STICKING TO A HEALTHY LIFESTYLE

Monday, February 22, 2021

NOW I SEE

 

My name is Sherman and I am a recovering alcoholic...

It's been just over 4 months since my last drink and I had sober time before but like all the times before I would find myself drinking again only harder and longer. This time is different in that I have embraced AA and the Steps of AA. Every day I ask my Higher Power to take my life and my will for the day. To give me peace and a loving heart. I also work the Steps, most I try to work every day in some sort of fashion but this morning was different.

This morning while I was having quiet time with God I realized that I was finally living life. You see before, while I was drinking and even before that, I never really lived life. I just existed and did as little as I could to exist. You see I never knew that you had to deal with feelings, defects of characters, short comings and just normal self-growing. Maybe if I had done these things earlier in life I wouldn’t be an alcoholic now. It was like I was ‘Seeing Life for the First Time’.

In the last 4 months I have seen so many flaws in my character and I am ok with that now because I want to work on them. I want to learn what real love is, how to be a true friend and a sharing part of this world. There is some much to do but I am letting God lead me in those things that I need to do Just For Today. If I don’t do this I will be overwhelmed and lost.

I am so happy to be sober today and it's like what some of the old timers say, “I don’t know if God led me to AA or if AA led me to God”, but which every way it happened I will never see life the old way ever again.


Wednesday, February 10, 2021

AMAZING GRACE

It was 1985, on a cool damp fall evening, with the typical chaos abounding in our little blue house nestled under the trees off an old dirt road in Marbury, Alabama. On one side of the house were the “house parents” and their 3 children. There were 9 of us on our side of the house, in a living space of approximately 1000 square feet – with five bedrooms, (2 girls in each), and our counselor in her own room. All of us shared 1 bathroom that comfortably accommodated 3 at a time…but of course on nights like this everyone was trying to do their hair and make-up at once and as expected, there was plenty of emotion to go around.

 I was nineteen and living in a program that was at that time, set up for troubled young women to help them turn things around before life’s consequences became any greater. Most of my housemates ranged in age from 13-16 and had come at the direction of their parents. I on the other hand, had come from having been in two different institutions at that point, for the treatment of addiction, as well as mental health and behavioral issues.

For the most part we never left a safe zone radius of: the house, the fields where we grew much of our own food and the Pastor’s house/church, (which were under the same roof). It was a good period in my life, though at the time and on this particular evening, (so early in my residency), it did not yet seem that way to me. I was still quite angry with the fact that I’d made such a mess of things, that I was living with a bunch of girls and that my every waking moment was filled with “God talk”…something I had been and continued to be resistant to.

All that being said, it was somewhat exhilarating to know that we were going out to an event, due to the fact that such outings were few and far between. Finally we were all ready and loaded up, with a mild tension that lingered among several of us. I can recall staring out at the countryside as we drove, with my forehead pressed against the cool glass of the window and opting for personal silence on that trip, to instead dwell heavily upon the regret and guilt I was filled with for having ended up where I was, rather than being in college like my peers back home had done. Arriving at our destination, (a medium sized church in Montgomery, AL), we headed to the downstairs where we would be having fellowship, food, worship and listening to a speaker.

In my recollection of that night’s event, I only remember a few things: I remember feeling uncomfortable with the amount of people present and the fact that they were a bunch of “church people” - my anger and self-pity growing with each passing minute.  I remember the all-consuming thoughts that there was no hope for me and that I would never measure up to those people who were all around me and I remember one significant event that occurred following the music…that I never saw coming.

I enjoyed the worship time, having always been a lover of music. The lights were put at a comfortable level and we started with very upbeat songs, to which everyone clapped and sang – something very different to me from the traditional “hymn” music and rigid protocol I’d grown up with. It then transitioned into softer music with very thoughtful lyrics. I noticed that many people seemed to allow their guard to go down, as they would close their eyes and raise their hands into the air. I recall being both intrigued with their willingness to physically make themselves so vulnerable and being unyielding in my own determination to NOT follow their lead, as I was very much locked into an instinctual need to never show weakness (even if only perceived). Though enjoying the music, I recall feelings of self-pity and hopelessness only growing, along with an overwhelming desire to get up and leave the room…and that is when it happened.

Just as I visually located the door I would attempt to exit out of, a man came onto the small stage with a big smile and commanding voice and began to tell us that we were in for a very special treat. He shared about the person who would come up next as having been a member of their congregation since he was a young child and that he was a blessing to everyone who knew him. He said, “When someone talks to Thomas there are two things that can’t be avoided: Knowing how MUCH he loves the Lord and the fact that you can NOT walk away from him without a smile on your face”. Listening, I cynically thought to myself, (from my stupor of self-loathing), “Oh great – I get to listen to yet ANOTHER person talk about how perfectly happy their life is because of God.”

