when my happy ending fell apart  

In the movie 27 Dresses the main character says she fell in love with weddings as a child. I can relate. I too remember following the bride around at wedding receptions, sighing every once in awhile. I just knew that would be me one day, and it seems like every movie confirmed my belief. Every movie ended with a kiss and a couple walking off into their happily ever after.

One summer during college I thought I had found my own personal movie ending. John was a handsome British soccer player who happened to speak 8 languages and travel the world constantly with his international missions organization. I just knew this was the exciting future God had planned for me. The wife of a missionary, living in Spain, raising little half-English kids who would call me “mum” and drink tea.  At the time I felt like God would surely give me the life I wanted. After all, my parents got married right after college. Plus, I was still a virgin and very involved in my church so I deserved a good, Christian husband, didn’t I?

A year later, when it became clear that John didn’t want the same future I did (or at least he didn’t want it with me), I was devastated. I was furious at God. How could He allow this to happen? I had done everything right. I had even chosen a godly man as the one I wanted to marry. Why would God deny me such a thing? I thought God was supposed to give me “the desires of my heart” if I do all the right things!

I’d like to tell you that I just worked through it, got some heart-healing, and moved on to better things, but I didn’t. Unfortunately, my anger at God turned to doubt and then to rebellion. I looked around at my friends who had husbands already or who were single but not “saving themselves for marriage,” and I got jealous. I remember thinking to myself, I have been doing the right thing all this time–denying myself any fun–all for nothing. My friends are dating wild guys and living it up, why can’t I?

After that I began to live just like everyone else. Partying. Compromising my standards. Doing lots of stupid things. I started dating a guy from Jordan (I had studied Arabic and was drawn to the culture and the beautiful, dark brown eyes), and my first unhealthy romantic relationship began. All was just carefree and fun. I even moved to New York City to become a flight attendant and a waitress at a classy restaurant overlooking Times Square. At that time I thought I had finally “made it” in life.

Then 9/11 happened. I lost both my jobs within a week and packed my bags to move back to Memphis. A week later I felt so panicked about the world and my future that I convinced my Jordanian boyfriend that we should elope. As we drove home from the courthouse that day I told myself that everything would be ok. I had just eloped with my boyfriend of a different religion (well, he didn’t really practice Islam at all), and yet I was hoping he would give me the happily ever after I desired. Surely it will all work out somehow. 

Well, after my parents recovered from the news and, thankfully, forgave me, I realized that my marriage was not what I’d been hoping for. I found out I was pregnant two months after we eloped. I was depressed. I didn’t want a child cramping my life yet. Well, my new husband decided that, if I couldn’t go out clubbing with him anymore, he would keep doing it for the both of us. Those months turned into years of waiting up at night for my husband to come home drunk or high. I had never been around alcoholism, so it took me awhile to understand what was going on and how I should respond. Unfortunately, after much prayer and giving him many chances to stop the drugs and womanizing, I filed for divorce. At the time I was pregnant with our second child, but I had been through so much that I was ready to go. I got custody of the kids and moved in to my parents’house.

I’d like to tell you that I learned from that, got healing, and stayed away from men for awhile. Unfortunately, I didn’t. (Well I learned some and healed some, but not like I should have.) Within months of leaving my husband I was spending time with another guy (a really kind guy who treated me well), and within a year we were dating seriously. There was a time I thought he was my happily ever after, but that ended after a few years.

I’d like to tell you that I really took some time to be wise and learn from all of that, but I didn’t. I was out dating and partying again for a good while, always hoping that this next guy would be the one to share my happily ever after with me.

And then I met my second husband. He was one of the most handsome guys I’d ever met, and he was a Christian. He wanted a wife and a family, and he was great with my kids. He was friends with my brothers so he fit right into the family. It seemed perfect. My happily ever after was looking more possible than ever.

And then mental illness started to rear its head. He began to show another side of himself, a side that was not just angry, but cunningly vengeful. He began to tear me to shreds verbally any time I made a tiny mistake or disagreed with him. I began to walk around with a feeling of panic ready to launch at any moment. I never knew when he would change from loving to hateful.

I’d like to tell you that I walked away from that and moved on, but I didn’t. I loved him, and he was one of the best people I knew–about half the time. The other half was misery. While he was kind to my kids, he made it his business to punish me for anything he didn’t like. And, because of my own insecurities and obsession to find my happily ever after, I ignored the abuse and married him.

It’s amazing what a diamond ring and a house in an adorable neighborhood can do to make a girl forget that she’s been treated like a doormat.

But not for long.

