The kids were playing at the playground late in the day during sunny July while Nano and I sat to watch... and that was when the man walked up. He had the friendliest smile you’ve ever seen and ready to make some afternoon friends. Soon enough after he had sent his grandchildren off to play, we learned much about his upbringing working with his family to farm cucumbers and keep the woodpile stocked for the cook stove and for warmth all through the winter.
He talked about life growing up as one in the group of ten children, some of the dynamics of the relationship between him and his father, and his journey through blaming and forgiving.
We learned that his father had been hard on his children, that he knew nothing of the idea of resting while the sun was still up. And nothing of the idea of getting a bite of food after school until the sunlight to work by had set and gone dark. And that much greater than connection and personal caring, his father had been focused on survival and teaching his children hard work through strict discipline and firm expectations.
We were told his father lived past a hundred and that in his last couple years of life, our friend got to live with and care for his father as he lived out his last days. And how those last days left fond memories and how his own heart that had once felt bitterness about the story he had grown up in, found contentment in the story he had gotten to live and appreciation for the person his father was.
He told it all so casually, yet not, as if he deeply knew all of life was a miracle. And it glowed across his face in a way where it was easy to tell how genuine his joy really was.
His name was Willy.
His presence and his story preached a sermon with no instruction. What Willy had to share came through story and joy and hands that didn’t grip on to a wish or demand of what the story should have been, but learned through a life to openly receive and appreciate what the story was. You could tell that even while he didn’t try to wash away the hard things that happened, that he saw and loved the beauty of the souls within the story.
I would think most anyone would look at him and the way he looks at his own life and that mostly anybody would want to be able to look at their life that way too.
To look at the things in a lifetime and the million things in all kinds of relationships that should not have gone the way they did, and to look on it all with a soul that knows there is grace and miracle in the whole experience just as it is and while we will not ignore the pain, what we will remember most is the beauty.
I think over many situations in my life and many relationships where I have struggled and can struggle deeply to let go of how the story was supposed to go in my book.
And ultimately, if what Willy has , is what I want in my own life, if his same perspective is the outlook I want to have for every relational interaction in my life that could have gone better, I wonder what is happening inside me when I want to grip on to the idea that *this is not how it was supposed to go.* Whether due to my own failing and weakness, or that of another, or perhaps likely due to a combination of all of our imperfections and struggles, whether due to all kinds of things that I just can’t understand or to misplaced hopes and expectations, so many things in life end up looking miles away from what we hoped for. I’m curious what is happening in my heart when it feels impossible to make peace with the realization that the story did not go the way that I was sure it was supposed to go.
And in sitting with that curiosity and the truth of the Word, in sitting with things I know to be beautiful and true, this question is more simple than it feels at first.
It is not an abnormal part of the human experience to struggle deeply with moving through the parts of the story that did not go according to plan. It is not unusual to deeply struggle with accepting things about life that are not understandable.
One thing I am trying to remember is that Willy, himself, is not a young man. He is moving towards his sunset years and he has been learning to move through it in a lifetime, not overnight. He didn’t describe a moment when he simply flipped a switch and never struggled with accepting the story ever again. I don’t think I would believe anyone who told such a story. But Willy’s story was believable and genuine and he described a story that involved a continual turning of his heart back and again to the Word and what is true, a story that happened over time.
It is normal for our hearts to have a need to keep being turned in the direction we want them to go. We will continually have moments in this life where we struggle with blame or shame or refusal to accept the story that is.
We can’t end our bent toward that, but we can name the arrows in life that point toward where we want to go and we can keep turning our sights that way.
In those places where we don’t know how to accept the story, we have a real need for gentle compassion, a real need to be intentional with the specific needs of the heart inside us, and a real need to receive what life is teaching us in the places where we need help learning to trust God with the story that is out of our control.
In the middle of unsolved stories, the heart needs compassion and empathy.
Nobody can heal without compassion and nobody gives it like our God. (Psalm 78:38-39) While God, our loving Father, will not pull us out of situations that we have a need to go through in order to learn and grow, God provides the covering for our wrong in Jesus and promises to never leave us or forsake us even as we go through the fire of a fallen world and the brokenness of our own weakness.
His Spirit is there to remind us of His presence, His Word is there to remind us of His promise, His people are there if we look for them, people of the Cross committed to Love, who are not perfect, but who keep coming back to how much compassion they themselves have been given and will help us feel God’s empathy through their love and care and the truth of our beloved-ness.
Our heavenly Father’s compassion through all these means He graciously gives, will provide us level ground, firm foundation. The strength and grace we need to root our hearts in healing places and access His constant, steady flow of love that will never waver or weaken.
