Category: Hmmmm

  • The Fury of My Heart

    There is at least one spot in each of our hearts that lights up as fast as gasoline whenever that one thing happens. For you, it may be when your spouse has that look on his or her face and as soon as you see it, the torch flares inside you. It could be seeing someone else’s highlight reel in this virtual world where we peer through each others’ windows and expose ourselves without shame – either the Photoshopped good or the sensationalized bad. But the comparison we make as Peeping Toms yells at us and reminds us that our life is not nearly as special or bright or dark or good or meaningful as the person we spy on. Or maybe it’s that friend who you thought was a friend until they disappeared and when you shout out to them in the forest, “Where are you?” and you swim across the lake and hopefully sing, “Marco!” and there is no reply of “Polo” and there is no reply at all and your heart ignites in fear and anger and insecurity.

    fireheart
    I have many of these spots and as I wake up I lay in bed for several minutes and pray desperately to dance over them with love and softness instead of give in to the torpedo of fury. Like a lighter these spots spark throughout the day and eventually something provides it enough fuel to explode and sometimes I cannot control it.

    There is a thing I do that is probably much like a junior high boy. I exist on one plane of real life where there are people and bodies and air and gravity. In my head I click the imaginary + sign and add a layer only I can see and in this layer I throw a bomb at the car that just cut me off or I imagine cartoon arrows shooting at that one man whose existence frustrates me to no end because he hurt someone I love. I look and loathe and try to find some kind of cloak of invisibility so that these things I imagine will never be known or seen though I know the only one who matters both knows and sees these.

    My soul grieves the way my heart throws its fire around so easily and with such entitlement. Forgive me, forgive me, I say over and over again. And I know I am forgiven and I know with time and surrender maybe these fires will become smaller and burn so slowly until the embers turn to ash and disappear forever.

  • 7 Ways to Be Kind Online

    Wow, oh wow: How much the Interwebz have changed since I removed myself from them a couple of years ago. The big mediums are still around: blogging, Facebook, Twitter (with some additional ones like Pinterest I just can’t seem to want to embrace). But how people interact has changed, and that has caused me to first, adapt; and second, take a good look at my own manners online.

    I consider myself a newbie again, and in the process, I’ve been surprised at how people I’ve interacted with before – online or offline – don’t always have the best manners online. I try to show grace. I know people are busy. I know how we use social media is different, but good manners never go out of style.

    Here’s a few rules I try to live by because of how I’ve seen them break (and broken them myself):

    1. Keep it friendly. You have every right to your opinion, even if it’s an opposing view. There’s a difference between expressing it and bringing others down by being intentionally defensive/confrontational/unapologetic.
    2. Follow through. I’ve had people say “oh, when you post this thing or that thing, I can’t wait to link to it/retweet it/show my world your stuff!” And then they fall off the face of the earth.
    3. Answer directly. If someone asks you a question, asks to meet up with you, asks if they can send you their book/album/latest blog post, just give them a direct answer. “Yes, I’d love for you to” or “no, I’m sorry. I just don’t have margin right now to give it a good look.” It takes courage to say no. Man (or woman) it up.
    4. Be quick to apologize. I recently discovered I had a few Direct Messages on Twitter that got buried in spam. I saw them when they came in, but they moved way, way down the list. Be honest. Apologize. Make it right when things fall through the cracks.
    5. Ask for help. If you truly can’t manage your social media while having good manners, ask for help. Sometimes, I enlist the help of a friend or two to reply to people who just need basic information and nothing specific from me. If I know I can’t reply to email quickly because of travel or deadlines, I turn on an out-of-office response.
    6. Acknowledge people. Sometimes when someone contacts you, it doesn’t need a reply, or a simple “thank you” will do. Even if you don’t have time to give them what they need, acknowledge that they’ve reached out to you in some way and point them to someone or a resource that can help them. (If you’re too busy to do this, see Tip #5.)
    7. Give yourself – and others – grace. The truth is we will all have things that fall through the cracks. Text messages, emails, Tweets…Realize for every time you’ve had someone not reply to you, you’ve likely not replied to someone. If it’s important, check in with them again and give them some grace. It’s true…what goes around, comes around.

    What about you? Anything to add?

  • How One Guy Won My Heart – Our Proposal Story

    [Note: The engagement took place at The Establishment Theatre where Tim is in an improv group with ComedySportz!]

