Thursday, February 28, 2013

everything i do, i do for me

I crave self-dignity. Everything I do, I do for me. Even the spiritual acts, the kind words. Even the selflessness is twisted selfishness. I am deceitful and deceptive and utterly dishonest.

I spend my life in front of a mirror. I’ve perfected the self-serving angles and facial expressions. I’ve determined the lighting that will bring me the most self worth and self glory. I’ve realized that I can be beautiful in the eyes of everyone if I master just the right posture.
I self promote and self proclaim my own battle cries for self provision.
And I am good at it: Look at me! I am an amazing person! Praise me! Esteem me! Promote my glory!

Except that the mirror is lying to me and I am lying to you.
I am not good nor lovely nor perfect nor beautiful.
I have bloody scabs and rough wounds that clutter my soul. I walk around in a safety net, shadowing me from everyone else. I try my best to be impressive and polite but, in full honesty, I am concerned more with being well loved then by loving well.

If only there was another way. If only it were possible to rip that self-promoting mirror off the wall, point that heavy reflector away from me and at something truer. If only I could angle my mirror at someone fully selfless so that I reflected him instead of my own self worth. If only it were possible to locate such perfection of love and truth and honesty and echo it. If only...

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

again and again and again


I’m training for a half marathon this winter. I could stop right there, let you chew on that impressive sentence. Let you tell me I am hardcore. I’ve done one before, nearly nine years ago (so it barely counts) but the thing I didn’t forget about nine years ago and the thing I remember every time I head out for a run now is that it is hard. Running is hard. I’m not hardcore at all because my knees and hips and feet feel like I’m 95 years old as I run in boring, repetitive circles.
Everything in life goes in circles, in cycles too: weeks, seasons, menstrual cycles, love, life. That's not profound, but the repetitiveness calms me. The familiarity of my running shoes beats down rhythmically, poetically, predictably in each step, even though it’s boring and even though my 95 year old legs feel each repetitive step.
Left to right to left to right to left.
Spring is summer is fall is winter is spring.
Predictable contentedness is promised joy is poetic struggle is I’m-going-to-be-okay is rhythmic contentedness is joy again.
and again.
and again.
and again.

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

grace received, grace given

Mere minutes ago I was in the movie theater, watching “The Impossible”, the remarkable true story of a family that was caught in the devastating 2004 Tsunami while visiting Thailand for Christmas vacation. The story is emphatically wrenching but beautiful and highly recommended. Because I want you all to see it, I don’t want to give anything away. But, we all remember the terrifying images of that day, so it’s no secret that it would have been a terrible thing to experience firsthand.

After watching the recounting of this story, I feel wretched and battered. I am reminded at how completely we can lose everything: our lives, families, health, wealth. We walk on this tightrope of grace all our lives. We either receive it, or we don’t. But, it’s never deservedly so. Without just explanation, the reasoning, the rhythm and the luck of each of us wanes and rises, whether we seem to deserve it or not. Life floods each of us with opportunities for failure, for regret, for pain. Yet, so often we are spared. Not so that we go forth with bubbled, safe, sweet-tasting lives and avoid all pain, but that we have less agony than could have been.

As depressing as that sounds, I mean it as hope.

Something as abstract as grace is hard to appreciate with our noses pressed up hard against the glass. We are pressed so close to our struggle and pain that we miss how blatant and continuous we are spared from gross suffering. Not that we are spared always. But, we are spared often.

And with grace being offered to all of us so consistently, certainly we can do better to offer it more consistently as well. For, at the least, those people in our life deserve grace from us as little as we deserve it from anyone else.

Wednesday, February 06, 2013

snow

It truly is the best thing.

Flakes falling, painting the streets white, hushing the buzz of a hectic city, forcing cars and people to slow down, punishing those who don’t. Liberating school children and making children of us all. Snow is the best thing.

This past Saturday night was one of those lucky nights. I happily walked block after block as snowflakes fell against my face. The only thing stopping me from holding my permanent toothy smile as I walked through the night was that the cold wind hurt my exposed smiley teeth. So, I closed my lips. But inside, the grin stood firm, happy, full. I’ve always been that way. I’ve always held snow as my favorite thing.

Some people go to mountains or beaches or waterfalls to see the hand of God, to feel closer to him, to feel in his presence. For me, it is snow. I watch the winter forecasts hoping always for more snow. I’m greedy because I always want more. I’m angry when spring comes with perky flowers and intolerable warmth. And I’m furious when people complain about more snow.

But, in the perfect snowy moment, like this past Saturday night, I’m not fixed on the evil spring or awful snow haters. I’m fixed on the present miracle at hand: Flakes falling from the sky. I pull on my warm socks, my boots, my hat, my gloves, my coat, my scarf, my toothy grin and I’m off. The quiet is remarkable. I live in the city yet in the midst of the snow, I turn corner after corner to encounter a perfect dark hushed night. I hear the swoosh of my arms gliding back and forth. I hear the crunch underneath each boot step. I hear muffled breath from behind my scarf. I hear muddled thumps of flakes rhythmically hitting my hood and hat. I’m not even headed anywhere specific. I’m just headed. And, in this place, like nothing else, I feel ridiculously happy. And in those snowy moments, I feel like I’m headed directly into the arms of God.