Shannon S. McKee

musings and moments

Permission to Name the Tensions and Sit in Them

January 14, 2021 by Shannon 4 Comments

Caleb moved out last month. It was a good moving out. It was time. He’s in a good place in life – really growing into the man we knew he’d become. He has an ideal living situation. He’s learning to manage work, friends, involvement in his church, and finishing school; we’re thrilled to see him navigating those things well.

So, we knew moving out would help him flourish. He knew it too. We all agreed it was time. We planned for it. Discussed it. Helped him think through all of the things. Set a date.

We knew in both head and heart that it was time. But, you know, Rick and I (ok, mostly me) still cried a bit when we talked about it and prayed for him. Every once in a while, we questioned it and wondered if we should push the timetable back.

But we didn’t. We stuck with the plan that all three of us agreed was best. And it’s been such a good decision. He’s rocking it and really rising to the extra weight of responsibility. And, to be honest, having one less person in the house does simplify some things (and make the leftovers last longer!). So, we’re all embracing this new season.

That doesn’t mean we haven’t been a little bit melancholy at times. Like when I found this pile that had somehow survived all the toy purges and was still in his room.

Or when we sat down for Chef Rick night and he couldn’t come because of work. Or when we walk by his room and know he’s not in it anymore. Or when Madison has no one to raid the pantry with late at night. Or when Taco the Dog has to find a new napping spot because his bed isn’t there for her.

It’s been a sweet transition – I haven’t even cried much. And, yet, it’s been a little bit bitter too.

Why do I tell you all of this? Because I want you to know that it’s OK to have conflicting emotions about things. When change comes or people disappoint you or you have to make a hard decision about the people in your life or you leave one job for another or you find yourself celebrating special occasions in new ways because of COVID-19… Whatever you’re facing right now, I want you to know that it’s OK to have conflicting emotions. Life is not always so cut-and-dried. Few life events are either all good or all bad. Most of them are nuanced and complicated. And sometimes we feel like we should know exactly what to do with all that nuance. Like we should have it all mastered.

But, we usually don’t so we fake it. Or we shove some of the emotions down. Or we go along to get along. Can I just give you permission to sit in competing emotions? To feel both happy and sad as you look back on 2020. Has it given us some gifts like slowing down and simplifying gatherings? Have we learned that we can have beautiful, meaning-filled weddings without having a blowout reception? Have we rediscovered things like hiking and being outside? Have we learned that being at home has its positives? Have some of us returned to creative pursuits like reading or sewing or making art? Have we learned to appreciate hugs and gathering with friends at new levels because of their absence? Have we learned that we don’t actually WANT to lose our small businesses? Have we learned that we have hard but worthy work to do in the area of racial reconciliation? Yes. All of those things are good things from 2020.

But this season has also been incredibly draining and difficult. It has been hurtful. It has been polarizing. It has been fearful. Mental health issues and suicide are at a high. Alcohol sales are up. Worthy groups like AA have stopped meeting and giving out their coins. Celebrations have been hampered. People have died in nursing homes – because of loneliness not COVID. Families who need in-home care for a loved one have been abandoned. We can’t SEE each other and we have to shout to our cashiers. Small businesses are barely hanging on – which means that the families behind them are struggling to pay their bills. Many shops and restaurants are just gone, leaving us with the big box stores only. Children are sitting in front of computer screens ALL DAY. Arguments on social media are more divisive and hurtful than ever. Some people have died from an illness we didn’t even know about a year ago. Foster care and domestic abuse cases are harder to document because being shut up at home isn’t safe and cozy for everyone. Relationships are feeling the weight of all these pressures. And IT IS HARD.

We hold these things in tension. The good AND the hard. I want to encourage you to name them both. To acknowledge all the nuances and feelings. Don’t just stuff them or dismiss them because they don’t fit into a neat package. The longer I live and the more I study the Bible, the more convinced I am that very few situations fit neatly into columns labeled “good” or “bad”. Most things in this broken world are a mixed bag. Nuanced. The person you love most in the world has his or her dark side. Some of your happiest memories had moments of stress or disappointment woven into them.

It’s OK to acknowledge and feel both. Hold them in tension. Let God work through both to shape you more into the likeness of His breathtaking Son. Can we let Him do that work as we reflect on 2020 and move further into 2021?