    When my husband Tim asked me to marry him (which started a slew of Instagram photos of the event), a few of you asked us to tell our story.


    anne-miller-tim-miller-proposal-1

    Well, Tim’s a) incredibly thoughtful; b) incredibly creative and c) a professional videographer. So once he set his plan in motion – which took two months of sneakiness – he knew every moment would be documented. Sure it’s nice to show off to the family & friends, but our real hope in this is that others see Christ’s love in us. That is only where our love for each other can begin.

    anne-jackson-tim-miller-proposal-2

    One of the things I love most about Tim is his intentional pursuit of me, as a woman. A passionate, Godly man who pursued? It was a rare trait. So women, take heart! They do exist! As you watch (or read) our story (it’s in the description part of the video), it will give you context to how he proposed the way he did. All of the crazy elements of the proposal had significance to our story!

    Here’s the video below, but for the full description, you might want to click over and watch it on its YouTube page. We hope you are encouraged by it, inspired by it, and that most of all, you will see how a redemptive God can take two broken people who love Him and join them together for His work.


     

  • Is There Joy in Holding on to Grief?


    Screen Shot 2013-05-15 at 10.02.03 AM
    On July 3, 2012, eight days before my friend Jay Williams turned 32 years old, he was buried in Lebanon Cemetery in Plains, Georgia. The air was still and thick with southern humidity, and sweat collected in the small of my back under the layers of my black dress. My friends and I stood on the brittle grass of the cemetery, waiting in line to say goodbye to Jay one last time. We dodged the sun by shuffling in and out of each other’s shadows and swatted at clouds of gnats with paper fans provided by the local funeral home.


    In the summer of 2010, Jay, myself, and 15 other people rode our bicycles from San Diego to Myrtle Beach, raising money and awareness for an organization that empowers people to fight the HIV/AIDS and water crises in Africa. Jay was the first cyclist to arrive at the church that would send us off. As I pulled into the church parking lot in San Diego, I saw a short, skinny guy with a tan wearing a straw cowboy hat riding his red bicycle in circles. Was he one of the team cyclists? Or some vagabond traveler who perhaps illegally acquired a nice road bike? Was he drunk? He looked so happy—too happy.

    DSCN1269Quickly, we learned he was one of our teammates. While the rest of us worried if our gear would hold up or how we’d survive cycling nine hours a day in 110-degree weather, Jay was content to cycle the 3000 miles we traveled cross-country in Teva sandals, occasionally strapping a milk jug of water to the back of his bike so he wouldn’t have to stop. Even without clipping into pedals or using recovery drinks (he preferred chocolate milk), Jay was the strongest on our team. He wasn’t competitive, though; he’d stop and help someone change out a blown tube or, in his South Georgia accent, would cheer up a teammate having an unpleasant day.

    As we got to know Jay, we learned he was in a skiing accident when he was a teenager. After extensive surgery that caused his abdominal muscles to be separated and required him to lose a kidney, he was back on the slopes the next winter. Considering the doctors told him he’d be lucky to walk again, this was only one small miracle in Jay’s life. Jay was brave. Jay was humble. It seemed like Jay was invincible. He quickly and quietly became everybody’s unlikely hero.

    After the tour ended, each cyclist returned to his or her respective hometown. Jay made an effort to stay in touch with each of us, scattered as we were.

    1photoAfter tornadoes ripped through the south in spring 2011, I volunteered at a benefit concert in Birmingham, Alabama. Jay drove four hours from Plains, Georgia, to help me sell T-shirts for two hours. Then he drove four hours back so he could be at his job on time the next morning. This wasn’t atypical. This was Jay. By day, he worked in his father’s peanut factory and by night, secretly repaired friends’ houses when they were on vacation. He loved Jesus, and to everyone who knew him, he never had to say a word to prove it. His actions proved this love beyond any shadow of doubt.

    On June 29, 2012, when the team received the news that Jay fell two stories and was fighting for his life, none of us could believe it. Twenty-four hours later, Jay passed away due to the trauma caused by his fall.

    Sadly, Jay was not the first of my friends to pass last year. Two others have unexpectedly died: one in a tragic hiking accident in Japan and another after an arduous battle with cancer. I began to wonder if, as a 33-year-old, death simply becomes a more frequent notification or if last year has been an anomaly. Thinking on these things, my chest tightens and my breathing becomes shallow and quick. I’m faced with the reality of my own transience now; death has been speaking into my consciousness more repeatedly than usual.

