perspectives
		
		 The Crackpatcher Gospel 
		
		By Carol G.  Stratton 
                	Guest Writer 
           	  
		
		 
		 
CBN.com 
   
 “And  what do you do?” inquires the Salesperson of the Year. She and 
I,  dinner partners, are making small talk at my husband’s annual sales  
meeting.
 Here we go again, I think, trying  to sum up my life in a few profound words.
 It’s times like this that  make me want to get a paying job. I  can tell her I’m an 
  agoraphobic with shopaholic  tendencies. No. I don’t think she’ll understand my ironic sense of humor. I could just  tell her the truth: I’m a Crackpatcher.
 I don’t mend sidewalks or re-grout tile. I  know nothing about the masonry trade. What I have is a  persistent inner voice directing me to look into life’s cracks.
  When I find someone who’s  stuck, I grab an arm and try to hoist them out of the 
  crevasse. Then I apply the  best filling compound available, friendship. 
 It started with a mailbox. My family  and I had moved from a large community to 
  into a new house in a smaller  town. Our new subdivision was complete except for the finishing touches. The  builder had Allowed us to purchase our own mailboxes until the permanent designer  mailboxes came. 
 A month later they arrived, all standard, decorated with wild  birds. Sandy Schmitt, town newcomer, ignored the edict to install a new box.  She liked her dinosaur one, very appropriate for a former Smithsonian Institute  archeologist.
 A  small controversy began percolating. Matching wild bird mailboxes were a high priority  to this subdivision. Tongues clucked. Evidently this woman wasn’t 
    going to conform.
 Intrigued, I knocked on her door to meet  this rugged individual of 
  suburbia. As we sipped coffee,  I discovered she hadn’t grown up locally. Sandy, like 
  I hailed from out west. While  she showed me her flowerbed mix of eccentric 
  wildflowers, I thought of the  proper petunias and marigolds planted in other front yards. 
 This gal’s not a  cookie-cutter suburbanite. She’ll shake things up.
 Halloween arrived and many hung tasteful  autumn sprays on their front doors. 
    Sandy, however, displayed an outrageous collection of  witches and wizards on her lawn. 
 Goblins and devils shrieked  through the loudspeaker on her porch along with R.I.P. 
      tombstones of her family.  Outrageous! I could already hear the gossip.
 One woman took up the challenge to put Sandy on notice. She  marched up to the 
    front door, her righteous  speech on the tip of her tongue. Sandy,  thinking someone had 
    finally welcomed her to the  neighbor hood, threw open the door with friendly 
    anticipation. No such luck.  The woman, Bible in hand instead of a pan of welcoming 
    brownies, notified Sandy of her inappropriate  and very offensive decorations.
 Sandy  looked puzzled as she relayed the incident to me. In her ignorance, goblins 
    and demons were things from a  fairytale. She asked,” Why would anyone care how I 
    decorate my lawn?
 The Christian Cringe Factor went  off in my head as I listened. Pharisee Alert. 
    What gopher hole would I hide  in? The only yard with a gopher was my own.
    I didn’t favor celebrating  ghouls. Still, I felt ashamed of my neighbors’ condemnation.
 That’s what makes me decide  to be the Crackpatcher in Sandy’s  life.
 I determined to befriend Sandy. We roller-bladed. We took our  kids to the 
    park. While our daughters  played dress-up, I offered suggestions for a good pediatrician 
    and admired her extensive  garden. Her herb garden was to die for.
 When spiritual topics came up, I kept  things low-key. Other than a few 
    references to answered  prayer, I just tried to be a friend. In some ways, I had more in 
    common with her than the  women at church. Living in this tightly knit community, I,
    too, had “come late to the  party”. Even though I broke the ice with my 
    neighbors and made some  acquaintances, I had two definite advantages over Sandy. I 
    had the correct mailbox and I  attended church. Sandy,  shunned like a pagan leper, didn’t 
    seem to notice the snubs. But  I did.
 After moving across town, I saw less of Sandy. Busy families kept 
    our paths from crossing. When the phone rang one night, I was surprised to 
    hear her voice.
 “I know you are kind of a religious person  so I thought I’d call you.”
 “What’s up?” I inquired.
 She paused before choking up. “It’s my  father-in-law. He’s been diagnosed with cancer.”
 “I’m so sorry,” I replied.
 “Well I know you pray and so I was  wondering if you’ll pray for him.”
 Years have passed since I’ve talked to Sandy. We’ve both moved  out of state.
  But I grin when I remember  the rebel of Hunters’ Green subdivision. Sandy  taught me a 
  lot about reaching out to  people. God puts certain people in our lives for a reason. 
 Through Sandy, God taught me to choose friendship  over neighborhood approval. And I  continue to hear the quiet  voice of God saying, “Pay attention to life’s cracks. You need  to be there to pull them out.”
  Jerking myself back to the present, I  notice Salesperson of the year waiting to hear what I do. 
 “I’m a-stay-at-home mother of four,” I  replied. “And I’m also a Crackpatcher.”
 “Why I think that’s just wonderful. Aren’t  you a dear.” she answers. “I think 
  everyone should be involved  in volunteer work.”  I was sure her hand  started to 
  move towards me for a pat on  the head. 
 I find my husband and mention it’s time to  go. “I need to get home and start
    patching up some cracks I’ve  seen.”
  He gives me a puzzled look.
  “It’s okay; I think I just got my calling.” 
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		 Carol G. Stratton is a freelance writer in Wheaton. She’s published in Women’s Touch, Purpose, Fandangle, InTouch, and Christian Communicator magazines. She writes for children. The Moving Guru, she speaks to women on friendship and moving, having moved with her family of six, nineteen times. Visit her website: www.changingzipcodes.com. 
		
		  
 
 
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