“Stay dressed for action and keep your lamps burning,”
Luke 12:35 ESV
October is our busiest month since our daughter entered high school. We always had a flurry of activity on a couple of our October weekends with 2 birthdays to celebrate. But things kicked in to hyper gear last year and this year October is even MORE action-packed.
Tonight is Homecoming and there are activities planned all day long at friends’ houses and a park before and after the actual Homecoming event. After homecoming is over, our daughter dives right in to activities associated with her upcoming choir fundraiser performance showcase (called Rev Factor) in which she will be performing 5 different songs (1 solo, 1 trio, 1 all girls group and 2 all-choir performances). This will require multiple rehearsals, setting up before and cleaning up after the performance, etc. Interspersed throughout the next several weeks are fun hangouts with her friends.
If she’s not talking about Homecoming, she’s talking about Rev Factor or some friend hangout that is upcoming. She is excited! It’s easy to get caught up in her excitement!
Our son turns 13 and his party is next Saturday. That’s what HE is excited about and talks about frequently but it’s not something our daughter is really keeping on her radar unless it is briefly brought to her attention.
Being 15, our socially active daughter needs someone to chauffeur her around to all her various destinations and in most cases, that someone is ME. Additionally, someone needs to plan our son’s birthday party, buy and wrap gifts, bake and decorate a cake, etc. Guess who that someone is every year? Yup, ME.
It brings me so much joy to help make holidays and other events special so I am NOT complaining about being so busy.
But the reality is that it all takes a toll on me physically. This is where having MS presents a bigger challenge than for healthy people. After a couple of really active days, I can crash hard and need a day of NO activity to recuperate. Again, I am not complaining. I know my limitations and I plan for rest days and I would rather be involved in life than spend my days trying not to do anything that would drain my energy.
But there is another member of our family who requires my time and attention - my husband. He is not caught up in the excitement. Quite the opposite, he is agitated by the disruptions to our family and he can talk about nothing but what a hardship it is for our daughter to make all these plans and expect us to not only pay for all if it but to provide transportation which means she is not the only member of our family who is frequently gone. He laments the fact that she is prioritizing her friends over time with her family.
I have been thinking a lot about this over the past many days because I am also the sounding board for everyone. I have come to the conclusion that we have a lot of people in our family who are consumed with themselves and their own experiences who can’t seem to step back and consider what their impact is on those around them. They have different perspectives and they are not wrong in and of themselves. Our daughter is a teenager with a great group of friends and she is involved in an awesome choir. She is a straight A student so it’s hard to find fault with the myriad of events and activities she is involved in. But my husband is also right. Our first priority should be to our families and we should be sensitive to each other’s needs and the impact we have on each other. Our son SHOULD be excited about his upcoming birthday party - there’s nothing wrong with that.
But what I don’t hear from any of my family members right now in the middle of this crazy month of activities is much in the way of truly showing love for one another by showing interest in the things the others are excited about. My husband is working on restoring a car that was his Dad’s and he wants to talk about it - but the kids never ask to hear about how it’s going. Our daughter is excited about her month of events but my husband and son don’t ask her much about any of it. Our son is excited about his upcoming party but he's the only one who ever brings it up. Everyone is talking about their own things and no one else is showing any interest. And I am just exhausted by it all.
Does this sound familiar to anyone?
This is a sin problem. It plagues all of us. We are selfish by nature and it is HARD to stop thinking of ourselves for a minute and show GENUINE interest in others. Not just pretending to listen and waiting for a break in the conversation to jump in and talk about whatever is on our own minds. I’m guilty of this too! With all that I am having to keep track of, it’s so easy to spend my time talking about my own thoughts and concerns and to be oblivious to the cares and concerns of others.
But what is the most concerning is that we aren’t keeping our minds focused on God. I have caught myself feeling anxious about how I am going to have the energy and strength to get through this month. Suddenly the Lord will bring me back to Him and reminded me that He will be my strength. What a relief!
it is so hard to admit when we are wrong or have been selfish. But we can’t show love toward each other OR truly love and hear what the Lord is telling us when we are too busy being consumed by our own thoughts and activities. We need to be constantly on guard for this. This is why we are supposed to “Pray without ceasing” (1 Thessalonians 5:17) - because when we stop praying, our minds get flooded by so many thoughts and concerns and we get so distracted that we can’t hear the directions the Lord is giving us. That makes us ineffective as witnesses and it's a trap laid by our enemy that we so easily fall in to.
We can’t be discouraged by our failures though. We are always forgiven and given another chance.