The Beatles sang about the long and winding road; I’m singing about the long and bumpy roads … but my song is not a happy one, filled with cheer and merriment.
The song I sing is more of a dirge, like you might find being sung in a funeral procession down the streets of New Orleans.
At this time of year, I notice the conditions of the streets more. Now that fall has come, on a weekly basis I make my way down to the K-Rock Centre hockey arena. Getting there takes me down Queen Street, which arguably is the bumpiest road in Kingston.
But it’s not the only one.
I’m concerned as they put in new sewers and things to update the city’s infrastructure. They are digging up roads or portions of roads and then just patching them back up.
I don’t like the time and trouble it takes to pave these roads, especially when over the long-term, the only ones who seem to benefit are the mechanic shops in town.
When I drive down Queen Street I feel like I’m in downtown Toronto many years ago, with its cobblestone streets and trolley car rails.
You come away feeling much like a James Bond drink – shaken, not stirred.
I understand that you can’t repave all the roads at once, but this street has been a mess for as long as I can remember.
When we got our new vehicle last fall, I thought the ride down to the arena would be a lot smoother.
Our new car is bigger, the shocks are firmer, but it hasn’t seemed to matter at all. The road has us bouncing around like a carnival ride.
I now know what it’s like to live in a Hutterite community and take your vegetables to market. I don’t have to ride in one of their horse-drawn buggies; I just have to drive down Queen Street in Kingston and I get the full experience.
Maybe that’s what they should do … There are some turn-of-the-century historical homes and buildings along the route. The city could turn the street into a pioneer village tourist stop.
They could add big windows to the fronts of buildings and we could watch a woman in period costume stoke the fire in her kitchen, or watch as the children milk a cow by hand in the yard.
They could put a toll booth at the top of the street, and we could just throw change into big receptacles as we turn onto the street, as a charge to ride the bumpy road and see the village people do all their chores by hand.
It would give us all a fresh appreciation for the conveniences we have in 2017. It could be a real teaching moment for parents with their kids.
You wouldn’t even have to get out of your car. It would all be drive-by learning.
Oh, and what they could do with all the money they collect from this fabulous pioneer village ride is PAVE QUEEN STREET!
Here’s the thing: When we experience inconveniences in life, interruptions to the good life we live, we should remember the inconvenience God willingly took to come to earth as a man to rescue us from the path we are on – a path that would take us to a place we would never want to go if we knew what it was really like. Be thankful for what Christ has done, with a new appreciation for the inconvenience you are experiencing.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: What inconvenience really has you exercised? Leave your comments below.