by Sturm, Lacey
© 2014 by Lacey Sturm
Published by Baker Books
a division of Baker Publishing Group
P.O. Box 6287, Grand Rapids, MI 49516-6287
www.bakerbooks.com
Ebook edition created 2014
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4412-4652-3
Unless otherwise indicated, Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation, copyright © 1996, 2004, 2007 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Scripture labeled KJV is from the King James Version of the Bible.
To protect the privacy of those who have shared their stories with the author, some details and names have been changed.
llustrations by Jordan Clarke, www.jordanclarkdesign.com.
Published in association with Yates & Yates, www.yates2.com.
“A book with this much substance will, without a doubt, live on to change lives for generations. I truly believe Lacey’s story has fallen into your hands at the perfect time. Dive right in and find out the reason.”
—from the foreword by Brian “Head” Welch, lead guitar for Korn / Love & Death, author of Save Me from Myself
“Fresh. Passionate. Powerful. Lacey Sturm does in The Reason what she has done her whole career—she tells the truth, sings the truth, dances the truth. Her story will blow you away, and her heart will touch you. Read The Reason. Just like her voice and presence, Lacey’s writing compels and penetrates, and in the end she will change you.”
—Chap Clark, PhD, author of Hurt 2.0: Inside the World of Today’s Teenagers
“In a time where the gulf between sacred and secular seems to grow incrementally, Lacey bridges the gap with her soul-bearing candor, raw passion, and prophetic insight. She communicates the comedy, tragedy, and triumph of her life story with fluidity and grace, and her message is timelessly impactful. It ‘screams’ of Jesus Christ, who is alive and active today, even in our darkest times, and the great news that no one is beyond his reach.”
—John L. Cooper, lead singer of Skillet
“At its core Lacey’s story is one of hope. From desperation to redemption to victory, this is an amazing journey that, apart from God, would not be possible. Hers is a story that will encourage and challenge all who read it.”
—Michael W. Smith, singer and songwriter
“I have been fortunate to witness Lacey grow from singer/songwriter to wife to mommy to now author. She is an amazing soul with a heart like no other. Her life and her story have been such an encouragement to me, and I know this book will also inspire and change you forever.”
—Sonny Sandoval, lead singer of P.O.D., founding member of The Whosoevers
“Lacey has touched so many lives around the world through her music. Her story will hit your heart.”
—Ryan Ries, cofounder of The Whosoevers
“Lacey Sturm is a voice of hope to a hurting generation. In her book, you will experience God’s unstoppable heart for you and for those in your life who need a supernatural reset. Lacey’s message is real, raw, and dripping with love. Dive in and be blessed!”
—Nick Hall, founder and primary communicator of PULSE
To Brittany Wigand. Thank you for caring about the passerby behind the music you fell in love with. Your story always reminds me of how God can turn my worst moments into glory in the lives of others, if only I will let him. It’s with you—your encouragement and your story—in mind that I wrote this book. I believe in you so much.
To the one like my teenage self, who is a breath away from finding the beauty of a life worth living.
To whoever needs to know that God loves you and has a plan for your life, and though you will die one day, he doesn’t want you to die tonight.
You are important, loved, and prayed for.
Love, Lacey
Contents
Cover 1
Title 3
Copyright Page 4
Endorsements 5
Dedication 7
Epigraph 11
Foreword by Brian “Head” Welch 13
This Today 17
From Shadows 19
1. The Reason I Lived 21
2. The Reason I Love Jazz 29
3. The Reason I Became an Atheist 39
4. The Reason I Fell in Love with Sadness 47
5. The Reason I Loved Nirvana 57
6. The Reason I Stopped Caring 65
7. The Reason I Wanted to Scream 75
8. The Reason I Wanted to Die 83
9. The Reason I Couldn’t Kill Myself 91
Into the Half-Light 97
10. The Reason I’m Alive 99
11. The Reason I’m Beautiful 111
12. The Reason People Matter 117
13. The Reason I Sing 129
14. The Reason I Wanted to Change the World 141
15. The Reason I Wanted to Go to Hell 151
16. The Reason I Couldn’t Sleep 159
17. The Reason I Stepped Down from Flyleaf 167
18. The Reason God Will Always Love Us 183
Your Tomorrow 191
Afterword by Franklin Graham 195
Acknowledgments 197
About Lacey 201
Back Ad 203
Back Cover 204
It would seem that our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.
C. S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory
Foreword
There is a state of being that, unfortunately, countless people have fallen into. A place so empty that words fail to accurately express the hopelessness felt in the soul. The person feels completely and utterly lost. Besides the heartbeat keeping the body alive, all else seems dead.
The end.
