I love the pleasant pop I hear when I open a new bottle of
wine! It tells me the wine is
unspoiled and ready for my sipping pleasure. Now usually when I go to put the cork back in to keep the
rest of the bottle fresh, it fits snuggly back in place as it should. Every once in awhile, however, it
won’t. It doesn’t matter how hard
I try. I just can’t get it to
work. If I continue to force it I
end up destroying the cork and wasting my effort.
I think dating and friendships in life can sometimes be just
like that wine cork. There’s the
pleasant anticipation as the relationship starts, a real savoring of each
other’s personalities and uniqueness.
Everything seems to be going along beautifully. You love each other’s company, love
spending time together, and love the emotions you’re experiencing with one
another.
Sometimes, a relationship like this continues moving forward
and maturing into a solid, life-enhancing relationship. Other times, something happens. It doesn’t really matter what
that something is. The bottom line
is the relationship changes, and not for the better. And you don’t understand it. You think back on how great everything was, how perfect
everything seemed to be moving along, and you can’t quite accept what you have
on your hands is no longer those things.
In life, the cork doesn’t always fit back into the
bottle. It’s the same bottle and
the same cork you started with.
Logically they should work.
After all, they used to fit together beautifully. But now, for some reason you just can’t
fit the cork back in. And
the more you try to force it, the more the relationship splinters and breaks.
When the cork no longer fits, one of the greatest gifts you
can give yourself and the other person is permission to walk away. Just walk away. The more we cajole, complain or fight,
the greater our loss of dignity and self-respect, and the more fractured we become. You can’t force something to work that is broken. It doesn’t matter how great things were
in the beginning. If consistently
over time the pattern has changed in a clearly negative way, or if your paths
have split irreconcilably, that is what your relationship is now. It may not be fair; you may mourn what
was; but it’s important to be honest with yourself and value who you are enough
to leave.
A parable I think of when it comes to this is one Jesus
shares in Mark 2:22: “And no one pours new wine into old wineskins. Otherwise, the new wine will burst the
skins, and both the wine and the wineskins will be ruined. No, they pour new wine into new wineskins.” You can’t force something that’s not
meant to be, no matter how tempting.
When you do walk away, you open yourself up for new wine and new
wineskins, for something that will
satisfy you for the long haul.
No comments:
Post a Comment