Deadlines are part of my world, but there are some deadlines that suck the life out of me more than others.
Most weeks of the year I live with at least one deadline: I have a sermon to prepare for Sunday and it doesn’t matter what has happened during the week, that deadline has to be met.
I might be sick that week, have meetings I’ve been called away to, or have had to conduct a funeral, wedding, etc. No matter what, that deadline of being ready to get into the pulpit on Sunday remains.
I know that deadline, have become accustomed to living with it, and can successfully navigate through my week to deliver on time.
But there are other deadlines that I don’t deal with regularly and they take a heavier toll on my state of mind.
When you compound a deadline with one or two other deadlines, all due around the same time … well, that’s how I’m feeling right now.
Right now the pressure is on. I have only a few days to go before these deadlines stop me in my tracks.
It’s like those auto commercials where they test how a car does in a crash. They stick a crash test dummy in the vehicle and then they remotely drive the car into a wall or a cement barrier of some kind.
It’s fascinating to see what happens when the vehicle stops on impact. The front of the car coils up like an accordion and then the car bounces back a little.
The car is a right-off, but what the company really wants to know is how the dummy will fair inside the automobile when it reaches the deadline.
Based on the dummy’s reactions they can tell how safe they have made the car. But no matter what kind of safety measures they have built into the vehicle, there are two things that happen to the dummy.
First, when the car hits the deadline, the dummy moves forward; the inertia is uncontrollable and the dummy’s body has to move in a forward direction.
But then at the pinnacle of the impact there is a force placed on the dummy that is every bit as uncontrollable, forcing its body to snap back in the opposite direction.
This action causes a whiplash affect on the dummy.
I am that dummy right now, right at the stage of whiplash with these multiple deadlines looming over me.
In a few days it’ll all be over; time will have run out on me. I will be a wreck, emotionally and mentally drained.
So in the short time I have, what do I do? I ask myself the question, “Do I work at one deadline until it is finished and then tackle the next one, or do I begin each one and gradually work towards completely them all at the same time?”
This is where I differ from a crash test dummy. It is just along for the ride, no thought, no input. Me, I have to think through the questions and decide a course of action.
Here’s the thing: We are all coming to a deadline. The problem with our deadline is that most of us don’t know when it will be. But when the deadline hits, that will be the end; we will be stopped in our tracks. To be ready for that deadline, be sure you have become friends with God, through faith in Jesus Christ. There is no better way to prepare for that deadline than to live now by faith in Christ so that you’re ready for that deadline of death.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: How do you handle deadlines: well in advance or right down to the last minute? Leave your comments below.
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