Snow

There’s snow falling outside. Well, actually, it’s stopped falling for the moment. But it was before and I stood in the kitchen and watched the white specks swirl past the window. Kitchen faces the brick wall of someone else’s world, but in between this home and that home, snow flakes fill the open air.

I drove to work. Drove carefully, carefully, but I’m worried about being late and I should have wiped the snow off the car windows before I left. I can see what I need to see, visibility’s not incredible right now, anyway. And there’s a thin heap of snow balanced on my window, and I’m only rolling fifteen miles an hour, surely nothing can go wrong. But you never know and I roll down the window, watching snow pack together in a heap, and the air is cold and flakes swing gently into the car, landing soft on my face, my hair. And the light is green and the window’s still rolling down and the tiny snow bank on the outside of the window collapses into the car, and I’m driving up the street with a pile of frozen white on my arm.

It kept snowing while I was at work, too, and the parking lot’s near empty by the time I come back out. There’s a snow scraper in the car and I’m careful to use it, but I almost forget to clear the snow off my window again, because I can hear Taylor Swift on the radio inside the car, and I’m thinking about Mexico again.

And the car wiggles on the way around the corner, but I’m driving so very slowly and it’s more fun than scary, really. I park in the garage, because I think that’s what the mother would have prescribed, but I don’t like going in the back door, so I walk around to the front. Walk straight up the middle of the alley, and it’s so still that I can hear the snow packing together under my boots. A soft, straining, settling sound. And the snow’s still falling gentle and wet on my head and coat and it’s settling on everything it can touch.

And before I shuffled the car into the garage, before I pulled around the corner to the street I’ve grown up on, there’s a stop sign on the corner, and snow is everywhere and snow can be so much. Because glance up, look around: snow is beautiful. Stunning, breathtaking wonder on every surface that it can get its sticky grip on. But there are other words with snow, too; like dangerous and wet and slippery and cold. And there’s an inches-thick white layer on everything in sight, but can you even tell what’s underneath? Because snow can be deceptive, tricky, disillusioned, too.

And God’s put beauty in this world, and He’s shattering this night with the silent wonder of snow falling, and a strange guilt starts to creep in, because I should be appreciating all this. And I am, actually. I really do love the snow, and I do breathe in tight when white-laden branches catch my eye; bright ice reflecting soft yellow street light glow. But I answered my mother’s phone because she was wrist-deep in dish water and the other end speaks Spanish and I forgot to not, and one time Hermana Tere asked me about snow.

And Mexico missing’s not always so close by, and the ache of longing softens with distraction. But Skype conversation at midnight says unless you do what you love, you will never be happy and there was more, too, but there’s snow outside and tightness in my heart because I know what I love and I know where I love, but snow isn’t just snow, and it will never be that easy, will it?

~Natalia

Where I’m Supposed To

It occurred to me just now to wonder if I’ll ever start sounding repetitive in my blog posts. Although I suppose to some extent, I probably already do repeat myself in what I write. A little repetition can almost not be helped; it usually takes me a little while to learn many of the lessons I’m learning, and something that I’m thinking about, that God is teaching me, is bound to crop up more than once.

But what if it got really bad? I’m sitting in bed, wrapped in my blanket with my computer on my lap, and I’m suddenly worried that I’ll continue to state the same thing over and over, a cycle of words already said and thoughts already thought.

I wrote about being a balloon a handful of days ago. I felt unanchored; content and yet unanchored, days ago. But it’s Sunday now and during Season of Prayer at church this morning, I begged God to let me anchor in something, to allow me to feel rooted in Him.

I’m physically rooted in Him; I know where I stand as a Child of God, but there’s something about my heart that’s not there right now. I take a breath, take a pause, turn in and glance at my heart, and I feel unsettled, unrooted.

I don’t know, really. Maybe I’ll just give it more time.

But I’ve talked about that before and I just talked about it again, and there’s no answer there now.

There’s other subjects I could talk about. Lots of them.

Talk about life at school. Moody’s community is unique; I know that and I’ve told you that before. But it’s different when visitors come, when visitors spend the day here, only to look around the SDR at lunch and comment that it’s really different here; everyone is so kind here.