As the pastor began to move left from center stage, extending his arm outward in introduction, I saw to the right that people were moving and then observed an electric wheelchair coming up the ramp and onto the stage. As the occupant of the chair came into view I recall feeling stunned, confused and a little angry – thinking to myself that “they shouldn’t be making this poor guy come up there”. In the chair was a young man probably a few years older than me. He was very thin, with thick glasses and his body was severely contorted and moving involuntarily, as his neck and head strained to the left. Another man positioned him at center stage and adjusted the microphone for him, as Thomas ever so slightly waved the fingers on his left hand at the audience and smiled. At that point several people began clapping and cheering “Thomasssss!!!” The lights were dimmed over all of us and one bright light shown down on Thomas. He pointed one finger towards the side stage and the music began – Amazing Grace. As he began to sing, it was very difficult to understand his words…but in short order – that didn’t matter.

Listening to Thomas sing, my mind shifted from an awkward discomfort of watching someone so severely affected by Cerebral Palsy, to being overcome at witnessing someone who was not religious, but visibly in love with God. As Thomas sang he began to openly worship in front of everyone – raising his hands as best he could, with his eyes closed – smiling – tears flowing down his face as he sang, “Amazing grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a wretch like me – I once was lost, but now I’m found, was blind but now I see…”. The hardness in my heart began breaking with each moment that I watched him – the pureness and sincere joy and peace of someone who had every right to be angry, bitter and hopeless. I remember my head dropping as I wept. It felt like something ran through my body, shoving out the horribleness that had taken up residency for so long and I experienced my first moment in years of utter peace and contentment beyond my comprehension. After Thomas sang, his father stood beside him and read to everyone his son’s story – which was one that had moments of anger and defeat and how he came to know God and experience change and purpose.

Certainly there was indeed a purpose – and that night for sure, I knew that his purpose in part was for me. Though I rode home quietly with my head against the car window, as I had earlier that evening, I no longer felt the consuming coldness and isolation I had for so long nurtured, but instead allowed myself to feel the goodness that had entered my heart and to ponder all that had happened. Something changed in me that night: hope replaced hopelessness and willingness replaced obstinateness. From that day forward all thoughts about leaving the program were gone, and in the months and years to follow, I would come to personally understand the mystery of Thomas’s miraculous joy - being ever thankful for that one fall night so long ago in Montgomery, AL. 

©2015-2021 Rebecca Balko

Wednesday, February 3, 2021

A Letter to 2020

 

What a year YOU have been. It is so easy to say that BY FAR you have been the WORST year…the STRANGEST year…the year that felt the most like fly paper! Indeed, it would be easy to just forget you even happened and throw you into the garbage heap of memories lost. It would be SO easy to say that you gave NOTHING but pain….

 But….the truth is that there is no appreciation…without struggle! There is no value found in light, unless coming from darkness. There is no true success, without a journey through failure….and there is no depth of spiritual intimacy, without experiencing an absolute desperation that comes ONLY from reaching the end of yourself and so reaching out to God.

 Yes 2020 – you have truly been a LOT…but BECAUSE of you – we have and continue to feel, see and experience the very presence of God in such a way that hope, joy and love abound where it would otherwise not be found! Because of you, my husband, (my love and best friend), and I have grown so much closer; Because of you we see God so much clearer; Because of you our hearts explode with pride in our girls and gratitude for all God has done in their lives; Because of you we are closer to our families; Because of you, I’ve grown in my job and been so BLESSED to have so many new people in my life; Because of you we’ve seen that Gods faithful provision abounds; Because of you, we have the experience that could ONLY have come from surviving this year, and the knowledge that INDEED, we can make it ‘one day at a time’.

 So 2020, I won’t say that we will miss you, but I will say that we have gratitude for you and joy as we face this New Year!

 GOODBYE 2020 and HELLO 2021!!!!

 Sincerely, Rebecca Balko

 Authors Note:   While this was a personal note, as this year came with a significant and painful diagnosis in our family, I believe anyone can make this ‘Letter to 2020’ a personal one for yourself. Perhaps you have wrestled with addiction and COVID only made it worse – or you have a loved one that you’ve watched self-destruct. Perhaps this year has just worn you down until you can’t see where there is reason to hope. I want to tell you most assuredly, “You have EVERY REASON TO HOPE!” There is no darkness, only the absence of light and there is NO hopelessness – only the absence of hope! A tiny match eliminates absolute darkness and the smallest glimmer of hope, destroys hopelessness. My prognosis at 19 was to be put on disability, placed in a group home and told I would “never function independently”. It didn’t change quickly, but friends…after finding a Power greater than that prognosis, 34 years have passed, with a life beyond my imagination. If it can happen for me…it CAN happen for you!

Popular Posts