Sunday, April 15, 2012

The Look


Not too long ago I wrote about my conversation with a dear friend ATL who talked about “the look of desperation” that some women have written across their face in invisible ink (see entry Too Desperate To Be Blessed).  Some of you wrote and called me, wanting to know what “this look” was and how you could know if you had it.  I must admit that it is hard to describe, because it manifests in so many variations among our sisteren.  But let me share with you what I learned from ATL that day..... It’s in the Eyes 


It has been said that the eyes are the window to the soul.  They tell what is going on with us deep within.  If we are happy they display joy, if we are sad they will show that too.  Our eyes can reveal contentment, peace, pain, loneliness, resentment, unforgiveness and more.  No matter how shinny our lip gloss, how flawless the makeup or fabulous our hair is done, our eyes will tell on us every time.  We can even manage to be coy, cute and alluring, but if our eyes are not right, a man will know what is going on with us beneath the surface.  We could ignore him and play hard to get, but our eyes will tell him our real story.  It saddens me to report that yes, you can be utterly beautiful with a captivating smile, but one look into your eyes will let him know if you are desperate.


Worse yet, ATL told me I had the look!  Oh my goodness! How could that be true?  I wanted to protest, but I knew deep down he was probably right. My pain, despite my dressing it up with make up and cute hairstyles, probably had read on my face from time to time.  It had been a painful three years.  So he was probably right, not so much that I knew about the look before that conversation, but I knew I had been desperate at moments.  Not to mention sad, angry, depressed, disappointed, and more.


Admittedly, I can be a bit too cool for school when it comes to showing emotions that I don’t want others to see.  I am a pro.  I know how to put emotions on the back burner to I have time to deal with them.  I can put a shield up, put a mask on and keep it moving.  I don't hide it from friends, but only those who truly know me do I allow to know what goes on within... those who I trust love me.  So I was a bit surprised that he was telling me I had a look that those I didn't know or provide this extra measure of trust could see desperation in my eyes.  Shoot, I think I may have been offended for a moment.  


Yet, that was exactly what he was telling me...my secret was out and my eyes were telling on me.  Wow!  He rendered me silent for a bit.  But because his conversation came totally from a place of love and a desire to see me meet my dream, I listened.  We rode in silence for about thirty minutes.  Then I did it.  I looked in the mirror.  Trying to see what he saw.  


I thought I had arrived at my place of healing.  I probed and asked.  Is that look still there?  I thought I was whole.  But he replied “it is not as bad as it was, but yes, you still have it. Godiva dear, your eyes still show sadness and a hint of discontent.”  He then went on to explain the opposite of the look of desperation is contentment: knowing you are ok, just as you are with or without someone, if love comes or does not come.  Fine. Complete.  Ready to be single. Rested. Satisfied.


Do me a favor, look in the mirror, look into your eyes.  Do you see joy, contentment? Full assurance that G-d has you?  What do you see?  Better yet, ask a trusted male friend, an older woman and a peer what they see in your eyes.  Be prepared for the answers.  They may be alarming.  But better to know and be able to change, then not to know and miss your blessing with the look.


Reality Pause:  I know it is hard to believe that men are this intuitive, but they are.  Now what they do with said intuition is another thing.  A hunter will use your look to conquer you, giving you what you think you need, but not himself.  Using his skill to get what he wants from you without ever giving you what you want and so desperately need.  A lover will run from you if your eyes are not right.  ATL says this is “unless” he is willing to do the work to help you find healing.  But if he is really ready, he is going to keep it moving because he wants a woman who is also ready and has unpacked her bags.

So ladies our eyes tell on us. 
What a concept.
So simple. So True.
They truly are windows….

Today's Whisper...
G-d make me fully content in you, trusting you without reservation until you send the one fashioned for me.






So I wait...

I have been waiting...


I will wait...
for the one God will send.

