25: The Year that Everything Changed – Part II

The Beginning...

About 2 or 3 weeks after that I made that fateful decision, I received the most unexpected surprise! My manager approached me and asked if I would be willing to go to Nashville for about 3 months to help with a plant shutdown. I’m pretty sure there wasn’t even a breath between her question and my “YES!” Completely out of character, that impulsive answer was certainly not my head talking. My spirit knew well what my brain could not yet articulate. I needed a change, and Nashville looked a whole lot like change.

I arrived in Nashville on April 29, 2006, walked into the beautifully furnished apartment the company had procured for me and finally…I exhaled. Standing in the middle of the living room, two huge windows to my right, fireplace in front of me, I literally closed my eyes and exhaled. I was home. Nothing there was familiar, nothing belonged to me, yet I was home.

That summer was beyond. I found 2 amazing churches, reconnected with a few folks I knew from high school and distant relatives, made new friends, and couldn’t keep the guys away. Life was good. But my 3 months were quickly coming to a close, and so was my apartment lease back in Michigan.

I knew that the plant in Nashville was closing and that the expectation was for me to return to my job in Michigan. But I wasn’t ready to go back. I wasn’t prepared to forego this newness that I had found. Being so, with the help of the Plant Controller, whom I had developed a really good relationship with, we managed to get my assignment extended through the end of the year.But the lease on my apartment in Michigan was ending, so on July 28 I flew to Detroit, packed up all of my belongings, stored them in mother’s garage, and flew back to Nashville.

I didn’t know what I was going to do or where I was going to work after the end of the year, but I knew I wasn’t going back to Michigan. I couldn’t. There was nothing there for me but loneliness and painful memories.

With the Nashville plant closing at the end of the year, I knew that if I were to remain in the city, I needed to find another job. I’m sure there were others, but the only interview I can recall was for a Finance role at a popular healthcare company. On the day of the interview, I was sicker than I have ever been in my life. Certainly, I had no business showing my face in public and spreading my germs, but there was no way I was going to cancel or reschedule. So I pulled myself together, medicated, and less a few sniffles and slightly losing my voice, pulled off a pretty convincing interview. I ended up in the ER the next day.

I returned home from the ER and was sitting at my dining room table preparing to take my prescriptions when the phone rang. It was the healthcare company that I had interviewed with the day before. They offered me the job and a 21% salary increase. I was completely baffled. Holding the phone and fumbling for words, I was rendered completely speechless. Wait…I’m sorry…WHAT?! The person on the other end chuckled at my stupor. I was baffled for a couple of reasons…First, they made an offer so quickly…less than 24 hours after I interviewed. And second, they offered me a significant salary increase. I don’t know how long you’ve been around, but it’s in most business’s nature to low-ball…to get as much as they can for as little as possible. So the fact that they offered me 21% over my current salary made zero sense to me. Little did they know, I was so sure of my purpose in Nashville, I would have taken a decrease! Still completely dumbfounded, I quickly accepted.

New Beginning2...

I called my manager in Michigan to give her the news. She was not at all surprised. She said she felt that Nashville was where I was supposed to be. Two weeks later, I flew back to Michigan to say my final goodbyes to my old team and spend the Thanksgiving holiday with my family. The funny thing is, no one on my team was surprised. In fact, before I left for Nashville the first time, they all told me that I wouldn’t be back. I just thought they were being nice. I had no idea that they were speaking prophetically into my life. Neither did they. On Saturday, November 25, I packed up my black SUV to start my new beginning in Nashville.

With Fred Hammond’s newly released Free to Worship CD (a gift from my outgoing manager) bumping through my speakers, I drove down Interstate-75 South at a dark and wintery 5AM into a bright and sunny new day in Nashville, Tennessee. Foregoing everything safe and familiar, I reached forward to the destiny that await me.

Friends, I leave you with a question: What are you willing to dispossess in order to possess the WILD that God has called you to?

Leave your responses in the comments section below. Also, if you have questions for me, ask!

25: The Year that Everything Changed – Part I

My New Life (Chapter 1)

“It’s time for me to move on. You can’t stay here anymore. I’ll take you to your mother’s house on Saturday.”

Those fateful words… That mental shift… That was the decision that changed it all. Just a few days after my 25th birthday, those were the words I uttered to my then estranged live-in boyfriend. No tears. No discussion. No questions to answer. We’re done.