    Most of the cycling team was able to make it to Georgia for Jay’s funeral. We stayed in two guest homes on a farm in the tiny town of Ellaville. None of us knew the family who owned the farm before we arrived. They heard we were coming, and they opened their doors. They loved Jay, and they loved Jesus, and because of this, they loved us.photo

    Alone in one of the houses while waiting for our ride to the visitation, I sat in the living room with the book I was reading. After attempting to understand the same sentence four times, I gave up and stared off into the smoke-stained fireplace in front of me, listening to the sounds that filled the house: water dripping from the kitchen faucet, songs of crickets and the rustle of leaves as squirrels jumped around in the heavy woods. In my hasty packing, I forgot to bring a pen. I searched the cottage and found a pencil and scribbled in the back of my book:

    When someone in our periphery dies, it gives our spirits pause. A moment of silence. But when someone close—a kindred spirit—passes, our reality becomes surreality. We float through a new and different kind of time and space, and our bodies feel the loss of a bright soul that no longer walks with us. The air, the sounds, the light … all is different when someone departs. When they became part of us, they implanted a small piece of their spirit in our own. And when they leave, there is such pain from the empty space that spirit used to fill. This is grief.

    During the days of Jay’s visitation and funeral, grief was loud. It was in the eyes of the 200 people who lined up in the heat to say goodbye to him and console his parents and his girlfriend. It spoke into the quiet moments in conversations as we spoke of Jay’s memory. It was in the tears of his friends as they touched his casket before it was lowered.

    However, as loud as grief was, joy was louder. It seems incredibly trite to write those words; it feels as cliché as saying, “He’s in a better place now” or “God just wanted one of his angels home.” But joy outsang grief, and its notes ring just as beautifully today as they did last year. Joy sings of a life lived bravely and with love. Joy sings of friendships created and renewed. Joy sings of every minute someone spent with Jay. In the moments where grief is raw and bleeding, joy reaches in with peace and hope. It is not intrusive or overpowering. It is constant and gently comforts our sorrow. In the space this mercy offered us, we could mourn and celebrate.

    July 12, 2012 marks the day Jay was buried. New concerns and mundane tasks seem to lessen the time I think of his death. Distractions threaten to numb the sensitivity to life and community and love I experienced so intensely almost a year ago. It’s effortless to let death, grief, and the overwhelming joy it paradoxically brings move away from our hearts. Our culture demands we must get over it—life goes on—but with intentional determination, maybe we have an alternative choice.

    Yes, we must accept life and death, just as we must accept grief and joy. There is a season for all things. But instead of moving on from the things death awakens in us, perhaps we embrace them. Perhaps we choose to keep the mark a life leaves on our heart unhealed and open and, by doing so, we create space for others to experience the legacy of love and joy a departed friend leaves behind.

    Can there, in fact, be joy in holding on to grief?

     

     

     

     

  • Is Grace Cheap?

    Cheap grace is the deadly enemy of our Church. We are fighting today for costly grace.

    Cheap grace means grace sold on the market like cheapjack’s wares. The sacraments, the forgiveness of sin, and the consolations of religion are thrown away at cut prices…

    Cheap grace means the justification of sin without the justification of the sinner…

    Cheap grace is the preaching of forgiveness without requiring repentance, baptism without church discipline, communion without confession, absolution without personal confession.

    Cheap grace is grace without discipleship…

    Costly grace is the treasure hidden in the field; for the sake of it, a man will gladly go and sell all that he has…it is the kingly rule of Christ, for whose sake a man will pluck out the eye which causes him to stumble.

    Costly grace is the gospel which must be sought again and again, the gift that must be asked for, the door at which one must knock.

    These are words that could have been written today. But they weren’t. Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote them in the 1930?s – when he was in his late twenties. This is a timeless truth that we should contemplate maybe more now in our commercialized, diagrammed culture.

    *What does grace mean to you?

    *How do you see the message of grace presented in our world today?

  • The Tension of Art and Vocation

    When I was seventeen years old, I moved into my very first apartment. Instead of worrying about who would ask me to prom, I was worried about having to fire the seminary student at the local bookstore I managed. I couldn’t vote, but I could create a profit-and-loss report with my eyes closed.

