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October 22, 2017 By HallieZ 4 Comments

A Way Out

Love brings me a way out every. Single. Time.

I was working at an event this weekend, representing the company for which I recently started working. My brother owns this event, and I knew that some of my family members would be working there. I had emotionally prepared myself to see them, and, though anxious, felt pretty peaceful. The further we get into this being shunned thing, the more compassion I feel for them, and peace about seeing them in public. Maybe they don’t want my compassion, but they have it! Having EVERYTHING IN THE WHOLE WORLD figured out and BEING RIGHT ABOUT ALL THE SHIT is exhausting and unsustainable. Maybe it will work out for them, I don’t know.

So I was doing pretty well, better than I would have a few months ago.

Until.

My nieces and nephew walked by with an Aunt.

I last laid eye on them 3 months ago.

I last played with them more than a year ago.

I hardly recognized the 2 littlest. They certainly didn’t recognize me.

It was too much. Yeah. All the crying.

But what happened next?

Love showed up in a boss who offered me compassion and let me run away from my work for a bit.

Love showed up in a BFF who was already planning to stop and have lunch with me… timing ended up perfect, she got there right after I lost all composure, with a big, juicy burger. I got to sit in her van with her and breath and stuff my face and feel safe and loved.

Love showed up in a vendor/friend gifting me a massage in her booth… moving the pain and sorrow right out of my shoulders.

Love showed up in the lady who ran the booth across from me, saw me fall apart, and bravely asked me, a stranger, if she could help.

Love was there when I called my Grande and asked her if I could party with her on Thanksgiving, and she joyfully welcomed me into her holiday, warts and all.

Love interrupted my sobbing on the way home from work with a double rainbow that popped out for a just a second.

Things come and go in my life that feel to painful to survive.

I tell you this without reservation. When I stay open and look for LOVE, no matter what, it always finds me.

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: DEPRESSION, divorce, Grief, healing, kindness, love, Spiritual Abuse

September 26, 2017 By HallieZ 1 Comment

an open heart

One of the things I often wish is…

I wish I could be loved by more open hearts.

I wish a sister could hear my heart, offer me into the hands of God for judgement, and just be there for me. Just look at me. “Hold space” for me.

One of the hard works of healing that has been asked of me us to take the wishes of my heart, and flip the script.

Ask myself how I am giving the things I want for me, to others.

That’s looking like a kind of hard thing for me right now. So I am playing with some different ideas.

When I go into a shop, or store, I am often leaving my phone in the car.

This keeps my eyes up, my head up. It pushes my heart into interactive mode.

I don’t really like it most of the time. It is uncomfortable. I have a pretty strong, entrenched belief inside me that people are scary and cruel, and will betray me at every turn.

Don’t trust anyone. Ever. The end.

I was heading to Bend, sans kids, the other day. I stopped at a “crispy chicken” place along the freeway, thinking I would pick up a few chicken tenders real quick, and get back on the road. Um. No. The kitchen was mayhem, and I hadn’t realized how long the wait would be until I had already paid.

Panic was setting in. There were LOTS of men around me.

Young sportsing highschoolers, looking all mangy and greasy who obviously hadn’t slept in a few days. Every. Single. One. Ordered. A. milkshake.

A bunch of retirees coming in for coffee.

And some dudes my age.

I played some inner tapes in my heart and head. Spoke to my heart and told it to open and make space for the people around me.

Pep-talked myself out of running to my van and getting my phone.

I made eye contact with one guy who’s path normally wouldn’t cross mine.

We both remarked on how interesting we thought those “clam chowder bites” looked. He didn’t want to spend $8 on the experiment (neither did I ) and asked if I wanted to order it and split the cost and order.

Oh, I thought to myself, he’s one of those people who like community. Or something. Maybe he was at a music festival?

Just to clarify, he wasn’t hitting on me. He was ACTUALLY making friends. He was living with his heart wide open.

It felt so weird. Uncomfortable but really, really good.

I learned that he loves the band Modest Mouse. And sure enough, he’d been at their concert in Bend. With his pal. Who looked like more of a square. Turns out his pal is a Quaker. And a “right kind of f***ing guy”.

