stepping stones

I have to keep breathing... For tomorrow the sun will rise. Who knows what the tide will bring? -Tom Hanks, Castaway

The question eventually comes up in conversation, so Iʼll just cut to the chase. Believe what you will, but my belief set doesnʼt subscribe to the idea that this experience was or is Godʼs plan. I just donʼt see it. End of story.

But Chad, if good things can come out of suffering, doesn't that make suffering good? Make no mistake, good CAN come from suffering, but not the act of suffering itself. The ʻgoodʼ that comes it directly hinges on our response to our suffering. Suffering is like a pile of rocks. You can choose to carry the load, throw them at someone, just let it lay there, or you can build an altar. The benefit comes when we take an unfortunate – or tragic beyond words - experience and make something good come from it. To find a hope in the gloom. Still, finding the hope doesnʼt change the fact that the situation is flat out heinous.

Itʼs been exactly four weeks to the day since the surgery. My brain is racked when I think about the events the last four weeks have brought. Itʼs incomprehensible, yet here I am. And I canʼt escape that reality. Truth be told, I think most people stop right there. They get stuck on the reality, and lessons arenʼt learned. There is no hope found. Souls that have been beaten down stay down. If you know the Prayer of Serenity, youʼll find an amazing truth hidden in the second half of it:

God grant me the serenity

to accept the things I cannot change;
courage to change the things I can;
and wisdom to know the difference.

Living one day at a time; Enjoying one moment at a time;
Accepting hardships as the pathway to peace;
Taking, as He did, this sinful world
as it is, not as I would have it;
Trusting that He will make all things right
if I surrender to His will;

That I may be REASONABLY happy in this life and supremely happy with Him

forever in the next.

Amen.

This life wonʼt be void of pain. In fact God promises the opposite – “In this life you will....”

I have accepted this. I wake up in the morning to realityʼs frigid welcome. So I greet it, take a deep breath, and continue building my trail of altars. You desire to know the art of living, my friend? It is contained in one phrase: make use of suffering. – Henri-Frederic Amiel

sons and highwires

I’ve got two boys – Luke (8) and Jake (4), completely different, equally unique. A couple days ago, my son Luke was having a tough day. With everything that’s happened in the last month, I think it just finally caught up with him. He lost an uncle, and his dad was in the hospital for weeks. In his mind, he didn’t know when or if I’d ever come home. I’m not the guy who holds his children out of school at the first sniffle. In fact, it usually takes a good hack or two before that even becomes an option.

But that day, something in my heart broke for Luke. I told him to crawl into my bed and forget about school that day. Then he asked me to curl up with him. You just can’t turn down an offer like that.

I’ve talked about living my life differently now, pointing to some of the things in Ryan’s life that I want to model after. This is one of them. Honestly, this is an area people might say where I’m being too hard on myself, but I know I can do better – more. This area is fatherhood. Man, I love my boys. (p.s. I don’t have any girls, so I’m not being exclusive). But Ryan not only loved them, he raced home from work to be with them. He cleared his weekends to be with them – doing more in a day’s time than I do with my boys in a month sometimes.

I said my boys were different. Luke is introspective. He strives for perfectionism and is hard on himself when he falls short of that. Jake is a force. He’s all out there, every second of every day. I’ve been a ‘good’ dad, but I know I need to do more. I need to let Luke fail, and to let him know it’s ok. I need to pursue Jake.

He’s independent to the point he’ll just go tuck himself in sometimes without saying anything.

And even as I write this, there’s a pit in my stomach because I know I’ve even passed up opportunities to be with them to write for this blog. Yep, pitiful. The blog where I talk about deepening relationships and the new me.

My dad has lost a son – an unbearable pain that I can’t begin to take in. His peace and strength through this leaves me speechless. I know he loved Ryan like I love my boys like you reading this love yours if you’re blessed to have even one.

Dad’s always pursued me. He’ll have to call 5 times before a single callback from me. “Sure would love to hear from you”. I don’t want him to have to say that anymore. I know he loves me as I love my boys. And I bet it breaks his heart to leave that message once, twice, three, ....ugh I feel sick thinking about it. I need to change that now.

Romans 8:16 says we are God’s children. I am God’s son. My whole life He has pursued me. He even sacrificed His son in that pursuit – an unbearable pain that I have tried my whole life to take in. What I’m amazed at with God is how undiscerning God’s love is. I mean, He’s God. He can’t just love anyone. You have to be selective! Guess not. And thank God, because I don’t know if I’d make the cut.