But I’ve written posts about school before. You know that I’m passionate about where I go to school, the classes I take, the relationships that I have on campus, the plans I’m starting to have for the future.

Write about that all over again and I’d just be repeating myself.

And the list continues right on down.

France, work, family.

Beauty, the train, Mexico.

I’ve said some about all of these things, but I haven’t said it all. Haven’t said it all and I don’t know it all. But I have talked about them. Sometimes rather extensively.

So I’ve written more than 400 words just now, and what have I said?

I’ve not said much of anything, really. And in some ways, I think that’s exactly right. With the recognition that I don’t have stellar thoughts or novel ideas apart from the God who created me in His image in the first place, I think I might have found myself exactly where I should be.

I know I’ve said it before, and recently at that.

But the thought, the belief, that I am nothing with Him, that He created me and saved me and pours buckets of sweet, unending grace on me every day; well, I think it’s okay to repeat that once or twice.

He completely overwhelms me with His love and mercy, and as I stand, trembling, in the tidal wave of His grace, I think I’m exactly where I’m supposed to be.

And maybe somewhere here, I’ll find some answers, too.

~Natalia

Relationship

I’m supposed to tell her

what my relationship with Christ looks like right now.

But the problem is

my life, and therefore my heart,

have seen so much action,

so much to-do and what’s next

over the past couple weeks

that I’m not exactly sure

what it looks like, really.

There have been words, lessons,

emblazoned in bold letters across the first two weeks of this semester.

Back at school and fumbling shakily to find my identity here;

Friends? School?

What makes me me, what makes me individual, important,

what keeps me going?

And then, quietly but growing steadily louder as I wander from

purpose to purpose,

Your identity is in me, He says.

Not who you’re friends with, not what you do, not how you love those around you,

You are truly you when you find who you are in me.

I’m His daughter, His child.

A lesson I hear, a truth He’s nailing into my heart,

but not a lesson I learn overnight.

And then I’m struggling

and I’m having a hard day

and I’m upset about the way things are going.

And there’s another small voice, steady and firm

You’re not the only one.

We hide it and stuff it and would rather not be talking about it

but open your eyes,

look around.

Everyone here, the faces in the hall

in chapel

in class-

this campus is full of people who are hurt, broken

and being healed, growing, through Christ.

Two lessons I can list,

two lessons I can hold in my hand, my head, my heart

and think about all day long.

But what does that say about my relationship with Christ?

Maybe I’ve had so much time learning

so much time watching, feeling Him

pulling on my heart and

teaching me lessons,

so much time chugging through life

that I’ve forgotten the very thing it’s all about:

a relationship with the very one who made me

sustains me

loves me

put me here

and who longs for a relationship with me

just as much as I’m parched for a relationship with Him.

~Natalia

Leave It At That

I shuffle quietly around the room, exchanging leggings and a tank top for a skirt and top. I deliberate for a moment over my choice of shirt, kneeling over my drawer, flipping back and forth between a white and a brown shirt. Silent moments pass, and I finally pull the brown shirt off the top of the stack and kick the drawer shut gently.

Dressed for church, I step over to my bookshelf, pale brown shelves balancing books and notebooks. A blue bag of makeup sits on the top shelf, propped between a tub of lotion and a metal basket containing a random collection of toothpaste, shampoo, and bars of soap.

I fish around the makeup bag for a moment until I find the right eyeliner and eyeshadow, and I’m on my way back to the mirror when something outside the window catches my eye.

I step closer to the window, beauty products still gripped in my hand. Six floors below me, across the street, the motion that had caught my eye is in the Parking Lot.

I’ve told you about the Parking Lot before. Directly in front of my window, the Parking Lot is a small square of city space featuring a sign that reads “$10 Parking All Day”. There are no lines on the bumpy Parking Lot pavement, and the cars, which seem to appear out of nowhere, and leave without my taking notice, pack the space.

