People often use pat answers and lines to buy themselves some time in responding to a request … but those words mean nothing.
We’ve probably all done it. … Someone asks us to pass something or come here, and we answer, “Yes. Give me a second.”
What do we mean by “a second”? … because really that second is over by the time we’ve said it and we don’t yet intend on making good on the request.
My wife, Lily, uses the phrase all the time, “Just give me a minute”. I’ve heard it so much, I don’t want to hear that phrase ever again.
The other day while we were in the car, I was telling her something while she was responding to a text. She said, “Just give me a minute.”
So I paused the conversation. I waited. We went through two traffic lights before she was done. … I should say, we stopped at two red lights, waited until they were green, and kept driving before she responded.
I started to do some calculating. When Lily says, “just give me a minute” she really means give me 15 minutes.
Now in the Bible there is a verse that says, “With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day.” (2 Peter 3:8)
So I started to do some calculations in my head …
If her one minute is like 15 minutes, and there are 60 minutes in an hour and 24 hours in a day … that means one day to Lily is like 15 days!
And then a whole bunch of things started to make sense to me.
She is never late for anything, even when I wait for her at the door for 5 or 10 minutes before we leave. In her mind she’s early – she’s still 140 minutes early!
And another thing that I understand now is when she can’t remember something we talked about, something she was even passionate about the day before.
For her that conversation was over two weeks ago! No wonder she can’t remember it. Who could remember word for word something from that long ago?
I thought she needed to do more Sudukos to keep her mind sharp. But her mind is like a razor when she can recall something I promised to do earlier in the day – that’s about four days ago to her and she still snapped that promise back to me in a flash.
Here I was criticizing her and she’s really a superwoman.
The downside to this new revelation that I’ve been given is when I come home from work, suffering from a little hypoglycemia, and usually a little “hangry” by the time I walk through the door.
When I then ask if dinner is ready and Lily says, “Just give me a minute”, I know it’s going to be forever before I eat … and I will be dead by then.
I can’t see any way that I benefit from this new discovery. So for my own self-preservation I have to declare her phrase of “just give me a minute” as meaningless.
Here’s the thing: God can operate outside of time. So when things don’t seem to be working the way we would like them to, in the time frame that we are subjected to, and have subjected them to, we know that God can still bring the very best outcome because He’s not restricted by time.
That’s Life!
Paul
Question: What phrase has become meaningless to you? Leave your comments below.
Discover more from p.s. That's Life!
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Lily is taking a few bruises here. Does she get a chance to respond?
Haha, that good David. No she doesn’t get to respond, she just gets to edit my writing.