The Story of Us: Part 1

I stole the idea of telling our story from here. However, it has continued to be on my mind for several weeks now and it wasn't until today that I think I figured out why.

It's fall in North Carolina. The leaves are beginning to change, the weather is getting crisp. As the leaves fall from the trees I think about how the old is being removed so that in the spring, new can grow. This time of year has always been my favorite. What I also realized today is that fall brings back memories of two very special events in my life.

I am telling you the story of me, Luke and our life together for several reasons. The first being that I want anyone reading this to understand that I am so incredibly imperfect. I have made so many mistakes that out of all the people I know, I MUST be the most flawed.

The second is so that you can see clearly that God is what holds our marriage and our family together. Without Him, we would not have the marriage we have nor could we parent these children He has placed in our home.

Also, some of you reading this have known me for a long, long time. Some of you knew me back when I was being held captive by my sin. For some of you, it must be incredibly hard for you to understand how I can blog regularly about my God, yet know all the things from my past. I know I must sound like the hugest hypocrite.

I want my life to be an open book, with God being the binding that holds it all together. I want the stories of my life to scream out the name of my Savior, allowing His redeeming glory to shine through. I want everyone to realize that I am still that same girl that grew up in small town Arkansas, went to a small town college, has made countless mistakes but now serves the Creator of the universe. I want everyone to know that I am only redeemed by grace and that by nothing more than mercy am I changed, in Christ's precious name.

With that said, please know that true to my character these stories will be raw, real and personal. This is me. What you see is what you get, I have nothing to hide.
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The fall of 1998 was one of huge changes for me. I remember, so vividly, my first trip down the twisted, Arkansas Ozark roads to my new life. I had the radio blasting Dixie Chicks and I was on my way to freedom. College was all that I could think about and I was ready for the new chapter in my life. I was ready to discover myself.

High school was not a time of fond memories for me. During my junior year, I became physical with my boyfriend. My father found out and my life turned upside down. The greatest pain came when my father told me that he could no longer trust me. You see, just 3 short years earlier I had made the choice to leave North Carolina where my mom and step-dad lived. I had made the choice, at 13 years old, to move back to Arkansas and live with my father. We had always been close, and since I was 10 years old, I had been waiting for the day that I could choose where I wanted to live. I was a daddy's girl, putting him on such a pedestal. When I realized that he too was not perfect, I was shattered.

In May of 1998, I spent the hours before my high school commencement moving my personal belongings from my father's house into my cousin's house. As soon as I was officially a graduate, I would be on my own, no longer captive by my father's rules.

With the an acceptance letter and a volleyball scholarship to Lyon College, my life was going to begin. As I drove those roads in August of 1998, the wind was in my hair, my spirit felt free and the emptiness inside me was looking forward to finding that missing piece. I was so sure that I would find what was missing in my new found freedom. I knew the world was risky. I knew I was going to find myself. I knew that college held all the answers.

What I didn't know was, that along with all the "necessities" for college, I was carrying with me fresh wounds of a damaged relationship with my father. Nothing I would find at college could heal those pains. No one could make that hurt go away, at least not anyone on this earth.

I moved into college 2 weeks before the general student body, for pre-season volleyball "practice" (read: torture). It was easy for me to fit in because I had already played J.O. volleyball with almost half of the team. College life had started off as amazing.

My freshman year was pretty tame. I stuck to the rules during volleyball season, the rules of no boys, no booze. The first week that everyone was on campus there was a party at the baseball trailer (yes, an on campus double wide that housed 8 baseball players). After much prompting (read: NO prompting) from the upper classmen volleyball players, I went.

I sat on the nastiest couch in the world and got hit on by the drunkest guy on the planet. As he sat on my leg (unbeknownst to him) he told me about how great Lyon College was. Between wiping the spit off my face and feeling my leg go numb from his weight, I remembered the advice my mother had given me just weeks earlier.

"Jessica, be very careful when you go out. There's this thing called the date-rape drug, and guys will try to slip it to you."