I’m intrigued by the Parking Lot, and I like catching glimpses of the funny, whimsical beauty of tens of cars haphazardly, and yet so very neatly, filling the Parking Lot. A real live game of tetris, right outside my window.

But it’s Sunday morning and the Parking Lot’s not full at all. A smattering of vehicles line the edges of the Lot, but the majority of the faded pavement is exposed; huge grey squares under the pale morning sun.

There aren’t many cars in the Lot this morning, but there is movement. A man and a woman stand in the middle of the Lot, separated by a yard or two. I watch as the man flings a tennis ball, away from himself, away from me.

A white dog jumps excitedly at the sight of the bright yellow toy, then takes off running after the ball. The dog returns proudly, the ball in his mouth, and the man retrieves the toy, no doubt a little more slobbery than previously, just as I turn away to put my makeup on.

A game of fetch.

Minutes pass and I step back over to the bookshelf, slipping the makeup back into the disheveled blue bag. I pause at the window on my way past, expecting to see the dog and man still involved in their game, but instead a different scene meets my eyes.

The man and woman remain where they were, rooted rather apathetically in the middle of the asphalt, but the dog is nowhere to be seen. I watch the pair begin to glance around, imagining the growing uncertainty and concern they might feel as the seconds pass and their four-footed friend remains missing.

Then a streak of white motion appears behind one of the cars, and I watch the dog weave his sneaky way around his people, slipping in and out of the few cars still in the Lot. Moments pass and the two individuals become more concerned. I watch as they begin to move, taking slow steps here and there, looking around for their furry companion.

Then, slowly, their search brings then back around to where they began and just as I did, they catch sight of the animal. I lean forward to watch the relief on their faces, and then step away from the window again; the misty sun is rising higher and I need to go.

But there’s a lesson, a comparison, a beauty, in the Parking Lot. In the dog. In searching for something that’s still there. There’s desperation and beauty and hope in my position, too. Standing in a window, six floors up, knowing that the dog is there, knowing that it will all work out, and completely unable to communicate that to anyone.

There’s something there; beauty, hope, grace, desperation, maybe a lesson. But I don’t know exactly what it is.

And for tonight, for once, I’m going to leave it like that.

~Natalia

Sometimes

I find myself walking home slower and slower from work.

Because it’s the evening now and the sun is glowing orange and serene on the cement sidewalk.

And cars are rolling past me, going about their own ways, as I watch them zip by.

Because there’s sound, but it’s not noise.

I’m completely surrounded by life, the world unfolding around me at the same dizzying pace it’s always been, but I’m alone.

Alone with my thoughts, my heart, and God.

We talk. As I step slowly over green grass and gravel, sidewalk and cracked black asphalt, Him and I chat.

Sometimes I work things out and sometimes my thoughts and questions come back to me just as open as when I asked.

But that doesn’t matter, really. What matters more is that there’s peace and rest in those fifteen-minute walks.

And conversation with Him.

~Natalia

Please Tell Me

What catches you eye about this el train ad?

~Natalia

Moody Expected

Occasionally, people ask me how actually living at Moody compares to my expectations of living at Moody. This question tends to stump me. You would think that the eight years that elapsed between deciding to attend Moody and actually arriving on this campus would have resulted in at least one or two major expectations. Alas, every time I am faced with that fateful question, I shrug, hem and haw a bit, and then sidestep the whole issue with the conveniently elusive and noncommittal

“Well, I’m not sure if I had any expectations, really.”

Which, as you can probably imagine, is not entirely true. I did have a handful of preconceived notions regarding what it would be like to work, play, eat, sleep as a Moody student. These preconceptions are based almost completely on off-hand comments and remarks made by previous Moody students, and are as follows:

Preconception #1: Sickness passes rapidly amongst human beings living in dormitory settings, and if the girl across the hall seven doors down has a cough, you’re probably going to contract influenza.

Truth: This belief was based on a story my 5th grade AWANA leader (then a Moody student and my idol) related about her entire floor (which, coincidentally, is the same floor I currently live on) being struck with the stomach flu at the same time. I can still picture her recounting this tale nonchalantly as wide-eyed young girls surrounded her, hanging on her every gruesome word. And yes, by nature of the fact that people who live with each other do occasionally breathe the same air, it is true that illnesses can pass from one of us to others. But thus far in my Moody career, I have yet to witness an entire floor wiped out by the same bug at the same time.