Saturday arrived and I took great care in putting myself together. Hair and makeup were flawless. Tall boots, sunglasses and oversized designer bag. When I pulled my SUV out of his mother’s driveway, I had never felt freer. It would have been tacky of me to burn rubber, so with the windows down, music bumping, and my past in my review mirror, I deliberately drove away that day and never looked back. The day was Saturday, October 15, 2005. 

I had my life back! I had my apartment back! I had my vehicle back! I was responsible for no one but myself! For the first time in 4 years I felt strong and in control. I had started a new job about 3 months prior making more money than I could have imagined just a few years out of college. I loved the culture and the women I worked with were heaven sent. Between Weight Watchers and Tai Bo, I lost 25 lbs. and gained a lot more in confidence. With an insatiable hunger for something bigger and better, I rededicated my life to Christ and became a faithful student of his word.

Then the test came… 

I received a phone call from my mother sometime in January 2006 asking if my then 17 year old brother could come to live with me. She needed a break. He needed a break and distance put between him and his neurotic, narcissistic, and flat out dangerous girlfriend. I knew the hell that was going on just 90 miles North of where I was living. I knew that she was afraid and desperate to save him. But I also knew that I wasn’t the answer. I was 25, single, and trying to get my own life on track after ending a 4 year relationship with a seriously broken man. I didn’t have enough to offer anyone else at that point.

But afraid to tell her no and not wanting to live up to her accusations of my selfishness, I told her I would think about it. That next week, I called a trusted advisor and big sister to get some advice. She told me that she was going to email me a list of questions to meditate on and pray over before I gave my mother an answer. She sent me a list of 20 questions. I read them all, but I knew after reading the first question that I shouldn’t have him come live with me. But I said yes anyway.

I enrolled him in an adult education school about a mile or so from my apartment, bought a futon for the second bedroom, went grocery shopping, and drove my black SUV the 90 miles to pick him up. This time, no fearless energy followed. No celebratory bad-ass music bumping through my speakers. I knew I was making the wrong decision. But I wasn’t yet strong enough to make the right one. 

This 17 year old boy was hurting and struggling with demons that I was not equipped to help him fight. I got him to come to church with me once or twice. After begging and prodding, I managed to get him up most mornings to get him to school. The other mornings, well…his feet got him there. He stayed in his room mostly. I stopped going out and doing things in the evenings and on the weekends. I felt guilty about leaving him alone. He quickly made friends; unfortunately, of the wrong sort.

School wasn’t going well. I called his teacher and she told me that he told her he was doing drugs. I left work hysterical. My manager asked me what I was going to do…what I was going to say to him. Bewildered, I simply responded, “I don’t know.”  We both sat on the couch in my living room silent. He was high on something. I was breaking inside and deathly afraid. For some reason, drugs scare the shit out of me. I refuse to listen to songs glorifying their use and forget about watching a movie scene with drug use. I just can’t stand them, not even the thought of them! We exchanged a few words before he retreated to his room…or out with his new friends. I honestly can’t remember. I do, however, remember becoming paranoid. I didn’t know who these people were he was associating with and I didn’t know if one of them would be waiting outside my door one morning. I started praying even harder, fasting…reading my Bible. Trying to find solace. I don’t know how, but I stumbled upon this verse:

“But if you return to me and obey my commands, then even if your exiled people are at the farthest horizon, I will gather them from there and bring them to the place I have chosen as a dwelling for my Name.” Nehemiah 1:9

Reading that verse of scripture felt like a rain shower after a 4 year drought. I cried and contemplated, reasoned and rehearsed. As difficult as it would be, I knew what I had to do. I knew I needed to follow the original leading I received and take him back home. I knew that my co-workers/angels/big sisters were right when they told me that I shouldn’t be dealing with this heavy burden, but rather, enjoying and living my life. And now, I had not only a feeling and other people’s opinions, but God’s word to back it up.

So one Sunday evening, I told my brother that I was going to call my mother and that I wanted him to listen in from the telephone in his room because I had something to tell them both. For a people pleaser who feared her mother, uttering the words was one of the most courageous and difficult things I have ever had to do. But utter them, I must. I was miserable and knew that I was the only one who could put myself out of that misery. I knew that I needed to regain control of my life. So after two months with me, I made that 90 mile drive again in my black SUV, this time wearing my mourning clothes. Although I knew I was making the right decision for myself, I was ashamed. I didn’t want them to think of me as selfish. But I needed to be selfish at that moment. I needed to nurture and heal myself. I didn’t have room or energy to help anyone else.

