When it comes to injuries, I’ve had my fair share … but I’m tempted to ignore some more than others.
I’ve had injuries where there was nothing I could do but wait until the injury was better before I resumed activity.
I think of the many times I’ve hurt my left knee – I have a torn ACL (anterior cruciate ligament). Before I knew what that was, I had injured that knee many times.
My surgeon went in and cut out a portion of my cartilage and decided that I could treat the ACL with a brace – not a cheap, off-the-shelf kind of brace, but one that was moulded to fit my knee exactly. It was pretty pricy and, over about 25 years, I’ve had two made.
When I injure that knee, I’m out of commission. I hobble around for a week or two, but know my knee won’t be stable again for another few weeks.
There is no playing hockey, no exercise involving my legs at all. I can only sit around and get out of shape.
But there are other kinds of injuries that tease you a little. You get hurt but think, “It’s not that bad; I can still keep going. I just won’t go as hard as normal.”
… In theory that’s great, but in reality it doesn’t work out that way.
Recently, I pulled a groin muscle playing hockey. It didn’t seem that bad; it was more of a nagging kind of pain … you know, one that you can play through.
“This injury isn’t going to sideline me,” I decided. I played hockey a few days later with the idea that I would take it easy and not skate too hard.
The problem was the game was fast. There were a lot of young guys on the other team so our team had to work to keep up.
Without thinking, just keeping pace with the level of play, I found myself skating pretty hard at times. In fact, I could feel a little pain when I took off quickly or tried to out-skate a guy on my heels.
I could do it. It was the kind of injury that wasn’t going to hold me back.
But I paid for it the next day. It was sore to walk without a limp. Even getting in and out of the car required some delicate manoeuvring. And when I slipped on an icy patch of sidewalk, I thought I tore the muscle more.
This injury that wasn’t too bad, and had tempting me to keep going, had just gotten worse. Now I was looking at having this nagging injury for a very long time – maybe all season.
So, I’ve made the decision that I’m going to stop skating until this thing gets better.
I might miss a week of hockey, but it’s better than playing with that nagging pain every time I move a certain way.
Here’s the thing: There are some things in your life about which you think, “I can keep doing this; it’s not that bad; it doesn’t hurt me, or my witness; it doesn’t cause pain to anyone else.” You may think you have it all under control, but the reality is you need to stop it. That thing will just nag at you and will, at some point, become a problem that forces you to stop. Listen to the Lord’s voice quietly telling you to stop now before it gets worse.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: What might you be doing that’s not that bad, but you really need to stop doing? Leave your comments below.