Yesterday Chris and I went rafting with a group from Oasis for a family event. We definitely didn't bring our children though. If you have met Chase for 32 seconds, you know that bringing Chase on a raft down the smallest of rapids would be akin to strapping him to a dentist chair and ripping out a molar without anesthesia. Had we brought Justin, he would have jumped off the raft for fun. So we left them and Adelai with two wonderful girls and went on an adventure.
I floated the river once or twice in my childhood, and it has remained one of my most favorite memories. Something about leaving the world behind and sitting on a raft or tube, surrounded by nature and slowly riding down the river just speaks to me.
Now if you know me, or have read my blog for any time at all, you might feel like you have just experienced a shocking change. Jess likes something on water? Whaaaa?
First and foremost, let's get some perspective. Two weeks ago I sat in the Urgent Care center for 3 hours (even though I had an appointment and had showed up 10 minutes early) and was happy to read my book in peace and quiet. I love to sit in waiting areas and just relax; I'll leave my children for any reason at all. So it's not like my bar is high right now. Are there screaming children on the raft? No? Alright I'm in. It's going down a waterfall? I'm going to give that some thought....while I'm on the raft.
The other shocking contribution that I'd like to submit to you is that I can be on a raft for 3 hours in rapids and come out with 100% dry hair. I have certainly rode on an inter tube behind a boat and come out with a dry face. When you have the level of panic that I can attain with water next to my nose, you develop some type of magical ability to remain dry in the most challenging of circumstance. In retrospect, I might have preferred a different magical ability....like the ability to do 14 loads of laundry a day without noticing. But I guess this one will do.
So Chris and I got on a raft. We were joined by a remarkable young girl from the youth group. Poor girl. She was so sweet. She had no idea what she was walking in to. Because this sweet girl sat between Chris and I as we attempted to navigate the river together....in the context of a 7 year old marriage with 3 children. We may or not have had additional baggage on the raft. There the girl was, so innocent and so unaware. She really was wonderful and it was a joy to get to know her better.
But she may never be the same.
To provide some context to this trip, you need to know that Chris and I rented a kayak in Maui in January of this year. I sat in the front (just like this trip) and Chris sat in the back. We could not pull it together. In the effort to obtain a unified front, we argued about who was responsible for steering the thing. Chris was emphatic that it was my job, and I was emphatic that no matter how much effort I gave, I could not make the boat go a direction. He thought I wasn't trying hard, I thought he was flat out wrong and we ended up nowhere. In a hurry. That day in Maui, I thought we would float out into the Pacific Ocean and I would never drink a Mai Tai again. The horror. We never did come to agreement, and only after we stumbled upon a current did we actually return to shore.
So really, this was effort #2, 7 months later. See?
Baggage.
Right away, I can't figure out how to sit comfortably. I've been given a paddle and explicitly told that I can't lose this paddle. I've also been told that I need to direct the raft, but I can barely even reach the water while I'm sitting in the raft so I climb up onto the top of the raft at the front where there is a handle and I can reach the water. Kind of a precarious spot to be, if I do say so myself. But, if there is anybody to rely on keeping my face dry, I've got like a 88% success rate, so I'm pretty confident.
And I'm totally sucking at directing the raft. We hit several rapids right away going sideways or backwards. But, if I can say anything about this trip, regardless of how the directions went, it was so seriously fun that even in those moments where I thought I might die, I was smiling and laughing. So fun.
The scenery was gorgeous. The people were wonderful. And for the life of me, no matter how hard I paddled, I couldn't figure it out. At some point I started to wonder if I was more stupid than I could have ever imagined. I thought hard about where to paddle to turn the boat, but no matter how much effort I put it, it never worked out.
At one point, from the back of the raft, Chris said "Jess, it's not hard. Just put your paddle to the left if you want to turn right like this (as the raft turned 360 degrees immediately in a circle), and to the right if you want to turn left."
"But Chris, when I do that it doesn't work. See?" (I then tried to turn the raft and it actually spun in circle if I paddled as hard as I could with a fervent pace).
"See honey? There you go. Do that."
"Chris, I think you are the director guy and I'm just for show in the front. Like an ornament of beauty."
"Nope, you are definitely the steering guy."
