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Sitting in the Hard

This week I had to be moved to inpatient hospice again as the struggle to breathe spiraled me into unconsciousness. Thankfully I am now back home with my people, breathing a little easier, but I just keep replaying in my mind the moments where my good friend sat on the side of my bed in the shadows of the afternoon the day I arrived there.

I did not have many words, partly due to my being on my ventilator, and partly because it felt like there was nothing left to say. I was discouraged and hurting. My “fight songs” playlist of music was playing through my phone, and my friend came and sat tenderly on the bed next to me, taking my hand in hers and lifting her other hand to Heaven as she swayed to the words of the praise music that was playing. I’m sure she asked me a few questions that afternoon, but the only thing I clearly remember her saying, as tears slid down her cheek, was “this just sucks.”

When someone is going through something painful we often do not know what to say, and the result is we say too much. We have the best intentions to lend encouragement, but in these situations being the “fixer” is not what’s needed. It takes some restraint to not say things like, “you’re going to be ok, you’ve got this, I believe you are going to be healed, etc,” but being present in the pain is a far greater gift.

My dear friend sat there and allowed herself to feel what I felt. She did not try to give me the easy answers or platitudes that would have taken less sacrifice than sitting in my grief. And no doubt it is costly to enter into someone else’s suffering.

The reality is those pat answers are just empty words at a time like that. Suffering is hard, and setbacks can take the wind right out of you and leave you wondering how you are going to move on from where you find yourself. I urge you to learn from my friend and be willing to love your people well in their need to acknowledge that it just sucks.

This grieving what is and what’s been taken is part of the healing that is coming, and it can’t be skipped or ignored regardless of how badly we want to have the answer to the fixing.

The next time you have the privilege of being allowed into someone’s hard, hold back the urge to find the most encouraging thing to say and listen and feel and acknowledge the obvious. This sucks. I’m so sorry you are going through this. This isn’t fair. This is hard.

Your words and your tears will mean so much.

11 thoughts on “Sitting in the Hard”

  1. Continuing to pray for you sweet Hannah. So thankful God put this dear friend in your life for such a time as this…what a gift she is. Thanks for always sharing your heart and being so transparent…your story continues to point us to our only Hope, Jesus Christ. Sending hugs, prayers and much love.

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  2. Thank you for sharing these profound words of wisdom from your first-hand experiences, Hannah. I’m so thankful that you have friends who can simply be present with you. That is a gift. It reminds me of Jason Gray’s song “Not Right Now” which is more or less about the same thing. I’m thankful that the Lord brought you through and you are now back home. Even when we don’t know what He is up to, He is working all things for good. May He continue to bless and strengthen your faith in Him as He leads you day by day.

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    1. Craig, somehow your comment slipped by me until now, but perhaps that was God’s plan. I just listened to that song and it is so spot on for this week. Thank you for sharing that. ❤

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