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							On Being 
							Stuck on a Snow Day
 
 Psalm 
							142.7—Bring me out of this prison, so that I may 
							give thanks to your name…
 
 It was about 1 pm yesterday when, through the hushed 
							purple and gentle golden stained glass windows in my 
							study, I noticed the snow. Flakes were falling fast 
							and with purpose as they soared through the sky. A 
							dusting quickly turned into a covering, and streets 
							already paved with ice became consumed by snow.
 
 Despite living mere blocks away from my favorite 
							building in Lincoln, I knew I needed to get home 
							quickly. When your vehicle of choice is a rear-wheel 
							drive Chevy pick up truck, you have just moments 
							between the accumulating inches of snow to get where 
							you need to be. Otherwise, your chances of getting 
							stuck increase exponentially.
 
 And well,
 
 despite my best intentions,
 
 as well as my ability to
 
 nimbly navigate in wintery weather
 
 I made it all the way to my house
 
 before I got stuck.
 
 After 30 minutes of spinning my tires, rocking and 
							rolling, I was eventually rescued by a thoughtful 
							neighbor, and was able to free my tiny truck. I 
							waded through the white snow, turned black by this 
							point with the stench of rubber on its surface, and 
							made it the 15 feet into my garage.
 
 That moment of being stuck was frustrating. I was so 
							close, and yet, so far away. Despite employing all 
							the necessary tactics, and taking my time so I could 
							arrive safely, still I managed to get stuck. My 
							adrenaline was pumping and my heart racing as I 
							tried and tried and tried to complete this journey 
							on my own.
 
								
								Being stuck is no fun. There is perhaps no worse 
								feeling than being trapped or fastened to some 
								facet of life. Looking out my writing room 
								window, I see cars buried in snow; neighbors 
								un-sticking themselves with shovels and snow 
								blowers; and I see something else too. Just 
								beyond the trees that hang heavy with snow, past 
								the intersection glistening with ice, there is a 
								reminder sparking in the soft snow. From the 
								window I see an opportunity to stop:
 
 to stop wanting to be unstuck;
 
 to stop wishing for warmer weather;
 
 to stop pondering how problematic these winter 
								weather patterns have been
 
 and to begin just being.
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			Being “stuck” has made me realize that 
			life isn’t so much about progress as it is about process. Spring 
			will have its day. We know that it will come: but winter needs hers 
			as well. Soon the sun will shine and the warmer weather will return, 
			and we will be liberated from being stuck. But we must not hurry 
			these forced days off so quickly. Having to slow down provides us 
			the occasion to engage in activities for which we often don’t have 
			time. We can drink our coffee more deliberately. We can take our 
			time working the crossword puzzle in the paper. And we can do the 
			difficult work of stopping rather than starting; stalling rather 
			than moving—learning that perhaps one cannot happen without the 
			other. 
 Maybe being stuck is necessary to being unstuck, maybe acting cannot 
			happen without listening first.
 
				When we’re stuck, what is the world trying to reveal to us?
 When we’re stuck, what is your soul speaking to your personhood?
 When we’re stuck, what is God bringing forth in your beautiful 
				life?
 Poet Wendell Berry said this about Winter,
 
 
			“Suppose we did our work like the snow, quietly, quietly,
 leaving nothing out.”
 
 So 
			friends, put your arms around your soul, embrace the anguish that 
			comes with being stuck, and respond to your summons from God. Get 
			ready for the adventure of growing into the next part of your life. 
			Getting stuck is worth whatever angst you must go through just so 
			you can hear God say to you, 
 "Hang on, you are about to get unstuck."
 [Adam Quine, First 
			Presbyterian Church, Lincoln]
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