Remember yesterday when I was talking about (In)Courage.me? Did you go there yet?
This afternoon I was so blessed( to the point of tears streaming down my face blessed)by this post that I had to share it. I think it was her story about her daughter and the diving board that got me…..I was that little girl too. Hated the diving board. In fact, I hated that diving board till I was 22 years old. Then one day I tried it, and I was like a kid again. (Seriously, ask Kev! I am sure he was quite embarassed by my jumping off over and over again. Actually he wasn’t……he was grinning ear to ear. That’s what he loves about me…..my quwarkey personality….but that’s a whole different post!)
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Journal written my Sarah Markley
My kids take the cheap swim lessons.
You know, the forty dollars for two weeks of 25 minute group sessions taught by college students at the community pool. I used to pay for the teach-the-kid-how-to-swim-in-a-week luxury lessons back when I thought I was rich and I pampered my first child like the princess she was.
But now, we all settle for the cheap ones.
A regular part of the community pool lessons is the go-off-the-diving-board day. And note that it is GO off the diving board day, not DIVE off the diving board day or JUMP off the diving board day. Every child just has to get off the end no matter which method they choose. Most of the older kids jump or dive. But some of them, including my three-year-old, have to be dropped off.
Maybe you think this is cruel: dropping a sniffling, goose-pimpled, three-foot-high child of the edge of a bouncing board into the dark blue water of the deep end. But I don’t think it is. I think it’s necessary.
My seven-year-old, in all of her risk taking glory, nearly runs to the end and catapults herself into the brilliant turquoise of the pool. She swims to the edge, climbs out and begs to go again.
My three-year-old, however, doesn’t have the same type of reckless personality that her sister has. She isn’t timid, but recognizes her personal limits far more than her sister did at the same age. When it comes to her turn, she’s been standing in the shade for 5 minutes and has already begun to shiver. Aided by an instructor, she walks to the end of the board confidently before she realizes what it is she’s about to do.
Her smile quickly morphs into terror and she begins to scream. She tries to claw her way back to the diving board ladder to dry ground but the instructor won’t let her.
Her trusted, smiling teacher is treading water for her directly under the edge of the diving board but she still won’t jump. He calls her name, begs her to jump, but now her screams are reaching eardrum-piercing levels.
The instructor standing with her on the board gently picks her up under her arms and drops her arched, squealing body the all of 24 inches into the waiting hands of her teacher calmly treading water in the pool. A brief second and she emerges from the surface of the water, still looking horrified.
Until everyone claps and cheers for her bravery. And she grins.
He swims her to the side of the pool, I wrap her in a towel and tell her how proud I am of her. That she’s done well. That she’s so brave.
But she really isn’t brave. She’s been forcibly dropped in the pool and then swum by a capable adult to the side. She really didn’t do anything.
Or maybe not.
Because courage might not be about bravery or doing something worthy of valor. Courage, sometimes, might just be being present. She didn’t ask to go off the diving board and certainly didn’t ask to be dropped in with arched back and screaming mouth. But she was there. And with assistance, she accomplished the goal.
My own courage, in its mini surges and meager portions, has usually come from just being there. It’s courage for the moment and not a bit more than that.
Allowing God to restore my marriage 6 years ago took courage. But mostly it was just making the appointment, sitting on the couch and asking God and our marriage counselor, “What do I do next?”
Sending my oldest from the safety of my mini-van into the world of school takes that same kind of passive, being-there courage. Trusting her little heart with all the whims of the other girls in second grade requires a Mama-courage that I never knew I had. I just have to open the side door and let her go.
Courage is waking up in the morning and resolving to try to clean my house and not yell at my girls when they destroy their made beds and organized bookshelves.
Lacing up my running shoes and taking the first step out of the door to jog when I’m exhausted and really don’t feel like it is courageous in its own way. Ninety percent of the jog is just showing up.
Courage is sometimes just walking right up to a new situation and simply being there. Courage just might be walking to the end of the diving board and allowing someone else to drop me into the deep end.
Because I know Someone’s treading water below me and He never gets tired. He won’t let me drown.
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I can honestly say, I’ve had to be thrown off the end of the diving board many times. I still don’t always like it, but each and every time my courage builds to where I am able to jump off on my own. Many times though…..my eyes are plastered shut and I let out a scream as I am going down!
Praise the Lord, He doesn’t let us drown!!!
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