Saturday, November 20, 2010

The art of Snapping Part 2: Milestones

"Dad, I CAN'T DO IT!"

I used to only be able to offer support.  "Sure you can, bud.  Just keep practicing.  You'll get it."

Then, after weeks of practice, my son showed me that he could snap.

He doesn't know what he's done!  Now I have a reference point for him to overcome his frustrations.

I ambushed him last week when he was trying to put a shirt on.  I tied him up with his sleeves and tickled him until he gave up.

We were both still laughing when he tried getting his shirt on correctly.  He slipped his head through one of the sleeve holes and couldn't find where his arm was supposed to go.

He got in one of those funks that I get in when I realize the donut I just bit into has jelly in it.  BLECH

He was giving up, pouting and getting ready to blow up when I gently reminded him...

"Jeremiah, snap for me.  Do you remember how frustrated you got when you couldn't snap?  You practiced and now you're an expert snapper!"

Now he has a memory to depend on when times get tough.  He has a victory that can remind him that he has won before and if he stays calm and keeps practicing he can win again.

A few victories on the way to being healthy have kept me motivated to stay active.

But even more than that, reminding Jeremiah to remember has made me do the same.

I'm still too big to shop in most places, but I remember my doctor saying he's proud of me for the weight I've lost so far.

I still have trouble being open about my emotions sometimes, but I remember how much my wife appreciates it and how much better I feel when I share.

I have no idea where God is calling me professionally, but I remember that he has healed my heart, repaired my marriage, blessed my children and used me where I am.

I've been challenged by my son's expert snapping.  My challenge is to not only help him remember victories, but for me to remember how God is moving in my life... even when it feels like he's not there.

Life is hard.  And rather than stay on the surface with platitudes of "being blessed" while ignoring difficulty, I need to dig deep and remember those times where God did work when I didn't expect it.

He continues to use me and speak through me even though I don't know what the future holds.

A lot of times I still feel like I'm tied up in shirt sleeves, flailing around only succeeding to make the trap tighter.

Slowly though, I'm starting to hear the voice of the Father saying, "Jay, slow down.  Concentrate."

One day I hope to become an expert snapper myself.

The Art of Snapping Part 1: Frustration

For the most part, my five year old is peaceful, joyful, jolly...  until he gets frustrated.  He could be having the greatest day imaginable and then he hits a wall.

It happened last month when he came with a simple question.  "Dad, how do you snap your fingers?"  

I showed him.  For the next three days he would ask the question, try to snap and shout, "I JUST CAN'T DO IT." 

Last week he came to show me something.  "Dad, close your eyes."   He had been practicing on his own for three weeks.  Now he's an expert snapper.

For two weeks, we've been working on tying shoes.  He has all the tools.  He knows the bunny ears.  He knows the Through the Tree.  But I hear it again.  "I JUST CAN'T DO IT."  

But before I shake my head and say, "Oh, those five year olds," I remember how ridiculous I get when I don't succeed immediately.

Over the years, I have splintered entertainment centers, treated screwdrivers like throwing stars and Leg Dropped appliance boxes.

Oh, those 32 year olds.

Sometimes I feel like asking for help equals weakness.  If I can't do something then I'm not a man.  I get wrapped up in the idea that if I successfully complete this task it will bestow more masculinity on me.  If I figure this out, I'm strong.  If not, I'm weak.

And I want life to be easy.  Failing strikes to my very core.  For years I thought I was on my own.  I believed that there was no one who could really help me...  What's worse, I didn't know if there was anyone who wanted to help me.  

Feeling alone to deal with the challenges this world offers. 

I daresay I'm not alone in feeling alone.  

And it's not just the frustrating tasks at home.

I'm already running late and now a train's crossing the tracks.  

I'm walking out the door as I spill juice on my shirt.

The smallest failure and we think we're useless...

My son is not useless.  He is not weak.  He has more strength than he knows, strength this world needs.

One of my greatest tasks as a father is to repeatedly remind my son that he isn't alone.  He has a father who loves him and will help him in times of trouble.

...

Why do I forget that I have the same?

Thanks to Jesus, I have a Father who loves me and who will help me in times of trouble.  

As I concentrate on putting that message in my son's heart, he's learning to snap and I notice his fuse is getting longer.

As that lesson slowly invades my thinking, I'm heaving fewer tools and breaking fewer spare parts.  

And now that he knows how to snap, on to the next challenge...

"Bunny ears, bunny ears, playing by a tree..."




Sunday, November 7, 2010

Feeling Feelings

It was a strange morning.  I was putting clean dishes away as my five year old son was making up fart jokes. 

(We’ll take a moment for those of you without sons…)

He finds a picture of my in-laws’ scottish terriers that died last year and got really sad.

We talked about how he misses them and about how they were really good dogs.

He sat on the kitchen floor looking at their picture for five minutes. 

To say my son is empathetic is an understatement.  From birth, he has hurt with those who are hurting and rejoiced with those who are rejoicing. 

It does my heart good to see that my son isn’t embarrassed by his emotions. 

By and large, there seems to be only two ways men raise sons.  We teach them either to perfect their poker face or run for the hills.

When I would get hit by a pitch my dad would yell, “You rub it, you’re out!” 

We hear “Walk it off” and “Rub some dirt on it.” 

The message is the same.  Don’t feel your feelings. 

Men don’t hug.  We don’t cry.  We don’t hurt.

We’re kidding ourselves. 

Stuffing our emotions becomes natural and we unwittingly pass it on to our sons.

Well intentioned church people occasionally reinforce it.

Instead of mourning with someone, we offer platitudes.  Someone is struggling through a loss or recovering from emotional devastation and we plaster a smile on our faces and say, “God will take care of it” or, “Everything will work out.”

We’re too scared of emotions to face them, so we push them down...

Unless our dads taught us to run. 

The first sign of bad news has us reaching for the eject button. 

Families are hard so we devote our time to sports or hobbies instead. 

I’m a year into letting myself FEEL things and now I’m faced with a five year old who feels everything!

It’s both exhilarating AND frightening.

I knelt down and hugged him while we both remembered Ivan and Sampson.  I tried to stay quiet for a bit.  My immediate reaction was to remind him that dogs die.  THAT would have been good.  Part of me wanted him to forget those dogs and remember Aunt Sarah’s NEW dog!

Instead, we hugged in front of the dishwasher.  My son was sad and that’s ok.  Sometimes we’re sad.  My son was mourning and that’s ok.  Sometimes we mourn. 

I thanked God for teaching me a lesson on the kitchen floor.

I’m called to walk my son across the tightrope of masculinity and emotion when I still feel like I need a safety net.

And now he’s back to the fart jokes.

I love having a son!