So we hit another rapid sideways. This was a doozy. Remember when I told you about my precarious seat? Well somewhere in the middle of the rapid, I fell backwards into the lap of the girl with my feet over my head and was stuck there for the whole rapid. (A precarious spot, indeed!) I even hit my mouth with the handle of the paddle and thought I had given myself a fat lip. Eventually the girl helped me up and both of us are laughing so hard that it's difficult to breath. I yell for Chris to paddle because we are headed for a tree and a rock, and then I grab my paddle to direct us. Surprise surprise, it doesn't work. Suddenly there is a jolt on the raft and I hear Chris yell "don't worry, I'm back!"
"Where were you?"
"What? I fell off the raft! You didn't know?"
"Nope?"
"Yep, I fell back head first into the rapids and had to swim to catch up to you girls."
This is definitely a moment where you look around at your surroundings and wonder if the pastor's wife just told you an outright lie when she said that "Nobody dies today" as encouragement that this trip wouldn't be life threatening. Chris just fell
ass buns over tea kettle without anybody noticing at all, and I hit myself exceptionally hard with a paddle in the face as my feet flipped over my head. I'm no expert on death, but one begins to reconsider the safety part when you sense the sudden lunge of a 200lb man onto your raft who, prior to that moment was not known to be even missing at all.
What's more, we quickly found ourselves between packs of rafts floating all by ourselves.
And the bottom of the raft seemed quite thin, as evidenced by the moment where my knee smashed remarkably hard into a big rock. But I thought that was all normal until we floated up to a place where the group had reconvened.
They all seemed to look at our raft with a measure of surprise and concern.
Because our raft had lost a lot of air. A lot. And it turns out that there was a visible hole in the back where Chris was sitting. But do you know what's amazing about Oasis? I didn't realize this until I was standing on the bank of the river, but I never expected anybody to care about my raft. They quickly realized that our raft was a mess, but I would have never expected that they would have concerned themselves with it. I know that makes me a bit weird in retrospect, but I think I've lived a lot of my life as a person who doesn't anticipate that anybody else will assume care of my problem. But here was Oasis, all involved in the problem and before I knew it, the raft had air again. It kind of reminds me about how life was before Oasis. We didn't have any air, and we didn't even know until they showed up.
And while we were on the bank of the river, I clarified that the back paddle was the steering guy and the front paddle was the power guy.
And this is where the girl came in quite nicely.
Because what's the first thing that Chris said in response to that news?
"Right, that's what I said."
My mouth drops to the ground.
"NO IT'S NOT!"
"Yes, I said you are the engine and I'm the driving person."
I can't pick up my mouth.
So this lovely young girl is 12 years old. I really like her, and it takes me a few nano-seconds before I decide that, despite her age and her innocence, winning a disagreement in a marriage is so much more important than anything else in the whole world. So I invite her into the center of a 7 year old marriage and essentially demand that she pick a winner. Both of us are staring at her expectantly, except that Chris has a smile on his face that full on reveals that he knows he is totally wrong. But we've played chicken with the girl, and she is now being stared at by two adults. She can't look away, and quickly reveals that I'm the winner. I knew I liked that girl.
So we were back on the raft and one thing became quite clear. Rafting with air is so much easier than rafting without air. And it's even easier when the person who is able to direct the boat actually directs the boat, and the other person just vigorously paddles. Chris and I could definitely work on communication though, as several times when he was changing the direction of the boat, he would yell from behind "sweetheart, we are going that direction now."
"Which direction?"
"That direction."
"I need more information".
"We are going towards that rock."
"What rock?"
"The one on that side."
The rest of the trip was riddled with me and Chris accidentally hitting the girl with our paddles. Multiple times....totally by accident. She really was a trooper.
I also hit myself with the paddle in my mouth one more time. Nobody could see the swelling part, which is actually much worse because when you smack yourself in the face, it's kind of nice when someone can actually validate your sense of shame and dismay by acknowledging the pain instead of look at you like you've lost your mind.
When it was all over, I couldn't wait to do it again.
Moral of the story: It's really important to properly identify the driver of the raft. And air is pretty darn important. And finally, there are certainly people out there who genuinely care about the state of your raft and will take it upon themselves, without asking, to help you. If you find those people, keep those people.
And always bring a 12 year old girl wherever you go so that she can tell you the winner of the argument. That was very convenient.