Sunday, 8 May 2016

121. Lessons from the darkness


Phil 4:8 Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable--if anything is excellent or praiseworthy--think about such things.




My last post resulted in a number of people checking in with me to make sure I was okay.  There were a number of e-mails, two phone calls, and a reminder from my brother that fucked up is often the norm.  I did not mean to cause such a stir, and for the most part I wanted the post to be inspirational.  For we all, let me repeat that, WE ALL have days like that and we get through them.
          I think my cousin put it the most succinctly, “If you remain unaffected by some of the shit we are exposed to, then you are indeed cold blooded.”  Most of you know what I do for a living, and the odd, and sometimes heartbreaking situations I am exposed to on a regular basis.  But we all are in the same boat.
          Christ calls us to have a level and nature of involvement in the lives of others that exposes us to the ugly and traumatic.  We are not called to remain insulated from the world while we work on our personal righteousness.  We are called to be involved with those around us, even those people we don’t like.
          So, on that day, I had had enough.  Enough of the pain and misery.  There had been much too much death around me.  I was tired of the stressful shit with work.  And it was one of those days that God seemed absent.  But as I wrote, as I sought out God, he was there.

Wanna is back, and life is back to normal.  That “two shall become as one” crap has some legitimacy to it.  The various crises have sorted themselves out, or have been sorted out.  Life has returned to normal – less messed up.
          It would be easy to simply pick myself up, shake off the dust, and carry on.  It is what I usually do.  But as I have written, there is opportunity to in the darkness of spirit that visits us.  That opportunity is to see what is of value in our lives.
          Substantially not much will change.  I did seriously suggest to Wanna that she simply stay in Thailand as I came home and cashed in our chips and moved us back to Baan Pha Tai.  There would be a certain comfort in being a pig farmer.  And you just have to respect a country where pork rinds are served with dinner.  But here we are, still living in Canada.
          Tomorrow I will get up, and start in with the work I have been called to do. 

So, what are the lessons to be had?  First and foremost, and it is a lesson I have learned previously, is that my life is living in the relationships with those in my life.  It is made more obvious as my work is with people.  But the qualities that I seek to have, that kinder and gentler person, can only be experienced in the context of the exchanges that I have with the other people in my life.
          With Wanna, and I think we lapsed into doing this, I want life to not be simply about being focused on what will come.  There is an awareness that there really are no ordinary moments, but she and I need to grasp some of those moments.  In those spaces created in the busyness of life, to stop and recognize just how extraordinary our relationship is.
          That also extends to myself, and how I am with me.  To recognize that what I do is not for the faint of heart.  That hidden in between the struggles, successes and errors, and the frenetic energy of work, is the success that what I do, I do well.  More often I need to pause and acknowledge that I am successful.
         Lastly, I am called to recognize the love that God has for me.  For those of you who understand, you know the significant difference, when what we do, is done from a place of love and gratitude rather than a place of appeasement of God.  It is the difference between living in victory and living an apology.  And thus, God beckons for me to simply stay put and bask in his love and grace. 

There is always the temptation when having experienced crisis to live life differently.  To quit our jobs, and live like beach bums. Not only is this not sustainable, but it misses the point.  It is not what we do, but how we do it.  So I leave you with that.

Oh, and am I glad to be a Christian.  My cohort at work told me last night that her daughter was approached by a religious person telling the daughter that people who eat bacon do not enter heaven.  Sheesh.  If there is no bacon it is not heaven.

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