It’s about time
to take down the Valentine décor on the shelves in the dining room and replace
it with symbols of spring and summer yen.
I love my Valentine display, not just because I’m a romantic and crazy
about the man in my life, but because love is an every-day thing.



Whether a person is single, married, divorced, or widowed, love is a choice. Whether we’re relating to a friend, a spouse, a child, a sibling, an enemy, a boss or a co-worker, love is a choice. I have to admit, however, that the flush of feeling that comes with loving someone is a quite a bit more enjoyable than the work and conscious effort it takes to do love.
I’ve learned a few
lessons, experienced a few trysts with this verb called love. I realize now that I’ll never fully arrive
(until I get to Heaven). I know that
each lesson prepares me for yet another obstacle in my way. I also have learned that doing my homework
right makes it easier to keep from failing the next time a test comes my
way. It doesn’t matter where we are in
life; each of us faces our own construction zones.


Amazingly, a friend told me months later how
much she admired me for my seeming unselfishness in allowing this guy to be
such good friends with other girls. It
wasn’t without some pain and work, mind you.
I not only needed to not say anything negative to folks, I needed to
respond in positive ways to them. The price of my emotional freedom was worth
the effort it took. That unsolicited compliment
told me I had accomplished what I had set out to do: love unselfishly.

One day I decided it was time to get real about my
faith, and I opened my Bible to that
13th chapter in I Corinthians. “This love of
which I speak is slow to lose patience; it looks for a way of being
constructive.” I asked God to help me be
slow to lose patience with Dorothy, and to find a way to be constructive. He did.
As it happened, both of us applied for a
position that guaranteed a promotion.
She got the promotion, so you know who didn’t. I didn’t mind so much not getting the
position because she had ten more years’ experience than I; what bothered me
was that now she would not only be a co-worker but my superior as well. I don’t respond well to dictatorship and knew
the days ahead could be difficult. It’s one
thing to say nothing negative; it’s something completely different to look for,
and find a way, to be constructive.
But that evening, I felt a nudge from God
that I could not ignore. My spirit knew I needed to call Dorothy, congratulate
her and offer her my support. I tried to
find excuses: I’d tell her next time I saw her at work; I’d write her a note
and give it to her later. I kept feeling
that prod from God banging away at my conscience. After all, hadn’t I asked Him to help me find
a way to be constructive?!
Sometimes doing business with God reminds me of
Jacob wrestling with an angel. Driving
home from town later that evening, I wrestled - verbally - with God. I had my reasons not to call her and I
thought they were pretty good ones. I told Him so - gave Him every last reason I had. He
would not leave me alone. I could still
take you to the curve in the road where I finally said Yes to Him if I could find her phone number and if she answered the phone when I got home. It is not surprising that I found the
number, and the phone only rang twice before she answered. The building of a relationship began when I congratulated her and offered her my
support. I’m sure she was as shocked as I
was.
You can’t imagine my surprise the
next evening at Kroger, standing there in front of the meat department (I could
take you to that spot, too) when a co-worker sidled up to me. For certain, I didn't tell anyone about that phone call, but she apparently did. “That was a hell of a gesture you did calling
Dorothy last evening,” she said. “Oh, it
wasn’t a hell of a gesture,” I replied, remember that curve in the road when I finally gave in to God.
“That was from Heaven alone.”
(And yes, it made all the difference in the world.)
Did my emotions change drastically? No.
She still had that abrasive personality, and others were still
frustrated by her attitude. I had to stay away when the I-Don’t-Like-Dorothy
club met. I had to keep looking for ways
to be constructive. Yet because I
looked, I found those ways in ordinary situations at work. We never became close friends, but the wall
had come down, and a new building took shape in its place.


I can’t tell you exactly what happened that
day in school because I wasn’t there, but my cubs came home excited -- and all
of our attitudes were better. After
that, he didn’t seem as gruff as before.
Maybe they discovered that, underneath that rough exterior, there was a
heart that did care for kids. Or maybe they
sensed that his gruffness was a cover-up for loneliness. Was it he who changed, or did we?

Yet our marriage was not just about me and
my pain. It was about us and about our commitment to this marriage. Looking for a way of being constructive isn’t
hard when life is good. But I figured those words were written especially for
the difficult times. So I looked for (and found) a way, that day. All I planned
to do was complete a task. Yet doing so changed my heart.
When Dave started his own construction
business twenty years ago, we had trouble keeping track of jobs and messages
for him. I’d try to remember to give him
messages and promptly forget - not a good thing when you’re trying to build a
business! Or I’d grab a piece of paper to
jot down the message when someone called, then one of the kids would get their hands on
it, and the paper became history.
So I started a spiral notebook for business
communications. Every few years I have
to update the notebook and begin a new one. For some time, Dave had been asking me to redo
the notebook because it was full. So, since I couldn’t concentrate on anything difficult
(because I was mad at him!), I decided to update the phone book.
For several hours, I thumbed through the
Solid Rock Construction notebook, making changes on my computer and crossing
out names of clients who were no longer living.
I added names of customers he’d recently acquired – over 100 names in
all. I remembered the customers and
smiled as I read verbatim notes penned to my husband:
“I have this problem,
and I knew just who to call.”
“I don’t know what we would do without
Dave. Tell him thank you for coming when he did.”
“My neighbor told me
to call Mr. Slabach; she said he can fix anything;”
and the best one from
an 80-ish widow lady:
“I tell you, if he wasn’t married, I’d be trying to
nab him; he’s such a wonderful person, you can be glad you got him first!”
At first, my reaction to those words was
a “humph” because I was still smarting. Yet as I continued paging through the notebook,
I realized again how blessed I am to be married to a man whose business is
conducted with integrity. This man, my
husband, is a gentleman and an honest businessman, and the work he does is
stellar. There is no shame in bearing his name!
By the time I was done with the phone book,
the anger in my heart was gone. In its place was a fire, burning with
admiration and passion. Oh yes, I still had reason to be angry; but the balance
of the scale was in his favor. Rather than focusing on his faults, I found
release in savoring his strengths. I found that being slow to lose patience,
looking for a way of being constructive, and then doing it is one
powerful way to show commitment! When Dave came home that evening, he found,
instead of a wife who refused to cuddle, a woman who wanted to renew her
commitment by being his lover.
It’s also true that in families and among co-workers, we will continue to face struggles in relationships. Some people are easier to like than others. We vary with those we mesh or clash with, depending on our personalities and strengths and weaknesses. I think it’s okay to be fonder of some people than others. It’s not okay to refuse to work on relationships and try to make things better between those with whom we rub shoulders.
I keep meeting Dorothys along my way – and the struggle is always there. Sometimes I’ve done well and other times I’ve allowed myself (again) to join the I-Don’t-Like-Dorothy club. Each time, I’ve had to follow the blueprint and find ways to be constructive.
If you’re like me, then you need more than an unreachable goal when it comes to relationships that are sour. When all that we’ve worked for and achieved seems to have crumbled, we need more than lofty theology and idealism. When we’re down in the muck and mire, trying to find broken pieces to put together again, we need more than just grandiose schemes for living as we rise up out of our huddle.
We need more than a “be ye warmed and fed” approach. We need a way to live where we can feel the shoe leather gripping our feet and know we are making a difference by our response.

Love is action. It takes that step. It looks for – and finds a way – to be constructive. Looking for a way to be constructive (and then doing it) is one of the best ways I’ve found to practice -and do - love.

* No, “Dorothy”
isn’t her real name