Thoughts From The Lawnmower
So, we have a pretty decent sized yard now. While, technically, you could mow it with a pushmower, it would take a *really* long time. So, we have a riding lawnmower. I love cutting the yard! It takes me somewhere between 2 1/2 and 3 hours to cut it, and it makes for some very nice "me" time. Plus, it has the benefit of allowing me to start a job and finish. My primary occupation is raising children, and that is obviously not a job where you get to place a period at any given time. So, cutting the grass is good for me.
And, it gives me a lot of uninterrupted thinking time. That little blessing is in short supply, most days. Having hours to begin a thought and then keep thinking about it and then allowing it to create this lovely gossamer of connections in my brain is a little bit like eating chocolate while you're dieting. It feels decadent and quite like a reward.
Well, I got to cut the grass on Wednesday afternoon. We were scheduled to have some pretty long rains, and all the weeds are vociferously stretching for attention, so I rearranged some other things and hopped on the mower. Earlier this week, a former first lady, Nancy Reagan, had passed away, and I got to thinking about her. I've always held both her and President Reagan in high regard. Not just for the way he governed and she managed the White House, but for the intense love they had for each other and the way they shared those emotions with anyone who watched. It was genuine. You knew it was. And, in politics, seeing real feelings that are good and pure have a way of connecting you to a person or couple.
So, I got to thinking about her passing and my first thought was "oh, she must have been so joyously happy to see her Ronnie again." That thought was immediately followed by "but that's not who she should have been joyously happy to see."
When I think of passing away, I think of those who have already left. I think of the possibility that my Jason will be the one I am longing to see again and how much that anticipation will fill my thoughts. But I should be deeply longing to see my Lord. Why isn't that my first thought? We long for those we lived with here, because we spent time with that person and invested in that person.
"Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."
Okay, so dig more deeply into His word and spend more time in prayer and in communion with Him. Develop a relationship with Him that comes to mind during the day as I think of friends and those I love.
But, not having that physical relationship - being able to see, touch, hold, care for - keeps the relationship from feeling like the one I have with my husband or my children or my parents or my siblings. In my head, I know I should long to see Him, and so I do. But it's not the same as longing for human beings who have gone on. And it makes me feel quite guilty as well as desirous of changing the relationship I have with Him so that I can feel that longing.
I long for Him to come back and take us all home. That is a deeply felt desire of mine now. But when I am passing away, will I feel that same urge for Him as I will feel for those people here that I loved?
You know, I don't know. But just typing this out has made me remember that investment of time matters. And I am not really investing the kind of time I need to in order to develop not just professorial knowledge, but also emotion and desire - that kind of desire that can at times overwhelm your heart. Maybe just knowing that this desire is a goal of mine will help to bring it about, because I will be putting my treasure of thoughts into Jesus Christ more often. And eventually, as I am leaving this world, I may be longing for those already gone, with Jesus being the first one on that mindful list.






