“That Looked Like It Hurt Bad.”

You have always heard people talk about a “leap of faith,” and all kinds of things conjure up in your head about what that means. Or what it looks like. Here is mine. A leap of faith that I took nearly thirty years ago that changed my life in every single way.

It was a chance look in the mirror that did it. November of 1995, and I was working at a credit card company in Dickson. We had just acquired a big account and to celebrate, we had an office party. Everyone was in a good mood, including myself, because it was a big deal. Doing the party, I went to the bathroom and as I was washing my hands, I saw something I did not like.

Me.

I saw a 27 year old man, going on 60. It was me that I did not like looking back. I saw an old man who had just settled. I saw an old man who goes to Chili’s and sits at the bar and remembers those good old days that ended far too early.

I left the bathroom, told my boss I didn’t feel good and he told me to go home and get better. I got in the car, called my mom and told her I was quitting my job and going back to college and getting my degree. She was 100% on board. “But you better have another job set up.” I did and hearing her confidence in me was all I needed.

Fast forward two months and I am working the graveyard shift at Overnite trucking company loading trucks. 11-P.M.-7-A.M., good times and then I would leave and drive to M.T.S.U. for my 8 A.M. class. I remember working that night, the day before classes started and doubt started creeping in. “You’re wasting your time.” “You are 27, you can’t relate to anyone or anything.” “They will all laugh at this geezer trying to get his degree.” All these doubts created by me and nurtured by me. Well, one half of me. The other half was saying, “Pedal to the metal and do not look back.” That is the one I listened to.

I leave work at 6 because I wanted to get to school early and I go to start my car and nothing. Zilch. Battery dead. You have got to be kidding me. I had no cables and time was not my friend. A found a co-worker who had cables, he came out and we hooked it all up and nothing. I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry, or both. “Let’s try it again.” Boom! It started right up, thank you Jesus, and away to the boro I went.

It had snowed a few days before so there was some ice still around in certain places on the MTSU campus. If you went to school there, and parked by Murphy Center and you walked to Peck Hall, you went between Murphy and the football stadium. As you know, under the stadium, no sunlight so there was plenty of ice still hanging around and I think we all know what happens next.

I was in a hurry-up walk and hit the ice and although it took about 3 seconds to fall, I swear in my mind, it took 2 minutes. Best part is that there were about 20 people around.
“That looked as if it hurt bad!” Was the only remark I heard, or cared to hear. I just laid there and looked up at the sky. In the last two hours, my car, a precious 1984 VW rabbit diesel that was something else, had try to die on me and here I was, trying to die on me.

But, something happened as I laid there on that cold January day in 1996. I knew I was going to be OK. Yes, I was laying on the ice under the football stadium with people walking by and laughing and I was laughing as well. I thought to myself, “Joe, look where you are, compared to where you were just two months ago. You are here. You got this far by wanting to do this, by making it happen, by praying your butt off and by taking a leap of faith.”

I got up off the ice with pride hurting more than anything and proceeded to my first class. I graduated a year later with a college degree. I took 67 hours that spring, summer, fall and spring of ’97.

I got it done.

A leap of faith. Yes, there were roadblocks. There were obstacles. There were plenty of naysayers. Plenty of people who said you will never do it and why even try. I tuned them all out because of one word, faith. In myself, and in a Savior who gave me that faith.

If you are wanting to do something to change your life but are worried by what people think, or what might happen if certain things don’t go your way, remember this: If you fall on your face, you are still falling forward.

Remember, most men die at 25 but we don’t bury them until they are 70.  Go for it!

Oh, don’t care what people think because there is a very good chance, they are not thinking about you.

And I still refuse to sit at the bar at Chili’s.

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