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A few weeks after my
first wife, Georgia, was called to heaven, I was cooking dinner for
my son and myself. For a vegetable, I decided on frozen peas. As I
was cutting open the bag, it slipped from my hands and crashed to
the floor. The peas, like marbles, rolled everywhere. I tried to use
a broom, but with each swipe the peas rolled across the
kitchen, bounced off the wall on the other
side and rolled in another direction.
My mental state at
the time was fragile. Losing a spouse is an unbearable pain.
I got on my hands and
knees and pulled them into a pile to dispose of. I was half laughing
and half crying as I collected them. I could see the humor in what
happened, but it doesn?t take much for a person dealing with grief
to break down.
For the next week,
every time I was in the kitchen, I would find a pea that had escaped
my first cleanup. In a corner, behind a table leg, in the frays at
the end of a mat,
or hidden under a
heater, they kept turning up. Eight months later I pulled out the
refrigerator to clean, and found a dozen or so petrified peas hidden
underneath.
At the time I found
those few remaining peas, I was in a new relationship with a
wonderful woman I met in a widow/widower support group. After we
married, I was reminded of those peas under the refrigerator. I
realized my life had been like that bag of
frozen peas. It had
shattered. My wife was gone. I was in a new city with a busy job and
a son having trouble adjusting to his new surroundings and the loss
of his mother. I was a wreck. I was a bag of spilled, frozen peas.
My life had come apart and scattered.
When life gets you
down; when everything you know comes apart; when you think you can
never get through the tough times, remember, it is just a bag of
scattered, frozen peas. The peas can be collected and life will move
on. You will find all the peas. First the easy peas come together in
a pile. You pick them up and start to move on. Later you will find
the bigger and harder to find peas. When you pull all the peas
together, life will be whole again.
The life you know can
be scattered at any time. You will move on, but how fast you collect
your peas depends on you. Will you keep scattering them around with
a broom, or will you pick them up one-by-one and put your life back
together?
How will you collect
your peas?
Michael T. Smith |