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1 ½ Years After My Wedding, I Saw Marriage Wasn’t for Me—When I Looked at my Wife, I Knew My Dad Was Right

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By Seth Adam Smith

Having been married only a year and a half, I’ve recently come to the conclusion that marriage isn’t for me.

Now before you start making assumptions, keep reading.

I met my wife in high school when we were 15 years old. We were friends for 10 years until … until we decided we no longer wanted to be just friends. I strongly recommend that best friends fall in love. Good times will be had by all.

Nevertheless, falling in love with my best friend did not prevent me from having certain fears and anxieties about getting married. The nearer Kim and I approached the decision to marry, the more I was filled with a paralyzing fear. Was I ready? Was I making the right choice? Was Kim the right person to marry? Would she make me happy?

Then, one fateful night, I shared these thoughts and concerns with my dad.

Perhaps each of us [has] moments in our lives when it feels like time slows down or the air becomes still and everything around us seems to draw in, marking that moment as one we will never forget.

My dad giving his response to my concerns was such a moment for me. With a knowing smile he said, “Seth, you’re being totally selfish. So I’m going to make this really simple: Marriage isn’t for you. You don’t marry to make yourself happy, you marry to make someone else happy. More than that, your marriage isn’t for yourself, you’re marrying for a family. Not just for the in-laws and all of that nonsense, but for your future children. Who do you want to help you raise them? Who do you want to influence them? Marriage isn’t for you. It’s not about you. Marriage is about the person you married.”

It was in that very moment that I knew that Kim was the right person to marry. I realized that I wanted to make her happy; to see her smile every day, to make her laugh every day. I wanted to be a part of her family, and my family wanted her to be a part of ours. And thinking back on all the times I had seen her play with my nieces, I knew that she was the one with whom I wanted to build our own family.

My father’s advice was both shocking and revelatory. It went against the grain of today’s “Walmart philosophy,” which is if it doesn’t make you happy, you can take it back and get a new one.

No, a true marriage (and true love) is never about you. It’s about the person you love — their wants, their needs, their hopes, and their dreams. Selfishness demands, “What’s in it for me?” while Love asks, “What can I give?”

Some time ago, my wife showed me what it means to love selflessly. For many months, my heart had been hardening with a mixture of fear and resentment. Then, after the pressure had built up to where neither of us could stand it, emotions erupted. I was callous. I was selfish.

But instead of matching my selfishness, Kim did something beyond wonderful — she showed an outpouring of love. Laying aside all of the pain and anguish I had caused her, she lovingly took me in her arms and soothed my soul.

I realized that I had forgotten my dad’s advice. While Kim’s side of the marriage had been to love me, my side of the marriage had become all about me. This awful realization brought me to tears, and I promised my wife that I would try to be better.

To all who are reading this article — married, almost married, single, or even the sworn bachelor or bachelorette — I want you to know that marriage isn’t for you. No true relationship of love is for you. Love is about the person you love.

And, paradoxically, the more you truly love that person, the more love you receive. And not just from your significant other, but from their friends and their family and thousands of others you never would have met had your love remained self-centered.

Truly, love and marriage [aren’t] for you. It’s for others.

Seth Adam Smith is on a “literal” odyssey to help others move forward through his writing. He’s the author of the books Marriage Isn’t For You”, “Your Life Isn’t For You, and the upcoming book “You, Unstuck.

“I Looked Over to His Side of the Bed. He Wasn’t There. I Knew He Wouldn’t Be There, But for the First Time, It Really Hit Me That He Would Never Be There Again.”

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After my young husband died, I joined several grief groups. I wanted to connect with people who knew what grief was, but more importantly, knew what I was feeling. The ups, the downs, the in-betweens. All of it. I wanted people around me who knew that grief sucks as bad on a Tuesday afternoon at a red light as much as it does on Christmas morning. I wanted to feel like I had a community who ‘got it,’ and who understood that some days we are ok and some days we are not.

But, the one question I hear from my fellow grievers, over and over and over again is, ‘When does grief end?’

I’ve thought about that a lot. I still think about it a lot. I wonder the same thing sometimes. And, the simple answer is, ‘never.’ It never ends. It never goes away.

Grief was an unwelcomed stranger that appeared on your doorstep one day and it has never left. He moved in, took a place in your life and started eating all your food. He sleeps in your bed. He follows you into the shower. He goes to work with you. He attends your kids’ events. He pets your dog. He infiltrates your life in the cruelest way. He takes over and confuses everything. He messes up your life and your hair. He changes your outlook, and we let it. Because we’re tired. We’re sad. We’re broken and we’re lost.

And so, we try to get rid of him. We try to kick him out. We pack him up and throw him out the door and as soon as we slam it and lock it, we turn around and he’s back sitting in the recliner throwing trash on the floor. We’re frustrated, so we talk to our friends and counselors about how to get rid of him. We rally the troops and we find things to help us ignore him. We stay busy thinking that if it’s out of sight, it’s out of mind. We even try to replace the person we’re missing. We think if we can fill the void, maybe we can feel better, but grief just hangs around and laughs.

We try to walk around it, under it, over it but we will be damned to walk through it. Because that kind of pain is immeasurable. It’s searing. Walking through it is like volunteering to cut off your hand with a dull knife. Nobody wants to do that.

But, you have to. You have to. Because only when you walk through it will you understand how to allow grief to live in your life without it controlling you. Only then will you understand how to let grief walk alongside you, and not fear it.

