Girl With a Satchel SELF LOVE...
To my mind there are few words sweeter than  David's beautiful Psalm for the Lord: "For you created my inmost being;  you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am  fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that  full well." (Psalm 139: 13-14).
Sometimes, looking in  the mirror, I forget these words and default to feeling yuck about  myself, even though I know I am a (relatively) intelligent, creative,  energetic girl of God. Those guilty feelings about feeling so silly in  the first place, and so terribly female (a joyous privilege if ever there was one!) in the second, are hard to shake.
Every  girl bares beauty scars – mine are focused on three areas: my nose, my  legs and my stomach. Each of these is tied into some comment made in my  formative years designed to strip me of my dignity and focus my energies  on things I couldn't really change without a lot of expended time,  money and energy.
I'll save you the details (what point  to dwell?), but those things hurt. If we don't nip them in the bud  early on, they can linger, fester, consume... and they can turn into  self-hate and plastic surgery and eating disorders and promiscuity and a  general devaluation of your WHOLE self based on your body if you are  one of the vulnerable, sensitive ones, like I was... 
A cautionary tale
I  grew up immersed in messages about the body beautiful. If I wasn't  looking at my reflection in the mirror at ballet lessons I was trying on  my mum's shoes (note to mums: not a precursor for eating disorders!).  My mother is beautiful and slim; I have my father's bottom and tummy  (and nose, eyes, ears...). When I was 13, my mother moved out of home. I  saw her fortnightly. A deep bond was hard to form.
My  dad did his best but had his own struggles. The new domestic dynamic  played out as I attended a private girls' school – fearful of bringing  anyone home lest they see the reality of my dire situation – and watched  Dad work two jobs and have a heart attack. Those were not easy days, so  I escaped in books and school and dancing and other "girlie" things.
As  an insecure teen, I was drawn to certain media: namely, magazines,  which I pored over and collected in my bedroom, as I listened to Take 40  Australia's top hits of the week. Before I knew the Lord, they were my  gospels. I lived and breathed by the dictates of first Dolly and Girlfriend, and then skipped on over to Vogue, Nylon and Harper's Bazaar (so advanced!).
Soon  my vision of a career in dance became blurred by boys and social events  and shopping... every girl's favourite pastime, so I thought. By the  time I got to university, I was like a kettle on the boil... all those  pent-up emotional issues, coupled by life's disappointments and some bad  choices, a lack of sure direction and a perfectionist streak, combined  to pour themselves out. I was bulimic.
Unable to  control my feelings, let alone share them with a friend (a move  interstate at the age of 12, coupled with embarrassment over my home  situation made forming long-lasting friendships hard), I hit the books  hard, barely coming up for air. I had a nice boyfriend, but knew that  relationship was going nowhere. I was screeeeaming for help; but nobody could hear. Bubbly on the outside, but a mess within.
Then  an angel: a psychologist who helped me vent my angst and nip unhelpful  thoughts and habits in the bud, and a beautiful new friend to share life  with, and a job I could believe in with a beautiful network of female  support (my people, my people!).  The bulimia disappeared. Life was too full of other things to  participate in that physical act of controlling and self-loathing. 
But  the disorder lay dormant for these wonderful interim years; I was  loathe to admit, but it hadn't disappeared. Those beauty scars, in my  mind, were seared, along with the emotional hurts and pains. All it took  to come unhinged was a radical life change.
I had  absorbed information about diets, exercise and calories while working,  ironically, on a health and wellbeing project for a teen magazine called  "Self Respect". That was like giving a crazed fundamentalist a bunch of  bomb-making instructions; but who was to know?   
Life  pressures weighed down on me – who had I become? what was I doing? what  have I signed up for? stop the ride, I want to get off! – and I lost a  lot of weight. And very nearly disappeared off the face of the earth.  Down, down the rabbit hole into anorexia I fell, grasping desperately  for the Lord's help, for some saving grace. Hello, wasn't He meant to  save me?
Well, He did. But before He could remake me, He had to break me.
"Surely  I was sinful at birth, sinful from the time my mother conceived me,"  spoke David. "Surely you desire truth in the inner parts; you teach me  wisdom in the inmost place... You do not delight in sacrifice, or I  would bring it; you do not take pleasure in burnt offerings. The  sacrifices of God are... a broken and contrite heart" (Psalm 51: 16-17).
