Saturday, September 21, 2013

Because Life is an Adventure Race

 

Today my girl & my man participated in their first adventure race together--and 8 hours later I think my heart may finally have recovered enough for me to write about it.

When they set out with their map and boundless enthusiasm it was sprinkling a little rain. An hour later when they completed the biking portion the sprinkles had become a steady drizzle.

By the time they transitioned to the running/exploring portion it was absolutely pouring--but they still wore big smiles on their drenched faces.

I realized that these two are FAR more adventurous than the boys and me. R passed the time by playing in the rain with a friend. P scrounged through the car for Legos hidden under seats.

 
And as they approached the 90 minute mark and headed to the river for a two mile paddle, I decided they might be borderline crazy.


The race organizers stopped allowing participants in the river due to the deteriorating conditions--about 3 minutes after I took this photo of my two rounding a bend.
 
To say that my hour long wait for their return was a bit stressful is an understatement. When the emergency rescue boat stationed near the launch pulled out of the water because his boat was filling up with rain water, I felt panic start to creep in. I may or may not have sent out a text that resulted in a friend driving over to the race site to check on them/me.
 
Two of my most precious treasures were out in nasty conditions and I was helpless. They were out of sight, and even worse, they had no phone or radio with them since they had to traverse a swamp. I had no choice but to stand watch, wait and pray (in the pouring rain with a chatty son who was blissfully ignorant to my cause for concern.) 
 
I didn't like it one bit.
 
I prefer the illusion of control I have most days thanks to the 'safe' little life we have built in small town Georgia.
 
When I finally got the text that they were safely out of the water, I felt a flood of relief mixed with frustration and anger. I confess that as I rushed to greet them at the finish line I struggled to congratulate them because I wanted to lecture them on how frightened I had been.
 
These two had just worked hard for over three hours...conquering challenges together, making memories, enjoying the journey. They were exhilarated and exhausted--but fear wanted to make the moment all about me.

 
Instead of celebrating what WAS I was battling a flood of what IFS. Thankfully, the Lord made it so clear to me in the moment so the thoughts could be held (mostly) captive and not spoil their moment.
 
And I groaned inside as I realized that this is going to repeat itself in my life as my children grow and take more risks.
 
Lord, help me trust You more with these people. Guard my thoughts and shut my mouth. Keep me ever mindful that you are the great I AM -- concerned with what IS and not what could have been. Help me abide in the present with YOU, not in a fictional future with my fears.

This morning was simply a microcosm of all the 'family adventure' this race of life is sure to hold before we cross the finish line.

7 comments:

Love Being A Nonny said...

I read this outloud to my husband. We are both in AWE of your girl. Complete AWE!

Unknown said...

Wow, your daughter is absolutely amazing!! Cannot believe that such a small girl did all that. Congrats to both and you, I would've been out of my mind by the time that they got back ;-)

Cheryl said...

I stalk your blog....ha, ha....I just had to comment....I love your daughter....she is just the neatest....girly yet not afraid to get in there and muck it up...smart, astute, she sees the "big picture" in life.....I think you are raising one heck of a little lady there....what an interesting woman she will be!!!!

Allison said...

Just read Kelly's blog. I read your blog from time to time, when I have some time!Ha Your family is absolutely beautiful. I lived in AL my whole life until a little over a year ago:) Blessings on your family!

nen said...

That is one amazing girl, with an equally amazing daddy by her side!

Lauren said...

This looks like so much fun and something that my husband would love...of course I would have been with you - and I would have been a major basket case too! I am in middle Georgia (boondocks!) and just added you to my reader to follow along!

Rosemary Clark said...

Thanks so much for sharing this post. I got nervous for you just reading the blog and seeing the canoe picture. What a great story K will have to tell. Thanks for sharing your prayer, as well. I needed to hear that one!