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As Caregivers, We're Not Being Delivered FROM It ...but rather, THROUGH It.

Hope for the Caregiver / Peter Rosenberger
The Cross Radio
January 20, 2020 7:35 pm

As Caregivers, We're Not Being Delivered FROM It ...but rather, THROUGH It.

Hope for the Caregiver / Peter Rosenberger

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January 20, 2020 7:35 pm

So many times, we caregivers cry out to God for us to be "delivered FROM" these challenges.  Doing this for 34 years, however, I'm learning that God meets us in it ...and delivers us THROUGH It. 

In the process, we discover our battle is not with our loved one's affliction, but instead ...the battle is with ourselves. 

From HOPE FOR THE CAREGIVER on American Family Radio JAN 18 2020  (See the full transcript of the show below.)

Brought to you by:

HFTC January 18 2020

 

[00:15]

Live on American family radio, this is Hope For The Caregiver. This is Peter Rosenberger This is the nation's number one show for you as a family caregiver, for those of you who are knowingly willingly and voluntarily putting yourselves between a vulnerable loved one and even worse disaster. You get up every day and you do this, and maybe you do it from a couple hundred miles away and you're ensuring that finances are being met or that staff show up to do things or whatever. There's all kinds of different ways to be a caregiver. But the challenges on the heart level are still the same. And some of us are up close and personal doing it every day all day long. Some of us are checking in once a day. Some of us are supporting financially those who are. There's just a lot of different scenarios of this and some of us have had to take a step back. You may have a loved one whose alcoholism or addiction has created such a destructive swath that you can't participate up close and personal. But they have a chronic impairment and where there's a chronic impairment, there's a caregiver. And that would be you. You got a special needs child or you got an aging parent. You got somebody with a traumatic brain injury whose personality has changed dramatically. And they don't think or respond in the normal way adults would, and you're engaged with this individual every day. You got somebody who gets violent or mood swings, somebody who has mental illness.

 

There's so many different scenarios but there's always a caregiver for every kind of affliction. And that's why we do this show. How are you feeling? How are you doing? What's going on with you? We speak fluid caregiver here and we're very grateful American Family Radio, they see the value of this, they see the need. And family is the middle name of American Family Radio, and this show is all about the family caregiver. 888-589-8840, 888-589-8840. If you want to be a part of the show, and you don't really have to have any kind of important question, or some earth-shattering thing. Sometimes you just want to just talk to somebody and that's one of the things we encourage you to do on this show, is to reach out to somebody and have a conversation. Don't sit in isolation. You're why we do the show. We're taking community to the caregiver because it's hard to get out. It's hard to connect with other people. It's hard to know what to say. It's hard to know how to respond and it's frustrating. And you if you want to have a friendship or meaningful friendships in this thing, you got to have people that are willing to embrace the pain that you carry. And that's not an easy thing. And you feel kind of weird about sharing some of those things with people. I get that. Okay? You don't want to expose your loved one and you don't feel like having a drag everything all out on the table. I get that. And that's why we do this show. Because here, you don't have to bring me up to speed. On this show, we speak fluid caregiver. Okay?

 

So, 888-589-8840, 888-589-8840. I want to start off with a Scripture. I thought this may be appropriate. Well, Scripture is always appropriate but I like to be laser beam focused when it comes to the heart needs of a family caregiver. And this is a Scripture that I saw and it was-- I struggle with this. Okay? I struggle with looking all around and getting distracted. I think sometimes we as caregivers, you know, shiny objects and we get our attention span gets pulled in so many different places. Proverbs 4:25 and I'm reading in the English Standard version, but I'm going to do it in another one, in a paraphrase. “Let your eyes look directly forward.” This is proverbs 4:25 to 27. “Let your eyes look directly forward and your gaze be straight before you ponder the path of your feet. Then all your ways will be sure do not swerve to the right or to the left. Turn your foot away from evil.” All right. And I'm gonna read that from The Message. Okay? “Keep vigilant over your heart, that's where life starts. Don't talk out of both sides of your mouth. Avoid careless banter, white lies and gossip. Keep your eyes straight ahead. Ignore all sideshow distractions. Watch your step and the road will stretch out smooth. Before you look neither right nor left, leave evil in the dust.” What does that mean to us as caregivers? When you're taking care of someone, and you-- For those who are brand new to the caregiving journey, it may not mean as much to you right at this moment, but for those of you who have logged some real time in this, you're going to understand that we get pulled in all kinds of directions. It is so easy for us to be looking over to the right, looking over the left, looking backwards. We spend a lot of time looking backwards. But we spent a lot of time also fearing the future. And we're going to look straight in front of us and just deal with what's ahead of us right now. And that's how we do it.

 

Now, again, I would really encourage you to not ever think that I own all of this. But I'm reminding myself of these things. And I had a great visual just the other day. I'm in Southwest Montana and I went out on a snowmobile. I do that a lot, just to kind of clear the cobwebs of my head. And Montana is a big state and the mountains behind us are big mountains and I have a lot of cobwebs, so I need a big state with big mountains, I guess. So, I went out there with a friend of mine, neighbor down the road, and we went out riding, and I learned how to ride snowmobiles from his father. Now you think, “Well, how hard is it to ride snowmobiles?” Well where we go, there's no lifeguard on duty and we're not out there on nice groomed roads that are flat and smooth. We're doing some pretty intensive riding. And there's this one trail that I've been riding on for 20 years, and there's a lot of switchbacks on it and it's going up incredibly steep and the snow is very deep right now. We've had a lot of new snow and it's very deep and you really gotta be-- there's a lot of balance and there's kind of a trick to riding a snowmobile. You don't just sit on it and press the throttle. You really have to handle the machine in a certain way, particularly when you have deep powdery snow.

 

And this particular trail is basically the width of the snowmobile, it’s not much more than that. And on one side, there's a drop off of several hundred feet, and it's a fairly frightening trail. And every time I get up there, I kinda just clench up. I'm thinking, “Oh my man, why am I doing this again?” Well, I'll tell you why I'm doing again, because the view at the top of this trail is spectacular. But to get there, it's a little bit of a challenge. And when you come out of this one clearing and the drop off is so steep besides you, you're tempted to look at the view there. Because it's a great view that I've snuck a peek out of my peripheral vision and look to my right there to see this view on this trail, but then I quickly look back and didn't stare straight at the trail so I don't go off the cliff because that's what you call a bad thing when you go off the cliff. And I wait until I get up to a place of safety where I can look at the view from a place of safety. And I have to keep my eyes on the trail. I have to stay focused. I can't be distracted, I can't look around because there's real danger if I do.