You really can linger over the pile of green, army guys with melancholy AND cheer him on in his new adventure at the same time. Welcome both emotions in, name them, and give them back to God knowing that He who holds them is trustworthy and purely, truly good.

Resolutions and Printables and Words, Oh My!

December 30, 2017 by Shannon Leave a Comment

Can I just be honest with you for a sec? The last few days of December always bring me a lot of anxiety. So much anxiety. Mostly about ending the current year well and starting the new year prepared.

I think social media has pushed me right over the edge with it. All these posts about resolutions and reflections.

What is my word for the new year? Do I even remember my word from last year? What if I pick the WRONG word? How will I reflect on 2017? What did I learn this year? Did any of my goals come to fruition? Did I make the most of my time?

What resolutions will I make for 2018? Is this the year I’ll finally nail my personal disciplines? Is my planner ready for the new year? Where are my color-coded pens and motivational stickers? Do I want to take up bullet journaling for real this time? Should I join a gym or one of the those get-organized classes or a ’30-Days to a New Me’ webinar or a book club or SOMETHING new? Oh, and how can I help the kids do some reflecting and goal-setting?

And, most-importantly, where can I find a cute printable to help me with these times of reflection? Some years (and I’m getting really vulnerable with you all on this one), I have spent so much time looking for the cute printable that I actually ran out of time to do the worksheet and answer the darn questions!

Please hear me. I’m not saying that any of these things are bad things to do. Reflecting is important for our growth. Looking ahead with some dreams and goal-setting is powerful. We need to evaluate so that we don’t just become stagnant – emotionally, spiritually, financially, physically, and relationally. If picking a word for your year helps you do that – awesome! By all means, go for it! Use the printable. Find the perfect planner.

But, here’s what I want to say to you… there’s nothing magical about January 1. Nothing. It’s just a day on a man-made calendar. If I were to breathe a prayer over you right now, it would not be about finding the perfect system to get organized or the perfect planner to accomplish your goals.

No, my prayer would go something like this:

“Lord, thank you for the gift of another year. Thank you that you have called me into relationship with You and given me ultimate purpose and significance beyond any goal I could set. As I choose my word or reflect on my hopes for 2018, I want to submit them all to Your Lordship. Please make them YOUR word and/or YOUR goals. As I process what I want my 2018 to look like, make me hunger for building Your Kingdom not mine. Help me not to find my identity in picking the “right” word or having a well-oiled machine of a planner. Help me not to compare myself to other bloggers or the women I see on social media who seem like they’ve got it all figured out. Help me to find my identity by just looking into Your face. I know you love me too much to just let me be stagnant but that You’ve called me into a dynamic relationship with you where I lean into the Holy Spirit and grow more like you each day. Upend those things that need to go, give me courage and discipline to grow where I need to, and give my clarity of vision as I move into a new year so that I don’t waste the moments you give me. The truth is, I know I’ll come to the end of 2018 with a mixture of victories and regrets. I love that you can take my regrets and make them beautiful marks of redemption in my bigger story. You already know that story. Remind me that everything doesn’t hang on a cute printable. Forgive me for letting a new year produce anxiety instead of a sense of eagerness and adventure. Thank you for the gift of time, Lord.”   

Friends, the truth is that we don’t really know what the coming year will look like. My word for 2017 was “intention.” Nothing about my 2017 was intentional because life just threw more crud at me than I could manage. It was one of the hardest years on the books for me and I come to the end of it weary. Emotionally, physically, relationally. A better word to describe it would be “faith” because that’s what stretched and grew the most in my life. Does that mean I shouldn’t have picked a word? Naw. It just means that there’s nothing magical about those exercises. Reflect, evaluate, dream. But do it with open hands. What if you get halfway through your 2018 and you realize you picked the wrong word? Gasp!! Or that your goals took a different direction than what you wrote down? Double gasp!! Nope… that doesn’t mean you’re a failure. Listen, I grew a TON in 2017. It’s just that it was in ways I did not expect when I was journaling about it a year ago. So, be open to God’s hand in the midst of your planning and don’t let anxiety overshadow it. Instead, enjoy the adventure and see what God does to surprise you and grow you in 2018.

