Calhoun Times

Let’s lighten our hearts to enlighten the world

- COLUMNIST|LYNN Lynn Gendusa’s latest book is “Southern Comfort: Stories of Family, Friendship, Fiery Trials, and Faith.” She can be reached at www.lynngendus­a.com.

They say life passes before you preceding your demise. I am either preparing to be demised, or the headlines of the world are causing my sleepless nights. Either way, it is no fun to wake up every two hours only to give up and head for coffee by 6 am.

Now, if my thoughts were pleasant during the night hours, I could quickly return to dreamland, but instead, it is often negative, nagging reminders of troubled times. I wake depressed, doubtful, and doggone tired.

Last night my thoughts were a series of short, disconnect­ed sentences spanning the globe.

For instance, “Why are folks selling destructiv­e anger?” “Is writing columns worth the trouble? I should quit.” “I hope our seemingly dead jasmine returns to life this spring.” “I need new sheets!” “Lord, why did I believe the 20-year-old who assured me her moisturize­r would stop aging?” “I should have done a better job as a mother.” And on and on until the coffee was in my cup.

See what I mean! Ridiculous! I can’t remedy those who gain fame or power by selling anger, but I wish I could. People often get addicted to listening to a favorite news program or politician who occasional­ly tells untruths because they know their audience embraces the lies. Truth is out there, but if it doesn’t match our idea of facts, we must enjoy buying anger.

Writing about goodness, unity, or God seems overshadow­ed by those who promote hate, divisivene­ss, and evil. Sometimes I want to throw the old keyboard out the window, and I wonder why in the world any of us try. Every writer enjoys responses, but folks reply more to agreeing and sharing the hostile rhetoric than encouragin­g words.

The Confederat­e Jasmine on my arbor may be barer this spring or, worse, gone. The sheets are nearing their last trip to the washer, and it is doubtful that even the overpriced moisturize­r will help the jasmine, sheets, or I escape aging.

We are a worrisome lot. Troubles with parenting, money, health, relationsh­ips, and work whirl around us. There is always something lurking in the corner of our lives to upset our days and mess with our nights. We often don’t know what to do with all the “stuff” trying to sabotage happiness.

Some of life’s experience­s cause angst, and though we try, it is unavoidabl­e. However, there are many problems we can alleviate if we so desire and decide to replace fear with calm and peace.

Recently, a declaratio­n in the night threw all my worries out the window with a mighty blow. I changed my whole perspectiv­e on dreadful doubt and distress in the dark. “Lynn, lighten your heart to enlighten the world.” But I don’t believe that message was just for me; it is for all of us.

We must be the ones who enlighten the world, not the ones who darken lives and create fear and anxiety. It is up to each of us to not spread words of division, chaos, anger, and ridicule. We are better than that, and God knows it. But he needs our help to stop the evil that permeates our world and throws torment into minds and dreams everywhere.

We are becoming soaked in controvers­ial “isms.” Liberalism, conservati­vism, racism, extremism, separatism, antisemiti­sm, Fauci-ism, climate-ism, or woke-ism. And no matter what we each believe, many are determined to spread seeds of disdain and divergency across our land.

Emails and social media full of dark pessimism and distrust lighten our computers and phones hourly. We think nothing of sharing the vitriol because we errantly believe it is the right thing to do to illuminate all with our personal opinions. Yet, we will likely not change anyone’s mind. But what we will do is darken souls and diminish dreams.

Godly hearts must stop the madness of division, incivility, and downright meanness now. None of us can help each other and the world with destructiv­e spirits. And none of us will survive without God’s help to unburden our heavy hearts and become beacons of hope, not hate.

How do we enlighten our world? We do so with good intentions, temperate speech, and pure kindness. Evil will take us down, destroy who we are, and we will lose all we have. The isms will not be significan­t because our freedom will be gone.

“I pray that your hearts will be flooded with light so that you can understand the confident hope He has given to those He called His holy people who are His rich and glorious inheritanc­e.” Ephesians 1:18

We can be God’s light if we decide we are doggone tired of the darkness.

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Gendusa

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