i’m the oldest child in my family.
i was actually the only child for 9 years, a month, and a day. (not that i was counting.)
yet, i have come to a realization that i am most definitely a middle child. maybe not in personality type. and maybe not in my immediate family…
but i am in God’s.
by that, i’m not saying that i’m a neglected child, smooshed between more spiritually successful older siblings and the youngest children with all the drama (that we think, somehow, take up more of God’s attention).
although, let’s be honest… i sometimes feel ignored.
does that sound heretical?
there are times that i have prayed for guidance… and prayed… and prayed.
there are times when i have waited… and waited… and waited.
there are times that all i wanted was to see God make things clear. you know, in a good way. as in, doors fly open and you soar through and people throw confetti and pop corks and blow kisses and it’s all great.
then again, maybe God knows that i’m a bit of a skeptic and would doubt the whole thing by repeating to myself the motto i learned when i was little: “if it’s too good to be true, it probably is.”
(thanks, mom.
)
my clarity seems to come in slamming doors, complete with sound effects and painful jolts. but hey, clarity is clarity. one can’t complain. (okay, they can. and i do. but that’s another post.)
however, i firmly believe that slammed doors are better than revolving ones.
(at least then, you know. and yes. it’s hard. sometimes ridiculously hard. but the grieving process can begin. and play its course. and end.)
revolving doors play with your hopes and your head. you don’t know whether to go ahead or to go back. you don’t know where to alot your mindspace, because you don’t want to invest it in options that aren’t going to work… in things that aren’t sure.
and if revolving doors weren’t obnoxious enough, there are times you feel like life is a massive game of monkey-in-the-middle.
oh, i hated that game. even when i wasn’t in the middle, i hated that game– because even if i personally wasn’t in the middle, i always felt bad for the guy who was.
why?
because… i knew how much i personally hated the middle position. and if it weren’t for the fact that getting him out of the middle meant putting me in it, i would have thrown the ball right at the guy for him to catch and get his torture over with.
middle isn’t fun.
and, right now, that’s where i’m at.
the other day, my friend posted an article from world magazine that talked about the middle condition… and i clicked… and towards the end of the article, i found this jewel of a thought by the author:
“i do wonder if, of all places, God is a God of the middle. if this is where He meets us the best. in the times when we’re neither here nor there. those waiting times where the diagnosis isn’t in yet or the house won’t sell or the man in charge can’t decide if he wants to offer you a job or not. those times where we have exhausted our own resources and have no choice but to sit in silence . . . and listen.”
and i realized something.
yes, i’m a middle child.
but that doesn’t mean that God is ignoring me, and deciding to impart His direction and attention in his other children. or, as i sometimes (wrongly) think, God is not maliciously playing games with my life and hopes and dreams by keeping the ball of certainty just over my head and out of my grasp.
no, middle isn’t fun. because the middle means revolving doors, and uncertainty, and waiting (waitingwaitingwaiting)…
but, unlike what i used to believe, and unlike what i currently feel, middle isn’t the worst thing in the world.
especially if it puts me in the position and aligns me in the perfect placement for me to meet Him best.
(to read the original world magazine article, read “in the middle.”)