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The Limbo Dance

How low can you go when life frustrations get you down?
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In the 60s, my parents would have cookouts on our California lanai patio with after-dinner "make your own entertainment." Included in the line-up was my father playing his guitar (ala the Kingston Trio), toddler kids spinning hula hoops, and everyone trying to do the new dance called the limbo.

The limbo worked like this. Two volunteers would hold either side of a long bar at about waist's height. While the Caribbean music played, each limbo participant would bend his or her body backwards, scooting their legs and bent torso under the bar. After each turn the bar was lowered. If a player touched the bar with his shoulders or chest, he was disqualified.

Now limbo, as a game, is great fun. It breaks the ice and has people cheering on their fellow party guests. Unfortunately, limbo in life isn't much fun. When we can't sell our house or find a job, limbo frustration seeps in.

Bitterness often follows frustration. We ask: Why didn't we sell our house sooner? Why did we put so much money into remodeling the kitchen? Why did my company downsize just when I started? And the universal question: What happened to my 401K? These are familiar questions as our country slogs through this recession.

Answering the "Why?"

Life limbo, as painful as it seems, allows us to see the important things. Just like the limbo song asks the player, "How low can you go?" we feel that life is asking the same question and want to scream, "No lower!"

But standing mid-thigh in life's crises, we realize we can bend more than we dreamed. In Limbo-Land we learn to flex our rigid spending habits and discover we won't break. We can be happy with less money or a smaller house. We discover how a marriage can weather the unemployment storm with the relationship still intact. Resilience, an underrated quality, can take a person a long way in life.

Second Corinthians 4:8-9 says: "We are pressed on every side by troubles, but we are not crushed. We are perplexed, but not driven to despair. We are hunted down, but never abandoned by God. We get knocked down, but we are not destroyed."

Paul, the writer of the letter to the Corinthians and an experienced sufferer for Christ (jailed, stoned, run out of town, nearly downed, and abandoned by several fellow workers), answered the "why?" question in the next verse: "Through suffering, our bodies continue to share in the death of Jesus so that the life of Jesus may also be seen in our bodies" (verse 10).

What the apostle is saying to our cushy, easy-loving culture is clear. The suffering we experience, which we carry around in our physical body or mind, reminds us of what Jesus did. But Paul didn't stop there. He went on to explain how God reveals life in our mortal body. This means we can experience resurrection life in this life!

Becoming More Flexible

As a practicing Christian (and I do mean I'm still practicing), I've gone through two years of the limbo dance. Because of several job changes and two stubborn houses that wouldn't sell until the price dipped below market value, I've battled through the gauntlet of anger, depression, self-introspection and apathy.

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Related Topics:
frustration, Growth, spiritual, Trusting God, Waiting

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Average User Rating: Not rated

Anonymous

September 03, 2010  11:56pm

Is't god amazing to provide the encouragement we need in a day? I'm so glad you are learning to be flexible. It's not easy but that quality in your life will give you a more tender heart and become more useful to Him. I will pray for God's favor and provision as you continue to seek a new job. God Bless. Carol Stratton

Kim

August 20, 2010  2:56pm

How much did God know I needed to read this article today? I've been job hunting full-time since May and although I've had a number of great interviews, my dream job seems very elusive. I'm trying my hardest to be flexible, but sometimes it feels as though I really could break - especially when the bills keep coming in, with no income to support them. Thank you for taking the time to remind me that all I really should be "worrying about" is growing closer to my God!

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