But that very “end” can become a new beginning where a brand-new structure rises out of the gloom of emptiness.
There have been countless stories about this mind-boggling change of existence, and my life happens to be one of them. I cofounded the rock band KoRn in the early 1990s. My success exceeded way beyond what I ever could have hoped for. But my failures totally shattered all of my accomplishments, and I was left to waste away in a prison of drug addiction, depression, and despair.
I was spared for a reason.
The heart of a human being isn’t only an organ that pumps blood through the veins. The heart is at the very core of who a person is.
It has the capacity to experience the bliss of heaven.
It has the capacity to feel the miserable hollowness of hell.
Lacey Sturm has experienced both of these extremes, and she has been given an incredibly important platform to help turn our generation around.
I’ve known Lacey for a few years now, and her story will always be one of the most jaw-dropping life transformations I’ve ever heard. Each time I hear her story I can feel her hopeless pain and sorrow as she reached the point where she gave up on life after trying to satisfy herself with the world’s antidotes, which only lef
t her soul in agony.
Lacey was spared for a reason.
Pain is an interesting experience we all have to go through. In this race of life, pain has the power to drag us down and ruin the rest of our lives—or it can be used as wind under our wings to lift us to the glorious heights of destiny. We’ve seen it countless times.
Parents of a murdered child fall into a lifetime of depression—or they start an organization in their child’s name to help others.
A rape victim becomes an alcoholic to deal with her pain—or she starts a program to help other rape victims get past the horrors of their experience.
Lacey has yielded to the process of pain turned into power. She has lifted and inspired so many people, male and female, and this girl is barely getting started! Lacey is a true poet and songwriter who speaks the language of the heart. Her soul is a hope magnet for countless other souls slipping away into nothingness like she once was. I am proud to call Lacey and her husband, Josh, my friends, and I can’t wait to see the results of this book for decades to come. A book with this much substance will, without a doubt, live on to change lives for generations.
I truly believe Lacey’s story has fallen into your hands at the perfect time. Dive right in and find out the reason.
Brian “Head” Welch
(Korn / Love & Death)
This Today
I wasn’t supposed to wake up today.
My bedroom here feels huge compared to the other places I’ve lived. It feels too big for a girl like me. Maybe one day I’ll move into an old van and feel more at home. Over there is the poster of my dream car, a Volkswagen camper, hanging alone on the big wall across from my bed. An empty Ben and Jerry’s chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream container filled with dried flowers sits on my dresser. It’s from my “friend date” with Jacob. At the time, I secretly hoped he would break up with his girlfriend of three years, the one he fought with all the time, and fall in love with me. That way we could stay up late together, reading Robert Jordan epic fantasy novels.
Memory boxes fill the underside of my bedside table. One is filled with the evidence of my first love, Ryan—notes he gave me in between classes, the lighter I used to burn a smiley tattoo into my hand the first time we got high together, his copy of The Vampire Lestat, the book he was reading the first time I saw him, the one that distinguished him from the other seventh grade boys.
I have a drawer full of pictures that my little brother and sisters drew for me. They remind me to see the beauty in every day, to keep going.
A bass guitar sits in the corner wearing a fuzzy purple strap called Purple Haze. My backpack beside my closet door is filled with books and a script for a play I planned to audition for next Friday. I had tacked my ticket to next month’s Pantera show at the Mississippi Gulf Coast Coliseum to the wall beside my bed, next to a picture of Dimebag Darrell I had torn out of Guitar World magazine.
This is how they would have found my room.
Apparently I had some dreams, goals, things I valued about my life. But if I’m honest, none of the things I thought mattered were really important to me. If they were, then I don’t suppose I would have planned to kill myself yesterday.
But now, here I am. I’m here waking up. I’m rising to a new today. And this today looks and smells different to me. I’m just lying on my bed looking around, noticing all my stuff. But it feels like I’m really opening my eyes for the first time. On this today I forgot to hate that I woke up again, like I have done every morning for years. Something lingers in this room. It’s something real and full of meaning.
What will replace my hate? Is it this lingering thing I feel all around me?
Today I’m fully alive—for the first time. And I don’t want this freedom from my hate to go away. I want it to stay. I want it to soar. And I want to soar with it.
Shadows remain. Daily we war with our own hearts, pushing down the hurt, pain, disillusionment, disappointment, bitterness, and betrayal. God’s brilliance, however, compels us through the shadows. We long for it.
Timothy Willard, Home Behind the Sun
1
The Reason
I Lived
My mother lay unconscious, covered in blood. Blood smeared her face and hair and soaked her entire gown. Granny screamed for help.
The nurse rushed in and tried to calm her. “I know it looks bad right now, but she’s going to be okay.”
