Friday, October 17, 2008

I-35


I remember watching TV last August 1st when the nation was captivated by the tragedy of the I-35 bridge collapse outside in Minneapolis. Several died and 145 were injured. Most experts thought it could have been worse

Only minutes later, the questions began, “How did this happen?” and within days began unsettling news reports that 30-50% of our nations bridges may be structurally unsafe

Fifty percent? Even a 10% estimate would make many of us nervous

Reasons such as cost cutting, cutting corners on inferior steel and concrete, time constraints, budget cuts, workmanship are all sited as to possible reasons for unsafe bridges in our country and the I-35 collapse

Somewhere along the way of each bridge built, decisions are made in regards to the design, cost, materials and workmanship that determine how long the bridge will last structurally

Once construction is done, a maintenance schedule is set and the bridge is opened for travel

On I-35 last August, travel stopped dead for 13 people

Something went very wrong

Makes me think

About my life and the bridges of my relationships

I see a relationship like a bridge-me on one side and someone on the other

Questions begin to emerge like:

*As I look around my life, how strong are my relationships?
*What is the foundation of my relationships?
*Do I take shortcuts with others or do I invest my best?
*Do I have strong foundations so they withstand the tough weather that often blows through my life?
*Am I surprised when a friendship goes south?
*Am I prepared to be the kind of friend others deserve?

I have been hanging with a group of guys the past 10+ years

We have been through a lot together

The best and worst of times

Together

I am learning a few things that have made these bridges what they are today:

*I need to decide daily to think the best of them
*I need to invest some of my best time and talents with these friends
*I need to be willing to let them know me and risk love once I am fully known
*when the issues come up, I decide to fully work through them

Some look at our friendship and think- easy

We know differently

Any good relationship takes (a lot) of work

In fact, I often tell others "I do not have a close friend I have not had a HUGE problem with" or, more likely, them with me

It’s like the person who needs to get their jaw broken and reset to be right. It’s really painful to go through, but once it’s healed and fits right, it’s stronger than before and finally works the way it was intended

I can’t say I have ever wanted to get my relational “Jaw broken”, but now I see why it has been good for me

Seems like it often comes down to making a choice-work through it or pretend it doesn’t exist

The latter almost inevitably leads to an I-35 incident

The former almost always makes the bridge stronger

Can’t say it’s my first choice of activities on a Friday night...sitting down and working through an issue...but later on...yup

A friend recently shared this quote from Nabeel Jabbour, "The stronger the bridge of relationship, the more truth you can take across it."

I have been thinking about it for days

In my closer, stronger relationships, I am willing to listen. In relationships where trust is not as good, I am almost deaf

When the bridge is stronger, I accept truth spoken in to my life. Listening and learning seems natural. Change happens

I hear because there is level of real trust. A trust based on the fact I am loved even though I do not have it all together. A genuine care for bringing out the best in me

I’d like to build good, strong bridges and as many as possible

I think I am learning the process and what it takes to build a decent bridge

Maybe you have thoughts about building relational bridges too...

7 comments:

Unknown said...

This excellent porch talk reminds me of Prov 27:17 and Prov 17:17. Like a good bridge, friendships need 'iron' on the inside and Pete pictures this so well in these bridge thoughts. I too have found iron is only built and laid well in our friendships through the intern battle to love when all is saying inside me to retreat for safe grounds. These great thoughts sure make me want to fight harder in my friendships. Thanks Pete MN

Duncan said...

I once heard "share your victories and you build fences, share your defeats and you build bridges"...keep building bridges Pete.

Patrick Q said...

great post Pete... living in Asia only accentuates what you talked about... everything is about the relationship and I'm a task-based American trying to figure it all out. It takes all my attention to try to think about my relationships and what they mean. What I am always challenged with is having the attitude of building into others and fighting the urge to take.

Jennifer said...

I'll be thinking about this for weeks to come. How am I building bridges? Great articulation. A word picture that will resonate...

Joelu said...

Well said Pete. Building good bridges requires commitment, endurance, willing to withstand pain, criticism but it saves lives, causes growth, able to stand firm against wind, rain and fire and would receive both present and future rewards. 1 Cor 3:10-15

Michelle Hiskey said...

Pete, saw this on the news last night, you might want to check it out!!
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/government_programs/july-dec08/infrastructure_10-20.html

Anonymous said...

don't think it was by accident that Jesus choose 12 to be with him. I decided years ago to really invest my life in twelve relationships. Someone asked me how i decided who those twelve would be? My answer is pray and let God show you who. This does not mean you shut the rest of the world out but really get serious about the twelve. I have not identified all 12 yet but I know that God will place them in my life in His good time. It takes time, expertise and a strong commitment to build a bridge...that is the road we must travel to develop those relationships. LS