My prayers
that night after the dance were off kilter. I tried to pray, but trying to talk
to God was like trudging through mud. I couldn’t think of anything to say. And
what I did say felt lifeless.
Even
though it was late, I opened the Bible and shined my reading light on the
words. In my daily reading I was in the book of Mark. As I read about Jesus
feeding the five thousand, my mind strayed to lines of young people dancing
under a starry sky.
I became
frustrated.
“Lord
God—”
I
hesitated. I sounded so . . . fake.
“Lord, why
can’t I pray?”
I closed
my Bible, put it on the side table, and turned off the light.
I snuggled
under the covers. Immediately, as if on auto play, came thoughts of Michael.
Two minutes in, something jerked me back to the present.
Fantasizing
about Michael had become so automatic. A nightly ritual. It’s how I fell
asleep.
Wait. Was
I lusting after Michael?
The
thought horrified me.
Surely
not! I didn’t lust after guys. I guarded my heart. I hadn’t even ever mentioned
Michael to Luanne in casual conversation, and Jen didn’t know about my secret
feelings either.
But then I
thought about the California Waltz and how our arms had brushed as we counted
the beats. I thought of his hand on my waist.
Stop!
He was
standing before me, holding out his hand, the dark of the night creating a 5
o’clock shadow on his already strikingly handsome face.
Stop!
But I
couldn’t. Thinking of him was my normal. And now I could replay something that
had really happened.
I fought
my imagination. I fought my memory.
Tears
pricked behind my eyes because holding back thoughts of Michael felt like
holding back a tsunami. I didn’t want to stop.
Didn’t I
know Proverbs 4:24 by heart? I lectured myself. What if Michael doesn’t marry
you, Trisha? Don’t you realize that maybe Michael will marry someone else and
that he doesn’t belong to you? My
throat constricted. No, he couldn’t. I couldn’t imagine him with someone else.
He was mine. Wasn’t he, Lord? No, You hadn’t promised him to me, but surely,
surely You would give me this good gift. Please, Lord. Give me this good gift.
For the
next week, every morning and evening I prayed my repentance. And dreamed. And
prayed harder. And dreamed still. And felt guilty. And found myself thinking of
him even as I prayed that I would stop thinking of him.
It’s not
easy to change the direction of a heart that has been focused on one thing for
years.
The dance,
that lovely, romantic night, morphed into a horrible shackle.
“Dear
God,” I’d say on my knees before my bed. “Help me stop imagining life with
Michael. Help me stop obsessing. Help me surrender him to You.”
Because
wouldn’t it be better if I let God work everything out instead of clinging to
my dreams of life with Michael so very hard?
But I
couldn’t. I just couldn’t.
In my
prayers, I reasoned with God. Wasn’t it okay to like a guy? Isn’t that how You
designed me?
Was I
lusting? What did that even mean?
I began
reevaluating my prior definitions of purity and lust.
Was
imagining talking with Michael lusting?
Was
imagining how my hand felt in his lusting?
Was lying
awake conjuring up imaginary images of him looking at me with love in his eyes
lusting?
I didn’t
know.
Dear God,
I didn’t know!
What had
once been a lovely infatuation had turned into something painful and ugly and
heart-wrenching. A battle to break a habit I, frankly, did not want to break.
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