 

And I think that's for us as caregivers, that's kind of where we are a lot of times. There's some places that we would love to be able to stop and view but it's not safe to do it. And we have to keep our eyes focused straight ahead and keep our head in the game. Not get distracted, not looking left or right, but just not even trying to sneak a view out of a peripheral, but to keep focused on the trail in front of us. “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path.” We don't necessarily see 700 yards down the road. And on this particular trail I'm riding on, you're doing good to look 10 feet ahead before it switches back, but you keep straight in here. This is hope for the caregiver. I'm Peter Rosenberger 888-589-8840. We'll be right back.

 

[Music]

 

Welcome back to Hope For The Caregiver on American Family Radio. I'm Peter Rosenberger. This is the nation's number one show for you, as a family caregiver, you’re why we do this show. And because He lives we can face tomorrow that we are not paralyzed by the circumstances that we're in. We're not overwhelmed by them. It's not gonna be easy. And I heard a great quote the other day that says “Anybody says life is easy as selling something.” It's not. It's going to be hard work. But doesn't mean it can't be done and doesn't mean that you're going to be doomed to seeing ugly things in life for the whole life. There's beauty and joy all around you even in the midst of very difficult challenges. 888-589-8840, 888-589-8840 if you want to be a part of the show, we're live. How are you feeling? How are you doing as a caregiver? How are you holding up?

 

I know that so many of you are looking at very grim things every day. And there are times when you just hang your head in weariness. I get it. Been there, done that, got the T-shirt. Still feel that way at times. I really do. And so, what do you do when you get that way? How do you strengthen yourself? How do you work through that? Who do you talk to? Are you hearing messages from your pastor that are strengthening you? Are you calling anyone? Is anyone calling you? You’re why we do the show because so many of you are not engaged in a good church situation. So many of you are just by yourself and the only lifeline you have is coming through the radio or through your app that you're listening to, or whatever device you're listening to this show on, and this may be the only place where you're hearing anything that speaking to you is in the voice of a caregiver, to your heart as a caregiver.

 

So, I want you to take advantage of this show, I want you to take advantage of this time and be a part of it. Share what's on your heart. And I'm going to try to plow as many things into your heart to strengthen you along the journey, just as people have done for me, and I'm also doing it for myself. That's how we do it as believers. It's not a one and done by the way, it's not something you just get. Okay, I got it. I'm gonna go move on with the rest of my life. No, no, no, this is the rest of our life. We will be needing to say these things every day to ourselves. And if anybody tells you different, they'll lie about other things too. Because this is how it's done. You go back and look through all of Scripture, it is a constant reaffirming of the Gospel. It is a constant reaffirming of the work of Christ. It is a constant reaffirming of the faithfulness of God. God knows that we're scared. He knows that we're weary. He knows that we're struggling. Look through all of Scripture. You'll never find one Scripture says, “Hey, I know y'all got that. I'll see you around a little later.” He says “I'm with you always. I know you're scared but don't be afraid. Don't be afraid. Don't be afraid. Don't be afraid. I'm here. I'm here. I'm here.” Okay.

 

And I just can't stress enough to you these things on what it means to you as a family caregiver to be reaffirming these messages. I want to read another Scripture to you, Psalm 147:3. Psalms-- My mother tells me this a lot that Psalms is a great place to go when you don't really know what else to say or do. You can go into the Psalms and listen to others before you, particularly King David pour out his heart. But he wasn't the only one that was involved in the Psalms. There are others that wrote those Psalms and a lot of them are [??? 14:28], and they're struggling and you could see the shift in their faith, particularly in David Psalms when he starts off with you know, “I'm struggling, I long the Lord” or you know, all these things, and then he wrenches his will into the will of God and you can hear almost the wheels turning in his head as he is reaffirming his trust in God. Psalm 147:3. “He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.” Let me read it in The Message. “He heals the heartbroken and bandages their wounds.” How many of you as caregivers have had to dress wounds? I mean, I've done that quite a bit. And my wife has a lot of wounds. She had a terrible accident back in 83. 80 surgeries later that we can count, 150 other smaller procedures. She's got one right now that we're having to watch very carefully.

 

How many of you all have bandaged wounds? You know what that's like. Do you understand that you have ones that require bandaging, too. Every time you've dressed a wound, and some of the ones that we have to dress as caregivers can be fairly complex wounds. I've had to do dressings where I've had to gown up, you know, in mask and gloves and the whole thing, and that's not easy. And as you think about that, as you've changed a wound, as you look at a wound, as you look at an angry wound, an angry wound is a wound that is inflamed and red and irritated. You have wounds like that as a caregiver. Do you know that? You have wounds like that. But you also have a savior who bandages those wounds, who is tending to those wounds. And they don't heal overnight. Sometimes it takes-- gosh, it seems like it just takes forever for them to heal. And some wounds don't heal this side of heaven completely.

 

Do you understand? Can you picture what it's like to have a Savior that's bandaging your wounds as a caregiver? Let me describe what some of those wounds are. Maybe they’re wounds of resentment. Maybe you have been pierced all the way to the core of who you are by the very person you're caring for. Maybe they have said and done things to you that just cut you so deep and yet, you got to keep on being a caregiver. Maybe you're changing someone's diapers, an aging parent or whatever, who's just cursing at you. Or maybe you got family members who are criticizing you and you are showing up every day doing what they're not doing, but they're criticizing you and giving you lots of pointers and suggestions on how to do it better. Those are wounds. Maybe you've had church folk, pastors who have chastise you for your lack of faith. Maybe some of your wounds are self-inflicted. You brought this child into the world with a disability and you blame yourself for it. Maybe you're just continuing to just create your own wounds, by just beating yourself. You have a Savior you that bandages up all of those wounds and more. Did you know that? Did you know that that's who your Savior is. He heals the heartbroken and bandages their wounds.

 

Are you wounded today as you're listening to this show? Are those wounds front and center in your thoughts in mind. My dad, longtime minister, greatest influence in my life, and the song that defines his entire ministry is an old spiritual called Balm in Gilead. That's Balm, B-A-L-M, not B-O-M-B. Forgive my Southern accent. For those of you who speak Southern, that's not a problem, you understood what I was saying. But for those of you who don't, it's Balm, B-A-L-M, a soothing ointment. There's a Balm in Gilead to make the wounded whole. There is a Balm in Gilead to heal the sin soul. Gracie recorded this on her CD, you can get a copy of it, and I would highly recommend you doing so. You can go out to HopeForTheCaregiver.com and take a look at it. It's an extraordinary arrangement that she sang. And I was always-- I've heard this song sung so many times and I think they've tried to recapture the old spiritual sound for it, and everybody that I heard perform it growing up saying it like, you know, “There is a Balm in Gilead,” like they're singing Old Man River kind of thing. And I didn't think it needed to be performed that way. This is a song of lament, and from people who are in pain, that's the origins of the song. And I felt like it needed to be sung by someone who was in pain. And my wife has not known a day without pain since Reagan's first term—37 years this year.

