“What are you researching,
Victoria?” I asked my daughter.
“Nothing, really,” she answered
me, even as she pulled up a webpage entitled, “5 Tips on how to encourage your
hamster to love and trust you.” As she
scrolled down, numerous linked articles showed up – most of which had to do
with dogs – “What happens when your dog eats sweet potatoes” and “3 foods your
dog needs to avoid!”
“Doesn’t Pip like you?” I asked her.
“No – or rather, I’m not sure,
but he bit me and even though it didn’t hurt, it makes me think he doesn’t like
me,” Victoria answered in a rush.
“Maybe you need my new perfume
that makes you smell like a hamster,” I said.
“It could be really helpful.”
“Dad!” Victoria was not amused.
Aly started laughing. “That would be funny to be sitting in church,
and you start sniffing and ask yourself, ‘I wonder who it is that smells like a
hamster?’”
It is an amusing thought, but
Victoria takes her relationship with Pip pretty seriously – more seriously than
her relationship with her siblings.
Getting him to like her and let her hold him is near the top of the list
of things she wants to do this summer.
“A man who has friends must
himself be friendly…” (Proverbs 18:24) The idea is that if we want people with
whom we can share life and connect deeply, we must be willing to make some
effort.
I often hear people complain
that some group isn’t friendly or doesn’t reach out the way they would
like. I am sure there is some truth to
this, but there is also a sense in which we need to be willing to start a conversation,
listen to someone else, and try to get to know them.
Even when it is outside our
comfort zone, we can take a first step to friendship.
Just like it is not enough
simply to smell like a hamster, so too, it is not enough to wish for connection
with others. As we make ourselves into
good friends, we will find these connections grow and our circles expand as a
result.