And, if for some reason you don’t get your evaluating or goal-setting done until January 12th, it’s OK. Let the Lord cup your precious face in His hands and guide your gaze to look into His eyes. Find your value there and be reminded that you don’t have to it all figured out this weekend in order for 2018 to be a great year with Him.

A Theme for 2016 {Tending to My Soul}

January 2, 2016 by Shannon 2 Comments

I’ve spent a lot of time these last few weeks thinking about my last year. My last several years, really. I’ve been reflecting on the things that have brought me joy and the things that have put me to the test. There are many of both.  I can say with certainty that my forties have been transformative as God upends some of my motives and the deeper places of my heart. And if I had to guess, I think He’s far from finished.

IMG_3487

As I head into a new year, I am certainly thinking about my goals and hopes for 2016. I think there is wisdom in taking time to evaluate where you’ve been and where you’re going. Socrates was no fool when he said that the unexamined life is not worth living.

But, one thing that has really resonated with me this year is embracing a guiding theme for my year. I needed a way to tie some things together.

In that light, I’m embracing 2016 as a year of tending to my soul. As a disciple of Jesus, I could say that I’m always tending to my soul. Certainly, the biggest, most pressing need of my soul has been satisfied by His complete and perfect sacrifice on my behalf. I was in darkness. Now, I live in light. I was an enemy of God’s. Now, I am His precious daughter. I was a slave to sin. Now, I am free to choose righteousness. Yes, my soul is restored.

IMG_3491But, in the practical day-to-day of living, I haven’t been tending to it very well. I have become busy, stressed, and hurried. I’ve been neglecting my soul. What have I been doing instead? Usually working my to-do list. I’ve grown a ton this year in managing my obligations and getting crap done. But, if I’m honest, I’ve also done my fair share of internet surfing, social media indulging, and mindless iPad gaming. Oh, and worrying. Mostly about my teenagers. But also about other stuff like writing deadlines.

Wasted moments in between a life of rushing, rushing, doing, doing.

The noise of it all has left me feeling empty even when I have downtime.

It kind of all crystalized for me when I was preparing to teach at a women’s Christmas event for a church on Cleveland’s west side this December. Friends, I stood in front of several hundred women that evening. I was the speaker for their important outreach event. I’m grateful because I think God used me and some women came to know Jesus that night.  But, I’m pretty sure God was speaking to me as much as to anyone else.

IMG_3490 copyDo you know what my topic was? It was about sitting at Jesus’ feet like Mary had done. The Bible tells us that Mary had chosen the good part which could not be taken away from her. She had tended to her soul. By focusing on her Lord while sitting with Him and listening to Him. Her sister Martha, on the other hand, was worried and bothered by lots of other things. And, Jesus in His compassion for Martha, called her out on it. I could almost hear Him, “Martha, Martha, you are worried and bothered about sooo many things…” Lovingly, tenderly putting His finger on the source of her angst. Not judging her or condemning her. But loving her and wanting something better for her.

And, do you know what Martha had been so busy doing? Serving Jesus. At least that’s how it appeared on the surface. I suspect she is a lot like me and there were a whole host of other motives thrown in there. But, nevertheless, she was serving. Hosting a bunch of unexpected guests in her home. She was making them a meal and getting them water from the well and tidying up… you know the drill. The poor girl was just working her to-do list. The one Jesus had just added to by showing up unannounced. Who can blame her for being worried and bothered?

And, yet, Jesus invited her to stop. To tend to her soul by sitting with Him a bit.

2016And I wondered in that moment, is it possible for me to do what needs done in life (because, let’s face it, there IS a lot that needs done) but still have a posture of sitting with Jesus? An inclination of letting Him tend my heart/soul? Could I create rhythms and focus in my day in order to give space for God’s grace to drill down deeper?  And, in addition to creating more of that space, could I even begin to trust God to turn my ordinary tasks into sacred moments lived unto Him?
And, I heard His response to my question. It sounded suspiciously like Luke 10.

Shannon, Shannon, you are worried and bothered about so many things. But only one thing is necessary. Come choose the good portion which will not be taken away from you.

And so was born my theme for 2016: The Year of Tending to My Soul. May it be so for the many years ahead.

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Thanks for stopping by my little corner of the internet! If you’re reading this, please know that I’d rather be sitting in my living room having cream tea with you and hearing YOUR story. But, for now, I hope mine will encourage you and spur you on in some small way. For more about me…

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