Unless this guys was trying to slip it to me by spitting it in my face, I was in the clear. After I made it abundantly clear that I WAS NOT interested in him, he left to get another drink and didn't return. Whew!

My roommate then abandoned me and I was left at this trailer with no one to talk to. That's when another guy approached me. He walked over and told me that he lived in the trailer.

"Hey, my name's Luke. Are you a freshman?"

Holy crap. A sober guy speaking to me. He MUST be trying to slip me the date rape drug. Little did I know that Luke didn't drink and he was actually a pretty nice guy.

I muttered out a few words and avoided eye contact. Finally, realizing that I wasn't up for conversation, he looked at me and said,

"Wow, your kind of a witch (only, he didn't say witch) aren't you?"

He turned and walked away. Totally offended, I left the party and went back to my dorm room, wondering if this college thing was really for me. I think I even cried myself to sleep that night. Three weeks of freedom and I still felt empty. Where was the thing that would fill my void?

Consumed with volleyball, I forgot all about the rude guy at the party. I settled into life as a full time student-athlete and realized that life was a lot of work, and I was up for the challenge.

If It's Pressed On Your Heart...

I know I use the term a lot "If It's Pressed On Your Heart," specifically when requesting prayer. My reason for that is because I know that as believers we have a lot that we see in our world that we need to pray over.

However, several years ago I was heavily convicted about telling folks I'd pray for them, and then never doing it. Therefore, I choose two responses now when people ask for me to pray for them.

My favorite (which sometimes takes A LOT of prompting by the Spirit) is to stop RIGHT THEN and pray with that person over the issue that they are requesting prayer. I feel that if it's important enough for them to ask, then they could surely use the prayer right then.

The next option is to tell them that I will pray about it "If the Spirit presses it on my heart." Now, I don't want that to sound cold or distant. However, like I said earlier, as believers, if our eyes are truly open to the world around us, we are bombarded with things/people/events/circumstances that we need to be in prayer over. Just as our amazing God gives us various talents and abilities, I also feel that He softens our hearts toward specific things as well.

For example, my heart is incredibly touched by the story of the Lawrensons. I think about them daily, and I pray for them often. I've never met them, yet I feel burdened to pray for them. Someone else may not. I believe that God uses these burdens on our hearts so that all peoples can be touched in our prayer lives.

With all of that said, I have some things I would like for you to pray over, if it's pressed on your heart. If you'd like to pray over these things/people/circumstances now, please leave a comment. I know that these prayers will not go unanswered, as long as we are praying for God's desires and His perfect plan to persevere.

1. The Lawrensons that I mentioned above. Long, long story short, almost a year ago Tricia went to Duke for a double lung transplant due to the deterioration of her lungs because of Cystic Fibrosis. The transplant was successful, and just weeks prior she delivered a pre-mature baby girl who is healthy and thriving. However, Tricia has now developed lymphoma and the chemo is not working. This family needs ANOTHER miracle.

2. Chris and Lindy Thompson. They are dear friends of mine who are returning today from Africa where they are FULL TIME missionaries. I'm not sure how long they will be back in the US, but please pray that their mission work will continue to thrive in their absence and that they will adjust to time differences, culture differences and thoroughly enjoy their time with friends and family.

3. The Hauts. They are also foster parents that we met in our fostering class. They are fostering a baby just 3 days older than Baby D. Today they were told that their baby's plan is being changed to Termination of Parental Rights. While this is a huge praise for them, it also comes with it's share of frustrations as it will be many, many months until the adoption is final. Please pray that they will find joy in the process, perseverance and peace.

Once more, if you feel led to pray now please leave a comment telling so. If you do not, that's okay too. However, realize that if you think of them over the next few days that it IS the Holy Spirit pressing them on your heart and they could use prayer AT THAT MOMENT.

Prayer doesn't have to be formal, it doesn't have to be stiff and rigid. However, it must be sincere. God knows the intentions of your heart and listening to His callings and understanding His promptings will bring you so much closer into a love relationship with Him. One like you have never dreamed or imagined.