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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

slowing down

Stop {A series of S-words, part 5}

October 10, 2017

It’s been a couple of months since I wrote a few posts about S-words I’d been pondering. Here’s another one in the series. You can find them all here.

Phil and I were on our way to breakfast in a part of the city we hadn’t yet explored. The promise of trying out a new restaurant combined with a one-week-only special motivated our adventure. I delayed my coffee consumption while my mouth watered thinking about the omelet I would order.

We pulled onto a typical city side street, narrow, two lanes of traffic, one in each direction and stopped in a line of cars for a bus that had its sign out, red lights flashing. This was not the same kind of bus we’d just put our children on 20 minutes before. This was a “short bus” as we used to call it in school. Now, I’m not even sure how to describe it otherwise, except it is the transportation for the kids with disabilities. We watched as a child in a motorized wheelchair was loaded into the bus, as the bus driver exited the vehicle while the mother watched from the sidewalk, as the bus driver situated herself in the driver seat and buckled before pulling in the stop sign and continuing on down the road.

The whole thing took a few minutes at most. I wasn’t watching the clock, but traffic piled up in both directions. For those few minutes, wherever we were previously headed was pointless. We were stopped. For good reason. And not one of us could pretend that the world is made up of only abled-children and “perfect” families because the truth was literally stopping us in our tracks.

The rest of us went about our days. Phil and I ate a breakfast that didn’t disappoint. But I couldn’t stop thinking about that bus. About the mother and the driver and the children. Would I have noticed them at all if I hadn’t been forced to stop and watch?

Photo by Branden Tate on Unsplash

—

I’m in the middle of teaching a class at my church about spiritual practices and it is terrifying and stretching and awkward, mostly because I am a writer and the words make more sense when I can see them rather than when I say them.

This week, we learned together about the contemplative tradition of spiritual life, a tradition that focuses on prayer and paying attention and noticing things we might otherwise miss. Like the disabled kids and their families and the school bus driver who serves them daily. The things we miss because we are busy and in a hurry and focused on tasks. Multiple tasks.

I am guilty of these things. And I am not alone.

I’m increasingly concerned (maybe because I’m getting older) about the rush while driving. Near our house, there’s an intersection that backs up during the early evening hours, and those who want to turn right often ride the narrow shoulder to reach the turn lane so they don’t have to wait for the cars in front of them to move. I do this, too, sometimes, but if traffic is backed up to a certain point, I won’t do it. One time, as I waited in the long line of cars, half a dozen others passed me on the right side, in what I considered somewhat dangerous moves. When it was our turn to move, we had waited no more than a minute before we could reach the turn lane.

One minute. We are in such a hurry these days that we cannot sit in a line of traffic for even one minute. We have to go. And go. And go.

—

Sometimes we do stop, but even then, we are looking at our phones or (my personal favorite) reading a book. I constantly have my face in a book, especially if I’m waiting. I am often too distracted to notice the people, the animals, the world around me, too intent on my to-do list to take time to notice something.

One morning, I felt like I had so much to do that my soul was overwhelmed and I was anxious before the day had begun. I decided to take a walk to the park, taking only a few things with me, including a notebook. I sat on a bench, surrounded by ducks, who at first fled at my arrival but who gradually resumed their waddling after I’d been sitting for long enough. I watched a heron for close to half an hour as it sat perched next to the water. It wasn’t fishing or flying or bathing. It was just being, and I envied it.

Acorns dropped from the trees right next to me. The ducks talked to each other in their language. A breeze rustled the leaves slightly, and the still water was only disturbed by the ducks entering and leaving the pond. Nature was noisy that morning, and I was quiet enough to hear it. When a truck rumbled by and the trailer hit a pothole, the heron took off, the ducks quacked their displeasure, and a woman walking by lamented the big bird’s departure.

I am a fan of walking through parks and woods, but sometimes even walking is too much motion to notice what is going on.

Just the other day, while picking tomatoes in the garden, an orange wooly caterpillar caught my eye. I watched it sink along a green stalk of a weed, surprised by how fast it was moving. The next day, a preying mantis perched on a chair on our porch. We watched it watch us. Later in the week, in the park, a katydid crossed our path.

Photo by Tobias Verstappen on Unsplash

All of it is so easy to miss. And so simple to really see.

—

It takes slowing down and paying attention and turning to the right or left, or casting a glance up or down. It takes stopping, sometimes, taking it all in.

But it’s a fight against the forces–internal and external–that tell us if we’re not moving, we’re not doing. The voices that say sitting and stopping and standing are signs of doing nothing. We risk being called lazy or daydreamers if we stop what we’re doing to stare at the sky, looking for shapes in the clouds or gazing at the stars.

Who has time for such things when the world spins rapidly around us?

