More Than We Can Handle
By Susan
Law Corpany
What do you do when the
cumulative effect of your trials seems too much for
you, either in the short term or the long run?
I have struggled at different
times in my life not to succumb to the belief that my
life was some sort of cosmic joke — that God woke up
each morning and said, “What can I do to Susan today?”
I once almost bought a
t-shirt that showed God at his computer, about to hit
the “smite” button. At one point, I had a year in which
I was having unidentified health problems, I had been
in a car accident, and my husband and I were separated.
(It is time for this oh-so-human columnist to admit
to a second marriage that lasted nine years.)
My son was a teenager and
“Just wait until your father gets resurrected!” didn’t
hold a lot of sway. When I got a little much-needed
appreciation from my boss at work in the form of a coupon
for Outback Steakhouse, I asked my son if he would like
to go out to dinner. We came home to find that our
house had been broken into and several items had been
stolen. It didn’t even register on the stress-o-meter,
I was so overloaded. I took a half-day off from work,
got the window replaced and carried on.
Shortly afterwards that
boss was replaced with a new one who felt that he was
not going to be able to reach
his sales goals with a little Molly Mormon assistant
who was not likely to cooperate when he stole leads
from other offices, among other things. Short on scruples,
he leapt on every piece of evidence he could to make
me look like a slothful employee, and this was a year
when there had been some unscheduled absences and additional
doctor appointments to help him make his case.
I realized that the stories
of people being pushed out of their jobs were real,
as I experienced that firsthand. In addition to everything
else that was going on, I found myself unsure if I had
job security and would continue to have health insurance
and needed income. I even approached an attorney about
my rights as an employee. Without listening to the
bulk of the things that were going on, he said, “It’s
not against the law to be a jerk.” I thought of telling
him that was a good thing or he would likely be arrested
on the same charge. I felt all alone in the world.
One afternoon during a
font-family:Arial'>Florida thunderstorm, I raised my
eyes heavenward. “I don’t need any more material for
any of my books!” I informed the Powers that Be. Then
I continued my rant. “How about if I just go out in
the backyard and give you a nice clear target?”
Week after week I went
to church and sat on the back row, often crying my way
through the hymns, trying to get my heart right, and
wondered if anyone but my closest friends knew or cared
how much I was struggling. I had no visible home teachers.
The main concern of some
ward members seemed to be that I not become a welfare
burden on the ward, never knowing how much that suggestion
hurt my feelings. The bishop was never aware that I
did eventually quit my job, turning in to the personnel
department all the information the attorney did not
want to make use of. I was too proud to tell the ward
leaders I was unemployed, and I was bound and determined
not to ask for any help from them. At one time I worked
three part-time jobs to keep my head above water.
I had been a Relief Society
President and had handled food orders for many families,
and I had never imagined needing a food order, much
less being made to feel that I was unworthy of help
if I needed it. Yes, I struggled financially, but my
biggest struggles at that time were spiritual. I did
my best to hold onto the message that kept coming to
me. “Be still and know that I am God.”
At times like this, there
is likely to be one or two or eighty-seven people who
will tell you, “The Lord doesn’t give us more than we
can handle.” I was already struggling in my relationship
with Him, and I didn’t need people suggesting he was
“sending” these problems. I know there are lots of
you out there who really like that saying, so I gave
that line to a character in one of my novels to handle.
**********************************************************
This excerpt is from Are
We There Yet?
Bob (aka
Bishop Buck) and Beverly stood up and began to work
their way out of the stake center. Dave and Justin
appeared, each on either side of Beverly. Justin whipped
off his necktie and put it over her eyes. Dave tied
it securely in back. “What are you clowns doing?” she
asked.
“We’re hungry. We don’t want you to see someone to
talk to. We’re doing like Dad does with the horses
when he needs to lead them past something.” Justin
took one arm and Dave took the other, and they began
to lead Beverly safely to the vehicle. Bob followed
behind chuckling.
Headed his direction, equally intent on a quick exit
was Trudy Gaster, oblivious
to Bob and everyone else. She walked by him briskly,
her signature scent bring back not-so-great memories,
not so much ignoring him specifically as doing her best
to treat everyone as invisible. Bob saw her headed
his way, head down. Maybe I should be the one with
the tie over my eyes. I wonder if she is still mad
at me.
Someone reached out and touched her arm. She knew she
could not hurry on without responding. It was her visiting
teacher, dear determined Emma, the elderly sister who
drove her ancient car over every month, faithful without
fail. “Trudy, that’s so wonderful about your friend
being made an elder. Are things progressing?”