I remember the first time I really felt my grief. It wasn’t right after he died. It wasn’t at his funeral or even a week after that. For me, it came about six months later. I was in bed. The room was dark and cool, but I was having trouble falling asleep. My mind wouldn’t turn off. I tried everything and then looked over to his side of the bed. He wasn’t there. I knew he wouldn’t be there, but for the first time, it really hit me that he would never be there again. I reached my hand across the sheet, up to the pillow and traced it. My breathing was quiet. I was listening for him, I guess. My eyes were heavy and fixated on the blank space in front of me and before I could stop it, heavy tears fell. I instinctively shot out of bed, wiping my face and concentrated on deep breaths. ‘No,’ I thought to myself. ‘No, I will not do this.’

I looked to the corner of my room and saw grief sitting there, smiling, tipping his hat with a wink as if he were welcoming me to the party. I looked back to the bed. Still empty. And then it happened. I fell to my knees, and then to my back. It came from up from my gut. I could almost physically feel it moving to the top of my abdomen, to my chest, into my neck and then my head. I cannot describe the pain. It was like my soul was slowly being ripped away from my body. I was covered in the heaviness of it all and could not control any of it. Not the feeling, not the thoughts, not the horrific sounds that came with it. Nothing. I was consumed. I was consumed with grief. I laid on the floor in the fetal position and let grief take over. I let the pain in. I let the nightmare play out. I screamed. I banged my fists on the floor. I pulled at my hair and I writhed. I cried. I cried harder than I ever have in my entire life and then as suddenly as it came, it was gone. The room was still. It was quiet. My body stopped convulsing. I took a deep breath in and looked around. I looked back to the corner, hoping grief was gone. But he was still there. He was still sitting there, watching. But this time, when I turned my head in his direction, I looked him in the eye. I locked onto him.

And in that moment, his eyes softened, and he cried with me.

Courtesy of Diana Register

Grief felt as badly as I did. Grief felt the same pain I did. Grief hurt as much as I did. And, grief hated it, too. He didn’t want to hurt me every day. He didn’t want me to feel bad or scared or anxious every minute. He didn’t want me to cry. But, he had a job to do and that night, he did it. I nodded at him. He smiled back at me, but not a taunting smile this time. No, a smile that told me that even though he would never leave, it was going to be ok, and I was going to survive.

Grief still hangs out with me to this day. But, he doesn’t scare me anymore. I don’t fear him. I’m not trying to get rid of him. And the less I fight him, the less he comes around. He doesn’t take up residency in my life anymore, but he does come to visit. Sometimes, he stays for days, sometimes, he stays for minutes, and sometimes, he just walks alongside me. For so long, I viewed him as my enemy and now, I view him as a reminder of how thankful I am to have loved somebody so much, and so deeply, that it was so hard to lose.

So, yes, the answer is, grief never leaves. But, we can learn how to let grief walk with us, without controlling us. I liken it to this:  When I was younger, and before camera phones, we had to actually print out pictures if we wanted to see them. And when they were first printed, they were full of vibrant colors and you could see all the details in the photo. Yet, over time, as the picture aged, it faded. The colors dimmed. You couldn’t see the details as well. The corners ripped. The picture was still there, but it wasn’t as clear. You remember the moment and the feeling, but you don’t see it as clearly anymore. And for me, that’s what grief is. It’s always there but it does get better. You just have to allow it. You have to feel it. You have to go through it. You have to stop fighting it. And, when you least expect it, you will come out the other side. I promise, you will come out the other side, even with grief holding your hand.

**This story was written by Diana Register and originally appeared on Love What Matters. Check out her books “Grief Life” and “My Kid Is an A**hole, and So Is My Dog” available in print and kindle. Connect with Diana on Facebook and Instagram.

To the Christians Who Are Done With Church

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You hear it all the time.

I’m done with church.

I don’t really need to go to church…my relationship with God is personal.

I’ve had it with organized religion.

The church is a man-made invention, not God’s idea.

I completely understand why a growing number of people are bailing on church. Even people who used to lead in the church often stop attending (here are [nine] reasons why church leaders do that).

We’ve spent a lot of time working through the issue of declining church attendance (and growing disillusionment with the church) on this blog and in my leadership podcast. (For a summary of the issues, here’s a piece on the 10 reasons even committed church [attendees] are attending church less often).

I get it.

The church is far from perfect. Life is complex. There are growing options. And the post-modern mind distrusts most things organized or institutional.

But as trendy as the idea of writing off the church may be, it’s a mistake.

While writing off the church passes as sophisticated thinking, it’s actually the opposite; what if it’s a simplistic and even reductionistic line of thinking that leads nowhere constructive?

THE CHURCH ISN’T EVEN BIBLICAL, IS IT?

People argue the idea of church isn’t even biblical.

So let’s start with the basics.

First, if you’re a Christian, church is not something you go to. It’s something you are.

You can’t disassociate from church as a Christian any more than you can disassociate from humanity as a person.

You don’t go to church. You are the church.

Second, the church was not a human invention. Half-reading the New Testament with one eye closed will still lead you to the inescapable conclusion that the church was God’s idea.

In fact, most of the New Testament is not about the teachings of Jesus. It’s about the work of the church that Jesus initiated and ordained. I won’t fill this post with [S]cripture verses that prove my point, because, quite frankly, you’d have to get rid of the majority of the New Testament to argue that the church was a parenthetical, made-up organization.

If you want to get rid of the church, you also need to get rid of Jesus.

You can’t have one without the other.

