My beloved wife wrote this recently. I have her permission to share it here.
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Some jumped,
or fell, or were pushed. I’m not really sure. It’s hard to know what caused
their flight –their own decision or others-but it’s not hard to see that they
are no longer here. I can’t say if they landed safely. Some before them did. Some
did not.
I’m here, near the
ledge, sometimes about to go over-slipping mostly reluctantly down. I did not
run to the ledge, not this time. I was dragged. Pulled by those who think they
know me. They think they know me yet what they know is a perception of me. A
figment of some cobbled together claims.
They don’t know how the
troubles around the place keep me up at night. They don’t know the times I
chose them over rest, sanity, and the best good of a few dear ones. They don’t
know of the ones who trust me, confide in me, need me to be as Jesus to them
when they can’t find Jesus themselves in the mess of living. They don’t know
their dragging/pushing has led to me pushing even God away at times. The One
Who Knows can be hard to know at the ledge. It’s hard to know if there is more of
God behind me or more of God before me.
They don’t know what worries
me or what distresses me or what disturbs me. They don’t know that I stubbed my
toe and broke my heart on the way this time. They don’t know how long it took
those to heal last time.
They don’t know the
number of times I limped myself to the ledge to wait and wonder. They don’t
know, not really, the other time or two or more someone dragged me to the ledge
and pushed me a bit waiting for me to fall off. Likely they don’t know the
number of times I stepped or hobbled back and suited up anyway. Or that I kept writing
the reports and answering the phones and the emails and shepherding the people
because those were the things that needed done.
I kept doing the thing
that I had to do because I am me.
Yet, they’ve pulled or
pushed me to the ledge and left me here. I turn back to look at them but I can
barely see them for how far back from me they’ve retreated. I can barely make
them out and I’m sure they can’t hear me asking if they intend for me to jump. I
agree with their retreat, the ledge is a scary place to be—uncertainties abound.
There are days I’m closer
to the ledge, the ground around me skittering off down into who knows where or
maybe to Who Knows What.
It’s not the pushy ones
who pull me back. A few of them seem to be causing a wind that would send me
over the ledge.
It’s not the uncertainty after the ledge that keeps me from going over. Even at the ledge I’m convinced that is my place. Yet my conviction gets smaller with each bit that goes over or gets pushed or blown over.
It’s not the uncertainty after the ledge that keeps me from going over. Even at the ledge I’m convinced that is my place. Yet my conviction gets smaller with each bit that goes over or gets pushed or blown over.
I’ve heard some insist
that the ledge does not exist. That there is only here and not here. I question
their vision. Disavowing the ledge does us no good. I’m certain there’s a ledge.
I’ve been on it. Others have been to the ledge. Some for a moment, then they
slip/jump/tumble/leap/fall over. Some for a moment, then they run back to the
stable ground too terrified of what might be. Some stay longer at the ledge,
waiting to be called back or for their tight grip to be pried off the ledge one
finger at a time. Some work days and nights over there but are still at the
ledge in spirit.
It can be lonely at the
ledge. It can be lonely even on the stable ground. I imagine it’s lonely even
after the ledge.
If you’ve run to the
ledge or if you’ve been dragged to the ledge or if you’ve limped to the ledge,
look around. I’m there too. I’ll sit with you if you want, looking either
behind or beyond. I’ll probably be near for a while. I can listen to your
story, but I can’t tell you whether to go over or go back.
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