At the risk of being a Debbie Downer who deflates all
positivity, we live in a life with limits.
Why am I bringing up this fun topic?
Because we tend to beat our heads against several walls,
trying to force one answer where another already exists and will not
change.
Situations like addiction and abuse highlight that reality.
How many of us, especially us codependent types, will hang in there,
enable, try, and blame ourselves for the self-destructive actions our loved
ones make? It is often within this realm, we are confronted with will versus
disease, and personal choice versus circumstances beyond our control.
Wouldn’t Over Couldn’t:
One such loved one for me was a female family member, “Jenny”
(not her real name, of course).
Jenny grew up in a physically abusive home, regularly
watching her father beat her mother with his fists and hammers. Unable to do
anything to stop the chaos, Jenny, not surprisingly, focused on simply
surviving.
And that meant she turned to food as her coping mechanism.
She ate to feel better. She ate to escape. She ate to numb. She ate to deal
with her “unacceptable,” unsafe, and repressed rage. She ate for every other
reason, except to nourish her body.
This set the stage for her struggle with food, weight, and
body image for the rest of her life. Constantly either dieting or binging,
Jenny became a depressed individual. And, as an adult, she chose not to
seek therapy for her issues. She became convinced her answer was only found in
a diet and the achievement of a weight loss goal.
There were multiple factors impacting Jenny, not the least of
which, was her depressed state. One can bring up the point of how much her
depression was there from the start, eliciting her self-medication, or how much
of it was brought on by her daily, abused trauma.
Chicken or egg: which one came FIRST?
Still, her “wouldn’t” exerted a strong will over her
“couldn’t,” in the respect that, she was aware of professional help, therapy,
and counselors. As a child, she was powerless to seek those things out, as her
adult parents had the final say in her life. But as an adult, she could
make a different choice. And she did not choose therapy.
She chose, instead, to insist she didn’t need counseling
(that was for OTHER people), she was healthy, compared to her alcoholic
siblings, all while dieting and binging, chasing an unrealistic and faulty
solution in being thin as the remedy to her pain. She did this all while
simultaneously becoming morbidly obese.
It’s not to shame or judge. It merely illuminates, despite
the complexities of life and trauma, in this case, those of Jenny’s life, ultimately,
her decision was to choose to say no to help. You and I can make that exact
same choice, despite our different lives and painful issues.
Scripture has a couple of great ditties that underscore this
concept.
First…
“‘If You will, Thou canst make me clean.’ And He stretched out His hand and
touched him, saying, ‘I am willing; be clean.’”
Luke 5:12-13
There is help. Do you and I ask for it? There
are therapists, doctors, programs, books, support people… and even prayer,
itself.
Do we reach out, admit we need help, and grab those
tools and lifelines? Because the overwhelming response from these
helpful resources, usually, is this…
“I am willing. Be clean.”
Fairly straightforward, wouldn’t you say?
Ah, but here’s where another scripture ditty comes into play
concerning the help/get clean issue…
“…‘Do you want to
get well?’"
John 5:6
Boom! Mic drop.
Is our “want to” busted?
Would we rather stay sick?
Would we rather say no to help?
Each one of us has had moments in which we appeared to choose
disease over health, chaos over peace, misery over fulfillment.
We all know the common sense answers: eat healthy, exercise,
get enough sleep, be around people who treat us with love, dignity, kindness
and healthy behaviors, delay gratification. Even if that hasn’t been our direct
experience, we know, because, again, there are resources. There’s social media,
the internet, television, and people offering to give us these very things.
Do we accept or do we refuse?
Most of us, if we’re honest with ourselves, can probably
admit to, at least one instance of saying, “Nah, I’m good. I wanna get loaded,
get high, binge on junk food, stay with this toxic person, etcetera.” We know
the answer we “should” choose.
And then we choose its opposite.
Couldn’t Over Wouldn’t:
“…The spirit is indeed willing. But the flesh
is weak.”
Matthew 26:41
As Jenny grew older, her weight ballooned. Her decades of
dieting and binging caught up to her one day in the summer of 2009. She woke up
on a Sunday morning, had a stroke, and collapsed. She wasn’t found until two
days later, when a welfare check was done. Hospitalized for days, it was soon
determined she had lost the ability to walk because of the stroke. And
her excess weight made everything more difficult to achieve, including the
restorative therapy to repair some of the stroke’s damage. She was moved to a
care facility, where she spent the remainder of her life.
And now, her obese body is confined to a wheelchair. Despite
exercise being a regular part of her daily routine, as part of her care, she
cannot do what it physically takes to lose enough weight that would place her
in a “healthy” range. She is monitored, on a multi-drug regimen to deal with
her slew of health issues.