It was the moment she had dreaded. She had her pat
answer ready. “He’s progressing in the gospel. Socially?
Yes, but not with me. We’re no longer dating.”
“Oh, that’s too bad, dear. I thought you had found
such a nice young man. I’m sorry.”
Young from where you’re sitting anyway. “Well, so
am I,” shot back Trudy, a little too forcefully.
Another pat on the arm. “Just remember, God
never gives us more than we can handle.”
She felt the tears springing to her eyes and turned
away. From nearby she heard a familiar male voice,
Bob Buchmiller — the widowed
bishop she had pursued before he had gone off to Utah
and had come back with a wife. “Yes, he does, Emma.
He’s given us all more than we can handle. That’s
why He provided a Savior for us. None of us makes it
back on our own.”
“Why Bishop Buchmiller, how
are you?” Emma gushed. “My yes, I suppose that’s true,
too. I’ve never thought of it that way. We certainly
miss you as our high council representative.”
Trudy was afforded a few moments to compose herself
as Bob engaged Emma in further conversation. As Emma
went on her way, a calmer Sister Gaster
turned to Bob Buchmiller.
In that instant all the acrimony she had felt for him
melted away. She managed a brief expression of gratitude.
“Thank you for saving me from the inquisition. I was
trying to get away before someone could comment, could
ask, but it looks like I didn’t make it.”
“You okay?”
“Sure, I’m fine. Just fine. Find and dandy,” she said definitively.
Bob smiled. “The more fine someone says they are, the
less I am inclined to believe them.”
She let him know the conversation was over. “I’m sure
your wife is waiting.”
“The boys have got her in hand.” Bob waved in the direction
of Beverly and the boys.
Trudy turned to look and something that sounded like
a cross between a laugh and a sob escaped her. “Why
have they got her blindfolded?”
“Trying to make sure she gets out without finding someone
to talk to. They’re hungry boys.”
Trudy swallowed. She spoke softly, her head down.
“All right, I’m not fine. My friend, James,
who was sustained as an elder today — he’s caught the
vision of the gospel, and he’s decided to take his newfound
principles and insights and see if his ex-wife is willing
to give their family another chance. It’s a good thing
he’s doing, and as soon as I get over my disappointment
and broken heart, I hope I’ll be able to wish him well,
to wish them all well. I’d become attached, not just
to him, but to his children. When he joined the Church,
I really thought things were...”
He hesitated, remembering the monumental efforts Trudy
had made to get his attention when he was single. Her
persistence had resulted in a date where he had let
the former rodeo queen and self-proclaimed expert horsewoman
ride his wildest horse, Saint, resulting in the temporary
loss of her bridgework and the near-permanent loss of
their friendship. “Trudy, I’m sorry things didn’t work
out for you. He seemed like a real nice guy, not a
jerk like me.”
She looked at him, a small smile teasing about her lips.
“You aren’t a jerk. You just acted like a jerk.
There’s a difference.”
“Now that’s comfortin’ to
know.”
“It was an academy-award-winning performance,
though.”
“Forgiven?”
“Forgiven,” she sighed. “Thanks again for intercepting
there.”
“I don’t know how many times people told me that God
never gives us more than we can handle when Christine
was fixin’ to die on me.
Even if that is true, sometimes people forget what the
handling entails. I’ve sure seen a few people
that looked to me like they had more than they could
handle. I rather think that God strengthens us to handle
whatever life throws at us, if we turn to Him. From
where I’m standing, the turnin’ to Him is a more difficult process if everyone tells
us He gave us this trail. What He gave
us is agency and a world full of perils. It sure felt
much of the time like I had more than I could handle,
watching my wife suffer and die. Hang in there, Trudy.
There’s a fellow out there will spend the rest of his
life with a soft spot in his heart for the woman who
introduced him to the gospel. I know it isn’t all that
you had hoped for, but it’s better than a poke in the
eye with a sharp stick.” He gestured in the direction
of Beverly and the boys. “Well, the family’s waiting.”
*********************************************************
As many of you have probably
noticed, if there is anything I hope to accomplish with
my writing, it is to help us to think twice about the
things we say to people who are dealing with trials.
While some of them might have comfort value, because
so many people tend to say the same things, they go
from comforting to annoying quite quickly.
We usually get a better
result when we open our hearts instead of our mouths.
The Last Straw
Too many times I have experienced
or witnessed that last straw on the camel’s back. Sometimes
it is a whole bale of hay, for that matter.
