Posts Tagged ‘Friendship’


Making Friends: An Example for Community

Naomiswing

Little girls make friends so easily.

On the playground it consists of nothing more than shared interest, inhabiting the same place in the space/time continuum and a tag-you’re-IT mentality.

Naomi walks right up to two little boys near the slide, Can we be friends? Let’s play on the swings. I’ll show you how to swing on your belly...

And off the three of them run.  Together.  No gender issues. No worrying about status or name or race or worldview. They don’t even try to beat each other to the swing set: they know there is more than enough playground equipment to go around.

It’s just three preschoolers happy to be at the park, happy to find someone else to share the morning with and happy to look eye-level at another kid.

Three-year-old community.

And an example for us.

So often I feel like I’m in the search for community.  There isn’t much community in suburbia unless I look for it.  And somehow, in my search, I seem to want to look across the table from people exactly like me.  I’m going to be honest, I never actually think this. But on this lofty search without thinking about it I set out for people who believe like me and in some ways look like me.

I know I’m not alone in this, so I’m going to be vulnerable.  Sometimes, before becoming friends I conduct an “interview”: I weigh comments and ideas and beliefs of the other person and in the depths of my brain, I make some kind of judgment about how close we can become based on these ideas.  Less like me, less close.  More like me, we can be bosom buddies.

But this isn’t right.  It’s horrible, I know.  And I realized this when I watched the three-year-olds swing on their bellies at the playground.  They were different. They didn’t come from the same place. But they all just wanted to play.

Friendships are richer when we are different.  They can actually be better when we find those people who are our opposites.  They rub off our rough edges.

Churches are stronger when we come from different backgrounds. We all add our wisdom to the work, wisdom that has come from vastly different experiences and lives.

And because of this, I think community is better when we aren’t alike. Our lives would be so much sweeter if we were less consumed about the what’s and why’s and more concerned about being friends and letting others into our lives and hearts without worrying about the outcome.

I need friends who aren’t like me. It’s important.

I need people around me who don’t think like me.  I need blog commenters who disagree.  It’s good for the community.

So, even if we don’t all think the same or look the same, let’s jump on the slide and play tag for the morning.  Let’s be friends, no matter what. We’ll be better for it.

How do you find community?  Am I alone in this?


God Was Late

I wrote yesterday that I’m having trouble seeing the good and beauty in seemingly juxtaposed heartaches right now.

Turns out I was just impatient.

I walked into my daughters’ school today at noon to pick up my preschooler.  I usually walk by the elementary school playground so I can give a quick hug to my second grader during her lunchtime recess.

She’s been having difficulty with her seven- and eight-year-old girlfriends at school lately.  So, confession: I spy on her to see who she’s playing with.

I try to remember what I dressed her in that morning, and because the sea of navy, khaki and white uniforms, she’s hard to locate. I can’t always find her so sometimes I walk away not having hugged her.

But yesterday I found her at the right moment. She was being led away from the playground holding her forehead and crying because someone had accidentally kicked her in an over-enthusiastic leap from the swings into the wood chips.  She was surrounded by four girls, each of them gently touching her in some way.  A hand on a shoulder, someone holding her hand, another touching her arm, all acts of genuine concern.

She saw me and began to cry harder.  One of her little friends recognized me and ran up to tell me what happened.  When I finally reached her, the girls were comforting her; hugging her and promising to invite her to their birthday parties.

Hope let me hug her for a minute or two, but then retreated into the huddle of second grade girls, all offering some other form of comfort that her mother could not.

And I walked away and shook my head.

Not because I was surprised that her girls loved her. But because I was amazed at how I’d failed to trust God.

Yesterday I whined about how my own heart ached for my daughter and her seeming lack of friends who loved her.  I just want to see her accepted and drawn in.  And today, almost as if in response, God shows me in living, breathing color, how much He loves my daughter and cares for her heart. But He showed me how much He loves me by caring enough to bring to my eyes a scene alive with his grace and care.

God was late.  By a day.

But it was in His perfect timing.  His “lateness” created a need in me to trust him more.  He forced me to watch for Him with greater attentiveness and to be careful not to miss Him.

Are you watching for His grace today?