the blessed annoyance of unlearning
"Come snow skiing with us," they said. "It'll be a fun day," they said.
Nope.
That was not a fun day.
I didn't have coordination trouble. Nor did I have problems getting onto the ski lifts. I also figured out how to stop (ie just fall down).
No, my trouble was deeper. I had to unlearn.
The stingiest hurdle for me that day was my skiing experiences ... but not snow skiing. Water skiing.
They're both skiing. This is true. And they are similar enough for me to believe my water skiing experience would help. But ... it actually did not help. It hindered. It wasn't just learning how to snow ski -- I also had to unlearn and work against my water skiing habits and reflexes. Unlearning took effort.
This memory comes to my mind now and then, especially in the wintertime.
At times, I tend to believe that improvement in life -- growing in my faith, or changing how I relate to others, or more regularly giving thanks -- can be achieved by acquiring more knowledge, by growing in wisdom and skill.
But that's only part of it.
We also gotta unlearn. Sometimes, we gotta unlearn more than we would want.
Un-learning.
Unlearning habits that no longer work.
Unlearning coping strategies.
Unlearning unwise ways to relate.
Unlearning our sneaky pride.*
[*Specifically, unlearning a pride that convinces us that we know what's best for ourselves, and unless we get exactly what we think should happen, everything all ruined. That's a sneaky kind of pride that feeds anxiety, when we assume we know the best ways that everything should happen and work out.]
Unlearning lies we came to believe were truth.
Unlearning behaviors.
It's a continual shedding of those barnacles that cling to us.
“We all want progress. But progress means getting nearer to the place where you want to be. And if you have taken a wrong turning then to go forward does not get you any nearer. If you are on the wrong road progress means doing an about-turn and walking back to the right road ... Going back is the quickest way on.” -CS Lewis
It's rarely 'feels' efficient to unlearn. But we all have stuff to unlearn. Small stuff. Bigger stuff. Welcome to the party.
It's wise to figure out where you took a wrong turn. We all make wrong turns, sometimes even for (at the time were) understandable reasons. Sometimes we took a wrong turn because we were trying the best we could, with the knowledge we had to work with at the time.
Make the turn. Do the unlearn.
Let's go see if we can pick the original path back up, to run the race as it's marked out for us.
"let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God." -Hebrews 12:1-2
Labels: efficiency, faith, growth, Hebrews, learn, Lewis, skiing, unlearning


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