From out of
nowhere, it suddenly materialized on my kitchen counter. A grub-like worm: fat, white, and moving faster
than I would have ever believed possible.
“Eww, Mom! There’s another one!” It was evening, and I was preparing dinner,
slicing vegetables while talking with Elise and Michael who had just come home,
sweaty and hungry, from a basketball clinic at school. Sure enough, there was another maggot. I snatched a paper towel and swept them up,
making a beeline for the toilet to flush the vileness away.
As I walked
back into the kitchen, a third one plopped down onto the counter. The three of us simultaneously looked up. Maggots dropping from the ceiling?!? This defies imagination. But there were no worms on the ceiling. As they continued to fall, we realized that
they must be coming from the cabinets above.
I braced myself, hopped on a chair and yanked a cupboard door open, half-expecting
to be buried in a landslide of squishy, squirmy invaders.
maggots in my sink - proof that i am NOT making this up |
But no. There were none. I peered through one cupboard after
another. Nothing. Oh wait, there’s ONE. I dumped it into the
biodegradable bin and returned to chopping onions, careful to first move out of the way of the falling worms.
Still the
maggots kept dropping. They’d plop onto
the counter and make a desperate dash for the edge, where they would plummet to the
floor and speed toward dark recesses, like under the oven. I caught most of them. But I knew we might be in trouble when they
kept showing up after dinner. What were these despicable creatures doing in our
house? They looked like ground-dwelling
things; like what natives in the bush dig up for dinner when KFC is closed. Why on earth were they raining in my kitchen?
It was a
full evening. Amy and Elise were scheduled
to leave the next morning at the ridiculous hour of 3:45 for a service trip to
another part of the island. I didn’t
have much time to focus on the loathsome maggots before bed.
Following a
fitful sleep, I got up at 3:15, checking first to confirm that the travelers
were awake, then flipping on the light in the kitchen. Ugh.
Eight or ten maggots crawled in the sink. Others wriggled under the dish rack, and yet more were snuggled with the moist dish rag at the sink’s edge. Who signed me up for this? I know it wasn’t me.
I grabbed
the paper towels again and went to work. After I cleared them all away, I located a
roll of packing tape and stretched a long line of it across the base of the
cabinets, blocking the narrow entryway by which these maggots were invading. What else could I do? Then I hugged
my girls goodbye and went back to bed, hopeful that the worms would just go
away.
By midday
the next day I saw no more maggots.
Relief. But where had they come
from? I couldn’t get away from the fact
that they didn’t belong here; there must be some explanation. Putting two and two together, we remembered
that a few days previously we’d smelled an atrocious stench in the same area of
the kitchen. A dead smell. We’d searched but found nothing, finally
realizing that it was probably some expired animal sandwiched in the space
between the kitchen ceiling and the upstairs floor. The odor had mercifully gone away, but apparently
not before flies had discovered the rotting carcass, laid their eggs, and produced a
swarming mass of maggots, poised to storm our unsuspecting family.
I'm pretty sure there
must be spiritual applications to this story.
Maybe as you read this they will pop out at you.
But for now I’m going to simply give God thanks, and then try to forget
the invasion. I may not understand
everything He brings my way, but that’s okay.
It’s not always about analyzing His design.
So I'll just be thankful.
Why?
*Because I don’t have to eat maggots for
dinner.
*Because these disgusting worms make the ever-foraging ants in my kitchen look positively friendly.
*Because I have a kitchen and a family
and food and a roof…all gifts that far outweigh the inconvenience of a few
maggots.
*Because they’ve stopped falling, and
the smell went away, and I don’t normally have to live with such things.
*But mostly because God is good. All the time.
Even when I don’t understand, and maggots are falling from heaven, and
my house might soon be full of flies. It’s
okay. I give thanks that He is God, He
is in control, and I can trust Him.
Still, please don’t
sign me up for any more critters…
7 comments:
So glad for you it didn't last long! It's so good to be thankful for life as usual. We can get so used to all the good things that it's easy to forget to be truly thankful for them.
So sorry - glad you're choosing to remember how many things are going right!
Glad you could be thankful in a situation like that! I'm imagining how I would have felt!
Yuck! I feel your pain/disgust. Believe it or not, we had something similar happen to us in our home in Covington. We were laying in bed one morning and I noticed something "dripping" from a recessed can in the ceiling. I got up to look at what it was, and it was maggots pouring in. A bird had managed to get in the attic area and died and flies got to it and laid eggs. To say we were grossed out is an understatement. I hope you never have to deal with those creepy crawlies again!
ugh! i'm so sorry, Serena! but in a selfish way your story makes me feel better...i'm not alone! :D thanks for sharing. and likewise, i hope you never see another maggot in your house again either!!! ♥
I guess maggots fall under the category of "We're just servants of Jesus, doing our duty as He asks." My initial reaction isn't always one of thankfulness - great job fighting the battle with praise!
Love,
Joanna
welcome back, Joanna! :)
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