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The Beauty of a Thorough Clean-Up
Dr jalarth Uche Opara
There is a kind of cleaning that only touches the surface, and there is another that transforms everything.
Not every cleaning whether of the house or of the soul carries the beauty, freshness, and renewal that come from a thorough clean-up.
Many of us sweep the visible spaces. We wipe what the eyes can see. We arrange what visitors will notice. And when everything looks neat, we conclude that the work is done.But true cleanliness goes beyond appearances.
I live in a house that receives the daily touch of water, detergent, and mop. The floors shine. The air smells fresh. The ceilings are free of cobwebs.
Anyone who walks in would naturally admire its order and neatness. Everything looked right.
Until one day I decided to go deeper. I called it my quiet operation — lift everything.
Chairs were moved.
Beds were raised.The fridge was pulled out. Corners long ignored were finally exposed. It was stressful. It was demanding. But it was revealing.
That was when I discovered something important:.A house can look spotless and still hide dirt in silent corners.
A place can smell like roses and still carry the dust of neglect where eyes rarely reach..And life is exactly like that.
Many of us polish the visible parts of our lives the parts people applaud, the parts that earn admiration. But beneath the surface, in the corners of our attitudes, relationships, thoughts, and habits, things may quietly accumulate.
The externals can deceive.
They sometimes create a beautiful illusion. Yet true cleanliness both spiritual and physical begins where the eyes do not often look.
This is why Lent is not just a season of routine adjustments. It is a season of deep cleaning.
It is the time to lift the furniture of our lives, to open the hidden corners of our hearts, to face what we have long ignored,
and to cleanse it with sincerity.
Because when hidden places are cleaned,
something remarkable happens. The air becomes lighter. The space breathes again..And the soul finds a new freshness.
That is the beauty of a thorough clean-up and the pattern ones lenten activities should be structured.
*This is also in appreciation to my best friend who is a master cleaner*- Very fastidious! A neat freak and clean freak, with an Eagle eye that spots dirt even in its incubating stage.
As we continue to inch toward the end of lenten season let this fastidious habit posses us to look deeper and clean every clog, log and dirt that would hinder our spiritual freshness, newness and neatness.
Jarlathuche@gmail.com




