Slow never killed time, only the rushing and racing, the catching up that tries to catch up to time, this is what kills time. Why keep wounding eternity?
Ourselves?
-Ann Voskamp, The Gift We Can’t Afford to Refuse, June 11, 2011
When I finished up my post yesterday, I clicked over to my Reader, and wouldn’t you know? Ann always seems to put words and thoughts clear and true to what’s circling around in my head.
This is the lesson I keep speaking to myself, over and over and over again. This is the lesson of my year. Hard lesson, this. It goes against everything I know.
About this time last year, I began working full time for a company in the publishing industry. I started this job for many reasons. I’ll explain why in subsequent posts. It’s supposed to be a perfect fit kind of job; I work from home, make my own hours, and they support both family and homeschooling. It is okay for those things to come first in my days, so long as my work is done well and on time. But the nature of the beast when it comes to publishing? Everything is an emergency. There is always a deadline that is not being met. There is always a crisis of some sort or another. Emails race constantly regarding this issue or that problem. All of our resumes should read: good at thinking fast and solving problems in a creative way. On one hand, the rush of figuring things out is half the fun; on the other hand, you never take a breath. By the time one issue is to the printers, we’re already ramped up on another issue, piecing out the puzzles.
It was a deadly development for me. I have always tended towards overclocking in my personal life, never knowing when to slow. The skill of slowing is a learned one, valuable, and elusive. It requires perspective. An ability to see both what is ahead, and what is behind, and find the balance in the middle; where time is held loosely in both hands and treasured for what it is. One of my biggest struggles is in vision: I either see the forest for the trees or the trees for the forest. I will go racing like a madman towards one or the other and get shocked when I am utterly, totally lost, because I was never sure of my bearings in the first place. In some ways, that’s what makes me good at what I do- latching on to an idea and running with it, exploring all the posibilities- what would happen if people didn’t do that? We’d still eat by candelight. Creativity thrives on innovation.
November came. I was thirty six weeks pregnant. The company was smack in the middle of a promotion, one that required long hours and careful attention on my part. Thanksgiving was days away: my family was coming, my house was trashed, and I was exhausted. How in the world was I going to get it all done? As if things weren’t stressful enough, everybody got sick with a cold, miserable as could be. Little Mrs. Overclocked was not happy. I cared for them with a begrudging heart, coughing myself, running around with kleenexes, to the computer in my office- sidestepping box after box for the promotion, stuffing envelopes- back downstairs again to the kitchen (which in the barn house was completely disconnected from everything else–a very big hassle in our large family). Not pretty. I cringe when I think about it now. I had latched on to the publishing way of life: crisis. Emergency. These Things Matter More than This. While it may be true for publishing, it is not true for my life. That I ever confused the two breaks my heart.
By the time the weekend dawned, I could not stop coughing. I had heard someone sounding like this before: my husband. His asthma attacks took the form of coughing fits- he’d begin to cough, and unable to stop, would no longer be able to speak. If he went much longer, he’d start turning blue around the mouth while his breathing took on a belabored whistle- still coughing. In my typical way, I noted this development. I was Highly Annoyed. I had Work To Do. Forget my family at this point. I could’ve cared less about that. The only thing in my head was crisis, crisis, run, run, run. By Sunday evening, I was taking a turn for the worse: I popped the meds in the nebulizer, blaming the dust cloud I had walked through earlier that day for my bad breathing, even though I myself had not had an asthma attack in over ten years. I was reading some spreadsheet while I sat with the neb; the numbers began to swim.
Monday came, and I could no longer be in denial. I literally could not breathe. I couldn’t speak either. A visit to my doctor meant an automatic admission to the hospital; do not pass go, do not collect $200 dollars. Straight to jail. That’s all I could think. The hospital? Now? I don’t have time for this! By Monday evening, it all didn’t matter. It all faded as I simply fought to breathe. The things that should matter finally mattered- the baby in my womb, the lungs that were struggling to fill with air, the thought of my family, husband, and the final realization that something was terribly wrong.
Why did it take an emergency to teach me that life is not an emergency? Why, in all of my adult life, did I not understand this? Ten years of crazy striving. After what?


