Wednesday, December 16, 2015

REACH OUT TO THOSE INTROVERTS!



So I woke up at 2 AM in the middle of a dream.  I had invited some people over for Christmas Eve, but because these particular people had been critical of my cooking in the past, rather than expose myself to some new criticism, I didn’t make anything – nothing at all – to eat.  They were all sitting around with annoyed looks on their faces expecting to be fed while I put on my coat and ran to a very busy supermarket to try and find things for them to eat.  I woke up feeling “less than”, not living up to the expectations of others.

I hoped to go right back to sleep but I didn’t.  As I thought about the dream, I said to myself, “You felt like that a lot when you were young (like in high school or college).”  But then I realized I could think of some much more recent times when I felt that way.  With that, my mind went running off to a few of those other times.  The most painful was the following:

I was sent by the organization for which I worked to a training session in another state.  I was looking forward to the training.  I hoped it would feed my soul as well as equip me for service.  I was housed in a cottage with seven other women, one of whom was assigned to be my roommate.  

I’ve mentioned in previous blogs that I am an introvert.  If you know one, then you know we are people who enjoy solitary endeavors.  We’re usually quiet and thoughtful.  When we have a demanding schedule that includes lots of time relating with people, the way we restore our energy is to run away to a quiet place to be alone. 

Since we are outnumbered in this world of ours by extroverts who are the exact opposite of us, we can easily be misunderstood.  Others might take us for snobs, or someone suffering from a superiority complex.  The truth is we’re probably shaking in our shoes with anxiety, wanting nothing more than to be home on the couch in our jammies reading a good book.

 I’ve often told people I would rather get up before an audience of a hundred and speak for an hour than have lunch with four people I don’t know.  So, you can imagine (especially if you are also an introvert) my anxiety as I anticipated the week ahead.  As if it wasn’t enough to just spend a week with a bunch of strangers, we were also encouraged to sit with people we didn’t know and socialize at EVERY meal.  It was both terrifying and exhausting!

Everywhere I went that week in my solitary misery, I watched others.  They all seemed to be doing just fine.  Each one seemed to have made connections with someone else and to be really enjoying themselves.  I was thoroughly miserable, feeling alone in a crowd, terribly self-conscious, feeling very “less than”.  

Adding to the bleakness of the week was my cottage assignment.  I was placed with seven other women who all had many years of experience doing what we did.  I had one year under my belt, and was hugely insecure that if I opened my mouth they would know I was a fraud who had no idea what I was doing.  I made an effort to join them as they sat in the common area to chat, but I said little.  

We introverts are easily intimidated by extroverts.  Extroverts handle themselves so well in social situations.  They never seem to run out of words.  Other people seem to readily take to them.  We want to be able to feel that relaxed too, but it isn’t in our nature.  So we might retreat to a corner, find some other introvert looking equally miserable and engage them in conversation, or get out of there as soon as possible.

As the week went on, I was so uncomfortable that I began to wander away from everyone else whenever I had the chance.  I looked for a quiet room that wasn’t being used, or a bench behind a building where my presence might go unnoticed.  
 
The women with whom I roomed noticed, but not in a good way.  Their noticing didn’t prompt anyone to try and get to know me.  On the last day, they took my name and e mail address along with everyone else’s in our cottage but then one of the women chose to “rate” us all by personality, and send her opinion out on everyone’s e mail, including mine.  I didn’t fare well and was hurt by it.  

Before I resigned from the organization, I went back one more time for training.  I began to pray long before that this time would be different.  I prayed that the Lord would choose women for that cottage with whom I would click, women to whom I could minister.  I asked friends to pray for me as well.  He answered those prayers for me in many wonderful ways.

He placed me in a cottage with all younger women.  This time around I was the one with experience and they were the newbees, shaking in their shoes!  I felt immediately more comfortable.  As the week went on and they shared their personal struggles, and challenges with the job we all did, I was able to pray with them individually and minister God’s love and grace.  I was the last one to leave our cottage for the airport on the last day and I was so full of joy for the Lord’s answer that I spent time walking through each room and praying for the women I’d had the privilege to room with.

Wishing to avoid the pain of sitting in the shadows of social gatherings, being thought a snob when I was just quiet, taking so long to make good friends, I have spent a great deal of my life wishing I was an extrovert so that being with people wasn’t so painful. I’ve learned to be more grateful for the way the Lord made me. 

The Lord had some assignments for me that I would never in a million years have considered as an introvert. Like lecturing to those one hundred women, but also shepherding leaders I didn’t know all that well at first.  It wasn’t hard for the introvert in me to invest long hours alone to plan lessons and leadership training, but it was hard having to BE the leader of my very capable staff!  So many times I felt “less than”, but God in His grace gave me what I needed to be the leader my introversion resisted!  I am the woman I am today because of all those hard and not “natural for an introvert” things He had for me to do.

Our world is full of introverts.  They’re the quiet ones at work or school who eat alone.  They’re the ones who seem to prefer a book to a conversation.  But you know what?  They want to be known for who they are, and loved and appreciated for it too.  They just are less likely to make the move toward others when they want to be friends.

In another month or so Jim and I will move 2 1/2 hours north of where we live now.  I'm still an introvert but as another introvert I know described himself, I'm a "high functioning" introvert, so I will probably have to reach out to others to make friends.  But I also hope others will decide to look past my quietness and want to know the me underneath.

