When a New Year Doesn't Feel New

Sometimes I want January to feel completely new. But she doesn’t show up to replace the troubles of yesterday. She doesn’t come with smooth, new roads, and old damage erased. Instead, she shows up with a new years’ worth of morning light—to shine on the same rugged lines of a perfectly bumpy life.
January arrives with familiar potholes and construction zones.
Life’s potholes can drive me mad, but the madness comes with memories. And the memories are bittersweet.
A life with potholes is a life where I get to experience things that are broken, and the quaint mystery of moments when we bear with imperfections.
On Friday morning, I opened the door to leave for my walk, and the tranquility of the day’s rhythms gave way to a familiar, repulsive stench. A few times a year, chicken manure from the nearby egg farm is spread across the fields. The smell is vile and I wanted to retreat, but my dog noticed my step outside. He wriggled and bounced, his tongue out with anticipation. He’s not contained by a fence or leash, but “people walks” are his favorite. Somehow, his playful eyes swayed me to believe a walk in these conditions couldn’t be too bad.
Many mornings, Saucer and I walk the road to the creek bridge and back. That day, I beat Saucer to the creek bridge, and the fields held my attention. They kept me walking farther. I’ve loved this place since I was a child, when the best parts of the year were the days at Grandpa’s farm. I spent years dreaming about these fields.
Now I’ve lived here for almost ten years of my adult life—about as long as the egg farm has been here, chicken manure and all.
For nearly ten years, the smell keeps coming around. Yet, for ten years, this stench has never made me feel done with living here. What do I know deep inside?
A place is always more than its imperfections. The goodness of this place stays with me even when the stench is here.
People are like places. I want to believe that.
People are always more than the stench of bad moments.
How do I look for the “more?”
At Grandpa’s farm, when life is imperfect, my old longings rise up and help me see more.
The deep roots of an old dream make the troubles seem smaller.
I’m sure this is a small glimpse of a larger truth. Beneath the temporary frustrations and quick-fix wishes of today, the soul is pregnant with good, old longings. Our Maker has set eternity into our hearts (Eccles. 3:11).
Deep down inside us, we long for what is good. We long to connect with each other in fruitful ways, and to conduct ourselves in ways that do not make that difficult. Deep down, we long to live in a world where our ears tune in to the good in each other, and our lips speak like our Father, who calls good things into being with His words.
Somewhere beneath the billows inside me, this is what I long for.
When life is imperfect, old longings can help me see more.
While the roots of my dreams are shallow still, I’m loved by a God who knows. He meets me with His own longing heart and tethers my soul to Him.
So here is a January with familiar troubles.
And longings as old as eternity.
January can come as she is.










