Altar Call – Opelika –Auburn News
Walter Albritton
October 3, 2010
Relax,
slow down, and learn the lesson of the bamboo tree
Our
son Matt, a Methodist pastor, used the Chinese bamboo tree to remind his people
of one of life’s basic lessons. That lesson, in his words, is simply this: “The
quality things of life are rarely developed overnight – they take time.”
Our
generation has pretty much ignored that lesson. The cry of modern culture is
for instant gratification. Patience is not a virtue in our society. We want
what we want – and we want it now.
Start
a casual conversation with a stranger, say in a doctor’s waiting room. A
popular subject likely will be how long we have to wait to see the doctor. My
usual wait is an hour and a half – for ten minutes of the good doctor’s time.
Traffic
lights at busy intersections can drive us crazy. It irritates us to wait 60
seconds for a green light. I have been known to say to my wife, “Did you bring
any peanut butter? We could fix a sandwich before this light changes.”
There
was a time when we could wait a few days to receive an answer to a letter
written to a friend. No more. We can hardly wait a day for a response to an
email message. For some of us, the days of buying stamps and using snail mail
are over. We must have an instant reply.
Cooking
also must be fast. Here again we are guilty. We use the microwave oven ten
times more than the oven in our stove. We hardly ever turn the oven on anymore
– except occasionally to dry out the morning newspaper. A wet paper becomes a
crisis. Mama cannot work the crossword puzzle if the paper is wet.
So
far as men are concerned, one of the greatest inventions in history is the
remote control for the television. The remote allows us to stay in our recliner
and change channels without moving a muscle – except the one that works the
index finger.
I
do love that remote. With it I can get instant relief from the loud and insane
commercials that are hated by everybody but the sponsors. I look forward to the
one night a week my wife lets me use it. That’s the night she goes to see a
movie with the girls.
That
is not really the truth. On rare occasions she will surrender the remote to me
– after she has flipped through 682 channels trying to find some guy remodeling
a patio. By then the remote is smoking. I have to let it cool down before I can
use it to find a baseball game.
The
checkout line at the grocery store is another example of our unwillingness to
wait. Who has the time to wait in a line with three other people in it? Why
can’t they open more lines to accommodate me? Where is the manager anyway?
Recently
as I pushed my half-filled cart of groceries into a line, I noticed a woman
walk up behind me with only four items in her hands. I politely pulled my cart
back and motioned to her to go ahead of me. Staring at me, with a wild look on
her face, she promptly fainted.
As
the paramedics worked to revive her, I heard her saying repeatedly, “I can’t
believe it; I can’t believe it; that man offered me his place in the line!”
I
did not wait to see if she was alright. I rushed back into the line,
just barely staying ahead of a man
pushing a cart full of groceries. I have my limits to practicing compassion. My
time is valuable. I had no time to waste.
Knowing
how impatient we all are, I realize some of you are about ready to pull your
hair out. What about the lesson of the Chinese bamboo tree? Let me share the
story our son told.
The
Chinese plant the bamboo seed; they water and fertilize it, but the first year,
nothing appears. The story is the same the second year, the third year, and the
fourth year – not even a sprout comes up. Then, the fifth year they water and
fertilize it – and something finally happens.
During
the fifth year, in a period of about six weeks, the Chinese bamboo tree grows
some 90 feet! Our son asked this penetrating question: Did the tree grow 90
feet in six weeks or did it grow 90 feet in five years?
His
answer: “It grew 90 feet in five years because, had they not applied the water
and fertilizer each year, there would have been no Chinese bamboo tree.”
So
as we struggle with this maddening demand for instant gratification that threatens
to rob us of our sanity, we should learn the lesson of the Chinese bamboo tree.
The best things in life are not overnight wonders. Things that matter require
time, patience, and careful cultivation. +++