Lessons From Weakness - Part Two
My previous blog may have looked like a pity party, but it was supposed to be a lighthearted account of why my blog went dormant for a year. I was virtually blind in one eye for a year, and then I was given a second chance at seeing again and I am compelled to wax.
See the photo journey above. I promised I would ruminate on the lessons of that process, so here are two things I learned from being visually disabled:
1) I used to laugh at old men who said, "If you have your health you have everything". That's simplistic for sure, but the spirit of it is right. When we skip through life with good health, and then start losing it, we are drawn to philosophical and spiritual reflection.
After we have worn out out loved ones with complaints, we find ourselves alone, with something/someone we call God. Simple maladies, much less major issues, transform people into pray-ers. Adversity has a way of making us pray, often for immediate or long term wellness. Unfortunately, when we are well, we forget to express gratitude for good health in equal proportion to our cursing, crying and begging God for relief when we have the flu.
My book (listed above for sale) gets into the fervent nature of our praying when things are bad, and also suggests we migrate away from prayer when all is well. I hate to be crass, but my dad used to tell me when he was getting old that he thanked God every time he had a good bowel movement. He knew how miserable he was when his digestive system shut down, so he wasn't trying to be funny at all. Sure, there are many other things to thank God for that are less distasteful, but his point was well taken: when you have your health, you have everything!
When we aren't working well, nothing else has the capacity to shift our focus from our misery and discomfort. Some get a really bad draw in life and develop terminal illnesses far too early. Possibly some deaths are brought on by poor living habits, but sometimes joggers drop dead without explanation as well.
Exercise your gratitude every day, and when you need an infusion of power when you feel weak, it will be there for you. If you are well, stay well and if you are not, do everything you can to get well!
That goes for your body, soul and spirit. (I write about the considerable differences between those three things in my book for sale above.)
Note: In a future blog I will write about the difference between gratitude and thanksgiving.
2) Another old saying leads me to my second lesson: Make hay while the sun shines. We have no guarantee that we will have the tomorrows we hope for. All of us have loved ones who have left us far too soon, and when we understand our mortality, we are wise to reflect on our legacy.
This thought speaks directly to the footprints we leave behind. I left some seriously creepy footprints from one part of my life, so I purposefully chose to leave my children and grandchildren better imprints, something positive, other than money or quickly fading memories.
One of my greatest achievements in life is that I really wrote and published "my book" (listed above for sale). It's an audacious thing to do, but I did it anyway. It's a lasting memory of who I am, or who I was at that time. I toy with writing another someday, just to show the changing nature of my ongoing journey, but it took three years of daily, backbreaking writing to finish it, so the thought of doing another one scares me. Maybe that's why I blog.
In the Dedication I tell everyone I was motivated to do the heavy lifting by Barbara, my wife, and my children. I left them something amazing they can have and hold long after I'm gone. The memories of our good and bad times will wane, so I really love knowing that when I am ashes, they have something tangible that will be there as long as the Library of Congress lasts.
I was here and I can prove it with something more accessible than my neglected tombstone. I don't know if I have more hay to bail, but if I don't get any more put in the barn, I did this one very good harvest. Sadly as I age, there are far too many cloudy days where the sun is not as bright as it used to be for making hay.
Keep looking for your positive lasting legacy, and don't let the clouds keep you from achieving it.
That's enough for now. I would love your comments and stories of your legacies, but I fear the settings on this blog mitigate against that. I'll check.
Jack
Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect. Mark Twain
Total Pageviews
What Matters About Me
- Jack C. Getz
- I am who I am, not what I have done. For those who care about pedigree, I have little more than being a former public school teacher and a pastor/denominational adminstrator. The following insights come from a couple of tests I took. They may explain why I am a Contrarian and why I decided to do a blog about it. The first test is a standardized personality profile. The second is something strange called a Brain Type test! 1)“Jack lives outside traditional boundaries and ahead of the curve. When others focus on limitations, Jack creates new possibilities and ideas. He is a doer, not just a dreamer. Well grounded in reality, logic and analytical thinking. He enjoys meeting and working with other creative and ambitious people...a fearless leader. Only 3-5% of U.S. population has these qualities.” 2) Jack's Intellectual Type is Word Warrior. This means he has exceptional verbal skills. He can can easily make sense of complex issues and takes an unusually creative approach to solving problems. His strengths also make him a visionary. Even without trying he's able to come up with lots of new and creative ideas. (Like blogging as Contrarian?)
It's always good to catch up on what you're thinking. Sometimes I read things in too much of a hurry and miss detail, such as the seriousness of your eye problem and surgery. I'll try to do better. I'm glad things are looking up – and down and sideways and every other way.
ReplyDeleteI am looking forward to having time to pursue some different things. For the past three years I have given much time to being the principal euphonium in an up-and-coming brass band. I gave my retirement notice a couple of months ago and just finished up the last two gigs before Christmas. As of now I am officially retired. However, I expect I will do a little substituting now and again. Upon my retirement, the guys in the band were very generous in their comments, leading me to believe that part of my legacy will be having played a big part in raising that band to a new level.
Now that I have more time to give, I am already enjoying giving more time to the church. I just started working on their website, hoping to make it much more of an outreach tool. The church is building a new 500 seat auditorium. The process has been going on for a couple of years now because they are building only as they raise money. Quite a bit of faith involved here – their current attendance runs around 130.
This is a new church for us. When we moved here three years ago, we started going to a church that I knew had a much different theological heritage. I thought that wouldn't matter as long as we shared certain basic beliefs in common. I was wrong. I think it might have worked in reverse – that is, someone with their theology attending our present church. Over there, they seem pretty sure everything was figured out for us in the 17th century and we now only need the Bible to confirm it. In other words they find believing to be easy on the basis of the "thinking" cartoon at the top of your blog page. We loved the people at that former church, but we are thrilled to be where we are. It's just full of life and the preaching is superb. The building plans are not at all unrealistic.
Life is exceedingly good for us. What fun it is to watch the grandchildren blossom. Lots to do and the good to health to do it. By the way, I think the quote you used typically goes, "If you don't have your health, you have nothing". It's nice to have the more optimistic version you have used, although I think the traditional one is probably more accurate. But, in fact, I don't think either one is completely true. My health steadily and subtly declines with the years, but I am richer every day. Wisdom, joy and gratitude don't depend on health.
At least until Alzheimer's sets in. I don't know. Maybe we'll see someday.
I counted on your enlightening comment my friend! Hoped for it, anyway! You are a poster child for my thoughts. You always have been and I am sure always will be, until you get Alzheimer's that is. Then we can sit with you and laugh at your offerings! ��
ReplyDeleteI LOVE your comment about the church that thinks all things were settled in the 1700's. And especially the second part that speaks to the notion of using the scriptures to prove their assumptions. I think, read and write about that single issue more than anything, and when someone as thoughtful as you hits the nerve as easily as you did, I am confirmed. I may get into that on a blog sometime.
I can't think of this life without the world's sexiest euphonium tone silenced. I have your CD, which is comparable to writing a book in my mind. Nice footprint! Can we post a ln on this site so folks can avail themselves of it!
Thanks for the comment.