Monday, February 27, 2012

Ready for Love

I open with an apology for not writing for three months.  Things in my life got very hectic and I neglected this space of connection, contemplation and community.  So much has happened, so many things I need to write about.  Not sure even where to begin.  But where I am seems like the natural place.  We will handle rewinds as they become necessary.


Its a new year, a new day, a new dawn.  Indeed.  But I am still waiting.  I am good, even great!  I am lonely, but I am not letting that consume me.


Lonely...not as being without companionship and company.  I have that from all my wonderful friends.  Nor is it that I am left without confidantes and comrades.  I have that too.  I am so blessed.  I have people who hold my heart, help me nurture my dreams, people who will laugh and cry with me.  But the kind of lonely I am, knows that something, better yet, knows someone is missing.  


I am lonely for romantic intimacy.  No I am not talking about sex or physical contact... although both would be nice (long pause).  But I want so much more!  I could get sex. You know that's not hard at all.  But I don't want to be aroused physically while my soul remains untouched.  I'm not looking for the warmth of one night, only to be left with the freedom of a single's independence.  I don't want ecstasy without responsibility; nor an embrace without love's commitment.   I don't want a fleeting satisfaction only to still be left singing in my sheets India Arie's ballad "I am ready for love."  


I am ready for love.
Why are you hiding from me?
I quickly give my freedom to be held in your captivity.

I am ready for love, all of the joy and the pain.
And all the time that it takes,
just to stay in your good grace.

Lately I've been thinking you are not ready for me.  
Maybe you think I need to learn maturity.  
They say watch what your ask for, cause you might receive.  
But if you ask me tomorrow I'll say the same thing.  I am ready for Love...

Would you please lend me your ear.  I promise I won't complain, I just need you to acknowledge I am here.  If you give me half a chance I will prove this to you.  I will be patience, kind, faithful and true to the man who loves me, the man who loves God, respects the spirit world and thinks with his heart.

I am ready for love.  If you'll take me in your hands.  I will learn what you teach and do the best that I can. I am ready for love, here with an offering of my poise, my eyes, this song, my mind, tell me what is enough to prove I am ready....for love.


When India preformed this at one of the award shows, she said, I am not singing this for any particular person, but to G-d, asking for love to bless her life. I hear her.  I am ready. This is not a statement, but a prayer.


But yes, I am ready for the work.  Ready for the journey. Ready for the privilege.  Ready! Ready to give myself, share my world and enjoy a lifetime of getting to know one another.  I am a romantic without a muse and I am ready for love.


I also want to be wanted. I want to be wanted for who I am, for my company, my wit and my presence.  I want to be wanted...because my voice matters in the issues of his life.  I want to be wanted because life is better with me along for the journey.  I want to be wanted because I am physically, intellectually and emotionally sexy.  I want to be wanted because my cooking and my presence makes his mouth water for more. I want someone who wants me, Godiva S. Sweet.  I want the one who has been praying to G-d for me, as much as I for him, if not more and who is also ready. 


Today my whisper is G-d please send my husband 'cause 
I am ready for love





So I wait...
          I have been waiting...
                    I will wait...
                              for the one God will send.


Monday, November 28, 2011

A Knock? A Prank? A What?

...I think the knock was a prank.  Or maybe not.  Either way, I will wait. 
((See yesterday's entry to undertand))

I was discussing with a friend today that if you are prayerful and discerning you can not only hear what people ((ok male prospects)) are saying to you, but know what they mean.  All we have to do is listen really closely.  Listen more than we talk and we will hear what they are saying, or not saying. 

As single women, it is important that we listen for the voice of the Spirit in the journey toward being partnered.  Drown out the voice of your flesh when it insists to be heard and lean in to hear the gentle voice of the Spirit who chooses never to raise her/his voice.

Today, I can laugh at the inconsistencies of the choices I am presented, while still rejoicing in knowing that G-d's got me in all of this. 

