Speeding Tickets on the Road of Life
February 8th, 2012 by joeI’ve been known to push my right foot into the accelerator a bit too generously at times, and as such have had my fair share of conversations with the boys in blue. This was mostly in my younger years (wow, I am old enough to say “younger years”), as I haven’t been hit with any speeding violations in quite a while. What is interesting about those times is how they simply serve to slow you down, but they also seem to narrow one’s focus and illuminate problems in one’s driving patterns. I’ve had illuminating moments like that on the road of life as well. For example, last night.
Melissa was at Bible study and I was putting Jake down for bed. We talked, read, laughed, prayed, and all the other things Daddys and boys do before bed. I left him to settle down after kissing him goodnight and went out to my over-sized brown leather easy chair, sat down and proceeded to prepare for an upcoming trip to Boston. What that meant was all of the following: Update my I-pod, work on my computer, make sure my Kindle was charged, transfer pictures from my Smart Phone to my computer, and watch Florida get mercilessly pounded in their game against Kentucky. So, to better paint the picture, my big screen TV blared the sounds of a ball game, while my computer sat on my lap electronically conversing to my Kindle, phone, and I-pod, all docked with their electrical umbilical cords into the side of my laptop, and I sat wondering why in the world the radio waves floating through the atmosphere from space weren’t arriving at my home fast enough to appease my desire for even more data at my fingertips even more quickly. As I struggled to balance all those little gadgets in my lap, while trying to turn through the pages of my overstuffed CD case to import all those notes and words digitally onto a storage device roughly the size of a match book, it dawned on me how dependent we are on all our technology to take us speedily down the road of life. It was about then that I had a lights flashing in the rear view, spine chilling goose bumps moment as I ran smack into the reality of the world I am bringing that little miracle of mine and his brother up into. It is a world that runs at the speed of technology, and often seems to have no real destination in mind. It is simply a frantic, breakneck pace designed to keep us from real relationships and real connection with people beyond our Friends List and Twitter accounts. Is that really the world I want my boys to embrace?
My mind also flashed from that “electrically charged” picture of the world from my brown leather chair to another world, not too distantly passed, that found me with my lap full not with technology but with a small plastic bowl, a spork, a block of cheddar cheese, and a guidebook. No regard for emails, playlists, status updates, or friend requests. No dull background noise of whistles and hightops on hardcourt. Just the wind whistling through the treetops and the mournful sounds of loons and coyotes on some distant hill. Just conversations and dear friends around a fire and a warm bed next to my beloved when darkness overwhelms daylight. Ask me which picture makes me most alive? Ask me which picture sounds like life was intended? Ask me what picture I want my boys to draw on their canvas of life?
For a few fleeting moments I thought of tossing my cell phone, shutting down my computer, moving my family to the woods and walking away from it all. For now, I know that isn’t possible. For now, those are necessary for my life and relationships. But what if they weren’t? Am I so addicted to the electrical age I would choose to neglect real relationships for the sake of gadgets? I hope not. What about Jake and Wade? How can I teach them to “unplug” and engage the world around them? How can I best model that in my own life? I’m not sure how to answer all those questions. And perhaps its best simply to live in the conflict, to constantly be comparing the life I live to the life I desire. Maybe its about finding little moments in the in between, little rest stops on the highway of life, little places of dead space and dead air…true life in the deadness. For now, I secretly hope for the power to go out, the Internet to crash, and AT&T to continue their spotty at best service for my phone! Maybe in those moments I can teach Jake (who is wiggling in his room talking to himself) and Wade to slow down, get off the technology toll road, and enjoy the sights and sounds and smells of life. Somehow, I hope you can too.


