On the latest addition of learning from my preschooler:
tools.
For whatever reason, my preschooler LOVES to play with our
handheld vacuum cleaner. He loves toting around the house sweeping up stray
crumbs and dirt and dog hair (which the dog doesn’t appreciate when the hair is
still attached to him!). One morning, the sweeper turned toy suddenly stopped
working. As much as my son slammed the button, it just won’t suck. No worries!
My son knew just what to do! He ran to the basement and returned with his toy
hammer. “I’ll fix it, momma!”, he declared and started pounding the pour
machine!
It took a good amount of self-control not to laugh at his
efforts. My adult brain could easily assess what the problem was; I knew a
hammer wasn’t going to fix a dead battery. Yet in his childhood innocence, he
was confident that this was the right tool for the job. He’d just learned how
to use it to pound plastic nails into his tool bench and had seen daddy use a
hammer to fix the panel in the bathroom, so of course it would fix this too!
I wonder how often we approach life’s problems with the
tools of a child. Maybe we learned in childhood that the way to get our needs
met was to be loud and demanding, so we struggle when our verbal pounding
doesn’t get us what we hoped. Or maybe we learned to survive by not having
needs at all; maybe the tool we were given is people please; always put others
first and they’ll never be mad at us. Except maybe now we’re feeling
unfulfilled or unmet because our needs have been ignored for so long. Or maybe
we hold the tool of addiction: if we can just get that next fix or have one
more drink or go on one more shopping spree, that whole in our heart will be
filled. Or maybe it’s the tool of self-protection; if we can just flee from
relationship, hurt or cut of them before they hurt us, we’ll be okay.
Today, I challenge you to take inventory of your emotional
and spiritual toolbox. What tools in there no longer serve the purpose they
once did? What’s no longer beneficial? What once useful hammer is now trying to
fill the role of an electric cord? And what are the tools are missing? What are
the things that you still need to be successful, happy, and satisfied with
yourself, your relationships, your life?
Once you’ve assessed your resources, I encourage you to
reach out to your community and share both the tools that you have and those
that you’re lacking. Reach out to a trusted friend or family, a pastor, someone
in your small group or club, or even to a counselor (I know of a few great ones!
=)) and ask for the help that you need. Stop trying to fix a dead battery with
a hammer; find someone who can teach you the tools that you need.