So, look around for those introverts.  If you think, “It might be nice to know him/her", then make the first move.  Say hi.  Ask them questions that require more than a yes or no answer.  Be prepared to keep reaching out until they know that they can trust you with their quietness.  

They just might be longing for someone to notice that they exist and are worth knowing.  Why don't you be the one to notice.


Saturday, November 21, 2015

THINKING ABOUT CHRISTMAS



When we moved to Florida one of the things I asked myself is, “How would we enjoy the anticipation of Christmas when it just doesn’t look or feel like the Christmas I’ve celebrated in New Jersey for 67 of my 68 years?”  

 The gloomy days I love that feel like snow is in the air are absent.  No snow at all is predicted in the Florida forecast, not a flake!  Christmas decorations are turning up on businesses and at the mall but my brain just can’t handle it.  It’s sunny and warm and everything is still so green!  Instead of sweaters, socks and closed shoes, I’m still wearing sandals and capris and short sleeve shirts, and using the AC in my car.  It can’t be nearly December!

My daughter Becky and I have talked about this quite a bit because we just love the weeks leading up to Christmas and the weather – it’s chilliness, it’s gloom, the threat of snow – all of it contributes to the sense of excitement and anticipation.  There’s a feeling in the air in December that generates joy.  She and I are happy in our baking and shopping and wrapping and thinking of what to give neighbors and friends and family for Christmas.  But here in Florida it doesn’t FEEL like Christmas at all!

I had determined that when we came here I was going to take this change in traditional Christmas weather in stride.  I decided that I was going to remember that first Christmas.  We celebrate Christmas in December but many say that Jesus was probably born in the spring.  Why do they say that?  In that part of the world in winter, it would be unlikely that shepherds would be out in the field keeping watch over their flocks.  It’s too cold.  

And of course, Jesus wasn’t born in a climate like that of New Jersey.  It was desert like, dry, and warm.  I picture green shrubs and trees, maybe some palm trees too.  Kind of like Florida (only it rains a lot more here).  

But then the reality of the incarnation of Jesus gripped me as I listened to Christmas carols on my Christian radio station.  Christmas isn’t about the anticipation of snow.  It isn’t about a chill in the air.  It isn’t about presents, or baking cookies, or Christmas trees, or wreaths.  It doesn’t matter if chestnuts are roasting on an open fire.  Christmas is about the coming of Jesus!  

There is nothing more wonderful, nothing more highly anticipated than the celebration of the coming of my Savior.  

If it never snows another flake.  If I never get another present.  If I never bake another cookie.  Whether it’s cold or hot, gloomy or sunny, nothing changes this awesome FACT:  Jesus came on that night more than 2000 years ago and nothing will ever be the same.  EVER.

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

AH, TO BE CONTENT



It has been about six weeks now since we made the biggest leap of our 45 years of married life and moved half the country away, relocating from New Jersey to Florida.  

When we arrived in mid-September it still felt like August.  It was very hot and humid.  Since I carry my own post-menopausal heat source with me at all times, I spent most of my days indoors, while Jim, somehow, sat outside all day in the sweltering heat, seemingly without breaking a sweat.  

Now however, just a few days from the start of November, the days begin in the high 60’s, so we have our coffee outside on the lanai.  Some days are a bit humid, others are gorgeously dry.  In the afternoon, the sun can still get pretty hot, but several days recently when I went out to the pool to cool off, I have had the gorgeously warm water all to myself, what pleasure!  And then every evening, when the breezes are blowing and the temperatures have dropped to the mid-70s, we eat our dinner outside. Sometimes I have to ask Jim to pinch me because it’s hard to believe we actually get to live like this!

After suffering from a very uncomfortable jaw and terrible nights of sleep for weeks after we got here, I went to a dentist and was prescribed a night guard, protection from grinding my teeth at night and putting stress on my jaw.  By the time the guard was ready (3 weeks later) my jaw no longer hurt!  The stress of selling a house, and moving out, and then in, to a new place in a new state was finally behind me.

We’ve been attending a wonderful church down here, which is a bit of a distance away.  It has so many ministry activities that sound great to us – Bible studies, tutoring in a local school, ministering to the shut in, mission trips to the Dominican Republic – but we have decided not to get involved in any of those kinds of activities in this time of transition.  We filled our Samaritan Purse Christmas Child boxes, donated things to a school outreach, and I’ve volunteered to bake for another fund raiser – but otherwise we’re keeping a low profile.

Having seen the movie, War Room, back when we first arrived, I find I’m content to spend more time in Bible study and prayer, asking the Lord to do in the lives of those for whom I pray the things only HE can!  These times are very sweet and uninterrupted by other activity.  

Before we left New Jersey Amazon had a good sale on Rosetta Stone so I bought level 1 Spanish and have been spending delightful time refreshing those lessons I had all those years ago in high school Spanish.  Only Rosetta Stone makes it way more fun!

Our house in Davenport finally has walls and a roof and it’s exciting to think of moving in.  But for now, Jim and I are really content – and after months of fixing up the NJ house, then wondering what it would sell for, how long it would take, when the closing would happen, etc. – feeling content is wonderful.

Every day we have something for which to feel so grateful to the Lord – green all around, swimming in October, eating outdoors (which we loved in NJ!), uninterrupted quiet times, the friendliness of the people here, a bigger kitchen to prepare meals in, two great churches to attend (here in Ft. Myers, and also in Davenport), and many opportunities to seek the well-being of this place where the Lord has us.  

And lo and behold, I now have a dishwasher!  I never dreamed having one could be such bliss!