 

And so, when she sings this, she's singing it from the depth of that pain and Gracie is a real singer. I mean, a no kidding singer. And when I played this for her, and I slowed it down and I played it for her to sing, she was in her wheelchair and she sang it live to track. Which, what that means for those who are not really in the music scene, whatever that much, we weren't punching anything in. he didn't have to do a bunch of takes with it or fix this or this. She just sang it. And what came from her was so extraordinary because she understood the concept. “There is a Balm in Gilead to make the wounded whole,” and she's wounded. Both of her legs are gone. Her body's orthopedically a wreck. She's wounded and she's had more bandages on her than other people I know. I don't know anybody who's had bandages on her like she has and wounds at least orthopedically and physically. But I would suggest to you that you as a caregiver understand wounds of that level too, just a different way. And I would also encourage you not to dismiss those wounds, that they are real, and they are painful, and they require attention. But the good news is you have a Savior that's giving you that attention. You have a Savior that knows how to dress wounds, your wounds. Your wounds as a caregiver. 888-589-8840, 888-589-8840. You don't have to have a question. Just call it just help one caregiver today. This is Peter Rosenberger. This is Hope For The Caregiver. We'll be right back.

 

[Music]

 

Welcome back to hope for the caregiver here on American Family Radio. This is the nation's number one show for the family caregiver. And by the way, I got the stats that we're also the nation's number one podcast for the family caregiver. You want to be a part of the podcast, it’s very easy. Just go to HopeForTheCaregiver.com, and it's all there at the website. And it's a free podcast, we podcast this show and other bonus materials, and all kinds of things that we do out there and it's a free podcast. And I'm very grateful for American Family Radio for seeing the value of what we do, and taking this message to this incredibly underserved population. For the family caregiver, for those who are knowingly, willingly and voluntarily putting themselves between a vulnerable loved one and even worse disaster. And sometimes we're doing it at the expense of our own bodies, of our own hearts, of our own wallets, of our own careers, all those kinds of things. How do you help these people? How do you strengthen the family caregiver? What does it look like? That's what this show was about. 888-589-8840, 888-589-8840.

 

I want to go back to the Scripture we started with— I want to kind of just drill down on this a little bit more so that you can leave this show today. After this show, my goal for the show is, is at the end of the show, I leave you a little better than I found you. You know, with something that you can hang on to that's tangible, right where you are as a caregiver. I can't take away your stuff anymore than you take away mine. I can't fix what you deal with any more than you could fix mine. But we can build each other up in this, and we can sustain each other. There's not a destination where you get to a point where you say “Okay, I've got this. I'm done.” Even at the grave that doesn't end for the caregiver. Because I maintain that the caregiver has a PTSD quality that affects them after the funeral. Now, I can't say that from personal experience because I'm still a caregiver. I'm in my 34th year of this. But I can say that with reasonable certainty based on the number of caregivers I've talked to, and the amount of time I've spent in this world, that just because your loved one passes away, doesn’t mean that the challenges you're dealing with and the things, the wounds that you're dealing with, just go away.

 

I think that's the mistake a lot of people make as they get into this world as a caregiver that it's, if we can just get them to stop doing this, then we'll be okay. But it doesn't work that way. And those of you with some real longevity in this understand that concept. It takes a while to figure that out. In the first, the beginning part of your journey as a caregiver, we spent a lot of time trying to run around in a flurry trying to do this and this and this and this because we're trying to fight off all the tigers that are attacking us. And then after a while, we realized the tigers aren't going to stop coming, and we got to have a different strategy. We can't just keep rushing out. We've got to replenish, we've got to stock up, we've got to endure this. And that's why when I wrote the book, Hope For The Caregiver and my other books and when I did the show and all the things that we do, it was always designed to equip caregivers to endure, not to accomplish or not to reign victoriously as a caregiver, but to endure but endure, with more calmness, to endure with more hope, to endure with more joy.

 

So, I'm not content to just kind of grind my teeth and survive this. I want to grow in it. More importantly, I want to see God differently in this. And more importantly than that, He desires to reveal Himself to us in greater depth in this. Everything in Scripture confirms that, and He reveals Himself to us in suffering. CS Lewis says, “Suffering is God's megaphone” because sometimes we just don't want to listen to the whisper. You know, I've never heard anybody say, “Well, I sure learned that the easy way.” That's just not the way it works for us, at least not for me. When you are the crash test dummy of caregivers, you know, and I've logged ample time at this. So, I've had enough time to make enough mistakes that you start seeing a pattern. Oh, oh, you can only run into a brick wall so many times before eventually, you're going to have to figure out that that wall’s not going to move. For some of us, it takes longer than others. For me, it took quite a bit of time but that's all right.

 

I want you as a caregiver to grab a hold of these concepts. I see a lot of people try to meet the needs of caregivers in the media and other shows or whatever. But a lot of them are talking about logistics, and then a lot of them talk about platitudes. You know, take care of yourself. Make sure you take care of yourself, and I get that. I get it and I appreciate it, God bless you. But on this show, we're going to drill down into the matters of the heart, because I think that's where the battle is for caregivers. See, if your heart is a train wreck, then guess what? Your wallet will be too. The way you interact with other relationships will be too. Your job will be too. And so if we speak to the heart and strengthen the heart of the family caregivers, then we provide a fighting chance for us to deal with these other issues. So, when I am faced with grim news from a doctor, or behavior, or the myriad of other things that can come at us sideways, where we're just trying to just live peacefully. And all of a sudden something just gets dumped in our lap that is just nuttier than a fruitcake, man. I mean, it's just crazier than a pit cocoon. And we're trying to somehow just get through the day and then all of a sudden here comes something that just, you know.

 

They say being a caregiver is like coming to a road looking both ways before you cross and then getting hit by a plane. And when those things happen, how do you reorient yourself? How do you recalibrate your brain and your heart? And that's when you go back to Scripture and see what Scripture has to say about those things. And that's the Scripture I started off with today, “Let your eyes look directly forward, and your gaze be straight before you. Ponder the path of your feet and all your ways will be sure. Do not swerve to the right or to the left. Turn your foot away from evil.” That's Proverbs 4:25 through 27. It seems almost on the surface unsatisfying for us as caregivers to hear things like that because we want answers. We want a sure thing. Tell us how to get out of this mess. And I don't see that it works that way. The way out of the mess is through the mess. And we want to be so delivered but we don't understand that we're being delivered through it of far more than just our caregiving challenges. And that's the heartbreaking thing I think for us as caregivers to realize that there's multiple battles going on. And the biggest battle is not the loved one we're taking care of.