While driving across the
island this week, my stepson, Shawn, and I were remembering
a Christmas Eve a few years ago. We were the last ones
leaving to go across the island because the family was
gathering on the other side, since our vacation home
was not rented during the holidays. Because we had
our dog with us, I was taking the less-windy south route.
Several miles from the
next town, I heard a pop and the car suddenly became
very difficult to steer. I began to drive very slowly,
sometimes requiring Shawn’s help to turn the steering
wheel when we came to a curve. The only thing I could
think of to do was to limp to the next small town, which
I knew was coming up, and hope we would find the service
station (yes, there was only one) open and be able to
get some help.
We both had to pull on
the steering wheel to get the car to make the right
turn into the small village. With relief, I noticed
that the lights were still on at the service station
as we pulled in. Jumping out of the car, I ran towards
the lone attendant as I saw him locking the door and
preparing to turn out the lights for the evening. He
stated that they were closed and pointed to a brown
house on the next street over and told me that a mechanic
lived there and wished me good luck.
On the verge of tears,
unsure whether or not we were going to be able to join
the rest of the family, I looked back at the car. Shawn
had the car doors open, because he had just returned
from taking the dog for a short walk. They had both
climbed back into the car. I headed to the car just
in time to see the dog toss his cookies all over the
backseat.
This has become sort of
a benchmark for me. Why, I have asked many times, often
on behalf of people other than myself, just when you
are already dealing with something stressful, does the
dog barf on the backseat?
When my niece was battling
cancer, why did her younger brother get hit with a baseball,
requiring several repeated trips to the emergency room
to stop bleeding that would reoccur just when they thought
they had it under control? Why did Dad also have health
problems during this time when family resources, emotional
and otherwise, were stretched to the limit?
I have a friend who, after
many years of struggling to make things better, ended
a marriage to man who had forgotten that supporting
his family was part of the bargain. He was more than
glad to let her new husband adopt their children, as
it meant no financial responsibility for him. She became
mother to his several children, and they added to their
family. I was so happy to hear that things were going
better for her.
Then during a trip to
Utah I heard that her new husband had died, leaving
her as a single mother to eleven children. I was in
town, so I went to the funeral.
As I stood in line, I
overheard someone telling her how wonderful it was that
she was sealed to her new husband. Yes, that is true,
but I was thinking about how she was also going to need
a lot of help to get through the “now” before she was
joyfully reunited with her husband.
This past week I heard
that some friends of mine lost their son, who took his
own life. That tells me that sometimes people do
have more than they can handle. And not having experienced
this, I don’t know how a family copes after such a loss.
I tried to imagine what
would be helpful in a situation like that. All I can
think of is that “right thing” that was done for me,
after my husband died, when a friend took me in his
arms and just said, “I’m so sorry.”
The other thing I can
think of that might be helpful is to take away a physical
task. When one’s emotional resources are spent, simple
tasks like taking out the garbage can become monumental.
I remember a friend coming
by my house one day and taking all my dirty laundry
and bringing it back clean and folded. It is that friend
who did that for me who just lost her son. Now I am
far away and all I can think of to do to help is to
write something that someone closer might read in hopes
that they might go by and do something kind for her
like she did for me.
In sensitive situations
like this, we often don’t know what to do or say, so
we don’t do anything, but doing nothing is not the right
thing, either. Above all, people need to know they
are loved and cared for as they struggle.
Do You Deliver?
It isn’t enough just to
tell people that they can handle their problems. I
am reminded of a time that I was sick with the flu.
I had tried to order a pizza, so I would not have to
try and get up and cook dinner. My son was too young
at the time to fix himself something and there was not
much in the house as I had not been shopping. As soon
as I began to give my address, I was told that I was
out of their delivery area. “But you didn’t even hear
my entire address.”
“We don’t deliver to the
elevens.”
In frustration, I called
my dear friend, Shauna, who was always there with a
listening ear. “And then Scotty climbs on the waterbed
and gets the bed in waves, which gets my stomach in
waves. There isn’t any food in the house and Pizza
Hut doesn’t deliver to the elevens.”
I felt a little better
after I had vented. Shortly after I had talked to her,
the phone rang. It was Shauna. It hadn’t taken her
long to think it over. Though she lived in a completely
different part of town, she told me that she was bringing
dinner over. “Pizza hut may not deliver, but Shauna
does.”
I have always been grateful
for friends who considered me within their “delivery
area.” I would not have made it through my trials
without the help of my friends. For every person oblivious
to the needs of others, on the other end of the ledger
are people who know what you need without you having
to ask. Those people are a gift from God.