I am a nurse and I used to work on a medical/surgical floor where a lot of our patients were post surgery. Often I would have patients that would be frustrated with the pain they were experiencing or the activity limitations that would be thrust upon them after a procedure. It was if they had expected that surgery would fix everything. Go in with an infected gall bladder, come out sans gall bladder and voila! - healed. Back to life as it once was. Maybe that's an over simplification, but we do tend to be a society that moves more and more towards instant gratification, and that thinking seems to play out in a lot of different areas in our lives.
I would always tell my patients, "Recovery is a marathon, not a sprint." Today we'll focus on pain control, tomorrow let's get up and walk to the bathroom then sit up in the chair. And the next day, let's go for a stroll in the halls. It's one day at a time, baby steps. It's an unrealistic expectation of ourselves to heal in instant after an invasive procedure... or trauma.
So why do I expect to be healed right now? (Yesterday, if I were being completely truthful.) My heart was broken, my trust betrayed, and some of my innocence stripped away. All of that takes time and the mysterious power of grace to repair. There are no quick fixes or hidden short cuts. I have to sift through all the junk, peel back the layers of shame, guilt, disappointment and confusion that have covered my heart and invaded my soul. Clean it all out and make room for forgiveness and hope to take root once more. But it can't be rushed. I cannot force it into submission no matter how strong my desire for peace and wholeness. Recovery is a marathon, not a sprint.
It actually took me two years to find the strength and courage to leave an unhealthy situation. Two years. A lifetime in someways. It was the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back that moved me to action. A ridiculous argument over taking down the Christmas tree. And in an instant I knew, enough is enough. No more.
But I often feel so guilty and ashamed that I stayed so long in a place that I knew was tearing me down and extinguishing my light, when all it took was a push from a Christmas tree to move me forward. What kept me there? Hope? Weakness? Fear? Naiveté? Pride? Denial? All of the above?
Maybe.
Or how about none of the above. What if my soul needed time to gather the strength necessary to stand up and find my inner voice? What if it was just a whisper at first, so faint and quiet that not even my heart could hear it amidst the turmoil -a spark that needed to be fueled into a flame? I needed that time. Time to build up my strength for the hard times that would lie ahead. Time to restore my confidence to know that I deserved more. Time to repair my boundaries. Time to get ready. Recovery is a marathon, not a sprint.
And now, I need more time. Time to heal, time to rebuild and restore, time to repair my innocence and trust. Time to release the bitterness and anger. Time to grieve. Time to remember who I am, and to become who I am yet to be. One day at a time, baby steps. Recovery is a marathon, not a sprint.
I would always tell my patients, "Recovery is a marathon, not a sprint." Today we'll focus on pain control, tomorrow let's get up and walk to the bathroom then sit up in the chair. And the next day, let's go for a stroll in the halls. It's one day at a time, baby steps. It's an unrealistic expectation of ourselves to heal in instant after an invasive procedure... or trauma.
So why do I expect to be healed right now? (Yesterday, if I were being completely truthful.) My heart was broken, my trust betrayed, and some of my innocence stripped away. All of that takes time and the mysterious power of grace to repair. There are no quick fixes or hidden short cuts. I have to sift through all the junk, peel back the layers of shame, guilt, disappointment and confusion that have covered my heart and invaded my soul. Clean it all out and make room for forgiveness and hope to take root once more. But it can't be rushed. I cannot force it into submission no matter how strong my desire for peace and wholeness. Recovery is a marathon, not a sprint.
It actually took me two years to find the strength and courage to leave an unhealthy situation. Two years. A lifetime in someways. It was the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back that moved me to action. A ridiculous argument over taking down the Christmas tree. And in an instant I knew, enough is enough. No more.
But I often feel so guilty and ashamed that I stayed so long in a place that I knew was tearing me down and extinguishing my light, when all it took was a push from a Christmas tree to move me forward. What kept me there? Hope? Weakness? Fear? Naiveté? Pride? Denial? All of the above?
Maybe.
Or how about none of the above. What if my soul needed time to gather the strength necessary to stand up and find my inner voice? What if it was just a whisper at first, so faint and quiet that not even my heart could hear it amidst the turmoil -a spark that needed to be fueled into a flame? I needed that time. Time to build up my strength for the hard times that would lie ahead. Time to restore my confidence to know that I deserved more. Time to repair my boundaries. Time to get ready. Recovery is a marathon, not a sprint.
And now, I need more time. Time to heal, time to rebuild and restore, time to repair my innocence and trust. Time to release the bitterness and anger. Time to grieve. Time to remember who I am, and to become who I am yet to be. One day at a time, baby steps. Recovery is a marathon, not a sprint.
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