Guest Post by Angie Occeño-Libardo
Setbacks come naturally to life, perhaps second to breathing. The unfortunate will even get a shrill experience of the “Murphy’s Law,” that when things go bad it will just be.
Dazed in amazement over the intensity of some issues, one can only shake his head and wonder. Inaccurate with the prospects of them seeping into our systems, struggles can either pierce our whole being or embolden us to create that better person in us.
I guess when it comes to experiencing and managing failures I have become an authority.
I used to be getting A’s from elementary to college. Government exams were not even too difficult to pass. I have not felt any tinge of inadequacy because I seemed to do well each time I took the test.
But when I went to the College of Law things changed for me. Gone are the days when I would be getting A’s. My grades were insanely bad.
My professors wondered why I even enrolled in law school when I seemed to lack the ability to even survive first-year law.
But as you can see, I still finished the course but the final test to whether or not the concepts were retained and mastered, the Bar exams had to be passed.
I thought I knew the basics but the examiners thought otherwise so I failed.
The first time I took it and failed was not as painful as I did the second time because it felt like I did not learn anything at all.
The whole experience cut my heart and my mind was gripped with all disparaging words about myself like, “So you are smart? So I thought.” “Your luster has died and you are no good.”
What could be worse than thinking that those people that I hurt in the past were just so jubilant about my failures? Magnified in my thoughts are their sneers and insults.
My self-esteem plummeted. But how did I surmount my pitiful condition and started hoping and desiring again to take the Bar exams?
Let me share with you the things that I forced myself to do in order to put my hopeful prospects back.
Acknowledge the need to be strengthened.
When adversities befall us we tend to live a hermit life. We shy away from people even trusted friends for fear that we would be ridiculed.
Doing this however will cost us our own happiness and will further lead us to despair.
Go out and look for your trusted friends. Share with them what you feel and honestly ask for their prayers.
I did just that, the comfort that I got after was exhilarating.
Reconcile with God.
Right after I failed the exams, I asked the Lord so many questions. As I blamed Him for not honoring my prayers or even rewarding me for my efforts, I would reason in my head, that I deserved to pass because I worked very hard for it.
I invested so many sleepless nights for it, I knew I studied very hard too; all to no avail. I cried alone, grieving over God’s decision.
Even a firm believer like me despaired but who am I to question the Lord?
He knows the future! Jesus, who began the good work in us will be faithful to complete it. He will send people either to teach us or propel us to minister to God’s unfailing love, similar to what He did to me. God is sovereign.
He cannot be dictated upon. Being the creator that He is, He knows our very being and powerfully discerns what is best for us; so when what we prayed for remains unanswered, be still and ask for divine understanding.
We might not immediately understand why bad things happen to us, we need to trust in the Lord because He is too good to be unkind.
The safest place to be when situations become unreasonable is in God’s arms.
Restore your self-worth.
No one has the right to belittle you. It can only be so if you yourself tolerated others looking down on you.
However, the best assurance that we can hold on to is the truth about God’s unconditional love, that whatever and however we become, He will take us to Himself unconditionally.
Remember the cross. Jesus died for your sins and mine. He even became sin himself to offer to us His greatest sacrifice, His own life for our salvation.
Aren’t we so special to God? Acknowledging who Jesus is and the sacrifices that He endured will revive our hearts’ desires and brighten our chances for better opportunities, and regardless of the hurtful remarks people say about us, it is definitely not the same as how Jesus thought of us.
The abundance of His loving kindness will be ours to have and enjoy if only we would also take Him into our lives. Be confident in the Lord because He is a father that restores.
While failures are admittedly part of our lives, we can’t do anything much but pray for God’s leading. Ask the Lord for wisdom and strength and intelligently learn from those painful experiences.
Will I still take the bar exams again? Hmmm… Why not?
NOTE: This article was first published on the author’s blog “Echoes of the Heart” on 27 March 2015.
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