As I hurried through the maze of halls and elevators to see my friends, I began to consider those locks. They are models of security. They represent safety and protection. The lock is a guardian that watches over its property with strength and diligence. It only needs a key or code to yield its hold and release its treasure back into the world. Yet, over time each of these guardians was abandoned. Now they stand guard over nothing; their purpose no longer realized. Their owners have moved on.
Most of us have some proverbial bike locks in our lives. There are answers that used to satisfy my curiosity. Now those same answers just raise more questions. I’ve watched as my children grow up and abandon their pacifiers and stuffed animals. Favorite woodlots in my old neighborhood have become shopping malls. Some promises that I once held dear have proven weak. Relationships that were as strong as steel have rusted through salty tears of change. Time has marched on and left life’s old locks as relics of antiquity.
We all want to feel safe and protected. We want to know that our families will last and our relationships are secure. We want to trust that our finances are stable and that our health is good. We want to trust our laws and those who enforce them are doing so for the best interest of the common good. We trust our schools with our children. We lean into our neighbors and co-workers as we engage into lives that enable and depend on trust in each other. From where does your sense of security come? What locks have you left in your life?
As I headed back to my Jeep, after a good cry and prayer, I made my way across the street back to the parking deck. As I stepped over the curb, I saw something else. There was a lone blue silicone baby pacifier that lying at the base of the curb. My guess is that it was dropped by some child as she held on to her Daddy or Mama. They, too, were leaving the hospital and moving on with their lives.
That binky got left in a flash to join the old bike locks that resided just a few feet away. I’m sure that within a few miles, that baby let Mama know that she needed a new binky! Even so, that child will eventually leave the days of pacifiers in the wake of time and move on to buying bike locks. The cycle will keep going as we learn to trust and hope.
We live in a world where we relocate our sense of security from pacifiers to bike locks, from childhood friends to spouses, and from our pay stubs to our investments. We mature in faith and wisdom. We keep growing and we keep on trusting something. It’s part of living and I for one, don’t ever want to go back.
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