Things can be different one day to the next, even when the conditions are the same.
Have you ever noticed that you can have a great day and, with no rhyme or reason, the next day is crummy?
I find that young adults can be like this. My wife, Lily, and I regularly talk to our kids on the phone. One day they can be sailing and the next they are in the pits.
Maybe there is some latent hormonal chemical reaction that strikes from time to time (they’re both in their late 20’s), but I am always dumb-founded to know what changed from the day before.
Often nothing changes, but we look for something to blame. It somehow feels better when we can find a reason for the turn of events.
… Like when the weather fails to turn out the way we had hoped it would, we blame the weatherman, as if he had something to do with changing the weather. As if he or she had some control over how the weather was going to turn out!
It doesn’t matter that meteorologists only predict the weather, we like to stick it to them and focus our frustration on their seeming incompetence.
The other day I played hockey with a group of guys and everything clicked – passing, shooting, skating. I scored one goal that I’m still playing over in my mind … it was a beauty!
I’m sure the guys on the other team weren’t saying the same thing. They seemed frustrated; not much was going right for them. I almost felt a little sorry for them.
But hold on to that thought …
Today came around and this time, playing with another group of guys, nothing was working.
Passes never seemed to get to me, and my passes sometimes got intercepted by my own teammates. Shooting, well, I hit three goal posts … that’s enough said there.
I felt as good today as I did the other day when I played. All the conditions were the same.
I was playing with a different group of guys, so I could say that it was the players that made the difference. I could blame them to make me feel a little better about myself.
The problem with that is I was playing with better hockey players today than I was the other day when everything went right!
There just doesn’t seem to be any explanation for the change, or any way to hang some blame on anyone.
One day everything went right and the next day nothing seemed to go right.
When someone is in a grumpy mood, we tell them that they woke up on the wrong side of the bed, or that they didn’t get enough sleep. We can blame their mood on something they did or didn’t do because those are conditions we can measure.
When there is nothing to measure, we are left with a mystery that will never be solved; it just must be accepted.
Here’s the thing: We often blame God when, out of the blue, things go wrong. We blame Him for allowing the bad to come into our lives. We want to blame someone or something and we feel God is as good a person to blame as any. However, before you turn your ire on God for something He may or may not have been at the centre of, why not accept it and keep moving forward? If you don’t, you will just spin your wheels, fixated on blaming.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: Who or what have you been tempted to place blame on lately? Leave your comments below.
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