I was in the waiting room of a doctor’s office when
I picked up an issue of Better Homes and
Gardens. As I flipped through the
colorful pages of recipes and what sort of origami can make your child’s birthday
party table festive, I came across an article about how a woman had made use of
a small space.
The woman had found a place for her desk by
converting her kitchen pantry into a desk nook.
She sat poised in front of this desk in the
picture. She had lined the back of her
pantry with vintage foil wallpaper. It
was striking. The paper had deep silvers and greens with an ornate black paisley
pattern swirling over the top. It looked
like the walls of Sherlock Holmes’ house on Baker Street. (The most recent BBC version. When it comes
to Sherlock –go Cumberbatch or go home.)
In front of the wallpaper she had mounted crisp white shelves artfully
arranged with books, supplies and decorative
objects. Under the shelves was her small desk: a clean
surface with a closed laptop on top of it.
She sat in front of her desk and she looked perfect.
She had her dark blond hair pulled back in a tight
low bun at the base of her tiny neck.
She had lovely features. She was
wearing a grey loose sweater that hung gracefully from her slender frame. She had a lighter gray scarf all gauzy and
airy draped around her neck.
She was sitting in jeans with her legs crossed in
the slipknot sort of a way that only a very slim person can get away with. This is the when a woman crosses her legs so
that her calves lie side by side against each other. A heavier person cannot achieve this effect. When we cross our legs it always kind of
makes the shape of a seven.
The whole picture was tasteful, elegant, lovely, but
not showy.
And she was sitting on…a reclaimed tree stump, a nice
hunk of wood with bark on the sides and everything.
I stared at this picture. I wanted to hate her and love her. I wanted her to be my best friend and I
wanted to push her down a flight of stairs all at the same time. All the sudden I had become the creepy
roommate in every B list horror movie.
I mean, this woman had it all together. I mean, you have to really have it all
together if you’re hauling in tree parts and thinking, “This is a chair
now.” I mean, what kind of back support
can a reclaimed tree stump give you?
None, that’s how much. Maybe this
lady does so much Pilates that she is her own back support.
I bet she does.
I bet she does Pilates every morning at dawn. No, earlier. Dawn is for those who sleep in, lazybones. She is up before everyone, even Marines,
doing Pilates and making a kale smoothie whilst packing organic lunches and
sorting out her budget at her perfect, perfect desk!!
When I think about that freak out over this poor
woman and her resourcefulness I just keep thinking, what’s the matter with me? What is the matter with me that I only see someone
else’s accomplishments as a light on my failings?
She just looked like what I should be, thin,
organized and stylish.
This is the ugliest kind of thinking. I reduce her to what I saw in that picture. Do I really think she’s never hurt? She’s never been frustrated? She doesn’t feel like a failure at times? She probably felt like a failure at some
point on the same day she took that picture.
This kind of thinking falls under the same category of
liking what I see in the mirror.
It’s that deceptive feeling like there’s some sort
of magic equation. When I am this weight
I will feel this way. When my house is
always clean I will feel this way. Just
one more room to decorate. It is the lie
everyone chases.
I think this is a hard subject to wrap my head
around because it’s tied to a much deeper question that I have a hard time
expressing.
Worth. When I
compare, when I add myself against others, I am measuring to see what I am
worth.
If I think I am better than someone else, a better
parent, with a better outfit = 2 points.
If someone is better than me = lose a point. A constant scale measuring to see how I add
up. Worth.
And another woman’s worth I either want to
assimilate (she is my best friend) or annihilate (push her down a flight of
stairs). I know this makes me sound like
some strange Star Trek race of people,
but I think this is what I am doing when I “love/hate” someone for their
success.
This kind of thinking is so wrong I don’t really
know where to begin. So let’s start with
what I know about God.
I ask myself what I am worth. I am worth Christ’s
death on the cross. But this, although
important, does not give me any credit.
He died for me; he died for all.
This doesn’t make me special.
Wow. Ooff.
That last paragraph might have been one of the worst things ever
uttered.
I am special and valuable to God, but not because of
anything I did or how I dress or any of that.
I did not earn that invaluable worth; it was given.
So what is the matter with me? Everything and
Nothing.
This is the beauty of the Gospel. I have nothing to bring to the table, but I
win the whole pot because someone else played for me.
Someone else has given my life value in redemption.
But
God demonstrates His own love for us in this: While we were still sinners,
Christ died for us. Romans 5:8
So all of this.
Getting my house in order, good wife, good mom, good steward of my body,
is not because this is how I will have value, but is because this is how I say
thank you for the value given.
Boom.
So how does this play out practically? I don’t like abstract solutions. I want to know what do I do, step by step,
when I am observing someone and I am intimidated and envious of their
life. I was discussing this with friends
and the solution they suggested was pray.
Pray for them and whatever they are going
through. Paint them for who they really
are: not a thorn in my side, but a person and a soul, hurt, scared, trying just like the rest of us.
And pray and ask for forgiveness, because although I
may talk about this playfully, this really boils down to good old fashioned
jealousy. The comparison game might
actually be sin.
And maybe I might be able to see people for who they
really are, and in the same breath see me for who I really am. Forgiven.
Forgiven and free. And maybe I
can start to feel this way.
Thanks, Stephanie!
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