I choose not to be anxious and relax and enjoy the process of personal transformation, spiritual preperation and the liberty that comes with solitude.

Today, I believe in full faith that my man is coming

I have not been able to say that for some time; but I dare to believe again, hope again and know again.  I choose to wait, faithfully. Patiently.  Maybe it was a prank, maybe not.  But it is what it is.  Time will tell if what I experienced was a "knock" or a prank.

Nonetheless, today is a great day.  No man called to make me feel good.  No email arrived to give me hope.  No text appeared flirting to confirm interest.  Just me and my choice to believe that my man is coming!


Hope you are having a great day. I am!

Toodles, Godiva

The Pursuit of Happiness

A few years back I watched the movie The Pursuit of Happyness with Will Smith and his son Jaden (who debuted on the large screen with this award winning film).  It was a moving story the chronicled the life of Chris Gardner, a single dad trying to make a way for his family.  Chris was a man who found great joy in being a good father to his son, a gift never given to him by his own dad.  Yet, despite this joy, happiness had evaded him.  Having hit rock bottom with a business venture gone bad, Gardner begins a relentless pursuit of his own happiness.

As a Christian, it is not merely some religious platitude that “the joy of the Lord is my strength;” it is fact.  There is nothing like knowing G-d for yourself.  It provides a joy that cannot me quantified or qualified. That is because Joy, is pure, essential and is indivisible.  It is Joy. Complete. Satisfying. Strength-Giving.

My relationship with G-d is what makes life livable during the difficult times.  Obviously, knowing G-d is phenomenal when things are going well, but it is in the time of trouble that I am able to draw needed strength from within the embrace of G-d’s love.  My relationship with G-d through Christ keeps me grounded and from going totally over a cliff in troubling times.  It is what gives me courage to believe, despite facts to seem to deny the fulfillment of my hopes and dreams.  But there is a difference between joy and happiness.  Joy comes from within and can exist even when the details of life do not make you “happy.”  I am so glad I have joy!  But during this season of my life I am pursing happiness. 

My therapist gave me an ultimatum this summer that I wrestled with.  He told me if I wanted to be in a relationship (of course one that leads to marriage was the implication-- I need a husband, not a boyfriend or boo) do something about it.  I was a bit taken aback by this challenge.  I was like dude, if it depended on me, trust I would have been married a long time ago and would be raising my kids with my loving husband.  But yet there it was, a huge pink elephant, he had paced in the corner of the room with his challenge whispering to me…pursue your happiness.

He argued that if my very-life depended on my finding a mate, I would find one.  He went on to insist that I could do so in as little as 6 months.  Really?! I protested, “it is by no means that simple, especially for women.”  But I must admit it made me wonder what role do we play in the pursuit of our own happiness?

Doc was right; we know how to go after everything else we want.  Why not here?  He wasn’t suggesting that I go searching, as much as I do what I could to make my dreams come true.  No time at the moment to discuss my theological musings about what it means to be “found,” but suffice to say, I opened myself up to the idea of the pursuit

So in July I decided to experiment with 3 months of on-line dating and see where that led me.  Look for a future entry “tales from the crypt – dating in 2011.”  I wanted to allow myself greater exposure to men.  I am not the kind of girl that will chase a brother, but increasing my exposure seemed to be a reasonable step toward the challenge to pursue my happiness.

My pursuit has also caused me to do continual introspection as respects to how I relate to men.  How open I am and how vulnerable do I allow myself to be?  I am undeniably “all girl,” but often shield “my girl” because of the roles I have held professionally.  Corporate America had made me a bit hard (no-nonsense, name taker, bottom line shot caller, deal maker).  Yet, any man, who gets to know me socially, is clear that I am a lady who is eager to follow strong leadership.  Despite this fact, those who only encountered me casually could easily miss this nuance because of my poise and professionalism. 