After I dropped him off, me apologizing profusely, my brother hugged me in the middle of my mother’s kitchen and told me that he understood. I cried the entire ride home. When I closed the door and turned the key to my apartment, my knees hit the floor and an ocean of tears followed. Kneeling on the side of my bed, I prayed that I had made the right decision. I knew I had, but making it almost broke my heart. 

Part II tomorrow…

The Gold Digger’s Manifesto

And the day came (white)

Ernest Hemingway said that there was nothing to writing except to sit down at the typewriter and bleed.

I say, “I hope you’re not squeamish.”

I am SO AFRAID to get really REAL and expose myself…

Stop hiding! That was the mandate given to me by the Spirit at the beginning of this year. That was my overarching goal for 2014…STOP! HIDING! Almost within the same moment, I received the inspiration to share my story, my unfiltered truth, and to do so in a very public manner. After I received the mandate on December 31, 2013, I wrote in my diary, “I am SO AFRAID to get really REAL and expose myself to the degree that God is requiring. The thought of it makes my stomach turn and makes me want to break out in hives.” And so here we are almost 1 year later and I have yet to answer that call. But there seems to be a force at work both within and around me that will not allow me to leave 2014 without doing the thing that I am most afraid of. So be it. Beginning tomorrow, December 18th, you will have an opportunity to experience me completely uncensored during my 30 day ‘Dear Diary’ series on my blog, Diary of a Gold Digger.

So, why am I doing this?

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve written a Facebook status or Tweet and deleted it, afraid of how others might perceive it. Afraid of how they might perceive me. Afraid to allow my true thoughts to see the light of day, opting instead to keep them hidden in my heart. But now I’m overflowing and the truth of who I am is bubbling to the surface. The real Kandyce is spilling out and I’ve decided to let it do just that. I’ve decided to stop being afraid. And I’ve decided to take all of you with me on my journey to freedom.

The characteristic that I most value in a human being is courage. No, that’s actually putting it mildly. Quite frankly, I despise cowardice. If that be true, then I must ask myself the question, “How can I expect or demand courage from another, yet be unwilling to exhibit courage myself?” Sure, I’ve taken steps in my lifetime that many have considered bold or courageous. I’ve moved across the country and now out of the country, both times alone and without knowing a single soul or what lie before me. I’ve journeyed across the vast and desolate Arabian Desert, ventured into drug lord territory in Guatemala, had AK-47 armed military police escorts in Nigeria, taken gypsy cabs in China, and the list goes on. But all of these things pale in comparison to what I’ve now been asked to do…to bare my soul. Strip myself naked for the world to see. Baring my imperfections, my desires, my unfiltered thoughts. God granting me the idea for this ‘Dear Diary’ series was an invitation.  An invitation for me to go deep…to write my story and to shine light on the truth of who I really am.

While I certainly haven’t been pretending to be someone I’m not, I have been fearfully holding back and selectively sharing. Not that I wish to lose any of my mystique, but I do feel that the time has come to lift the veil to allow the world to see and experience the woman underneath.

The next 30 days will be very personal. And certainly some would argue that my decision to make public my diary is unwise, to say the least. I would be a liar if I didn’t admit that I too am a bit nervous about allowing the world to be a voyeur into the intimate details of my life. Okay, let me be completely honest. Tears well up in my eyes, a boulder lodges itself in my chest, and I literally cover my face with my hands at the mere thought of sharing some of the truths that I may be led to share with you. But then I am reminded of one of my favorite quotes by Marianne Williamson: 

“We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It’s not just in some of us; it’s in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.”

So here’s my manifesto, my sacrificial lamb… Every day for the next 30 days, I vow to challenge myself to live life inside-out. For your sakes and mine, I am going to live fearlessly! I am voluntarily taking on one of the most vulnerable mantles I have ever considered. I want to liberate you to stand in your truth and to fully embrace yourselves in all of your unique glory. May you too become compelled by the same force that has compelled me to step out of the shadows and be seen; apparently, the thing that I have been most afraid to do.

My hope is that over the next 30 days you will commit to opening yourselves. Open yourselves to hear the truth. Not just my truth, but the truth that will sprout up and begin to reveal itself in your own hearts. Don’t ignore that pull, that thing that you want to dismiss, the thing that pisses you off. Listen to it. Ask what it’s there to teach you. As I find the courage to stand in my truth, let my words challenge and inspire you, entertain you, make you blush. But most importantly, may they stop you dead in your tracks, awaken you out of your stupor and motivate you to get real with yourself and the world around you.

Diary of a Gold Digger is my ultimate expression of that old adage, “the truth will set you free.”