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Single Parent Faith

Monday, August 20, 2012

Divine Appointments— Fire Hydrant Angel

The golden moments in the stream of life rush past us, and we see nothing but sand; the angels come to visit us, and we only know them when they are gone.” – George Eliot

While growing up, my mom never allowed my sisters and I to sleep over anyone’s home. My mom was very strict about that. She had to break her rule once during a hospital stay, when she had no choice but to have us stay with my aunt. But otherwise she never allowed it. I was upset with her about that rule. I didn’t see its purpose. I thought she was being extremely strict, and that the trust I elicited did not merit such an extreme prohibition.

When I was 16 years old, I had a friend who had fire engine red hair. It was very long and so fluffy that it poofed out—that was back in the day of big hair. Her female cousin, also attended our high school, and they were two peas in a pod.  They were everything I was not.  Maybe that’s why I was drawn to them. They were outgoing, popular, funny, and always attracting guys’ attention. I often wondered why they allowed me, this shy awkward girl, to hang out with them. Maybe I was their mascot. I can’t imagine they felt much in common with me.

Sometimes when we got out of school, they lit up and smoked pot. They offered but when I rejected it, to their credit (and my surprise, now speaking as a parent) they didn’t push me to smoke it. Their parents allowed them a lot of freedoms I never got at home. They were able to stay outside until very late. Both of them were sexually active and I caught bits and pieces of their conversations which often were spoken in code, when I was present. I guess they didn’t want to fully disclose the details in my presence.

Looking back, now as a mom myself, I recognize what a bad influence these girls were, and how I would not want my own daughter hanging out with these girls.

My mother didn’t know the things I knew about them, and one Friday evening my mother surprised me by allowing me to spend the night at the red-head’s home. Both girls decided at 11pm that we should go outside and hang out at the playground. We were not there very long when the neighborhood guys were drawn to us. Well, more so to them who were the extroverted gregarious ones. I was the very quiet bud, not yet fully bloomed. So you can imagine my surprise when a very cute guy started talking to me.

At that age (or any for that matter), the ego is massaged with such attention. I was definitely not used to all this attention.  If this is a taste of freedom—getting all this attention from a cute guy—I was indeed liking freedom!

I felt immediate chemistry and attraction toward this guy, though I knew nothing about him. I liked his looks and how good it felt to receive this attention. Looking back now, I realize I was starved for male attention, not having had an emotionally attached or affectionate father.  So I, like many countless girls and women, didn’t know that the hole where normally self-worth would occupy, would erroneously interpret a random guy’s attention as acknowledgement of my worth.

He asked me if I wanted to go for a walk. I was excited that he asked “me” and not the other girls. Surely there were other girls prettier than me, I thought. Who doesn’t want to stand out as the special one, when all you know is the dull pain of being ignored and unrecognized. Even with the excitement of being noticed, I felt a twinge of nervousness.  Something inside me was saying, But you don’t know him.

My “friend” said “Go ahead, it’s okay! We’ll be here when you get back.”

I was not sure, but at the same time I thought what harm was there to just go for a walk. I rationalized, and disregarded my internal urgings, my intuition. 

We walked and talked. I can’t remember the conversation. It was likely teen deep. He reached for my hand and held it as we walked. I felt warm and special when he held my hand. It was such a foreign feeling to me, not having this attention from a guy ever before. His hand felt good, as his masculine hand wrapped around mine. I was so thrilled.

I noticed that as we got far away from the playground, his pace started picking up. I didn’t know my way around that neighborhood. It was in an entirely different area of NYC, than the one I lived in. I looked in the direction we were headed, and noticed that the apartment buildings soon would end and all that lay ahead was a dark heavily wooded area. It seemed to be many acres deep. It is where you’d go if you want to hide, or disappear.

The nervous anticipation of having a guy pay attention to me was quickly replaced with fear, and adrenalin pumping. He stopped his quick pace momentarily to give me a kiss. It felt hurried and void of any emotion. It was perfunctory. It was sloppy. It was what he must give all the girls. How could it be special? He didn’t have time to get to know my heart. That takes weeks, months. All we had were minutes.

This was not what I expected from my first French kiss. I dreamt of something special, because I am special. Instead, it infused fear and tasted like nasty cigarettes. It turned my stomach.