I also realized that I usually harnessed my “feminine mystique”  ((future entry)) until I encountered a man who had expressed his interest.  Then I would turn it on.  Honest talks with male friends over the last 16 months have taught me that I needed to soften myself.  I am strong.  No changing that.  But did I always need to come off sooo strong?  Fact: some men will not lean in close enough to see your softness and learn that beneath the very accomplished businesswoman turned minster is a girl looking for her prince charming. I know now, I have to let my soft show. It is critical to my pursuit.

So today I am pursing my own destinyI have learned it is not just about happiness; but more about doing my best to cooperate with 
G-d’s destiny for my life.  That means being open, being wiling to change and keeping my eyes and ears open for glimmers of the future.  Who knows sometimes when you least expect it, opportunity knocks.

Wait, I think someone is knocking now… 

So I wait...
          I have been waiting...
                    I will wait...
                              for the one God will send.
                                                     --Godiva

A Moan...then Silence

I apologize for the silence.  It has been a tough few weeks.  I have found it hard to write the whisper, because all I had to give was a moan.  My moans were about loneliness.  My moan was about feeling alone while in crowded rooms.  Also I need to write about my own journey of survival of sexual abuse.  The Penn State incident has raised old issues for many.  While my own issues have been well worked out in prayer, worship and therapy.  The experience does play strongly into the whisper of my life.

So I owe you an entry or two.  Additionally, I feel the need to respond to the pull in me to write here more.  So I may take to two times a week in January.  I am still journalling to separate this from that.  Yet, at moments I see the need for overlap between the two.  I'm still learning how to do that.  Please be prayerful with me as I discern what to share in this sacred space.

Sacred because hopefully in my own transparency, you can hear G-d speaking to you.  Unless I am absolutely compelled to do so, I resist the preacher in me and never take a text.  But hopefully you hear the Word in between the cypher of my prose. But I believe (or at least think) if the experience of G-d's people and G-d interaction with them was deemed holy and become G-d's word in the past; then stories of today's Christians have sacred connotations, because of the power of story.  Our stories matter; and because God is involved in our stories they are Sacred.

Fact: I am a wordy girl.  So despite my attempt to shorten my next blog to 500-750 words, I am at what seems to be my sweet spot, about 800.  I guess that is who I am. So I own it.  My hope is that these entries take no longer than 7-10 minutes to read.  We rush rush rush all the time.  I sure do.  But what is a few minutes a week to hear the whisper of our souls?  So I will continue D & T to try and shorten these entries, but "I am what I am..." (in my best popeye's voice) wordy.  Lol.

Godiva

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Too Desperate to Be Blessed

Lately, I have been having a series of interesting conversation with some of my single and married male friends.  They have been eye opening and have caused me to think about how I am situated within the truth that they shared. 

The initial conversation was between me and a friend, lets call him ATL.  ATL is a 30 something married minister with an awesome marriage of six years to a beautiful sister who too is my friend.  We were talking about my blog and some different topic ideas I was considering.   He asked me how I was doing with my active waiting– now that’s another entry for another day- and my current prospects.  Anyway in the middle of that discussion today’s topic emerged.  Here is how our conversation went…

ATL says to me “within moments of entering a room I can tell which women are available and which ones are not; which are open to be approached and those who are closed; I can even tell which ones are desperate to be in a relationship” and by implication married.  I think to myself, yeah really.  Then he shared that the last group were the ones he “used to avoid.”  He explains, even when he was ready for marriage and wanted to find his mate, he would avoid those who seemed desperate to be married.  My response was first silence and then out loud I skeptically barked “really!”

I must admit, that I am not sure what I objected to the most:  the idea that “being ready for love” could be misinterpreted as desperation upon casual observation OR that men are really that perceptive to discern so much about us without one word being shared. 

This struck a nerve, because although I never have been desperate, at least to my own mind, had I ever come across as desperate?  Particularly without saying one word.  What did that look like? Would I know it if is ever creped up in me? Could a waiting woman seem desperate instead or ready for God to bless?  I needed to know more.