 

The biggest battle is what's going on in our own hearts and the things that God is zeroing in on and just keep-- It's like He keeps pressing on this one spot until we cry uncle, and we realize, oh, that's what he's after. And that's painful. That's hard, I know. But then you go back and look at the other Scripture we read today. “He heals the brokenhearted, Psalm 147:3, and binds up their wounds.” He's not doing these things haphazardly and he's using the circumstances in our life to reveal something about ourselves so that he can reveal something about Himself to us in that. There's a lot of broken stuff in our life. There’s a lot of broken stuff in my life. And God is using these circumstances around me that I deal with as a caregiver to reveal those things in me so that I run to him. You just have-- It's a different way of thinking about it. But this is what I've learned in 34 years of this. And we watch somebody suffer, and those of you who've watched somebody in pain and watch somebody suffer, you're going to get this really well. But to watch another human being suffer creates a theological argument inside you. And it just bores down all the way to the core of who we are because it seems so unfair.

 

It seems so un-Christ-like, un-God-is-good-like, and you hear all these people on TV that are talking about this and being delivered of this and you go to have your breakthrough here. And yet you and I are on watching somebody in pain. You and I are watching somebody suffer, day in and day out. And we wrestle with the concept of the goodness of God in the midst of that. I cannot be alone in this. I cannot be the only one that wrestles with that. But it's in that wrestling, that we get a chance to see him in a way that we don't expect. That's the issue. Because at the core of it, I think it’s a crisis of faith. Do we trust God while we watch this? Do we trust God while we see this? You remember, those of you who are old enough to remember it well that 9/11 when the nation was so shocked by this unimaginable horror of attack, and the nation reeled. And for the first three to four days, you could just see the stunned look in everybody's eyes. And then you started hearing the questions on the news and so forth, you know, how could God, why would God? And people were doing this kind of thing, and they were wrestling with it? Did they ever answer the question? A lot of pastors try to go on television and talk about it. But think about it, when we're faced with tragedy, we instantly ask how could God allow such a thing? But when the tragedy fades, we put the questions away. But you as a caregiver, you got to look at it every day. How are you doing with the question? 888-589-8840, 888-589-8840. This is Peter Rosenberger, and we'll be right back.

 

[Music]

 

Isn’t that a great song? It’s Keith Green. “There are sometimes I doubt but you always find me out.” It's exactly what we're talking about. Keith Green, well you go on after the show's over, go just do some research. If you don't know who he is or who he was, he still is, he's with Christ now, but just an enormous influence on the Christian music world, but I love that song. “There's sometimes I doubt but you always find me out.” He knows you doubt. This is Peter Rosenberger. This is Hope For The Caregiver. 888-589-8840, 888-589-8840. “There's sometimes you doubt, he's gonna find you out,” and he is pursuing you. And sometimes the path that he pursues you leads you through these dark places that seems so unpleasant, so horrifying to us. And yet what he's revealing is going to trump every bit of that. I go back to what I talked about at the beginning of the show, when I was out on the snowmobile and I'm on that trail, and it is a frightening trail. I promise you, but the view is so fabulous. In order to get to where I want to be, I'm going to have to go on that trail. There's no other way up there. And others have gone before me, I can see the path.

 

I am smart enough to not go up there by myself, number one, and number two, just after it's a brand new snow …because that's how you get stuck. And I just don't feel like digging my snowmobile out on a cliff at this point in my life. But there are others who go up there all the time and they get to see that spectacular view, and we all get to rejoice in it. That's our journey as believers. This is what we're doing. This is what it looks like as caregivers. And the journey right now, some of us it is incredibly frightening. I get it. Weeping endureth for a night, say it with me, but joy comes in the morning. And that's the promise, that's the hope for us as caregivers. That's what I call the show Hope For The Caregivers. That conviction that we as caregivers can live a calmer, healthier and even more joyful life, this is not the end of the story. Even the grave is not the end of the story. And it’s really important for us to understand that, and if we don't understand stand it, then despair will overtake us. Despair is going to be nipping at our heels, no matter what. And we're going to constantly fight it, but we don't have to be overtaken by it. And we will be if we don't continue to wrap our minds and our hearts with the things of the Gospel.

 

Now, you can try it your way, you can try it not doing that. You can just shake your fist at God and walk away from all this and see how that works for you. I don't recommend it. This is 34 years now that I've been doing this. My 34th year of caring for a human being who's broken, who suffers and has gone through more trauma and surgery and all kinds of things that I care to recount on this show. Some of you are living in similar circumstances. Is despair overtaking you? If you feel that way today then I'm glad you listened to the show because as one caregiver to another. I just want to tell you these things. These are things that I've learned. These are things that I've seen, these are things that I've experienced, that I've touched, that I've witnessed. This is not my opinion. I don't even care about my opinion. But my experience, on the other hand, now that's a different matter. “They overcame by the blood of the lamb and the word of their testimony.” That's what Scripture says in Revelation. So, it is the redeeming blood of Christ that equips us and then our experience, our testimony, our personal encounter with [??? 40:59] Christ, that's how we overcome. And the implication is there something that needs to be overcome. And for you as a caregiver, there's something that needs to be overcome. And it's not Alzheimer’s, it's not autism, it's not addiction, it's not a mutation. Well, that's a lot of alliteration I just use. It's not the affliction that we need to overcome. He's already overcome all of that. It hasn't been manifested yet in your life, but it is overcome. That's not what needs to be overcome by us. That's not how we endure through this. What needs to be overcome is our own hearts; the rage, the resentment, the fear, the doubt, selfishness. You say, “How can I be selfish? I'm a caregiver, look at all the things that I'm doing.” When we say those things, look at all that I'm doing, we've already indicted ourselves. And you are, please, again, I always have to have this disclaimer, I think John, John's producing the show today. And I have to probably have a recording a disclaimer that the views represent-- The views expressed by this host are things that God is working on in his life every day.

 

So, we may have to have that disclaimer played because these are not things that I own, these are things that I know. When I go up that trail on the mountain, I didn't make that trail and I don't own that trail, but I know where the trail is. And that's our journey as believers, that's our journey as we walk through these things as caregivers. And we can somehow try to put the battle over here that well if we can just get, you know, mom to stop doing this or if we can just-- if this would just, if this would just. And you really think that's gonna make everything go away or that's going to make you all feel that much better? Nah. That's not where the battle is. I can't fight amputation. I look at my wife's limbs and we're dealing with some prosthetic stuff right now. She still got a sore on her limb because of a prosthesis that we're working back and forth with. For those of you who are not in the amputation, prosthetic world, you won't really get this as much. For those of you in the-- that have limb loss in your family, you will.

 

But for example, when you have diabetes and you lose a limb, they go above the bad tissue wherever the infection or whatever it is, that’s causing the limb to be dysfunctional. They just go above it and find a healthy tissue and that's where they amputate. And you usually don't have a lot of the fitting issues that you would normally have. I mean that when you do with diabetes and so forth because you're cutting away to good tissue, but otherwise the person has not been damaged in other parts where it would affect the prosthesis. I didn't probably say that as clearly as I would like. But when you come to a situation like Gracie, she was so traumatized, everything was broken. One of the residents, surgery residents told her prosthesis later that they stopped counting at 200 breaks. And when you have that much trauma, then fitting a prosthesis to traumatized limbs, this is where a lot of wounded warriors will get this because those wounds were, they were incurred through trauma, roadside bombs and so forth. And when you have scar tissue and all those kinds of things, it's hard to get these things to fit properly. And it requires a lot of extra work.

