CROW’S FEET CONFESSIONS

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I’ve been looking at my friends faces a lot lately. Looking at their Instagram posts, zooming in on Facebook pictures, looking closely at them when we are talking. I wish I could say it was because I just can’t get enough of them. That they are all so beautiful I have to stare.

There is some truth to that. They are beautiful, and yet, I’m not looking at them in admiration. There are two other reasons—and those reasons are ugly.

1. Comparison
2. Jealousy

I know I am not the first person to compare myself to others. Sadly, I also won’t be the last. I think it’s part of the Fall. I don’t have a specific scripture in mind to back that up, but I know I could make a biblical case for it.

That said, here’s a glimpse inside how I compare—it may or may not be different than how you do. I look at someone I know or admire, and then see how I stack up. Often I do this in things that the world sees as flaws. Now that I’m in my mid-thirties, it’s taken a very specific focus: wrinkles.

Yep, wrinkles.

I have some and I hate them. So if I look at people that I love and admire and see that they have wrinkles too, somehow it quiets the anxiety inside me. Somehow it makes me feel like I’m ok. After all, if women whom I admire and love have wrinkles, then surely, wrinkles are ok. Right? RIGHT?

Once I get to the place of recognizing that amazing, lovely, awe-inspiring women have wrinkles too, that’s when #2 kicks in—jealousy.

Jealousy? “You, Jessica, are jealous of wrinkles?”

Yep. I’ve (mostly) accepted the fact that wrinkles happen, so now I want the best wrinkles I can have. In my opinion, those are the smile lines and crow’s feet. Those little creases that not only show that you’ve lived a few years of life, but that you’ve lived it happily.

Those are not the wrinkles I have. I have the furrowed brow kind. The ones that show that I’ve spent hours and years thinking, wrestling, despairing and, well, frowning.

Just the mere fact of writing that down is causing me anxiety. The next time one of you who reads these sees me, I fear your eyes will go straight to my forehead. And yet, I’m on a journey. A long journey to accept myself in the way that God made me. And part of that is the furrows that show that I think deeply, and fret, and ponder.

Do I wish It was different? Yes, sometimes I do. But in wishing things were different—wishing I was different—I think I’m missing out on what this life is really about. Loving. Not by comparing. Not by putting someone on a pedestal, but by seeing who they really are—people made in God’s own image. People He loves enough to have created and chased after. People He died for. People He still is still chasing after today.

I want to see people that way. I want to see you that way. And really, I want to see myself that way. I want to put aside the comparison and the jealousy and just be. I want to be me, and I want you to be you. I want to not care if my face has wrinkles—or what kind it has—and just be thankful that I get to breathe deeply, feel sun on my face, and live in a world full of beautiful, wrinkled (and non-wrinkled) people who were all made in the image of God.

 

2 thoughts on “CROW’S FEET CONFESSIONS

  1. Jessi
    As always, thanks for sharing your thoughts! This morning, Dad and I commented to each other how we still look at others with jealously and comparisons. much less than when we were younger, but still …. As you put it so well … We all were made in the image of God, and He is still chasing after all of us!!! To love without comparisons … Allowing ourselves to be us, and doing so with delight and thanks!!! I did laugh a bit, because after my hip surgery, when I was at least a month or more into recovery, I looked in the mirror and noticed my cheeks were covered with little crisscrossing lines to make little squares of wrinkled skin. As I opened my eyes wide I was shocked, at first!!! How did all those get there so quickly!!! Wrinkles like my Aunt Ida had had, she was Grandmas oldest sister and a truly gentle soul, who knew she was loved by God!!! Then I chuckled to myself and felt glad to be reminded of her, even in wrinkles!!! Since then these wrinkles have lessened and I decided they came with all the sleeping I had been doing!! But they will come back and I pray I can see with with a smile and think of my Aunt Ida. Love you!!!! Mom

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    • Mom, I was hoping I would “grow out” of the comparisons. It is so hard. But I love that you were able to see your Aunt Ida in you a little bit and yes, smiling when we see those changes is hard. But if they remind us of others and the joy of life, maybe it’s worth it. Maybe. Love you too!

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