In the Dark

While I was lying in bed last night, two car crashes happened outside my open window. It was jolting to be half-asleep and hear the screech of tires followed by the crash of metal and glass. Even though I was lying safely indoors up on the fourth floor, it felt as if the cars were crashing into me.

It reminded me of how I sometimes feel like my world is falling apart when in reality, all is well.

Sometimes I feel like I am walking in the dark. I can’t see anything.  Everything seems uncertain, undefined, unstable. So when I hear threatening sounds right beside me, I get scared. But the truth is that I don’t have to understand everything that is happening around me in order to be safe. I just have to stick with someone who does.

~ In order to sleep, you have to close your eyes. How could I ever do that if I thought I was on my own? How would I ever find rest in the midst of an unpredictable world? ~

Last night, the first accident really shook me. I popped up right away, put on my glasses, and peered out my window, trying to see what had happened. (Trees were blocking my view, so I could only see car headlights and had to deduce from there.) When the second one happened several hours later, I didn’t even fully wake up (which is why I’m still not 100% sure it really happened, but I’m pretty sure it did). I just cringed, eyes closed, as I heard the crash, briefly wondering to myself if this accident was related to the first one, then fell back asleep.

Recently, life has been a little rough, exhausting, and scary. But ultimately, what is being produced in me through all of it is fearlessness. The threatening sounds lose their power to intimidate me, because again and again I find that I am safe.

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Elizabeth is a preacher, educator, and certified life coach. Half-Korean, half-white, she spent 7 years of her adult life in South Korea. She is a deep feeler, a perpetual learner, and believer in the power of curiosity, raw honesty, and radical self-embrace. Elizabeth currently resides in Los Angeles.

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