On one of my favorite Seinfeld episodes George is on a date and is invited up to the womans apartment at 12:30 "for coffee." George turns her down because "I can't drink coffee late at night it keeps me up." He then bemoans his stupid move for the rest of the episode eventually saying "people this stupid shouldn't be allowed to live!" My favorite line and apply fits me at this point in time.
So I have this new job, a chauffeur for British Motor Coach, I get to drive people around the greater Seattle area. I have recently made my way up the ladder from the lowly van driver to driver of Rolls Royce's. So Friday night I had a small two hour gig at a wedding in a nearby town. I had to stand near the car for over an hour waiting on bride and groom to finish up. So while waiting I was able to start talking to some of the bridal party including several apparently single bridesmaids.
Then the moment I will never get back happened. There was one bridesmade in particular that was staring at me as she smoked. Eventually every one else walked away, we made small talk about the car. She said all of a sudden, "you look pretty good standing next to the car." Now she was technically slightly inebriated but I froze. She eventually made her way over to stand next to me and we kinda told life stories. It was all over before I knew it and I couldn't close. I did not get her phone number or imply that I felt the same way, which I most certainly did. Before long I stood there alone again watching her sachet her way across the dance floor to reunite with people that might actually show her the attention she wanted. I was left with a George Costanza moment where I hit myself viciously on the forehead for several minutes and wiped the tears away as I opened the car door for the bride.
"People this stupid shouldn't be allowed to live!"
Sunday, August 3, 2008
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
The Next Chapter
Today has been a long and wonderful day. First, last Friday I turned in my last paper of my first year at Mars Hill Graduate School. Second, I am exhausted and cranky and have been longing to be alone for some odd reason. Third, there was no chance to simply rest as I have been in a financial crisis for a little while and had to scramble to get rent money this past weekend. But today I was offered a job at SIMCO electronics, I accepted the offer, and I will be driving to companies to pick up and deliver all sorts of machines and computer equipment to be calibrated (that is the easiest explanation). I feel like the weight of the world has come off of my shoulders. I cannot wait to work next Monday, and I feel like I am about to start the next chapter of my life.
The chapter coming to a close has been brutal. I sold most of my worldly possessions on Craigslist and on Monday August 27, 2007 I said goodbye to the closest friends I have ever known. I said goodbye to a church that had rescued, restored, healed, mentored and in many ways led me to Christ. I said goodbye to my apartment. This was no small deal in my mind. My whole life had done a complete 18o degree turn in the three years prior too my departure. And in many ways my apartment was a big character in my story.
When I first moved into it I was a recluse, and I never invited people into my life. I had a hunch that the reclusive portion of my life was coming to an end, and it did as only a few months later I invited people into my life and my apartment. This period of my life was life giving. I almost feel like my hospitality was my art. When I had people coming over I was in my element. And as any artist when you first start out you suck. I sucked. I remember the first time I cooked for everyone I could not make a decision, because what if this person doesn't like that dish or that drink, I eventually got over that little problem. But I would stress out the entire day and yet I would not have traded those minutes for anything. Even if I could go back and change my attitude, which was bad many times but that was how I lived, and I like to believe that I changed as I matured.
I guess what was most beautiful about the picture in my head about the day that I left, eleven months ago, is the picture I have looking up at my apartment for the last time. It was more than a place to put my stuff and it was more than just a space. I have several places I lived in years prior to my move into my apartment that was just an apartment or a house, but this became my home. Eventually I decorated it, I had never decorated any other place in which I had lived. And I savored the messes left by other people. I savored the dumb things like finger prints on my windows, because they didn't belong to me, a glass that someone left on my table that had lip marks on it, and even long hair that I found all over my furniture. Those were the moments when I knew my life had changed. Because for years I lived alone, even if I had a roommate, I lived alone. So when people came in to my home and left a message that someone had been there I cherished those moments, no matter how ridiculous it may seem, I never wanted to leave that apartment, my home.
