onceuponatime

  Home
    fabula
    imago
    percontatio
    lyra
  About
  Archives
  Guestbook
  Contacts
 



  Links
   alek
   andy goodacre
   alpin
   asnac ruth
   bex bowtell
   bruce in bristol
   charity hamilton
   clareinscotland
   edgehog
   esaj
   geoff on the 43
   habarizamark
   iain bailey
   jacko
   jerry
   jimbob
   joe and his joybasket
   jon swarbrick
   klingwood
   krister and resa
   lile
   live vicky
   lotsofpeople
   lucille
   lutonblog
   paul roberts
   phil evans
   rabbit galloway
   urbanmonklife



http://20six.co.uk/nimoi

powered by
20six.co.uk



chapter 6 - control

When is it alright to let go?

A 1am head dialogue.


Fred: Time is valuable, right? So isn't making the most of every moment
the best way to live a fruitful, fulfilling and worshipful life?


Edith: But rest is also valuable - so I am told. Not wasting time as
such. So it follows that making best use of time incorporates rhythms
of action and rest, involvement and retreat. This also releases you to
be creative, fully yourself, which gives glory to God. Besides which
your adjectives have lost their life - freedom isn't just about productivity
you know.


Fred: I know that. But then making decisions about when to do which involves a whole
head process, and a responsibility which brings you back to the same
problem as the 'overefficiency' quandary, surely?


Edith: Then again, why should you feel 'responsible' when you live
under grace and not law? Do you still believe that you are what you do?
What about love?


Fred: No, but time IS valuable. And we are in a sense responsible for
what we are given - we are called stewards. Besides, if you open
yourself up to love, you start to see things you want to see restored, changed, broken. You start to care. And then you want to use your time as best you can...

Edith: But sometimes it's alright to let go. To trust God. That doesn't
mean you cease to care - it's more about the right to control it. He
wants both you and the people around you to become all they could be,
to be fully free.

Fred: True - but when I let go I often block out the pain of others.
The need to respond. I feel like doing nothing except being selfish.
Edith: Are you sure you're not just afraid that that's what would happen?
Fred: Yes, I've known it happen. Right now I feel apathetic. I want to bury my head in the sand, or hibernate. Not to care.

Edith: What are you scared will happen if you do that?

Fred: I'm not scared - or, perhaps a part of me is, that I'll cease to
exist. The other part is more concerned that like every one else, there
is a selfish part in me that does just want the best for myself.
Edith: What about that everything will all go wrong and the people around you will fall apart?

Fred: Maybe. But also, it just seems like a waste of time to do that.
There's so much else you could be doing. No, you're right on a deep
level it is maybe more about the control and responsibility. Even when
there's good stuff mixed in.

Edith: Maybe you should just let go. Whoosh.

Fred: Easy for you to say... but what does that even mean? Do nothing? Do stupid things? Cease to think?

Edith: I don't know. I'm going to bed

5.10.05 01:26
 


To date 0 Comment(s)     TrackBack-URL

Name:
Email:
Website:
Email me when further comments are posted
Save information (cookie)



 Insert emoticons



The weblog's authors are responsible for the contents of this blog. Your free weblog from 20six.co.uk