One Saturday morning a man is sitting on his couch drinking
coffee and reading the news on his iPad. His wife walks into the room dressed
for the day and announces that she will be gone for the next eight hours or so.
Before leaving she hands her husband a long list of chores that need to be
done, preferably that day.
True to her word, she returns early that evening and sees
the list of chores on the kitchen counter. She’s pleased to see that most of
the items have been crossed off the list. She looks for her husband and finds
him sitting on the patio in the back yard and thanks him for finishing all the
chores while she was gone. To which he replies “oh, I didn’t do anything. I
just crossed the chores I didn’t want to do off the list.”
Like I’ve always said, if a man says he will do something,
he will. You don’t have to remind him every six months.
I hate lists. Lists are an Albatross hanging from my neck. They
stare me down every morning and force me to organize my day. Unfortunately,
making lists is also the only way I can remember the things I need to do.
Sometimes I forget to look at my lists (Karen will testify to this). I don’t
know how to fix that.
I used to make paper lists but that’s not good enough in our
modern technological age. Now I have a “list app” to categorize, prioritize,
and track progress against my tasks. Where I used to have a simple list
scrawled on a sheet of old notebook paper, I now have a numbing array of lists,
all available at a moment’s notice, with headings like home groceries, Target,
Sam’s/Costco, Home Depot/Lowes, farm groceries, meals, vacation plans, farm
projects, etc. I even have a meta-list, a list of lists that categorizes all my lists. And there is no limit to how
many lists I can create.
My failure to complete tasks is now highlighted in yellow or
red. To make matters worse, I share my list with Karen, which gives her the
ability to add to my lists at will. While I’m in the middle of checking some
task off my list, new ones appear like magic.
One item you will not find on any of my lists is “spend
silent time listening to God”. Spending
time with God is not a chore to check off when complete. Thomas Kelley, a Quaker
mystic, asks us:
“Do you want to live in such a divine presence that life is
transformed and transmuted into peace and power and glory and miracle”.
If your answer is yes, Kelly says “if you do, you can. But
if you say you don’t have time, then you really don’t want to, because we
always manage to find the time for the things we truly want to do”.
Is your desire to spend silent time with God on your “to do”
list or on your “want to do list”. If the latter, you will find the time.
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