Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Humanity, there is hope for you yet...

Just a short post to proclaim that there is, indeed, still hope for humanity.

Just when you get bogged down at work, emotionally abused on the phone by rude, ruthless people, and you begin to lose hope in the future of humankind...you interact with a kind soul who reminds you that YES, there is hope still for humanity.

I just had such an interaction with a lovely Mexican family (the Duarte family). Let me tell you, there is nothing like a fun, kind, energetic latino family to lift your spirits. ;) There was nothing super extravagant about the conversation we had, it just blessed me to recieve a smile, a "thank you" (well, we spoke in Spanish, so it was a "muchas gracias"), and a sense that there still are genuinely good people in this world. And I am reminded how God has wired me to work cross-culturally; that He has called me to operate in such a setting, to serve others using foreign language, and that it blesses me like nothing else to be able to cross that cultural and linguistic border and show someone that I truly care about them and their family.

Gracias a TI Señor Duarte. :)

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Eat. Pray. Love.

"One woman's search for everything across Italy, India and Indonesia." This is the premise of a book that you might not think I'd relate or connect particularly deeply with. au contraire... About two weeks ago my friend Jenni bought me this book, Eat Pray Love by Elizabeth Gilbert. And let's just say that it is possibly the best book I've EVER read.

On almost every page I laugh, I cry, I reminisce, I FEEL. I love her thought process, her humor, her sense of self and search for...well, for EVERYTHING. I'm glad to know that someone else has been on that search other than me. Eat Pray Love follows the journey of Elizabeth Gilbert, a renowned New York writer who had a successful career, luxurious home, and marriage, but loses it all and begins an around-the-world journey to Italy, India and Indonesia in search of herself, God and other great mysteries of life. Set against the backdrop of 3 different cultures, Elizabeth searches to examine 3 different aspects of her nature: pleasure in Italy, devotion in India, and the balance of the two in Indonesia.

There are so many things I've learned already from this book, so many things that have made me laugh, tear up, etc. But I'll post only an example or two of each instance:

LAUGH:

"And, oh, the woes that traveling has inflicted on my digestive tract! In Lebanon I became so explosively ill one night that I could only imagine I'd contracted a Middle Eastern version of the Ebola virus. In Hungary, I suffered from an entirely different kind of bowel affliction, which changed forever the way I feel about the term "Soviet Bloc". But I have other bodily weaknesses, too. My back gave out on my first day of traveling in Africa, I was the only member of my party to emerge from the jungles of Venezuela with infected spider bites, and I ask of you - I beg of you! - who gets sunburned in Stockholm?! Really!?"

"Believe me, I am fully aware of the irony of going to Italy in pursuit of pleasure during a period of self-imposed celibacy. But I do think abstinence is the right thing for me at the moment. I was especially sure of it the night I could hear my upstairs neighbor having the longest, loudest, flesh-smackingest, bed-thumpingest, back-breakingest session of lovemaking I'd ever heard. This slam-dance went on for well over an hour, complete with hyperventilating sound effects and wild animal calls. I lay there only one floor below, alone and tired in my bed, and all I could think was, 'That sounds like an awful lot of work...'"

CRY:

"What I write in my journal tonight is that I am weak and full of fear. I explain that Depression and Loneliness have shown up, and I'm scared they will never leave. I say that I don't want to take the drugs anymore, but I'm frightened I will have to. I'm terrified that I will never really pull my life together. In response, a voice, something from within me arose and whispered to me: "I'm here. I love you. I don't care if you need to stay up crying all night long, I will stay with you. No matter how you fall and fail, I will love you through that. There's nothing you can ever do to lose my love. I will protect you until you die, and after your death I will still protect you. I am stronger than Depression and I am braver than Loneliness, and nothing will ever exhaust me."

So basically I am loving this book. Loving the journey. I can so relate, and I feel like in so many ways I am in the exact same place, the exact same season of life that she was in when she wrote it. Well, EXCEPT for the fact that I'm stuck in central Ohio and she spent 4 months of her journey in Italy eating amazing food and surrounded by ridiculously beautiful people. jealous... But still, I'm loving the journey.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Farewell

Sitting alone in a quiet, still room. A candle and a lamp lightly illuminate a soft glow around the dark room. Dark, clear night sky. Soft music playing, the words seem to pierce right to my heart. I slowly fall to the floor, wrap my arms around myself and a blanket -my sole companion this night- and overcome by...by what I don't know. By something, and a tear begins to fall.

-Something feels different tonight. Life seems different. Is it just me? Reflecting on my journey, I feel like I can almost see what's ahead -if I close my eyes just a little tighter... almost there... Yet at the same time it seems so distant. Was everything I've been through meant to bring me to this time, to this moment. Why does everything seem just as elusive as back then? Is this what I'm meant for, what I'm meant to become? Why do I feel so alone and lost during these moments? I wish I knew how to quit you...


"Farewell, so long 'cause
I was wrong I guess
Farewell, so long 'cause
I was wrong I confess

I miss the way you
I miss the way you danced with me
I miss the way you
I miss the way you danced with me

So farewell my love
'Cause I was wrong I guess
Farewell, so long
'Cause I was wrong I confess

I miss the way you
I miss the way you sing with me
I miss the way you
I miss the way you sing with me

I never asked you for
A sailboat in the yard
Or that fancy dress to wear
Or a ceiling made of stars
And all I got was just this
Broken heart from you"


[Rosie Thomas - Farewell]

Monday, March 8, 2010

"A turning point?" *REVISITED*

So, I was urged by several people to revisit my previous post "A turning point?" and maybe talk a little more about it. Apparently it was "too deep", "too vague".

