Over the years in my life, I have become a very skilled liar. I don't mean the kind of liar who looks you right in the face and fabricates scenarios, or embellishes details in order to fit the present need (though if you ask my mom, she will probably tell you I did my fair share of this as a little girl). I mean a very different kind of liar; the kind of liar that exists in some small way, in each of us. I had perfected into an art form the practice of lying to myself and of keeping truths to myself when they should have been shared with others. I would stuff these truths down into a dark corner of my soul, pretending that they didn't exist, and beating them over the head when they threatened to emerge. Looking them square in the face felt too threatening, too scary, or too risky.
Adversity in life is a funny thing. Whether it is self-inflicted or inflicted upon us, it creates the same reaction. It lights a fire in our soul that burns so hotly that it can feel like we are being consumed. But eventually, if we allow it to, it purifies whatever it touches. The bigger the adversity, the larger the flame, and the greater its capacity to purify. Though I am no Job, I have seen my share of adversity in my life. Some of it is readily obvious. You need only talk to me for 10 minutes to learn about the basic details of it. Other trials I have endured require a much more intimate relationship to be revealed. These are only shared with a very exclusive group of people. Finally, their are struggles that are so private that I do not trust them with anyone at all, only myself. Suffice it to say, I have seen my share. (To those who don't know me well, please don't take this is a "woe is me" pity party. To those who DO know me, well, you already know that I don't have a single pity party bone in my body. It is purely a statement of fact).
With each adversity that I have experienced in my life, the flame has grown larger and larger, catching on fire everything that it touches. There came a point when it had burned for so long that I stopped to look, and realized I could see straight through myself and out the other side. Not to say that I was perfectly pure, but the heat had taken the gritty, murky sand of my awareness and turned it into crystal clear glass. I could see my motivations, intentions, actions, and who I was with a clarity that took me aback. It was a terrifying experience, one that I had to introduce myself to in degrees, because as I looked through the new glass of my self-awareness, I saw the liar that I had become.
Dishonesty has more power than people give it credit for in our society of self advancement. Its power is one of destruction and separation. The power of dishonesty is that it takes the parties in a relationship and it separates them emotionally. The greater or more frequent the dishonesty, the further the separation. If we are dishonest with our significant others, a rift is created that can leave us feeling like islands when what we should feel is oneness. When we are dishonest with our friends and colleagues, it becomes impossible to feel close and lasting bonds with them. And finally, when we are dishonest with ourselves, we rob ourselves of the most valuable relationship we can have on this earth, the one that is with us every second of every minute of every day.
Inversely, the greater our honesty with ourselves and those around us, the stronger the bond that is formed in our relationships. We become welded together in associations that can transcend what we ever thought possible in this life. This is the feeling we have when our hearts feel like they could burst out of our chests when we consider someone that we love.
At the onset of 2015, I gathered the courage to take a good long look through the glass that is me. Having worked so hard at being a liar, I had created a distant little island, emotionally separated from all I had lied to, especially myself. I realized what I had known for a very long time, that I was lonely. The saddest part about it all was that I knew exactly why and I knew that the power to change it was completely within my control. I say sad, but really it was liberating. Deliciously, terrifyingly liberating. And so I made a New Year's Resolution. I resolved that 2015 would be a year of HONESTY. No more lying to myself. No more keeping truths from others.
This new honesty evolved and shifted, taking many different forms in my life. Though I had committed to speaking my truth, I was still the same girl that I had always been. A.big.fat.chicken. I discovered a tool early on in the year that saved my resolution from dying a sad and untimely death. I discovered that the truth flowed out of me like water when I used the written word.
I began to use this arrow in my quiver slowly and tentatively, realizing in layers the versatility that this voice gave me. I used it to blog about some of the most tender, sacred, or harrowing moments in my life. My goal was to share my truth so that others might benefit from a shared experience, but also because I knew it made me feel emotionally connected to my greater network of friends, family, and acquaintances. Each post that I wrote caused anxiety and several reconsiderations of whether to make myself that vulnerable to the outside world. As I was tempted to shrink from sharing, I remembered that vulnerability is one of the purist forms of honesty. Therefore, vulnerability, as terrifying as it inherently is, creates healthy emotional bonds. So, I shared.
I used my tool of writing to speak the truth inside of me to people who I was not yet friends with, but so sincerely wanted to be. Making friends has never come easily to me, and the dishonesty of keeping truths to myself that should have been shared had made it virtually impossible over the years. With my resolution, sometimes it was all I could muster to send a terrifying, child-like text that said "Hey. I think you are great. I want to be your friend". Other times I would write to tell someone a truth that I felt they needed to hear. These formed messages, texts, and notes filled with the amazing qualities I saw in the people around me. As I shared with them, I felt relationships grow stronger. Other times, the truth that needed to be spoken was an uncomfortable one. There were times when someone wronged me through insensitive or blatant words or acts. The old me would swallow this truth, holding it in my stomach until it made me feel physically sick. As I found the courage to say these truths to the appropriate party in a mature way, I felt the liberation of honesty. True to form, miraculously, these truths created stronger emotional relationships as well.
I learned to be more honest with my husband and my family, my most favorite relationships that I possess. I said the truths about how I felt about them as often as I could think of them. I allowed them to see me as I truly am, as difficult as that was at times. The discoveries we made along the way from being honest have taken us from the a place of futility and darkness to a place of light, hope, and progress.
Being honest with myself was the hardest skill to learn. I am human, and therefore, I am made up of many beautiful and weak parts. I took myself apart, piece by piece. I owned the weak parts so that I could understand them for what they were and learn to improve them if I could, or navigate my life within them if I must. The beautiful parts were as hard to face as the weak ones. Probably more so, actually. Statements of truth about my personal strengths left me with "Who do you think you are?" feelings. I decided to push through, so that I could hone the talents that God gave me. As I learned to analyze these beautiful and weak parts of me, and see them for what they really were, the emotional bond I felt with myself increased ten-fold. I felt more mercy for my weaknesses and more admiration for my strengths. It sounds funny to say, but I found a greater friend in myself than I found in anyone else during this year.
As 2015 draws to a close, I raise my glass of sparkling cider in a toast to the things I learned this year. Here's to vulnerability, and raw honesty. They are game changers. I look forward to the journey that 2016 has in store for me. One thing is for sure. Its going to be a wild ride.
Four and half years ago, I was diagnosed with a tumor inside my spinal cord. It's called a Ependymoma. A seven and half hour surgery at the University of Utah Neuroscience Hospital removed the tumor but my left leg was numb. It took me a year to learn how to walk and today I'm doing okay but continue to have my left leg numb. It's a battle everyday but I'm grateful I am not paralyzed.
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