Song from Revive on sunday:
"You make me brave
You make me brave
You call me from the shore into the waves...
No fear can hinder now that love has made a way.
You make me brave...."
Wow....sobriety is damn hard! So many of the women who come to BJM are active in addiction - drugs and alcohol. Others are in recovery - for years or months or a few days. Still others are engaged in a life-and-death battle today...right now.
Drugs and alcohol provide many women with the ability to cope with daily life in the Tenderloin. When clinicians diagnose clients, one of the areas they explore is that of "life stressors." Stressors are categorized - problems with lack of money, emotional and personal support, family problems, problems with housing and food, employment or health.
Daily life in the Tenderloin is like a case study in life stressors. The one constant in just about everyone's life is "not enough."
The folks up at Bethel's Transformation Center in Redding, California have been working on a support group model for people living with drug and alcohol addiction. last time I saw Yvonne, I said, "Write faster!!!"
Been thinking about addiction. People here say they use drugs and alcohol to be numb. To survive the cold nights or dangerous streets without feeling.
How inviting "numb" must be to anyone living in the Tenderloin. Yet, I have spent my own time living "numb." Thinking about the many ways Jesus has carried me during my life through "numb" into "feeling a little" and gradually into "being present and able to be myself."
Being present is scary and often painful. Who wants to feel sadness and loss? Not me! Numbness doesn't seem so bad....a small price to pay for reprieve from pain. Yet, that numbness steals joy. And leaves us feeling empty and alone. Lures us with lies of control...."you can control this situation....you can feel again anytime you want....Being numb and checked-out is better than the alternative."
In healing prayer we often ask God, "Father, what lies am I believing?" In the past, a lie I believed was "being numb is better than feeling." And, "you're safer when you're numb."
some people believe God doesn't care. Or that He cares but, somehow, can't help. Still others believe they deserve their pain because of the things they've done. One woman said, "My liver's shot and I don't know if the doctors can help me. But, I drank for a lot of years. I guess I deserve it."
At BJM we often find ourselves having conversations about the nature of God. Over and over we confront the lie that God wills bad things to happen. Many women have been told about a fickle, punishing God who "gives people" liver failure or depression or mental illness to punish or "teach me a lesson." Over and over, we find ourselves saying. "God is Good. GOOD. Everything he does is good. Sickness and depression and mental illness or addition aren't good. So, they aren't from God. Period. End of story!"
One gift that happens at BJM is to create a place where women can feel again. A safe place where "numb" isn't the only way to avoid pain. We open a spiritual space of acceptance and love - where someone trapped in addiction can find peace and safety. Where someone who has retreated into themselves to escape from pain can rest. And slowly begin to peek out at life once again.
When God is waiting outside that door of numbness ....or when He will slip inside the closed door if a woman is willing... then it isn't so terrifying to think of trading numbness for life. Of taking the risk of slowly, slowly S-l-o-w-ly learning who we are and stepping out to be our real selves.
Jesus carries us through. He finds us lost in numbness and dissociation. Lost in self-protection and fear. He gently touches our hearts. He offers to wait with us - for as long as it takes - until we want to move again. Breathe again. Until we're ready to consider what feeling alive might be like again.
Sobriety IS hard. Yet, God knows that. And I believe Love can make a way.
There are so many similarities between TL challenges and S. Tucson. Would love to come to San Fran to catch up, share strategies, see the ocean. Much love, Nina
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