WISDOM'S JOURNEY: 4 Ways to Avoid being a Pest Proverbs 25:17

Are you a time abuser?


TODAY'S PROVERB: Seldom set foot in your neighbor’s house, lest he become weary of you and loathe you. Proverbs 25:17

What happens when someone doesn't respect our boundaries? How do we handle someone who takes up our time?

Today's proverbs speaks of uninvited visits--frequent uninvited visits. With the invention of the telephone, the chances of intrusions on our life escalated. Caller ID helps. Emails and texts help mitigate long conversations. But, it can do little to help us with the frustration of endless interruptions.

I suppose it's all about our time. Our time is a precious gift given by our Heavenly Father. We're born with a number of days and hours (Job 14:5). It's good to remember that, but not be fearful or possessive about our time.

Scripturally, we can surmise that our first priority for our time is GOD, then our spouse, children, parents, extended family and friends, congregation, and community. Somewhere in there--probably between our children and parents--is our job and other responsibilities.

Keeping our promises and commitments means managing our time wisely. Being flexible for the occasional surprises and GOD-interruptions is also important and necessary.

However, it's when those recurring interruptions gobble our time that we need to reassess. Are the perpetrators the same souls over and over again? Are our boundaries being breached? Do we have boundaries? 

Perhaps that's where to begin, first. Establishing boundaries. Our family has a few "rules:" like no unscheduled social calls after 5pm. You would be amazed at how much territory this covers. Generally, if someone calls us after that time, it's very important, so of course we'll take the call.

If we've been the "victim" of a time-user, then we should be especially sensitive to not be one ourselves. Here are a few tips I keep in mind for myself:

  1. Schedule visits/calls. I will generally text someone to schedule a convenient time and length for the other person.
  2. Ask if visit/call is convenient. For those unscheduled times, I pay special note how the person responds. If there's hesitation or their body language indicates they're only being polite, I'll schedule a more convenient time. If it's an emergency--and it better be--I'll let them know.
  3. Be sensitive. Pay attention to unexpected disruptions during the conversation. Be the gracious one to give them the option to end the conversation and reschedule.
  4. Don't stay too long. Whether scheduled or impromptu, even if the conversation is riveting, be sensitive to the needs of their family. When it's time to go, go. 

The late musician Bobby Womack said: "Leave them wanting more and you know they'll call you back." I like that.

Knowing that time is precious is important. Spending time with the LORD, family, and friends makes our life rich and worthwhile. Being good stewards of that time--spending it wisely--is a good thing.

May we be good stewards of time--ours and others, my friends.

Proverbs 25:17, Tree of Life Bible Society, Tree of Life Version - TLV, #tlvbible, #tlvproverbs 

[WATCH MONDAY through FRIDAY LIVE at 8:30EST, Tree of Life Bible Society's CEO, Daniah Greenberg and me, Terri Gillespie, Author dig a little deeper with the book of Proverbs. Watch previous episodes there as well. Stay wise, my friends!]

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