Change.
It’s
the worst.
The
unknown brings feelings of fear.
Challenges previously unknown. All the what ifs. All the what ifs.
Change.
It’s
the best.
Adventure
and love and heights of joy previously unknown.
All the surprises. All the
unexpected surprises.
We
spent some time by the Pacific Ocean last week.
What else is so beautiful and alive and frightening all at once? What, with ever-changing beauty, spins and
hurls and crashes and rises and gracefully settles as it pushes and pulls upon
its very edges all over again? I’ll tell
you.
Life.
The
successes, the failures, the unexpected joys, the horrors, the growing…
the
constant change.
Change
is what draws us to the ocean. It’s the
driving force of the thing. The
currents, the rising and falling tide, the waves…they are the very reasons the
ocean teems with life. If the currents
ceased, if the waves stopped, jellyfish and seashells and sea turtles and surfers and sailors would
also cease to be. There must be movement
in order for there to be the transfer of energy necessary for ocean life to
continue, for surfers to surf, and for sailors to sail. Everything we love about the ocean is brought
about by its ever-changing nature (and the wind, of course, about which I often
complain).
All
of this brings me to Levi…
Here we are again, on the verge of big change…another boy is heading to Kindergarten. Now this boy, as you may know by now, has quite a distaste for anything out of the ordinary. He’s afraid of anything unknown, including food he’s never tried.
Notice how far he stands from the water? He thought at first that he’d be content to
stand there all day long, playing it safe.
But even he could see that there was so much more out there in the big
blue than in the sand. The appeal of
comfort eventually lost to the lure of adventure….
See…for a while, I’d watched Andy, our oldest,
stand and jump and run in the waves; and I’d felt confident that if a wave
overtook him, I could quickly pick him up and he’d be alright. With 2 boys out there, I was far less
confident in my abilities.
Andy made it clear that he didn’t need my
help, and demonstrated that fact over and over.
Did I sigh with relief and enjoy playing out there with Levi? Nope.
I focused the anxiety of having both boys out in harm’s way, as I saw
it, completely on Levi. I grabbed him
and picked him up anytime a wave approached that seemed a bit scary. And the more worried I got, the more worried
he got, and the less fun we both had.
Finally, I went to build a sand castle with
Ajay, our youngest. Levi had returned to
the beach as well, and was delivering trucks full of sand to us. Awhile later, I noticed that I hadn’t seen
Levi come by for a bit. I turned around
to find him laughing hard with his cousin as they ran to the water and dashed
to the beach as the waves came in and out.
He had found that there truly was so much more to be enjoyed beyond the
comfort of the sand.
And this one.
I watched him stride confidently further and further out to sea with my
heart in my throat. What if he gets
swept away? What if I can’t get to him
in time? I had half a mind to tell him
he could only go in up to his knees….
You
know what? If I’d had it my way, nothing
would’ve ever changed when I’d turned 5.
I’d have stayed at home, playing with my Lite Brite and Barbies
forever. I’d never have gone to school. I’d never have attempted to make a friend. I’d never have joined the cross country team
and found out that I really could run for hours on end. I’d never have gone to college and talked
with that hilarious boy that became my husband.
I’d never have had any children.
And
although I also never would’ve had to tearfully watch my mom leave every day of
first grade, or have fallings-out with friends, or get my heart broken, or be
made fun of, or do the hard work of marriage, or bury my child….
I’m
so glad I didn’t have it my way.
Does
anyone ever really know what they want when they’re 5? Or 35?
Or 55?
The
allure of comfort leads us to believe that right here, right now, is as good as
it gets; and if we venture out, we could mess it all up. Sure, maybe there’s something better out
there, but I don’t want something bad to happen to me. Since nothing bad is happening right now, I
think I’ll just stay right here…
I
have that same heart-in-throat feeling as I think on school starting up next
week. Levi…he’s so little…he’s so
scared. I feel as though I’m throwing
him into that ocean to face the waves without me. I feel the same about Andy, although he’s
proven to me many times that he can stand against the waves. It’s just…
The
tumult and uncertainty of change makes me want to try to find contentment in
the here and now and leave the future untried.
I want the waves to stop because my
children are out there.
But
the ocean wasn’t made to be still.
If
the waves all stop, son, so does the life.
And
the waves are scary. I know. But you…you have a rock to which you can
cling. I do too. The waves are no match for it and it does not
move. Ever.
“In You, O Lord, I have taken refuge…
In Your
righteousness deliver me and rescue me;
Incline
Your ear to me and save me.
Be to me
a rock of habitation to which I may continually come…
You are
my rock and my fortress….
For You
are my hope; O Lord God, You are my confidence from my youth
By You I
have been sustained from my birth…
Your
righteousness, O God, reaches to the heavens,
You who
have done great things;
O God,
who is like You?
You who
have shown me many troubles and distresses
Will
revive me again,
And will
bring me up again from the depths of the earth.” – Selections from Psalm 71
And will
praise You yet more and more.
My mouth
shall tell of Your righteousness
And of
Your salvation all day long;
For I do
not know the sum of them…
My lips
will shout for joy when I sing praises to You;
And my
soul, which You have redeemed…” – Selections from Psalm 71
Cling
to the Rock.
In
the days ahead, you may be facing some change.
Scratch that. You will be facing change as long as you live. With life comes change. This change…it may be horrifying; it may be
thrilling. Cling to the Rock. He says to
come habitually. He will not tire of you. Bring all your emotions and heartache and joy
and sorrow and blurt them all out like a 3 year old on his father’s lap. And then.
Audaciously praise the God who made the oceans
and counted the hairs on your head thinks of you more often than the number of
sand grains on the shore. I’ll do it
with you. Let Him show you His
strength. Let Him hide you from the waves. Stand and look around and see how safe He’s
made you. Experience His unwavering care
for you. Lean with the full weight of
your cares on Him. Rest.
A very
present help in trouble.
Therefore
we will not fear, though
the earth should change and though the
mountains slip into the heart of the sea;
Though
its waters roar and foam…” – Psalm 46:1-3
“O come,
let us sing for joy to the Lord,
Let us
shout joyfully to the rock of our salvation.” – Psalm 95:1
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