It starts when we are kids. Â You play games with friends and there’s always someone who scores more points. Â Early on in school, we learn to associate our knowledge level with a grade. Â As we age, we either wear our years with pride or wish we were older (or younger). Â I remember longing for the day I turned 18, turned out it was just another day in my life. Â Eventually, we become defined socially by the amount of money on our paycheck, or lack thereof. Â At some point we begin to realize the numbers on the scale say a lot about who we are, or rather reinforces what others have said about us for years. Â Our society uses these number games to put people in their place. Â If you get good grades you enter an elite group, if you don’t, you join the ranks of another group. Â If you earn a certain paycheck you are “better” than someone else making less than you.
As  a girl, I grew up being judged for my looks quite early.  I learned that I could get attention by doing well in school.  Sadly over time that attention from teachers just made me more of an outcast from my peers.  I was bigger than other kids, physically matured before my peers, and was smarter than a lot of my classmates for most of my youth.  All of these things put me in the nerdy, unwanted group of kids.
Unfortunately there are some labels you don’t outgrow. Â I admit and wear my geek badge with pride now. Â I’m working on outgrowing those unwanted pounds that for years have made me feel unwelcome and unloved by others. Â But I find I still thrive to meet the high expectations I set for myself all those years ago when I knew the only way for me to succeed was to do well in school.
I’m now less than a year from graduating college, a few too many years later than I originally planned. Â So far I’ve maintained a 3.95 GPA and have fought to maintain it. Â I know that number is trivial. It won’t help me get a job or do much but make me feel good about myself. Â It’s amazing how a grade can make me feel so deflated, stupid, and incapable. The truth is I’ve overcome many obstacles to get to where I am today. Â I will continue to face and over come many more in the months to come.
I think for me the biggest lesson God is teaching me through the college experience is to let go. Â It’s a lesson I constantly need to relearn. Â I’m no longer the smartest kid in the class, and while it hurts my ego, in the end it doesn’t really matter. Â What matters is finishing a dream God put on my heart and discovering the plan He has for me. Â Everything else is just icing on the cake. Â I know I’ll continue to struggle to accept my grades when they are not what I think they should be, but I think learning to accept the reality that I can’t do it all will eventually win out.
I’m currently going to school, training to run a 5K, raising 3 kids, maintaining our home, regularly volunteering at church, and trying to be a supportive and loving wife. Â I can’t give any one of these things my undivided attention, that means I can’t have a spotless house and straight A’s. Â It also means I may not always have dinner cooked when Dean gets home, the energy to hang out with friends, or even stay awake long enough to find out how Dean’s day was. Â There are seasons of life, and for right now I’m spreading myself thin, as I tend to do. Â This may mean letting go of grades or having a dirtier house, but in the end what matters is that I do what God has called me to do. Â First and foremost that is to be there for my kids, husband, and friends when they need me. Â If I’m discouraged and grouchy because I’m flailing in some part of my life then I can’t be there to give to those around me. So today I quit. Â I quit playing the numbers game. Â I lay my marriage, my kids, my GPA, the cleanliness of my house, the number on the scale, the amount in the checkbook,and the time I have to exercise at the foot of the throne of God and give Him control because if it’s up to me I’d lose the game every single day.