But, by and large, the window for Jenny’s ability to make
significant changes to greatly improve her life and her health has closed. Try
as she might, especially in the early days, post-stroke, Jenny was
adamant about walking, insisting she’d be back to her normal self in no time
flat.
Her legs said
otherwise.
Stubborn at that reality, she often overdid things, pushing
herself past what was doable or safe. She fell many times, all while
maintaining she could walk.
This was a woman who once avoided physical activity, loathed
it as punishment, and only a means to get “thin.” Now, she desperately wanted
to be active… and could no longer be.
Perhaps, now she was willing. But, like Matthew 26:41 stated, her physical body was, indeed, weak.
It has been a painful cautionary tale for my family members
and I to behold.
When
the “Wouldn’t Window” Becomes the Closed “Couldn’t Window…”
We
can delude ourselves into thinking we have all the time in the world. We have
endless opportunities laid before us. We have chance after chance to do
something. We will get to it “later.”
But
what if “later” is “too late?”
I
mention this, along with Jenny’s situation, to illustrate how, as
despair-filled and hopeless this outcome may be, it also does have a silver
lining attached to it.
When
we flawed, vulnerable, human beings encounter life moments that show us that
maybe, a moment or opportunity has passed us by, that maybe it does feel
“to late,” a grace can flow from that broken place. And that broken
place asserts that in human weakness, be it physical, emotional, mental,
or spiritual, compassion is something we qualify for when we simply just
“can’t.” It doesn’t need to be life and death matters, or something as severe
and attention-getting as not being able to walk, like Jenny. It can be anything
that we “give way” on.
When
stress, pressure, and, well, life, come at us, we will find ourselves giving
way to it. And there is no shame in that; there is only humanity.
And
I hate to break it to ya, we’re not being excused with any kind of hall pass from
that humanity.
Pesky
little sucker.
So,
when you and I simply can’t, for whatever reason, remember, humanity.
We’re all subject to it.
Back to Wouldn’t Again:
Jenny was faced with opportunities and experiences to embrace
and refuse help. She encountered the consequences of exerting her will, and of
being fragile and limited concerning her desires and wishes.
For the past few years, she has settled into a resignation
about her life.
Seeing it as largely over, living in a wheelchair, in a care
facility, and unable to be the person she once was, she, not
surprisingly, is not interested in exploring anything new. I’m not just talking
about a new hobby.
Again, I am referring to the concept of getting therapy for
herself.
And her refusal to do so is not simply because of her age and
health limitations. Her decision, again, largely falls on her steadfast belief
she doesn’t need the help, and, therefore, would not benefit from
it. Maybe she believes she is “too old,” or it is “too late.”
But, mostly, she
doesn’t want to enter into that therapeutic space, because of fear,
pride, ego, and discomfort. To a certain degree, she’s content with her
discontent. She’d rather exist in her status quo than live in better health and
well-being.
I say this because, within her care facility, there are
options and offers for her to discuss with a counselor, her issues, and
circumstances, including her disordered image and abuse issues. She has refused
them, insisting, again, therapy is for “other people,” and she is fine as she
is.
Because of this choice Jenny has made for her life, I have
had to sever contact with her. For, her refusal to help herself impacts on my
ability to lead a healthier life. And since my cancer diagnosis hit my life years
ago, “healthy” has become a non-negotiable for me. To waffle on this now could
cost me my life, not to mention my sanity and my spirit.
Her
disease cannot be my disease.
So, I made the painful decision. Jenny is no longer in my
life.
“Do you want to get well…
…or not?”
The question cuts through reasons, excuse, lies, and
circumstances.
There will never be a “good time” to deal with our pain and
our issues. There will never be the perfect cocoon, the ideal environment. So,
with that in mind, what is keeping us from transcending our “wouldn’t?”
The answer: us, you and I making the willful choice,
even after life changing circumstances and insights have altered our worlds and
our perspectives.
Maybe the wakeup call didn’t wake us up.
Maybe the death or the health issue didn’t get our
attention enough to change.
Maybe the loss of a relationship was not a powerful
enough motivator to get us to seek help and deal with ourselves already.
Wouldn’t or Couldn’t Within Us:
We can make the choice, to improve, to get healthier, to
deal, to heal. We make thousands of choices every single day. We can choose
even while powerless in our lives. The choice in those paralyzed
moments, is to choose to embrace and accept, not abandon ourselves.
We deserve to not abandon ourselves… ever.
Easier said than applied. It may feel like an impossible,
harsh, judgmental standard, asking way too much of us.
Still, we choose, regardless of if we think
we’re making a choice.
We choose.
Copyright © 2021 by Sheryle Cruse
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