Well, processing it a little more, in retrospect I think part of what I mainly wanted to communicate was that I'm just tired of seeing the Body of Christ invalidate, demean, and diminish the legitimacy of hurt, struggle, pain, LIFE. Christians love labels. We love to place big fat stickers on people and issues that say simply: "RIGHT", "WRONG", "YOU LOSE", or "WE WIN". They love to win arguments. To be right. And in doing so completely embody the antithesis of Jesus' approach to people. He came in "grace and truth". Seems to me like we're a little heavy on the "truth" and a little light with the "grace".

I'm just saying that people, issues, and life are more complex than the Body says they are. As one who lives amidst the complexity, I can say that it's time everyone else legitimizes the fact that there IS gray area. There is an in between place. And for God sake, it's time everyone stops cloaking their judgment, pointing fingers, and refusal to even try listening to the other side of the argument with that classic guise "oh, well the Bible is clear on this issue." Since when did the Bible nullify compassion?

I've met some amazing people lately. People who love God, and are trying to live for Him. But they're also people that a vast number of Christians would shy away from, would rebuke without first showing love and compassion simply because they DON'T UNDERSTAND them and their issue. -and their lack of understanding manifests into fear, and fear into righteous indignation. Call me a radical, but I believe Jesus would have more of an issue with THOSE people than with the ones they're judging.

And can we PLEASE actually have a courageous conversation about all this? I mean seriously, so often we start discussing and then the other side goes, "oh this is just too uncomfortable, too "deep". You just need to pray more or something..." -REALLY?! Are we just afraid that we MIGHT have to perhaps admit being wrong, admit there's more than the surface level?

I don't know. These are just my thoughts...

Thursday, March 4, 2010

A turning point?...

"They never tell you, truth is subjective.
They only tell you, not to lie.
They never tell you, there's strength in vulnerability.
They only tell you, not to cry.
They never tell you, you don't need to be ashamed.
They only tell you, to deny.
I'm finding something else to learn..."


-Gary Jules "Something Else"

I think if I waited any longer to write this post I was going to explode. Way too much on my mind and no time to decompartmentalize. I've had such an interesting past 2 weeks; so much happening in my life. So many new thoughts, questions, queries, confusion. I've felt very "in a fog" for much of these past 2 weeks. But at the same time, so much does seem clear. And there have been so many amazing moments, too.

As my last post describes, I've found a new community. New friends. And I love it. I truly do. They are wonderful, amazing people who love God and are trying to live for Him in this crazy life. Together we saw the film "Lord, Save Us From Your Followers". And wow, I was BLOWN AWAY. It's an incredible film for both Christians and non-Christians; but honestly, I think that Christians are the ones really in need of seeing it in some ways. It was about how the Gospel of Love is diving America. The "Culture War" between "conservative Christians" and the "godless liberal leftists" and issues like abortion, gay marriage, church and state, and poverty. It was EYE-OPENING, CONVICTING, CHALLENGING, HURTFUL, AND ENCOURAGING. So many incredible interviews and quotes (I was trying to remember EVERYTHING Tony Campolo said; it was profound). It's just got me thinking about a lot. Here's some great quotes from it:

>"It's too easy to sit back and criticize things you don't know about and much more difficult to search for truth - and, yes, I'm applying that to myself first."

>"And when I realized all my objections were fear-based, I tried to talk my mind into believing that there was something to this I just didn't understand yet...and the fear must be confronted. Maybe I'd understand later, but staying home because I was afraid of the unknown, afraid of the adventure, or really, afraid of what God might be trying to teach me, would not be acceptable."

>"Our tendency to reduce the gospel of Jesus to a couple of isolated issues, our willingness to oversimplify this complex life just so we can be right and win an argument is, as a smart person would say, antiethical to Jesus' teachings."

>"In First John it talks about how Jesus came in "truth and grace". Seems like we might be a little heavy on the "truth" and a little light with the "grace"."

>"It's hard to know what God's will is for us because our will kind of likes to run the show."

>"The only thing strident arrogance is good for is hardening hearts, fostering resentment, and creating animosity."


Secondly, I've been having so many of those moments where you're just in awe of what your life has become. Like, hanging out with these new friends, having amazing late-night vulnerable conversation, and driving home listening to music like Rosie Thomas - "All My Life" and Gary Jules - "Something Else", and thinking to myself, "wow, this is my moment. this is my life. how did i get here? what is to come of these new questions, new insights, new journey?... I don't know, but I do know that I do enjoy this. I love this journey, no matter how hard or confusing it is. And although I sometimes (or often times) don't understand God, myself, or my life, I will choose to live amidst the fog."

What's up with me and having these random 20s life crises?... Hmm. I just have realized some things about life. About people. And about myself. I'm not sure how I feel about it all yet, but I can't deny what I have learned is truth. Some people won't see it that way, but that's because it's not their reality. They'll never fully know. So, what lies ahead? Good question. I don't know. And I'm starting to not care. To not care about perceptions, persona, image, or a fantasized fairytale ending that I honestly don't see coming. I don't know...

"I've been waiting all my life,
Waiting for you to come.
I've been traveling and wandering
Alone on my own for too long.
I swear I tried to convince myself
It would be much easier being alone.
But after running circle after circle
I'm tired of being on my own.
I've been waiting all my life..."


-Rosie Thomas "All My Life"

That verse from that song really paints a clear picture of a lot of what I'm thinking and trying to get across, I think. I wonder if this will just be another one of those nights I write something like this and look back on it one year, two years, ten years from now and think: "huh, that was just a phase. just a weird night. now i'm here, passed that." --or is it more than that? is this a turning point? I guess we'll see...