Preconception #2: Classes are ridiculously hard and your little brain is going to be working overtime trying to keep track of everything you’re learning.

Truth: I am unsure where I collected this little gem of a foreboding expectation, but I arrived on campus last fall literally ready to suffer brain cramps from the overload of learning that was sure to be heaped upon me. Now, please keep in mind that I am two semesters into an eight-semester-long Moody career. I have yet to experience much. I am a mere padawan. However, I have been most pleasantly surprised with the academics here at Moody. Yes, classes can be hard. Yes, I do occasionally struggle to wrap my mind around this or that concept. But professors are kind, wise, and intelligent. Classes are teaching me invaluable lessons that will help me immensely as I seek to further God’s Kingdom. And the things I am learning, both inside and out of the classroom, are shaping and growing my mind and heart to be more like Christ.

Preconception/ Question #3: Ever since I was quite young, the whole idea of sitting in class has had a huge question mark over it. From a young age, I would occasionally ponder such life changing queries as Will I take notes in a notebook? A three-ring binder? What do college classrooms look like? And they big? Small? Do you wear a backpack in college? Do I have to take my textbooks to class? Wouldn’t that be a lot of books? How do you know where to go for every class? And the notes: taken in pen? Or pencil?

Truth: I suppose these questions were understandable for a homeschooler to be asking, seeing as most of them find their root in the simple fact that I did not experience a public school setting until my senior year of high school. At that point, at the ripe old age of 17, I was enrolled as a part-time student in the tiny Christian school at our church in Mexico. This was an invaluable experience for me in many ways, not the least of which being that it helped me begin to answer the above questions.

Preconception #4: It is socially acceptable to walk around your floor without pants on.

Truth: Yes.

Preconception #5: College is such a growing experience and will be so good for you.

Truth: First, allow me to say that the above sentence can easily be construed to mean anything and is, for the most part highly uninformative. However, it is by far the strongest message I received from people when they found out I was planning on attending THE Moody Bible Institute.

And, as ambiguous as they were, they could not have been more right. I am learning and growing; immensely so. So much that sometimes, Thursday night hits and the spilled makeup on the blue dorm carpet is a painfully accurate picture of how I feel on the inside: poured out, empty, splattered all over. Done.

So much that I’m sitting on the red couch in the lounge, listening to conversation bounce back and forth across the room, echoing slightly off the walls, and my heart kind of hurts because I can physically see how blessed I am. Relationships with my family, with the women on my floor; deep, complex, sometimes challenging. But also filled with joy and fun and patience and grace and love. The love of God that pours out of us, splashing on those around us, soaking all of us in a blanket of His mercy and sovereignty.

Is Moody like I had expected? Maybe a little bit. But it’s also so much harder, so much more fun, so much more challenging, and so much better than I ever expected.

~Natalia

Longing

She wandered purposefully up and down the stage, speaking as she went.

She had prayed for the Holy Spirit to work through her, and even as she paced the stage, people were praying. Praying that God would give her words, give her wisdom, use her heart to change hearts.

He did.

Her words were even and heart-breaking. She knew the message by heart, and infused the words with passion as they came out. I sat, feet propped on the seat in front of me, transfixed.

We were all transfixed.

My notebook was already open before she began to speak. Tossed haphazardly in my lap, the little blue book fell open to a page already full of my flat, round handwriting. I flipped forward until I found an empty page, then set my pen to the paper.

God, I wrote across the top of the page, then hesitated, why do I feel this way? I looked up from my writing to watch her once again. Even while I wrote, I had been listening intently to her words, and now I paused to watch her walk across the stage.

Moments later, I turned back to my journal, even as my ears and heart strained to hear her message. She’s talking about Eden; about feeling perfect love and joy without remnants of past pain- I’ll never have that, LORD. I wrote, emotions twisting within me.

