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My legs are rubber, knees about to buckle, calves cramping. In
my delirium I grope for a resting place but find nothing. I can't
feel my toes. I see mirages – chairs, benches; they flicker
invitingly, only to vanish as I approach. I teeter on the verge of
fainting.
Suddenly a voice rings out from the blinding light: "Oh stop
acting like a baby! We've only been shopping for an hour."
I don't mind shopping if it's done
the right way. My way - with the drive and celerity of a military
operation.
It's a familiar voice, a cruel voice — the voice of my wife, whose
endurance far exceeds mine on such days. For her the
"Accessories" section at Nordstrom is paradise. For me it's
somewhere between the Sahara desert and Dante's Seventh
Circle of hell.
Okay, maybe I'm exaggerating. Truthfully I don't mind shopping
if it's done the right way. My way — with the drive and celerity of
a military operation. Alas I may never set the agenda when my
wife and I hit the mall, but I find coddling daydreams very
cathartic. So please excuse me while I switch to fantasy mode.
Click.
First, the shopping trip would have a clear objective. If you go to
the mall before determining what you need, something odd
happens. When you arrive you find out that you "need" all sorts
of things, stuff that you didn't know was invented, or needed to
be! An hour of mall trudging rubberizes your legs. Two hours
and your torso slouches. Around the three-hour mark the
fatigue flashes up the spine and seizes your brain.
Suddenly the line between needs and wants begins to blur. You
begin to ponder strange questions. How did I ever sleep without
a bed that realigns my body's energy with the earth's magnetic
field? Or, how will I summon rodents without this rodent whistle?
If it were up to me, we wouldn't stick around long enough for
this to
happen. We'd hit the ground running. Secure the items. March
them to the
counter. Dispatch the plastic. Vacate the premises and make it
home in
time for the ball game. The perfect shopping trip!
Click. Back to reality. Such trips are a fading memory from my
bachelor
days. The real scene is somewhat different. It plays something
like this:
Walking. Looking at clothes. Looking at clothes. More walking.
Arguing.
Silence. Apologizing. More arguing. Trying clothes on. Leaving
store.
Coming back to store. Putting clothes on hold. Walking. Weeping
(me).
Gnashing of teeth (mine). More walking.
Well, you get the picture. Shopping causes a little consternation
in my
marriage. This took me by surprise. Just two years ago we were
giddy and
engaged, with not even a hint of conflict on the horizon — a
perfectly
compatible couple. We both liked cuddling, kissing and a guy
named Drew.
Then we got married and started shopping together.
But recently I discovered that something else was causing
problems in our
marriage, something much worse than shopping — my
selfishness. The
descriptions above make my wife look like the bad guy. Some
serious
qualifiers are due.
For starters, though my wife likes to shop, she rarely buys
anything. Yeah,
I don’t understand it either. Why put in all that time just to walk
away
empty handed? It’s one of those mysteries, like Bigfoot or the
Bermuda
Triangle. But the point is I’m lucky. I’ve witnessed many full-
grown men
weep over their wive's spending habits. When my wife actually
purchases
something, it’s usually after a good deal of prodding from me.
Secondly she accompanies me on many activities that she does
not enjoy. And
she does it without producing the low, haunting moans of a
humped back whale
that characterize my trips to the mall. She doesn't like
Basketball. But
she watches Basketball games with me. Though she enjoys
reading, my habit
of camping out for entire evenings at the local bookstore
stretches her
resolve. Still she rarely complains.
Most of the time I was too selfish to notice her sacrifices. Now
looking
back I can see the signs: weak smiles when I announced that
date night was
going to be Ta-Da! a live NBA game! I remember her eyes
glazing over after
hours of perusing the stacks of tomes in the Theology Section.
Trips to the
movie store featured another expose of my selfishness. She
wanted Emma. We
got Arnold.
I'm tempted to blame my "single years" for lulling me into a state
of
oblivion to others' feelings, but the truth is more sinister. I just
want
my own way. Like a toddler clutching a toy and screaming MINE!
I was
letting my will run roughshod over our relationship. My wife was
doing her
part, making concessions and sacrifices. But I was failing to
respect her
wishes. With the exception of the odd shopping trip, which I
ruined by
whining, we did what I wanted, my way.
The Bible comes down pretty hard on selfishness. Of course I've
always been
well aware of this. Somehow since it didn't specifically address
selfishness in the context of a shopping mall, I missed the
application.
But the Bible's teaching on the subject is hard to miss. "Nobody
should
seek his own good, but the good of others" (1 Corinthians 10:
24). "So in
everything, do to others what you would have them do to you"
(Matthew 7:12).
Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in
humility consider
others better than yourselves. (Philippians 2:3).
Those verses nailed the problem on the head. I had a habit of
putting
myself before others. I could disguise this vice while I was
single. Being
married brought it into sharp focus. I had to change.
I tried a few avenues to recovery. First I employed what I now
call the
"martyr method." I agreed to my wife's plans. I would even
encourage her
to make choices customarily made by me. Then during the
activity I would
revel in self-pity. It's all about dying to self, was my self-
righteous
motto. We went shopping. I suffered, but in silence. We watched
romances.
Both our faces were wet with tears. Although the misery was
delicious I
wasn't fooling anyone. We both knew my "selflessness" was
disingenuous.
The only sacrifice I made was to appease my overgrown ego. I
was still
putting myself first, just in a different way.
Then I switched to a second tactic: score keeping. Okay I would
think,
tonight we'll do your thing. Tomorrow we'll do mine. 50/50.
Sure it was a
tad legalistic, but it was fair. Keeping everything even was the
only way
to ensure my selfishness remained in check, I thought. But that
didn't work
either. It was only another way of looking out for myself, making
sure I
could still got my way when I wanted it. Besides even when we
did my
things, I couldn't enjoy myself. I was using up valuable points!
Finally I broke down and tried God's way. This meant more than
adjusting my
behavior; it meant overhauling my attitude. I endeavored to truly
put my
wife’s interests before my own, viewing the world from her
perspective and
asking myself what would make her happy.
I still don’t have this mastered. I keep slipping back into my old
selfish
persona. Old habits die hard, if they ever die at all. But
something
interesting started happening as I fought this inclination. I
actually
started enjoying things I never thought I could enjoy. Even
shopping trips
weren’t all that bad.
I'm realizing that God doesn’t give us commands to make us
miserable. He
extends instruction because he loves us. His rules are not
arbitrary; they
constitute a code of love. Abandoning my selfishness not only
benefited
those around me, it gave me more joy as well. I’m learning that
God’s peace
can fill my heart no matter what I’m doing — even if it’s
shopping.
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