But I did, I moved to Seattle, and I am starting to realize as this year comes to a close that I have in so many ways reverted to my old "I will not let anyone in" mantra. I have not let people in the way I did in K-vegas, thats Kernersville to anyone not from there:), but I know that part of me is not dead. I have feared that it was many times this year as I passed up the parties and get togethers or wasn't invited at all. But I know that I am still alive. I realized this week, and I might be wrong, but I think that part of me was punishing myself for leaving that wonderful moment in my life. I fell and have felt like I betrayed myself. I have been at times even bitter at myself for having to start all over again. Wondering, hoping, but not believing, that I would ever find friends of the depth and love that I have in North Carolina. So here I sit with a small grin on my face as I believe with this job offer coming at the most amazing time as I have nothing to do but look to the future and a fresh start. New job, new year of school and a new place to live. . .eventually. And the future looks bright and I look forward to opening the next home that I live in, even if its the size of a postage stamp, and welcome new friends through the doors and hoping that the next chapter of my life brings me home.
The chapter coming to a close has been brutal. I sold most of my worldly possessions on Craigslist and on Monday August 27, 2007 I said goodbye to the closest friends I have ever known. I said goodbye to a church that had rescued, restored, healed, mentored and in many ways led me to Christ. I said goodbye to my apartment. This was no small deal in my mind. My whole life had done a complete 18o degree turn in the three years prior too my departure. And in many ways my apartment was a big character in my story.
When I first moved into it I was a recluse, and I never invited people into my life. I had a hunch that the reclusive portion of my life was coming to an end, and it did as only a few months later I invited people into my life and my apartment. This period of my life was life giving. I almost feel like my hospitality was my art. When I had people coming over I was in my element. And as any artist when you first start out you suck. I sucked. I remember the first time I cooked for everyone I could not make a decision, because what if this person doesn't like that dish or that drink, I eventually got over that little problem. But I would stress out the entire day and yet I would not have traded those minutes for anything. Even if I could go back and change my attitude, which was bad many times but that was how I lived, and I like to believe that I changed as I matured.
I guess what was most beautiful about the picture in my head about the day that I left, eleven months ago, is the picture I have looking up at my apartment for the last time. It was more than a place to put my stuff and it was more than just a space. I have several places I lived in years prior to my move into my apartment that was just an apartment or a house, but this became my home. Eventually I decorated it, I had never decorated any other place in which I had lived. And I savored the messes left by other people. I savored the dumb things like finger prints on my windows, because they didn't belong to me, a glass that someone left on my table that had lip marks on it, and even long hair that I found all over my furniture. Those were the moments when I knew my life had changed. Because for years I lived alone, even if I had a roommate, I lived alone. So when people came in to my home and left a message that someone had been there I cherished those moments, no matter how ridiculous it may seem, I never wanted to leave that apartment, my home.
But I did, I moved to Seattle, and I am starting to realize as this year comes to a close that I have in so many ways reverted to my old "I will not let anyone in" mantra. I have not let people in the way I did in K-vegas, thats Kernersville to anyone not from there:), but I know that part of me is not dead. I have feared that it was many times this year as I passed up the parties and get togethers or wasn't invited at all. But I know that I am still alive. I realized this week, and I might be wrong, but I think that part of me was punishing myself for leaving that wonderful moment in my life. I fell and have felt like I betrayed myself. I have been at times even bitter at myself for having to start all over again. Wondering, hoping, but not believing, that I would ever find friends of the depth and love that I have in North Carolina. So here I sit with a small grin on my face as I believe with this job offer coming at the most amazing time as I have nothing to do but look to the future and a fresh start. New job, new year of school and a new place to live. . .eventually. And the future looks bright and I look forward to opening the next home that I live in, even if its the size of a postage stamp, and welcome new friends through the doors and hoping that the next chapter of my life brings me home.
