Friday, October 11, 2013

May the sun rise


I love flying on stormy days. Despite the threat of delays and some stomach rattling turbulence, there is an experience to be had on these glim days that refreshes my soul. The first time this experience occurred, some type of audible expression chocked out of me that I quickly swallowed back as to avoid the questioning eyes of fellow travelers, as if they were concerned with anything more than their own future destination.
 

As I sat on the plane, thinking about the events ahead of me, my thoughts swirled between the things I needed to get done at home, worries for Katie taking on the responsibilities of the household on her own, and the tasks ahead of me at my final destination. The plane’s engine grew increasingly louder, making it difficult for me to concentrate on a single thought, and a clear plan for moving considerations into actions began to escape me.
 

As the small regional jet took flight, it rattled as if my son was holding the plane in his hand while the passengers inside waited to understand how the story in his head would play out. Struggling to break though the heavy clouds pounding the vessel with steady pellets of rain, you could sense the anxiety from the less travelled passengers growing with every drop and rise in altitude.
 

Just when the feeling that the darkness and trembling would remain with us for the duration of the journey set in, the plane’s nose began to break the thick layer of dense, dark, moisture, and we are set free from its weight. Through my small window to the outside world bursts a brightness that pierces my thoughts, pulling me in to its beauty as it pushes down the black to expose a penetrating blue resting on a soft blanket of billowing clouds. From me, escapes the sound of settling in to my warm bed next to my wife, and often my children, after days on the road.
 

Our lives are constant storms. Even in the happiest of times, we are unable to fully experience the love that surrounds us because of an anxiety hidden deep within us that is distraught over not knowing what will happen next. The clouds of apprehension linger above us, blocking the sun from shining upon us and renewing our faith that tomorrow brings hope. The beauty in my trivial experience is the understanding that the sun is always a short distance above the extremely penetrable, vaporous, wall of darkness.
 

“So may the sun, rise, bring hope where it once was forgotten.”  - Sam Beam