I became pregnant on the honeymoon, which was happy news. A few weeks later, however, his anger and mood swings began to affect my kids. My stress levels began to affect my pregnancy, causing me to bleed. One day, after a particularly scary night of bleeding, I was heading to the doctor to see if I was having a miscarriage. He and I had fought the night before over something where he had hurt the kids’ feelings. Somehow the fight fueled again and he lost it. He became violent and horrifyingly scary. He threw a chair across the room and threw me out of our home (thankfully the kids were at school), He took my cell phone from me and began to text my friends and family, who already didn’t trust him. They were unable to reach me, and many of them were afraid he had done something horrible to me.

At that point it realized I couldn’t put any of my children through that fear and abuse. I moved us back to my parents home. Once again I was pregnant and getting divorced.

Another chance at happily ever after was shattered. My dreams were crushed. Again. And this time I was labeled with the stereotype of being one of those women who’ve been married and divorced multiple times. Gasp. I felt like the word “Loser” was stamped on my forehead, along with the scarlet letter “D” on my chest.

I can now tell you that I learned from that. Now I am healing and leaning on the Lord, not perfectly, but more than before.

I’m finally realizing that my happily ever after can never come from any human being or ideal situation. My happily ever after can only come from Him. The first chapter of Romans says that God “has set eternity in their hearts,” meaning He has given us the longing for that happily ever after. And we will never be fulfilled until we are with Him. We will really never be complete until we join Him in Heaven, free of pain and sadness.

Jesus is my happily ever after. He is what I long for, even when I don’t realize it fully. He has made me for Him.

why I love Cinderella


I think most girls like the tale of Cinderella. It’s got drama, a handsome prince, a makeover, and a huge, fancy party. It gives us hope that if life is tough, it will get better. It lets us dream of a day when the world will see our beauty, and maybe a handsome someone will notice us. It gives us that sense of happily ever after.

But that’s not why I really love the story of Cinderella.

The part of the story I love is the middle. This is kind of the sad part. Cinderella’s parents have died and the stepmother has started to treat her like a servant. It would be a miserable existence for most of us.

But not for Cinderella.

The reason I love this part is because this girl gets it. She is an overcomer. Cinderella may be having to serve the stepsisters their meals and hang their clothes out on the line everyday, but she has not been beat. No ma’am. This girl has got her head on straight.

Do you see it? Cinderella is content. She has found joy even in those hard circumstances. She gives out kindness (sincerely, not passive-aggressively like I’d be tempted to do) to those who don’t deserve it. She doesn’t play the victim and dwell in self-pity. She doesn’t plot to get revenge or teach them a lesson. She rarely even defends herself.

What? Most people would say. This girl needs to stand up for her rights! Liberate herself! Give those evil women what they deserve! 

Yes, that’s what our culture would tell us to do. Give them a piece of your mind! Or Make them pay for what they’ve done! I know I hear a statement like that at least once a week from a news show or a Facebook post.

But Cinderella didn’t choose that route. She chose love, forgiveness, kindness, contentment. And in choosing those things she became free.

Free? Yes, all of us have our own version of the stepmother. All of us find ourselves in situations where we are not in control and life is not what we’d choose. One persons’ “stepmother” may be cancer, another’s may be feeling trapped in a boring marriage, and still others have lost loved ones too soon and wonder why God has allowed such pain.

Cinderella, although she looked enslaved in a hopeless situation, had found freedom. See, it’s easy to fight, insult, and get revenge. What’s hard is to let all of that go and find contentment. We become truly free when we don’t let our circumstances define our happiness. We are free from our oppressors when we no longer let their words determine the course of our day. Cinderella was not the slave of the stepmother. Yes, she did what she was told, but inside she had found freedom. You see, it takes a lot more strength to be kind to someone undeserving than to get back at them. The one who forgives is stronger than the one who fights.

This mindset is similar to the one Jesus had on this earth. He was wronfully accused, physically beaten, and eventually killed. Yet he never fought back. He didn’t defend himself. 1 Peter 2:23 says, “When they heaped abuse on Him, He did not retaliate; when He suffered, He made no threats, but entrusted Himself to Him who judges justly.” Jesus was able to continue living in peace, still handing out love and forgiveness as if no one was mistreating him. Why? Because he trusted that his father had it all under control. He knew righteous judgment would be poured out eventually on those who deserved it and never repented. He knew Good would win.

I had a chance to put this into practice during my divorce in 2012. I knew my husband would do everything he could to tear me down in and out of court. I was scared. Scared of him and scared of what he might say or do. Every time he sent me a hateful text message or email I had to bite my fingers so that I wouldn’t text back hateful things. I was scared to death of court and how he might lie about me, but I had to claim this verse and trust God to handle it. I had to let Him be my defense. Every time I engaged my ex in the argument or defended myself I was under his power. Trusting God to defend me brought me true freedom and peace.

