Preparing for the Storm

Preparing for the Storm

Knowing God

The idea for this blog originated from a text message I sent, checking on my friend Bonny before Hurricane Francine made landfall along the Louisiana coast. I shared with her that it was also the day my husband suffered a fatal medical issue. She wrote these encouraging words. I hope they bless you today.

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Living in Louisiana, we get used to tracking storms. From the moment meteorologists start talking about a low-pressure area over the ocean, our ears perk up. Suddenly, we’re all amateur weather watchers, discussing the potential for a hurricane and where it will make landfall and when. We know about wind speeds, hurricane categories and remember the major ones that people still talk about like Ida, Rita, Katrina, Camille and Betsy.

We also know how to prepare for these potentially life-threatening storms. We gas up our vehicles and load up on bottled water, bread and medications. We remove outdoor furniture and plants, gather flashlights and charge up our phones and computers. Ready for the storm, we board up and stay inside or leave.

But those storms are easy. From June to November, it’s hurricane season. We know what to do. And, we’ll go through the motions again and again, because that’s how we can protect ourselves and our loved ones.

Unpredictable life storms

But what about the storms we’re not prepared for? Those storms that nobody could predict were coming.

Those are the storms that will bring us to our knees, sending us out to sea and drowning us in fear, pain and despair. They blow in and blow out, and in an instant, we are left with one thing: loss.

Loss, in all its forms, makes such an impact that it becomes a part of our beings, our lives and who we become.  There’s a “before” and an “after.” And, every year, that moment that changed everything, is marked by an anniversary. A date marked in our minds and our hearts, and, again, we are knocked to our knees.

We know this storm is coming. We can predict it. We feel it. But how can we prepare for it? How do we “board up” our hearts, to make them strong against the violent winds and memories? Maybe we can adopt the hurricane preparedness list and use it to help us remain strong and vigilant.

Remain strong and vigilant

  • Stay informed: mark your calendar and be aware of what’s approaching.
  • Plan for evacuation: offer yourself in service to someone else in need, i.e., a shift at the Food Bank, a visit/phone call/text with someone who is lonely or go shopping to donate to a baby charity.
  • Family communication plan: communicate with others, i.e., a family member, close friend, prayer partner or clergy.
  • Gather emergency supplies: consider what has given you the most strength over the past year and spend some time with God talking about it.
  • Survive: Yep!
  • Aftermath of the storm: assess the damage and know how strong you are. Keep safe and be healthy. God loves you!

As Jesus awaited His own personal “storm” at the Garden of Gethsemane, He brought his closest companions, and He prayed to the Father. He knew the time had come to die for humankind and sorrow overcame Him too.

“Then he said to them, ‘My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. Stay here and keep watch with me,’” (Matthew 26:38 NIV).

Knowing God

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Don’t know Jesus? You can.

It would be my greatest honor to take your hand, introduce you and walk you through how to accept Jesus as your Lord and Savior, and how to have a personal relationship with Him.

Find out more here.

Umbrellas

Umbrellas

Squeal with delight

This blog post was written by my friend Christy McIntyre. She shared her thoughts with me one day while walking and they resonated. I hope it encourages you too.

Christy has been a teacher in 3 countries, Director of Training for Totalfit, and married to her best friend for 23 years. She is currently launching her two kids into adulthood, loving Jesus, and trying to find the next iteration of life God has for her, probably on the other side of the planet. Meanwhile, she writes observations and God-given notes in her phone that hopefully won’t break before she puts them all in a book.

I love her perspective on life and her teaching spirit. Enjoy!

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When exactly did the lie begin? You know the lie, that being a grown-up was a straight path, predictable, and for the most part, planned.

We, well at least I, grew up antsy to become an adult and couldn’t wait to be out there doing all the adult things. For some reason, watching our moms and dads do the mundane seemed extraordinary. Seemed effortless. Seemed, like a straight line on a smooth road. Did they just not tell us about the bumps along the way or storms that popped up out of nowhere? Were they better at navigating the bumps, the curves, or even the quick hard left turns that life seems to throw at us regularly?

Hope and Help

Despite the answer, the truth is, adult life is just a series of storms. Unfortunately, we can’t watch the “adult life weather report” because there is no meteorologist for each of our lives predicting the sunshine, clouds, torrential rain or damaging winds on the horizon.

But just like the actual weather, life storms will come and nothing can be done to stop them. What if instead of trying to avoid the storms we looked around for hope and help, like umbrellas on a rainy day?

Umbrellas are everywhere, useful, and can even change the course of our day especially if we don’t have to get totally drenched in a pop-up storm. The people we choose as friends, work partners, and even our community are just like those umbrellas. They impact our emotional state in ways we can’t fathom.

Relief and Calm

The relief and calm they bring help shift our perspective, offer good advice, bring humor to situations, and make moments of joy and hope that are the sunshine and fair weather that help us carry on. Friends will often sit with us in hard times offering wisdom beyond our capacity or a place of calm to process the crazy.

Long gone are the days of umbrella holders right inside the entry to homes and businesses, but what if we look at our collection of friends and memories as just that? A collection of umbrellas that help us to endure a storm and steady us in the rain.

This week look for the umbrellas. It could be a moment of joy or a friend. Go be an umbrella when you see a storm approaching someone you love.

“A friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for a time of adversity,” (Proverbs 17:17 NIV).

 

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Don’t know Jesus? You can.

It would be my greatest honor to take your hand, introduce you and walk you through how to accept Jesus as your Lord and Savior, and how to have a personal relationship with Him.

Find out more here.

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