Monday, May 5, 2008

Light in the Darkness

So like I said, 3 1/2 years ago I was diagnosed with PCOS. PCOS is a horrible disease. It causes hair growth in embaressing places, increase weight gain (especially in your tummy), inciline resistance (which just makes it harder to loose weight), abnormal periods, cysts on your ovaries, and perhaps the worst side effect infertility. I have a sister in law who has PCOS so I already knew alot about it. This was a huge blessing to me, to have someone to talk to, who understood what I was going through. It was also hard because I knew that Amy had struggled to have kids for almost 10 years, and I wondered if it would be that hard for me. I felt a newfound compassion for Amy and what she had been through. I also realized that I had been critical of people who were overweight, I felt a new empathy for the pain and sorrow this causes. I realized that it wasn't always because someone was "lazy." Which is what I used to think. There are hormonal, genetic, and medical issues that a lot of women have and they are just doing the best they can. PCOS is horrible because it feels like it strips you of your womanhood. You don't feel beautiful. You have extra testosterone in your body, which is what causes the moodiness and the hair growth, and you can't have kids. I felt like I had nothing to offer. I felt so ugly and fat and like there was nothing I could do about it. I read a study that said 75% of women with PCOS struggle with depression because it's effects make you feel so bad about yourself. I bet that is true for a lot of women who struggle with their weight, not only those who have PCOS. I think this was one of the worst times of my life. I got angry with my husband because I was sure he didn't find me beautiful anymore. I didn't want to be intimate or even loving because I felt like he would be disgusted by me. (I just have to say really quickly that Chuck has been wonderful. He has never once said an unkind or critical thing to me about this. Not once. He has always told me that he thinks I am beautiful and that I will always be beautiful to him. My feelings of inadequecy were inside of me, not from anything he ever said or did. I am so grateful for him and his support. I know I could not have come as far as I have without him and his unconditional love.) I hated seeing my friends from high school and college. I was sure they were judging me. I felt like my family was judging me, especially my mom, who I felt had always put pressure on me to be thin. I just felt depressed and horrible. Initially I put all my energy into trying to loose weight. I excercized, I dieted, I did everything I knew how to do and the weight wouldn't come off, which only made me feel worse. We also had been trying to get pregnant again without any results, and I felt hopeless, alone and depressed. Eventually I gave up and I think this is when I hit my low. Basically I just resigned myself to the fact that I would hate myself forever and it would never get better. One night I was crying and having a really hard time, Chuck asked if I wanted a blessing. I wont share the sacred details of this blessing but I will share a couple of things that the Lord taught me. I learned that this trial and these health problems were not something I aquired by chance. They were not a punishment either. They were a gift from my Heavenly Father. A gift that would help me become more like him. I learned that there were things I needed to learn about the nature of God that I could not have learned any other way. He gave me this trial because he loves me and he wants me to be like him someday, so that I can return to live with him. I felt so much peace, and love from my Father. I knew that this was true. I felt a light had opened up in this dark room that I was wandering through. I felt hope and I didn't feel alone anymore. This was a huge turning point for me. This is when I started to turn my life over to the Lord, and started my long journey of sanctification. My perspective totally changed, I wasn't being punished, the Lord hadn't forgoten me. He loved me and was mindful of me, he had wept for my pain and was offering me a better way. So this is my message today. Heavenly Father loves you, he loves us all. Not all of us struggle with our health, but we all have trials. These trials are not a punishment, and most of the time they are not here by chance. They are a gift, from a Heavenly Father who loves you. More than anything, he wants us to return to him. He wants us to become like him. I wish we could be refined without them, but most of us can't. It takes the refiners fire to humble us enough that we will allow him to shape and mold us into what he wants us to become. We all learn in church that our trials are a blessing, and that we should be thankful for them, which is true. But hearing it in those words that night somehow personalized it for me. This was a gift I was being given. We have all been given similar gifts. Maybe not similar in our experiances, but similar in the opportunity that it provides for us. You see, I have learned, it is more important to me that I become like my father than it is to be skinny, or beautiful, or pain free. It is more important to me that my Father in Heaven is proud of me, than it is that my friends, or family, or the world think I am beautiful. I couldn't always say this. It has been a long, hard road to get to where I am today, and I still struggle sometimes. Anyway, as soon as I started to look at my experiance as a learning opportunity, it all changed for me. I realized that there was something that I needed to learn. I also had faith that once I learned it I would be healed. Maybe not in the way I wanted, but in the Lords time and in the Lords way I would be healed. So now I just needed to figure out what I needed to learn so that I could learn it. I didn't realize that sometimes it's not that easy. If only I had known what a "wonderful" process this would be...