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
Lets be buds today
My brother Tim and I used to fight like all brothers do. I was four and a half years older than him and dominated most of our interactions I am sure. But we spent every waking moment around each other and sleeping hours as well, we shared rooms until I was almost seventeen. In our family we were all at one each others throat sooner or later. Many of my best memories of my childhood growing up are of Tim and I laying on the floor of one of our bedroom floors (in the twelve years of sharing a room there were nine different houses) playing G.I.Joes. or several other things through out the years. Even in those moments you never knew when the heat of life would come through and we would start fighting about whatever. Occasionally we would even get to the point were we had to walk away from each other. And there were times when I would forcefully torture him and make him cry. So even in our relationship there was a closeness but we never knew when we would have our next blow up or fight. Looking back on our family it was probably more often than I care to remember.
But every once in a while when we knew that we would be around each other all day we would say the words that provided safety in the midst of the crazyness that was our family.
"Lets be buds today" when either one of us said that the other one would automatically know that any fighting or bickering was off limits for the rest of the day. "Lets be buds today" was our way of telling each other that we needed a break from the chaos and anger involved in surviving a day in our life. Now looking back it was security in the midst of a home that taught us to attack each other. We had to live like soldiers at war never knowing when the next firefight was going down, and one one of us said those words it was like offering safety.
I haven't spoken those words in years, and now we are very different men than the boys we once were. I long for the days when I can look to anyone and say "lets be buds today." What is amazing is that I have been given those moments, with him and at this point many others. It is a beautiful relationship that can give you a place of security and peace even if for just a brief moment. And I just want to praise God that period of my life is over and that now that God has truly begun to heal so many of those memories from my family, and now I find that there are so many beautiful memories that I have forgotten but not lost many of them started with "lets be buds today."
But every once in a while when we knew that we would be around each other all day we would say the words that provided safety in the midst of the crazyness that was our family.
"Lets be buds today" when either one of us said that the other one would automatically know that any fighting or bickering was off limits for the rest of the day. "Lets be buds today" was our way of telling each other that we needed a break from the chaos and anger involved in surviving a day in our life. Now looking back it was security in the midst of a home that taught us to attack each other. We had to live like soldiers at war never knowing when the next firefight was going down, and one one of us said those words it was like offering safety.
I haven't spoken those words in years, and now we are very different men than the boys we once were. I long for the days when I can look to anyone and say "lets be buds today." What is amazing is that I have been given those moments, with him and at this point many others. It is a beautiful relationship that can give you a place of security and peace even if for just a brief moment. And I just want to praise God that period of my life is over and that now that God has truly begun to heal so many of those memories from my family, and now I find that there are so many beautiful memories that I have forgotten but not lost many of them started with "lets be buds today."
Friday, July 4, 2008
Searching for identity
Today is Independence day. I have been thinking a lot about identity lately. Questions like "who am I?" and "where am I supposed to fit in?" continue to pop in my head a lot. I think for me that identity has a lot tied up in independence. I feel like the day I find my true identity I can be set free from all that is tying me down. Maybe then I will be perfect:) j/k. I want to finish today with a quote from another author found in Abba's child by Brennan Manning:
"To be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best day and night to make you everybody else, means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight, and never stop fighting." E.E. Cummings
To all of us in the fight, let us enjoy our Independence day.
"To be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best day and night to make you everybody else, means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight, and never stop fighting." E.E. Cummings
To all of us in the fight, let us enjoy our Independence day.
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Restoration
I have been questioning a lot of things about my faith lately. Just what exactly I would respond too if someone asked me to explain the gospel or salvation or redemption or restoration. Just flipping a few things around in my head about God and what is real and what has been fed to me in theology classes and church. Do I really know the gospel in a way that I can communicate it, not only to others but even to myself in times of deep struggle. So the word restoration has been ringing in my head the last few days and when I woke up this morning a story popped into my head. So here it is.
