Thursday, February 6, 2014

I'm Not Who I Was

One of the marketing slogans for my study abroad organization is "Your World: Redefined," referring to different aspects of life that are redefined abroad, such as public transportation, lunch time, weekends, or whatever it may be.  This led to many jokes in my program, mostly around varying Chinese standards of bathroom cleanliness.  What IES can't tell you, is how true this may actually be, for more than bathrooms, etiquette, and sense of time.

I'm not who I was.

The hardest part of my abroad journey was coming back to Hope and realizing that the place that I left, and the person that I was then are gone and that they aren't coming back.  Reality set in after the initial face of running and screaming and hugging and unfulfilled (and fulfilled) promises for coffee dates.  My stories weren't dramatic in the way some people may have expected.  I could barely articulate anything.

Since September, I've gone through periods of intensely desiring pre-China Karen.  She seemed so much more confidant of who she was and where her life was going.  For me, coming home from abroad also aligned nicely with the beginning of the senior questioning, "So what are you actually going to do with your life like immediately in the next year when everything you've known for the last four years changes?"  The time that being at college was all that mattered is gone.  The kicker is that I had an answer to this question before I went to China, and then that got turned on its face.  I don't know who I am or what I'm made to do anymore.  (This is an exaggeration.  I have ideas and things that I'm pursuing right now, but these questions are still pressing).

I've spent way too much time and energy wishing for things to be different.  Also, just because things aren't the way I want them to be doesn't mean that I've done something wrong to deserve it.  This is severely limiting God's sovereignty and loving character.

I'm not going to have any huge ideas of what I'm doing for the next few years.  The feeling of unsettled turbulence probably isn't going to get significantly better, I'll just figure things out a little at a time.  However, I have the choice to be upset about it or not.  I can dig in my heels and protest leaving my home sweet Hope, or I can look back at the incredibly ways God has proven His grace, sovereignty and tendency to blow my expectations out of the water, and know that He has the next thing coming, and that right now is a time to trust Him.

God replaces the anxiety, the doubt with desire for more of who He is.  With His presence comes peace and contentment.  (Philippians 4)

I'm not who I was, and I can be upset about it or I can move forward with it, trusting that I'm being refined, for good even if it's at an alarming rate.  My life changed so utterly completely that it's taken awhile to figure it all out.  I finished a journal recently, and on the last page I wrote down a few things that I'm going to leave behind in that journal.  I closed the book, and made the choice not to let myself by held captive by those lies anymore.  Life with God is an adventure, and I'm thankful for where I've been and who it's making me to be.

1 comment:

  1. Oh Karen! I love you so much, and I love your willingness to share where you're at, whether it's good, bad, or ugly, lol. And I just want to share with you a little bit of my own life questionings. I'm here in Costa Rica, doing exactly what I said I'd do, and what I wanted to do, after graduation. Through these past four-ish months (has it only been four-ish months?!?!), I have been wondering what the next steps are for me, and if this is really the path I should continue to follow. What I mean is, I'm coming face-to-face with the question "Where do you want me to go next, God?" and not having a clear-cut answer is still pretty scary.

    One thing my dad has told me several times since I got here is that it is infinitely easier for God to change your path while you're walking than to try and change a stationary person. So my huge advice to you, is to just go. Don't get caught up in trying to find THE thing God has for you after college. Just go. If it's right, it's right, if it's wrong, it's wrong, if it's a little bit right, you have more of an idea of what to look for next. The best part is, God will ALWAYS be able to use your experiences to mold you and shape you into who he wants you to be. So my advice? Just go.

    I love you Karen, and thank you for sharing your thoughts and your heart with us! Miss you!!! xoxox

    Kiki

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