Do you ever find yourself wishing that you just had even five minutes in your day when you didn't have anything to do? I often find myself wishing there were more hours in the day, more time to get things done. But it seems like when I'm wishing that, really I'm wishing that I could have just a few minutes in the day when I didn't have anything to do. Many of us feel this way even during the "regular" time of the year, and the holidays just seem to escalate that feeling.
The month of December finds more people in a complete frenzy. You don't need me to list all the chaos that consumes our lives during December, you're living it, and listing it just makes all of us feel that much more exhausted. The point is that Advent, the four weeks before Christmas, is a hectic and chaotic time for all of us. But Advent is intended to be a period of preparation, much like Lent is supposed to prepare us for Easter. Advent is supposed to involve waiting and anticipation. Ha! Waiting and anticipation so often seem like the exact opposite of our advent experience. And yes, pastors often find their advents are chaotic and hectic as well. So this Advent season, I'm going to try an experiment. I'm going to schedule 10 minutes each day to be more intentional about my advent preparation. And no, I'm not going to add one more thing to do during this busy season. Instead I'm going to take those ten minutes and do absolutely nothing. That's right, Nothing! I'm not going to read, or write, or listen to music, or talk with people, nothing. I'm gonna just sit there and enjoy having ten minutes to do absolutely nothing.
I'll let you know how it goes.
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