A Pregnant Pause - Of course I am not oblivious that we women can give off many messages with body language alone.  Heck I do it all the time.  I well know the power of non-verbal communication – from a look, a brush of the hair, even our posture says something.   But until this conversation, I thought much more about its benefits and our feminine mystique instead of how it could block us from the very thing we wanted most. 

Both men and women know how to use looks, glances and slightest movement to say come close or go away.  As a woman, I even know how to give a glace of indifference and grab a man into my presence within moments.  Shoot my ultra ego Godiva is a consummate flirt.  She knows how to send a look, a half smile or smirk, to shift in her chair or even change her walk just to say “hello.”  Indeed, I know how to discreetly flirt from across the room and let a guy know that it is ok to approach. 

My Conversation with ATL that afternoon seemed to reveal that the non-verbal expertise of our species cut both ways. Dangerous ways.  This exchange was revealing.  I was so intrigued by what he shared.  Like watching an episode of Lie to Me, I leaned in, intrigued, rubbing my chin, channeling the persona of Yoda and said “hmmm interesting indeed, this is.

As I listened, I was forced to relinquish the thought ATL was kidding.  I wanted to convince myself that it was impossible for him or any man to know our disposition about our singleness without us even opening our mouth!  Something was unsettling about his assertion.  The inner me wanted to insist that his claim was ridiculous.  Yet, I knew ATL to always be a straight and honest communicator, so I asked,  “How he could possibly tell all of that upon entering a room? Without even speaking to a woman?” His response and the next hour conversation was an eye opener.

For some of you, this concept may not be a surprise, but for me it was enlightening.  I have a father, a step-father, two extremely doting uncles and a few close male friends, but non of them ever shared the truths I learned that day.  While we covered a lot, the place I want to hang my scarf for a conversation is around this idea that some of us want to be married and partnered so much that our desire reads as desperation to men.  Even worse, it comes across without any direct interaction or intent on our part.  And if that is true, then the very men that we want to be noticed by invalidate us because we come off as desperate.

A moment of silence to let that one sink in…

So I wait...
          I have been waiting...
                    I will wait...
                              for the one God will send.
                                            - Ms. Godiva Sweet

Friday, October 21, 2011

Shattered Dreams & Broken Pieces (a Rewind Entry)


Largely the Whisper was born out of time of emotional crisis in my life.  It was a few years back while recuperating from a surgery that left me barren and led to the chain of events that birthed “a waiting woman’s whisper.”

Surgery: I had a phenomenal medical team and an even better prayer team that supported and surrounded me.  Like any self-respecting charismatic, neo-Pentecostal, crazy-faith Christian I solicited my sister-friends, peers, leadership team at church and family to join me believing God for a miracle.  We had fasted, prayed, believed in faith and possessed a righteous hope for a positive outcome.  I would later learn that God had answered our prayer, because my surgery was far more difficult than I had imagined.  Life itself was my miracle.

A Great Loss: Other than the passing of my grandparents who despite living full lives left a crater sized hole in my heart when they moved onto glory- this was my first great loss.  At least with my grandparents I had been known and loved them.   But this was all together different.  My dream had died!  The thing I had hoped for, even presumed since I was a child would no longer be a reality.  I never new it.  It was dream. 

Sure, there were other ways I could and maybe someday would parent…but at that time I only felt loss.  I couldn’t understand how this had become my reality, my story, my truth.  The little girl who had kept herself for marriage, waited for sex, now at 39 was without a womb!  There were no words.

When I first awakened in the recovery room and my doctor told me the outcome, I had a peace.  I finally understood Philippians 4:7 “the Peace of God that passes all understanding.”  I did not cry, I felt no pain, I had peace.   I would later recognize that this Peace was a gift and a grace given to me by God as He divinely shielded me from the emotional pain while my body began the “two month” process of healing.   Two months, ha! It was more like a year+ before I did not have a daily reminder of some sort of what my body had gone through. 

