Earlier this week, I was struggling. I had allowed myself to be hurt. I had wallowed in it, cried about it, and I had felt defeated. I moaned and complained about it to my closest friends, and maybe a daughter or two, and was as sick of hearing it myself as they were because I had allowed it to happen before by the same set of circumstances.
The funny thing is a lot of people who hurt don’t even know they did it; the sad thing is lot of people know they do and maybe find a little joy in it. What a sad thought that someone finds pleasure in bringing someone else sadness or hurt… whew.
But let’s go back to “I allowed.” They didn’t have the power and strength to hurt me, I gave it to them. Again, I, I, I… I went to bed that night thinking about the saying, “Don’t let your key to happiness be in someone else’s pocket” and asking myself why I continued to allow it to happen because it was the same scenario over and over again. I prayed, cried some more, and prayed. I thought to myself how I was 53 years old and was letting someone whose immaturity in self and in Christ become ‘my’ issue and I asked God to take that from me. Those things are so not me and life is too doggone short to carry that suitcase on what I hope is a long journey ahead. Travel light, travel light, travel light (thank you Max Lucado).
The following morning, I think I was between sleep and waking, and it immediately came to mind again, and it felt like a literal shrugging of the shoulders as the heavy rock of hurt from the day before fell to the ground. It felt so literal I even laid in bed for a few minutes wondering if I had been dreaming. I woke up with a lightness as if the suitcase had been emptied but filled with the weightlessness from forgiveness, a different feeling that I’d experienced in a long time.
I am getting up in years, yes, the silver tinsel verifies that, but I can honestly say in all 53 thus far, through high school, working in an office for 27 years, and dealing with every kind of client and person there is, I can count on one hand (and remember, there are only five fingers), the times someone has really hurt me or been mean to me or caused me not to like them very much, this recent scenario being on that hand. In fact, there are so few of them that I can see their faces in a flash and I sort of laugh about it now and the insignificance those moments carry in my life at this point. Sure, we all have people along the way that throw in a little pebble into the suitcase, but they’re lost in the shuffle of life and you move on, they usually fall between the cracks and you forget about it before it barely started (like the lady who jumped in front of you in the grocery store line .. and lady, you had 13 items, I counted them). Anyway, I’m talking about rock sharers and boulder bearers. But what a blessing to realize my one hand is all I need to count on for those situations, it could be both hands and feet and I know people who need them all!
Some people have the gift of song, art, woodwork, and I can’t do any of those things, but I am thankful for the gift of gab and of tolerance… I can adapt to, love on, give until I can’t give anymore, and tolerate every personality known to man, and I sort of like the challenge of breaking down the person whose wall is made of big rocks (like my mailman… I’m on a mission from heaven to get through to that mailman, to get one smile before I leave this earth, but that’s a story for another day:). But my parents were that way and I thank God every day my children appear to be that way. I may not have passed down how to carry a tune but I hope I passed down a tender heart… sorry kids, it can be a little too soft at times but I promise you’ll be thankful later:)
When you’r
e hurt and YOU’RE carrying the rocks in the suitcase, sit it down, dump them on the side of the road, or better yet, hand it back to them, “Carry your own suitcase and if you need any help getting rid of those rocks, I know Someone who can help with that.”







