Impact!
We must wake each morning and truly think about who we will
impact that day. It must be
conscious decision and not something we leave to chance. Love is a deliberate act not a passive
feeling. It’s not necessarily easy
either. It becomes easy through
repetition. Repetition makes it habit.
Like training a muscle or committing some fact to memory. It’s easiest to impact those who are
part of our daily lives. Impact;
however can be good and bad. If
it’s not deliberate and thought out, it is a gamble.
I’m trying to
get better at impacting strangers.
It’s not easy and I’m not always successful in doing so. It’s far too easy to get caught up in
the routine of life; it’s easy to get caught up in the routine of what I have
to do for MY life. It’s hard to
think about others albeit a total stranger first. Positive impact must be planned and practiced.
As I’ve mentioned repeatedly in these blogs I’m a police
officer. I’m impacting lives on a
daily basis but if I approach my job by just going through the motions the
impact only scratches the surface….it is not Deep Impact! The funny thing is to have deep impact;
it does not take monumental effort, simply an effort. Kind of like what the bible says about
faith…”If you only had the faith of a mustard seed.” The point is to not leave it to happenstance.
Sometimes positive impact comes through listening to your
heart. I know that might sound
cheesy, but I think that is how God speaks to us. If you don’t believe in God, well that is still where
goodness is spoken to you. For me,
I don’t get a lot of clear direction from God. There is no burning bush, no voice from on High booming down
telling me what to do and when to do it.
I rely on the innate goodness given to us as humans, and the moral
senses of what is right that has been reinforced through good and loving people
in my life. Some may call it
listening to the Holy Spirit. Call
it what you want but act on the prompting of goodness…..even it makes you uncomfortable.
Last year, I responded to a radio call of a mentally
disturbed person. This man was a
husband and a father of three beautiful girls. Dad had been recently began episodes of paranoia….each day
getting worse. Our department’s
Psychological Emergency Response Team responded and he was ultimately placed on
psychiatric hold and transported to a hospital. I felt bad for the family and wished there was something I
could do. I sent up a prayer and
something inside told me to pray with the family…..I ignored it, I told myself
as I got into my patrol car that it would be silly and I would feel totally
awkward. I drove out of the
neighborhood and couldn’t shake the feeling. A mile or two down the main road and I turned the car
around. I had to catch my breath
as I knocked on the family’s door.
Mom had a puzzled look on her face. I informed her that something was telling me to pray for her
husband and their family with them.
She broke down. She ushered
her teenage daughters down from upstairs and informed them of why I had
returned….everyone was misty eyed.
We held hands in a circle and I offered my short awkward prayer for
their family. Finished, slightly
embarrassed and ready to bolt out the door, I was shocked when mom picked up
where I had left off, then daughter #1, daughter #2 and daughter #3. Expressing their gratitude for me.
I won’t lie it felt good. But the point is it was not something I wanted to do, but
decided to do. I don’t know what
the lasting impact was but I know it was something that family needed at the
time. I look for opportunities
like that; I try to think in advance of who I can impact that day. I’m not always successful, I often
forget or an opportunity does not really present itself. Often the act I choose and the reaction
is much more subtle than the example I just listed.
One. Start with
a planned impact of just one person.
This post reminds me of a poem by TS Eliot. Here is part of it:
ReplyDeleteThe endless cycle of idea and action,
Endless invention, endless experiment,
Brings knowledge of motion, but not of stillness;
Knowledge of speech, but not of silence;
Knowledge of words, and ignorance of The Word.
All our knowledge brings us nearer to our ignorance,
All our ignorance brings us nearer to death,
But nearness to death no nearer to God.
Where is the Life we have lost in living?
Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?
In this world, there are so many loud voices that try tell us how to live, how to gratify passions and how to "have it all". The world will try to influence our minds and actions about what we should be doing to be happy. Real happiness comes from learning to filter out the static and tuning into the voice of the Spirit as you bravely did. This solution is quiet and subtle. Unpopular in a world of instant gratification. It is an ancient solution in a world of people always looking for something new. I too believe that this is how God speaks to His children. Prayers are most often answered through others, willing to act on the promptings they receive. Good for you for being their answer from God, that He is aware of their struggles. That He loves them enough to prompt a police officer to return to pray with them. A sign of His mercy and love for them in their trials of faith.
GREAT POST!
Thanks Mat! Love the Poem as well!
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