Jilbert Ebrahimi Broken Glass
Betty
Clendening was a force to be reckoned with and our son was experiencing the
full extent of her indignation. The two of them stood in front of my desk –
Mrs. Clendening with her hands on her hips, Andrew red-faced and sheepish.
“Tell
your mother what you did,” she demanded.
“I
didn’t mean to. I did it ‘on accident,’” he stammered. “I was trying to kick
the soccer ball over the school roof and it went through a window.”
“On
accident.” There’s a phrase I knew wouldn’t fly with his father.
According to my Main Man, very little really happens “on accident.”
Rather, while you don’t actually want something bad to occur, due to impulsivity,
force of habit, or poor judgment, something you didn’t really intend, does.
I
thought of our son’s long ago incident while preparing for a presentation I was
making on “Living with Purpose.” It occurs to me many of us fail to live a
considerable portion of our lives with intentionality or “on purpose.” Rather,
much of what materializes seems to befall us “on accident.”
But
does it really?
For
instance, many people complain about being “too busy.” It causes me to wonder,
are our schedules slammed from stem to stern because we were thoughtful about
our choices? Or did we, perhaps, fail to say “no” when we should have? Did we
graciously decline without the “maybe-if-you-push-me-hard-enough-I’ll-say-yes”
in our voice? Do we contain our children’s schedules, or allow others to make
us feel guilty when we limit our commitments?
Photo by Michael Heuser
Richard
Leider, author of The Power of Purpose, identifies three key skills for
those who want to be more intentional about their lives. First, living on
purpose or requires reflection on our current situation or choices. Why am I
doing what I’m doing? Who am I trying to please or make happy? What am I afraid
of? Whose life am I trying to live, mine or someone else’s?
Secondly,
living on purpose requires courage—not the kind of courage needed for
sky-diving or white water rafting. Rather, it necessitates the sort of bravery
associated with being more real, vulnerable and authentic with others. It means
letting others know who you really are.
Photo by Mikito Tateisi
Finally,
living on purpose means answering questions like these: Who am I? Why am I
here? What do I need or want to accomplish? When I think about living with
purpose, I’m encouraged by advice from a cancer patient.
You must stop and reassess your
priorities and values. You must be willing to be yourself, not what people want
you to be because you think that is the only way you can get love. You can no
longer be dishonest. You are now at a point where, if you truly want to live,
you have to be who you are.
If
we are to live this kind of life then we will have to make choices. We will
need to be intentional. We will need to sort and sift through our options.
What happened to our “on
accident” son? The window cost about $200 to replace—a lot of money for a
12-year-old of limited means. Fortunately, the school had a lawn measured in
acres, something that allowed a young man with few resources to do a lot of
thinking while walking behind a lawn mower. No doubt the experience allowed him
plenty of time to reflect on his actions and plan the future with greater
intentionality. He certainly never tried to kick a soccer ball over the school
roof again.
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