On stage, she continued. She spoke of what God originally created. The perfection, the pure love, the emotion that filled one’s heart to bursting with joy. The communion and intimacy with God that we cannot even fathom.

I’ll never have that, God, I wrote, my pen scratching rhythmically across the page. I will never experience that perfection and I cannot even fathom what I’m not getting, what I’m missing because of the sin in this world.

She paused on one side of the pulpit and spread her long, slender hands in front of her. The auditorium was silent, watching, listening, hearts breaking.

Longing. She spoke the word and my heart sank. I knew what she meant. In fact, the half-full page in front of me, scribbled-across with my cries to God, was seeped in longing.

The broken and completely unfixable state of this world is laid bare before us, and we know it. We can’t miss the fact that everything is not as it should be, not as it was originally created to be.

The world is broken. You’re broken. I’m broken.

And we weren’t originally made to be that way.

Why would you cause us- cause me- to feel this way? I demanded of God. Why would you wish this upon me?

But even as I wrote it, I knew the answer.

I didn’t, He said. And I knew He was right. He didn’t wish that we would hurt, that our world would reek of brokenness and sin, that each day would be filled with reminders of the perfect that was, that we will never experience this side of Heaven.

We brought it on ourselves.

We disobeyed. We rebelled. We sinned.

And it hurt Him.

It hurt Him so much more than my life hurts me. It broke His heart.

And we chose to do it.

Oh, God. We need you. We broke your heart- I broke your heart. And you took in that pain, soaked it into your own perfect heart and then, not once closing your eyes to me, never thinking of turning your back to me, you still gave.

You gave your Son. You gave hope. Hope beyond imagining. Hope that there is more, so much more beyond the longing.

She was almost done speaking, having brought us from creation to cross, weaving together bold-faced rebellion and gut-wrenching longing with the overflowing, overwhelming grace of God.

And the hope that that brings.

Because we long now. Long for the perfection that was. That never again will be on this earth.

And with that longing comes deep hope. Hope that what we long for will one day be restored. Restored and replenished, and yet so much more; better than anything we ever had, better than anything we can imagine or fathom.

There’s so much longing, but oh, so much hope.

~Natalia

Right?

I suppose I’m in one of those little phases wherein I have yet to allow the life that swirling around me to fully sink in. I’m scampering from event to project to conversation, and my mind is not quite able to capture everything, untangle it, and absorb it.

I know somewhere in my head that I’m supposed to properly process and comprehend what is going on in and around me, but sometimes, deep in my heart, I doubt that this is true.

Maybe I don’t actually need to be able to “get” myself and the world before I step out to live another day, another hour, another experience.

But in the end, it always works such that I need to step back, to slow down, to stretch out the thoughts, words, and emotions that fill my mind and heart and make sense of them.

Right?

~Natalia

What Motivates

This week we had a guest speaker in one of my classes.

He spoke about discpleship; building intentional, one-on-one relationships with fellow beleivers for the purpose of mutual growth. Relationships based on love and friendship.

As you can imagine, given my rather intense interest in intentionality, love, and friendship, the talks held me spellbound, start to finish.

But the speaker was not shy about the trails of discipleship. He didn’t sugarcoat or skim over the trying parts of discipleship. The parts where you get on your knees and beg God to remind you why you’re doing this in the first place.

It’s a proven fact that when you allow people so close to your heart, invite them there even, some amount of pain is involved.

Often, a fair amount of pain.

Because we’re broken people, and they’re broken people, and broken + broken = hurt.

And as I sat in class, taking copious amounts of notes in my little blue notebook, something I have thought many times before rose up again in front of me.

What motivates me to discipleship?

I understand why we do discipleship: because, well, God commanded us to, and for the purpose of growing closer to Him.

I get that.

But what motivates me to not only open my arms to the likely hurt that comes with these relationships, but to literally pursue it?

I can think of several acceptable motivators, but I wonder, will those things keep me around? When it’s hard to love and it’s messy because we’re both people and this is not Heaven, what will motivate me to stick around?

Will what motivated me to reach out in the first place be enough to make me stay?

~Natalia

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