Posts Tagged: POWER

“Pickleball Lesson and Lessons from Pickleball”

We have friends back home who are really into Pickleball. My wife and I now see why. It is great fun and highly addictive!

At the RV resort where we are staying, they have a lot of activities. My wife, who is much more adventurous than I am, signed us up for a Pickleball class. We went, we saw, we were conquered.

The folks who were conducting the class were knowledgeable, patient, funny, and kind. We liked them immediately. It turns out that several of them had been teachers. They still are—and good ones at that.

One of them told us about the three “P’s of Pickleball: Placement, Patience, and Power.” I can’t remember if patience or placement comes first, but I’m certain that power came last.

Of course, I immediately thought to myself, “Well, there’s tomorrow’s blog post!” No matter what I read, here, or experience, my mind goes to life and spirituality.

Where you “place” yourself on the court and where you place your shot is important. It is the same with life. When I get up in the morning, where and how I place myself is crucial to how my day will go. I place myself in the mindset that it is going to be a great day. I place myself in a state of gratitude by making a list of things for which I am grateful. I do my 12-step report to my sponsors, text with another 12-step friend, and do some 12-step readings. I read Scripture and pray. (I also have coffee, which helps with all of the above.)

Patience is crucial to pickleball and life. I am not good at patience. This is, at least in part, a result of the fact that I’ve practiced so little. I’m not very patient with other people and I’m not patient at all with myself. (Hummm . . . I wonder if my impatience with other people is one of the bitter fruits of my self-impatience?) I expect myself to do things that I simply can’t do—go back and change mistakes I made in the past, be really good at things (like Pickleball) right away, and generally be better than I am right now.

Of course, both patience and  impatience are the fruit of frustration. And who wants to be frustrated? In fact, it goes even beyond frustration. The Apostle Paul said that “tribulation brings about patient” (Romans 5:3). And who wants that! Someone said years ago, “I prayed for patience and God sent tribulation.” Yep! I am afraid that’s the way it works!

And then there is power. Most of us don’t have enough. At least we don’t think that we have enough power. I was never powerful, even when I was young. Growing up on the farm, I always threw the bales of hay up on the wagon or into the barn more by adrenaline than by strength. I will soon be seventy, and I can testify that my power is not getting more powerful.

However, power is the third and least important of the three “P’s” in pickleball. And I do have some power. So do you. So do we all. Am I, are you, properly using the power we’re given? My 12-step sponsor never tires of reminding me to “just keep doing the next right thing.” I never get tired of hearing it, either. It’s a good reminder and very necessary. Doing the next right thing is the best way to use power.

And, of course, there is God. Where does he come into all this? Let me suggest that God is the Greatest Pickleball Player ever. He is God with us. In fact, this is an important fourth “P”. God is present with us. That is God’s placement. This God who is present is very patient with us, not destroying us for our many stupidities and wrong-doings. And God is present and incredibly powerful. And he waits to empower each of us.

AS POWERFUL AS I MAKE UP MY MIND TO BE

“I have noticed,” said Abraham Lincoln, “that a man is usually about as happy as he has made up his mind to be.” 

I’ve also noticed that I am about as powerful as I make up my mind to be.  This is decidedly bad news for me a good deal of the time.  To paraphrase an old joke usually attributed to Gracie Allen, I’ve never felt strong, and I still do!  (I think the original was, “I’ve never liked you, and I always will.”)

Maybe I need to redefine power.  Perhaps even better, perhaps I need to reimagine it.

What is power?  How do I imagine it?

Is power the ability to win gold in Olympic swimming events or on the balance beam?  Is power being president of the United States—or at least running for that office?  Obviously, if I think of power in these ways, I am not powerful.  And I will never be powerful.

The truth is that I don’t want to merely be powerful in the ways I just mentioned.  No, I want to be all powerful.

Of course, that is one of the attributes of God.  God is the One who is described as all-powerful.

Indeed, challenging God’s knowledge (and knowledge is power, right?) was the first temptation.  “You will be like God (or gods), knowing . . .” is not just the first temptation.  It is the only temptation.  Every other specific temptation is merely a variation on that theme.

So, how should I think of power?

Power is the strength to do what I really need to do, as a limited human being, at any given moment.

And what do I need to do at any given moment?

Merely the task at hand!

That task may be mowing the grass (which I already did on a very hot and humid day), doing the laundry (which I am doing now), grading a student’s paper, waiting tables at the restaurant where I work, resting, loving my wife, making final revisions on my PhD thesis, being kind to and patient with people, and so on.

I will have the power to do what I need to do.  However, God doesn’t give the power before I need it.  There is no savings account or investment portfolio for power.

But if I ask God for the power I need at this moment, and I act based on the assumption that the power will be there, then the power is, in fact, there.

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