Two years ago I wrote a post about our potential new
neighbors. Every night the kids and I would pray for the people who would soon move
into two houses on our street, “Lord, help us to bless our new neighbors, and
help them to be a blessing to us.” Those empty houses held the promise of play dates,
friendships, and casual pizza dinners in the cul de sac. Maybe even future prom
dates. They were ideals, pristine-- not yet marred by the hurt feelings,
awkwardness or conflicts that often arise when living in community. You can read that post here.
The houses made me think a lot about myself as a friend. I realized
that while I wanted to roll out the welcome mat and be an ultra- friendly
neighbor, I had grown accustomed to being more of a drive-by friend than a
steadfast one. I leaned away from people whom I considered “needy” or who
pushed intimacy on me. I also think I put
unspoken, internal limits on how long it should take for people to “get over”
things, and how much of myself I’d offer up to them if they needed me.
I realized I might be an okay friend to have during a
sprained ankle, but chronic depression? Probably not. Ouch. You could have described my friendship
style as wide, but not really deep. I think, with the exception of a small
group of friends, I kept myself a little closed off from others. Maybe it was
because I didn’t want to let them see the times when our family was annoying,
ungracious, and our lives were… messy.
Less intimacy = less
mess.
Seven months after the new families moved in, 3 young friends
knocked on our door, and Jack and Margaret went out to play with them, huge
smiles on their faces.
Jack never came back.
One new neighbor, Jane, whose daughter had been playing with my kids in the rain, held my hand as I knelt in the wet grass, cursing and praying as rescue workers tried to find our son. And the other new neighbor’s son, Joe, was the one who called out, “Let’s go look at the creek!” and led the kids into his back yard.
Jack never came back.
One new neighbor, Jane, whose daughter had been playing with my kids in the rain, held my hand as I knelt in the wet grass, cursing and praying as rescue workers tried to find our son. And the other new neighbor’s son, Joe, was the one who called out, “Let’s go look at the creek!” and led the kids into his back yard.
I can and do wonder about the way God chose to answer
our sincere prayers about our new neighbors. He’s the same God I prayed to for
guidance on buying this house 10 years ago.
What’s up with that? Jack is dead! This is not a blessing! I ask Him, “Why did you lead us to this
neighborhood in the first place?” Why? Wouldn’t any other f’ing town,
neighborhood, or even street have been a better call? I don’t have the answers.
But I do think it is interesting that the woman who avoided
conflict and intimacy, and sometimes missed out on true community, the
woman who wrote these words on her blog, “Of course in my shallowness, I must admit
I want to be needed in the "Where's the grocery store? or "Let's hang
out on my porch" kind of way, not in the walk with me through a major life crisis sort of way,” is now immersed in a messy struggle for
survival that is truly long-term and has left few in the neighborhood, town, or our internet circles untouched. There
is no clear-cut end date or exit strategy, and no evaluation form to complete
when the healing is “complete!”
And I have been cared for by people who have bravely
rejected the idea that surface level friendship is enough, including my friend
Jane, who hasn’t quit holding my hand.
It’s all so very interesting.
I now need what I was reluctant to give, and that is humbling.
And I can’t wash off or run away from the mess, even if I try.