He grabbed my hand tighter as he was moving quicker in the direction of his destination. I began verbalizing my fear in a very passive manner. “I think we need to get back. Terri will be wondering where I am.” Little did I know that he’d have knowledge of Terri that would render my soft threat pointless, meaningless. I was in over my head. I was meekly threatening the big bad wolf warning him that grandma would be looking for me. Unlike grandma who cares, Terri was a teen overcome by the call of hormones and busy with her own teen absorption.

I stopped to turn back, and he pulled me in the direction of his one-track mind. It was not about me; it was about him—what he wanted. At that moment, nothing existed in his mind other than making it to the goal. His sights were set on that wooded park. It was clear to me at that point, that I could have been anyone. I was just another girl, just like countless others he must have coerced or taken dragging. This seemed like a well-worn path for him.

It was surreal. On the one hand my heart was racing, and yet, it didn’t seem possible that this was happening to me. It must be a bad joke. He’s surely going to relent. But he did not. I had no voice.

He was not talking anymore and there was nothing stirring about. The silence in the city that never sleeps was eerily quiet.  We were now far away from apartment buildings, it was now past midnight, and I was alone. I didn’t know what to do. I was in shock and fear. I was paralyzed and unsure. I was the lamb being led to slaughter. I was out of my element. I did not know how to navigate through this situation. I never had to deal with this before, in my protected world.

We reached the end of the last city block. Once we crossed the desolate street, we would be there. Just a few steps away and I would disappear into the darkness. My heart was thumping and my thoughts were of regret for having agreed to leave the group and be alone with this guy. My thoughts rapidly firing and mental prayers, God please help me!

I was prey caught in the cross hairs.

As his firm grip pulled me to cross the last street, I was startled by the instantaneous sound of rushing water. To our left was a fire hydrant full throttle open, loudly gushing gallons of water onto the isolated street. Standing near it was a large black male easily over 6 feet tall, with a strong physique, looking as if he was planning to wash his car. At this hour? At this location?

With this surprise distraction I yanked my hand from his grip and headed quickly in the opposite direction, crossing back and passing the man by the fire hydrant. With crisis averted, I was running on adrenalin and made my way quickly back to familiar and populated surroundings.

After I returned home the following day, I never asked my mother to spend the night anywhere again. I was content with the warmth of the familiar bed I shared with my sister. I was comforted by my mother’s wisdom. I understood then the possible dangers my mother was trying to protect me from.

I was thankful then, as I am today, that this Angel appeared out of nowhere to thwart the plans of someone with evil intent.  Water gushing at such high volume would have been audible prior to us reaching the end of the street, especially given the quiet of the night. Yet, that would have removed the element of surprise. It was all perfect timing as it occurred, to catch us both off guard (him particularly), to enable me to extract myself from him. This way, he had no time to think, only to react, so that I could take advantage of his pause. I believe that even the size and ethnicity of my Angel was not a coincidence. It had to be someone large enough that could pose a threat to this well-built virile young man. It had to be someone imposing enough that this white boy would deflect, and surrender his plan. 

I will never know who this man was, this mysterious Angel. Do you believe in Angels among us? Was he a real person? If a real man, he must have listened to the urging to wash his car at that location at that precise time. We are all potential Angels if we “show up” to be used as we are called for in the moment of someone else’s need. We may never know how our presence can make a difference in another’s life if we listen to these urgings. And how intuition is something we should not ignore. I believe this is one of God's ways of directing our paths, wanting to guide and alert us, if we take heed.

“Discretion will protect you, and understanding will guard you.”— Proverbs 2:11

Ella Venezia
Copyright © 2012 Ella Venezia. All Rights Reserved.

Image Source: All rights reserved by Joseph Robertson

Monday, August 13, 2012

The Roller Coaster that is Life — Get on



Often life is compared to a roller coaster ride. I remember a great scene in the 1989 movie, Parenthood, with Steve Martin. The grandma speaks brilliance into the spiraling out of control, anxiety-filled Steve Martin character, as he’s faced with the unwanted news that his wife is now pregnant with their 4th child.

His mother interjects unsolicited wisdom:
“Life is messy.
You know, when l was younger, Grandpa took me on a roller coaster.
Up, down, up, down.
Oh, what a ride.

l always wanted to go again.
lt was just interesting to me that a ride could make me so frightened...so scared, so sick, so excited...
and so thrilled all together.

