Monday, September 30, 2013

PART 2 - THE BEST LAID PLANS....



  We chose in the beginning not to share much about Ed’s illness with many people and we never shared all of the details of what we had been told to expect as the disease progressed because we needed to live as normally as possible for our church and for our family.  We told our church family the name of the disease and that a transplant would eventually be needed but that we were believing for healing.  In most instances, a PKD patient in renal failure will need to stop working at a certain point. Their energy levels just won’t hold up and stress only multiplies the symptoms.  As a pastor, of a small congregation, we didn’t have a staff to cover all of the responsibilities he carried.  Ed was determined to keep up.  Many nights he would come home and go straight to bed or fall asleep in his chair. Most of the time, when he was at home, he was asleep and he invested his waking hours into his responsibilities at church.  We knew that we couldn’t live this way forever, but we were still praying and believing for God to miraculously heal Ed and take this disease away.



That was our plan, we were waiting on God.



Plans make us feel safe.  We were created according to God’s plan.  Plans are good.  Plans allow us to live to our full potential and get more accomplished.  I like plans.  The problem is that I like to be the planner. It’s a problem that has plagued we humans from the get go. In the Garden, there was a plan in place. God’s plan for Adam and Eve gave them everything they needed to live to their full potential.   
    There were clear boundaries.... 
               They knew who they were in Him. 
               They knew they belonged to Him. 
                       And they knew what their part in the plan was.   
The problem came when Eve forgot all this and decided to make a plan of her own.  Eve made her own plans when the enemy tempted her to doubt the goodness of God’s plans for her.



 

  Sometime when life suddenly seems to spin out of control, it’s tempting to forget all about the good plans the Planner has already laid out for us. The boundaries that were once so clear can become so blurred when we forget who we are in Him, who we belong to, and what our part in His plan is. 



  When your spouse or someone you love is sick.  You feel the need to be strong for them. It’s not something you think about. You just do it.  You pull double duty when you need to and do everything you can to ease their burden so they can focus on getting well.   
     You stay strong for them
                            –for your kids
                                   – for the people who are depending on you    

But taking on this role can lead to some pretty blurry boundary lines if you’re not careful.   

   As we began to learn more about PKD, we began to discover some ways that we could try to keep Ed off dialysis and prolong the need for transplant for a period of time.  One way was a very difficult balancing act of a diet that limited certain foods completely while including some in small increments never to be combined with some others. To say it was complicated was an understatement and to a busy mom and pastor’s wife who thought she had climbed Mt. Everest by just getting a homemade dinner on the table that everyone would eat, it was overwhelming.  Knowing that what I gave my husband to eat could literally kill him (as if my cooking couldn’t before all this!) was a lot of pressure and I have never worked well under pressure.   
So to avoid feeling pressured, I controlled ....
                              –I became the Food Nazi. 
 My ideas of what he should be eating were my offering of forbidden fruit, so to speak, MY plan to make him well. 

   Sounds really unspiritual, and not just a little bit crazy to read these admitted “tactics”  as I type them here, but I was in survival mode – I had a good life, a good plan, and I needed to do everything I could to keep it in place.  In the end, none of my own tactics worked not only that, they led to frustration, more anxiety, and stress.  Eventually it became clear that God had his own plan in mind …and the best laid plans happen when we lay ours down and embrace His.
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