Sorry it has been so long! A whole semester has gone by and I have learned much this semester about research, parenting, the Old Testament, Spanish, and more research. Finals have come and gone and we are now in Spring term, but I am currently not taking any classes. I am just working. I work custodial from 5 am to 11 am in the Administration building and the Museum of Art. I really haven't had anything to write in a long time, hence my absence from my blogging. Sorry about that. But today I started remembering a lesson that time and again has been impressed upon me.
When I first graduated high school, I became a lifeguard and a swim teacher. Here is a picture of me four years ago:
As you can see, I haven't changed much.
Teaching swim lessons could be either super fun or a total nightmare, depending on the children's attitudes that day. But I got to say, it was always such a rewarding thing after days or weeks of working with a child to watch them swim out on their own for the first time, and to see the joy on their parents' faces as they grabbed the video camera and cheered from the sidelines. I would think to myself, "Wow. I did that. I taught a child a life-saving skill. I taught that child to swim."
The majority of the time too I was assigned to teach the preschool-aged children. I had a lot of patience with them, so they always stuck me with the 4 and 5 year-old's. One of the important skills I had to teach them was how to float on their backs. We did this in a very interesting way.
The child’s head would
rest on my shoulder with his/her cheek touching my cheek. Floating on their
back is a very scary experience for a child, but they must learn to do so to
swim. Having their cheek against my cheek is comforting to the child. I am able
to whisper to them to keep them calm. Their body then rests on my hands. Like
this:
I would wait for the
child to relax. As the child relaxed and filled their lungs with air and stared
up at the sky, they would become more buoyant. However, a child cannot learn to
float if they forever remain in this position, resting on my hands. Eventually,
I must lower my hands. But we were to never remove our hands. Just lower them.
That way if the child began to sink, they would just land on my hands. That way
they could never drown. And while my hands may have lowered, their head remains
on my shoulder, touching my cheek. They don’t float completely on their own
until they are older.
Without fail, every
time I did this for the first time with a child, they became scared and started
kicking their feet and flashing their arms. That or their arms would come up
and lock around my neck. As they started thrashing, they would immediately
start to sink. Where they would just land on my hands. It would take a couple
lessons. But eventually they would learn that if they remained calm, they would
float, and they would learn that they could trust me, that I would never let
them drown. They also needed to keep looking upwards towards the sky. They
couldn't see what was below them, and that was scary, and so sometimes they
would take their eyes off the sky to try to see what was below them, but then
their spine would curve and they would start to sink.
It is all the same
with us and God. At first God has us resting on his hands. It is scary not
seeing what is before us, but we eventually learn to feel his spirit (the
hands) and we become calm. But God cannot teach us to float this way. He must
lower his hands. Without the comforting touch of his hands that we are used to,
we often become scared and may begin to freak out. We must remain calm though
in order to float. But if we do start to sink, God’s hands are waiting under
the water to catch us. God will never let us drown. And all the while we must
continue to look to the Heavens and pray and listen to that whisper to keep us
calm so we can remain floating.
Celeste

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