Taking Up My Mat

It’s a big week for birthdays at Doves & Serpents and  today is my birthday. Only 365 more days left in my 30’s and I’m not sure I want to leave this decade yet. When I was a little girl, I remember watching my grandmother look in the mirror bewildered that her reflection did not match the youth of her spirit. She didn’t feel any older, so what was happening with her body?

The older I get the more I understand her. My 40’s are intimidating because I have an expectation that by the time one reaches this decade, she has her life pretty well under control. Yet here I am, merely a year away, and I don’t even know what’s for dinner on any given night. I don’t feel any more responsible than I did as a 20 year old.

This year of 38 has been monumental in my life journey. I was introduced this year to a story in the Bible (I honestly don’t know how I made it through 38 years of church-going and missed it??) and have reflected on it throughout the year. I feel a connection with the story of the man at the waters of Bethesda who remained at the edge of the healing pool for 38 years unable or unwilling to be healed. According to John, the waters would be “troubled” by an angel every season after which the first person to enter them “was made whole of whatsoever disease he had.”

Jesus appears and asks this particular man if he wants to be made whole, and the man answers that he can’t because he doesn’t have anyone to take him to the waters after they are troubled by the angel. And someone always steps in ahead of him.

Jesus replies “Rise, take up thy bed, and walk.”

And the man is made whole.

As I have prepared to leave my 30’s there are a myriad of “what if’s” and “should of’s” I can’t help but consider. And as I do, it’s easy to blame my circumstances or other people for the things I regret. I didn’t have enough money or time or childcare or whatever it was to do the things I wanted. Every one of my regrets has a pretty little excuse attached to it to make me feel better, to eliminate the responsibility I had in making the choice to let money, time or childcare get in the way of what it was I really wanted.

But as I connect to this man who was so close to being whole, yet so far away, I thought about God asking me the same question one day and decided I don’t want to be left offering excuses about why I didn’t follow up on my dreams or let life pass me by. So this year, I’ve begun to own my life. I’ve begun to seek divine help to get up off my mat and leave behind the excuses.  But doing so is difficult as I have to look at some of the ugly parts of myself that I like to disguise, the part of me that procrastinates or forgets or avoids.

Without excuses, facing 40 is a little daunting. But there’s no stopping the clock now. Game on.

I’m interested to know how you handle these milestone birthdays in your own life.