The Storm...A Parable
It began to rain softly.
It came without warning. I wasn't expecting it...nor was I bothered by it. Rain
comes and goes. It's a part of life. Some days it rains, other days it doesn't.
Some days we experience a drizzle or a down-pour. Other days are dry and
hot. Still other days are windy or the snow falls softly.
Meteorology is not an
exact science. Like life, we look for patterns and signs. History plays a small
part, but each day is a new opportunity to discover just what the weather
pattern will be. One TV meteorologist, Steve Pool, is quoted as saying: "I
enjoy being a television forecaster. It's one of the few jobs that you can be
absolutely dead wrong on a somewhat regular basis and remain employed." (Watching
Weather, pg. 113).
This day the rain began
without warning, but also without any call for concern. Rain is a part of
nature's cycle. God ordained rain. It is needed to bring growth and cleansing.
The schedule God set for nature is consistent and complete. God's creation
needs rainfall and sunshine. It is a system of nourishment for the earth that
God set at the time of creation.
So, on that day, when
the rain began, I had no reason not to believe that in a matter of time the sun
would push its way through the clouds and nature's cycle would be consistent.
It would rain for a time and then it would end. I had no way of knowing that
this rain was the beginning of a storm that would last and last.
I went inside. I stayed
inside for the rest of the day. I had no real reason to go outside. To some the
rain is calming. It brings a feeling of security...even God's presence. Some
feel safe, with the rain outside and the warmth inside. To some all is well
with the world when the soft rain begins to fall. The smell, the freshness,
knowing that each plant is drinking up every drop...is reassuring...especially
when you know that you can watch it from the comfort of being inside, dry and
warm.
The rain continued to
fall in the afternoon, which wasn't unusual. But I began to have the ominous
feeling that this was a rain that had no thought of letting up. Harder and
harder it came. And, although I was inside, I seemed to somehow feel the
effects of it. The rumbles of thunder and flashes of lightning were somehow
affecting both mind and body. And all I could do was waiting for it to pass. Pass...it
didn't.
I walked to the window
to watch the rain fall, to see if there was any sign of clearing. Then I
noticed something that both amazed and puzzled me. There were children playing
in the street. A neighbor walked her dog, obviously in no hurry. The world
seemed to go on as usual. Couldn't they see that it was raining? I could feel
each drop...why couldn't they? How were they able to stand outside amidst the
blinding rain, the thunder and the flashes of lightning?
I felt almost like I was
in a dream. I knew it was raining. I not only saw the rain, somehow I even felt
the storm, yet, it seemed that I was the only one. My body shook with every
rumble of thunder and I felt the shock of every flash of lightning. The world
around me was going on as usual. Children were playing and laughing. Birds were
singing in the trees. And the rain was falling harder and harder. Was I going
crazy? I needed answers. I needed help.
"It's not raining
and there is no reason for you to believe it is," was the first
professional answer I heard. "The sky is blue, the sun is shining, and
there is no storm." I left the weatherman's office
bewildered...frustrated...and strangely alone. Weatherman after
weatherman...the same answer, "No rain in sight."
But I felt the shock of
every lightning bolt and my body quaked with the thunder. Every drop of rain
found its target...me. It was almost as if I was living in an alternate world.
Everyone else enjoyed the sunlight...and I stood alone in the rain. The storm
makes you feel that way...alone. No one else feels what you feel, sees what you
see, knows what you are going through. And you can't describe it.
Virginia Woolf wrote:
"The merest schoolgirl when she falls in love has [great writers and
poets] to speak her mind for her, but let a sufferer try to describe his pain
to a doctor and the language at once runs dry."
Even when you are
surrounded by those who love you best, you feel a deep sense of aloneness. They
can't feel your pain...not that you would want them to. Well, perhaps, for a
few seconds...just so, for a moment, they know what you experience. Yes,
probably one of the toughest parts of living in the storm is the feeling of
being alone.
Oh...I know that I am
not the only one living through a storm. There are many others like me. But the
loneliness comes when you realize that there comes a point when you must
quietly let the thunder shake you and the lightning strike you without a word.
You must...or the words would flow continually. How do you convince someone of
something they can't feel? How do you work through the "It's all in your
mind" comments from others? How do you live with a storm that doesn't end?
From the nights when the
lightning flashes would jolt me awake to the days when I had to work and live
in the middle of a downpour, I go on. I have been able to hide the never-ending
storm from others.
It has been raining for
close to 20 years now. I feel a little like Noah, wondering when the storm
would stop and the waters would recede. At least Noah was warned that the storm
was coming, and others witnessed the flooding rain. He also had time to
prepare. And he knew it would end.
One of the first things
I had to do was to tell myself that I wasn't crazy. I wasn't feeling something
that wasn't there. It wasn't all in my mind. It was in my knees, elbows,
shoulders, feet, toes, hands and fingers.
There were times when I
felt that I found storm experts. They understand that the storm is very real.
They just can't stop it. They have helped me know that I'm not crazy. They have
also prescribed medications that turn the downpour into a drizzle at times. I
am grateful for all that they can do.
I have also known that
God has been aware of my storm all along. At times I have yelled for him to
"Close the heavens and Stop the rain!" Other times have found me
asking "Why?" And...there are times when I just ask him to help me to
sleep during the storm.
I reflect on the time
Jesus was able to sleep during the storm on the Sea of Galilee. Peaceful,
restful sleep...while the disciples feared for their lives. When they woke him
up and asked "Don't you care whether or not we die?" Jesus stilled
the storm and told them that they had little faith. I would love to be able to
sleep during the storm...like Jesus. I have often wondered if I can't because
of lack of faith. I will talk more about that later. For now...I can say with
confidence, both, that I live in the midst of a storm, and that I live with
God.
Dr. Tom Murphree,
professor of meteorology at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey,
California describes a storm as "a violent and short-lived readjustment of
the atmosphere toward a more stable condition. When cold air and warm air meet
and start mixing it up, the natural tendency is for the relatively buoyant warm
air to come to rest on top of the heavier cool air. That's the stable
condition. Blizzards, hurricanes, thunderstorms and tornadoes are all part of
the process of getting to that stable
condition.” (Watching Weather, by Tom Murphree and Mary K. Miller,
Henry Holt and Company, New York, 1998. page 77).
This book is about
getting to a more stable condition. Although the storm may continue there is a way
to find stability of spirit. As Murphree stated, a part of getting to that
(more) stable condition includes blizzards, hurricanes, thunderstorms and
tornadoes. He says that the violence of the weather is needed to bring about
stability. Whatever the result, the "violence" of the storm can have
a tremendous effect on us.