Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Great expectations


Presumably our expectations about life these days give rise to all the panic we see about ...well, snow. I have childhood memories of huge snowbanks at the sides of Glasgow streets, and of being sent home early because the (outside) school toilets were frozen; of wonderful sledging on these unexpected free afternoons because of aforementioned plumbing crises; of launching myself intrepidly down slides in the playground before the janny ruined them with salt. But I don't recall the trams going off, or being kept at home because it was too snowy to travel to school (half an hour away, if you walked).

But now we expect to be cocooned in our cars until the last possible moment when we go anywhere; we expect to whizz along motorways at insane speeds; we expect planes to shake off the shackles of earth without worrying about the improbability of landing safely on black ice - and when something makes this difficult or impossible we go into hyperbolic mode and talk as if the end of the world had come.

I'm as bad, in my own way: if I want to speak to someone and they're not either at home to answer the phone or responding immediately to their mobile, I feel irritation closely followed - if it's family - by panic: is their phone ringing out in a crashed car? Where are they? Why are they out in the snowy dark with a 2 year old when they should be safely at home with In the Night Garden?

So tomorrow, in penance for all this exaggerated expectation, I shall join in further gritting of our church drive (apparently our labours yesterday have produced miraculous improvement; we just need to do it further up) so that we can have our lovely Midnight Mass tomorrow. And then I hope to drive sedately along the M8 to join my family for Christmas dinner. It's been an interesting Advent of flu, cancellations and anxiety followed by relief as family travelled the country to be with us - it would be good to relax for a bit. Especially if someone else is doing the cooking ...

4 comments:

  1. hahaha!!! I am sooooo with you on this one, Chris. 'Cept, I cannot stand to worry. Don't like sweaty palms!!!!!! Perhaps because life has dealt some awesome blows, I am of the mindset that I cannot change the way a situation has played out, and that my poor imagination can run wild if left unbridled! Or, perhaps I believe what Jesus said when He told us worry can change nothing!!

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  2. Blessings of peace and joy at your midnight Mass Chris. And blessings of safe travel along the Purgatorio which is the M8. As for worry about the family - one of ours is travelling here today, from Edinburgh!...on the M8!! in fog!!! :))

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  3. Thanks for some much needed common sense, Chris...I'm wondering if anyone will actually BRAVE midnight at one of my churches, which will be slightly ironic after all the recent panic re sermons etc in these parts. However, onward we go for still we hear them singing...and the Babe will be born come what may.Safe travels & happy arrivals to you

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  4. Blessings to you all this Christmas!

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