 

And so we're dealing with those kinds of things right now. But I'm not a prosthetist. I don't even play one on TV. I mean, you know, I know enough about it from a layman's point of it. We run a prosthetic limb ministry. You heard Gracie’s story just a few moments ago. And we do this and I know enough to get me in trouble. But I can't fight that battle. I can't do that. I don't have the time and the wherewithal to go to prosthetic school or become an orthopedic surgeon or whatever and do all these things. That is not what I do and what I can do. Those are not my skill sets. I can't fight that. But I can fight being a jerk. I could fight that. I can fight being demanding. I can fight being resentful. I can fight cholesterol. The country ham that a friend of mine sent me for Christmas doesn't help me fight that battle, but I can fight it.

 

Are you fighting the wrong battle? Your battle is not with your loved one. However poorly they may act, your battle is not with your family or friends. However poorly they may act toward you, that's not your battle. The battle is always within our own hearts. “When peace, like a river, attendeth my way, When sorrows like sea billows row; Whatever my lot, Thou has taught me to say, It is well with my soul.”

 

Is it well with your soul today as a caregiver? Is it? If not, why not? Is it because your loved one’s acting funky? They may be a catalyst, but that's not the battle. You want to know more? Go out to HopeForTheCaregiver.com. Get the book. Get the CD. Let Gracie and I play and sing for you. Don't do this alone. I’m so glad you joined us today. And get the podcast, we’ll have this out on the website later on. We'll see you next week. HopeForTheCaregiver.com. This is Peter Rosenberger. Healthy caregivers make better caregivers.

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American family radio, this is caregiver. This is Peter Rosenberg. This is the nation's number one chauffeur unit was a family caregiver.

Those of you who are knowingly and willingly and voluntarily putting yourself in a vulnerable love one.

And even worse disaster.

Get up every day and you do this to maybe do it from a couple hundred miles away in your ensuring that finances are being met that staff show up to do things or whatever. There's all kinds of different ways to be a caregiver with the challenges on the heart level are still the same and some of us are up close and personal doing it every day all day long. Some of us are checking in once a day. Some of us are supporting financially those who are there's just a lot of different scenarios of this and some of us had just have had to take a step back. You may have a loved one is alcoholism or addiction has created such a destructive swath that you can't participate up close and personal, but they have a chronic impairment where there's a chronic impairment. There's caregiver that would be you get a special needs child or you get an aging parent, you get somebody with the traumatic brain injuries who traumatic brain injury whose personality has changed dramatically and they don't think or respond in the normal way adults would in your engage with this individual every day. Yet somebody gets violent mood swings, sleeveless mental illness. There are so many different scenarios. There's always a caregiver for every kind of affliction and that's why we do the show. How are you feeling how are you doing what's going on with you.

We speak fluent caregiver here and were very grateful American family radio that they they see the value of this exceed the need and family is the middle name of American family radio in the show is all about the family caregiver 888-589-8840 888-589-8840 if you want to be a part of the show when you don't really have to have any kind of important question or some earth shattering think sometimes you just want to just talk to somebody and that's one of things we encourage you to do on the show is to reach out to somebody and have a conversation.

Don't sit in isolation. Your why we do the show were taking community to the caregiver, because it's hard to get out. It's hard to connect with other people. It's hard to know what to say.

It's hard to know how to respond and it's it's frustrating and and you you if you want have a friendship or meaningful friendships in this thing you you gotta have people that are willing to embrace the pain that you carry. That's not an easy thing and you feel, weird about sharing some of those things with people I get okay. You don't want exposure love one, and you don't feel like having to drag everything all out on the table. I get that that's what we do show because here you don't have to bring me up to speed on this show we speak fluent caregiver okay so 888-589-8840 888-589-8840 will start off with the Scripture. I thought this may be appropriate. Web scriptures always appropriate, but all I like to be laser being focused when it comes to the heart needs of the family caregiver and this is this is the Scripture that I've saw and it was.

I struggle with this. Okay, I struggle with looking all around and getting distracted. I think sometimes we as caregivers, you know, shiny objects in it.

We get our attention span gets pulled somebody different places. Proverbs 425 I'm reading in the English standard standard version, but I'm going to about do it and then in another woman.

To paraphrase, let your eyes look directly forward. This is Proverbs 425 to 27.

Let your's look directly forward in your gaze be straight before you ponder the path of your feet, then all your ways will be sure.

Do not swerve to the right or to the left turn your foot away from evil. I never read that from the message okay keep vigilant over your heart. That's where life starts don't talk out of both sides of your mouth. Avoid careless banter white lies and gossip.

Keep your eyes straight ahead ignore all sideshow distractions.

Watch your step in the road will stretch out smooth before you look neither right nor left leave evil in the dust. What is that mean to us as caregivers when you're taking care of someone and you, for those were brand-new to the caregiving journey. It may not mean as much to you, right at this moment but for those of you who've locks in real time. In this you understand it, we get pulled in all kinds of direction. It is so easy for us to, you know, being looking over to the right look of the left looking backward. Wheatley spent a lot of time looking backwards, but we spent a lot of time also. Fearing the future and we can look straight in front of us just deal with what's ahead of us right mail and that's how we do it now again I would would really encourage you to not ever think that I own all of this, but I'm reminding myself of these things and and I have a great visual. The just the other day I'm in Southwest Montana and I went out on the snowmobile do that a lot just come clear the cobwebs of my head and Montana is a big state the mountains behind us a big mountains and I have a lot of cobweb so I need a big state with big mountains. I guess so out there with my neighbor down the road and we went out riding and learn how to ride snowmobiles from his father raising my heart is right snowmobile as well. Were we go.

There is no lifeguard on duty were not out there on nice groomed roads that are flat and smooth were were were doing some pretty intensive writing and there's just one trail that I've been riding on for 20 years and there's a lot of switchbacks on it it it's going up incredibly steep and the snow was very deep right now. We've had a lot of new snow and it's very deep and you really got up the there's a lot of balance in and there. There's kind of a trick to writing snowmobile.

You don't just sit on and press the throttle. You really have to you don't handle the machine and certainly particularly have deep powder snow. In this particular trail is the basically the width of the snowmobiles. Not much more than that, and on one side there's a drop off of of several hundred feet and it's up fairly frightening trail and every time I get up. The rack is clinch up what they get. Only why my doing this again will a T-1 do it again because the view at the top of this trail is spectacular but to get there. It's it is good on it it it's a little bit of a challenge and that when you come out of this one clearing and the drop-off is so steep. Besides, you, you're tempted to look at the view. There because it isn't is a great view it up of snuck up peek out of my peripheral vision, and looked about right there to see this view of the stripper that I quickly look back and stare straight at the trail so I don't go off the cliff because that that's what you call a bad thing when you go off the cliff and I wait until I get up to a place of safety record. Look at the view from a place of safety that I have to keep my eyes on the trail have to stay focused. I can't be distracted.

