What do you want to be?
A fireman. Mommy. The President.
Most kiddos have some idea of what they want to become when they "grow up." (Still a somewhat flighty phrase in my book as I approach
year twenty.) I too had my list of things I wanted to be and do, but they weren't all...
well, here. That is to say, they weren't all a part of this century.
My dreams, rather than exclusively pulling me toward the future, often ran backwards into the corridors of the past. I imagined what my life might look like if I had been born hundreds of years earlier.
I pictured myself navigating the questions of the American Revolution. Would I be a
fiery patriot, or would I sip my tea in silence? Would I lose friends and make enemies, or ride out the waves in placid
disengagement for as long as possible?
I thought about the thrill of the Great Depression (yes, I'm not kidding), having to make do or do without. My whole family and I would be thrown into the exciting challenge of canning food, sewing clothes and
bed sheets, maybe even raising chickens. I wanted to live in
Kit Kittredge's attic bedroom, complete with a typewriter for stories and small window to spy on the happenings of the neighborhood below.
(Confession: Once we had a massive tornado warning in Springfield, Missouri. While everyone rushed around upstairs, I sat by myself in the basement crawlspace for a few moments, excitedly hoping that the tornado
would destroy our house. It would be such fun to walk through town and make a new life with nothing but the shoes on our feet. A real adventure! Thankfully, nothing happened to our house, and my imagination found other outlets.)

Sometimes I traveled much further back into the rich ages of Medieval lore. A daughter of a lesser Lord, I would walk the length of our castle, brushing my hands across our family tapestries that hung to muffle the chilling damp of the stone corridors. I would bend over my books, learning Latin, French, and history. Riding my horse on the outskirts of the growing village nearby, sometimes I would spy the swineherds children frolicking and laughing
all the day long, without a care in the world. Often I would envy them, only to return home with self-conscious pain. Their life would not always be easy. It wouldn't even be much longer until they would have to join in the hard labor of their parents. My lot was to study hard while I was young, so that I could serve well in coming years.
Then there wa
s the dream of life in the 1800's, probably the one I visited the most often as my sister
Aanna and I would don our prairie girl dresses to ride our family couch-turned-covered-wagon, or pick dandelions in the back yard. In that life, I wanted to go west, to find the open spaces where I belonged. I would travel to a little town with nothing but a few pieces of luggage, and there I would become a school teacher, perhaps even marry the bachelor newspaper editor. Between teaching with chalk-dusted fingers, ambling walks through prairie valleys, and a sisterly quilters circle of wise mothers and young friends, my life would be full of contentment, measured with the rhythm of steady unpredictability on that new frontier.
***
Can I tell you a secret? This last dream tickles me so much, because it's true. Today, I feel as if I am living a modern variation of the life I once carried in my ten-year-old head. Though I never would have planned to come back to the place where I grew up, here I am living in the
Midwest once again. This time, I'm nestled between green pasture fields and winding gravel roadways. I have the privilege of tutoring three remarkable souls, and respond to "Miss Rebekkah". Wagging-dog-tails follow me when I walk to the edge of the property to mail letters to distant friends. Going into town is a semi-weekly occasion. I live here with an amazing family who show me daily the multi-faceted miracle of individual lives seeking to show Christ's likeness, while drawing that same likeness out of others. This little dream I once held
surprised me by showing
its face again. I had forgotten all about this childhood dream, and still, I love it.
Perhaps certain childhood dreams are never truly cast aside when we finally "grow up." Maybe they are always tied to a tender place inside of us where they have taken root, if not to come true, then at least to shape who we are and what we grow to become. I am reminded again how intimately God cares, how he sees all. Perhaps He
hearkens to these scarcely-breathed prayers we don't even know we carry, and treasures them.
Only God knows, but I wonder if there may be other past dreams I will meet again. Maybe I can hope that castles and village cobblestones will be another distant imagining brought near for re-introductions. My Lord's mastery of the future fills me with such hope! Let it
bring you hope too. There are other sleeping dreams that we may still have the surprise of looking forward to, though these all pale beside the dream of being reunited with Christ who came for us. Then, we will finally be in the place where we were made to belong. This is the place of his unaltered, uninterrupted, never-ending
presence. This is the greatest dream of all.
No comments :
Post a Comment