I had my first cry the day after I got home from the hospital, about 7 days after surgery.  I didn’t cry every day, but instead I would cry about once a week.  Almost like on schedule, every Sunday night during my recuperation period I would cry.  But as the feeling came back in my body, my soul was growing numb.

In Crisis: While my crisis began emotionally, after about seven months it had morphed into a spiritual problem.  I was morning.  I was hurting. I had grown numb.  This is where the problem came in.  Numbness creates a distance between you and the God, you and Christ, you and Holy Spirit.  This is because you cannot feel when you are numb.  Ironically, my numbness did not, at first at least, effect my ability to worship.  What I was feeling emotionally had no negative impact on my commitment and devotion to God.  I had decided as a youth there was no turning back.  Plus God’s goodness, despite my present emotional state, could not compare to anything else.  Receiving the gifts and graces of God in one’s life is inexplicable.  Its something you must experience for yourself to fully understand.  So me and God were good.

Nonetheless, a chance meeting let me see that something was wrong inside.  Problem being, I did not care.  I was having uncharacteristic thoughts and was ready to follow through on them.  I saw a rising indifference in me. Why wait.  I was wondering why I had kept myself if this was going to be the outcome.  I asked myself…why had I not gone ahead and have sex as a teen or during college or even in my 20’s and early 30’s?  Why did I wait for a dream that had never showed up?  Where was my love and marriage- the supposed prize for waiting on the Lord to bring the desires of my heart?  I wanted to know.  So maybe waiting didn’t make any sense anymore, others had done their thing, had their fun and repented and had moved on to, what appeared to be full wonderful lives of faith AND they had husbands too.  Maybe I should play with him….

I knew I needed help!  Although a virgin, I was not without sexual, very sexual encounters (sins of days gone by).  But I had been waiting for years- most times completely obedient and without physical contact.  But now with my feelings back, I wanted to be touched.  I needed to feel again.  On a sub-conscience level it was like I was saying to myself, if I could not dream, then at least I would feel.  I was headed for sin.

At the surface it would seem that I was having a full on pity-party, but it was so much deeper.  I was hurt at my core.  Yet, I was functioning fully- showing up, teaching, preaching, coaching, mentoring and loving on the people of God.  But inside a callous was growing around the wounds to my heart.  Tears had long since stopped; except for the occasional inconvenient whimper.  I was hurt emotionally, but I was also suffering spiritually, as I later discovered I was not only hurt, I had grown angry.

Therapy: Being a Pastor, I knew I needed help and this was not a scenario for “physician heal thy own self.”  Yet, at first, I put off going for help.  Like a storm coming upon the horizon, I knew I was headed from trouble.  Having seen it manifest in others time and time again, I was approaching an intimate first-hand encounter with despair, depression and disobedience.  I knew that therapy was necessary, not pastoral counseling. I needed to go take a seat on somebody’s couch.  Shoot, I might need to lie down.

Today I am healthy.  I have been healed of my heart disease and I have again found the power to hope and to dream again.  In fact, now my desire for my husband is stronger than I could ever have imagined.  From the broken pieces of my dream, a more beautiful God-centered vessel (dream) has emerged.  I am grateful to my now friend OB1, who was the object of my affection for a short moment which revealed to me that I was ready.  It’s been almost four years since I woke up in recovery with that Peace of God.  I am grateful to God for my journey with all its intricacies and through it all, though tattered and tested, I still have “that Peace.”  Girl… it feels good to dream again…

So I wait...
          I have been waiting...
                    I will wait...
                              for the one God will send.
                                            - Ms. Godiva Sweet

P.S.  I know I have left major parts out, but the issues of this entry could fill an entire book.  I will periodically do these rewinds that will fill in the blanks.  I appreciate your grace as I continue to whisper (and sometime whine).