I wouldn’t say this often, but there are times it’s better to be bald … like when you need to cover your head with a hat.
It sounds kind of strange, but I’m having a bad hair day today and the only thing that is going to help it right now is a hat.
I know that some people struggle with their hair every day but I don’t usually have issues with mine. I have the kind of hair that pretty much stays where I put it in the morning. And for most of the time, that’s a good thing.
In the last ten years, I’ve noticed my hair has thinned out a bit, but it still performs the way I want it to … most of the time.
The good thing about hair like mine is that I don’t have to comb it throughout the day to keep it in place. My hair knows where it’s to go and it remains there all day.
When I was a youth pastor, the students in my group found this curious at times. They would come and mess up my hair just to test it. All I would do is give my hair a few quick flicks of my fingers and it was back in place.
If I went out into a wind storm, same thing. I would just run my fingers through my hair and I was good to go.
The downside with this type of hair is its strength: my hair stays put.
When I put on a hat, my hair forms to the hat and when I take it off, it stays that way.
After a night of sleep, often my hair needs a little coaxing to get into place. But if I’m just going out to play hockey, I will slip on a ball cap and go.
After hockey and a shower, I usually don’t put my hat back on. But today I did. My hair was a little damp; I threw on the hat and went home. At home I didn’t need the hat so I took it off.
That’s when the comments started arriving fast and furiously.
“Dad, your hair is wild today,” my daughter said with a laugh. She was home for a quick visit and after her vicious comments, I was glad it was a quick visit.
Lily chimed in and said, “She’s right, dear. Your hair is something else today!” and chuckled.
I had hat hair and I really didn’t care about it that much. I just wished my family was a little more supportive.
Later in the day, I was stepping out to pick up some wings for dinner. My son was home at the time, and as I went to the door he simply said, “Uh, Dad, you better wear a hat”, with a smirk on his face.
Lily just laughed. I slapped the cap on and headed out the door.
I just wonder how it would have gone if I had have made those comments to Lily about her hair.
Here’s the thing: Our minds and hearts perform much like my hair does. My hair forms to where I put it or what I put on it. Your mind and heart form to what you put in it. So if you want a mind and a heart that is forming to God, feed your mind the things of God: read his Word and spend time with Him in prayer.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: What kinds of things do you put in your mind to form it? Leave your comments below.
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