In unsolved stories, the heart will likely have need to grieve and let herself feel the pain of the loss of the version of the story that she is letting go of.
God is close to those who mourn (Mt. 5:4) and a heart that doesn’t feel is a heart that can grow hard. (Ps. 119:70) When parts of the story confuse our hearts and turn us around, it is natural for feelings of grief to want to ride through our bodies. As we grow in allowing each wave of grief to ride through us, not fighting against it, or numbing out to it, that grief is always a gentle invitation drawing us closer to the heart of our God who is so close to us in those places.
As we recognize those waves of grief and work with them, not against them, our energy is freed up and as each wave of feeling is allowed to pass through we have new energy to think more clearly on the other side.
In unsolved stories, the heart may need help and time to settle in herself on whether or not she has done everything she can to live at peace with everyone as far as it depends on her.
(Rom. 12:18)
We’re called to see the active parts of making peace that lie within our own court and to step into those things, even as we learn to let go of the things that fall outside of that. As we learn, it’s normal for it to take time to discern and learn through practice and counsel what lies within our own court and what does not.
At times, it may take whole seasons and caring counsel to settle within ourselves on whether we’ve done what we can to take care of the pieces of the story that are ours to step into.
While we cannot undo anything that’s been done, we can pray, seek the Word and the insight of good friends as we assess, take steps, and settle within ourselves that we are taking care of our part in the story for today and learning to let go of the rest.
In unsolved stories, the heart needs stillness and insight to help her see the truth about her situations and the truth about where her heart is.
The deceptive parts of our hearts can so easily lead us to start seeing a false version of the story rather than the story as it stands in reality. As we keep bringing our thoughts to what is really and simply true about our stories and to what is beautiful about them (Phil 4:8) it is easier to have clarity in our situations. And as we are honest with ourselves, our people and God about where our hearts really are, it is easier to know what is needed for our next step and to have gratitude as we take it.
When in doubt, the Word and prayer can always help us to see the truth and our own hearts better. Psalm 139:23-24.
In unsolved stories, the heart needs grace to lean back into trust again and again while her heart will want to lean on it’s own understanding.
(Prov. 3:5)
While there are many healthy things we can do and rhythms we can engage to try to learn from as we grow in understanding and learning from our own stories, it’s also true that when I exercise a compulsive need to try to understand the story, I am not trusting God with all my heart. If we understood everything about the story, there would be no need to trust. Yet trust is what God invites us to as the place that opens our hearts and it is the very place where He astounds us with His grace and faithfulness.
We don’t need to understand when we can hold onto His hand. And we can keep turning from a relentless craving to understand, to a relentless trust in God as a good Father.
In unsolved stories, the heart needs hope and time in learning to hold space for all the beauty of possibility without knowing anything except that God promises to work all things for good.
(Rom. 8:28)
When it’s hard to hold onto hope, we can hold tight to God’s promises and find hope in them. We can’t really know how the story will go. But we can know of a surety that God will work it all for good. The words we wish we hadn’t said, the choice we made that we thought would lead us one place and instead brought a thousand question marks, the hurt we felt in that situation, and the places where we did the best we knew to love but it didn’t seem that love was communicated at all… the promise to all the called of God who love Him, is that He will work it all together for the good of His story. And God’s promise never fails.
In unsolved stories, the heart needs receive grace to seek the kingdom of God in today and lovingly take the next step to care for her own.
We’ll keep asking for our daily bread, (Mt. 6:11) the provision we need for today, and we’ll let His hands hold tomorrow. We’ll seek the kingdom that is among us, both in the life of the soul inside us and in the souls around us. There is Love flowing through today, inviting us to come along. To look into the eyes of the people beside us and see miracles standing there. For here in the spaces between us are highways upon which Love travels from soul to soul and the Kingdom keeps coming down with a glorious call that is eternal. So we’ll keep knowing how loved we are, we’ll do what is ours to do and we’ll step on in the Kingdom that gives our moments eternal purpose.
We’ll get it wrong in so many ways, but what we can always do is recognize when we’re off course and keep turning our hearts back again to these arrows we can name, the way we want to go. The way of love, healing and forgiveness that our hearts were always made for.
And Willy remembered our names as he said goodbye that day. And as we drove away from there with three little ones buckled in, his smile kept stirring up stories inside me. And as we wrapped up our day I was grateful. Thank you, Willy, for sharing a piece of your heart and life with us. We like the way you see.
So we’ll aim to see life like you do. We’ll take the beauty that is here to enjoy in the story just as it is now, and we’ll enjoy the beauty of ourselves and each other just as we all are today. Grace will be enough for us and as we keep on turning to God’s own heart poured out, His Love will keep clearing our vision to see the miracle of the story that is and the utter gift of the souls within it.