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| Christian Singles living purposefully for Christ! | |||
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Romantic Disappointment By Fern Horst
If you're a single adult I'd venture to say you've been
disappointed at one time or another in the romantic department of
life. If you've been in a romantic relationship that ended, if
you wanted a friendship to become "more" but it didn't, if you
desire to be married but aren't, if you've experienced divorce
or death of a mate, you've experienced romantic disappointment.
Along with romantic disappointment you've probably also suffered
the pain of rejection, of being misunderstood, of wondering why
this was happening to you, and perhaps even wondering what's
"wrong" with you. You've gone through the self doubt, the sense
of being abandoned by God and others, and the feeling that you're
missing out on the best life has to offer.
By God's grace you can overcome romantic disappointments and once
again have hope, peace, and fulfillment in life regardless of the
lack of a romantic partner. God has a way of turning these
disappointments into great benefit for you and those whose lives
you touch if you will let Him work through the very situation
that has caused you pain.
Overcoming the negative effects of disappointment involves three
aspects: understanding and accepting the stages of grief,
forgiving the other person, and believing the truth about what
gives life meaning and purpose.
It helps tremendously to understand the emotions that
disappointment and grief throw at you, and to realize that each
one is a part of the process of healing. Any time you lose
something you will experience these stages of grief to varying
degrees. The length of time from the first stage to the final
stage of acceptance is determined in part by the value a person
places on what was lost: the loss of a button off one's shirt,
for instance, will result in a very short grieving cycle (perhaps
only one minute or so), as opposed to the loss of an important
relationship (which may take months to years to process
completely). Resisting these emotions rather than allowing
yourself to go through these stages only prolongs the process and
consequently also prolongs acceptance and healing.
The grief process may take you through these stages in an
unpredictable order several times, making you feel like you're
getting nowhere. But if you work through each one as it comes,
you will eventually come to the stage of acceptance where there
is a sense of hope and well-being and purpose. The stages of
grief are:
Denial (shock, disbelief, numbness)
Anger (resentment, blame, asking "Why me?")
Bargaining (negotiating with anyone-including God-who you think
can change the situation; a last attempt to make the situation be
as you want it to be)
Guilt ("If only I had...", "What if...?)
Depression (sadness as a result of admitting that it actually
has happened; can include anxiety, insomnia, loss of appetite,
restlessness, hopelessness, apathy, irritability, feelings of
worthlessness)
Acceptance (the point where you accept the reality of what
happened and know that regardless of the loss, life will go on
and it can be good)
The only way you can satisfactorily process these emotions and
get to the other side of them is by realizing who God is and how
He operates in the details of your life. Remembering the
following three aspects will help you to realize that no matter
the pain you are experiencing, no matter the mistakes you or
someone else has made, God is in control and He can work in this
very situation to accomplish His purposes for all involved:
God is Sovereign (in ultimate control of everything, above the
wills and whims of people)
God is Benevolent (has your best interests at heart in all that
He allows into your life)
God is Redemptive (able to take your mistakes and sins, and
those committed against you, and work them together for good).
Searching the Scriptures for the basis of these characteristics
of God will help as you learn to view your situation from His
perspective. There is no better Source for comfort and healing
than the truth of God's Word. Saturate yourself with it.
Sometimes romantic disappointment is accompanied by mistreatment
by the other person which can add to the pain. Forgiving does not
come naturally; it is a choice one makes with God's help.
Misconceptions about forgiveness often hinder this choice:
Forgiveness is not absolving the other person of their
responsibility for their wrongdoing.
Forgiveness does not mean trusting that person again if they
continue to prove that they are untrustworthy.
Forgiveness does mean making a choice to obey God in releasing
that person from your vindictive thoughts or actions, and leaving
that person in His hands to deal with as He sees fit. This means
that you will not try to take out your hurt on that person
(causing him or her to experience pain also), or on anyone else
who consciously or unconsciously reminds you of that person's
actions. Prayer for God's grace is important. Forgiveness is one
of the most difficult steps in the process of recovering from
another's mistreatment, and it can't be done without God's
enabling grace.
Many messages, both from secular society and from Christian
circles, indicate that worth is based on having someone connected
to you romantically. God's truth is that He has created each
person with value, with worth, and with purpose. Romance does not
give this value, worth, and purpose. A "significant other" does
not give these things. No earthly role can give true meaning to
life. Only God gives true value, true worth, and true purpose. In
the workbook part of his book, Search for Significance, Robert S.
McGee suggests memorizing the following sentence to remember when
struggling with worth, purpose, and acceptance by others: "It
would be nice if ________ (fill in the blank with whatever you
are desiring: 'so-and-so accepted and loved me', 'I could be
married and have children', 'I were more outgoing and
attractive', 'so-and-so did such-and-such to show me he/she loved
me', etc.), but if that doesn't happen, I am still deeply loved,
completely forgiven, fully pleasing, and totally accepted by God
through Christ."
Jesus told us to lay up treasures in heaven, not on this earth.
Marriage, for all its wonderment, is an earthly treasure. It is
an earthly treasure that can be used to lay up heavenly treasure,
but marriage in and of itself is earthly. Singles can lay up
treasure in heaven by serving the Lord with the opportunities
which only singleness provides, just as married people can lay up
treasure with the opportunities that only marriage provides. The
ultimate treasure for every person is Christ Himself. Building a
close relationship with Him and living in accordance with His
purpose is what gives meaning to life, whether single or married.
No one is totally exempt from experiencing some degree of
romantic disappointment. Choosing to love always means taking a
risk. Even the most trustworthy people will sometimes disappoint
the expectations of those they love, simply because they are
human.
Learn to hang your hat, and your heart, on the truth of who God
is and who He is for you, not on who someone else is and who he
or she is for you. With this renewed focus on the Lord, sooner or
later you'll have the sense down to your very bones that there is
life beyond earthly human romance. Hard as it may be to believe
in the aftermath of romantic disappointment, life as a single
person in the service of the Most High God can be purposeful and
fulfilling. It's a choice you make.
Robert S. McGee, The Search for Significance (Houston, Tex.,
Rapha Publishing, 1990), p. 292-293.
© 2001 Fern Horst
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