The story...
We rode our bicycles to Grand Haven and participated in the Coast Guard parade. We seemed to fit in with our bike clothes as we squeezed along the parade route. There were so... many people who seemed to have planned to feel and do good that day. You could see and feel expectations of happiness with their decorations, sandwiches, red-white-blue clothes, and generally happy, gabby and cheering natures - throngs of like-minded people. They were excited by the bands, small-floats, old-guys on small Cushman scooters, small lollipops, clowns, Coast Guard helicopters roaring overhead, and being together. A woman threw me a stack of t-shirts that I passed out and wore - I felt engaged within the community. I'm reexperiencing some of the joy and happiness as I recall the event. Thank you Grand Haven - ya done real good!
I expected good and received that good along with the unexpected too. I might've worried about how I'd be accepted by the group - possibly marginalized, or reexperiencing prior feelings of rejection. The 44-mile bike ride had it's associated risks yet we accepted them. What if the people I went with didn't want to do or go according to my will? No, I was fully engaged in the "now," within community, and my self-focused will was virtually locked up - chained and left with the bikes next to that big tree.
Why not let down your guard and risk being kinder and engage in life already? We might accept the risk of being amongst people with whom we might interact, learn, grow and experience the giving and receiving of love - together. As for me and my house, the only church in town is the place where the good stuff of life's available 52 weeks per year.
Just for today...
"If I am expectant of good, it will surely come to me. Even the grace of courtesy gives rich immediate rewards in response . . . Concern, love and kindness on my part will be reflected in everything that takes place in my life." One Day at a Time (p. 246)
We all have a sort of reaction tolerance band. Hyper reactions occur when I overreact and Hypo reactions occurs when I underreact. Might widening that tolerance band minimize unhealthy reactions, to whatever the trigger, for the benefit of us all?
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