Learning to do things differently

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As I write, I am currently recovering from complex wrist surgery. I have had to do everything with my Left non-dominant hand, and it has been a steep learning curve. In other ways, it has also been surprisingly easy. Maybe my brain likes a challenge, and perhaps I am more ambidextrous than I realised? I like to think that an upside of a painful experience is that I am re-wiring my brain.

My spiritual director prompted me to look for what might be ‘gift’ in amongst the realities of severe pain and diminished energy. She wasn’t being unsympathetic or unkind. Simply prompting me to actively look for ‘gifts’ or treasures of darkness. Any source of pain can be physically and psychologically crushing. A flattening experience. A squashing out of joy. A voice so loud it is hard to take in anything else. Watching the clock until the next lot of painkillers. How can there be gifts in that?

Changing a perspective can dramatically alter a photograph or a painting. It can make it sing. An artist’s eye is always scanning for perspective. As a keen photographer and artist I am used to doing that almost without thinking. Changing perspectives on painful and challenging circumstances can be a whole different ball game, but it is a vital, life-giving skill to hone.

I am facing an uncertain future.. I wrote those words to a wonderful, gifted author whose latest book is resonating deeply with me at this time of transition. (Called Apothecary by the Sea – a year in an Orkney garden by Victoria Bennett, I can’t recommend it highly enough! ) As I wrote the phrase ‘an uncertain future’, I realised how ridiculous I sounded. All of our futures are uncertain, we just think we can be sure of tomorrow/next week / next year and take our health and working bodies for granted until they stop or break.

My particular uncertainties revolve around the outcome of this operation on my dominant wrist. What sort of movement and strength can I expect to recover? I am a passionate gardener, an artist who loves to play with paint, a volunteer massage therapist at my local hospice and a joyful grandmother of two, soon to be three. All of these and more need two working hands. At this early stage, neither my surgeon or my physio can give me a clear picture of how I will be. Everyone is different, and my particular situation has some unique challenges.

Naturally I have been doing a lot of reflecting. Severe pain and physical limitations will do that. Trying to get my head around the uncertainties involved. It has lived rent free in my head for too long, and I am an impatient evictor. The whole process has been a lesson in patience, waiting for appointments/having cancellations etc, and I am not sure it is a lesson I have learned very well. Patience comes hard.

Learning to do everything with my left hand has been an interesting new sport. (I challenged my 7 year old granddaughter on a sleepover to get dressed/ undressed with just her left hand. Not only can she contort her lithe little body into positions I couldn’t attempt in the dressing process .. but we discovered she is probably more ambidextrous than I am. It was a fun experiment.

A few days later I had a yearning to pick up a paintbrush again. I had mastered the art of one handed photography from the get go, but could I paint with my left hand? I thought it was time to find out, and spent a happy hour or two playing with oil paint. It turns out my brain can cope with a left hand, and more importantly it was the joy it always has been, left or right.

Everything has been a reorganisation of thinking. How can I do this differently? What can I use to make it work? Over and over, rethinking things I never usually had to think about. That is good for the brain’s plasticity and can definitely be counted as gift.

I had seen that as a short term challenge as I negotiate various permutations of mediaeval type splints (even my physio agrees with my description of them) and slings. What can I wear that fits? How do I get my unwieldy limb into tops, coats or jumpers? But lately I have realised it is a frame of mind I need to keep as gift.

Whatever the outcome, and no matter how much physio I do my right arm cannot go back to what it was. It will inevitably be weaker and less flexible than it was. (Hopefully it will be less painful) So I need to change perspective. Unwrap the gift of discovery.

How do I do things differently? How do I continue to do the things that give me joy? I am going to have to think laterally, and daily/ hourly workout different approaches to every day tasks, just as I have been doing. Keep rewiring my brain and not just between right and left.

Keep a child’s willingness to try and fail and try again. A pliant heart and brain willing to experiment and discover. To look at things from new angles, even if it means kneeling down.

Looking up

I lift up my eyes to the mountains—
where does my help come from?
My help comes from the LORD,
the Maker of heaven and earth.

Soaring mountains. They draw out the superlatives in us. Majestic. Awe- inspiring. Scary, even. Living among them briefly, last week, did me the power of good. What is it about such stunning beauty that lifts the heart and refreshes the spirit? For me, it is because they shout the glory of the God who made them. They feed my soul. I don’t want to conquer them or climb them. Soaring around their heights would be more my style. I watched hang-gliders do just that, and looked on in wistful wonder. But I was also happy just to sit and feast my eyes on the ever changing lights and shadows and colours. It is a view I would never tire of.

Looking up is always good.  It changes my perspective. Reminds me how little I am, and how big God is.

David ( who wrote alot of the Psalms) and I are old mates. We go way back. A shepherd boy poet/musician who poured out his heart and soul to the God he knew and loved. I could wax lyrical about many of the Psalms he wrote, but I’ll restrain myself to one . Psalm 61. (It is also about mountains.) It burned itself into my consciousness in my early teens.

Hear my cry, O God;

Listen to my prayer.

From the ends of the earth I call to you , when my heart is faint.

Lead me to the rock that is higher than I.

Lead me to the rock that is higher than I. “I” …such a little word. But it can tower over us,  It can block our view of others, and of God and it can certainly dominate our inner landscape.  Whether we view ourselves positively or negatively, self absorption is a habit that is ridiculously hard to shake off.  Young children go through a wonderful stage of unselfconsciousness. They just are. Like flowers or stars or mountains.   Then they start comparing themselves to others ( or are compared) .. and the trouble starts. Before they know it, puberty has hit and self consciousness goes through the roof.

The big ‘Who am I? ‘  questions really  start.. something I think we go on answering for the rest of our lives.  I had a strong sense of self from a very early age. I was one very stroppy toddler I am told ! ( individuating is the child development term… “I can decide things for myself and know where I begin, and others end” or “I can flex my will” )  I didn’t need to be a rebellious teen, I had done it all at 3!  My early teens, however coincided  with me being introduced to the Holy Spirit for the first time. ( God the Father and Son, I had been familiar with since birth). This encounter was in once sense, very ordinary and un-dramatic, and simultaneously, totally life changing. Perhaps I will make that encounter the subject of a blog post one day. The purpose of describing it here, is more about one of the effects.

It made me review myself with fresh eyes. I recognised the strength of my will, and personality, and wanted to reign myself in.  I was too big for me to handle, if that makes sense. Lead me to the rock that is higher than I . I needed to look up. I needed to know that my life rested in bigger, wiser hands than mine. Someone who knew me better than I would ever know myself. Someone who had loved me from my earliest beginnings, and had called me by name.

External pressures can be overwhelming at times, but internal pressures can be even more so. The deep, half hidden pressures we put on ourselves, to perform, to be perfect, to live up to whatever we think or have been made to believe we should be/do… these are just some of them. These are the real stressors, in my experience. They can be what takes the load to breaking point. “From the ends of the earth I call to you when my heart is overwhelmed. Lead me to the rock that is higher than I.

I long to dwell in your tent forever, to take refuge in the shelter of your wings.” Sometimes we need to take refuge from the world, but more often I think, we need to take refuge from ourselves. Our wills, our self consciousness, our inner drivers and pressures. I know I do.        I need to look up . I need to get myself in perspective, and lose myself in the vastness of God.

I lift up my eyes to the mountains—
where does my help come from?
My help comes from the LORD,
the Maker of heaven and earth. ( Psalm 121)

 

Paul Baloche has interpreted Psalm 61 in a song. From a CD called Compassion Art.