The apostle Paul wrote Philippians while starving in a sewage-filled jail cell. He wrote, “I have learned to be content in all circumstances…I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.” (Philippians 4)

So this, to me, is what Cinderella represents. Contentment in the storm. Grace under fire. Freedom in an impossible situation. Thisis what I want. Paul’s “peace that passes all understanding” that only God gives.

Now, don’t I like the fact that Cinderella gets saved by the prince and taken to live in the palace? You better believe I love that part! But my Prince is coming for me eventually. And until then He’s walking by me each day and giving me his strength and peace to make it through the rest of this life.

After all, I sometimes wonder if all these fairy tales are really meant to point us to Him. To the real “happily ever after” that he has planned.

why “the search for happily ever after”?

I just wanted to write sort of an introductory post. Why is my title “The Search for Happily Every After”? You mighspain castlet ask. Am I searching for some amazing, handsome prince? Do I think there really is a happy ending out there?

The answer to these questions is yes and no. I believe there is a Prince, but he’s not anyone you’d expect. There is a happy ending, but it’s not what you’re thinking.

My title comes from a realization I had a few years ago. We women seem to always be searching for this “happily ever after” that we think is out there. First, we search for the perfect man. Most of us go through relationship after relationship searching for “the one.” After that we search for the perfect wedding, the perfect house, decorating the house to make it more perfect, having children and raising them in order to have the perfect family. Although we’ve grown up and moved beyond Disney princess movies, we still harbor this idea that life is supposed to turn out with us riding into the sunset completely fulfilled and unconditionally loved by all.

It seems like we spend our lives hoping it’s all gonna work out. Waiting and planning and sometimes even scheming to make life what we think it should be. It seems like we’re always searching for this happy ending, hoping this new person or job or house will be the key.

I know I’ve been guilty of this. I’ve been through so many failed relationships that I could write a book. But more about those stories later. Let’s just say I’ve realized in the past few years that I’ve always been searching for something to make me feel like life is finally going to turn out like the movies. Well, I finally realized it’s not. There’s not a “happily ever after” like the fairy tales. There’s something better.

You see, when we’re born we’ve already got this desire in us to be part of something bigger and this longing to be loved unconditionally. We’re supposed to long for these things. We’re supposed to want something to fulfill us. Or Someone. God put these desires in us, because he wants us to see how only he can fill that void. He’s the only one that can love us unconditionally. He’s got the happy ending waiting for us; it’s just not on this earth. He’s promised us amazing, eternal, more-than-we-can-imagine happiness with him in heaven. And, although he gives us hope and strength to get through this short time on this earth, he’s got a great future planned for us that will make this life seem like a forgettable dream. This is the happy ending we are truly longing for: his presence. Walking with him daily here in this life, and then celebrating with him at the amazing feast he has waiting for us in the next.

This is why I write of the quest for happiness, and somehow I hope that my words might encourage you to find your fulfillment in the Savior. He’s waiting with open arms to give you the future of your dreams.

“…I have come that you might have life and have it more abundantly.”            John 10:10

 

 

freedom on a walk

Yesterday was Thanksgiving. I have so much to be thankful for. But that afternoon I wasn’t feeling too thankful. My parents were grumpily pushing everyone to “clean up this house!” It’s funny how planning for company coming makes you so grumpy that by the time they arrive you just want to go take a nap.

Anyway, to avoid the holiday grumpiness I took a walk with our curly little dog, Joy. She lives up to her name in all but her smell. So, as I walked Joy through the neighborhood streets lined with gorgeous fall leaves, I felt freedom. Exhale. Finally. But I noticed my curly companion wasn’t feeling so free. Now don’t get me wrong, she was having a great time trying to smell every smell in a ten foot radius, but she had a problem. She was on a leash. That little ball of fur kept pulling hard against that leash. And every time she did she felt the pain of the leash choking her stinky little neck. She wasn’t content sniffing the leaves and things in our path, she wanted to go her own way and it hurt. I thought back on the times that I took her walking with my toddler. I tied Joy’s leash to the stroller and Joy happily walked alongside us, not pulling on the leash at all. She went peacefully along, wagging that stumpy tail. She was content and unhurt because she accepted her boundaries.

I realized how much I am like her. God has placed me where I am right now, and this is where I’m supposed to be. But how often do I refuse to accept it and long for the “freedom” of my own way? When I go off on my own, trying to do things my way, I end up feeling the misery of the leash. The pain and disappointment of moving in a direction that I’m not supposed to go. I am so much happier, full of “Joy”, when I stay by His side focused on His plan for me. How many times pulling at the leash will it take for me to realize that? I didn’t have Joy on a leash today because I wanted to ruin her life. I wanted her to have the best walk possible, without getting hit by a car! In the same way, God knows what’s best for me, and it’s only when I walk in that way that I will find his joy.