Indwelling my words


I use my words. This is the theme of my blog.

I use my words and I’ve also misused them. In pursuit of a good life, I’ve relied on words to create my reality. Indeed, I’ve written my way into a new reality.

But have I neglected living this good life?

Two Fridays ago, I found out I didn’t have cancer. Later, I found myself alone in a bar, staring into a martini glass. I felt a deep, dark wave of uncertainty wash over me. I felt discouraged.

I stared into my martini glass and I wondered: what good are my words if, after using them all, I am still sitting alone in a doctor’s office waiting to hear if I have cancer? Words cannot protect me from stark reality.

Words, in the end, can only point to reality. Reality itself must be experienced directly and although using my words has helped point me toward reality, I must also indwell them.

The Word became flesh. And then what? The Word dwelt among us. It wasn’t enough for the eternal Logos to become human. The Word lived the human experience.

Words make me human, but now I must take the second step and indwell them.

My fault is not in using words or even misusing them. The illusion I built was in believing that words alone could create the connection and community I longed to live. I’ve written my way into an authentic state of being, but I haven’t balanced that with dwelling in it. It’s like writing about love without ever experiencing love itself.

What good are words if they do not create authentic connection? Why have I invested so much time and energy into the online world—seeking connection—while right next to me are living, breathing human beings also seeking connection?

That was the illusion I saw. I saw the illusion of online connection. Which is to say, the illusion of online connection that never goes beyond words on this screen.

I want more of the going-beyond-the-screen. I want more indwelling. More realness.

And yes, my words have done good: 60+ children in Bolivia were sponsored last year as a result of my words. My daughter can attend ballet school this summer because my words touched some of you. Using my words brought me a literary agent. And now, I’m using my words to live my lifelong dream: writing a book.

Even so, I want to make sure I’m not only writing my words, I’m living them.

We are, perhaps, living in the most “connected” time in history. We have Facebook and Twitter and blogs and YouTube. But with all our “connection,” we are still isolated. I see it every single day at the restaurant where I wait tables: young couples come in and spend half their time together staring into their cell phones.

Online connection means nothing if it does not give birth to real life community. And what is community? It is a place beyond words. It is the living and the serving and the loving of those right beside you. It is the dwelling among others.

Upon receiving the Nobel Peace Prize, Mother Teresa was asked how to accomplish world peace. “Go home and love your family,” she said.

Go home and love your family.

This is how we create community.

I am guilty of becoming far too attached to my blog, my stats, my “readership,” my “platform,” my “influence.” This all means nothing if I do not have the checks and balances of a real-life community keeping me honest, keeping me humble. I must balance using my words with living my words.

Jesus lived the Word and it was His Way of living the Word that changed everything.

Words without indwelling are powerless.

In the bar, my phone buzzes. It’s my husband texting me.

“Come home now.”

So, I do. I go home and love my family.

This is where indwelling begins.

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  • olya

    SO  TRUE!!!!

    • Maryann Faro

       Great post and it dovetails with challenges  in my own life. I’m not a blogger, but I’m blessed that my husband and I can afford for me to stay home and write a novel. It’s finished, but needs major work. During the day, I’ve been cutting old parts and writing new parts while taking breaks to read blogs. At night, while my husband sits next to me, I read blogs about writing and novels. This routine has been making me feel isolated and obsessed.

      A few nights ago, when my husband stumbled in our dark bedroom, he said something about being blind. And I bolted up and said, “What would happen if I became blind and can’t write?”

      “Well Maryann,” he said, “if you’re worried about that, here’s what you have to do.” I expected him to go on about learning braille. But instead he said something like (I’m paraphrasing): You have to make God first in your life. That’s why I go to Mass each morning before work…it helps me put God first, otherwise I’d worry about my job all the time. When you put God first, you’ll let go of the fear that you won’t be able to write. And you’ll let go of your other fear that no one will like what you write. All the rewriting you do, and reading blogs about writing…I think it’s your anxiety. When you put God first completely, you won’t stop writing, but you’ll have more fun with it and not fear losing it. Because writing won’t be your God.

