Today, this
same cousin posted a blurb on her social media page:
There are some mistakes I've made that I have vowed to
never repeat. 2016 will be meticulously orchestrated and executed. Just let me
get through Christmas
To which I responded:
Unfortunately, mistakes are part
and parcel of life. Shoot, speaking of commemorative ceremonies, I can think of
a couple of glaring mistakes in the one I planned for my immigrant grandfather;
not to mention my mistakes throughout an entire year. But yes, we have to keep
on pressing towards the best of which we are capable
Now, I’m sure Jeanne had not been
referring to the event she organized when she mentioned having made mistakes,
but it seems good to use it as an example from my own life.
Back in 2008, when I and another
cousin, Kimberly, meticulously planned a grave marking ceremony for our
Scottish immigrant, Revolutionary War ancestor, well, I can tell you we “didn’t
miss a beat.” Literally, hundreds of hours were poured into the construction of
that ceremony. By the time we finished our figurative blueprint, and the
invitations had gone out, it was a regular Rembrandt.
However, I can tell you, readers, that
there’s can be a huge difference between a blueprint, and a completed building.
A blueprint is only a theory,
… until the building is raised on the
site.
But to return to my story…
November 1, 2008 dawned,
and a couple hundred McDonald descendants
appeared (Check)
Each and every one of the planned
speakers showed up (Check)
Representatives of the Georgia Sons of
the American Revolution in period uniform graced us with their presence (Check)
The still and video photographers were
right on time (Check)
And Bagpipers “dressed to the hilt” in
kilts (Check)
The Boy Scout troop with their
pre-selected bugler filed onto the cemetery grounds (Check)
Why, even Sony Schroyer, (“Enos” of
“The Dukes of Hazzard”) graced us with his presence (No Check required, since
his appearance was an unexpected treat). He lives in the area, and counts a
couple of my relatives, his friends.
But since too many participants, too
much geographical distance, and too much required time precluded a dry run, in
the few minutes I had available before the ceremony commenced, I provided my
participants a few last minute instructions.
And then it began,
… and then it began to “go wrong.”
Well, to say it went wrong would be a
gross exaggeration, since to be fair, there were only a couple of obvious
mistakes in an otherwise flawless ceremony. And it goes without saying that
when you’re involved with turning blueprints into buildings, any conscientious
architect is sensitive about millimeters, turning into feet.
And when I say it went wrong, it was,
paradoxically, the one ingredient which should NOT have gone wrong, and in
which I might have invested the most confidence.
For when our “seasoned” bagpipers
proceeded to “strut their stuff,” (who had, I’d been informed, participated in
dozens of such commemorative ceremonies) their kilts and pipes figuratively,
(if not literally)
… unraveled at the seams.
“Danny Boy”???
(They might just as well be playing,
“Jingle Bells”)
and the (not so) amazing,
“Amazing Grace”
(A tone-deaf nuclear cannoneer wearing
earmuffs might have paused to shake his head in disbelief).
And I, “Mr. Structure,” himself, was
absolutely mortified as the pipers piped their way through instrumentations
which should have been the most familiar of all selections to folks who play
the pipes.
But upon reflection, when I consider
the depth and breadth of a ceremony which required an hour, I suppose a scant
fraction of the elapsed time having been disrupted by the horrendous
interpretation of two songs isn’t all that significant.
I can tell you, I was my own worst
critic that day.
And so it is, I think, with all of
life.
As a Christian counselor, (with the
emphasis on the first word) I am “taken up” with fulfilling my God-given
destiny, and ultimately bringing pleasure to my Creator. And I am the first to
admit that I am not always “a man after God’s own heart,” and I don’t always
“get it right.”
It is simply too easy to take one’s
eyes off the prize, and to become overly sensitive, and even obsessive about
one’s mistakes; for the mistakes’ sake.
There’s a wonderful passage in one of
the Apostle Paul’s epistles.
“This one thing I do. Leaving the past
behind, and turning to all that God has prepared for me.” (Philippians 3:13)
Identifying the mistakes. Asking God’s
forgiveness. Forgiving one’s self. Making mid-course corrections. Getting up
off the proverbial ground.
… And moving forward.
This is “where it’s at,” my friends.
This is what it’s ultimately all about.
And something we ought to be doing
throughout the course of our lives.
By William McDonald, PhD. Excerpt from "(Mc)Donald's Daily Diary" Vol. 16. Copyright pending
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