Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Stop and drop!

Emotional exhaustion is settling upon many of us. We have fought long and hard to reclaim our families, our homes, our companies, and our lives. And now we are just about to drop.

I have read that a great race horse has so much heart that he will run for the jockey until he kills himself. The jockey riding a great horse has to be acquainted with the physical limits and protect the horse from his own determined will.

So maybe it is time to stop and drop. You don’t have to drop hard, and you don’t have to stay down long. But for the sake of everyone you love, you have to take a breather.

I think that is why the account of creation in the Bible records God resting on the seventh day. We are made in the image of God in that we can initiate, innovate, communicate, relate, and correlate. But he knows we do not have unlimited stamina. So he stopped to rest and hoped we would pay attention.

Sometimes we refuse to stop and drop because we are in crisis mode. Our lives are incinerating, and we are running without thinking. The “stop and drop” instruction works when your clothes are on fire. You should not run then. You should stop, drop and roll.

It also works when your mind and heart and emotions are on fire. You cannot outrun your racing mind. You will run yourself into the ground. And that will not be good for anyone.

I can hear your thoughts churning. People are depending on you—important people like children and spouses and aging parents. You are a caregiver every day. You are the chauffeur, the nanny, the nurse, and the maid.

You are the sole provider. You generate the only income stream. Everything goes south if you stop producing. Everyone depends on you.

All the more reason to stop and drop. Warn the people around you. If they truly care for you, they know that you are approaching your limit. They may already be urging you to take a break.

Listen to what they are saying. The rat race will be okay without you for a day or two. You will not fix everything that still needs repaired and recovered in one fell swoop. We are in a 20-year marathon down here on the bayou, and we have to move out of crisis mode and into a sustainable pace with appropriate breaks.

The stress of this mess is straining the most important relationships of life. The mountain of things yet to do seems overwhelming. Sometimes we fear that we are just digging futilely at the edge of the pile. Frustration combined with futility will wear out any hearty soul.

Stop and drop. It will give you a new perspective on life in general and the pace of your own personal recovery. It will increase your energy, lower your anxiety, and bring your world into better focus.

After all, everyone on the planet is recovering in some way. We are all “getting over” troubles of some kind. We cannot postpone love and life and recreation until we are fully recovered. You can see where that would leave us.

This week I examined a butterfly with two of my granddaughters. It danced through the yard and landed on the tiniest lavender blossom. We sneaked up close, faces pressed together, and watched it feed on the pollen. We noticed the amazing pattern of bright colors on the perimeters of its wings. We studied it upside down and right-side up until it noticed us and flitted away.

Now that was a moment when the cares of the world were suspended. It didn’t last long enough, but it reminded me how good it feels to stop the spinning wheels of my mind, drop to my knees, and enjoy a moment of beauty and grace.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dear Pastor,
Your new blog is fantastic! This is why we love you and joined FBNO shortly after you came. You are always on the cutting edge. You are innovative, open-minded and progressive and you love our City. Because of who you are, FBNO is healthy and vibrant, as we reach out into the community for Jesus. We reflect you as you reflect Him. We are so grateful for you - you remain in our most fervent prayers, daily. Frank and Kay

Anonymous said...

David:

Great idea...that is what I did today at about 2:30. I walked out of my store, got in my car and said to myself I have had enough for today. It will still be there tomorrow. (That is the cleaned up version of what I said haha!)...but you get the point. Then I put out the request that I needed some encouragement and BOOM there it was in my email. Thanks a bunch and keep those blogs coming

Suzanne

Anonymous said...

Pastor Crosby,
This new blog is awesome! thank you so much for doing it. You are so right. It doesn't matter how much we try we really do need to take some time jsut to breath. Actually I did that this morning. Just listen to my christian songs and took a deep breath and just thanked God for the good. Even though we always think there is more bad sometimes we just have to "stop and drop" and remember there is always good.
Thanks again, Ale.

Anonymous said...

Dear Rev Crosby-As i usually do each sunday i brought the church bulletin "home" and read about all the church news and weekly happenings of the church and its families and noted the information about your new website.the weather outside for a sunday afternoon is rainy following a busy thanksgiving weekend so we "surfed"the website especially your message written around 10/30/2007 and the fact we are all tired after two years and many of us are still not back in our homes yet,my family included,as we await to rebuild on our lot near clearview pkwy.and w.esplanade.even though our children are college age,i can tell from their emotions that apt.living is wearing everyone thin after this amount of time.thank you for your advice on how we should just stop and listen to our hearts for gods direction for our lives;something i pray my son will learn to do.thanks for your ministry;i have learned so much from the few short months i have been visiting first baptist church new orleans.take care.john and betty