So I’m asked if I’m angry with God. If my faith in Him is fading.

There’s a story I heard awhile back. It’s been awhile so it’s a little fuzzy, but I think you’ll get the point.

There’s a guy, we’ll call him Guy. Guy’s hiking out at the Grand Canyon. He comes to the edge where it drops into a bottomless darkness. Through the haze of the heat, he sees a tightrope that extends from one edge of the canyon clear to the other side.

Then he notices something unfathomable. There’s an acrobat coming across the highwire with a wheelbarrow – and within the wheelbarrow another performer rides totally at ease.

Reaching him, Guy’s amazement is unmistakable. The acrobat acts like it’s no big deal and says, “What? Think I can’t do it again?” Guy, shaken but with faith in what he’s just seen says, “Uh, actually I believe you can”.

The acrobat smiles and then says, “Good, then get in and I’ll take you across”. So back to the question of being angry or untrusting of God.

I have no problem telling people I have a deep faith. That I trust God. But would I get in the wheelbarrow? We’d all like to think we would. But will I? I say I believe God CAN get me through this pain. But do I believe He WILL?

Romans 8:38-39 For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

So, when I take in how deep His love is for me by what He sacrificed, who he sacrificed – I can get in the wheelbarrow without a second thought.

Love you Dad. 

the new normal

Yesterday I had my checkup at the hospital. For the first time in over a decade, my levels were normal. I was ecstatic.

After the appointment, I jumped in on a work call and answered some emails. I was energized.

Being energized, I hit the treadmill. I crossed the 1-mile marker for the first time in a single workout since the surgery. I was pumped.

After that “fierce” workout (sarcastic quotes) I took the last remaining bandages off my suture. I was, well, I was grossed out. But I was also psyched.

“It feels good to be getting back to normal.”

The minute I said that I got sick to my stomach.

Let me back up. Just two weeks before, Rock – my cousin who, along with my sister Janelle, lived every second of that hell with me there in the hospital. Rock (yes, that’s his real name) and I have always been close, but those weeks together in the hospital bonded us in a deeper way than I can ever communicate. There was sleepless night after sleepless night. In sleep’s place were tears and the only kind of talks that have lasting and meaningful impact in this life. There was none of the typical FB status-type talk (no offense meant, I do it too).

We talked about Ryan’s life. We watched in amazement as news agencies picked up the story and people started to take notice. We got our breath knocked out of us with each physical setback I had – thinking I was going home then told it would be another day or two or three. He literally lifted me out of bed and helped me walk to the bathroom at all times of the night.

They were bittersweet days of physical, emotional and spiritual rehab. We started to hate those four walls, that bed and the hard “couch” he slept on. I had goals on a board that I had to meet each day, and Rock,  and Janelle made sure I was getting after it. It was up to me when I got out of there.

When “we” were finally released, I never wanted to go back to that place ever again. Not for checkups, not for ER visits, not for anything in this world.

Fast forward to yesterday. I was actually celebrating normal. I was pumped to be normal. The second I said the word “normal”, I wanted back inside those four walls.

See, when we’d sit there at 3am staring at the ceiling, we’d talk about how Ryan’s death had changed us and how we see life’s landscape now. We’d talk about the things we don’t want to continue doing, things we wanted to start doing, and how we could never let ourselves slip back into the ruts we’ve created over a half-life.

Then Rock said it.

“My greatest fear through all this is that we are all affected by it but then eventually just go back to normal.”

I hate normal.

Now... I get it. Some times normal is ok. Getting back in shape is good. Re-engaging in work is very good. But there’s a slippery slope just beyond that and I feel like I’m at the edge of it trying to figure out how to get around it.

I’ve been in the church my whole life. I’ve heard that we are to live an “in-your-face-to-the-extreme-on- the-edge” kind of life. I’ve even had some experiences on mission trips where, for a suspended moment, I’ve felt the surge of that kind of life.

But that’s less than 1% of 1% of real life. What about when you have kids, jobs, mortgages, and in-laws? I DON’T WANT TO GO BACK TO NORMAL. How do I stop it from happening? I don’t have the answer. And to be honest, if you comment back saying you have the answer, I’d ask you two questions: 1st: where can I pick up your NY Times Bestseller, and 2nd: How come nobody’s reading it?

My point is, if it really was that formulaic, we’d all be doing it. Everyone has their own answer they swear by. Well, I’m no different. I offer this: After hashing this backwards and forwards in my head, I think it has to do with seeking out what you believe and then living that out unabashedly. No great revelation. For me, I’ve found two examples for living an un-normal life that I plan to model.

