October 12, 2012

Broken Bones and Cookies

Well, I was going to write an elaborate and fascinating post on used bookstores.

Hopefully I still will, at some point. But not today. I've got something else on my mind.

Chocolate chip cookies.

Free image courtesy of Stock.xchng and superfloss

I usually have chocolate chip cookies on the brain in some form or other. Warm on a napkin, with the chocolate just a little bit melty, they make my shoulders unclench any time of day. I'm an absentminded baker who tends to calculate quantities wrong, but for these cookies, I try harder to get them right. They were one of the American delicacies I missed most in Britain. But now they're on my mind for a different reason.

It was Wednesday night, a hard night, a gloomy night. An odometer-raising, package-juggling, asparagus-and-tears-for-dinner night. Grandma's not doing well, and the pressure had me full under its thumb that night. I was supposed to meet a friend for coffee, but though I love talking to her, I just didn't want to on Wednesday. I didn't want to talk. I wanted to sit and watch British TV until my mind melted into oblivion. I texted her.

She came anyway. Showed up on my doorstep, skipped coffee. Carried in her hands a green recyclable grocery bag. Containing chocolate chip cookies.

People say all kinds of things to friends who are hurting. Sometimes they're well-meaning things like Every cloud has a silver lining. Or God works out everything for the good of those who love him. Maybe they're true things. But when the wave of suffering knocks you over from behind and tumbles you on the sand until your skin is scraped raw and you can't remember which way is up, even true things don't help.

Free image courtesy of stock.xchng and storm11080

Suffering is a quiet place, a place where the rules don't work right and you have to reinvent the wheel. Like falling in love, it's a different experience for every person, and it feels like no one has ever experienced it before. That's why platitudes, no matter how true, don't help. They're words. And while I love words dearly, you can't use them to set a shattered arm or leg. Like sticky, cheerful Disney-character band-aids, they're utterly helpless to solve the mystery and horror of bone sticking through skin.

My friend couldn't fix my problems on Wednesday night. She didn't try. Instead, she listened with her full attention (I did end up talking) and gave me a hug (thank you, dear). The chocolate chip cookies she brought said I don't have all the answers. But I love you anyway. And somewhere between soggy Kleenex and melty chocolate pieces, I found the strength to keep going til tomorrow. That's what helps.

Lately music has been helping me where words fall short. So if you're in that quiet place tonight, reinventing the wheel or staring at shattered bone, here's a song that another friend showed me today. It's not a solution. But maybe it'll be like chocolate chip cookies on your doorstep.


8 comments:

  1. While I haven't been in your exact situation, I know those feelings all too well. When people would say, "Trust God," or "Pray about it," it sounded like "Get over it," and "If you were a better Christian, you wouldn't be so distraught." The valley is real, and I'm sorry you're walking through it. I've always found music to be a very powerful release. My all-time go-to song that I put on repeat and blast the volume to drown out everything is "Crash and Burn" by Savage Garden.

    Thank you for your honest and vulnerable posts. You touch a lot of people with them. :)

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    1. You're totally right. In our minds, when we hurt, we translate the true things to untrue things. Maybe that's why they're so unhelpful in a moment of crisis.

      Love you :) Thanks for the encouragement.

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  2. I like your posts too Alina. You probably aren't even aware that I have read many of them. You do have a wonderful way with words. :) I am sad after reading this post though. I am so sorry that you are struggling/suffering so much right now. I have already stopped to pray for you, that God will hold you close and comfort you, bring you peace....even better than a chocolate chip cookie! (Altho chocolate does seem to cure ALMOST anything!) Love you, Sharon Ink

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    1. Thanks, Sharon :) I appreciate you reading. I do hope, though, that this post isn't just about me and my life--it's for anyone who's ever felt alone on the road.

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  3. Beautifully written...Hugs rose <3

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  4. God gave you a gift of words, and though they might not be helping you in the hearing just now, you have said what many of us--I for one--cannot, so perhaps they help in the telling in ways we don't yet recognize... Love you LOTS sweetie.

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    1. Thanks for the reminder :) I'm glad my word-spinning helps, in whatever way.

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