When I was a teenager, a police officer in Seattle stopped my friend, Shelly, and me, and threatened to give us a ticket. Our crime? Jaywalking.
Here in the Pacific Northwest, we take jaywalking very seriously. In downtown Seattle, in fact, when you can look both ways and no cars are coming, you still stand on the curb and wait for the light to turn green. You will, or you will pay.
I like that. I like to follow rules. I like other people to follow rules. The world would be a better place if we all just followed the rules. (My rules, in case you wondered.)
The other day, as I drove along savoring my freedom, the lights marking a railroad crossing began to flash. I slowed to a stop, first in line at the crossing.
The crossing did not have a gate, only flashing lights. I could see clearly down the tracks looking both directions. Quite a distance to the right, I could see the train coming.
The rain puttered along very slowly. I could have run faster than the crawling train. Still. I sat, obeying the flashing lights.
I reasoned that I could go . . . now!
Or . . . now!
Or even . . . now!
But I sat. I waited. And waited some more. I thought, I could have gone twenty times already!
But I didn’t move. Finally, the train arrived. I could see the whites of the eyes of the train engineer. I think he was smirking.
I followed the rules, though. Never cross railroad tracks when lights are flashing.
I was that child in your classroom who shushed everyone, the girl who longed for the rest of the class to stop asking questions long enough for the teacher to complete the instructions.
I love rules. (But not these rules.) Curiously enough, I don’t want anyone to speak for me or tell me what to do.
But the Golden Rule? The one where we all treat each other like we want to be treated? (“Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” Luke 6:31) I try to do that. I hope you try to do that.
If that guy tailgating me or that woman parking her shopping cart in the middle of the aisle or my kids leaving their dirty dishes scattered hither and yon would also do that, I would be grateful. If those drunks driving and those kids drinking and that cat pooping in my yard would also follow the rules, wouldn’t that be nice?
Also, if my daughter would refrain from waking me at 6:00 a.m., I would appreciate it. The day should never begin before sun is up and shining through the window. She, however, listens to the dictates of her stomach which apparently rumbled, “GIVE ME A DONUT NOW.”
I hate a predawn talking tummy, even more than I hate a slow train chugging down the tracks, wasting my precious free time.