MAYBE WHAT BOTHERS YOU SHOULD ACTUALLY AMAZE YOU

I understand that the idea of the church being imperfect makes some people despair.

But rather than making us despair, the fact that Jesus started the church with imperfect people should make us marvel at God’s incredible grace.

That God would use ordinary, broken human beings as vessels of his grace, and delight in it is awe-inspiring. He’s proud of how his grace is beating through your imperfect-but-redeemed life and through the church (have you ever read Ephesians 3: 10-11?).

The idea that God would use you and me is pretty amazing. He had other options.

He could have spoken to the world directly but instead chose to use broken people to showcase his grace to a world in need of redemption.

For sure, community is messy.

People sin. Leaders are sinful.

Most of the New Testament is not a story of an idealized church where everything worked perfectly all the time (just read 1 Corinthians any time you’re frustrated with your church).

Most of the New Testament is a story of Jesus using his followers to spread his love in spite of themselves and as they overcome obstacle after obstacle.

The fact that Christ uses flawed people to accomplish his work on earth is actually a sign of [H]is grace, not a sign of [H]is absence.

The church’s story, as twisted as it gets at times, is a beautiful story of God’s grace, God’s power, and God’s redemption.

So, by the way, is your life, which reflects the story of the church more than you would want to admit.

The church gives the world a front row seat to the grace of God.

THE ULTIMATE CONSUMERISM ISN’T GOING TO CHURCH…IT’S WALKING AWAY FROM IT

People criticize the church today as being consumeristic. And to some extent, churches cater to consumerism — often to our detriment. I agree that consumerism is a problem for Christianity.

But ironically, much of the dialogue about why people are done with church pushes people deeper into Christian consumerism than it pushes them into deeper discipleship: Here I am, all alone, worshipping God on my schedule when it’s convenient for me.

Listening to a podcast of your favorite preacher while you’re at the gym or on the back deck and pushing three of your favorite worship songs through your [earbuds] does not make you a more passionate Christ follower.

It usually makes you a less effective one.

Disconnecting yourself from community is actually less faithful than connecting yourself to a flawed community.

If you think the church today isn’t enough (and arguably, we need to reform it), then do what the early Christians did.

If you want a more biblical church…don’t gather weekly, gather daily. Before dawn.

Get up before the sun rises to pray together with other Christians before you go to work. Pool your possessions. Don’t claim anything as your own.

Be willing to lose your job, your home, your family and even your life because you follow Jesus.

Then you’ll be more authentic.

And notice that the early church did indeed gather. 

Gathering always leads to some form of organizing.

To pretend the church doesn’t need to be organized is as logical arguing that society doesn’t need to be organized.

Because community is inevitable, organization is inevitable.

Our ability to organize and to accomplish more together than we can alone is one of the crowning achievements of humanity, and our ability to work together makes Christian effort far more effective.

It’s also part of God’s design for how we should interact while we’re on this planet. Come to think of it, heaven is a community too.

The only one who wants us to believe that we are better off alone is our enemy.

If you really think about it, it’s actually a very clever tactic.

THE CHURCH HAS HELPED EVEN THOSE WHO RESENT THE CHURCH

Finally, if you’re reading this article and you have any modicum of faith in Jesus, may I suggest your faith is actually the result of the mission of the church.

Very few people come to know Jesus because he appears to them supernaturally when they are alone and calls them by name.

Does that ever happen? Sure. But not to 99.9 [percent] of us.

Almost all of us who follow Jesus have had our lives changed by a flawed body called the church that Jesus so passionately loves and calls his own.

Think about that.

WE NEED MORE CHURCH

Do we need more churches? Yes.

Do we need more humble churches? We do.

Do we need authentic, transparent leadership? Absolutely.

Does the church need to change? Without a doubt.

The church needs continual reformation and transformation.

So what will the future look like?

Will we gather in quite the way we do today in the future? In some ways yes; in others, no.

Hopefully, we gather more frequently and work through our differences at a deeper level and impact our communities more powerfully.

These two posts offer 10 predictions about future church attendance and 11 traits of churches that will impact the future.

But regardless of how the church gathers in the future, we will gather…we need to gather.

We Christians need each other, probably now more than ever.

And even if you don’t think you need other Christians, I promise you, you do, and so does our world.

Now, more than ever, the world needs Christian working together humbly under Christ to lead people into a growing relationship with him, in whatever innovate and fresh forms that takes.

The church is not dead.

Far from it.

Maybe it’s just beginning to take shape for a brand new era that desperately needs it.

My Husband Is Doing It Again!

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Well, he did it again. New place, same story. It’s not that I thought a new neighborhood would change his behavior, but I didn’t expect him to fall so easily into prior patterns. Yet he had, and as we spoke on the phone via text I became angry. He tried to send me a cute picture of our eldest daughter, and how they’d decided to skip school and take advantage of the nice weather outside. Did he think I wouldn’t find out the real reason?!

I am a travel nurse. My husband used to own his own business, but when it began to not work out we changed things up for our family. They all started traveling with me, and while I worked my husband held the reigns at home. He homeschooled our daughters and did everything to keep our traveling home running smoothly.

But it is his “extracurricular” activities that I’m speaking on now. It’s the other stuff he does when I’m at work. And after this particular day, I realized he was doing it again. He even had a lunch planned the next day.

