One of the opening lines of the play Hamlet reads, "Something's rotten in the state of Denmark." This line became a phrase used for anything foul that is at play underneath the surface of something. Last week I discovered something foul that was at play in a backpack belonging to one of my kids. A decomposing pear.
It was another school morning in the Martin house, and
people were in full swing getting ready. I was barking orders while
simultaneously packing the kids snacks. In a hurry, I grabbed their lunchboxes
and began to pile them for emptying and refilling, only something was a little
off about one of the lunchboxes. I sniffed the edge, and winced at the acrid
sweet smell of fermented fruit. "What is that? Spilled Anti-Bac?
Juice?" My mind rushed to a conversation that I had with one of my kids
who complained that it smelled like beer in the minivan. "That's
impossible, Hun- there isn't any way it's that." I flashed forward to the
mystery at hand, and decided to use my extra sensitive nose (thank you, 4
pregnancies for that blessing and curse) to track down the unpleasant odor. I
stuck my head inside the backpack that I pulled said lunchbox from, and the
smell overpowered me. "Ain't NOBODY got time for this on a school
morning!!!" I seethed under my breath (or what was left of it).
I carried the back pack to the kitchen counter, and
inspected the contents of the bag under the bright lights. And I saw it-
whatever it was, it was brown, mushy, stunk to high heaven, and was nestled in
between a few folders and papers at the bottom of the bag. Now completely repulsed, I grabbed a wad of
paper towels and extracted what promised to be a legitimate (stinky) setback to
an already hurried morning. I felt anger rise up in me. I called up the child
in question, and held out the putrid produce for him to see. "Oh", he
sheepishly responded, "That must have been the pear that I didn't have
room for in my lunchbox, so I left it in my bag. I guess I forgot about
it." Understatement of the year.
We got busy with the task of righting every rotten wrong
inside the bag, and decided what to keep and wash, and what to pitch. I was
shocked at how many papers were leaked on to. One little shriveled up pear
causing that much damage, and that big of a setback. When it was all said and
done, that putrid pear cost me about 25 minutes. 25 minutes that I honestly
didn't have. We were late to school. As I drove, my insides were still at a
rolling boil. I was angry at the child. Angry at the pear. Angry at the
setback. Suddenly, my angry thoughts were interrupted by the bickering of kids.
There was a rotten, sour spirit in my van. And it all began with me.
You see, if I had the luxury of rewinding the tape from that
morning, I would see the moment that I extracted the pear, and seen a clear
cross roads. I could have a) decided to laugh it off, joking around about the
irony of having his own personal compost heap in his back pack on Earth Day. I
could have eased up on the time factor by putting it into perspective. I could
have used grace as a cushy place to have this setback land on. Or I could have
b) gotten seething mad about the whole thing, creating tension in my home,
tension in the kids, and tension in the van. Sadly I chose the latter.
There was a source to that stench in the bag. It didn't
appear out of nowhere. The odor was coming from a mushy, brown, forgotten and
forlorn pear. And until I dealt with that pear, and everything it leaked on, I
wouldn't have peace for my nose. Much like that scenario, there was a source to
that tension in our house, in the kids, in the van. I was the one who
perpetuated that sour spirit because of the root of anger in my heart. The root
of pride that didn't want to be late. The root of a bad attitude. And just like
that pear leaked on everything it touched, so my bad attitude leaked onto
everything I touched. The kids, the house, the van. Had I chosen to let it go,
they could have had the freedom to let it go too. The good news is that my
mothering isn't defined by my rotten attitude in that moment. It's defined by a
God who allows me to fall on my face so I can recognize my need for a Savior.
Friends, it's in those moments of rottenness of spirit that we can trust that
God will show us, if we're willing, the source of that bad attitude. The
process will be messy, as He sorts through our baggage with us, and it might be
a perceived setback. But in the end, we'll be better for it. Case in point, my
child's backpack and lunch box are now clean as a whistle. That's already an
improvement! It's a pit stop in the process of keeping his bag clean. I'm sure
there will be another pit stop in the future, as we will experience pit stops
in our quests to keep clean hearts.
Much like the backpack that held my child's belongings, our
hearts are the epicenter of our lives. There's no such thing as one area of
rottenness staying contained. There is always cross-contamination.
Guard your heart above all else, for it
determines the course of your
life. Proverbs 4:23
The contents of your heart are precious, my friend. So when
you have something unpleasant coming to the surface, choose to be brave. View
this setback as a setup for success. Lay all the contents of your heart bare
before God, and let Him lovingly show you the root of that ornery attitude.
Because when it comes to your heart, content determines course. May your course
be clean. May your willingness to stay clean be tenacious. And may the aroma
coming from your heart be sweet, coating every area of your life.