Some didn´t like it. They went on the merry-go-round instead.
That just goes around.
Nothing.
l like the roller coaster. You get more out of it.”

The beginning of our ride, and the end are certain. These are the guarantees. But how about the in-between?

That’s where the living occurs.

We waste so much time in life worrying, fretting, stressing, complaining, not appreciating the life in-between, in essence, the roller coaster ride. It’s not until we are old enough, courageous enough, or just fed up enough, that we scramble to find purpose.

Saying yes to the ride, leads us to our purpose. 

Ever feel like you are stuck? You don’t feel like you’re growing or moving forward? The only way to move beyond the stuck point is “to do.” Action always is the answer to rut moments. They just don’t undo themselves without our action. We can pray and pray, but God expects action on our part. The roller coaster can’t deliver thrills unless it’s in motion.

God exists in the fluid motion of our actions. He cannot move through us, use our actions to further his reach, if we are unavailable to him— As we are when our self-absorption with our own pain and challenges keeps us from taking action. He cannot move through us to further His love if we are waiting on Him to make the move as we stall, as we stagnate, as we shrivel our heart’s potential. Wasted time (minutes, days, weeks, months, years) is gone forever. These moments in the waiting (waiting to live), procrastinating, don’t come back. I can’t tell you how many times I have waited on Him to show me a sign. One would think I was waiting on a map to drop down from the sky, to make things crystal clear. So crystal that it requires no risk on my part. No faith. No roller coaster moment. All the while he’s waiting on me to take an active role in this life he’s given me.

“Now and then I go about pitying myself and all the while my soul is being blown by great winds across the sky.”—Deepak Chopra

Sometimes we are afflicted with paralysis by analysis. We may think we have to have all our ducks in a row to make a move. We think we have to have answers to everything, to make a move. We think we have to have our lives all planned out, all mapped out, to set a course. But we are already on a course since the day we are born. It’s just a question of whether we’ll run out of time before we have courage enough to get on the roller coaster. We might be standing by watching others while we have yet to strap ourselves to the ride. Some of us may be strapped in, but have not given our thumbs up to moving down the track. Some of us are on the track, but we have the brakes on, and have not let go.

Are you one of those people who lift their arms straight up when the roller coaster drops down the vertical run? My daughter does that. It freaks me out. But metaphorically speaking, that is throwing wild abandon into the moment by throwing yourself fully into the moment.

He’s given us our life! Isn’t that amazing enough? Why must we hold God hostage now to our rules? Our fears? Our limitations? I know, they are so comfortable to us. They feel safe. But in reality, because we don’t know the ride’s potential for giving us the ride of our life, we hold back. We are still in the starting gate of the ride.

We must move. Take action. Pick up the phone. Book a flight. Click submit. Drive to that location. Enroll in that program or seminar today. Start your passion now. Take that chance you’ve been holding yourself back from. Step into an unknown. Step into a church. Extend a hand, a hug…be the first, don’t wait on someone else. Take a chance. Be bold. Move beyond the rut, doubt, pity, and on toward great winds.  

“Be strong and courageous. Do not be terrified; do not be discouraged, for the
Lord your God will be with you wherever you go.” – Joshua 1:9

Ella Venezia
Copyright © 2012 Ella Venezia. All Rights Reserved.

Image Source: ©All rights reserved by taranoel



Thursday, August 9, 2012

High School Graduation Day



“The love of a mother is the veil of a softer light between the heart and the heavenly Father.”Samuel Taylor Coleridge


In early June my daughter graduated high school. When that day arrived, it did so as if it snuck up on me. In the moment of the day-to-day life of raising a child, time seems to stand still. But then, in the surreal moment that is graduation day, it appears as if that day approached in a flash.

In the blink of an eye, I went from walking her into her first day of kindergarten, to shouting out her name in a crowd of over 800 graduating seniors. In the distance I watched her hugging friends and smiling for photos. This is the very baby I brought home from the hospital, without the slightest understanding of what it would really take to raise her. Nor that compounding this challenge I would one day face raising her as a single parent. I had no idea of the many things I would have to learn along the way. And the things I have still ahead of me to learn as a parent who walks through stages of my own development, in parallel with my teen.