Lessons Learned from Tumbling Down a Staircase
As many of you know, I derailed last Sunday morning for my congregation, my confirmation families, my own family and myself by taking a header down the bottom part of our balcony stairs before the first worship service.
The repercussions were both immediate and lasting. Immediately, or nearly so, I ended up in the Emergency Room at a local hospital. Diagnosis: no broken bones but severely strained upper leg muscles. (A miracle that things weren’t worse!) The longer term ramifications: extreme pain and the inability to support myself with my legs. Treatment: rest and muscle relaxers until the muscles heal and regain strength.
So it seemed practical to share some of the lessons I have learned, and am still learning, from this experience in this week’s blog. I’ve broken them into two distinct categories.
Category One: Simple lessons learned.
Don’t do it! By whatever steps you must take, (pardon the pun), be certain you never skip the last four steps of a stairway!
Be assured that the stairs and landing below are less giving and more punishing to your body than your body is to them.
Utter disaster can occur in an instant.
The theme for my message to the Confirmands was going to be “Hold on Tight.” As someone pointed out to me afterward via email, I should have heeded my own advice.
A little extra caution is a good thing, especially if one is a little extra older.
Ambulance rides are overrated.
If you think you’ve already felt the worse pain mishaps can bring your body, think again.
Legs can swell a lot larger than one realizes!
Sometimes we have to slay our pride and let others help us. We just do.
We all sometimes need tools (like a walker), people (like family and friends), and, most of all, the Lord to lean on.
God is faithful and good – always! And he always protects and provides … according to his purposes.
Miracles still happen.
God’s got some awesome angels guarding over us. It’s not a joke; it’s a fact.
God’s timing definitely is not our timing. His always trumps ours!
We are totally insufficient; the Lord is totally sufficient.
We are fragile; the Lord is a Rock and our Rock.
The Lord is always working and accomplishing, even when we are “shut down.”
A person can only do what a person can do; they cannot do what they cannot. (I recognize this sounds simplistic and even cheesy, but it’s a significant truth nonetheless.)
Perhaps the most important simple lesson of all: I have taken so very much for granted my entire life! (Which leads me to our next category.)
Category Two: Things for which I’ll always be thankful and will never take for granted again. (Or at least I shouldn’t!)
The guiding, blessing hands of our loving God.
The powerful protection of God’s guardian angels.
The professionalism of medical responders.
The kindness and caring of God’s people.
The blessing of gracious, giving friends.
The unselfish love of family.
The applicability of God’s Word to all situations at all times.
The significance of a little bit of human encouragement in difficult situations.
Self-sufficiency.
The blessing of personal freedom. Such as roaming the house at will, stepping onto the deck to grill, ambling around the yard to look at the flowers, running out on a whim of an errand or attending my son’s ballgame.
The importance of leg muscles in almost everything one does, and the necessity of a strong base.
Legs that don’t constantly ache.
Walking! Walking upright. Walking without pain. Walking around. Taking a walk. Just walking.
The ability to take stairs. (I say this in reference to mobility, not negotiating them!)
Taking a shower.
Working from my desk. (As opposed to working from a card table while sitting on a walker.)
The capability of standing up unassisted after falling down.
The ability to get into and out of bed without help.
Sitting down, and rising back up again, without pain.
Stooping down to put on socks or pick items up off the floor.
WIFI, television and a restroom in our remote bedroom in the house.
Godly leaders and workers who don’t hesitate to step up and into the gap for God.
Leading worship on Sunday, and the privilege of preaching God’s Word to God’s people.
The preciousness of time, and how quickly it can potentially be taken from you.
“Wake up calls” from God, teaching us lessons we should have already known.
All of which seems to be summarized beautifully by the Apostle Paul. “Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus” (1 Thessalonians 5:16-18).
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2 thoughts on “Lessons Learned from Tumbling Down a Staircase”
I agree I took things for granted when younger. The idea of being able to get on the floor and get back up is no longer something I can do. And I miss it now. I just try not to fall.
I understand, Marlene! Especially after what I went through. We get wiser as we get older. Or at least hopefully we do! Thanks for the comment.
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