After the PTA meeting last night, I got
the kids to bed and started watching The Real Housewives shows my
husband refuses to watch. My husband had a work meeting and at 9:15
pm texted “I'm on my way.” I watched a few more scenes of fancy
lunches at beach houses in the Hamptons and checked my phone. It had
been over 30 minutes and he still wasn't home. The drive home takes
about 12-15 minutes. I texted him, no answer. I called, no answer. I started to worry. I text again, nothing. I call again,
nothing. I had the laptop next to me and I remembered that if he was
signed into Google then Google maps would show me where he was. We
discovered this once when he called me for help avoiding a traffic
jam on the interstate. I click on the location button and it shows
him in Pueblo, a city about an hour away. So now I am panicking.
The logical thought would be “he meant he was on his way to dinner,
which they usually do after that meeting and the location feature
isn't always accurate” but my first thought was “someone wanted
to steal his car, threw him in the trunk and drove it to Pueblo.”
There was a voice of reason inside me trying to be heard but worst
case scenario flashes overpowered it. This was all within a matter
of minutes before I reloaded the page and it showed he was at a
restaurant downtown. I breathed a sigh of relief, closed the
computer and thought “I'm going to be a wreck when my kids can
drive.”
I have always been a worrier. I can
remember being very young and crying because I thought my mom must
have died in a car wreck when she decided to pick up a pizza on the
way home from work and was late getting home (in the pre-cell phone
days). I knew all of this was a risk when I decided I wanted to be a
mom. I also knew that my desire to have children outweighed my fears
and that whether or not I became a mom I would still have
attachments. Being a mortal attached to mortal people breeds
anxiety.
I know that my worry comes from my
inability to accept what I can't control. The fact that I worry
about something has no bearing on the final outcome, but it is hard
to avoid. One of my Lenten disciplines this year is to allow myself
to be in discernment. I have veered from the path I always expected
myself to take since I was called into ministry when I was thirteen
years old. I realize that a sense of calling at age 38 may look very
different from what it looked like 25 years ago and so I really want
to allow myself to be open to whatever God's calling might look like
for me right now. Part of that process is reminding myself that I am
happy where I am and there is no urgency. I am using tools like
meditation, conversations and journaling to try to keep myself open
rather than rushing to find an answer.
I am also trying to take fear out of
the equation. How many of our decisions are influenced by fear?
Part of letting go of fear is fighting that same battle I have fought
so many times with worry. I need to stop pretending as though I have
control, accept that things change and life is unpredictable and
unload the weight of the world that keeps creeping onto my shoulders.
I came across this passage as I was
reading The Interior Castle written
in the 16th
century by St. Teresa of Avila. She writes:
It's tempting to think that if God
would only grant you internal favors you would be able to withstand
external challenges. [God] knows what is best for us. [God] does not
require our opinion on the matter, and, in fact, has every right to
point out that we don't have any idea what we're asking for.
Remember: all you have to do as you begin to cultivate the practice
of prayer is to prepare yourself with sincere effort and intent to
bring your will into harmony with the will of God. I promise
you that this is the highest perfection to be attained on the
spiritual path.”
My husband came
home safely. He had in fact meant that he was on his way to dinner
and then accidentally turned the vibrate on his phone off. He felt
really bad for worrying me. I was just happy he was home. That
worry was over, but a new day brings new risks, fears and unknowns.
And so I keep working, discerning, letting go, breathing deeply and
doing my best to live this life.