A Reminder to My Waiting Heart
Sunrise in Bolinao, Pangasinan (2017) |
I found this entry curiously
sitting in my drafts folder, meant to be shared for Advent 2013. Since it
was Pentecost Sunday yesterday, I must have been more attuned to the promptings
of the Spirit today as this piece, written by Fr. James Donelan, SJ in the
'80s, is what my waiting heart needs to hear now. My wait-list is getting longer by the day - for the work engagement that will fire up my soul and at the same time sustain me and my son financially, for the time when SV and I can be in one place again, for stability in my beloved country, for the senseless killings and reign of distressing politicians in this world to end.
I turn to The Sacrament of Waiting like a comfort toy to a child when impatience and weariness get the better of my achievement-oriented and controlling self. I was still in my college years when I first got hold of a copy of The Sacrament of Waiting. Back then, pieces like this were shared not via social media or even email but by typing the material on bond paper and having it photocopied. I've lost my copy ages ago but the heart of the message has stayed on. Thanks to Google, resources like this can now be accessed with ease sans the photocopying. The context may have changed. Some of Fr. James' views I may not necessarily agree with but the core of the message still echoes what I believe waiting takes.
So, here goes.
The Sacrament
of Waiting
The English poet John Milton
once wrote that those who serve stand and wait. I think I would go further and
say that those who wait render the highest form of service. Waiting requires
more discipline, more self-control and emotional maturity, more unshakeable
faith in our cause, more unwavering hope in the future, more sustaining love in
our hearts than all the great deeds of derring-do that go by the name of
action.
Waiting is a mystery—a
natural sacrament of life. There is a meaning hidden in all the times we have
to wait. It must be an important mystery because there is so much waiting in
our lives.
Everyday is filled with
those little moments of waiting—testing our patience and our nerves, schooling
us in our self-control—pasensya na lang. We wait for meals to be served, for a
letter to arrive, for a friend, concerts and circuses. Our airline terminals,
railway stations, and bus depots are temples of waiting filled with men and
women who wait in joy for the arrival of a loved one—or wait in sadness to say
goodbye and to give that last wave of hand. We wait for birthdays and
vacations; we wait for Christmas. We wait for spring to come or autumn—for the
rains to begin or stop.
And we wait for ourselves to
grow from childhood to maturity. We wait for those inner voices that tell us
when we are ready for the next step. We wait for graduation, for our first job,
our first promotion. We wait for success, and recognition. We wait to grow
up—to reach the stage where we make our own decision.
We cannot remove this
waiting from our lives. It is part of the tapestry of living—the fabric in
which the threads are woven that tell the story of our lives.
Yet the current philosophies
would have us forget the need to wait. “Grab all the gusto you can get.” So
reads one of America’s great beer advertisements—Get it now. Instant
pleasure—instant transcendence. Don’t wait for anything. Life is short—eat,
drink and be merry for tomorrow you’ll die. And so they rationalize us into
accepting unlicensed and irresponsible freedom—premarital sex and extramarital
affairs—they warn against attachment and commitment, against expecting anything
of anybody, or allowing them to expect anything of us, against vows and
promises, against duty and responsibility, against dropping any anchors in the
currents of our life that will cause us to hold and to wait.
This may be the correct
prescription for pleasure—but even that is fleeting and doubtful. What was it
Shakespeare said about the mad pursuit of pleasure? “Past reason hunted, and
once had, past reason hated.” Now if we wish to be real human beings, spirit as
well as flesh, souls as well as heart, we have to learn to love someone else
other than ourselves.
For most of all waiting
means waiting for someone else. It is a mystery brushing by our face everyday
like stray wind or a leaf falling from a tree. Anyone who has ever loved knows
how much waiting goes into it, how much waiting is important for love to grow,
to flourish through a lifetime.
Why is this so? Why can’t we
have love right now—two years, three years, five years—and seemingly waste so
much time? You might as well ask why a tree should take so long to bear fruit,
the seed to flower, carbon to change into a diamond.
There is no simple answer,
no more than there is to life’s demands: having to say goodbye to someone you
love because either you or they have already made other commitments, or because
they have to grow and find the meaning of their own lives, having yourself to
leave home and loved ones to find your path. Goodbyes, like waiting, are also
sacraments of our lives.
All we know is that
growth—the budding, the flowering of love needs patient waiting. We have to
give each other time to grow. There is no way we can make someone else truly
love us or we love them, except through time. So we give each other that
mysterious gift of waiting—of being present without making demands or asking
rewards. There is nothing harder to do than this. It tests the depth and
sincerity of our love. But there is life in the gift we give.
So lovers wait for each
other until they can see things the same way, or let each other freely see
things in quite different ways. What do we lose when lovers hurt each other and
cannot regain the balance and intimacy of the way they were? They have to
wait—in silence—but still be present to each other until the pain subsides to
an ache and then only a memory, and the threads of the tapestry can be woven
together again in a single love story.
What do we lose when we
refuse to wait? When we try to find short cuts through life, when we try to
incubate love and rush blindly and foolishly into a commitment we are neither
mature nor responsible enough to assume? We lose the hope of ever truly loving
or being loved. Think of all the great love stories of history and literature.
Isn’t it of their very essence that they are filled with the strange but common
mystery—that waiting is part of the substance, the basic fabric—against which the
story of that true love is written?
How can we ever find either
life or love if we are too impatient to wait for it?
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