I suspect that for most people the notion of Lent is somewhat archaic. We live in a secular society where the rhythms and rituals of the church don’t have a lot of meaning any more. Yet for some it is a time of healing and cleansing; a time to step away from some of the bad habits and behaviours we know deep down are holding us back.
Personally I find the New Year a very hard time to make a fresh start with my resolutions. Quite often there has been too much eating and drinking and generally sitting around in a less productive way and the idea that the clock can turn to 12 midnight and you wake up full of resolve for the things you want to do better or stop doing just doesn’t work for me. The first week of the year is usually so slow we have not got back into any routines and when the Christmas wine delivery has not yet run out and the boxes of Celebrations are still not finished it’s nigh on impossible to keep all those great resolutions!
But lent is somehow different. You are back in the swing of your year, back at work, the kids back at school, etc. The days are getting a bit longer again and the spring flowers are starting to appear. This year we have had such terrible floods and snow is still threatening, but still I feel the resolve is there to make a fresh start. And for me it will be 40 days without a glass of wine – a real killer as I love to cook most days and the ritual of a glass while I’m cooking and a second with my meal is a very hard habit to break. And yet I know that there are days when my mind is less clear and that I could be much more productive and fresher if I doubled my water intake instead. I didn’t manage it last year but this year I shall try again.
But the whole point of giving something up for Lent (apart from the religious reasons if you are a Christian) has a deeper significance. Because sometimes our bad habits can mask other issues such as low self esteem or avoidance of some kind – maybe facing up to the fact that our life is not going where we had hoped. So in my mind the idea of giving something up which you hanker for is only half of the story. Perhaps it is more what you face into if you take away the little fixes. Maybe by tolerating the cravings of what you are missing, you become more self aware and more in tune with the spiritual prompts in your life. By creating that mindful space you are opening yourself up to deeper change and opportunity.
At the end of the 40 days of Lent we have Easter, I think a hopeful time and, if you accept the Christian message, a chance for forgiveness and redemption and the start of a new life in Christ. And while Christmas and New Year can be a time of stress for many families, especially the worse off, perhaps Easter can be the opposite: a time when we don’t indulge ourselves but can take some more time to reflect, to just be and to figure out not only what we want from the year ahead but what God wants of us. What service can we be to the world and to other?. Maybe we all need a bit of a detox from the ‘me culture’ and instant gratification, and open ourselves to our higher calling.
Melinda
Ayuda Group Ltd
Company Number 02756474