      If anyone else had said this, I would have been offended. But because my husband loves me, and lives with me, I know his words were kind and true. He didn’t say stop writing–he’s the one supporting my writing, both financially, and, by his steady presence, emotionally.

      But if I spend more time thinking about imaginary characters than I spend thinking about the real people who love me, something is wrong. If I love word more than The Word, something is wrong. And now I’m trying to change that. When I went on line and saw your blog, I was so glad to see your new post. But when my husband comes home, the blogs and my book will be put away. Thank you for articulating some of the reasons I should set better boundaries with my (cyber)space and my time.

      • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_4QMUQWAZLLY4IXV7UKUW42HTSQ jeanelane

         Boundaries are so important to all of us.  I like the picture other people have written/spoken about with God putting fences around us.  The fences are far away because his limits are actually our freedom.  We feel so free to go wherever we want.  And we are safe.  But before we are at that place, we must put God first, we must choose God.  Then he places us in that great big wide long pasture where we can be free.

        Ask God for help in setting those boundaries.  If you do, he will.

  • Anonymous

    Your words echo in me this morning. God bless us both.

  • http://howtotalkevangelical.addiezierman.com/ Addie Zierman

    Beautiful words. I have been feeling this too lately — the veneer of the online friendships. The importance and beauty of all these words flying around the internet and the frustration that comes when they don’t translate to day-to-day life. I’d never heard those words from Mother Teresa, but they are wonderful and true and so easy to forget. Thank you.

  • http://faithandfood.morizot.net/ Scott Morizot

    I have to confess the thing that leaped out to me in your post was the fact that you were sitting in the doctor’s office alone waiting for the results. Maybe that’s a difference in the culture of the South and the culture of California. Even when we had small children, there’s never been a point in my life when in a serious situation there wasn’t someone who could watch the kids.

    It’s not, strictly speaking, connected to Christianity. Some of our friends and neighbors over the years have been Christian. Others haven’t. (Heck, at different points I have or haven’t been.) But there does seem to be an underlying cultural expectation that you help in such situations. We’ve had people watch our kids while we’ve dealt with things and the same has been true in return. And we’re both relatively reserved people who don’t make friends particularly easily and who don’t necessarily know a lot of people around us.

    I know it’s hard with a bunch of kids, but I guess I was surprised that nobody was available to watch them so your husband could be with you in that doctor’s office. Just from your descriptions of him, I’m sure that’s where he wanted to be.

    The South has tons of flaws; don’t get me wrong on that point. It’s hardly some idyllic place. Racism still permeates the air we breathe. Sexism and even outright misogyny are not uncommon. Violence — though an often strangely cordial violence — lurks barely beneath the surface. Even so, there are aspects of our culture I wouldn’t one to lose and I think that’s one of them.

  • http://teamaidan.wordpress.com/2012/05/21/belonging/ heather

    Lots of truth here and I think like in most things it’s about balance. You stated that great things have been accomplished because of your contribution to online community and yet that really can’t replace “real life.”  I’ve certainly been guilty of that stats checking and the “I can’t really attend to you right now because I just have to write.” Ugh. Convicting.

    I just posted about the similar theme of belonging and building friendships and the extra challenge of doing that when you don’t have words.
    Thanks for sharing.

  • HeatherKopp

    Elizabeth, I loved this and I related so much. SO much. This blog thing is so easy to get hooked into–pretty soon your mood rises and falls on whether or not you think your blog was good that day. So silly. I am constantly working on letting go. I think for the type of person who blogs–blogging is automatically a challenge. The personality required to do it is the same personality that is bound to struggle with ego attachment and striving and all that good stuff that helps us win but makes us crazy and miserable if we buy into it. Thanks for such a lovely reminder that is so thoughtful and kind, too. You have such a beautiful soul. Love ya, Heather

  • http://heretichusband.blogspot.com/ Heretic Husband

    I considered disagreeing with you and saying that perhaps you were being a bit hard on yourself.  Then I realized that having that thought just proved your point.