After I got home from a long shift he nonchalantly mentioned his lunch plans for the following afternoon. I had made a point to not stay angry when he had texted me earlier in the day about them skipping school. I mean, I knew they’d make it up, and I couldn’t allow myself to get angry over something so trivial. But then later that night, at home, as he explained the real reason for missing homeschool lessons, it all made sense. My husband was up to his old tricks, so to speak, and this incident was just another example of that.

“She needed me,” he explained.

“The guy next door, that’s her age, he’s had [a] quadruple bypass for goodness sake,” he added.

I knew. This was what my husband did. He couldn’t help himself. It’s like something within him drove him to do it. I couldn’t think of a single time where he had ignored the need. At our last temporary home in South Carolina, he had done the same thing. It was hard for him to leave that area when I found a new job because of the relationships he had made all over the neighborhood. And sure enough, in our new community, he was at it again.

“I had to,” he said.

“I know,” I agreed.

Then I smiled.

After all, he was a helper. He was a servant. He was a lover of people. His mission was relationships with those around him, and everywhere we landed he took up the task of helping others.

At our last home, he had forged friendships with grumpy old men, been a handyman to the park owner, and had drawn every person he met out of their shell. He was the kindest man I’d ever encountered, and I had a feeling that most people who crossed paths with him felt the same.

He was a helper.

He had done it before, and he was doing it again. This was his way. His way of showing God’s love.

He had told me over the phone that they skipped school to enjoy the weather outside before it got too hot, and I guess that was a part of it. But later that night he explained how the elderly woman next door had bought a new air conditioning unit since hers went out. It’s Central Florida here, folks. Naturally, he offered to install it for her.

I mean, he had told her before, “anything you need, just ask.”

He told everybody that!

And the thing was, he meant it.

He was a helper, a friend, the person you could count on. He was a kind smile on a tough day. I watched the way our neighbors smiled and waved as we drove by in our golf cart. They loved him. I was married to Mr. Popularity.

The thing was, he was a wonderful husband. I experienced the most of his loving heart in action. He was an amazing father. He cared for us in a way that couldn’t be rivaled. I felt blessed to have him in my life. But I also felt blessed to watch him in the lives of others. He was a helper.

That night on the couch, after I got home from work, I listened happily to his retelling of their day. Helping an elderly neighbor for free, teaching our daughters a valuable lesson that wasn’t in their curriculum. The next day she was having a big meal at her home for some friends, and she wanted my family to attend. I knew it was her way of saying thank you.

At their lunch invite that Sunday he told me they were the only people there under the age of sixty, but that he had a great time socializing with his new friends. The older women had gushed over how sweet and well-behaved our young daughters were. They had sent a huge plate of leftovers home for me, and I made a point the next day to smile, wave her over, and say thanks. I was trying to be more outgoing like my better half. The fact was, he wasn’t going to stop. He was doing it again. He was loving on strangers, helping neighbors, and building new friendships. That was His way.

Outrage Over Coach Allowing Bible Verse on Players’ T-shirts Forces His Resignation

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A head basketball coach in New Mexico has resigned after being blasted for allowing his players to wear t-shirts bearing the phrase, “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.”

The Freedom From Religion Foundation immediately expressed outrage and stirred up the angered voices of atheists, agnostics, and “free thinkers” alike.

After an investigation into the t-shirts’ origins, it was discovered that a local church youth group — which many of the school’s students attend — provided them for the basketball team.

The Animas High School coach was also accused of leading a Bible study for the players.

“It does not matter whether some players asked the coach to lead a Bible study or whether wearing the religious t-shirts is optional,” the FFRF’s lawyer wrote in a complaint to the school district. “Courts have summarily rejected arguments that voluntariness excuses a constitutional violation.”

Loren Cushman, the high school’s superintendent, appeared quick to side with the FFRF in an official response to the attorney:

“When I observed the players wearing the t-shirts during pregame warmups, I immediately questioned the coach and activity director,” wrote Cushman. “I gave specific instructions at that time that this was not permissible and was not to happen again”…later adding,”The administration, through me as a superintendent, did address the situation and direct that it is not permissible for individuals to promote religion while serving in any capacity representing the school district.”

Cushman also addressed that the Bible studies, while attended by some of the players, were not held specifically for them:

“Although many of our students attend the local (religious) youth group, it is in no way sponsored or endorsed by the school district. It is my understanding that the coach often attended and at times led the various activities, including Bible study or lessons. The coach is not holding Bible studies for groups of players and/or other students separate from the youth group.”

The superintendent closed the letter in saying, “The coach has submitted his resignation from the district.”

Of course, the FFRF gladly took credit for the resignation.

A New Mexico high school basketball coach who was violating the Constitution resigned after the Freedom From Religion…

Posted by Freedom From Religion Foundation on Friday, April 26, 2019

“Animas Public Schools officials responded to FFRF’s call with swiftness and resolve,” wrote FFRF co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor in a statement. “Superintendent Cushman acknowledged in his response that FFRF’s concerns were real. He informed the Foundation that the coach in question had resigned. And he added, ‘We will address each of the areas of concern during our staff in-service training at the start of the next school year.'”

“We’re pleased that the Animas school system took us seriously in remedying a constitutional violation,” Gaylor continued. “Behavior cannot be excused in public schools.”

How God Saved Me From Suicide

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grew up with idealistic missionary parents who wanted more than punch-a-clock and pay-the-mortgage normalcy. They pursued a ministry life abroad, but after I was diagnosed with leukemia as a child, we were left stateside and struggling financially. We moved a lot — Hawaii, then Nepal, then back to Hawaii, then New Mexico.

