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POP!

It’s been unseasonably warm this year in Northern California. I almost,Β almost,Β feel guilty when I see the incredible pictures of the deep freeze happening across much of the rest of the country.

I wore a tank top the other day. I hadn’t planned on it exactly, but my light mustard yellow cardigan was just too warm to compete with the buttery sunshine melting on my shoulders. I wore the cardigan to my Bible study class, inconceivable to walk in brazenly bare shouldered there.

After class I enjoyed the very rare and unspeakably sweet opportunity to spend time alone with only one of my kids. Lovely four year old Lucy and I went to brunch. She wanted to sit next to me in the booth so we snuggled and chatted over a big, fluffy biscuit smothered in country gray, scrambled eggs, and hashbrowns with ketchup. It was turning out to be a morning more magical than most.

Feeling full and abundantly blessed I decided to stop by every mom’s happiest place on earth: Target.

The warm red glow of the giant concentric circles emblazoning the tan warehouse seemed to wink at me. It seems even Target was not immune to the sweet seduction of an early spring. I easily load my happy preschooler into the shiny red cart in the cart-port I had easily parked next to in my favorite part of the lot. It was even a perfect parking spot day!

Lucy and I sing as we leisurely stroll down the wide drive, cars glinting in the sunshine. I push her up the yellow bumpy part of the sidewalk and she squeals in delight.

How is it that I am so singularly blessed as to experience all this sunshiney joy this morning?!

I glance to the planter at my right. A young woman sits on it’s cold concrete edge, head hung heavy in her hands. A small baby girl with a smattering of dark fuzz on her tiny round head is sitting in the dull red cart, looking at me with wide naive eyes.

I wonder if she’s okay…

She’s probably fine. I remember needing to sit down after shopping when I was pregnant, feeling so utterly depleted I would need a rest before the last burst of energy required to pack up the car. It would probably embarrass her if I spoke to her.

Plus, this is my happy shiny morning! I’m surely entitled toΒ one. Rarely do all the stars align so perfectly that I have only one kid with me. And not just any kid, my sweet and well behaved Lucy! Nothing is more important than this time with her. I continue to walk toward the beckoning automatic doors.

But I feel the tug somewhere in my gut pulling me back.

Maybe I’ll just turn around and walk back and ask her real quick, just to be sure it’s just because she’s pregnant and definitely doesn’t want my help.

No. No, I don’t want to. I don’t want to lose the shine of this moment which seems to quickly be turning matte in the presence of this woman. I’m going to look like a crazy person if I about-face here in front of the doors and go back. Even if she does need something it’s probably more than I have to offer. I don’t have any cash to give her. She looks a little rough around the edges. This would probably turn into a total time drain. I really have a lot to get done still.

I’m sorry God, but I just don’t want to. Forgive me and take away the guilt which is surely from the enemy. You give me the freedom to choose and I’m walking on. If I’m really meant to help her let her still be there when I leave.

So I walk into Target, the cool breeze of air conditioning rushing against my warm cheeks. Actively fighting the tug that pulls my soul back outside. Then in the buzzing of the barista, getting Lucy to the bathroom now, and shopping for all manner of whozzits, whatsits, and thneeds the warm fog of my blissful morning descends again.

By the time I leave heavy laden with plastic bags, I am buoyant. Skipping on the fluffly cloud high of having found not one but TWO amazing less-than-five-bucks one of a kind clearance finds! This is MY day and nothing is out of my reach!

I round the corner, and there sits the haggered young mom on the cold concrete planter box attempting to shade her baby girl from the sun’s harsh rays with the corner of a soft cloth infant carrier. I can almost hear an audible POP! in my mind as the shiny red balloon of my perfect day is pierced by the cold needle of this moment.

I try to look away, but the reality of that baby being so poorly shaded is too much for even me.Β Why doesn’t she just go inside with the air condidtioning?!

“Um, excuse me, are you okay?”

The young mom with the deep brown eyes looks up at me and I am alarmed to see them filling with tears. She chokes out in a kindly southern drawl, “You know, you are the FIRST person to ask me that all morning! Everyone else has just kept walking by. I locked my keys in my car and I don’t have a cell phone. I was finally able to get a hold of my dad but he’s from another country and wasn’t understanding what I needed. It was really frustrating. But he was able to get a hold of my husband and he’s on his way.”

The weight of shame and the expensive new cell phone tucked casually in my back pocket are almost more than I can bear. “Is there anything else you need? Can I go buy a snack for the baby? Do you want a ride?” My shiny, giant SUV loaded with booster seats and a top of the line baby carseat only 50 yards away in my favorite parking spot stand as a grotesque monument of my guilt.

“Oh no. I ran inside and got her something. I think she’s about to fall asleep now. I don’t want to wait inside and miss him driving through. He’s on his way, I don’t need a ride.”

