Tomorrow, my youngest is turning seven. It puts a lot into perspective. It’s not that you don’t notice you’re getting older if you don’t have children. There will always be the odd gray hair or the rickety back to let you know you’re getting on in years, but when you have children, it’s a direct and constant reminder of the passing of time. Tempus Fugit, indeed, like it was doing industrial strength speed and washing it down with a six-pack of Red Bull.
The more they grow, the older you get because nothing stops
time except for a dirt nap, and in that case, time stops only for the one in
the ground. It goes on for everyone else.
It’s odd that while generally speaking, life is a short and
fleeting thing, there are moments in life that seem to transpire in slow
motion, wherein an hour feels like a day and a day feels like a year. It’s
never when we’re laughing, smiling, enjoying the sun on our faces and the
breeze in our hair, or in my case, my shaven scalp. Those days seem to zip by,
and you look back on that five-day trip four days in and realize that it’s
almost over, done with, and you’ll have to get back on that plane, likely with
the same people, because most of them bought the same five-day package, and
return to packing lunches, school drop off lines, dentist appointments, violin and
cello practice, working your first job, then your second job, wondering if you
could fit in a third job but just part-time because you want the kids to
remember who you are and not call the police when you wander into the house
exhausted.
The coo-coo clock doesn’t go any faster or any slower; it
keeps perfect time, yet depending on what we’re going through at the time, you
wonder where the time went or can’t believe it’s only been three minutes since
the last time you looked at your watch. Yes, I know most people don’t have
watches anymore, except for those thrall collars that tell them they need to
walk three thousand more steps, go to the bathroom, drink more water, and
breathe; that last one’s important. Don’t forget to breathe.
How did we manage before we were so laden with gadgets that
we emanate low-frequency radiation even when we’re not around them? Don’t get
me wrong, I like the convenience of not having to trek to an outhouse in the
middle of the night or empty a chamber pot every morning, but what was meant to
be a convenience has now become an obsession, an addiction, a prison cell
without bars, to the point that if we wind up in an area without bars for more
than thirty seconds, we start to sweat, and think it’s the end of the world. You’re
three minutes from home, and you’ve driven the same road a thousand times,
you’ll be okay. When what was sold as a tool to make your life easier turns
into an albatross around your neck, without which you don’t feel normal or at
ease, you are no longer mastering the tool; the tool is mastering you.
Job had none of the distractions we’ve become accustomed to.
He was alone with his grief, with his pain, with the ever-present reality of
his loss, and it’s very likely the days dragged on at a snail’s pace for him.
It’s unlikely that time flies by when all you have is a potsherd with which to
scratch at yourself and a heap of ashes upon which to lay your head.
Even when his friends showed up, they could do nothing more
than sit with him in silence, seeing that his grief was very great. How do you
console a man who was on top of the world one day, then the next, all he has
left is the pain with which he has to contend?
There’s pain, then there’s pain. Physical pain is one thing;
the pain of the heart is something wholly different. If your joints ache on a
given morning, you can pop a couple of aspirin or lather yourself in icy hot
and make it through the day, but when your heart is broken and shattered, there
is no remedy for it but God.
Men try to find other ways to mute or numb the pain of the
heart, as they have since the beginning of time, whether giving themselves over
to wine, crawling into a bottle, taking pills and powders that are likelier to
kill them than make them feel better because that soul-crushing pain of the
heart is so unbearable as to make any physical pain pale in comparison.
For many, just having one of the things that happened to Job
happen to them would be enough to throw them into an endless spiral of
self-destruction, never mind loss upon loss, grief upon grief, and pain upon
pain.
Job was within his rights to lament. He was within his rights
to grieve and pour out what he’d been holding in for so many days.
Oftentimes, we have unrealistic expectations of those whom
God has called to service. We expect them to be superhuman, beyond feeling or
emotion, always rising above the circumstances of their existence, and when
they do show emotion, when they mourn, and weep, and cry out, we think less of
them.
God never called anyone to be unfeeling, emotionless, or robotic;
He called them to be obedient. Rather than look down on a brother who is
grieving a loss while continuing to walk in obedience, we should encourage
them, be there for them, and comfort them because even in their pain, they’re
doing what God called them to do.
My grandfather took my grandmother’s passing hard. She’d been
the love of his life, and when she died, a piece of him died with her. While
still in mourning, even before we had the wake, a lady from Kansas came to
visit because she’d heard about the ministry and she was in the area. We
honored her request and gave her our apartment address; even in the midst of
all the tumult, my grandfather and I made time for her, and we spent a good
thirty minutes talking; we said a prayer, and she left. We thought nothing of
it, busy making the arrangements to ship my grandmother back to Romania, which
in itself required jumping through so many hoops you’d think you were in the
circus. A month or so later, we got a letter in the mail from the
aforementioned lady informing us that she was underwhelmed by the experience, didn’t
feel welcome when she visited, and that we could have been more hospitable.
If she hadn’t known of the situation and that my grandmother
was lying in a casket at a funeral home, I would have seen my way to being more
gracious in my response, but she did; it was the first thing I informed her of
when she walked into our apartment.
I understand that this may come as a shock to some, but it’s
not always about you. The world doesn’t revolve around your happiness, and
sometimes, the people you interact with who seem distant or distracted are
going through their own version of hell and doing their best to just keep it
together.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
Posted on 6 December 2024 | 12:48 pm
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