What even IS a modest mouse? I wondered to myself. Is he self-depreciating? Does she wear a one piece instead of a bikini? Maybe he just kind of covers his mouse parts with his sweet base guitar?

 

 

There was this other band, did I like them? I thought about all Laurie Berkner Band and Josh Garrells I usually listen to, and assured myself that this dude and I lived on different planets.

He dropped some parts of his sentences and conversations, damage from drug use? I wondered, and then immediately chastised myself.

He used to cook crack, he tells me. That was a while ago. But then he went to jail and is in recovery. And now he cooks this thing. He pulled it out of his pocket. I think it is #37 on the periodic table, but I’m going to have to as someone who knows this stuff better. “I melt it down and then mix it with ? and pour it over bent up forks and stuff and it just does what it wants to do”.

 

 

He pulled a couple out of his pocket and handed me one. “Merry Christmas! I sell those, but I want you to have one” and then he said a lot of words about some things I didn’t understand. So I just smiled.

The food was taking FOREVER. People were mad, some were swearing. My new friend was cheering on the kitchen staff “just keep doing the next thing! You got this! F*** it, I know how to work in a kitchen, want me to come in and help you? Because I WILL” and he MEANT it.

His square, Quaker friend was getting impatient.

“he’s mad because I’m enjoying myself!”

“sometimes you just gotta enjoy the detours, ya know?”

Some of his more complex thoughts got lost in his brain, and I could see his shame and frustration that he couldn’t access the thoughts he was wanting to share. He covered for his mistakes, and filled in the gaps with swear words. I don’t think he exactly wanted to use them, but that’s how he coped. So I sat with that thought.

I gave him $5, since that’s how much he usually charges for this little tiny artwork, and he goes “how about $10, then, if you’re handing money out?”  I laughed at him, and said, you wish!

I will probably never see him again. I love his open heart. And I am glad I left that phone in the car.

 

 

 

Filed Under: DEPRESSION, Grief, healing, kindness, love

August 26, 2017 By HallieZ Leave a Comment

When Peaches & Love Kill Fear

Peaches go way back in my story… at 10 years old, my family moved next to a peach farm. We ate peaches off the tree every morning for breakfast during August. Peaches for lunch. Peaches for dinner. And in between. We picked up the windfalls for pennies, and sometimes there was only an hour between the orchard and our canning jars. I think we canned more peaches than anything else, and that was ok by me and all my siblings, because it was our FAVORITE. Our mom had to ration those jars, because we would have eaten them every day!

I helped canned peaches one August, and got married and moved away the next, before they were ripe. That was 13 years ago. And I haven’t canned a peach since. My little sister gave me a bunch of jars for Christmas last year, and it was heaven.

A bitter sweet heaven, because I wasn’t allowed to celebrate with her or the rest of my family that Christmas, but still, the kids and I could taste her love in every bite.

Depression can take so much from a person. I haven’t been able to can any type of produce since I came back from China. I have all the gear, my mom saved a lot of stuff for me to get started when I got “home”. But I just couldn’t work up the energy to tackle it.

Canning means:

  1. finding fruit
  2. finding $
  3. washing jars (ew)
  4. cooperative kids
  5. blah blah blah blah

And I just couldn’t GET THERE.

This year, instead of feeling like I should can all the things, I had one goal.

PEACHES.

Can peaches.

I didn’t care how much or how little, I just needed to do it. And I’m sorry, but it seems like a freaking unattainable goal/hope.

Until I shared that goal/hope with a couple friends.

And that couple enthusiastically invited me to come can with them. And guess what? I didn’t want to. Because why? Well, I had to sit on that for a bit.

I didn’t want to because it felt really intimate. And intimacy brings me rejection and pain usually. And even though these people had never betrayed me, WHAT IF THEY DID?

Also, depression has been such a life sucker, I was afraid I would let them down. What if I just started crying or something? What if I sucked at canning? What if…

Yeah. It is an endless circle of anxiety and fear. Boo.

So this is where LOVE steps in.

