Yesterday we started out riding straight into the wind. After
the first two miles, I realized I wasn’t enjoying the ride against the wind and
was tempted to turn onto a perpendicular road to engage the side-wind, instead
of the headwind. I kept pedaling and the
corner passed along with the temptation to take the easy way. Soon enough, the rhythm found me, and the telephone
poles ticked by unoticeably. I wonder if
riding up the Iowa hills against the wind is anything like riding up a
mountain. We eased into some higher
gears on the down-hills, but even that seemed slow.
Slow and steady wins the race; or maybe it just lets you finish
the race. Some days, slow and steady is
all that keeps you going, race or no race.
Slow and steady. Is that what
life should be? Slow and steady? Whether it should or not, that’s what it is
sometimes—deliberate and faithful.
The return ride was soft, gentle, calm, peaceful, warm (for
December), like a hand on my back, urging me up the hills and hanging on for the
down-hills. The wind became a small part
of something much, much larger than me; the very hand of God propelling me forward,
the breath of God whispering me onward.
Normally when riding with the wind, it seems there is no
wind. But yesterday I noticed it in both
directions. For once I noticed. Both directions. God, equally present.