A Spidery Inconvenience

05 October


For the past two years, I lived in the basement of a house. While there are massive pros to this such as a cooler atmosphere and more space, there are also massive cons. One of which is VERMIN. 

When I first moved in, I truly had no idea how many rodents and insects were lurking around the basement of my parents' house, the most popular of which were spiders. Now, normally as a rule, I don't really get freaked out by small spiders. I can squish it and move on. But big spiders? Spiders the size of quarters, much less my palm? No, thank you. 

I remember distinctly at first when I would see large spiders in the basement, I'd text my landlord (read: my dad) to come down and kill them for me. I'd avoid that area until I was sure that it was gone and that my basement was free from eight-legged inconveniences.  

That was, until encountering them became more of the norm. 

Over those two years, the more I saw them, the more I started to realize that the spiders were there all the time, whether or not I saw them was a different story. So, over time, I became less startled by them. I got to the point where I'd see a spider scurry across the floor and just shrug and continue on with what I was doing. We could co-exist. He wasn't bothering me and I knew that in just a little bit, I'd come back and he'd be gone. I didn't need to know where he went. In fact, it's better if I didn't.

I even would go as far as to say that my fight or flight receptors are immune to spiders at this point because I was so conditioned to them for so long. 


2020 has metaphorically been one big spider pit.

2020 has been riddled with my biggest fear: uncertainty. 

Lots and lots of inconvenient, spidery uncertainty. 


But because of this, much like my spider friends, I've finally become comfortable with uncertainty. 

For as long as I can remember, uncertainty has been my biggest fear. Aside from my anxiety, I have a personality that very much likes to know the details of things. As a writer and a teacher, I need a well laid plan. Problem is, life honestly doesn't work that way. 

Before the pandemic, I lived under the guise of certainty. There were areas of my life that I felt more comfortable with simply because I felt like I had more control or there was more certainty attached to them.

What ended up happening though was that every single area in which I thought I had certainty suddenly became uncertain:

  • My job was put on hold and I was no longer able to feel successful and quite honestly "hide" from life's problems at work. 
  • My trip to Disney was canceled. Which is a small thing but not when it's used as an escape from the weight of life's problems. 
  • My Master's Degree graduation was canceled indefinitely. Which I'd been working toward for two years and by that point, was all I felt I had left to look forward to. 
The bottom line was that by May, I felt incredibly defeated. I felt like 2020 had taken absolutely everything away from me. In reality, God had allowed every guise of certainty and every method of escape to be stripped away so that I could become comfortable with uncertainty and thus trust Him more.

Because the bottom line is this. When life would get hard, I would run to God, yes, but not all the way. I always had other things in my life that I'd be able to console myself with saying, "Well at least I still have _______________..." 

  • When I go through breakups, I usually throw myself into my work and volunteer for all the things because it makes me feel like I'm not a failure. "If I'm not good at relationships, at least I'm still good at my job..." 
  • "I feel suffocated by all of the things happening in my life at home, but at least I get to escape this and feel like it doesn't exist at Disney..."
  • "I may still be single, but at least I can be proud of myself that I used this time to get my degree and I still get to celebrate that..." 
I lost it all. Every "at least" that I had left to hang on to. 

I no longer had the "certainties" of life to console me. I genuinely only had God. I would say I had no choice but to trust him, but that's not true. I could either trust Him or sink deep into the despair of what I'd lost and ultimately things I could not control. I chose to trust because if I hadn't chosen that, I wouldn't have survived.

What God taught me was that while those things are good, they are, in fact, not certain at all. They may be mostly stable, they may be around for a while, and they are probably good, but they do not last. They are not certain after all. 

My whole perspective was flipped and here's the emergent truth: Nothing in this world is actually certain. 


So I sat around for months. Not knowing if I was going to go back to work. Not knowing if that date from Bumble was going to turn into anything past an initial conversation. Not knowing literally what tomorrow would look like in the season of Corona, an election year, and social unrest. And all of these things really sucked, but it taught me probably the most valuable lesson I've learned in the past 5 years. 

Because now I'm in a season where everything is still uncertain, if not more uncertain than before. I don't know what my job is going to look like when we start going back in person next month. I don't know if I'm going to contract Coronavirus at work and have to self-isolate for 2 weeks trapped in my room so I don't infect my roommates. I don't know what relationships with loved ones look like day to day as they are constantly evolving through personal conflict and unrest. I don't know if tomorrow I will break down and just cry at the grief of this year or if I'll be able to face it with strength.

Nothing is certain. 

Where that would have destroyed me before (and make no mistake it sometimes gets the best of me now too) it really just lets me lean deeper into an authentic trust with God. It's how I can live with a peace that passes understanding even when my life is a whole mess. One day at a time.

Honestly, I kind of hate that it sounds so "Christiany" because I think that almost makes it sound easy. But it's not as easy as it sounds. It took me a long time and a whole worldwide pandemic to learn to not be afraid and try to control the spiders of life, but rather to let them live among me. 


You Might Also Like

0 comments


About Me

Christian first, teacher second, boyband connoisseur third.

I'm walking through the Christian life struggling just as much as everyone else, but I just happen to process my struggles through writing. These are my thoughts; these are my revelations.

My Story

More from Megan

Popular Posts