The Flip Side of Paradise

Away from the beautiful beaches and lush landscapes of Caribbean serenity, I came across this lil cutie pie while on a countryside tour of Punta Cana last year. Barefoot and barely fazed, she strolled along a road devoid of hope and paved with neglect. Welcome to the flip side of paradise.

The level of poverty surrounding so many popular travel destinations is alarming. What a stark contrast to the pristine, all-inclusive, beach front properties that align the tourist centers of this beautiful city. At the time of my 2012 excursion, Punta Cana’s stats were astounding: inflation over 28%, public gas prices more than $6/gallon ($9 for private gas stations), and if your income exceeded $200/month, you were on your way. It’s the flip side  of paradise.

And yet, the locals were so incredibly kind. Content even. It was almost as if they had no idea a whole new world existed just beyond the sea. Shoot, the poorest sections of my hometown pale in comparison to poverty-stricken Punta Cana. But sadly, there is such a sense of entitlement where I’m from. The American mindset is to spend more, save less, look good, and buy your way out the bad. Seems we have a wealth of wants and no shortage of greed. It’s pretty ugly, if you ask me. We’re slaves to stuff here in the land of the free. We’re cowards to conflict in the home of the brave. Portions of our paradise are filled with polluted beaches and pools of blood built by the entitled hands of gun violence. It’s not all bad but we sure could do more good for our flip side of paradise.

We could all learn a valuable lesson from this lovely little lady here…

She caught my attention as we rode by on our countryside tour. She waved at every car that came her way and even threw rose petals at some of the vehicles passing by. How sweet!

So many of us who “have it all” believe (albeit subconsciously), we don’t have enough and that we have nothing of value to give others. We use possessions to purchase acceptance and we’ll go broke trying to fix relationships that simply can not be repaired with more “stuff.” Money can’t buy joy, peace, or forgiveness. But a sincere smile, a contrite heart, a warm embrace, a wave hello, a kiss goodbye… these are the gifts that keep on giving. The kind gesture shown in this pic teaches that you don’t need a lot to give a lot. I’ll never forget this little girl and I pray she grows up appreciating all the wealth in her big heart. She embodies the true essence of paradise.

Out of Order

Dear Ms. (and Mr.) Fix It,

A few months ago, while at the gym, I came a cross a sign similar to this:

It was the beginning of the year and I was all excited about getting started on my training program for my upcoming Stair Climb Challenge. But one of the machines I needed to use was broken- out of order. I had two choices: ignore the sign and use it anyway, or move on to the next station of my training. Not wanting to risk injury, I opted for the latter. I hopped on another machine and along comes Mr. Big Bad Gym Dude who starts using the broken equipment next to me. I kindly made him aware of the sign, then he looked at me, asked what was wrong with the machine (like I knew!), and proceeded to use it anyway. So of course I’m thinking this guy is nuts. But it also made me think about how often we come across people who are broken and we try to make things work with them regardless.

A week or so later, I walked into another gym and Break Your Heart (by Taio Cruz) was playing through the sound system. The lyrics go something like this:

“Now listen to me baby

Before I love and leave you

They call me heart breaker

I don’t wanna deceive you

If you fall for me

I’m not easy to please

I’m might tear you apart

Told you from the start, baby, from the start
I’m only gonna break break your heart.”

 

There are two types of heartbreakers most of us have encountered: those who tell us and those who show us. The straight-talkers will tell us up front that they’re out of order. They say things like:  “I’m not interested.” “I’m not ready for a relationship.” “I’m only gonna break your heart.” There’s no guess-work required. They wear their cold heart on their sleeve. And then there are those whose actions speak louder than their lack of words. They’re not brave enough to be upfront with you. So instead, they lead you on. They’ll tell you one thing but their actions rarely line up.

As challenging as it is, we must learn to accept what folks say about themselves as well as what their behavior says about them. And if you really want to grow stronger, take heed to the observation of trusted friends and godly counsel. They’ll see all the signs your pride enables you to miss.

In either case, don’t waste your time trying to change the person you’re interested in. NEWSFLASH: none of us are capable of fixing someone’s shortcomings. It’s hard enough trying to change oneself, let alone someone else! Sex and money won’t fix someone’s dysfunction; using those powerless tools will just leave your bruised ego in need of nursing and your self-worth in need of repair.

So often, we tune out God’s voice and turn up the volume of our vices- all in the name of “love.” Our flesh finds a way to turn God’s no into yes- only to beg for His help to get out of the mess we impatiently created. Totally out of order- trying to re-order someone else’s priorities. Christians, you can share the Good News, but you can’t make ’em read the Bible. Sisters, you can cook him meal after finger-lickin’ meal (in the kitchen and the bedroom, if you know what I mean), but you can’t make him hungry enough to spend forever with you. You can sex it up and chef it up and it still won’t be enough for him to wife you up. Brothers, you can lead her safely to aqua blue waters, but you can’t make her thirsty for your love. In an effort to make things work, many will give an inch, let them take a mile, and wonder why the relationship is going nowhere. Total disorderly conduct.

Rather than settling for disinterested, broken people who are clearly out of order, pray for their healing (and yours!), and invest your time and energy in building healthy relationships that foster peace, love, and faith. Every time you pump the weight of someone’s brokenness, you run the risk of long-term injury. As Maya Angelou once said, “when people show you who they are, believe them the first time.” The writing is always on the wall (and any social media outlets they use). It’s up to you to pay attention. 😉

Are you trying to make it work with someone who’s comfortably out of order? What warning signs are you ignoring? What’s keeping you from moving on?