M E R I D I A N M A G A Z I N E
Rules are important. I've always appreciated them and the comfort they seem to provide. I was never a Tom Sawyer or a Dennis the Menace. I was never “up to no good.” I liked to do what I was supposed to do; life was manageable then.
I've been told that when I was three years old or so, I would watch my mother iron. Always the inquisitive little tyke, I asked her one day if I could touch the iron. She told me I could not. As the story goes, I asked if I could touch the “white part” of the iron (the handle I knew full well was not hurting her) and she conceded.
My curious little finger got closer and closer to the “hot part” until a quick burn met with three-year-old tears and a loving scolding from my mother. My finger swelled under cold running water and I determined in my young mind that the “hard way” is not the wisest choice when a lesson needs to be learned.
The “hard way” was often unavoidable, however. When I got a few years older, I would learn that I was not an athlete. My one-year tee ball career culminated in being awarded the “best dancer in the outfield” honor when my coach handed me the trophy my parents had paid for. I've wondered what possessed the man to crush a little boy's athletic dreams with a single joke.
I doubt this occurred to him, though. In a desperate attempt to find something to say, he must have remembered a fateful afternoon when his outfielder, in desperate need of a bathroom, couldn't stand still and pay attention to the game. Little did he know, perhaps, that the snow cone at the end of the game was the only motivation keeping me out there.
Even before the pizza and trophy party, I knew I didn't share my teammates' dedication to the sport. The other boys watched baseball games, spent hours a day playing catch, and knew terminology so mysterious and useful that I wondered why we never covered it in Mrs. Menz's kindergarten classroom. With every trip or screw-up came an assertion that the baseball diamond was not the place for me.
I was thrilled a couple years later as opening night of my first play approached. Excited as I was, I was careful whom I invited to the occasion. Boys don't do plays and, though I'd seen plenty of men onstage, I knew this very well. The confidence that I'd found my niche was tempered with a healthy dose of self-consciousness with regard to where I'd finally resolved to “belong.” I'd broken some mold. I was a maverick, an exception to the rule, and too young to feel anything but embarrassed.
I certainly wouldn't say I never break the rules. I defy expectations and push boundaries when I feel secure in doing so. But for the most part I think there is strength in security. And rules give security. A calculated risk loses its flavor when rebellion becomes a habit and I take pains to ensure that the charm of a step out of line remains a “special occasion” of sorts.
I often skip breakfast, I cut across the grass, I don't brush my teeth on nights when I'm especially tired, and I eat Top Ramen far more often than I ought to. I'm ashamed, sometimes, by how fervently I want to “fit in.”
But there is a time and place for living on the edge, I suppose. And I'm grateful for those who showed me the rules. I'm grateful too for the faith necessary to follow those rules that govern eternal things. I'm still engaged in the process of acquiring the wisdom to know the difference between the necessary and the simply taken for granted, but until then I imagine I'll fall in line more often than not. It's just how I am.
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