For most of my teen years, we lived in Albuquerque, and during that time, I began to resent the ways God allowed us to suffer. I began to think God was cruel, a scarce and mean God who looked the other way when we were in need. My parents gave me space and didn’t force me to go to church with them, but I knew they prayed that I would come to know Christ. My dad would often say, “I believe God has a call on your life, Alia.” But I wanted nothing to do with faith.

Everything changed in the middle of my junior year. My parents got another ministry job offer and moved us back to Hawaii.

When we arrived in Pahoa, my dad surveyed the house the ministry had provided for us. It was unlivable. The house had no plumbing and no interior walls, only a concrete slab pooling with puddles of mosquito-infested water. Heavy green mold scaled the cement ruins and the jungle loomed around the house, unruly vines breaking through shattered windowpanes. No one had flown to the Big Island to inspect the house or property for years, and it had become uninhabitable.

We lived in Nepal in the early ’80s in a dung-style hut, so we’d never be accused of being high maintenance, but this was ridiculous. The ministry agreed to pay half the rent for livable accommodations. But even a month after we moved in, we had no furniture and couldn’t afford to get any now that we had to pay partial rent. We had two lawn chairs in the living room and a futon pad on the ground. Despite our situation, my parents decided to stay and see what God would provide for us.

The rain in Pahoa fell in constant sheets, pounding on our metal roof like an assault. And I took it as just that: a personal attack. I sat on our back porch — a slab of concrete with a tin covering — listening to the rain pinging like rapid gunfire while I dragged hard on my cigarette. This was my personal hell.

Reconciling these years of poverty and pain with a loving and merciful God seemed impossible. I could not believe in a God who continually abandoned us. I hurt everywhere. I fit nowhere. Home wasn’t a place I could feel.

And yet, I met God there one night. Or God met me.

It had been raining for 42 days straight when I considered taking my own life. I had no transportation, no license, and no hopes of getting one anytime soon. I was miles away from civilization and as sober as I’d ever been.

In Albuquerque, I had learned to silence the torment I felt inside. I didn’t know I had bipolar disorder; I just knew there were times my skin tingled with restlessness, my limbs seemed possessed, and my feet tapped out a Morse code. I felt invincible, immortal, immune to hunger and thirst and the incessant demands to slow down, to sleep, to recharge. My mind was a colony of secrets and schemes. But it’s an unfortunate law of the universe that what goes up must come down.

That night in Hawaii, blind with tears, I started ransacking the bathroom medicine cabinet and rifling through drawers. I decided it was time to quiet that steady hum once and for all. I wanted the shadows to disappear and the voices to stop, and I believed that death was the only way.

My hand shook as I picked up the flimsy disposable razor. I held it over my skin, trying to build up the courage to make the deep cut. I had flirted with death before, but just enough to blow my hair back, just enough to make me feel the tiniest bit alive. In that moment of desperation, I cried out to God: I never asked to be born! I never asked for any of this!

Never did I imagine that God would answer me. But he did. I found myself silenced, barefoot and open palmed, splayed like an offering across the floor. I was ready to take my own life and instead found myself laid out by God — physically knocked to the floor and flooded with a peace that to this day, I cannot fully describe. I felt the resuscitation of grace.

After that night, however, I began to make excuses. Maybe God reveals himself to desperate girls on chipped linoleum floors in the middle of a monsoon and says, “You belong to me. I have loved you with an everlasting love. You are mine.” But that was all too much for me to fathom. I wanted something to explain away the very real and terrible possibility that God existed and that he wanted something from me. I thought perhaps it was my body’s response to all the stress hormones and my legs had just given out. But even with all of my justifications, I couldn’t deny that I felt something I had never felt before. I felt God.

My parents had given me a Bible I never used and instead wedged under a tiny garage-sale table in my room to make the legs even. I pulled it out and began to read it at night behind my locked door. I didn’t want my parents to know. I didn’t want my dad to say, “I knew God had a call on your life, Alia Joy.” I didn’t want any spiritual I-told-you-so.

My bed was a rolled-out length of eggshell foam — the kind you put on a real mattress (should you actually have a mattress) — and not thick enough to keep my hips from falling asleep and aching through the night. As I read my Bible, I was confronted with questions and fears. I’d lie in the dark with God and whisper prayers into the void, hoping someone was there answering me back. Like Jacob wrestling with God through the night, this grappling changed my identity and renamed me.

In the Book of Genesis, when Jacob first prays for protection and deliverance from Esau, he prays to the God of his father Abraham and his father Isaac. After he wrestles with God and his prayers are answered, Jacob erects an altar with his new name, Israel. He names it El-Elohe-Israel, which means “God, the God of Israel.”

When I wrestled with God, he brought me to that same place of weakness. This weakness didn’t leave me more vulnerable before my enemies, real or imagined. Instead, it taught me that, even though we all walk with unsteady feet, we can rely on the God of our fathers and more than that, on the God who reveals himself directly to us, a God unmasked, a God who lets us grab hold of him in the darkness. In these times of wrestling, we might find ourselves transformed. We might feel the touch of God dislocating our hip as dawn breaks. God might take us to the ground.

I am not healed in the ways one might imagine. I still have bipolar disorder. Sometimes I still struggle with suicidal ideation. I take antipsychotic meds and antidepressants to help keep me alive. These, too, are ways that God meets me on the mat, meets me in the darkness, and lets me grab hold of [H]im.

