I know I am a little bit late to get this one on the list, but I just finished reading The Help by Kathryn Stockett. (Honestly, one of the Top 10 books I have ever read and you should hurry and finish whatever book you currently have opened and get this one- but that is not the point I am making). Among the many, many thoughts this amazing piece of writing has left swirling in my head comes from a conversation early in the book between Abileen, a black woman working as a maid in Jackson, Mississippi, and Elizabeth Leefolt, her white boss. The Leefolt’s have just built Abileen her own bathroom in the garage so that they won’t have a “colored” person using the one in their home:
“So, from now on, instead of using the guest bathroom, you can use your own right out there. Won’t that be nice?”
“Yes Ma’am.” I keep ironing… She keep standing there looking at me though.
“So you’ll use that one in the garage now, you understand?”
I don’t look at her. I’m not trying to make no trouble, but she done made her point.
“Don’t you want to get some tissue and go on out there and use it?”
“Miss Leefolt, I don’t really have to go right this second.”
“Oh.” Miss Leefolt lick her lips a few times. “But when you do, you’ll go on back there and use that one now, I mean… only that one, right?”
I say what I know she want to hear: “I use my colored bathroom from now on. And then I go on and Clorox the white bathroom again real good.”
“Well there’s no hurry. Anytime today would be fine.”
But by the way she standing there fiddling with her wedding ring, she really mean for me to do it right now.
I put the iron down real slow, feel that bitter seed grow in my chest, the one that planted after Treelore died. My face goes hot, my tongue twitchy. I don’t know what to say to her. All I know is, I ain’t saying it. And I know she ain’t saying what she want to say either and it’s a strange thing happening here cause nobody saying nothing and we still managing to have us a conversation.
Now that is one beautifully written picture. Not the blatant discrimination, and certainly not the humiliation Abileen feels to be told the white family she works for believes they will catch colored diseases if she uses a bathroom in their home. But the tension in the conversation is so tangible and real, it puts you right there in the middle of it. We know what each character is really feeling and thinking even though their words are not saying it.
I think about that last line, about nobody saying anything and the conversation is still happening. Have you ever had that conversation? Have you ever felt like there was so much being left unsaid? Have you ever felt like someone was formulating an opinion of you on very little information? Or, have you ever formulated an opinion of someone on very little information? (Mmmm hmmm.) Have you ever known that your heart was in a very different place than your words and actions?
The point is this: sometimes our hearts speak louder than anything we could say.
There are no words that can be articulated well enough, no body language that can look perky enough, and no good-deeds done in bitterness that can look real enough— none of these things can mask our hearts quite enough to be believed as genuine. And that seems to me to be the point. If our hearts are not right, we know it, and others will eventually see it.
But more importantly, God knows it. He is searching the whole world looking for the men and women whose hearts are fully committed to him.* And we can’t hide with our words or our actions. When our hearts are devoted to something much bigger than ourselves, and when they are truly humbled by the unmerited grace we are offered every morning, the footsteps of our day follow accordingly, and we love others well. But the opposite is also true. When our hearts are bitter, judgmental, anxious, overly opinionated, angry, or entitled, the footsteps of our day will still follow accordingly.
Our hearts really do speak. And they act, and they leave impressions, and they show others who and what we value the most, too. And that must be why, above all else, we are to guard them. Because our words don’t mean much if our hearts can’t back it up. So today, I want to think a little more deeply about my heart, about the places I let it go to, and about the Savior who has done, and will do, anything to win it.
*2 Chronicles 16:9