“You’re sure?” I ask, nearly frantic to help and release the hard grip of regret holding my insides.

“Yeah. Thank you so much for asking me though. It was so nice of you to check on me. You were the only one.”

I smile at her and walk to my car, tail between my legs. Her kind words only making more obvious my betrayal.

A realization crashes down on me like a great tsunami, I am not the Samaritan. I am the Pharisee.

Lord, forgive me, a terrible sinner, for sometimes I know exactly what I am doing.

Check out the Parable of the Good Samaritan for yourself, read: Luke 10:25-37.

 

 

 

 

11 thoughts on “POP!”

  1. Ok, so this scenario was similar to mine yesterday. I was coming out of a fast food restaurant with my 3 & 4 year old around lunch time. There was a gentleman hanging out around the front door and he waited until I was getting in the car (even though I walked right by him) to try and get my attention and ask me for something. Well, I made the choice to ignore him and so badly wanted to say “you have no idea what I’ve just been through…I’m a little busy right now!” I also wanted to say “didn’t you notice that my daughter just came walking out in an insanely short dress and her brother was wearing her lacy biker shorts (that are supposed to go underneath the dress), but due to the stomach bug he is experiencing he left his insides all over that bathroom and now I am carrying a bag of his poo covered clothes! And, he would have been walking to the car naked, but luckily I was able to get creative with his sisters wardrobe for a brief moment” The only reason I was in that establishment in the first place was because the doctor said to get him some starchy food (like noodles) to eat to help settle his stomach.

    How rude of me to assume that he would have known all of those things, but needless to say I was a bit stressed to the max in that moment and even though I could have taken the time to show this man God’s love I simply chose to ignore him. Normally I have ‘blessing bags’ made up that I leave in my car for this exact instance, but I had just given the last one out a few days prior. That was my own excuse of why I couldn’t have helped him, but I know that was only an excuse. I felt horrible afterwards, but know that God is a forgiving God and I can only do better next time. He chooses the stressful, crazy moments of our life to test our faith and response to him and I failed…miserably on this day, but am working on extending my love to the least of these. Thanks for the encouragement Aleah!

    1. Kassi, it sounds like you handled the whole situation just right. Jesus didn’t heal everyone and sometimes he took off to a quiet place with his friends despite the needs of the other people nearby. You were tending to the needs of your little ones, and I admire your resourcefulness and resolve. Good job.

      Blessings,
      Tim

    2. Kassi, it’s so fun to connect with you here! πŸ™‚ I agree (nearly always πŸ˜‰ ) with Tim. No need to feel guilty when you were so obviously busy attending the needs of your kids. I think if I had to pick a moral of my story it would be that God cares for people whether we partner with him or not. I don’t think you were in a position to help- so sorry you had to deal with all that. Been there! I love that you keep care packages in your car. That is an awesome idea!

  2. Aleah, great job on this! This is definitely a good one to share, as we don’t often get a chance to see what we missed out on when rejecting that “tug”. Well God certainly blessed responding to the second opportunity, as I know I will almost certainly remember this the next time I feel that tug at my heart. You sharing this could definitely be what God uses to set me straight. Thanks for sharing πŸ™‚

    1. Ha! I just started leading Priscilla Shirer’s Jonah study with my group at church. Didn’t even make the connection! Thank you for pointing that out!

  3. I have been in “your” place as well as the “young woman’s ” place. This is why yes I talk to strangers,,,knowing and hoping each time I’m NOT being put in the place of a victim or busy-body,,,,Great writing here!! Gives us so much to think about! Love it!

  4. Aleah, you’ve described me to a T in some of the opportunities God has given me that I’ve turned right around and squandered. I am so glad you spoke to that woman, though. She will remember your kindness even as you see it as something less. But it’s not something less, you know. It’s something wonderful because Jesus was with you through it all. You eventually chose to listen to the Spirit of Christ, and that is always a good conclusion.

    Cheers,
    Tim

    P.S. The brunch you and Lucy shared wasn’t at Black bear Diner, was it? Your menu choice sounds right in line with them, and the dish you ordered is one of my 23 year old son’s favorites there.

      1. Yes, definitely what Tim said. I’m thankful to have had the opportunity to both bless, though not as fully as I am capable, but certainly to learn about missed opportunities. It also served to remind me that God’s plan to provide will prevail whether or not I choose to play a part in it. I’m thankful He cared for the young woman even without me.

        Tim- Yes! Black Bear is a favorite of ours! My personal favorite is the “small” one biscuit & gravy with sausage. πŸ™‚ My Lucy-goose loves hashbrowns and scrambled eggs.

  5. Aleah, your writing always tugs at me, gives me goosebumps. I can so relate to being in my own little world that I often don’t notice or care about the people that God has placed before me. Your writing is a gift & I thank you for sharing.

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