Once when my family was driving down the road when I was a kid, there
was a motor home in front of us with a sign on it that read,
"DUNWORKIN." It was obviously a retired couple on the road in their RV,
enjoying retirement. I don't know why that made such an impression on me
that I remember it all these years later, but I find myself thinking
about that sign lately. I think I'd like to hang it on the back of my
Rav4. DUNWORKIN. Too bad it's too many characters for a vanity plate.
Yesterday
I got a text asking if I'd be interested in a possible worship leading
position in a local church. My response was immediate and emphatic.
Thanks, but not interested. The mere thought almost makes me shudder.
Just the idea brings back that feeling of burnout that I talked about in
my previous post, "2015."
While I very much enjoyed and am
grateful for the time I had as worship leader at Hope Fellowship, I can
say that as of now I have absolutely no desire to get another gig. I feel like I'm
done with that career. I feel "released," as you sometimes hear
evangelicals say. I feel like I've done my job, and now I get to retire.
And I couldn't be happier about it.
And that doesn't just apply
to paying work. For our entire adult lives, my wife and I have been very
involved in our church. Lots of volunteering in the music program.
That's over too. For the first time in our lives, we're just going to
church like normal people, and it's wonderful. Wonderful not to be
responsible for anything. Wonderful not to have to make sure the service
runs on time. Wonderful having no Christmas rehearsals. By the way, the
same people who sacrificed their Christmas season so you could have a
nice Christmas Eve service? They started working on Easter the next week.
That's not an exaggeration. I have friends who did that very thing this past season.
I asked our friend Nikki
when she was here if she thought I was crazy because I wouldn't change a
diagnosis of metastatic cancer if it meant I had to get another job.
She said, yes, I am crazy, but not for that reason. I expected her to
say that. She said it's perfectly natural to feel feel like you're done.
That is how I feel.
While I do continue to do a minimal amount
of work, and while I want to make sure that my musical and ministerial
legacies are in good hands for the future, for all intents and purposes,
it is my sincere heart's desire to be done. Not done with life, but
DUNWORKIN.
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