January 4, 2023
“What She Said Got Me Going”: A Prayer
O Lord, what she said got me going and what she said was,
“It's always something;”
and she said it
because
suddenly
the garage door wouldn't open,
then did open but wouldn't close,
opening, not closing, closing, not opening,
motor grinding, grating, groaning,
son-in-law called in,
got it working,
but
big, black, glob of
black globby stuff
dropping on floor,
tracked in the next day,
up the carpeted steps,
across the carpeted floor,
stain remover not remove,
first try, second try, third try,
one more, then call the pros;
“It's always something;”
and
something else
she said that
got me going
and what she said was,
“If it's not one thing, then it's another;”
and she said it
because
fire alarm
started to beep,
11 feet up in the air
as listening to carols,
those present too short or too shaky or too scared
to go up the ladder,
son-in-law time again,
“Silent ... beep ... Night ... beep ... Holy ... beep ...”
until he arrived;
“If it's not one thing,
then it's another;”
and
something else
she said that
got me going
and what she said was,
“Can one more thing go wrong?”
and she said it
because
one more thing
did go wrong,
fireplace not light,
this one beyond
even son-in-law,
so pro time
(Maybe also fixes exhaust fan on fritz,
window not closing properly
and whatever goes wrong
next?)
And what got me going, Lord, what got me thinking is that
it's so true,
it's always something,
not only
pipes not piping,
refrigerators not refrigerating,
water heaters not heating,
but also
just as
feeling better
start feeling bad again
(“What is it this time?”);
just as
pain is gone
(“What bliss!”),
arthritis kicks in again;
just as
back stops aching,
knee gives out
(“I don’t believe it!”);
and much, much worse:
suddenly
devastating fire, devastating loss, devastating death
(“When will it ever end?”);
and got me thinking how
frustrating, maddening, angering
it all can be;
and how
it can wear down faith,
erode strength,
drain hope;
and how
it can get us
questioning, wondering, doubting;
“What have I done now?”
“What have I done to deserve this?”
“What’s the point of believing if this is what
it gets me?”
“Why this?”
“Why now?”
“Why me?”
and how
it’s often
the little things that get us
more than the big things,
able to manage hard loss or illness
only to be brought to tears or put in rage
by a tire gone flat
(or maybe it’s the little things on top of the big things
that bring us to our knees);
and yes,
so many things
normal things,
part of owning a home, part of growing older, part of life;
things wear out, parts wear out, we wear out;
and we know this,
but it’s not so much what happens
as it is
the non-stopness, the one-after-the-otherness, the never-endingness
that becomes too much,
that makes us think,
that even makes us say,
your idea of what we can bear and
our idea of what we can bear
may not be quite the same.
And so, Lord, it got me going, got me thinking, got me praying
this prayer, a simple prayer, a prayer simply asking
that when, like gnats on a summer’s day,
little things cause us to give up
in despair,
we learn to
stop, take a deep breath, calm down, relax, and trust that
no one is out to get us,
no one is punishing us,
no one is testing us, and we can
fix things, put things right, call in help;
and when
it’s the big things
we must face,
grant us
the courage, the determination, the resolution to
bear what we must,
and the faith that trusts that
in your love of us and your strength for us,
bear it we will.
And we pray, Lord, for those who especially feel as if there’s
no end in sight, that it’s always one thing after another:
those who are ill, those who are suffering and
hurting, those who are dying, those who are
grieving, those who are struggling to
keep their heads above water, and the
hungry, homeless, and refugees;
heal, strengthen, comfort them,
and bring an end to their fear or pain or misery and
raise them in hope and even gladness.
O Lord, it’s always something, that’s for certain; and
who knows what will happen next, except
something will happen, that’s for sure; and
something after that,
count on it;
but what is
even more certain,
even more sure,
is that
you will help us
live through
whatever the “always something” turns out to be,
and that can be
counted on more
than anything,
no doubt,
no question,
no wondering
about it.
Amen.