The Butterfly Effect by Georgie Tennant
According
to the infallible authority that is Wikipedia, “In chaos theory, the butterfly effect is the sensitive dependence on
initial conditions in which a small change in one state of a deterministic
nonlinear system can result in a large differences in a later state.” Clear
as mud? I’m with you on that one.
Even if the
obscure wording of Wikipedia doesn’t enlighten us much, I think most people are
familiar with the concept of ‘The Butterfly Effect,’ - the idea that a small,
seemingly insignificant event can cause ripples and effects we could hardly
begin to imagine.
Ray
Bradbury’s chilling short story, ‘A Sound of Thunder,’ approaches this concept
from a more sinister angle. It is 2055
and a time travelling company runs a commercial operation, taking groups of
people back to the time of the dinosaurs to hunt them. The three men who take the trip in the story
are warned to shoot only marked dinosaurs and to stay on the path provided. Failing to follow both these rules could
change the past and have a detrimental effect on the future. In a flurry of
panic when a T-Rex appears, one of the men steps off the path, noticing too
late that he has crushed a butterfly.
When the men return to 2055, everything is recognisable but darker and
more sinister – including the election to president of an evil, dictatorial
politician, instead of the moderate candidate in place when they left.
I think
of the ‘Butterfly Effect’ often in relation to my own life as a Christian. On the night I decided to go along to a new
youth club in our village, aged 12, I almost didn’t. It was a hot evening and I was enjoying
wallowing on a lilo in the paddling pool in our garden. Making the decision to go started me on a
journey towards a faith I can’t imagine being without. How vast and far reaching the ripples from
that momentary decision.
The links
to our writing lives are obvious. Dwelling
on them with a bit of imagination can be inspiring and motivating. What if one of my poems about grief helps
someone to feel they are not alone on a difficult day and helps them get
through? What if others reading my blog choose to talk to someone, instead of
suffering in silence? What if someone
reading, say Jane Clamp’s ‘Too Soon,’ devotional finds themselves able to
support a friend going through baby loss instead of having no idea how to? What
if, as another example, Lucy Rycroft’s new Advent devotional is read by someone
struggling and overwhelmed in a tricky season and it helps them focus back on
the peace of Christ, even for a few minutes and their new-found peace is caught
and experienced by others? I could carry
on with many, many other examples – insert your own writing titles and potential
effects here and I hope you get the (slightly laboured!) idea.
A friend
asked me, recently, if she could use some of my writing at a sibling
bereavement weekend run by ‘Care for the Family.’ She shared my ‘Sonnet About Grief,’ and I am
praying that it will help even one person to get through the valleys of their
grief – and maybe countless others if it takes off and flies as far as I pray
it will. If it does, what a privilege.
Let’s
re-imagine our words, today, as butterflies, flapping their wings as we release
them into God’s world. Let’s pray for
them to land well, in the right places, at the right moments, causing ripples
that will have an impact into eternity.
Maybe only there will we truly see the incredible scale of the ‘Butterfly
Effect’ of our humble words released into the service of our King.
Georgie Tennant is a secondary school English teacher in a
Norfolk Comprehensive. She is married, with two sons, aged 11 and 8 who
keep her exceptionally busy. She writes for the ACW ‘Christian
Writer’ magazine occasionally, and is a contributor to the ACW-Published ‘New
Life: Reflections for Lent,’ and ‘Merry Christmas, Everyone: A festive feast of
stories, poems and reflections.’ She writes the ‘Thought for the Week’ for the
local newspaper from time to time and also muses about life and loss on her blog: www.somepoemsbygeorgie.blogspot.co.uk
Lots of food for thought here, Georgie. I think I'll look at the prayers I write in the Wycliffe prayer diary in a new light after reading this. That was a really nice touch how you included other ACW author's work in your piece too. I hope and believe that your poems and blog posts will have ripple effects beyond what you can imagine.
ReplyDeleteYour writing has certainly had an impact Georgie, probably more than you will know. I am sure this will apply to the other writers in the AWC and I hope you all keep up the good work!
ReplyDelete