I’m increasingly convinced that to not have time for them is detrimental to body, mind and soul. Our bodies were not made for nonstop doing. Our souls were not made to rush. I find that if I am negligent in this practice, my body will let me know. I will be forced to stop for a day or a week or longer, due to illness or injury. Choosing to stop is far preferable.

When is the last time you stopped to notice something?

Filed Under: s-words Tagged With: cloud spotting, contemplative tradition, notice, slowing down, stop

Margins

October 30, 2015

I’m never sure what to do with a week like this. You know the kind, the ones where nothing goes according to plan and everything seems chaos and you sigh with relief that this week is O-V-E-R. (Except it really isn’t when your husband works Saturdays. Sigh.)

Next to me is a girl home from school with a fever. She shuffled off the bus last night and said she couldn’t keep warm at school, but she didn’t have a fever when the nurse checked her. She was feverish by the time she got home, so we nursed her a little and sent her off to bed, and my “plans” for today became laced with contingencies.

Of any day this week for her to be home from school, today is a good one. I didn’t have concrete plans and I wasn’t meeting with my first-ever writing client (squee!). That was yesterday. I was dressed and ready to take a jog/walk when we made the call that she wouldn’t be getting on the bus. In the hour she was awake this morning, her fever rose by a degree or more, so I did the grown-up thing and decided she’d stay home.

She’s missing apple day in her class and I’m on the fence about whether I should let her go trick-or-treating tonight if she’s feeling better. And even though her presence in the house today won’t be a bother, part of me is still selfishly annoyed that my day is not my own today.

I’ve gotten a little too used to this kids-being-in-school-all-day thing.

But it doesn’t even have to be a sick kid to throw me off. I’m not the kind of person who leaves space in her days for the unexpected and unplanned. If I have a calendar, I want to fill it, even if that means filling my time with reading or writing, not necessarily appointments and coffee dates. I start the day with an idea of how things are going to go. It’s a control issue, I think, or maybe something deeper. I don’t know. Maybe I’ll talk to my counselor about it.

Today is just one indicator of how chaotic our week felt. On Sunday night we discovered a patch of carpet in the kids’ room that was soaked. All along the wall their room shares with the bathroom. We knew there was a small problem with the shower but further investigation has led to the revelation of a bigger problem. Monday, on my husband’s day off, was spent clearing out the kids’ room, removing all the furniture against that wall and clearing the floor of all the kid crap that accumulates unwanted. It was exhausting, and the work isn’t done yet and our house is extra messy because we have furniture and books in places they don’t normally belong.

We alerted our landlord. We’re still waiting to hear from the plumber. In the meantime, we discovered that we can’t use the shower unless we want to rain water into the basement on top of all the stuff we have stored down there. So, baths it is for the foreseeable future. (And don’t get me started on the mold potential.) Four years ago, in our last rental, we survived three feet of water in our basement but our souls are still recovering from that ordeal.

It is emotionally draining for me when I have to handle the unexpected and I think that’s because I don’t plan for it at all.  My basic assumption is that everything is going to go exactly as I think so there’s no need to allow for other possible outcomes.

Unrealistic, I know.

I don’t know how to plan for what I don’t know is coming except to keep my schedule free in spots and my attitude open. I know I need to slow down and not always be in such a rush. I don’t have to tick off a dozen things on my list just so I feel like I accomplished something today and am a productive member of society.

My value as a person is not in how much I contribute but simply in who I am. [bctt tweet=”My value as a person is not in how much I contribute but simply in who I am.”]

—

In the midst of this week, there has also been beauty. We had a lovely visit with friends we haven’t seen in years on Sunday. Our son lost his first tooth, which was stressful at first because it was so close to falling out but he wouldn’t let my husband pull it. But it was fun to see him embrace the magic of the tooth fairy this morning.

And it’s the peak week for fall colors around here so every tree is bursting bright with oranges, reds and yellows. I feel like the colors are especially vibrant this year, and the beauty makes me pause every time.

On the way to the bus stop yesterday, I caught a glimpse of the moon lingering in the morning sky, perched just above the trees whose leaves are changing. And later I read in a devotional how a busy schedule makes us miss out on important things.

chaos quote

I wondered what I had been missing this week. Or really my whole life.

There are busy seasons, I know, some more than others. But I know that if I don’t leave margins, if my schedule doesn’t include empty days and white space, then life will become overwhelming when an emergency or unplanned event strikes. If the mantra of my life is “I don’t have time for this”–and I’ve said those words more times than I’d care to admit–then I’ve got it wrong.

I want to have time for this. For quiet snuggles on the couch on a sick day. For a long look at the moon or the stars or the autumn leaves. For the chance to help someone in need. For the stopping and the pausing and the lingering.

How do you make room in your life for what’s important? How do you know when your life is too chaotic?

Filed Under: faith & spirituality, family Tagged With: autumn leaves, chaotic life, planning, schedules, slowing down

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