I opened the gate of my heart, I accepted their kind and hopeful offer. I spent the last of my food stamps on some peaches and I loaded up my van with my jars.

And it was awesome. The Mr took all the burden off my shoulders and just told me what to do. He took the time to explain things I had forgotten and remind me of the process. We laughed and talked about stuff all over the place. The Mrs and I peeled and sliced an peeled and sliced… and 50 something quarts later, we were done for the day.

This morning I took my kids to the orchard where I had my first job as a peach weighing and selling girl, and we picked a bunch of peaches.

The kids went to their dad’s tonight, and I canned 3 canners full all by myself, jamming to some Broadway tunes. And it was no big deal. It was even kind of fun.

See what happened there?

Love with skin on came into my world and was patient through my fear and my worry and my depression and my paralysis.

Love had time and space and wasn’t afraid of me

Love walked beside me through a little thing like canning peaches.

Love took the fear out of the peaches and made them my friend.

Filed Under: DEPRESSION, healing, love, stuff i love

August 22, 2017 By HallieZ 9 Comments

My Depression in 3 Parts

I want to tell you a bit about my journey with depression.

  • Hello depression. Sucks to meet you
  • Maybe I’m better?
  • And… here we go again

It is scary to do this. Well, every blog post is scary for me. My experience in life tells me that vulnerability and telling your story will get you crucified. One of my life goals is to be vulnerable in a healthy way, and I really want to tell my story in a way that honors the stories of others.

I’ll just keep trying, one day at a time, and sometimes I will screw up, and sometimes I won’t, and I am going to daily choose to accept the grace and love and mercy that is offered to me as a gift, in my humanity.

  • Hello depression. Sucks to meet you

I’ve described her as a medusa.

Some people have had depression lurking about through most of their life.

Some meet it post partum.

Some people find that depression comes like a slow, creeping flood.

My depression came like a 20 foot tsunami.

I had been working off and on with a therapist for 2 years already, while I was living in China. We were working on a lot of different things, and I write more about that here.

Never had depression been on our radar, actually.

But then, there was a series of months, when my heart’s blinders came off, so to speak. The lens through which I had been looking at my world wasn’t clear any longer. The signs of trouble that I had been watching, recording, and trying to dismiss, could no longer be explained away.

I couldn’t leave China, to return to the USA for “help”, because, if I did, I would have to give up the adoption of my son, and that wasn’t an option for me.

The words “severe depression” were used over Skype, by a professional. For legal reasons, I couldn’t be diagnosed across state and national lines, via the internet, so we didn’t use the word DIAGNOSED at this time. But if I had been in the USA, I would have been diagnosed at that time.

This came in the midst of a depressive episode that had me virtually non-functional. I would get out of bed in the morning, get my kids fed, put a tv show on for them in my room, and climb back in bed. I would lay there, in a fetal position, crying, until they needed something, a diaper, food, whatever. I couldn’t answer emails. I couldn’t cook food. My body had moved into survival mode. I did JUST enough to keep us alive and keep my kids healthy, and no more. I wanted to die, but I loved my kids too much to leave them. In a way, they saved my life. Now I know this is a pretty common sentiment of parents with depression.

In China, SSRI’s like Zoloft (medication for depression) are available over the counter. I didn’t know where to get them, or how to ask for them. My therapist and doctor in the USA told me I needed to start medication ASAP, but it was really hard to accept that. It was also really hard to tell the Christians I knew that I needed help like this.

The religious culture in which I had been raised looked down on medication as ungodly and depression as something weaklings, with no faith in God, make up. This set a foundation of fear and anxiety that would take me a long time to unravel.

The expat Christian culture we were involved with never spoke of depression, unless it was a sort of “claiming” of happiness and feeling good. I had lived there for 7 years, and didn’t know of ANYONE who was on antidepressants, or admitted to experiencing depression. When I finally worked up the courage to call my missions director and tell her about it, she quickly said “if you had diabetes, and needed insulin, I would tell you to get it. You are sick, and you need medicine. TAKE THE MEDICINE!!!” I am forever grateful to her.