I can't look around because there's real danger if I do, and I think this for us as caregivers us, where we are.

A lot of times there are some places that we would love to be able to stop in view but it's not safe to do that we have to keep our eyes focused straight ahead and keep her head again not get distracted looking left to right, but just try to speak of you out of a horrific but you keep focused on the trail in front of that word is a lamp to my feet and a light into my path.

We don't necessarily see 700 yards down the road and on this particular trail and run on your doing good to look 10 feet ahead before switchbacks straining so for the kick Peter Rosenberg 888-589-8841 Americans in this is the nation's number one show for you as a family caregiver you why we do the show because he lives we can face tomorrow that we are not paralyzed by the circumstances that were in were not overwhelmed by the start of the easy and heard a great close to the basicity, but he says life is easy as selling something that's not going hard work, but doesn't mean it can't be done. It doesn't mean that you're gonna be doomed to seeing ugly things in life for the whole life. There is beauty and joy all around you, even in the midst of very difficult challenges. 888-589-8840 888-589-8840 if you will be a part of the show were live-are you doing as a caregiver. How are you holding up. I know that so many of you are looking at very grim things every day and are times when you just hang your head in weariness, I get it. Been there, done that, got the T-shirt still feel that way at times. I really do. And so what do you do when you get that way. How do you how you strengthen yourself.

How do you work through that you talk to are you hearing messages from your pastor that are strengthening are you calling anyone. Is anyone calling you.

You why we do the show because so many of you are not engaged in a good church situation. So many of you are just by yourself and the only lifeline you have is coming through the radio or through your app that you listen to, or whatever device you listen this show on and this may be the only place where you're hearing anything the speaking to you is up in the know in the voice of a caregiver to your heart as a caregiver child to take advantage of the show. I want you to take advantage of this time and be part of share what's on your heart and I want to try to plow as many things into your heart to strengthen you along the journey. Just as people done for me and them also noted for myself that's how we do it as believers.

It's not a one and done, by the way, it's not something you just get okay I got it. I want to move all the rest of my life. None of this is the rest of our lives. We will be needing to say these things every day to ourselves and if anybody tells you different the lab out of the things to because this is how it's done. Go back and look through all of Scripture. It is a constant reaffirming of the gospel is a constant reaffirming of the work of Christ. It is a constant reaffirming of the faithfulness of God. God knows that were scared. He knows that were weary.

He knows that were strong but through all of Scripture unit you'll never find one Scripture says hey I know you got that I see around the later pieces home with you always.

I know you're scared but don't be afraid. Don't be afraid. Don't be afraid. Don't be afraid I'm here I'm here I'm here okay and and I II just can't stress enough to you these things on what it means to you is a family caregiver to be reaffirming these messages I will read another Scripture T-1 Psalm 147, three Psalms.

My mother tells me this a lot that you know the Psalms is a great place to go when you don't really know what else to say or do. You can go into the Psalms and listen to others. Before you particularly King David pour out his heart but he wasn't only the was involved in the Psalms are there others that wrote themselves and their their lot of a route I laments they're struggling in there and you could see the shift in their in their faith, particularly David supposedly starts off with you know I'm I'm struggling to how long the Lord or you know all these things and then he wrenches his will into the will of God, and you can hear almost the wheels turning in his head as he is reaffirming his trust in God. Psalm 147 three.

He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds rated in the message he heals the heartbroken and bandages their wounds. How many of you as caregivers have had to dress wounds. I would have ever done that quite a bit and my wife has a lot of wounds she had terrible accident back in 83, 80 surgeries later that we can count hundred 50 other smaller procedures. Got one right now that were having to watch very carefully how many of you will of bandaged wounds.

You know what that's like you understand that you have wounds that require bandaging to every time you dress the wound and some of the ones we are to dress as caregivers to be fairly complex wounds I've had to do dressings where I've had to gallop you know in masking and gloves and in the whole thing.

And that's not that's not easy and as you think about that as you change one as you look at a woman as you look at the angry one angry loser wound that is inflamed and in and read and in irritated you have wounds like that is a caregiver. Do you know that you have wounds like that should also have a Savior who bandages those wounds was tending to those wounds they don't heal overnight. Sometimes it takes cash. It seems like it just takes forever for them to heal and some wounds don't heal this side of heaven completely. Do you understand can you picture what it's like to have a Savior that's bandaging your wounds as a caregiver, let me describe some of those wounds are maybe wounds of resentment. Maybe you have been pierced all the way to the core of who you are, by the very person you're caring for. Maybe they have said and done things to you the just cut you so deep you gotta keep on being a caregiver.

Maybe your changing someone's diapers, an aging parent. Whatever who is just cursing at you or maybe get family members who are criticizing you and you are showing up every day doing what they're not doing their criticizing you and you lots of pointers and suggestions on how to do it better.

Those wounds maybe for church folk pastors who have chastise you for your lack of faith. Maybe some of your wounds are self-inflicted.

You brought this child into the world with the disability and you blame yourself for maybe you just continuing this just create your own wounds, but just beating yourself. You have a Savior that bandages up all of those wounds and more.

Did you know that if you know that that's clear.

Savior is he heals the heartbroken bandages their wounds are you wounded today as you're listening to the show are those wounds front and center in your thoughts and mine. My dad longtime minister greatest influence on my life and the song that defines his entire ministry is an old spiritual call balm in Gilead. That's balm BA Elliott not BOM be. Forgive my southern accent. For those of you speak southern accent probably understood what I say but for those you don't. It's balm BAL M a soothing ointment. There's a balm in Gilead to make the wounded hole. There is a balm in Gilead to heal the sin sick soul. Gracie recorded this on her CD. You can get a copy of it and I would highly recommend you doing so you got to hope for the caregiver.com and take a look at it it's it's a extraordinary arrangement that she saying and I was always a further song song silly times and I think they try to recapture the old spiritual sound for it and everybody that I heard performer growing up saying it like you know there is a ball really like their second old man river in the thing and I didn't think it needed be performed that way. This is a song of lament and from people who are in pain. That's the origins of the song and it and I felt like it needed to be sung by someone who was in pain and my wife is not noted Dave without pain. Since Reagan's first term. 37 years. This year, and so when she sings this she singing it from the depth of that pain. Gracie is a real Singerman and no kidding singer and when I played this for her and I slowed it down and at a plated forcing she was in her wheelchair and she saying it will have to track which what that means for those you not really in the music scene, whatever that much of we weren't punching anything it she didn't have to do a bunch of takes with it or fix this.