Eventually the nurse admitted that they had almost lost both of us, but they were relieved to stabilize my mother. They continued working on me, trying to help me breathe properly. But the whole scene was a mess, and this bothered my granny. And when Granny’s bothered, you know it.
She cussed the nurse out.
“Why didn’t you clean her off? Someone get some water and towels and clean the blood off my baby! I’m serious! Who treats people like this? I’m reporting this whole hospital! Get my baby something to clean her off!”
The nurse tried to calm her again.
“We’ve stabilized the mother, but we need to care-flight the baby to Miami, and we need someone to go with her.”
Granny pointed to my sixteen-year-old mother and yelled at the nurse, “THAT IS MY baby!”
Now she began to cuss the whole hospital out.
“How in the world do you treat people as badly as this and still have a job here? I thought y’all were supposed to be helping people. She looks like y’all have been trying to kill her! How come nobody has even wiped the blood off her face and her little hands? I ain’t leaving her with y’all! Look at her! No one is taking care of her!”
That was my granny: a striking twenty-nine-year-old woman with long platinum blonde hair that fell in beautiful heaps down her back. Her dark lashes curled long and elegant against her brows and revealed her deep blue eyes. Her penetrating gaze held steady and true, even when she laughed. Beautiful and unafraid, she had a passion for her loved ones.
My mother is her firstborn daughter. Still today, she calls my mom her baby. We are all her “babies” in her mind. Back then my granny would stand in a room wearing baggy sweats and drinking a Coke, saying nothing, just minding her own business—and capture a room with her beauty. That’s the strange thing about physical beauty. It makes people notice, wonder, and doubt themselves. It can be a lonely gift.
As a child I looked at my grandmother the way a young girl would look at a real live princess. I hung on her every word. When she said my name or looked in my direction, I blushed and felt honored. When she praised me, I felt like everything was right in the world. She taught us to fight for what we believed in, to do whatever we could to help rescue whomever needed rescuing. She taught us to treat strangers this way, not just our loved ones. She raised one passionate man and three passionate women. Even at sixteen, my mother was passionate enough to risk her life delivering me, a child expected to die anyway.
And as my mother fought for me to live, not thinking of herself, Granny now fought for my mother, knowing that no one in that hospital loved my mom like she did.
It was suggested months earlier that my mother not risk having another baby. They didn’t think it would be safe because of complications she’d endured while delivering my brother Eric just ten months earlier. Not only were there medical risks for both of us but it was also complicated because of what she had been through with my father.
He was a young, handsome Native American man. My mother said he was daring, protective, and had the most beautiful heart. But that was only when he was sober. The Hulk-ish person he became after a typical night of drinking landed him in jail many times. By the time my mother was pregnant with me, an extended stay in prison was just around the corner for my father. In the future, his stay in correctional facilities would bring him salvation in a few different ways, but at this point in time it only left my mother on her own, at sixteen, with one child and another on the way. So the doctors suggested she abort me.
My mother ignored their suggestion.
My granny
continued to argue with the nurse until finally they sent me on to the hospital in Miami alone. My mother laughs now and says, “You were on tour from day one.” Before I left for Miami, the doctors didn’t hold out much hope. I was born two months premature, and since lungs are the last thing to develop, I was having some critical issues. They feared I would die at any moment because I couldn’t breathe correctly.
Three days later, however, those same doubting doctors declared me a miracle. No one could explain why—no explanation, no real reason. I was breathing fine and could go home.
When they finally handed me to my mother, I was small enough to fit in the palm of her hand. She said I looked like a little monkey because I was covered in hair. I was so fragile she was scared to hold me, let alone allow anyone else to. She was afraid I’d break. Maybe this was why she was always so tough on me. Maybe she wanted to teach me to be much stronger and more unbreakable than I looked.
More to Overcome
Not long after I went home with my mother, I caught whooping cough. I once again struggled to breathe. I wouldn’t take a bottle. I began to lose weight.
My mom took me to the emergency room, where doctors and nurses worked to bring me back to health. Eventually they wanted to transfer me to another hospital in a different town. My mother became distraught at this suggestion.
My mom had been trying to work things out with my dad. She was in love with him. She wanted him to be around to know his children. When my granny announced that she and her husband were moving a state away, my mother resolved to stay put with my father. She clung to the vain hope that perhaps having two children would curb his appetite for alcohol and violence. But now, with her mother gone and her love in jail again, she was all on her own.
Putting me in a different hospital a town away for who knows how long now presented more stress than just worrying if I was ever going to get better.
“But, what about my eleven-month-old son I have at home? I don’t know anyone in that town. Where will we stay?” she asked.