I asked a local friend to go get the medication for me, and she did. I remember her standing at my door, with the bag in her hand, and feeling like sobbing. I was screaming in my head.

“I am SICK, I want to be OK. I want to LIVE. DAMN IT, I WANT TO LIVE”.

Damn. It is really hard to write this.

The first pill on my tongue felt like a scream into a void, and like a tiny taste of oxygen. It felt like it might be hope.

There were a lot of people telling me it was bad to take this medication. Telling me I was sinning. Their voices piled on top of each other, and told me that I was weak and bad and small and unworthy of love or kindness, since I needed this medication. It hurt more deeply than I even know how to express.

I was in daily communication with 2 friends in America on a 3-way conversation app. They were one of my lifelines. I remember talking about the medication, describing the night sweats, as my body adjusted. I talked about feeling tired, and about the hope I was afraid to feel. About 3 weeks after I started taking Zoloft, something happened with the kids, that a month earlier, would have left me seething with anger. This day, I was level headed and able to deal with it. That’s when I knew the medication was starting to work.

At the same time, I was meeting weekly with 2 precious women to talk and pray together. We were all 3 pretty different, and a lot alike. They were the first people in my daily life to whom I disclosed my depression. At the time, they may not have understood fully what I was describing, but they showed up with love and compassion at a time when I needed that more than anything else.

Early on in this adventure, I knew I wasn’t going to do this secretly. I told everyone who wanted to talk about it what was going on in my life. I said that I was using medication for depression. I shared that I was having weekly sessions with my therapist. I spoke the words “I am not ok”. And guess what? A lot of other women weren’t, either. I found out that faith workers all over the world were going through stuff like me. I found out that most of us were on medication for depression and anxiety. It broke my heart for my sisters.

From my journal in July 2014

When you are a Christ follower, in the today’s western world, the dark places in your mind can be something

Taboo.

The elephant in the room

The-place-of-which-we-shall-not-speak

In those dark places…

The only things that gets you out of bed is your children’s needs, and love for them that drives you to movement.

Even the smallest mishap feels like a meteor just landed on your house.

Finding that you are 3 dollars short at the grocery story feels like the end of the world. Like, you ACTUALLY WON’T make it through this.

I look at the people around me in line at McDonalds

and the only words I can access are “f*** you”

  • Maybe I’m better?

If you don’t know me in real life, you wouldn’t know that I’m hecka granola natural. As in, the first time I ever took an over the counter painkiller, I was 18. I watched most of my 7 siblings be born at home, and I can make a mean garlic oil for earaches.

I have used supplement, homeopathy, and essential oils as my first defense for all manner of health related whatnots my whole life. I was tested for thyroid everything, did work on my adrenals, and on and on and on before I started using allopathic medication for depression. During the time I was on medication, I was also in the care of a naturopathic doctor, and using a wide variety of natural products to keep me going.

The year after we moved back from China, I was able to wean off anti-depressants. It had become very clear that the depression I dealt with was situational, a result of years of toxicity in my marriage and home.

The most frustrating side effect for me while on medication was weight gain. While using Zoloft, I gained about 40 lbs, and weighed more than I had even weighed pregnant! After I weaned off them, I was using supplements and eating really well, and was able to lose about 20 pounds.

During that year, my husband and I were doing counseling 1- 2 times a week with a local professional. It was amazing to have an in-person relationship with a therapist, and made me even more grateful for the work my counselor had done with me on skype for so long. I had a lot of hope during that time that we could find solutions to the issues that were a breeding ground for depression, and I truly enjoyed not being dependent on medication for that year.

  • And… here we go again

In late 2016, it became clear that my situation was not going to change. The toxic things that were happening in my home and marriage were not going to stop, and it was time for me to make the choices to change my life. This time, I recognized the signs of depression a lot earlier than I did the first time around. The anger, the fear, the sleepless nights. I was able to ask for help, and get it. I also filed for divorce. Once again, I chose to be open about what I was experiencing, and this time, the loudest voices against me came from my own family.

