Tags
anxiety, challenge, failure, fear, God, growth, hesitant, Holy Spirit, invitations, Jesus, joy, new, risk, try, yes

I was listening to a podcast this week that was talking about how, as they mature, adults have a harder time trying new things because they have a deeper understanding, and perhaps fear of, failure. Children don’t have this same hesitancy. They try new things, figure out what works and what doesn’t, and keep at it. There is a freedom in their development that allows them not to hold back or be afraid, but to keep trying out new experiences and challenges.
As one of my daughters ages, she is heading into that in-between time where she doesn’t have the same innocent willingness to try and fail, and is starting to understand that failures or inadequacies are sometimes noticed by others negatively. She is trying out a new extracurricular this fall, and hated the first session. As we headed into the second session, she pulled out all the stops about why she shouldn’t have to go back: she wasn’t good enough, people weren’t nice, she would bring down the group through her inexperience. In a moment of weakness, I almost caved. I know how big those feelings are. I palpably remember the anxiety that kind of experience brings, and I wanted to protect her from that hurt.
When she came out of the second practice, she was a different person. She was smiling, had a lightness to her step, and a warmth about her. “That was fun!” she said. As I listened to her describe the session, I was overwhelmed with two realizations. First, I realized how close I came to cutting off a growth experience – how she would have never had learned the feeling of what it means to push through fear and find joy. And second, I realized I needed to take a long look at where I am cutting off growth experiences in my own life. Masked with the label, “wisdom,” how often do I fail to risk?
I wonder what growth opportunities are being presented to you today. It doesn’t have to be something big or dramatically different. Part of creating an openness to growth means being open to the little invitations – talking to a stranger when that’s not something you would normally do, reaching out for support when you don’t like feeling dependent upon someone, saying yes to an invitation to something that is not at all in your comfort zone but you admittedly have never tried to know for sure. Those yeses prepare us for the yeses the Holy Spirit desires in each of our lives. Those invitations are often God’s quiet invitations into God’s joy. Those experiences are often pathways to the incarnate Jesus in your life. I can’t wait to hear what you say yes to this week!