    I didn’t go into my late teenage years expecting to be a career woman, but those were the cards I was dealt. I quickly moved into corporate marketing and communication, then ministry, and signed my first major book contract when I was twenty-seven and a contract for my second and third books when I was twenty-eight. By the time I was thirty-two years old, I had the opportunity to travel to eighteen countries to write stories, I was honored to speak in front of over a hundred thousand people, and for the most part, was able to live the dream staying self-employed. This often meant I could work in my pajamas and avoid using mascara for days on end.

    This was life – a good life. One I have held in deep gratitude in my prayers as I know it is a life many work hard for (myself included…not once has it been an easy life).

    As I continue writing, I find myself in a tension I’ve not yet experienced and questions I’ve not yet asked: Is this what I’m here to do? I examine the colors in the garden of my heart. Are the seasons changing?

    Writing has always been a part of who I am. From the time I could form the shapes of the alphabet, words move from my mind to paper. This art will never leave me.

    But as a career? I wonder…

    Merton wrestled with writing as vocation, and for the last two years I have poured over his journals. I see myself in his words and feel his tension. As always, whatever I put my hands to can succeed, but if the motivation of my heart is misaligned, it’s worthless in the eyes of my God.

    Intertwining the art of writing with the nuances of vocation often leaves me feeling like I need to exfoliate the surface of my heart and mind. My social media feeds tell me what to do to get more people to read me (I have accepted this as using any of these virtual places as simply mediums to communicate the truths God has imparted to me), as well as demanding – yes, demanding – I share everyone else’s work with those around me. “Retweet this!” — “Can you put this on your Facebook Page, blog, Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram, refrigerator door, and all the telephone posts in a 2-mile radius from your house?” — “Hey, look! I’m #471,271 on Amazon!”

    The Scriptures say to celebrate with those who celebrate and mourn with those who mourn. Usually, my heart gets tired from mourning but I’ve found lately my heart is tired from celebrating; not because I envy others’ success (much), but because the noise can be so, so, loud.

    I do not want to add to this noise, yet there is even irony as I type these words on my blog, which I will then place a link to it on Twitter and Facebook.

    “We live in a society whose whole policy is to excite every nerve in the human body and keep it at the highest pitch of artificial tension, to strain every human desire to the limit and to create as many new desires and synthetic passions as possible, in order to cater to them with the products of our factories and printing presses and movie studios and all the rest.”  – Merton

     

  • Are Forgiveness and Reconciliation the Same?

    I never thought there was much difference between reconciliation and forgiveness. In my heart, it all kind of meant the same thing – letting go of pain that someone had inflicted on me. Usually this involved some type of “making up” process involving apologies, sometimes tears, and a hug to make everything alright.

    Twelve years ago, somebody hurt me in a very painful, inexcusable way. For years, I didn’t allow myself to work through the pain as I needed to. A couple of years ago, circumstances (which were mostly out of my control) caused me to stare at this wound square in the face.

    As strange as it sounds, I’ve never doubted that I forgave this person. I feel fortunate that, for the most part, forgiveness comes easy to me. There are probably only two situations in my life where I know I still need to work on forgiving someone, but this particular hurt isn’t one of them.

    However, as I was processing through healing during this time, I began questioning if i really had forgiven this person. Sure, the scabs had been peeled off and the wounds were fresh – and it hurt…badly, all over again.

    Someone who was helping me through this sent me an email. He encouraged me and said that what I was experiencing wasn’t me being bitter or holding on (which was what I was afraid I was doing) but that I was desiring reconciliation.

    I wanted for this person to own up to the mistake and for everything – painful as it would be – to be okay again.

    And I wanted for the relationship to be harmonized and restored completely.

    Later, I read this in a book:

    Joseph was reconciled with his brothers when they came to Egypt in search of grain. By the time his brothers reached Egypt, he was able to stand before them and confront them because he had no inner feelings that would keep him from having a relationship of unity and peace with them.

    Forgiveness is unilateral. You can forgive even if [someone] never admits [their wrong doing], is never sorry, and never changes. But reconciliation requires both people’s commitment to recovery, honesty, repentance, forgiveness, and communication. Even then, reconciliation is a long and difficult process of breaking down barriers and building trust.

    You may not ever be reconciled with a person that hurt you (or that you hurt).

    That part takes both people to work through.

    Forgiveness is a necessary, but not a sufficient condition for reconciliation.

