The Boyertown Area Times

Moving from one season to another

- Don Meyer, Ph.D. Think About It

“Isn’t it funny how day by day nothing changes but when you look back everything is different.” — C.S. Lewis

The older you get, the more you expect life to change. It is inevitable. The calendar always wins. Clocks do not run backwards.

As Evie and I have moved into this new season in our lives called retirement, I have been pondering the process of moving from one season to another. My first major change occurred when I sensed Divine redirectio­n to leave our family farm and go to college to prepare for the ministry. Until then, I was going to follow in my father’s footsteps as a dairy farmer. I was a member of the FFA (Future Farmers of America).

That decision did not come overnight. Nor did it come easily. Change can be intimidati­ng. How easy it would have been to stay where life was comfortabl­e. I loved those Holstein cows and Farmall tractors and the smell of silage. Going to college had never been a goal. But the good that came out of it was lifechangi­ng for me.

More than five decades have gone by since that decision and the years since have been filled with many changes. Each change brought a bundle of the same emotions and anxieties. How easy it would have been, if I allowed them, to prevent me from taking those new steps. Getting married. Beginning my first job as pastor. Having children. Going to graduate school. Becoming a professor, an academic dean and later a university president.

Throughout life we are always moving from one season to another. Here are four things I have learned about that process.

Change is Slow. C.S. Lewis said, “Isn’t it funny how day by day nothing changes but when you look back everything is different.” Someone said, “Days go slow; years go fast.” Sure, on a specific day we start a new job or get married or take our first class or become parents but the process leading up to those major life changes can take years. Rarely do our lives change overnight. Trees don’t grow overnight and neither do we.

Change is Necessary. We can’t stay young forever. We can’t stop the clock. Time moves on. We can’t be newlyweds forever. We can only be the new person on the job for so long. It would be naïve to spend too much time longing for a world that no longer exists. Memories of the past may feed our souls today but we can only return to that world in our memories.

Change is Challengin­g. Someone said, “Life begins at the end of your comfort zone. If you want to change, you have to be willing to be uncomforta­ble.” I remember the anxiety I felt as we drove from Lebanon, Pennsylvan­ia, to Springfiel­d, Missouri, to go to college. For me, it

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