Previous Challenge Entry (Level 4 – Masters)
Topic: Empty and Full (06/04/09)
-
TITLE: Halfway Point | Previous Challenge Entry
By Brenda Kern
06/11/09 -
LEAVE COMMENT ON ARTICLE
SEND A PRIVATE COMMENT
ADD TO MY FAVORITES
Her thoughts turned toward herself. “Am I full of my years yet? Well, probably halfway now. No, more than half way.
“According to life expectancy tables, I’m past the midpoint.” She thought on that for a moment. Hmmm.
“And what have I got to show for it?” This kind of introspection could be brutal, she knew, but this was the mood she was in. So, she urged herself on.
Both parents are gone now, dying relatively young, and our inheritance is not staying with us—-snatched away, gone forever.
No husband, no children.
No job, no prospects for one. No retirement, no health insurance. All in an economic situation with little promise, with business closures everywhere. Economic conversation first featured the word recession, then turned to the dread term depression, and now seems to be moving toward collapse. An ugly word, particularly to those caught in the vortex, most likely to be most hurt.
My siblings are struggling, too: job hunting, moving, battling serious illness, maybe more that hasn’t been disclosed to me. And I, though the oldest, can do nothing to help, not a single thing.
She sank a little lower as her questing mind moved toward summary and conclusion. “I’m not happy with my personal life, my career, or my appearance. My physical health may be holding, but my emotional health is eroding away, due to day after empty day, waiting.”
Waiting for a job, waiting for a call, waiting for my life to start.
Bitter chuckle. “It’s a little late for that.”
Waiting for yet another reload to start. Get another job, start at the bottom of the totem pole again, work hard toward…
Nothing. Another layoff? Probably.
Reload again. This cycle isn’t any fun; it isn’t even satisfactory.
But for me, it’s all I’ve got. Decades of nothingness, followed by more empty years as a senior citizen.
The panic rises, that old familiar strangling feeling sets in. An old joke recommends that you “live long enough to be a burden to your children.” Hilarious.
I can’t live to be a burden to my siblings or their children, I simply can’t allow it.
Dying full of years, looked on with admiration in the Bible, is a terrifying prospect for me.
I’d prefer to die now, half full of years, thoroughly full of emptiness.
But I’m not allowed to die, obviously. I’m required to soldier on, like it or not, prefer it or not.
What a joy it must be to be my friend! I light up a room...when I leave it.
I suppose I should be actively seeking joy of some kind, somehow. But, between doing my gloom crunches about unemployment, faking hope for the future during phone calls, and sleeping too much, there hardly seems time.
How did Job do it? He had plenty of doom and gloom to worry over, friends who were no help, and a peach of a wife. (Are you still holding on to your integrity? Curse God and die! Job 2:9, NIV)
After all the discourses and scholarly discussion amongst Job and his friends, God has had enough and steps in and speaks. We might have expected kind and comforting words, or explanations, or a defense of Job, but no. The core of what He has to say is this: I am God, you are not. I always have been, I AM, and I always will be, God almighty.
If there’s one theme in the Bible that really speaks to me, she thought, this is it: His identity.
He, God, knows my needs, financial, practical, and otherwise. He’s capable of provision, and His timing is trustworthy.
He, the Creator, knows more about my loved ones and their worries than I do, and is certainly more able to help; all I can do is ask Him to.
He, the Comforter, must wonder why I feel empty, given that He dwells within, filling me with Himself.
I, the believer, can’t fear the fullness of years or despise the emptiness of heart. I must bow.
She closes the Bible and the interior discussion, simply trusting.
The opinions expressed by authors may not necessarily reflect the opinion of FaithWriters.com.
Accept Jesus as Your Lord and Savior Right Now - CLICK HERE
JOIN US at FaithWriters for Free. Grow as a Writer and Spread the Gospel.