Tuesday, October 23, 2012
Not nice, but good.
"Be nice" they say.
"Don't talk back. Say please. Don't roll your eyes."
Since I learned to brush my own hair it's been drilled into me that I must be polite. Ladylike. Sweet. Not mean.
So nice-ness becomes the reflex response.
Hurt is crudely covered by a masked smile.
"Yes" is abused and my plate is overfull.
Graceful femininity is admirable. Courtesy and care worth striving for.
But when did nice become the highest regarded character quality?
I want nice to retire. I want to be good.
I want to hang up the synthetic garb of sweetness and clothe myself with strength and dignity; be the woman who "laughs at the days to come". (Prov. 31)
I want to run from shallow, half-invested relationships and fight for fierce loyalty; be the woman who vows before God to stay by the side of her embittered mother-in-law. (Ruth 1)
I want to shatter the facade that my heart is impenetrable and embrace complete and utter honesty; be the woman who weeps and begs for her soul's desire of motherhood. "I am a woman troubled in spirit....I have been pouring out my soul before The Lord." (1 Samuel 1)
I want to flee the temptation of passivity and bravely act against injustice; be the woman who defies the law and boldly approaches a King to save those who God loves. (Esther 7)
May my character be shaped and my persona be characterized by the heritage and faith of these noteworthy women. I am saying "no" to sugary sweet. To shallow pleasantness. To best efforts at feminine perfection. I am saying "yes" to uncommon strength. To unconventional faith and beauty. To goodness that knows when to laugh, when to fight, when to weep, when to be brave.
I want nice to retire. I want to be good.
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