To this day, I carry the bruises of those restless nights, of a too-thin mat and a paralysis so severe I could only be laid at the feet of Jesus. Sometimes I remember that whisper-thin foam of my bed and the ache in my hips as I wrestled with God. I think of my parents choosing to stay in Hawaii and wait on the Lord. I thank God for their obedience, for helping bear witness to the goodness of God in that horrible rental where I first believed.

I came back to life in that home that wasn’t a home. It was the place where I met Jesus and the place where I learned that I’d always been called.

This post originally appeared at ChristianityToday.com.

Alia Joy is a speaker and writer who lives in Oregon with her family. Her blog, AliaJoy.com, offers insight into her life, family, and faith journey. This essay was adapted from “Glorious Weakness: Discovering God in All We Lack” by Alia Joy, copyright March 2019. Used by permission from Baker Books, a division of Baker Publisher Group.

“They Don’t Really Stand a Chance” – A Look Inside New York City’s Trafficking Industry

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They don’t look like the victims being saved by Detective Olivia Benson on Law and Order SVU.

They don’t have Liam Neeson on an international manhunt for them.

In fact, New York City’s sex trafficking victims look so much like you and I. In the daily hustle and bustle to get to work, you’ve probably even sat next to them on the subway.

While you’re thinking about your day at the office, they’re thinking about how stuck they are. Trapped in slavery. A slave to a pimp, a slave to their body, and a slave that you cannot see.

We often have a preconceived perception of what a sex slave looks like. Perhaps it’s influenced by Hollywood productions and media outlets alike. But let’s get one thing straight: It’s not background or status, successes or failures, nor is it anything one person makes the decision to do that forces them into a life of slavery.

“It’s that confluence of a super-young, vulnerable person meeting a predatory individual who is ultimately part of a billion-dollar sex industry,” said Rachel Lloyd, a sex trafficking survivor, and founder of the anti-sex trafficking group Girls Educational & Mentoring Services.

“They don’t really stand a chance.”

A recent three-part series published by the New York Post, gives a glimpse inside the hidden sex slave industry that’s living, breathing, and operating RIGHT under our noses. Here. In America. In New York City and beyond.

Cue dramatic SVU opening: “These are their stories.”

sex slaves

From the age of 2, “Alexis” was tossed around in and out of foster care. She went from one family to the next to her own, and back again.

First molested by her biological father at 8 years old, the sexual abuse very rapidly turned to rape.

What kind of chance does a kid have in the world when sex, abuse, and fear are the only things they’re ever taught? Before she was even old enough to know what her female organs could do, they were being used against her will.

When she was just 14 years old, Alexis had a cat that she couldn’t take care of. So she asked a man she met on the street to take care of it for her.

He was a neighborhood pimp.

“He managed to get in a conversation with me about a party that he was going to do, and that a famous celebrity, Meek Mill, was going to be there . . . So he asked me if I’d like to go,” Alexis said in an interview at The Children’s Village, an organization that assisted in her rescue.

He asked her for pictures of herself for the party’s “VIP list,” and met her that night to take her to the “party.”

In the car on the ride there, he gave her a cup of sparkling wine, and in just a few short minutes, Alexis felt her jaw lock up and she became hot.

What she didn’t know is that the pimp had used her “VIP list” photos to make an ad on Backpage.com. The two arrived at a Yonkers hotel where there were men who responded to the ad, waiting to have their turn with her.

Alexis spent 2 years in “the life,” before a friend told her about the safe haven that is The Children’s Village.

Now 22 years old, Alexis works full-time at a counseling center in the Bronx and is the proud mother of a 2-year-old daughter.

Couple Loses 600 Pounds Combined Before Wedding—& Their Transformation Is Stunning!

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Everyone wants to look good for their wedding day. It’s one of the most special, important and memorable days of your life.

This couple from New York just took “sweating for the wedding” to a WHOLE new level. For them, it was their sweating and years of shedding unbelievable pounds that actually led to a wedding.

Ronnie Brower was weighing in at 675 pounds when he decided enough was enough. He wanted to take back control of his life, so he began working out and changing his diet. And so began his incredible fitness journey.

Ronnie Brower

Throughout the four years it took him to shed 458 pounds, Andrea Masella, a fellow gym-goer with a similar goal of extreme weight loss, took notice. Their shared mission led to a beautiful bond—“a match made in heaven,” Ronnie’s personal trainer, Nick Murphy calls it.

The couple has overcome unthinkable obstacles that go far beyond losing weight.

Ronnie Brower

“Both of us had used food as a coping mechanism; I would just eat my feelings,” Andrea said. “We’ve gone through a lot of counseling to come to terms with that and change.”

Along the way, Ronnie also gave his life to Christ, and was baptized by Nick Murphy three years ago in the Christian church where the couple tied the knot this past Saturday.

Ronnie Brower

After now shedding a staggering 578 pounds combined, the healthy, happy, new and improved couple says they plan to continue supporting each other through life, and even begin to counsel others on their own weight loss transformation.

Andrea Brower

Andrea hopes they can be an inspiration to others who feel like they’re literally stuck in their own skin, because both of them have been there.

“People come to me all the time, asking for weight-loss advice,” Ronnie says. “I just tell them there’s hope out there. If you want it bad enough and put your mind to it, anybody can do it.”

