Get a Free Ebook

Five Inspirational Truths for Authors

Sunday, August 19, 2012

Of Lifejackets and other Saving Things - M. Laycock


I was raised smack dab in the middle of two of the largest of North America's Great Lakes, Lake Huron and Lake Superior. So I'm used to being in, around and on the water. I did a lot of swimming and boating as a child. These were activities that we all took for granted so there was very little supervision and safety precautions were non-existent. I almost drowned once. No-one really noticed. I almost drowned my nephew once. At the age of two he slipped off the bow of my tiny "sea-flee." No life jackets in sight. When we returned home no-one questioned why his diaper was wet.

I realized I have a rather large blind spot in regard to the dangers of being in, around and on the water when my husband and I were in a small aluminum boat off the coast of Papua New Guinea. The wind had come up and the waves grew as we headed across the mouth of a wide bay. The boat was tossed about as huge waves splashed over us. I was loving it. My husband was white-knuckled as he clung to the gunwale and prayed. It wasn't until we reached shore that the word lifejacket was mentioned.

We were recently on a small sailboat when a similar thing happened. The breeze became a wind that made the craft heel over nicely and I was delighted. My husband was worried about an eight-year-old sitting on the bow with his dad. Neither wore a lifejacket. When he commented later that it could have been disastrous if that boy had slipped off, I realized, oh yeah, I guess a lifejacket would have been wise.

It seems familiarity can breed blindness and even, yes I'll admit it, stupidity.

There is danger of this as we become more proficient writers. We publish and become comfortable in the waters of book publication and marketing. We take for granted all those working on our behalf to get our work out there. We stop learning the craft. We aren't so diligent about keeping pace with the latest developments in the industry. We neglect relationships with other writers. A lifejacket? Who needs that?

Many of us go through life this way, almost daring fate to do its worst. Unfortunately, 'fate' often does. Many of us go through our spiritual lives this way too. There are precautions we are told to take, habits and disciplines that act like lifejackets and lifeboats. Things like reading the Bible regularly, staying in fellowship with other Christians and praying often. It is wise to use them, wise to realize that familiarity can breed blindness and stupidity.

"Walk in all the way that the Lord your God has commanded you, so that you may live and prosper and prolong your days in the land that you will possess." Deut. 5:33

Do you have a lifejacket on? Or is it gathering dust somewhere?


Related Posts:

  • Expressing Praise through Your Gift by Marcia Lee Laycock There was a hush on the fourth floor of the Vancouver Art Gallery as we entered, almost a reverence, I thought. People meandered quietly through the halls and rooms, taking time to study the painti… Read More
  • Too Much Christmas by Marcia Lee Laycock “I baked a bit.” My mother-in-law smiled as my husband piled the tins of cookies, Christmas cakes, chocolates and tarts on the counter. “I should say you did!” He said, and we all chuckled. Then … Read More
  • My Day of Epiphany by Marcia Lee LaycockI was in tears. No, not tears of sorrow but the kind that spring from being touched deeply and profoundly. Interesting that it happened to be January 6, traditionally known as the day of Epiphany. It ha… Read More
  • Taking Correction by Marcia Lee Laycock Correction. It's never easy, especially when we think we've got it all right. Those words we have slaved over; those characters we built from scratch; those brilliant plot twists we implanted at just … Read More
  • Beauty in the Darkness by Marcia Lee Laycock Winter has landed here, its cold hard boot slamming down on the country and its inhabitants with the force of a sledge hammer. We had been lulled into thinking it wouldn’t hit so hard this year. … Read More

6 comments:

  1. Marcia, my husband and I were discussing life vests yesterday because our ocean-cruising automatic inflatables are so uncomfortable and heavy. Now that we're cruising inland waterways, we need an alternative.

    But isn't the discomfort, the extra thought and care needed to don a lifejacket and keep it on exactly why so many of us avoid the ones we need? Sometimes they just seem to be too much trouble. And yet we have these tools handed to us to keep us safe and able to perform our duties on board . . . whether that be on a boat or on land.

    Thank you for an excellent post.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Marcia, thanks for the reminder to keep clutching the one necessary Lifejacket :)

    ReplyDelete

Don't be shy. Share what's on your mind.