I keep coming back to this picture.
Somjit is in the yellow on the left, and Beemai is in the black on the right. We are waiting for evening worship time to begin, and the children are gathering and playing. It's like that. They come into the big meeting room and goof off a bit before we get started with the singing.
Somjit and Beemai have been having a thumb war first, which evolves into a tableless arm wrestle, then a bit of what might be described as chair wrangling. And it all is apparently hilarious fun.
And I keep coming back to this picture because, having been present when it was happening, just remembering the moment and looking at those faces delivers a significant injection of joy every time.
How can it not? I mean....just look at them!
In these days of Lenten reflection, these days of lesser productivity and a bit more space, I have become more aware of what I'm looking at. And not all of it is joy.
There's a LOT going on on the planet these days, in case you didn't know. But I fear the problem is that we all do know, and we know it a lot! It comes at us non-stop thanks to our phones. Mostly our phones, but also by all sorts of media.
An article that's already four years old from the American Psychological Association was outlining the stressors of too much news back in the days of COVID. These days it's wars and rumours of wars and gas prices and politics and no end of awfulness that we can consume in a matter of minutes just by scrolling up.
And then there's whatever's happening in our own orbits, in our neighbourhood, with our friends, within our families. And oh, let's add in a long harsh winter winding up with a March that's behaving like a menopausal woman.
But. That's actually not all that's going on. It's just one side of things. Which brings me back to this picture and becoming more aware of, then more intentional about what I'm looking at.
It's a razor thin line sometimes between honest, compassionate engagement in the pain of others, and the good and necessary choice to find the joy. We navigate the space between 'toxic positivity' and wallowing. We dare not invalidate the negative even as we seek the positive. And we can't let all the sorrow rob us of the joy that is indeed honestly available to us.
Which brings me back to the picture. Again. Because...just look at them!
These sweet girls have known their own sorrow; more than they should have in their young lives. Without going into their stories, just know that the fun they are having in this captured moment is a testament to their own resilience and the power of a nurturing environment to heal the soul. They don't know it, I'm sure, but they bring so much joy to my own. What a gift it is to be in that nurturing environment as often as I am.
So, what then?
I won't ignore the goings on, the bad and the ugly. I won't run from the pain of others, or from caring and doing and knowing, not in that order, but maybe in that order.
But I choose to let my focus rest on all that's good.
And yes, I can't help but hear it in my head right this minute.
"Whatsoever is true, or noble, or right, or lovely, or admirable -- anything excellent or praiseworthy...think on these things.... And the God of peace will be with you." Philippians 4:8-9
And also with you.