Pages

Monday, 13 August 2012

In which I ponder False Starts and Dead Ends, and God says, “Come, Dance.”

 


 I set aside a few slots of time one day a week for decluttering.

My maternal grandparents left a house full of a lifetime’s stuff which neither they, nor their three unmarried children who lived at home had ever dealt with. And the accumulation made their house seem small and cramped and dark. Oh, how much space it took up. Whole corridors and large sections of rooms!! And my father died, prematurely, after a few dreadful months of sorting it out, tossing it, or trying to find homes for it. He didn’t even get to enjoy or use the stuff!!

Yesterday, I heard my friend, David, the son of John Bendor-Samuel, the founder of Wycliffe Bible Translators, UK, say in his Sunday sermon that his brilliant father was a hoarder and left two rooms full of papers, magazines, sermon notes, lecture notes, andjournals, which David is stolidly dealing with.

I can’t stand the thought of leaving mess and papers for someone else to sort out. It’s just plain wrong. And so, I declutter once a week.
* * *

It’s a bit of a sad exercise, really. I see projects started with enthusiasm, which I haven’t followed through on. Courses I took which were a waste of time. Diaries filled with “Lunch with X and coffee with Y,” and you know what, twenty years later, I don’t remember many of these people. I look at To Do lists: “Reply to A, email B, thank C.” Who are these people? They are all out of my life.

I look at projects taken up and abandoned. I love French, but early into my French classes, I bought the complete Remembrance of Things Past in French. Oh-uh!! How many hobbies and interests I plunged into by buying a pile of books on the subject!!

Oh, how much I tried to do with my own strength instead of relying on God!

How long it took me to focus on my writing1
* * *

And, the odd this is, when I look at these things I put my intensity into which were unfruitful, which failed, or disappointed me; things I wanted so badly which I did not get, or which did not satisfy; false starts, dead ends, I have the same overwhelming sensation.

And it is not sadness.

It is someone saying, “I love you. I love you. I love you.”

I sense God’s overflowing love.

What?

Well, when does a good parent love their child most? Feel most protective? When they have aced their exams, or when they have truly blown it, and are down in the dumps? When they experience rejection, failure and sadness, or when all is sunny?

And he who is melding the shards of my life—wasted time, wasted energy, wasted intensity--into a beautiful stained glass window sees me turn them over sadly, and says, “I will let nothing be wasted.”

And says, “Yeah, I know. I know. I love you anyway. I love you.”

And says, “All shall be well, all shall be well, all manner of things shall be well.”

And says, “Come, beloved. Want to dance?”


6 comments:

  1. I so identify with this! I get such "great" ideas but so many don't pan out. I sometimes get discouraged and ask God to help me through the scatter-brainness that seems to be there so often.

    Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Jane, A blogger I read today wrote

    "If you give your whole self to God, He can even take all your stumbling and your wandering, your off-track time and use it all for His kingdom. How can He use it? I have no clue, but He does. He is the ultimate trash into treasure expert."

    And they are such comforting words. Thank you for sharing them at http://janehinrichs.weebly.com/1/post/2012/08/freedom-and-making-your-trash-into-treasure.html

    It was a superb post! :-)

    ReplyDelete
  3. You know, all that 'stuff' sounds like a life well lived. It sounds like human connections...emailing, coffees and thank-you's that you may not remember but God may have used. Classes and lessons....once again connections. It sounds like Holy Chaos to me.

    Declutter, thats a good thing...but I don't think God wants you to regret...He sure doesn't regret the things you have done...after all it was in that process you came closer to Him. His time. His process.

    You're fabulous and He is so exceptionally proud of you!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Oh thank you, Ursula--and you are an exceptionally wise young woman!!

    "I don't think God wants you to regret...He sure doesn't regret the things you have done...after all it was in that process you came closer to Him. " That's brilliant. Thank you so much!

    ReplyDelete
  5. You write beautifully about the love of God. Your insights about the nature of God are exciting - reminding me of the first time I read Cloud of Unknowing.
    I do sympathise with you over housework and de-cluttering. May I ask if you have visited the flylady.net site. The Only Fifteen minutes a day section transformed my approach to housework.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hi Anon,

    Thank you. Yes, I do know Flylady, though should visit the 15 minutes section again. I spend 15 a day just tidying and decluttering our large bedroom at the moment--so I do do longer bashes the day before the cleaner comes.

    We've been becoming more organised and decluttered over the last four years, but when it's so slow, you sometimes don't realize how much progress you've made.

    ReplyDelete

Hi guys, love hearing from you, so fire away! Word verification and comment moderation has been experimentally turned off!