Red Jellybeans…


We’ve often heard that the only thing one can be certain of in life, is uncertainty.  Call it change, call it growth, call it whatever you will, I call it – stress, discombobulation, and absolute chaos.

While knowing that the sun will always rise in the east, and fall in the west – I cannot count on seeing the sun every, single day.  For some, this is not a big a deal.  They roll with the punches and most of all, they don’t put as much stock into certainty.  But for someone like me, someone who needs predictability and order to help me get through the day, it’s amazing just how much a little bit more to the left or a sudden change to the right can affect my world.

The end of the school year is always a hectic one – and it has been for as long as I can remember.

When we were kids, growing up on the other side of the world in Saudi Arabia, the end of the school year meant that we were packing our suitcases for weeks long vacations through Europe and to come and visit my dad’s family here in Canada.  It meant that I could go from my daily routine of school, to being able to ride bikes down the hill at my cousin’s house (and try not to crash in the parked cars!) in idyllic Hamilton, or swing from the tire at the park near my grandma’s house in St. Catharines and best of all, walk down the street and buy a Freezie from the convenient store.

My mom would pack those suitcases for days, my dad would make sure all the papers, hotel reservations and tickets were in order.  All I had to do was show up, little sister in tow. 

Now it’s my turn.  And there are days when I truly feel like I’m drowning in all the chaos.  Drowning in all of the choices and responsibilities; unable to see the calm.

They say it’s personality.  Some people have this innate ability to navigate their way through life without ever letting on that the pressure is getting to them.  I, on the other hand, am the epitome of a pressure cooker…with a release valve that seemingly appears to be sealed shut…until it’s not.  And it very loudly alerts all those around that I’m about to go off!!

I repeat to myself, over and over again, “I must try and take my steps more lightly.  I must try and take my steps more lightly.”  I mean, they will not define my every being.  Yet the pressure in the cooker increases and it gets louder and I can barely hear myself above the FFFFFSSSSSHHHHHHHH!!!!!!

Part of the problem is me, of course.  Like most modern day women, we want it all.  Like most modern women, we don’t want to let any of the balls we’re juggling come tumbling to the ground because they’re important to us:  partners, kids, family, jobs, friends, commitments and so on.  Like most modern women, we even find it difficult to just put any one of those balls on the shelf or in our pocket even for a moment for fear that we may be missing out on something or worse yet, make the wrong choice.

Oh to have the strength of clarity…even in the face of uncertainty!

My seven year old is exceptional at limits and at being direct.  He does what he does in such a way as to not even show any doubt in his decision making abilities and eventual choices.  That is, unless of course it’s free dress day and he has to wear what his best friend is going to wear and I have to miraculously guess what that’s going to be!

In any case, every week when the boys would go to their swim class, as a reward for a job well done, they’d each get a quarter to use on the dispensing machines on our way out.  These machines are a child’s dream:  an assortment of candies and bouncy balls.  My older son now has a healthy collection of bouncy balls – a testament to his many weeks of hard work and perseverance.  My younger son, on the other hand does not.  Not because he doesn’t also earn his quarters, but because he prefers to use his quarter to buy jellybeans, a consumable that’s gone within minutes.

I cannot understand the seven year old’s choice.  The almost eleven year old and I are the same:  we like stuff that lasts.  Neither of us are good at delayed gratification (i.e. saving those quarters for something bigger in the end) but we sure do like our stuff.  And those bouncy balls are a metaphor for things…material things…trophies!  The seven year old is more like Mr. Niceguy:  all about the experience. 

One week, unable to let go, and accept buying jellybeans as a wise way to use his quarter, I asked the seven year old,

“Why do you keep buying jellybeans?  Don’t you know we can easily get these at the store and you can have them whenever you want?  Don’t you CARE about bouncy balls?”

To which he replied most matter-of-factly, “I CARE about red jellybeans.”

Point made.  I was completely surprised and delighted all at once.  This little boy had the freedom to choose but most importantly had given himself the freedom to be at complete peace with his choice.  There’s a lesson here…

Nothing is perfect – so it follows that uncertainty is a normal state.  However, in it, there are elements of certainty:  love, fun, laughter and our amazing ability to come through whatever it is we face – even if we’re not exactly who we were when we started.  And while there will be days when the loud FSSSSHHHH of the pressure cooker seems to completely block my ears and keep me from remembering to take my steps more lightheartedly, I know I’ll get through them, one red jellybean at a time.

Epilogue:  Modern day life is complicated.  While many advances have contributed to increasing the length and quality of our lives, they have also presented us with more choices and options than ever before which can sometimes be daunting.  Taking a step back, a deep breath and listening to what we really want despite what we think we want, as difficult as it can be, is a good way to move ahead.  Try it…and have a safe and happy summer!