I cannot keep silent
any longer. I have been patient all winter. I have to comment on the horrendous
crop of frost heaves that we have this year.
Those readers who are flatlanders may not know what frost
heaves are. They are not potholes. They are the naturally forming speed bumps
produced by the freezing and expanding of the ground under the roads.
Frost heaves are giant dips and peaks in the surface of the
road, which cause vehicles to hit bottom and passengers to hit roofs. They form
in the winter and subside in spring, just in time for mud season.
They force drivers to go ten or twenty mph on roads that we
would normally cruise at forty or fifty. Consequently they make any trip twice
as long and ten times more uncomfortable.
Many commentators think that his “thorn” was an illness. I
think the apostle was describing Roman roads in winter. His words certainly describe
my experience of frost heaves very accurately.
(Except for the “conceited" part.)
Another possibility is that frost heaves are the work of
God, sent by the Creator to slow me down. God knows I do not need any more
speeding tickets. That officer was very nice to let me off with a warning the
other week when I was on a smooth stretch of road, but I should not tempt God
or local law enforcement too often.
Yes, that is what it is. God is forcing me to “slow down and
smell the roses” as they say in rose country. Here it is “slow down and smell the
wood smoke.” Therefore I have heeded the call of God. I now slowly jostle over
the country roads, appreciating God’s plan in every bump in the road of life.
If I were a country singer I would write a song about the
frost heaves. But as it is, I will sing praises to God for the free
chiropractic adjustment of my spinal column I have received while traveling the
roads of Sandwich, New Hampshire. But I am still praying for spring to come
quickly.
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