    However, forgiveness is a decision that you make, and continue to make, regardless of the other person’s choice.

    And through the cross and grace and love, you can.

  • Does The Reputation Management System Need to Die?

    A couple of weeks ago, I was spending some time with a highly respected friend of mine. For contextual purposes, this person is someone who has sold a lot of books, has a very well-read blog, and travels all over the world to speak and consult. One of the things he talks about frequently is social media, and I consider him to be a true trailblazer in regard to such things.

    During our conversation, he told me that he doesn’t keep Twitter searches going anymore for his name or his books. He deleted all of his Google Alerts. For the good or for the bad, he recognized how these things affected him.

    I was shocked. Over the last few years, I knew him to be one of the few “famous” people who would still go and leave a comment on someone’s blog after they wrote something (again, good or bad) about him. He’d clear something up or apologize if he needed to, or thank them for their kind words.

    He doesn’t do that anymore.

    Granted, none of us – myself completely included – are probably at a level of success where my friend is (if you define “success” by how much product is sold or brand recognition one receives.) If he didn’t thank people on their blogs, his book sales wouldn’t go down and the percentage of his platform that would leave if they were upset for any reason would be so small you probably couldn’t measure it.

    But, this conversation got me thinking…

    And for the last few weeks, I’ve rolled his actions around in my head and have wondered, “Do I need to do the same?”

    Does the reputation management system need to die?

    Don’t get me wrong. I LOVE a personal touch. When someone shares a review of my book or even has a concern about it (as in he or she is offended by its “adult” themes – cough, cough…) I do my best to leave a comment on their blog or thank them on Twitter. Why? Because I appreciate them taking the time to share, even if we disagree on if the word “crap” is foul language.

    For companies, I think it’s wise to monitor such things. I’ve had amazing experiences with Zappos, American Airlines, MediaTemple, and FedEx to name a few (and not so great experiences with Hotel Indigo and USAir, I’ll add). Those touches absolutely make a difference in my brand loyalty.

    Here’s the catch for looking at this in my context as an individual and looking at them in their context as companies.

    I am not a brand.

    They are.

    Some would disagree. There are things about the way I communicate that are uniquely my voice or characteristic of me.

    But I will say it again.

    I am not a brand.

    I am not a commodity.

    I have to ask myself, “Is my identity is wrapped up in what others are saying about me?” … and “Is the only way I’m responding like this is because it helps me build my own recognition or reputation?”

    If the answer to either of those questions are yes, then for me, my reputation management system needs to die.

    I am (slowly) learning that what others think of me, or what I say, what I write, or what I do is not important at all.

    The one question I need to know the answer to is, “Am I doing ________ with integrity?”

    And if the answer to that question is yes, that’s the only thing with which I need to concern myself.

    Is this a poor PR strategy? Bad marketing? Missing out on opportunities?

    Probably.

    But then I remind myself…

    I am not (and nobody is) a product.

    I am not (and nobody is) so important that we need to know what is said about us personally and react to it.

    And most importantly, I don’t think any of this “reputation management” is as important as simply being who we are and doing it as honorably as we can.

  • Do You Just Give Up Sometimes?

    First, I think everyone in the world should be in counseling.

    That said, I was in counseling the other day.

    I’ve made an agreement with myself to always be honest, even if I sound like a…jerk…with him.

    Below is a portrait of a conversation we had.

    —–

    Him: So, if God was saying to you in any circumstance, not just this current issue you’re facing, “Follow me. Trust me. Do this,” what would you say?

    Me: Right now? Today? At this moment? I’d say no.

    Him: So you’d rebel.

    Me: Yeah. I guess I would. At this moment anyway.

    Him: Does that scare you?

    Me: A little. But right now, I’m kind of at a point where I don’t care. (Waiting for a lightning strike).

    Him: Well, I really appreciate your honesty. (Looks up.) “I hear you.” (Probably also waiting for a lightning strike).

    —–

    Do you just give up sometimes?

    Do you knowingly rebel?

    Are you more afraid of the work ahead of you and the ways that you could fail than what the consequences of rebelling would be?

    Sometimes…do you just not care?

    Confession: Sometimes…I don’t.

    —-

    Epilogue:

    The thing I’m supposed to think about now?

    If I said yes…my next job is to say to God, “Fine, then.” (Because I’m sarcastic). “Show me how.”

    And wait.

    Is there an area in your life where you can ask God that question?