I Question My Life

God surged into my life on a winter evening in 1997. That’s when I began to understand the intrinsic nature of the soul that exists inside all of us.

Three main relationships began to be defined — mine to me, mine with God, and mine with everyone else. 

For years, I’d felt that I had a fairly good relationship with my internal self. I allowed myself to be important and to have fun. 

But things only started to evolve and broaden when God entered my life full force. That change made me believe that a higher love exists beyond anything else I had known. 

Questions of Life

The night of my revelation, I had been on the phone with my dad, telling him about my latest heartbreak. I was living in Montana, in a house with trees and a babbling brook outside my bedroom window. I had a hot tub on the back deck. My view included the broad, star-scattered night sky that filled my heart with joy. There was an abundance of happiness in my life, but something was missing. 

Realizing What was Missing

Looking back, I realize that the hole in my heart went beyond a romantic relationship. Something wasn’t whole inside. 

Like many times when talking with Dad, he hit me hardest when I wasn’t expecting words with an emotional impact. I wept, cruelly dragging him into my pain, and asked him to tell me he loved me. He said this frequently of his own accord. Dad’s voice broke as he said, “Oh, honey, I love you.” 

In that moment, I felt the depth of what it must mean to be a father. And to have one out of four children strike you differently from the others. Dad never played favorites and we each teased him about being his most special kid. 

For us, perhaps something about me and dad was simply more in sync than what he shared with my siblings. Maybe my siblings think the same thing.

What it was, my questions of life changed that evening. The question became internalized and externalized. Me inside and me in the world.

Wrapped in Love

That night, I sat in my bed, surrounded by soft green sheets with warm moonlight coming in my window. I wept with joy in my father’s love.

In the following instant, I felt words storm through my heart, demanding that I listen. The words, “I LOVE YOU” resonated, pouring inside me. In that moment, I knew it was God reaching out, reaching in. Looking back, I realize he had tried many other times, but I hadn’t been paying attention. This night I was listening. And everything in my life changed. My questions of life changed.

Because of this revelation, I started to elevate myself and elevate my friendships. I got choosier about the people I spend time with. It took me too long to purge the man who was holding back my progression. That happened in one fell swoop. I wound up in Pittsburgh a world away from the grandeur of Montana, which I still love and miss. 

Our Inner and Outer Selves

But this essay is supposed to be about existing outside of oneself. Here I am, focusing on the inside. They are deeply intertwined, don’t you think? 

What goes on in my heart, in this relationship I with God, directly affects everything I do in the world. 

There was a man I used to be friends with. We became divided when we talked about faith. It separated us. He believed faith is always there and if you didn’t always embrace it, then you can never have faith. I believe faith can be learned and expanded from the moment you feel it. Once known and trusted, it comes to be the very definition of the word, faith. He scoffed at the progression in me that it took to reach this level. I withdrew from his friendship until we fully went our separate ways. 

Conversations like that used to wound me. I drew inside, thinking I was wrong, that others knew better than me how I should believe in God. But I can no longer pull my Cancerian Crab act and withdraw from the world. In order to continue to exist outside myself, I have to keep my internal heart open to everyone around me. It’s the only way I win pursuing my questions of life.

It’s a marvel—how tough the disciples had it. Their patience and internal peace is to be marveled over in the face of so many adversities. How did they ever overcome their many trials to spread the gospel? 

Confronting the Unwanted in Life

I have faced evil people, people who knowingly let the devil guide them. Although I tried to handle them myself, have found that the only way of dealing with them is to pray. 

A former friend accused me of deliberately behaving with cruel intent toward him. The mere notion that he could even momentarily think such a thing … . That crumbled any residual friendship, fading the relationship to dusk. Not that I do not behave badly or make mistakes, but never intentionally, only with human flaws firmly operating.

San Giorgio Church interior, Portofino-questions of life while praying
San Giorgio Church interior

A work atmosphere was full of overwhelming negativity stemming from a few people, despite there being some wonderful employees there. One coworker described the main source of my angst as, “a woman who practices being mean.” Beyond what she did to me, I pondered if she had any comprehension of what she was doing to herself. She so fully hated me for nothing I had done, but for what she created in her mind. Her behavior was a question of life—why choose to live that way?

A Huge Question of Life

Maybe this is where living outside my self would come in most handy. 

Could I have detached from my inner spirit every time I walked through those doors? If so, maybe the place wouldn’t have been as painful. More often I caught myself being so much me that I would shrug. I am who I am. Pop-Eye said that, and he always managed to come out on top, didn’t he?

And still, I am who I am—a work in progress, continuing to strive to meet my goals. Still having these questions of life—inside and outside my heart. 

If God had not entered my life when he did, would I have let him in later? I was, then, on the verge of hardening my heart. Years later, there was large angst in our family in too short a space. The joy of my new love of God poured strength into me from a bottomless source. If God had not appeared, I would have tucked myself inside my shell and never reached outside it again. I turned to him. There he was, saving me with deeper faith, getting me to read and understand words with previously unfathomable meaning. Faith has helped with my questions of life.

Walking the Path

I’ve learned to set my path and stay the course. Walking while knowing that I can’t again start predicting my way. Each time I try to steer, unheeding of spiritual advice, I confused my situation. When I set my outside desires aside and allow spirituality to dictate my direction, I get farther. I move beyond behaving selfishly and in a self-protective manner. 

Relationships take what I strive toward on the inside and move it to the outside. There, I share it with others. The close, true interaction with people I admire and love and learn from. My world has broadened beyond the physical confines of where I live, be it Pittsburgh or anywhere else. 

These days, I exist very much on the inside—concentrating on being me first in any given situation. My questions of life let me blend that with the inside. That’s how I try to honor God and it’s how I’m learning to exist outside of my self.

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