I get so restless with the process of self-change. I feel very deeply that I'm moving toward something -- different, important, destined. In an email I sent the other day, I likened it to the process of a sculptor. . . but I am the marble. Everything that is not essential to who I will end up as, is being chipped away.
But you cannot rush a sculpture. It risks a crack in the marble, and ruin.
I've been reflecting on this passage a lot lately. And trying to look around more. Appreciate the journey for what it is.
"Above all, trust in the slow work of God. We are, quite naturally,
impatient in everything to reach the end without delay.
We should like to skip the intermediate stages; we are impatient of being on
the way to something unknown, something new. And yet, it is the law of all
progress that it is made by passing through some stage of instability...and
that it may take a very long time.
And so I think it is with you, your ideas mature gradually -- let them grow.
Let them shape themselves, without undue haste. Don't try to force them on,
as though you could be today what time (that is to say, grace and
circumstances acting on your own good will) will make you tomorrow.
Only God could say what this new spirit gradually forming within you will
be. Give our Lord the benefit of believing that His hand is leading you, and
accept the anxiety of feeling yourself in suspense and incomplete...
Above all, trust in the slow work of God. We are, quite naturally, impatient
in everything to reach the end without delay.
We should like to skip the intermediate stages; we are impatient of being on
the way to something unknown, something new. And yet, it is the law of all
progress that it is made by passing through some stage of instability...and
that it may take a very long time.
And so I think it is with you, your ideas mature gradually -- let them grow.
Let them shape themselves, without undue haste. Don't try to force them on,
as though you could be today what time (that is to say, grace and
circumstances acting on your own good will) will make you tomorrow.
Only God could say what this new spirit gradually forming within you will
be. Give our Lord the benefit of believing that His hand is leading you, and
accept the anxiety of feeling yourself in suspense and incomplete... "
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
(From a letter to his cousin Marguerite Teilhard, July 4, 1915 in The Making
of a Mind: Letters from a Soldier-Priest 1914-1919, p. 57)