Are you hiding from your dream?

You know dreams and big plans are scary.

Would you think they’d be scary to little kids? Not yours to them; their own dreams. What kind of dreams and goals could a kid have that would scare them?

Doesn’t matter what kind. They’re all scary.

Last weekend with the grandkids we watched the first few days of the Olympics and athletes reaching their dream.

We watched the movie “Being Elmo” about the guy who dreamed of working with Jim Henson and who then became Elmo. We watched “Cool Runnings” about the Jamaican bobsled team’s dreams. We viewed the “Caine’s Arcade” video about the nine-year old boy who dreamed of his own arcade and then created one from cardboard boxes in his dad’s auto parts store.

Now it was the kids’ turn.

I gave the six of them a fun worksheet. In huge bold letters at the top of the worksheet were the words “My Big Dream.” Under that it said, “One day I will ____” with a blank for them to finish the sentence.

I reminded them of the stories we’d seen over several days. I told them their dream could be something they do or accomplish or make or become. Whatever they felt or heard inside them.

The worksheet asked a few simple questions about their dream, what it is, how it would help people, and it had a place to draw a picture of what it would be like when their big dream happened. I just wanted them to realize they could think big. I was lighthearted about it.

It scared them all

One wouldn’t do it. The five others tried to hide what they were writing. Then when they did write they turned their papers over and didn’t want to talk about it. The twelve year old folded his worksheet in thirds and sealed it in an envelope and stashed it away. NO WAY would he share what it was about.

You’d think you’d naturally embrace change and dreams and hope.

Nope.

Fear of dreams starts young and it doesn’t go away. The kid afraid of criticism, rejection, failure, and being told “you can’t do that!” turns into the grownup afraid of the same thing.

Hiding your dream from others is understandable.

But you can hide it from yourself too. Do that and you’ll spend the rest of your life with your fingers in your ears so you don’t hear that thing calling your name.

It takes courage to listen. No matter how old you are.

Your energy is a compass

Energy is like income, a checkbook, your IQ. You don’t have the same as everyone else, and you’re not supposed to.

And you have different energies available for different things.

When energy gets low you can experience stress. Then stress uses up more energy. Lower energy leads to more stress and less energy and more stress. It’s a rotten little circle.

God may give you less energy in some areas so that you won’t focus on areas where he doesn’t want you.

If you do mis-focus, you run out of gas to force you back to where you should be.

You know those times when you’re going hard but you’re not tired and you feel like you could go on forever?

Maybe that’s your true north.

That thing you want might be important. Here’s why.

We’re probably not talking about a car/house kind of thing. More meaningful than that.

Imagine you just died

and you’re in heaven engaged in a heavy duty conversation with God.

He’s showing you some things that didn’t happen in your life, some things that for some reason you didn’t do. Maybe a project, idea, vocation, relationship, ministry…something like that.

And you say, “That’s exactly what I really wanted!”

And he says, “I know.”

And you realize

That thing you wanted was what he wanted, too

That’s why you wanted it. He made you want it, so you would cooperate with him, trust him, and do it.

But you didn’t.

So now, after you wake from your Scrooge dream and find you’re still alive, what are you going to do?

Not believe it?

Be afraid?

Be lazy?

Avoid it?

Make excuses?

The dream conversation could turn into a real one at any second.