Waking up to clear skies in the morning while experiencing dolphins, manatees, turtles, and all kinds of different birds has been refreshing and relaxing. Clouds in the sky and thunderstorms in the afternoon! What an amazing show. Over the five years in California, I’ve almost forgotten what it is like to have East Coast thunderstorms. I never get tired of watching them. The humidity and the bugs, however, I have not forgotten or missed while I was gone.
Recovering in
Florida has been amazing. I realize how spoiled we are that we have good
friends that we can stay with in such a beautiful place. We are still
thinking about and praying for everyone that has been experiencing the new
fires, or having to live in the damaged areas and breath the toxic air.
Getting away from all that has been tremendously helpful. I have still
been working on Volume Two of my Bible study, though I have shifted my focus
onto a possible resource about Finding a New
Normal
after loss.
Every day has new
challenges and new opportunities for freedom. About fifteen days ago the
trauma fog/brain fog lifted and I was able to think clearly. I started
having times when I was able to just be happy again, without needing a reason
to be happy. I could just experience the joy of being alive. It
doesn't always last, but it is always amazing when it hits. It is
becoming more and more normal to just experience the joy that is a regular part
of life.
The brain fog I
was experiencing was really interesting. It wasn’t like there were all
these thoughts distracting me and taking up the bandwidth of my brain. It
was the lack of thoughts, and almost a sense of not being able to think, that
took up the space and made it difficult to have normal, sequential, rational,
and intricate thought processes. This has lifted and now I can think
again. Praise God!
I was thinking
about the brain fog that was happening and relating it to the loss we
experienced. It reminded me of a revelation the Lord had given me about
loss a long time ago: we were not created to ever experience loss. I
don’t think there is anything in us to understand loss. That is why loss
will never make sense to us. The grieving process allows us to
reestablish some level of acceptance of the new normal we were never intended
to experience.
I think the fog is a symptom of the
overwhelming process of reestablishing connection to a new reality. It is
almost like our whole being is on overload as it is trying to find some sense
of normalcy again. It seems like it is an emotional and intellectual
overload where your brain and heart are trying to make sense of something that
will never make sense.
I believe that the peace that God
gives us, that is beyond our understanding is one of the things that help us in
this new reality of life. I know there will not be an understanding of
the loss. I also know I can have peace without having to understand
it. This peace brings joy.
Peace I leave
with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let
not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid.
– John 14:27
It is OK that you
don’t understand any of the loss you have experienced. Allowing yourself
to not understand it will help you to move forward and begin the process of
reestablishing connection to the new normal. It is not about forgetting,
or denying. It is about accepting the new reality and allowing yourself
to be OK, even in this unfamiliar place where nothing is OK.
There is not
something wrong with you, or you are not spiritual enough, because you are
experiencing grief because of loss. This is something I will explore
another time. For now, wherever you are in whatever grieving process you
may be in, just know, you are not alone. Everyone experiences grief from
loss. Some allow themselves to process it, and some deny it, believing
lies and establishing self-protections.
It is a courageous choice
to face your pain, face your loss, and be present in your emotions. It is
also OK if you are not ready to do that yet. God will still be right
there comforting you when you are.