In my nearly half a century on the planet I’ve found that life rarely unfolds in the way that we imagine it will. God, in His sovereignty, has His own unique way of making things happen and I’ve learned just to yield when I sense His hand at work. In those moments it is best to be as a little child, who simply trusts the direction of his father, regardless of whether he really understands the purpose of it all. And so it was one evening, a few years ago. As I walked through the living room and saw about 15 seconds of a commercial for a new reality show about children’s pageants and the people who participate in them. Within that snippet I saw a young girl (maybe 4 or 5 years old) sobbing, and her mother angrily venting her disapproval and bellowing, “I’m doing all of this for you!” Rightly or wrongly, my immediate sense was that this woman was deceiving herself and no doubt doing untold damage to her child.
As a father of four (two boys and two girls) I was sickened at the thought of a parent who would be willing to crush their child under the weight of their own unfulfilled expectations. Though I’d seen fathers do this to their sons on countless ball fields/courts, it was somehow even more startling to watch a mother do it to her daughter. As my own heart grieved I sensed the grief of heaven join in and I quickly became overwhelmed with emotion. As I closed my eyes to pray I began to feel the broken heart of this girl. Strangely, it was not her heart in the instant that I had witnessed, but her heart years later, as she stood at the threshold of adulthood. As I lingered in that moment, words began to flow and the following verses emerged.
Pageant Girl
Want you to know that I don’t blame you
You just wanted “the best” for me
You sacrificed so much to make me a winner
You deserved better
If I just could’ve stood a little straighter
If my hair wasn’t so stringy
All those cute little outfits
To you, sexy just meant playful
But playful meant something different to them
Anything you serve like an hors d’oeurve is bound to be devoured
If only I had been a better singer
If I just had fuller lips
I tried to smile for the camera
It’s what happened when the camera was off that made it hard
Thank God for makeup
The bruises & scars never showed
Maybe if I had been smarter
If I wasn’t so clumsy
You always said there was a price to pay
And I’ve tried hard to “live the dream”
Guess I must not have wanted it bad enough
You deserved better
If only I had been taller
If I wasn’t so flat-chested
Always in the court, but never the Queen
At nineteen, it’s already too late for me
The “1st Alternate” to the winner is still just a loser
Who could want me now?
If only I could have lost more weight
If my eyes weren’t so close together
I’m sorry for letting you down
For leaving the stage before the show is really over
I’m sorry about all of this blood on the floor
But as it weeps from my wrists, I feel strangely free
If only I could have been a daughter you could be proud of
It is hard to describe the profound nature of experiencing these emotions as though they were my own and maybe even harder to explain why God would allow me (a forty something year old man) to have such an experience. The one thing I felt sure of was that I should try to legitimately speak from the heart of this precious child, and, in as much as I knew how, that is what this piece was about for me. But after the emotion of the moment ebbed, I was faced with the daunting question of what to do with all this. While I hoped that people might be touched by the devastating consequences of the unrealistic expectations that are so often heaped upon our children, I couldn’t help but wonder how I might answer the practical questions of where this writing came from and what made me credible to be its author.
Like a coward, I thought about sticking it into one of my many notebooks, where no one but God and I could find it. But a dear friend reminded me that if God had indeed facilitated this experience, it must be for someone. So I said a little prayer and posted it on my blog www.bryancorbin.com where someone might stumble upon it. Within minutes, I received a response from a young woman, half way around the world, who said that she felt as though it had been written specifically for her. She shared her own heartbreaking poem with me, where she cries out to a father who’d made her feel like a disappointment. While I tried to share some uplifting words with her, our exchange was brief. But knowing that someone had profoundly connected with it was all I needed to validate that there had been some purpose behind the whole experience.
Until recently, it has remained tucked away in the archives of my website and frankly, I had no plans to do anything more with it. Of course, that doesn’t mean that God doesn’t have plans of His own. Like fresh leaves in springtime, there seems to be new life emerging from these roots and hopefully the branches will reach even further in this season. Upon reflection, I can see that this was about more than just girls who’ve suffered through the pageant circuit. It is really for any child who’s been made to feel like they are less than what they were created to be. And now, instead of simply being a stark picture of the pain that comes with that, a counterpoint of hope has been set upon the horizon. With the benefit of hindsight, I realize that all I had was a single piece of the puzzle and that it wasn’t until that was combined with other pieces that a clearer, more beautiful picture emerged. Such is the patience of God. I pray that all of this will be a seed of hope and healing to those who would receive it.
Please go to http://youtu.be/KQSsXAsZGX0 to watch the video put together by our dear friends Vincent Wigh and Jose Bosque, and featuring the beautiful song, “You Know Me” by Steffany Frizzell. If this touches you, please share it with others. God bless.
Bryan, I enjoyed this piece. Thanks –Dave R.
Man’s Folly is Bound in a Stony Heart f “foolishness is bound in the heart of a child” (Proverbs 22:15), then consider how hard that uncorrected foolish heart can be by the time the child has grown. And since “even a child is known by his doings, whether his work be pure, and whether it be right” (Proverbs 20:11), it is only the Scriptures that can give us the Wisdom needed to discern what is in the heart of a person. “A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is evil: for of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaketh” (Luke 6:45). Discernment is the God-given derivative that comes as a result of studying God’s Word, to “those who by reason of use have their senses exercised to discern both good and evil” (Hebrews 5:14). “For the Word of God is Quick, and Powerful, and Sharper Than Any Twoedged Sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a Discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart” (Hebrews 4:12). Unrighteousness, whether found in the hearts of the backslidden, or found in the hearts of those who have never confessed to belong to Christ, can be seen and known by judging conduct. “Ye are they which justify yourselves before men; but God knoweth your hearts: for that which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God” (Luke 16:15). Actions are the outgrowth of “the thoughts of the heart” (1Chronicles 29:18), and can be seen and known. “Ye shall know them by their fruits” (Matthew 7:16). And since the LORD sees directly into the hearts of men, He understands firsthand, when He says, “My Thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways My Ways, saith the LORD” (Isaiah 55:8).
bookmarked!!, I like your website!