Almost two years ago I went to a week long retreat in Colorado Springs. Part of our journey that week was to be involved with a "triad", which was three people that were not randomly grouped together, as in we were placed together based on our essays. So the first day I met my triad with Jae a forty-ish woman from Colorado by way of Chicago, andCarlyle a forty-ish year old guy from Phoenix that looked just like Jim Carrey. We were only scheduled to meet together for one and a half hours, not one time did we finish in under two and a half. Our goal was to meet and one of us was to share our story, as in life story. The other two were given a different goal every day, like we could only ask curiosity questions or we had to listen to what the Holy Spirit was telling us before we opened our mouths. When Carlyle told his story on day three we spent well over two hours talking through several big stories. One of which had happened at five years old. The story goes that he and a friend of his had received goody bags at Halloween at church, each bad containing a lot of candy, toys and an apple. While waiting for his step-father to pick him up his friend looked into his bag and said "man! my bad doesn't have an apple in it." He said his friend looked so dejected that he grabbed his apple out of his bag and handed it to his buddy. His friend not wanting to take it started to push it away. Just as they started to shove the apple back and forth between them Carlyle's step-father emerges from the hallway to fetch him and immediately jerks the apple away from him and throws it into his friends bag. On the way to the car he is berating Carlyle for being one of the most selfish children he knew, after helping him into the back seat his step-father grabbed the bag of candy and threw it on the front seat between him and Carlyle's mother. All the way home Carlyle had to endure a verbal beating based on something that was not even true. He never got the bag of candy back and after only a minor attempt to salvage his identity, he gave up.
The day he told us this story there were other stories of great sorrow, and much deeper hurts. But on the last day that we met as a triad we were to write each other encouragement letters. By this time in the week we had all shared our stories and felt so cared for and loved by the other two, in fact I still have both letters that I received that day. As a going away present for Carlyle not only did Jae and I read our letters to him but as we sprawled ourselves out on this beautiful patch of grass we gave him a bag of candy with an apple in the bag. We all laughed and laughed. His face beamed. His laughter said so much more, it was a healing laugh. That is possibly one of the best memories of my life.
When I think of restoration I do not think of theology that has been taught to me in so many places, I think of a beautiful laugh between three friends.
Almost two years ago I went to a week long retreat in Colorado Springs. Part of our journey that week was to be involved with a "triad", which was three people that were not randomly grouped together, as in we were placed together based on our essays. So the first day I met my triad with Jae a forty-ish woman from Colorado by way of Chicago, andCarlyle a forty-ish year old guy from Phoenix that looked just like Jim Carrey. We were only scheduled to meet together for one and a half hours, not one time did we finish in under two and a half. Our goal was to meet and one of us was to share our story, as in life story. The other two were given a different goal every day, like we could only ask curiosity questions or we had to listen to what the Holy Spirit was telling us before we opened our mouths. When Carlyle told his story on day three we spent well over two hours talking through several big stories. One of which had happened at five years old. The story goes that he and a friend of his had received goody bags at Halloween at church, each bad containing a lot of candy, toys and an apple. While waiting for his step-father to pick him up his friend looked into his bag and said "man! my bad doesn't have an apple in it." He said his friend looked so dejected that he grabbed his apple out of his bag and handed it to his buddy. His friend not wanting to take it started to push it away. Just as they started to shove the apple back and forth between them Carlyle's step-father emerges from the hallway to fetch him and immediately jerks the apple away from him and throws it into his friends bag. On the way to the car he is berating Carlyle for being one of the most selfish children he knew, after helping him into the back seat his step-father grabbed the bag of candy and threw it on the front seat between him and Carlyle's mother. All the way home Carlyle had to endure a verbal beating based on something that was not even true. He never got the bag of candy back and after only a minor attempt to salvage his identity, he gave up.
The day he told us this story there were other stories of great sorrow, and much deeper hurts. But on the last day that we met as a triad we were to write each other encouragement letters. By this time in the week we had all shared our stories and felt so cared for and loved by the other two, in fact I still have both letters that I received that day. As a going away present for Carlyle not only did Jae and I read our letters to him but as we sprawled ourselves out on this beautiful patch of grass we gave him a bag of candy with an apple in the bag. We all laughed and laughed. His face beamed. His laughter said so much more, it was a healing laugh. That is possibly one of the best memories of my life.
