Smile -- You're on heaven's camera!
What brings a smile to your face? A tear to your eyes?
For me, it’s the little things in life the unanticipated events, the chance remark, the unbidden dream, and the little things that don’t matter much. Of course, big begets BIG. I cried buckets of tears when my parents died. Smiles dominated my face on our wedding day, when the children were born, and when the Illini beat Michigan and Ohio State in football both in the same year.
But those big things are too rare to depend on to maintain a persistent smiley disposition. Instead, it’s in the little things and the daily routine that we find reasons to smile. This week I’m smiling.
A couple of nights ago, I had a dream. Nothing unusual about that. I take some little pills to adjust the chemistry in my brain and one of the side effects of that medicine is that nighttime dreams come every night with uncommon intensity and a magnified vividness. These dreams are not just a nighttime extension of the day’s events, but often speak of recurring fears, doubts, and failures.
One of my recurring dreams has me scheduled to take a school examination. In the dream I am well prepared and confident, but when I get into the room where the exam will be taken I discover I have prepared for the wrong test. To think one is to take a history exam only to discover the test subject is calculus, is not a pleasant feeling. No smiles coexist with that kind of fear. But at least the dream gives my mind a safe way to experience the fear of failure.
Another recurring dream is about churches. The other night, I dreamt that I was a pastor again of a typical congregation. In the dream, a friend told me that a member of the congregation had included me in her will that she had changed just prior to her death. I knew the woman but not well. We had nothing more enduring than a routine pastor/parishioner acquaintance. Surprised and skeptical about her reasons to include me in her will, I showed up at the time appointed for its reading. I listened while her wealth and treasures were doled out to her relatives and then in the last line of the will, the attorney read, “To my pastor, I bequeath a brand new commode.”
Sure enough, there it was in the lawyer’s office, shiny and complete with its double lid. As I carried my new commode home, I wondered what the woman had been thinking. Putting aside the blasphemous and cynical thoughts, I concluded that she gave me a way to rid myself of all the S--- I had been given. I woke up laughing!
Days later, awake, I returned to that dream again and again and each time, I smiled. I think the dream tried to explain that in every congregation there is an unlikely someone who wants to give a commode to the pastor – to flush away you-know-what that comes with the territory. Oh, if only we all had someone to give us a commode to handle what we put up with. At that thought, I smiled again.
Won’t you smile when a similar commode, a way to flush the stink out of your life, comes your way?
On the first day of a Shakespeare class I am taking at the University of Illinois – Springfield, the professor came dressed in a shirt, tie, trousers, coat, shoes, and no socks. I smiled! After all, Shakespeare isn’t about black wing-tips and over the calf socks. I smiled again.
Yesterday, in the same class, I overheard a young woman, no more twenty years-old, say to her classmates, “In all my years of study of the English language, even Middle English, I have never seen words that Thomas Hardy uses in Tess.”
In all her years – I hope not. I, a near 70-year-old student who assumes she has some years yet to live, smiled at her mismatch of words and meaning. At age seventy, I grin at the concept that I might have learned enough about anything. And I suspect octogenarians smile at this 70 year-old’s premature conclusions.
Go – search for a smile. Begin looking in the life of someone 20 years your junior. Don’t quit looking until you find a smile in an unpleasant memory.
John
If you would like to be notified the next time a change is made to this blog, check out www.changedetection.com/monitor.html
For me, it’s the little things in life the unanticipated events, the chance remark, the unbidden dream, and the little things that don’t matter much. Of course, big begets BIG. I cried buckets of tears when my parents died. Smiles dominated my face on our wedding day, when the children were born, and when the Illini beat Michigan and Ohio State in football both in the same year.
But those big things are too rare to depend on to maintain a persistent smiley disposition. Instead, it’s in the little things and the daily routine that we find reasons to smile. This week I’m smiling.
A couple of nights ago, I had a dream. Nothing unusual about that. I take some little pills to adjust the chemistry in my brain and one of the side effects of that medicine is that nighttime dreams come every night with uncommon intensity and a magnified vividness. These dreams are not just a nighttime extension of the day’s events, but often speak of recurring fears, doubts, and failures.
One of my recurring dreams has me scheduled to take a school examination. In the dream I am well prepared and confident, but when I get into the room where the exam will be taken I discover I have prepared for the wrong test. To think one is to take a history exam only to discover the test subject is calculus, is not a pleasant feeling. No smiles coexist with that kind of fear. But at least the dream gives my mind a safe way to experience the fear of failure.
Another recurring dream is about churches. The other night, I dreamt that I was a pastor again of a typical congregation. In the dream, a friend told me that a member of the congregation had included me in her will that she had changed just prior to her death. I knew the woman but not well. We had nothing more enduring than a routine pastor/parishioner acquaintance. Surprised and skeptical about her reasons to include me in her will, I showed up at the time appointed for its reading. I listened while her wealth and treasures were doled out to her relatives and then in the last line of the will, the attorney read, “To my pastor, I bequeath a brand new commode.”
Sure enough, there it was in the lawyer’s office, shiny and complete with its double lid. As I carried my new commode home, I wondered what the woman had been thinking. Putting aside the blasphemous and cynical thoughts, I concluded that she gave me a way to rid myself of all the S--- I had been given. I woke up laughing!
Days later, awake, I returned to that dream again and again and each time, I smiled. I think the dream tried to explain that in every congregation there is an unlikely someone who wants to give a commode to the pastor – to flush away you-know-what that comes with the territory. Oh, if only we all had someone to give us a commode to handle what we put up with. At that thought, I smiled again.
Won’t you smile when a similar commode, a way to flush the stink out of your life, comes your way?
On the first day of a Shakespeare class I am taking at the University of Illinois – Springfield, the professor came dressed in a shirt, tie, trousers, coat, shoes, and no socks. I smiled! After all, Shakespeare isn’t about black wing-tips and over the calf socks. I smiled again.
Yesterday, in the same class, I overheard a young woman, no more twenty years-old, say to her classmates, “In all my years of study of the English language, even Middle English, I have never seen words that Thomas Hardy uses in Tess.”
In all her years – I hope not. I, a near 70-year-old student who assumes she has some years yet to live, smiled at her mismatch of words and meaning. At age seventy, I grin at the concept that I might have learned enough about anything. And I suspect octogenarians smile at this 70 year-old’s premature conclusions.
Go – search for a smile. Begin looking in the life of someone 20 years your junior. Don’t quit looking until you find a smile in an unpleasant memory.
John
If you would like to be notified the next time a change is made to this blog, check out www.changedetection.com/monitor.html