Of this, she just think it and what came from her was so extraordinary because she understood the concept. There is a balm in Gilead to make the wounded hole that she's learned both of her legs are gone or bodies orthopedically of a wreck. She's wound and she's had more bandages on earth, on people and nobody I don't know anybody setting bandages on her like she has in wounds is at least orthopedically physically, but I would suggest to you that he was a caregiver understand wounds of that level II just a different way and I would also encourage you not to dismiss those. There were you they are painful and they require attention. Good news is you have a Savior that attention you have Savior that knows how to dress one more your wounds as a caregiver dating five 8848 589 88 have a question just call just one caregiver to dispute Rosenberg Hope caregiver will be right here on American family radio, the nation's number one show for the caregiver about what that's every loss of the nations podcasts for the podcast is very easy for caregiver.com. It's all there at the website and you can it's free podcast, but does this show with other bonus materials and all kinds of things we do out there is a free podcast and I'm very grateful for American family radio for see the value of what we do and taking this message to this incredibly underserved population for the family caregiver for those who work knowingly, willingly and voluntarily put themselves between vulnerable of one.

And even worse disasters sometimes were doing it at the expense of our own bodies of our own hearts of our own wallets of our own careers. All those kinds of things. How you help these people how you strengthen the family caregiver. What is it look like that's what the show was about 888-589-8848 885-8988 Ford and I go back to the Scripture we started with overcome just drill down on this little bit more so that you can leave the show today after the show. My goal for the show was is at the end of the show. I leave you little better than a found you know something that you can hang onto that's tangible right where you are is a caregiver and I can't take away your stuffing morning take away mine. I can't fix what you deal with them more than you could fix but but we can build each other up in this and we can sustain so there's not a destination where he you get to what was it okay I've got this undone even at the grave that doesn't info the caregiver because II maintained that the caregiver has a PTSD quality that affects them.

After the funeral. Now I can't say that from personal experience because I'm still a caregiver memo 34th year of this, but I can say that with reasonable certainty based on the number of caregivers I've talked to in the amount of time I spent in this world that just because your loved one passes away doesn't mean that the challenges you're dealing with and the things the wounds that you're dealing with. Just go away you.

I think that's a mistake a lot of people make is to get into this world as a caregiver that it's if we can just get them to stop doing this they will be okay but it doesn't work that way and those of you will submit a longevity in this understand that concept takes a while to figure that out in the first at the beginning part of your journey to caregiver. We spent a lot of time trying to run around in a flurry trying to do this, this, it is this because were trying to do to fight off all the tigers that are attacking us and then after a while we realized tigers are stop coming and we got have a different strategy.

We can't just keep rushing out. We've got to replenish. We got to the stock up. We got to to endure this and that's why when I wrote the book, and hopefully caregiver in my other books when I do the show in all the things that we do. It was always designed to equip caregivers to endure not to not to accomplish or not to to to rain victoriously. She has a caregiver but to endure, but to endure with more calmness to endure with more hope to endure with more joy so not content to just kinda grind my teeth and survive this. I want to grow in it more portly.

I want to see God differently in this, and more importantly than that he desires to reveal himself to us in greater depth in this everything Scripture confirms that and he reveals himself to us in suffering. CS Lewis says his suffering is God's megaphone because sometimes we just don't want to listen to the whisper.

I've never heard anybody say boy I sure that the easy way.

If it's is this not the way it works for us is at least not for me.

When you are the crash test dummy of caregivers ghetto you you and I've got. I would have logged ample time with this. So I've had enough time to make enough mistakes that you start seeing a pattern you can only run into a brick wall so the time before.

Eventually you're going to have to fix trust that was not move for some of us it takes longer than others. For me it did quite a bit of time but that's all right. I want you as a caregiver to to grab a hold of these concepts. I see a lot of people try to meet the needs of caregivers in the media, in an you know other shows whatever Latimer talk about logistics. You know and and and then a lot of them talk about platitudes. You take care yourself. Make sure you take care yourself. You and I get that I get it and I appreciate it. God bless. But on this show were going to drill down into the matters of the heart because I think that's where the battle is for caregivers. If your heart is a train wreck. Then guess what your wallet will be to the way you interact with other relationships will be to your job will be to and so if we speak to the heart and strengthen the heart of the family caregiver that would provide a fighting chance for us to deal with these other issues, so when I am faced with grim news from the doctor or behavior or the married of other things that can come at us sideways were just trying to just live peacefully. All of a sudden something just gets dumped at our lamp that is just nuttier know fruitcake man I mean is just crazy in the pit.

Kuhn and were trying to somehow just get through the day that all said here comes something to just know this a be a caregivers like coming to a road looking both ways before you cross and then getting hit by a plane, you know it when those things happen. How do you reorient yourself. How do you recalibrate your brain in your heart.

That's when you go back to Scripture and see what Scripture has to say about those things and that's that the Scripture started off with a let your eyes look directly forward in your gaze be straight before you ponder the path of your feet in all your ways will be sure not swerve to the writer to the left turn your foot away from evil. That's all that's Proverbs 25 proper 425 through 20 7/8. It seems almost on the surface unsatisfying for us as caregivers to hear things like that because we want answers we want a sure thing.

Tell us how to get out of this mess and I don't I don't see that it works that way the weight out of the mess is through the mess and we want to be so delivered. We don't understand that were being delivered through it of far more than just our caregiving challenges. That's the heartbreaking thing. I think for us as caregivers to realize that there's multiple battles going on in the biggest battle is not the love one were taking care of the biggest battle is what's going on in our own hearts and the things that God is zeroing in on and just keep it slightly keeps keeps pressing on this one spot until we cry uncle would realize, oh that's what is after that's painful. That's hard. I know, but then you go back and look at the other Scripture we read today he heals the brokenhearted Psalm 147 three and binds up their wounds. He's not doing these things haphazardly and is using the circumstances of our life to reveal something about ourselves so that he can reveal something about himself to us in that there's a lot of broken stuff in our life Ladbrokes stuff in my life and God is using the circumstances around the that I deal with as a caregiver to reveal those things in me that I run to him. You just have to it's a different way of thinking about, but this is what I've learned and 34 years of this, we watched somebody suffer, and those of you who want somebody in pain and what somebody suffer. You can get this really well, but to watch another human being, suffer creates a theological argument inside you and it just bores down all the way to the core of who we are because it seems so unfair. It seems so on Christlike done.

God is good, like an you hear all these people on television to talk about this and being delivered of this and you gotta have your breakthrough here and yet you and I are watching somebody in pain. You and I are watching somebody suffer day in and day out, and we wrestle with the concept of the goodness of God in the midst of that I cannot be alone in this.

