Little Things Will Get Ya
“Enjoy the little things in life…for one day you’ll look back and realize they
were the big things.” – Robert Brault“Enjoy the little things in life…for one day you’ll look back and realize they
Oh, Mr.
Brault, I’m so sorry. We did not enjoy that little thing. And right away we realized that, yes, it was a
very big thing!
Here’s the story. My
husband and I were on vacation, soaking up a gorgeous week of Florida sun in
one of God’s best places on the Gulf Coast (according to our winter-weary,
warmth-deprived souls, anyway). But sometimes, even on vacation, one needs
clean underwear. Our hotel not having any coin-operated laundry facilities (one
strike against that place!), we were forced to take a vacation morning and seek out a local
laundromat.
We’ve long had the
luxury (and it is surely a
luxury for a great part of the world) of in-house laundry equipment and hadn’t
had the need for a public laundry facility in years. Though we didn’t know what to expect, the business
turned out to be pretty clean; the machines were, if expensive (I guess I never
pay attention to how much washing and drying laundry at home actually costs),
fairly modern and up-to-date. After loading our items into two machines (as long as we had to do one
load, why not do two?), we sat down for a pleasant wait reviewing the news from
2011 (in other words, reading outdated magazines even too old for doctors’
offices). What we did not do was check for a little thing.
And, boy, did that
little thing cause big trouble. A previous patron had, for whatever reason,
left one of those BLEACH INCLUDED laundry pods in a wash machine, the very one
we used. (Who would think to check for that? I will, that’s who. Next time. If
there is a next time.)
When the “I’m Done” beeper sounded, we found that most all the items (and of course they were the dark load items; not the white underwear) had large, splotchy,
obvious “someone-doesn’t-know-how-to-use-bleach-properly” stains on them. Only
a couple items of clothing in that load were of the old, we-don’t-really-care-about-them
items. Included were several newly purchased and now-ruined tops of mine (how
many mowing or painting shirts does a person need?) and a dark blue (now turned
dark blue and white) “This Old
Cub” T-shirt, which had been presented as a special gift by our daughters to
their Old Cub father. Boo. Hiss. Why hadn’t we washed just the underwear as
originally planned?
Ernest Dimnet once
said that “the happiness of most
people is not ruined by great catastrophes or fatal errors, but by the
repetition of slowly destructive little things.” While we weren’t exactly happy
about the laundry “oops,” this “little thing” surely wasn’t a “great catastrophe” or a “fatal error.” Destructive, yes, and will not
be repeated if we can help it. But,
what about other destructive “little things” that might be in my life?
“Keep a close watch
on how you live and on your teaching,” warns Paul in I Timothy 3. “Stay true to
what is right for the sake of your own salvation and the salvation of those who
hear you.” Pastor David Whitehead agrees: “Pay attention to the details of everyday
life, for it is when we pay attention to
the little things that we are preparing for the moments when our light shines
the brightest.” Little things...like my words? My attitudes? My thoughts? My
desires? My activities? Are they bright lights or...big, ugly laundry splotches?
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