"Stop  trying to reinvent what Jesus did on the Cross!" was the message I got  from God, loud and clear. No striving, no want of trying, no amount of  martyrdom or self-pity could heal.
I had lot to unlearn  and learn all over again. I had a self-love to cultivate not based on  any attributes of my own, nor on longings for a mother's love  (displayed, I might add, in her own way) or a husband's approval or a  fashionably slim physique, but a deep-rooted knowledge that I was God's  and God's alone, and through Jesus Christ he was calling me home.
And,  you know what? All the silly knowledge I had, of diets and food labels  and calorie intake and such things... all that useless stuff from my  slate, used to control my being and my world, was wiped clean, the more  of God I gleaned and the more weight I gained. My mind became filled  with God's truths and sweet promises and the other things were washed  away.
"I am going to put breath into you and bring you  back to life. I will give you sinews and muscles, and cover you with  skin. I will put breath into you and bring you back to life. Then you  will know that I am the Lord." (Ezekiel 37:5-6)
Recovery  takes time. Particularly if you are disobedient, or rebellious, or  intent on holding onto your old self because it's comfortable, or, heavens to Betsy!,  the newer, shinier, brighter one might be ALL TOO MUCH. What a terrible  shame this fear of being someone who could bring glory to His name. Of  being a bit too bright. Too female. Too much reveling in God's delight.  But what right, what right, to hide such light?
"This  is the judgement: that light has entered the world, and men have   preferred darkness to light because their deeds were evil. Everybody who   does wrong hates the light and keeps away from it, for fear his deeds   may be exposed. But everybody who is living by the truth will come to   the light to make it plain that all he has done has been done through   God." (John 3: 19-21)
The crevices, nooks and  hidey-holes where sin makes its home are dusted out, one by one, as God  lovingly remakes the work that was wrought wrong by the world: first  sit, then crawl, then walk, then run... sometimes, you will fall down  again, but as you progress you see visions of way He wants you to be,  wanted you to be, before the world stepped in and mucked up the plan.
All  the parts of you – the intellectual, the creative, the physical, the  relational – start to sync together as you let go of your grip. And the  person you become, in unison with Him, is more likeable and more ALIVE,  because that person is created in God's image, not the world's. 
"The  word which came to Jeremiah from the LORD, saying, 'Arise, and go down  to the potter's house, and there I will cause thee to hear my words'.  Then I went down to the potter's house, and, behold, he wrought a work  on the wheels. And the vessel that he made of clay was marred in the  hand of the potter: so he made it again another vessel, as seemed good  to the potter to make it." (Jeremiah 18: 1-4)
God knows  and loves every hair on your body, every freckle on your face, every  inch of your being – including your gifts, abilities and the desires of  your heart. We were created on purpose, for His purpose: to love Him  with all our heart, soul and mind, and the body by extension.
You  and I have been made just how he wanted us, to live in unison with his  will and righteous ways, but the world pulls and persuades: drop weight,  wear this, zap that, run on that treadmill, pop this pill, get a better  job, buy these clothes... is it any wonder it saps your energy,  strength, dignity, life? It's a useless fight. But God is there, willing  always to clean up your mess, take your hand and make things right.
It  is such a terrible shame that we are found wanting – someone else's  life, someone else's body, someone else's hair colour, someone else's  happiness – when what we have been given by God is all ours to enjoy and  nurture and share. But it's a project, this self-care, this walking in  God's ways – but the more the self-love is cultivated through the Lord,  by pressing into His word and singing his praises, the more that love  outwardly emanates.
"Your beauty should not come from  outward adornment, such as braided hair and the wearing of gold  jewellery and fine clothes. Instead, it should be that of your inner  self, the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is of  great worth in God's sight." (1 Peter 3: 3-4).
For the  first 25 years of my life, I didn't know the Lord, nor the love He had  for me, nor His will for my life... and it took me FIVE whole years to  know it and feel it with my innermost being. To know thy creator is to  know thyself; to love the creator is to love the self, for we were  created in His image... and, hello, you only have to look around this  glorious world to feel awestruck at that. 
To reiterate, "I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well." Now, that's something to celebrate!
 
 
 



 
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