I cannot be the only one that wrestles with, but it's in that wrestling that we get a chance to see him in a way that we don't expect that's the issue because at the core of it I think is a crisis of faith do we trust God, while we watched this. Do we trust God, while we see this new member. Those of you old enough to remember well that 9/11 when the nation was so shocked by this. On imaginable.

Horror of attack and the nation reeled in for the first 3 to 4 days. You could just see the stunned look in everybody's eyes and then he started hearing the questions on the news and so forth. You know how could God have. Why would God in the end if people were doing this kind of thing and they were wrestling with the ever answer the question a lot of pastor struggle television talk about it. But think about it were faced with tragedy instantly asked how can convalescent when the tragedy fades, but the questions were used to caregiver to look at it every day. Are you doing?

888589 848-885-8984 this is Peter Rosenberg and is a great song is Keith Green there. Sometimes I doubt that you will always find me out exactly what were talk about Keith Green. They'll go on after the shows over go just do some research on if you don't know who he is.

Was he still is he's he's with Christ now but just an enormous influence on the Christian music world and but I love it so you there. Sometimes I doubt you always find me out you know you doubt this is Peter Rosenberg. This is hopefully caregiver 888-589-8848 885-898-8840 other sometimes doubt is unified yeah and he is pursuing you and sometimes the past that he pursues you leads you through these dark places that seems so unpleasant, so horrifying to us and yet what he's revealing is going to trump every bit of a go back to what I talked about beginning the show when I was out of the snowmobile and I'm on the trail and it is a frightening trail. I promise you that.

But the view was so fabulous in order to get to where I want to be. I'm going to have to go on that trail. There's no other way up there and others and gone before me. I can see the path I am smart enough to not go up there by myself number one and number two, just afterwards a brand-new snow because that's how you get stuck it out just I just don't feel like digging my snowmobile left on a cliff at this point my life so but there are others who go up there all the time and they get to see that spectacular view. We all get to rejoice in. That's our journey as believers.

This is what were doing. This is what it looks like as caregivers in the journey.

Right now some of us it is incredibly frightening. I get weeping and doers four night stay with me with joy comes in the morning.

That's the promise. That's the hope for us as caregivers and freckles show hope for the caregivers that conviction that we as caregivers can live a calm healthier and even more joyful life. This is not the end of the story.

Even the grave is not the end of the story that's really important for us to understand that if we don't understand it and despair will overtake us.

The spares will be nipping at her heels, no matter what you constantly fight it but we don't have to be overtaken back and we will be if we don't continue to wrap our minds and our hearts with the things of the gospel that you can try it your way, you can trot not doing that you can just shake your fist at God, and walk away from all this and see how that works for me. I will recommend this 34 years now that I've been doing this my 34th year of caring for a human being whose broken who suffers and is going through trauma and surgery and all kinds of things that I care to recount on the show. Some of you are living in similar circumstances is despair overtaking you if you feel that way today. I'm glad you listen to the show because is one caregiver to another.

I just want to tell you these things these things that I've learned these things that are saying these things that I've experienced enough touched that I've witnessed this is not my opinion I don't even care about my opinion but my experience on the other. That's a different matter. They overcame by the blood of the lamb and the word of their testimony is what Scripture says in Revelation so it is the redeeming blood of Christ that equips us and in our experience are testimony our personal encounter with that Christ.

That's how we overcome and the implication is there something that needs to be overcome, and for you as a caregiver there, something needs to be overcome, and is not Alzheimer's. It's not autism. It's not addiction it's not amputation when it's a lot of alliteration I just use it's not affliction that we need to overcome.

He's already overcome all that it has been manifested yet in your life, but it is overcome. That's not what needs to be overcome by us.

That's not how we endure through this. What needs to be overcome is our own hearts the rage.

The resentment, the feared the doubt the selfishness. How can I be selfish on the caregiver look at all the things that I'm doing when we say those things. Look at all that I'm doing. We've already indicted ourselves and you are pleased again.

I always have to have this disclaimer, I think John John's producing show dates and I have to probably have a recording disclaimer that the views represent the views expressed by this house or things that God is working on his life every day. We got to have that disclaimer blade because these are not things that I own. These are things that I know when I go with that trail on the mountain. I did make that trail and I don't own that trail, but I know where the treeless that's her journey is as believers is our journey as is, as we walk through these things as caregivers, we can somehow try to put the battle over here that will, if we can just get your mom to stop doing this or if we can just if this will just if this would just think that's going to make everything go away or that's going to make you all feel much better. That's not what the battlers II can't fight amputation. I look at my wife's limbs and would deal with some prosthetic stuff right now. She still got a sore on her limb because of prostheses that were you were working back and forth with when you for those you not in the amputation prosthetic world won't really get this is much for those in the if I have limb loss in your family you will, but for example when you have diabetes and you lose a limb. They they go above the bad tissue.

Wherever the infection or whatever this is causing the lamb to to be dysfunctional. They just go above and find healthy tissue.

That's where they amputate and usually don't have a lot of the fitting issues that you would normally have been the that way when you do with diabetes and so forth. Because your your cutting away to good tissue, but otherwise the person is not been damaged in other parts where it would affect the prostheses probably say that as clearly as I would like but the newcomer situation like Gracie. She was so traumatized. Everything was broken heard one of the residents of the surgery residents total process. This later that they can they stop Kelly at 200 breaks and when you have that much trauma then feeding a prostheses to traumatize limbs. This is where a lot of wounded warriors will get this because those wounds were in it with. They were incurred through trauma, roadside bombs and and so forth. And we have scar tissue and all this because he thinks it's hard to get these things to fit properly and it requires a lot of extra work and some were dealing with those kinds of things right now but I'm not a prostitute running play one on TV. I'm not you know I known enough about it from a layman's point of it. We run a prosthetic limb minister. You heard Gracie story just a few moments ago and we do this. I know enough to get me in trouble, but I can't fight that battle I can't do that.

I don't have the time and the wherewithal to go to prosthetic school well or become an orthopedic surgeon or whatever and do all the things that is not what I do and what I can do. Those are not my skill set the can't fight that. But I can't fight being a jerk. I could fight I can fight being demanding I can fight resentful.

I'm fight cholesterol the country ham that a friend of mine sent me for Christmas doesn't help me fight that battle. But I can't find you fighting the wrong battle battle is not with your left, however poorly they may act your battle is not with your family or friends however poorly they may act toward you that's not your battle. The battle is always within our own hearts.

When peace like a River attendance my way, when sorrows like sea billows roll whatever my lot, thou hast taught me to say it is well with my soul. Is it well with your soul today is a caregiver visit. If not, why not is because your loved ones acting funky they may be a catalyst.

That's not the battle. No more blood to hope for the caregiver.com get the seating migration a play and sing for don't do this alone. Glad to join his podcast will have this out on the website later on. See next week. Hopefully caregiver.com's health caregivers make better caregivers