52.6 F
Spokane
Tuesday, May 6, 2025
HomeCommentaryLife is full of risks, crossroads and rewards

Life is full of risks, crossroads and rewards

Date:

Related stories

How a sudden clinic shutdown upended my husband’s mental healthcare

Therapeutic Solutions clinic in Spokane Valley abruptly closed March 14, leaving 1,800 patients like the author's husband without mental healthcare.

How to heal eco-anxiety with Buddhist principles of interdependence

From chickens to climate action, Tracy Simmons finds hope in backyard ecology and Buddhist values like interdependence, urging local steps to counter eco-anxiety.

Ask a Buddhist: Is Theravada Buddhism closest to the Buddha’s?

This Ask a Buddhist question explores the different branches of Buddhism, including Theravada, and what they teach, where they come from and how close they are to the Buddha's original teachings.

Is a faith-based charter school a threat to religious freedom, or a necessity to uphold it?

The Supreme Court hears case on Oklahoma's bid to fund faith-based charter school, raising key First Amendment church-state questions.

Hey, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., I am autistic and I am OK

Read the poet's response to Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s recent comments on autism. The writer shares how discovering he was autistic later in life made his past make much more sense.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img

In coming to a crossroad in life, just remember that LIFE IS A RISK!  Great risk yields great reward.

I am often very scattered in my thinking. One of my friends refers to my condition as “Attention deficit…ooohh…something shiny!” But rather than consider my behavior a detriment, I choose to try to search for the patterns in life and seek the “authorship” or the guiding hand. There are times when it is easy. But, more often than not, life seems to be disjointed and a rough road.

A few weeks ago, I had an extremely difficult task to complete that was steeped in a multitude of emotions. Mainly, hurt and deep mourning over a relationship that ended prematurely. While these feelings are not unique to me, I did not have a perception that the other person involved was hurt at all. I was solely focused on myself and my own hurt.

Then I received a text message simply stating, “I don’t want you to think I hate you or anything. I am just really hurt by how things ended and the state we’re in right now.” Wow. Perspective. In searching for the author’s story in my own life, I failed to consider the state of another  —one for whom I care deeply — or the ways in which our stories overlap.

Now, with new knowledge that both parties were hurt, I am attempting to reconcile and make things work again. While I am hopeful and working to create the foundations that would need to be in place for this to work (finding a job and a place to live), several of my friends have expressed concern that I am sacrificing too much to make it work. But if this is truly the way my story is meant to be written, my sacrifices are only paving the way.

No matter how I choose to proceed, there is risk. I run the risk of my attempts at reconciliation being rejected. And I run the risk of missing out on something great if I do not try. I am at a crossroad. No matter how I choose to proceed, there is risk. Life is a risk. But great risk yields great reward.

So in considering all of those disjointed things that make up my life, I have to at least hope for the best and work toward what I believe to be the best. And, if there is an author to our lives, aren’t these the actions that are required of us? In all our actions, we must consider both our own stories and the stories of those around us.  It is when we fail to consider others that we become self-centered and unable to function in relationship or community.

I honestly do not know where my story will take me. I do not know how this chapter will end. But I have to hope for the best and work to create a foundation that will support me. And, in hoping for the best, I have to consider others and work to affirm their stories, too.

Kyle Franklin
Kyle Franklin
Kyle A. Franklin is a recent graduate of Gonzaga University, where he earned his Master's in Religious Studies. He completed his bachelor's degree in history and religion at Pacific Lutheran University in 2007 and has worked in both the ELCA Lutheran Church and the United Methodist Church.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest


0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
spot_img
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x