Permission to Grow” contribution comes from Helen Kerr, an English teacher in Scotland, of all places. (And, yes, I did Americanize her British spellings of words. I am, after all, a Texan, even if I do have English and Scottish roots.)

Her guest post originally appeared at my friend Andrea Stunz’s blog, Empty Plate.Full Heart, and they graciously agreed to let me share Helen’s beautiful message–about praising God when we don’t really feel like it–again here.

permission to grow

Permission to Grow

How we grow when growing is just plain hard

Sometimes I slump.  Not just for an hour or two in front of the TV, but really slump.  For days, weeks at a time.  The weather is bleak and relentless, the days are short and dark and the nights are long and bitten by rain and howling gales.

Stepping outside is a chore. A momentous effort that brings with it gritted teeth and a furrowed brow. The wind near pulls the car door clean off and I sit and shiver with irritation from the cold sleety rain.

Sadness lingers like a half-wanted friend and pokes holes in every lining that has even the faintest glitter of silver.

Motivation has gone.  A ghost of a whisper of a memory.  What does it even feel like to be motivated? To have that get-up-and-go? To enter the day with bravery and courage and sparkle? Where are those friends when you need them most?

And there you are.  Stuck in the slump again.  You manage the days by some weakly mustered force of will and they pass.  And the weeks pass and the months pass. Tempus fugit.

Have you ever felt like this? Maybe you get year-round good weather, but you still feel the slump.  The rut is deep and you’re stuck hard.  No climbing equipment to get yourself out – I mean, you haven’t even got enough effort or willpower to even try.

And somewhere, deep in your veins, you’re sighing hard because you know this is not God’s plan for you.  You know that He isn’t wanting listless days for you that lack passion and fervor.  That are empty of all vigor and purpose.  That are pointless drips of life that swimmingly blur one to the other.

So how do we grow?

How do you pull yourself up? How do we find strength and motivation when they seem to be former allies who have fled to the hills?

Look at what David said in Psalm 28.

1. We call and we cry and we lift our hands (verses 1-2)

To you, Lord, I call;
    you are my Rock,
    do not turn a deaf ear to me.
For if you remain silent,
    I will be like those who go down to the pit.
 Hear my cry for mercy
    as I call to you for help,
as I lift up my hands
    toward your Most Holy Place.

We do not have to sit in shaking silence with vain hope that our God can hear us.  David called to the Lord, he cried for mercy.  He was not silent! We can vocalize our hurt, our distress, our sadness, our pain.  And we can be sure he hears us.

We can call on Him for help – but what else did David do?

He praised God.

He lifted his hands.

How does our mood change when we turn our attentions to the Lord?

When we sit, even in our most feeble state, when we are empty of strength and life, we can turn to the One who sees and knows all our pain and sadness.

2. We praise and we know and we trust (verses 6-7)

Praise be to the Lord,
    for he has heard my cry for mercy.
The Lord is my strength and my shield;
    my heart trusts in him, and he helps me.
My heart leaps for joy,
    and with my song I praise him.

When we praise God, we remember who He is and what He has done.

Our focus shifts.

Our pain might not disappear; and our weariness will not always flee in an instant.

But our perspective changes.

When we have no strength, He is our strength.

When we have no recourse for the battle we are in, He is our shield.

And when we empty ourselves of our woes, we fill ourselves with His truth.

And the result?  David said his heart leapt for joy.

Joy!

Where we can see none, it can come.  Not in outward things, in the fluff and bubble of life, but inside…deep inside. In our hearts, we can have joy that comes when we are all out and God is all in.

Yeah, growing can he hard.  Painful.  Maybe not even always desirable.

But join me, won’t you?  Join me getting out of the slump and into the joy.

Join me in praising the One who can be our strength when we have none.  Our warrior when we are weak.  Our shield when we are defenseless.  And our joy in the hardest places.

Home-Spun Hearts

Helen Kerr

Helen Kerr is a wife, mama and high school English teacher, currently residing in the windy North Atlantic on a far-flung Scottish island called Shetland. She loves coffee, reading, baking and blogs over at Home-Spun Hearts.

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