“demonic influence”

“poisonous chemicals”

“proof you are weak”

“lying about your experience”

“denying God’s sovereignty”

“rebellion”

Many more phrases and accusations were leveled against me by people I had trusted and loved. It hurt more than anything I had been through in my life, but not as much as staying in the place of darkness and fear where I had lived for so long. 

From my journal Aug 2016

I can’t find you, right now, in this situation

in my agony

in my heartbreak

in my loss

I know you are here, I know you are with me, but I can’t feel you. I can’t touch you. I can’t see you. And my heart screams

“did you leave me?”

“am I alone”

This week I am letting go of the things and the one I love. I am letting go of my hopes and dreams. My heart is shattered, and I can’t find you.

At this point, I am on a perfect-for-me blend of anti-depressants, anti-anxiety medication. I also use L-Theanine, Vitamin supplements, and, when I’m on top of things, whole food diet to be healthy. I continue to have weekly session with my therapist, and I check in with lots of people who love me and know me well. I stay open about where I am emotionally, and I am daily learning to let myself feel the things I feel, and heal. My medical team has a plan that will lead to me weaning off the medications eventually. I am excited about that, for a lot of reasons, but I also know some people need to stay on them a lot longer, or maybe for many many years. It just depends on the kind of depression you experience, and what your life is like.

It is hard for me to use god-words, religion words, Bible words, at this point in my healing, because those are the words that have been used to slice through my heart and personhood with great authority and conviction. The words of their “god” have been used to manipulate and control me, and I have no energy for that nonsense any more.

I am deeply aware of those who have experienced spiritual abuse like me, and that friends I have can’t use god words either. I worry that if I use god words, I’ll trigger you, or scare you, or make you think I don’t love you, that I don’t want to be with you.

At the same time, God is so real and present to me, I have to try to find the words to express…

The DIVINE one, who knows and breaths life, hope, light, and love, has been in and around, over and above me my whole life. The presence of GOD throughout every phase of my depression has been undeniable. The words of Peter in the gospel of John stop me in my tracks on a daily basis “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life, and we have believed, and have come to know, that you are the Holy One of God”.

From my journal August 2016

I am so tired. Sad. Tired of being sad.

I need  joy-light to come into my head and my life.

Every word they speak is a land mine; their mouths breath out poison gas,

their throats are gaping graves.

Their tongues slick as mudslides, let their so-called wisdom wreck them.

But you will welcome me with open arms when I run for cover to you.

Ps 5

 

RESOURCES

If you think you might be depressed check out this quiz. AND TALK TO YOUR DOCTOR!

Overseas Religious Workers check out:

Careport Counseling

Velvet Ashes

Filed Under: DEPRESSION, divorce, expat life, Grief, healing, love, speaking up, Spiritual Abuse

August 19, 2017 By HallieZ Leave a Comment

Letting Go/Holding On

It’s a disaster, really. “Letting Go” all the while, “Holding On”

My eyes started leaking when I saw this photo I snatched at swim lessons this week. She wanted to jump off the “jumping board”. But she’s no dummy, and she KNOWS kids can drown. And “sometimes doctors can’t save kids.” But she is FREAKIN’ brave, and she really wanted to jump.

The first day, her teacher sort of dangled her off the board, and slowly slid her into the arms of another teacher.

This was the second day.

The image arrested me, because that’s more or less how I feel like I am living life 75% -ish of the time.

I am standing on the board.

Ready to dive.

And all the things…

 

Court dates.

Sale of the house.

Where am I going to live?

Lonely.

Accusations.

Dreams that didn’t come true.

I am RIGHT THERE! Toes curled over the edge, about to dive, then I reach out, grab on, hold tight, not quite letting go, not quite holding on.

HOLDING ON

Relationships that aged in my heart

Joy

Past experiences of love

Life

The Divine

Hope Rediscovered

My children

Belonging

Dreams

Peace

LETTING GO

Trauma

Guilt

Fear of abandonment

Living in a box

Victimhood

Pleasing people

Old dreams

Enabling

Half told self-truth

Filed Under: DEPRESSION, divorce, Grief, healing, love

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