15 Irresistible ‘Rizz’ Pick-Up Lines to Elevate Your Flirting Game

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In the game of attraction, having “rizz,” or charisma, is like possessing a secret weapon. It’s that irresistible blend of charm, wit, and confidence that can turn a chance encounter into a moment of connection. Whether you’re navigating the world of dating apps or striking up conversations in the coffee shop line, the right pick-up line can open the door to all kinds of possibilities. But here’s the secret: it’s not just about the words you say; it’s about how you say them. With that in mind, let’s dive into some top-tier “rizz” pick-up lines that strike the perfect balance between clever and charming, ensuring you leave an unforgettable impression.

Rizz Pick-Up Lines to Step Up Your Game

    1. “Are you a magician? Because whenever I look at you, everyone else disappears.”
      • Why it works: This line is classic yet effective because it’s a compliment wrapped in a light-hearted setup. It suggests that the person has captivated your attention completely, a flattering notion for anyone.
    2. “Do you have a name, or can I call you mine?”
      • The charm factor: It’s forward yet playful, suggesting a level of interest that’s both flattering and bold without being overbearing.
    3. “Aside from being stunning, what do you do for a living?”
      • The appeal: This line works because it acknowledges their attractiveness while also expressing an interest in learning more about them, striking a balance between physical attraction and a desire to understand the person more deeply.
    4. “Is it hot in here, or is it just our chemistry?”
      • Why it clicks: Flirty and funny, this pick-up line breaks the ice by alluding to a mutual attraction, making it a light-hearted way to express interest.
    5. “If you were a vegetable, you’d be a cute-cumber.”
      • The charm: It’s cute, it’s punny, and it’s disarming. Humor is a great way to lower defenses and make someone smile, opening up the room for further conversation.
    6. “I must be a snowflake because I’ve fallen for you.”
      • The allure: This line is sweet and poetic without being too serious, perfect for capturing someone’s attention with its whimsical imagery.
    7. “Excuse me, but I think you dropped something: MY JAW!”
        • Why it’s effective: It’s a humorous and exaggerated way to compliment someone’s appearance, likely to elicit a laugh or at least a smile, paving the way for a conversation.

15 Heartfelt ‘Thinking of You’ Quotes to Brighten Someone’s Day

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In a world that moves at breakneck speed, taking a moment to pause and let someone know they’re in your thoughts can be a powerful act of connection. Whether it’s a friend going through a tough time, a family member you haven’t seen in a while, or a partner you’re missing dearly, a simple “thinking of you” message can bridge miles and mend hearts. To help you articulate these sentiments, we’ve compiled a selection of “thinking of you” quotes that beautifully express this feeling. These phrases go beyond mere words, touching on the essence of human connection and the tender act of keeping someone close in your heart, even when they’re far from sight.

“Thinking of You” Quotes and Insights

    1. “In case you ever foolishly forget: I am never not thinking of you.” – Virginia Woolf
      • Insight: Woolf’s words offer a profound declaration of constant thought and affection, perfect for reminding someone of your unwavering presence in their life.
    2. “Somewhere someone is thinking of you. Someone is calling you an angel. This person is using celestial colors to paint your image.” – Henry Rollins
      • Insight: This quote paints a vivid picture of how we hold dear ones in our thoughts, ideal for sharing with someone who needs a reminder of their worth and impact.
    3. “Thinking of you is easy – I do it every day. Missing you is the heartache, that never goes away.” – Michael Pryce
      • Insight: Perfect for expressing both the ease of fond memories and the pain of separation, this quote balances warmth with the ache of missing someone.
    4. “I think about you constantly, whether it’s with my mind or my heart.” – Terri Guillemets
      • Insight: Guillemets’ words beautifully express the all-encompassing nature of thinking about someone, making it a touching message for someone deeply ingrained in your thoughts.
    5. “You’re everywhere except right here and it hurts.” – Rupi Kaur
      • Insight: Kaur’s simple yet powerful words convey deep longing and the pain of absence, perfect for expressing how much you miss having someone near.
    6. “If I had a single flower for every time I think about you, I could walk forever in my garden.” – Claudia Adrienne Grandi
      • Insight: This quote conveys the endless nature of thoughts filled with someone special, suggesting a vastness of affection that’s both romantic and poetic.
    7. “Just wanted to let you know you’re on my mind. Right now, tomorrow, and always.”
      • Insight: Straightforward and sincere, this message is versatile, fitting for any relationship to express that they are always in your thoughts.
    8. “Whenever you find yourself doubting how far you can go, just remember how far you have come. Remember everything you have faced, all the battles you have won, and all the fears you have overcome. I’m thinking of you.”
      • Insight: This encouraging quote is perfect for reminding someone of their strength and resilience, showing that your thoughts come with admiration and support.
    9. “Thinking of you keeps me awake. Dreaming of you keeps me asleep. Being with you keeps me alive.” – Unknown
      • Insight: Ideal for a romantic partner, this quote dives into the deep connection and longing that comes with love, expressing how thoughts of them fill every moment.
    10. “I just hugged you in my thoughts… Hope you felt the squeeze!”
      • Insight: Playful and sweet, this quote is a light-hearted way to let someone know they’re in your thoughts, perfect for sending a virtual hug when you can’t be there in person.

7 Jaw-Dropping Last Statements Ever Uttered Before Execution

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Throughout history, the final words at executions have captivated the imagination and provoked deep thought among scholars, ethicists, and the general public. These last statements offer a window into the individual’s thoughts, feelings, and reflections at the moment of their ultimate fate. They can range from expressions of remorse or innocence, to declarations of love, to philosophical or religious musings. This blog aims to explore some of these final words, considering their historical context, the individual’s circumstances, and the broader implications they hold for our understanding of justice, humanity, and mortality.

