Today's Reading
TO ARTHUR GREEVES: On the meaning of
interruptions and real life; on the difficulty of being patient; and on
expiating through embracing one’s own sufferings.
20 December 1943
Things
are pretty bad here. Minto’s varicose ulcer gets worse and worse,
domestic help harder and harder to come by.
Sometimes I am very unhappy,
but less so than I have often been /in what were (by external standards)
better times.
The great thing, if one can, is to stop regarding
all the unpleasant things /as interruptions of one’s ‘own’, or ‘real’
life.
The truth is of course that [what one calls the interruptions] are
precisely one’s real life
—the life () God is sending one day by day:
what
one calls one’s ‘real life’ is a phantom of one’s own imagination.
** the life (that) God is sending one day by day = God is sending one the life day by day
This
at least is what I see /at moments of insight: but it’s hard to remember
it all the time
—I know () your problems must be much the same as mine (with
the important difference //that mine are of my own making,
a very
appropriate punishment and, like all God’s punishments, a chance for
expiation.)
Isn’t it hard to go on being patient, to go on
supplying sympathy?
One’s stock of love turns out, when the testing time
comes, to be so very inadequate:
I suppose () it is well that one should
be forced to discover the fact!
I find too (do you?) that hard
days drive one back on Nature. I don’t mean walks . . .
but little
sights and sounds seen /at windows in odd moments.
I had a most
vivid, tranquil dream /about you /the other night, just chatting in the
old way. Let’s hope it will happen sometime.
For the rest, I’ve no news.
From The Collected Letters of C.S. Lewis, Volume II
Compiled in Yours, Jack
The Collected Letters of C. S. Lewis, Volume II: Family Letters 1905-1931. Copyright © 2004 by C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. Used with permission of HarperCollins Publishers. Yours, Jack: Spiritual Direction from C. S. Lewis. Copyright © 2008 by C. S. Lewis Pte. Ltd. All rights reserved. Used with permission of HarperCollins Publishers.