First – From the Bible, the apostle Paul. He wrote to the people in Philippi that he wanted to know Christ. To know him and the power of his resurrection as well as to share in his pain and sufferings. That’s not normal.

The second one, well, you can probably guess that one. My “little” brother. You‘ve heard about Ryan living life to the fullest. Hunting, fishing, 4 wheeling...but if that’s all you get from his life, I’m sorry but you’ve woefully missed it.

Living life to the fullest means loving, giving, committing to the maximum extent possible. Living fully means being emptied. And even beyond Ryan’s earthly years, his life symbolizes knowing Christ and making him known.

I can’t inspire anyone other than myself to live un-normal. Heck I can’t even inspire myself. I need friends who care enough to get me off my back and out of bed and help me back up when I fall on my way to the bathroom in the middle of the night.

More than that, I need to put down roots in God’s words and embrace His promises to me – the Bible. Cliché? Maybe. But it’s the only bestseller I’ve found that offers a way to the new normal. Now I just have to live it. 

you probably think this song is about you

.....And you probably know the rest of the song.

I was the King of Vanity. Ask anyone who really knows me. In fact, I think a lot of those people think I haven’t yet passed that mantle over to anyone yet.

That’s ok. After looking like the first (ok, second) pregnant man because of ascites with an aura of yellow around me who can’t stop itching and excusing myself to hit the bathroom every 5 minutes because of diuretics – I’ve eaten my share of humble pie.

Selflessness. I think it’s the one thing that has stood out to me more than anything else so far in this process. It’s been threaded through every post and I didn’t even notice. Ryan’s life and sacrifice. Letting go of guilt. Hospital halls. Psalm 133.

If you can spot selfishness, you have a head start on life. You can snuff it out. Then you’re at that ethereal place where you realize YOU have to figuratively end so that faith can take over. You have reached the end of yourself. And that’s right where God likes to enter the scene.

2 Corinthians 12:9 – But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me.

Selfless living. I don’t think it’s hard as we make it out to be. Think about it for a second. When I think of the times that I’ve felt sublimely content, it wasn’t when I bought that new whatever or got that promotion or won that thingamajig. It was the time I helped that person in the smallest way unbeknownst to them. It was the time I reached out to a friend when they needed me, and when I bailed out my brother or saved my sister’s bacon. OK that last part about brother and sister was actually the reverse – I was being bailed and it was my bacon – but you get the point. There was a split second moment where things just felt right – like things just snapped into place.

Yet I’ve spent the majority of my time for those fleeting yeah-it-feels-good-but –not –for-long moments. So I chased that fleeting moment with another (fill in blank with appropriate response):
 

This is my chance to really make it stick, now that I have all of you holding me accountable. I’m making every day’s goal to live selflessly.

OK after reading that, it sounds pathetically trite. But I don’t care. To live it is something altogether different. 

can you believe it

I wasn’t born with an intrinsic optimistic mindset. If I were to win the lottery, the first words out of my mouth would probably have been, “Great, now how much am I going to be taxed on THAT?”

1. Over the last few weeks, that cynicism has been bolstered. Throughout the transplant process, I’ve lost a brother (.01% likelihood), my hospital stay has lasted longer (2 weeks longer than norm), I’ve had complications where at the beginning I was told, “this would be last case scenario, it hardly ever happens... I’ve never actually seen it happen...they just say that to brace you...etc.

Throughout my life I’ve heard to not focus on my worries. Besides only 1% of those things actually happen. Call it self-pity. Call it being weathered. But it feels like I’ve been getting more than my share of 1%’s lately. Even some hospital staff agree. I heard Strong’s is considering changing Murphy’s law to Chad’s law. (Yes, I’m laying the self-pity on pretty thick right now – deal with it).

2. Especially based on recent events, I’m not at all as trusting as I used to be. When someone says they’ll meet me here at this time or they’ll do this by then, I set that expectation bar very low. I don’t even get upset – I just plan on disappointment.

3. I’m crazy impatient. I have a very clear picture in my mind of where and how I want things to go. That goes for home life, professionally, and spiritually. Because I’m a rocket-fueled OCD perfectionist, you might say I can be a little overbearing.

4. And I don’t like the hard stuff. If there are going to be rough waters ahead I’m eyeing the closest lifeboat on my scamper down to the hull.

5. Ever see the Seinfeld where George pushes the kids and bowls over grandma out of the way so he can “clear” a path away from the fire? Yeah, that’s me.

