Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Explosions, Rumors, Meth Labs, and Pure Stubbornness




A friend called out of the blue yesterday.  She was upset – it happens a lot.  In celebration of her birthday she had a party at her house.  She ordered her husband to clean up the yard and store all his miscellaneous equipment in their storage building.  He worked all afternoon and before long her guests arrived.

The party was a success and the night became heavy in darkness as their moods became lighter.  Their guests liberally imbibed in the free liquor enjoying each other.

In midsentence of a joke a huge explosion rocked the party.  Flames and sparks danced into the night sky as they all stared shocked at the burning building before them.  It was the shed her husband had stored his equipment in.  Their reactions were slow, and her husband, crawling on his knees from too much liquor, battled the blaze with a water hose.  She called the fire department and six trucks arrived.

Thankfully the fire was put to rest without damaging the house that lay situated fifty feet from the shed.  But the night was not over.  A drug unit arrived to investigate.  “Sheds just don’t randomly blow up”, they said.  And so the search for the meth lab started.  Her entire house was searched and she describes in detail the humiliation of being drunk and suspected of operating a drug operation out of her house, with children who were thankfully at a friend’s house that night.  The drug search turned up nothing and the officers departed.

Several days passed but the drama continued, she tells me.  A man in town was spreading the rumor that she was under heavy investigation for suspected meth lab operations.  But this is not what bothered her, it was the fact no one told her of the rumor.   Instead her friends avoided her and the situation.  It wasn’t until a business acquaintance she had recently met came to her with the rumor.

I thought about what she was telling me about her pain and betrayal of the people who attended her party, who had imbibed in free liquor, and withheld this damaging rumor.  I assessed their reactions and I concluded they were a sorry lot.   If it had been me and my friend was being accused of anything, regardless of the validity, I would certainly discuss it with them.  But to withhold the information and letting the rumor flourish is poor – no matter what the excuse.

It is a tired saying but I told her anyway.  She didn’t need friends like them.  I had said this before but obviously she hadn’t listened.  So this time I told her she was stubborn.  She was shocked but I didn’t stop there.  I accused her of being so afraid of being alone that she takes any person offered to her.  But the problem was they aren’t friends, they are people who use people like her.  They are around for a good time or when they are in a bind, but they are never there for when you are in a bind. They are also the first to turn on you, if it benefits them.  I told her to stop over-friending and keep with the people who mean the most and are the most important – her family.

Then I told her that sometimes drastic things have to happen for stubborn people to wake up.  She exclaimed “What?!”  And I explained.  God gives us signs every single day to guide us in the right direction.  Sometimes it is friends giving a bit of advice, sometimes it is a boss giving you a difficult time, and sometimes it is the sunset on a relationship.  But unfortunately most of us are too stubborn to see the signs.  We think we must move forward because, of course, we are the only ones who are right. Or we are the only ones who could possibly understand the situation.  So we ignore the signs and we continue on a path that deep down we know is wrong. We are stubborn.  This is when God gets fed up and explodes our lives.  In my friend’s case literary.

So, I tell my friend, listen to this sign and find worthy friends.  Keep faith that they are out there – heck she was talking to one.