When I think of restoration I do not think of theology that has been taught to me in so many places, I think of a beautiful laugh between three friends.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
It Takes A Thief
I am now in charge of taking out the trash every week and setting it beside the road. I woke up last Wednesday morning made my way to the kitchen where I saw a note on the dry erase board for someone to remember his trash duty. As I read this message I locked the sliding glass door in the kitchen because my roommate had just exited and there is no key, it must be locked from the inside. So I went to the back door to retrieve the trash bins and take them down to the road. As soon as the door slammed shut behind me I realized that in my haste to get the trash to the road I had failed to bring keys with me, and the door that just slammed home behind me was in fact locked, along with all the other doors to the house, and that I was also the only person at the house at the time. Panic set in rather quickly, thinking about spending my whole day perched on the front porch in shorts and shoes without socks, drinking the rain water from the spout. Maybe warming myself on the grill, I could light that if I needed heat. No food though, what a travesty! I decided to break in. I walked back up from the street where I had just placed the glass, it was recycling day. And proceeded to yank out a screen for a kitchen window, slid the window open, and one deft maneuver jumped like a pole vaulter into my kitchen and danced what I now call the "kitchen breaking and entering dance." I then went to school:(
Sunday, June 15, 2008
Winning
So today I was in leadership class at MHGS and played a part in a role playing game. One person in the group became a women from a church that had recently lost a husband and dealt with a drug addicted son as result of the death. She had gotten involved in a ministry outside the church that "brainwashed" her, in a sense. Another person in the group agreed to be the pastor now sitting down with the women for a talk, because she had started a commotion in the church because of the radical doctrine.
When it was my turn to play a role I grabbed at the chance to be the pastor. I started out really defensive, arguing about doctrine, when one of my team members stopped me to ask if that is what I really wanted to do. So I just started again and stared into the "her" eyes, she was being played by a man:). Anyway, the second time around was much better. I began to reason where she was. The background said that we had been friends in this church for 20 years so I made a point to talk about our history with each other and the church. I agreed to go to the meetings with her, just to see if this is something "our church" could get behind. I made a strong plea to every direction I thought she was coming from, and succeeded by disarming her. In fact I did such a good job that "she" had to break character and said, "I'm really at a loss for what to say." Immediately what crossed my mind "I won" and a smerk grew on my face.
I admitted this to my team when we finished, we laughed. In all I made a few good points and I am so glad I was able, with the help of my team, to stop and redirect away from a doctrine, because I don't really believe in a situation this complicated with someone this hurt that the issue is truly doctrine anyway. But I am amazed at the realization that I did some of that "heartfelt" pleading with "her" to win. I am not naive enough to really think that I have lived my ministry out over the last few years simply to win. But how many conversations or disagreements have I had where my goal was to win? How many people have I missed? What is my record? I am not being hard on myself I am just using this as a place to voice my concern for myself, and a resolve that I will try to move past winning and loosing when it comes to the lives of other people. My guess is I have a long way to go, but one less step after today.
When it was my turn to play a role I grabbed at the chance to be the pastor. I started out really defensive, arguing about doctrine, when one of my team members stopped me to ask if that is what I really wanted to do. So I just started again and stared into the "her" eyes, she was being played by a man:). Anyway, the second time around was much better. I began to reason where she was. The background said that we had been friends in this church for 20 years so I made a point to talk about our history with each other and the church. I agreed to go to the meetings with her, just to see if this is something "our church" could get behind. I made a strong plea to every direction I thought she was coming from, and succeeded by disarming her. In fact I did such a good job that "she" had to break character and said, "I'm really at a loss for what to say." Immediately what crossed my mind "I won" and a smerk grew on my face.
I admitted this to my team when we finished, we laughed. In all I made a few good points and I am so glad I was able, with the help of my team, to stop and redirect away from a doctrine, because I don't really believe in a situation this complicated with someone this hurt that the issue is truly doctrine anyway. But I am amazed at the realization that I did some of that "heartfelt" pleading with "her" to win. I am not naive enough to really think that I have lived my ministry out over the last few years simply to win. But how many conversations or disagreements have I had where my goal was to win? How many people have I missed? What is my record? I am not being hard on myself I am just using this as a place to voice my concern for myself, and a resolve that I will try to move past winning and loosing when it comes to the lives of other people. My guess is I have a long way to go, but one less step after today.
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