I’d like to believe I have some redeeming qualities to offset these, but it doesn’t change the fact that I’m wrecked.

So when Ryan told me I was worth it and sent me a message saying he believed in me, I struggled to accept that. Still do.

I Believe in You

But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. Pretty sure Paul had someone like me on his mind when wrote that in First Corinthians.

Wait a minute....

Thought just hit me. Ryan DID believe in me because he KNEW that no matter what happened, I had just enough feeble fool in me to be the right guy to get it right. Man, he was wise beyond his years! I’m kidding. I think.

So what’s my point through all this garbled scribble? Despite my...

Ridonculous Cynicism (See point 1) Untrusting Bent (See point 2)
Crazy Impatience (See point 3) Difficulty Dodging (See point 4) 

suffaithering :: faith in the middle of suffering

This article (used in part) appeared today on National Fox News by Rev. Bill Shuler, pastor of Capital Life Church in Arlington, Virginia and friend of the Arnold siblings. To learn more, visitCapitalLife.org.

In Denver, Colorado two brothers embraced before going into surgery for a liver transplant. Ryan Arnold,

age 34, was donating a part of his healthy liver so that his older brother Chad Arnold, who had an incurable liver disease, could live.

This type of surgery is rare and not without risk. After what seemed to be a successful surgery, complications arose. Within four days, the donor Ryan Arnold died while his brother Chad lived.

Ryan and Chad’s father fought back tears as he broke the news to Chad with the simple words, “I have some bad news. Ryan’s gone but we still serve a good God.”

When someone goes through unbearable pain and emerges with faith intact something in all of us takes notice. Faith emerges as less of a debate and its sacred nature becomes illuminated. The words in scripture, “Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends,” (John 15:13) are merely noble words until modeled in a hospital room where a brother’s life hangs in the balance or on a cross 2,000 years ago.

The Bible does not pretend that suffering doesn’t exist. The eleventh Chapter of Hebrews is known as the “Faith Chapter.” Within its contents are recorded mighty exploits and miracles. Also within its contents are those who took a stand and whose lives were marked by suffering even to the point of death. The Bible notes that ALL were commended for their faith....

In a world in which faith is often ridiculed or marginalized, Ryan Arnold, husband of Shannon and father of their three children ages 6, 4 and 1, simply lived out his faith. His words, spoken minutes before his surgery to his brother telling him that he was “worth it” caused us all to catch a glimpse of how God views us. His faith told him that love has the power to forever change the life of another. END

This is Chad talking now. One of the things I wrestle with most right now is that question of being worth it. It’s hard to see the value within me first, for Ryan to make the sacrifice he did and secondly, to see the future value my life will yield as a result of the borrowed time I am now living on. I think that’s a common struggle with anyone when they approach God. But he says we are worth all that He did for us. So I know that at least for me, I have to believe those words and make them real. 

mind the gap

It’s a phrase that comes from the London Underground. Since there’s nothing to fill the gap between the passenger car and the platform, this is what is heard to prevent passengers from being caught unawares and suffering injury by stepping into the wide gap.

It’s the same phrase that rings loud in my head when I start to spiral down with questions I know I’ll never get answers to until I stand before God after my time here is done.

I have to mind the gap. Why Ryan, God? Why not me? What about all the prayers? How could something like this happen to our family? What are we supposed to do now?

If you think I haven’t asked these questions – you’re wrong. If you think I have a “remarkable” faith that helps me coast over these questions – you’re wrong. If you think I haven’t yelled at God – I’m sorry and you’re wrong. I have my weak and ugly moments, and so does everyone close to this.

These questions will never go away. I know in 20 years I’ll be somewhere doing something and one of those questions will blindside me again.

What maybe makes this story different is that there is a point where you mind the gap. You realize that some questions will never get answers. And then you’re faced with the ultimate question – “Will you still follow me?”

Minding the gap means swallowing hard and turning to the only hope you know is real, knowing that what you don’t know is the stuff that faith is made of. Faith isn’t a set of laws. It’s not getting dressed up for Sunday morning church and going through the motions. It’s the thing you cling to when you’re taking your last breath in a freezing river whose current is too strong. Well, the current is too strong for me right now, and so I’m clinging.

PSALM 131:

1 My heart is not proud, O LORD, my eyes are not haughty; I do not concern myself with great matters or things too wonderful for me. 2 But I have stilled and quieted my soul; like a weaned child with its mother, like a weaned child is my soul within me. 3 O Israel, put your hope in the LORD both now and forevermore.