    How the hell do I know if you’re being hard on yourself or not?  I DON’T KNOW YOU.  Not really.  I know you more than if I didn’t read this blog, obviously.  But not well enough to determine if you’ve accurately diagnosed a problem in your life or if you’re just beating yourself up for no reason.

  • http://jamiewrightcr.blogspot.com/ Anonymous

    Love this. Love you…. like, for real, in real life. :)  

  • http://ashleighbaker.net Ashleigh Baker

    So true. So very true. Love your reflections. 

  • http://invisibleforeigner.com/ Hannah

    This is lovely. But I do think that words, especially on the internet, have a great capacity to connect people who would otherwise find themselves alone. Sometimes community, home, and family would not exist without the words that fill the great distance between us.

  • Mark S.

    Balance indeed.  Great reflection. Interesting dichotomy to consider in that you write and we read (and comment). Two different acts with 2 different impacts. I need to read what you and others write because I often feel the nudge of the Holy Spirit in them and am challenged to act on them. You write as prompted by your nudges. We all need to remember to keep things balanced, real and ordered in importance. My only other thought is that although we are a virtual community, we ARE real, just not seeing each other face to face. Challenging but not something I want to diminish in my life as if there are classes of friendship. Lots of people we dont see face-to-face, starting with God down through my nieces, nephews and folks I really do know on line as much as I know people who live on my block. All are part of the mosaic of my life journey. Blessings to you and your family!

  • Amicarr

    oh wow! Thank EE! I love this. It makes perfect sense. I have struggled with this the last few weeks too. Now to figure out how to live in the real world. I have relied on my new “virtual friends” so much lately! Thanks for posting and for sharing your life with us!
    Ami

  • http://staceydaze.blogspot.com/ Stacey

    Found my way over here through a twitter link, hey!

    I recently realized I was doing similar. I was writing. And I was living. But I wasn’t doing both. Now I write what I live, and some days it is still a struggle, but it’s better. Having people I have to face after I write words has made a huge difference in the words I write.

  • http://crazybeautifulohmy.blogspot.com/ Charity

    Amen sister!

  • http://bunkersdown.com/ Ami

    I really loved this post, especially the quote from Mother Teresa.  I need reminders like this from time to time so that I can realign my priorities.

  • Handsfull

    I have often noticed that it’s the ones who live the furtherest away who are the most generous with offers of help when I need it – possibly because they know they can never be taken up on their offers! 
    On-line community is great, and can definitely be life-changing.  But we so badly need real-life community, and somehow that can be harder to create.
    I have only a tiny fragment of family outside of the cult I left, and that fragment is mostly on the other side of the world.  I have women in my life who say that I’m like their sister… but I’m not.  They don’t treat me like they treat their sisters.  They don’t tell me the things they tell their sisters.  And it hurts every time they say that.  Because it’s one thing to be ‘like’ family, but it’s very, very different to actually ‘be’ family.  I notice the differences… I don’t think they do, because they have real family.  They’re not reliant on me for ‘sister’ stuff, whereas I am reliant on them.  And there’s no way to explain to them what my experience is.
    That saying that ‘friends are the family you chose’ is a lie, in my experience.  All of my friends would put their family first before me – and they should!  The difference is, that I don’t have anyone who puts me first because I’m their daughter or sister or aunt… thank God for my husband, who DOES put me first!

  • KatR

    I’m glad you took a break! I will say, though, that by about day four my inner whiner was all “I miss Elizabeth’s blooggggggggg”. :) I do miss your words.

  • http://kathyharter.blogspot.com/ Kathy Harter

    Love the post….i often forget the very people that are right under my nose. Thank your for you honesty and your words.

  • Luis

    Wonderful piece.

    Once lost, and now found. No need to cut oneself to firing back feeling to a conscience. The very best thing about a bonafide journey into depression is the ascension from the depth. I’d like to think of it as the true test of one’s faith. Don’t cut the journey short, nor alter it with meds. When one successfully resurfaces, they know to living within the filament is where there true self can blossom best. You are a gift you husband has received.

    Wonderful.

    Your children are blessed in having a loving home.