Postby Jingo Jaden » Thu Nov 06, 2008 4:56 pm
Heh, I have asbergers myself. Now the question arise in my mind is do you think that people with various disabilities, or just mental differences are pre-planned to go towards eternal suffering?
I might as well take my own testimony into this to help explain my position on this.
I would start as early as kindergarten. Whereas I early had started to both read English and Norwegian. *Yes, I am Norwegian and I live in Norway.* You could say that I sorta learned Norwegian the same way I learned English thanks to media and computers. I was an early tech-freak for my time. That and I loved to read, no particular physical presence as I always was a slow runner, in truth I still am that today. Moving on at the age of 7, I was what would be labeled an outcast in terms of the whole class with only one true classmate friend. Now, I did fine at school, had a near nonexistent social life and not that great of a health, be it mental or physical. I was not diagnosed, but constantly taken to a counselor at an early age. Aside from the obvious troubles I had at that age regarding communication I also was a diehard atheist. I mean, how many die hard atheists do you find at the age of 7? Spiritually I was the poorest in the class, socially the same and maybe even physically. Always standing up for my point, even when I knew it was wrong. I was both stubborn and confused, although focused at desires.
Moving on the age of 11 I decided to turn towards faith. I did not fully understand the whole sin and forgiveness idea, but I had seem to like God for who he was. You could say he had aided me quite a few times, always showing me that there was something to go after, even when the situation was ever so dark. It was not until the age of 12 or 13 I started to read 'the little bible' which is about 6-800 pages long. I read about 10 pages each day, sometimes more, sometimes less. However the funny thing was that a week before my birthday, I saw that I had about 70 pages left. And I finished reading the bible on the end of my birthday. Quite strange eh? At either rate, I was starting to feel more and more comfortable with my faith, more open so to speak. I got baptized at the age of 14.
Now, here is where things get interesting. During my last days of high school, this was 3 years of being bullied quite intensely around. I had what was classified as a very strong mental breakdown. Now, imagine this. Having a hard time thinking straight, not being able to breathe properly, having clear problems eating, drinking, speaking and constantly being tired, yet not fully able to speak? During this times I had doctors from France looking at me, and these guys know their stuff. However, they could not find a diagnose to it. And when they start mentioning symptoms of paranoia, asberger, OCD, schizophrenia and numerous other things that are too hard to pronounce, then you know you got some serious trouble. And it was not like I was not fighting it, I was haveing a constant day and night struggle with it. Fighting it, as not giving into it. Even working out. However the kicker is that by saying I had problems thinking the thoughts that came forced into my head where ungodly ones. I mean really ungodly, not as if I made them myself, but as if something else tried to force it into me and all I could do was block. This get tiring after a few hours, not to mention a few months. It was heavily active for 2 months, although it started to decrease and I was given medication that really was not indented for my age group, or so I think. It proved to have no visible effect, most of it at either rate.
So, walking into a church one day thinking the thoughts might have made me into a demon of some kind I decided to give myself to God. Now this is a moment in my life where I could feel that the struggles I had became weaker, as if whatever caused it had taken a hit. I would say it is one of the stand alone highlights of my life, I can't really explain it in detail. However it started to fade away after this, note that I still have some occasional kickbacks today, but I guess that something that goes into ones mind to such a great extent has to have some sort of fallout in the end.
Ironically I had taken on my mental challenges right after I was feeling better. I started to study media and communication even. Communication, which had been the very stone blocking my progression for all this time. During this course things had improved in terms of the overall being bullied around in high school. However that's not saying much as I still had some notable problems with my friends. Moving on I studied media and communication for about one and a half year. However I left after that, most of those around me though I was foolish moving on from that and into a even higher stage. That I was unrational in terms of judgment. I started to study multimedia for about half a year, and it was only at the end of it that my point was proven. The school I was in previously had serious manpower and financial problems, and I had bailed out just when things seemed to bite the dust big time. In fact, I had a 3 out of 6 grade at the end of that semester. However, a privatist exam I took sometimes later, without even doing any extensive studying. Gave me two 6 out of 6 and one 5 out of 6 grade. Very respectable grades unlike many who did stay on that course. Even with that, my knowledge on communication and media. I still had problems regarding communication, and it was visible on those around me, but just then I was starting to realize. My stubbornness and disability to compromise was the primary cause of my not so high popularity.
Then, a diehard atheist kid at 7 years of age with major problems. Now, someone with faith. A soon to be 3d professional who has had work delivered from a teacher with 30 years of experiense to blur studios, which is huge considering it was treatment doodle work that was delivered. So I have been on a long down slope in my life, but things are starting slowly to look up. The question is why?
Its the ability to admit ones shortcomings and communicate, which is a two way road. That's the thing, communication is a two way road, wastly dependant on being able to compromise, but also being able to stand ones ground depending on the subject at hand. It’s more of a gradient than a black and white scale and most of the times its best to keep within the gray zones. I still have plenty of shortcomings, but the ability to see them for what they are and to work on them is worth more than gold itself.
So, finally I can go to the question at hand. Which involves life and being different.
I don't think saying that seeing life for what it is will at present itself as a fair assessment. God knows what life is, we are just exploring it short term. I don't think one can know another, least of all oneself. God knows, which is why its best for us to be humble and try to observe sometimes, instead of acting all the time. It is even said that we should be happy for the trials we are granted in the bible. These are personal challenges that one should take and also know that one is likely to fail many, many times. The worst thing one can do is to think that the challenges won't be a problem, because they will, and in the end only God can truly help. Now whereas one might have problems understanding groups another person might have problems with alcohol, or problems with controlling their rage. One thing we are asked specifically not to do is to judge others, we are not fit to do so. Maybe something that appears as completely vile in ones eye will be the result of a long struggle lost in that person.
As for people who are different. There are plenty of people there, despite their flaws, who have a much greater willpower than your average 'normal' person. God knowing everything will of course take this into consideration. So rather than what one are, one should focus at what one could be. And there is no better thing guideline to follow than the one God will give you should you search for him with all your heart.
As for hell, I think it is wastly underestimated. I have experienced pain and I am sure you have done that too. However hell is a level that will be unrivaled to any experience possible to obtain on earth. Setting that as a final destination, which I have done before not truly knowing what it is, cannot be classified as anything, but a major mistake. Anything experienced on earth is likely going to be small fry compared to what awaits there. Which is why God wants us to be saved. And I also think hell itself is mercyful for someone like me. Yet God wants us to be saved and he personally looks into the life of even the seemingly most unimportant person that can be found just likes he looks into those who will shape the future. His hopes for them are countless as the sand on the seashore. Such an hope is unrivaled by any human understanding, as is his love. Trust me, one cannot deserve heaven if one has sinned. God knows this, yet he still wants us to be saved from hell. Everyone on Earth is known by God and they all have their path. Those who are fortunate and spoiled like we are, who are asked to follow the narrow light road in a wast space of darkness should express an unrivaled gratitude, yet even when we don't do that, because we don't fully understand what the future will bring. He still loves us.
Of two evils, choose neither - Charles Spurgeon.