Final Words at Executions

The tradition of recording an individual’s last words before execution dates back centuries and spans various cultures and legal systems. These statements are often seen as a form of ultimate truth, a final opportunity for the individual to express themselves without consequence. However, it’s essential to approach these words with a nuanced understanding of the complex situations in which they were uttered, considering factors such as the individual’s psychological state, the justice system’s fairness, and societal attitudes towards crime and punishment at the time.

Reflections on Notable Last Words

  1. “I did not get my Spaghetti-O’s; I got spaghetti. I want the press to know this.” – Thomas J. Grasso
    • Context: Grasso’s final words at execution in 1995 for two murders have been remembered for their bizarrely mundane complaint about his last meal. They highlight the surrealism and absurdity that can pervade the final moments of life.
  2. “Such is life.” – Ned Kelly
    • Context: The legendary Australian outlaw Ned Kelly was executed in 1880 for murder. His purported final words have become emblematic of a stoic acceptance of fate, reflecting Kelly’s enduring defiance and the complex figure he remains in Australian folklore.
  3. “I am ready to be released. Release me.” – Karla Faye Tucker
    • Context: Tucker’s final statement before her execution in 1998 for murder reflects a desire for spiritual release and redemption. Her case sparked widespread debate on the death penalty, particularly regarding women and redemption.
  4. “Let us hope that this execution is the last act of the tragedy of a second world war and that the lessons taken from this will be that peace and understanding should prevail between peoples.” – Adolf Eichmann
    • Context: Eichmann, a major organizer of the Holocaust, was executed in 1962 in Israel. His final words at execution invoke a controversial plea for peace, coming from an individual responsible for unimaginable atrocities.
  5. “I’d like you to give my love to my family and friends.” – Ted Bundy
    • Context: Before his execution in 1989 for numerous brutal murders, Bundy’s last words were a simple message of love. Despite the horrific nature of his crimes, his final statement reminds us of the complex and contradictory aspects of human nature.
  6. “I forgive you all.” – Sister Maria Restituta Kafka
    • Context: Executed by guillotine in 1943 by the Nazis for distributing anti-Nazi pamphlets, Sister Maria’s final words were a profound act of forgiveness, showcasing the strength of her convictions and her faith.
  7. “Hurry it up, you Hoosier bastard! I could hang a dozen men while you’re screwing around!” – Carl Panzram
    • Context: Panzram’s defiant and contemptuous final words before his execution in 1930 for murder reflect his violent and rebellious nature, having spent his life in and out of prison for various crimes.

The Ethical and Moral Considerations

The exploration of final words at executions inevitably raises ethical and moral questions about the death penalty, justice, and human rights. These statements can humanize individuals who have often been dehumanized by their crimes and the media, reminding us of the complexity of human morality and the profound implications of capital punishment. They also prompt reflection on forgiveness, redemption, and the possibility of change, challenging society to reconsider its approaches to justice and retribution.

The final words of those facing execution serve as a poignant reminder of humanity’s complexities, the profound questions surrounding justice and morality, and the indelible mark left by the final moments of a human life. As we reflect on these last statements, we are reminded of the weight of capital punishment and the need for continued dialogue and examination of the systems that administer it. In remembering these individuals and their final words, we confront the depths of human nature and the societal structures that determine fate.

Oops, Wrong Car! 10 Signs You’re Not in the Uber You Ordered

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In today’s fast-paced world, ridesharing apps like Uber have become a staple of urban mobility, offering convenience and flexibility for travelers and commuters alike. However, amidst the hustle and bustle, it’s crucial to ensure that the vehicle you’re about to step into is indeed the Uber you ordered. The consequences of hopping into the wrong car range from a simple mix-up to more serious safety concerns. To keep you safe and sound on your journeys, here’s a light-hearted yet informative look at 10 unmistakable signs that you’re not in the Uber you ordered.

Spotting the Mix-Up: 10 Signs You’ve Entered the Wrong Uber

1. The License Plate Doesn’t Match

The first and most reliable sign is the license plate mismatch. Before getting into the car, always check that the license plate matches the one displayed on your Uber app. If it’s a jumble of letters and numbers that doesn’t align with what your screen shows, you might just be about to make a new (unintended) friend.

2. Your Driver Has No Clue Who You Are

“Are you my Uber?” is usually met with a nod or a quick confirmation of your name by the real deal. If instead, you get a puzzled look followed by, “Who’s Uber? I’m just waiting for my buddy Dave,” it’s a clear sign you’ve got the wrong car.

3. The Car Model and Color Don’t Match

You’re expecting a white Toyota Corolla, and a red Ford Mustang pulls up. Unless your driver has been dabbling in some serious automotive alchemy, chances are you’re eyeing someone else’s ride.

4. The Driver Is Overly Enthusiastic About Paper Maps

True, everyone loves a bit of nostalgia now and then. However, if your driver whips out a paper map and starts plotting a route the old-fashioned way, you might start wondering whether this Uber doubles as a time machine.

5. There’s No Uber Decal or Identifier

Most Ubers have some form of identifier or decal to signal they’re working with the rideshare company. If the car is as plain as a private vehicle and the driver seems confused about why you’re so interested in his lack of Uber swag, you might not be where you think you are.

6. Your Driver’s Route Seems Inspired by a Roller Coaster Design

If taking the “scenic route” involves back alleys and sudden, unexplained detours, your driver might not be lost; you might just not be in the right car. Uber drivers have GPS and a clear route, so excessive rerouting is a red flag.