Tending the Temple: The RED Light
Lately I feel like I’ve been driving a ticking time bomb.
I don’t know what’s going to happen, but I live with the constant, nagging
feeling that I’m on the verge of something bad with my car. I have two
hopes—that it won’t be today, and even better, that the check-engine light
will turn off, and whatever it is lurking below the hood of my car will
magically get better on its own.
But you’d think I’d know better. I once destroyed an engine by ignoring that
little red light of doom. I kept hoping the problem would go away. Instead I
ended up on the side of a road with a smoking, very dead car.
Turns out a small bolt had come loose and was bouncing around in there.
Eventually it got deeper into the engine and managed to grind it all up,
destroying parts that this mechanically challenged writer has never seen nor
heard of. According to my mechanic—who apparently thought I would
appreciate knowing this—if I had brought the car in right away, it would
have been an easy (and more importantly, cheap) fix.
Instead, I got to buy an entire engine.
Ignoring those warning lights can be costly and dangerous. Whatever issue
triggered them in the first place rarely improves or even stays static. The
problem almost always gets worse with continued use with neglect. But here’s
what got me thinking about all this: While I was sitting in my car the other
day, stuck in traffic and staring at my bright red check engine light, I
thought, Wouldn’t it be nice if our bodies had check engine lights? (Nothing
too obvious—bright red lights on our foreheads would definitely make puberty
that much more brutal.) But here’s the thing: We have a ton of warning
lights that we ignore all the time. One of the biggest ones? Exhaustion.
How close to the edge are we running our bodies if we’re conking out every
time we sit still for more than a few seconds? I’m not talking about falling
asleep during a three-hour lecture in a warm room with overly comfy
seats—that’s not exhaustion. But if you’re dozing in your office, on the
couch, in your car, during your favorite movies, or any time you let your
pace slow down for a few moments, that’s your body lighting up the service
engine light and begging for maintenance.
Studies have shown over and over that our bodies need somewhere in the
neighborhood of nine hours of sleep at night—yet since the dawn of
electricity, our sleep patterns have been gradually whittled away to smaller
and smaller numbers. From creation all the up to the recent past, humans
went to bed when the sun went down; we had to—you just can’t do a whole lot
by candlelight. But now everything’s different, and as a culture, we’ve
actually taken busyness and our addiction to activity to the point of being
proud of how little sleep we get. We’re even jealous of the guy who can
function on four hours of sleep a night—and in some twisted way, we now look
at people as weak or lazy who sleep the number of hours per night that God
de- signed us to need.
Sleep deprivation has some serious consequences to these bodies that God
made into temples. When we consistently operate on too little sleep, our
ability to focus, our memory, and our stress levels are all adversely
affected. Even our general sense of energy and attitude take a hit, whether
we realize it or not. Depression and lowered immunity are also associated
with getting too little sleep. Given my background, I was particularly
fascinated to discover that two of our weight-related hormones are also
negatively impacted by a lack of sleep. The first, Leptin (which controls
appetite), is depleted when we’re tired. Meanwhile our bodies overproduce
the second hormone, Ghrelin, which is an appetite stimulant.
Ultimately, how we treat our bodies reflects our view of its value. Do we
look at our bodies as the temples of the Holy and perfect God? Or are they
just some tool that we have no problem running ragged until it drops? To be
honest, a big part of the reason I haven’t been taking that warning light in
my car too seriously is because the pile of metal is only worth a few
hundred bucks. It’s fifteen years old, it’s logged too many miles to count,
and the stereo doesn’t work. Our minivan, on the other hand, would be
expensive to replace. When we even get a hint of something wrong, I’m on
it—because I’m afraid of the cost of ignoring something that represents
great value. So...shouldn’t we have the same sense of urgency when it comes
to God’s temples? Don’t ignore the warning signals your body broad- casts.
When we’re out of balance physically, it won’t be long before the spiritual
is impacted as well.