Refining Fire

ForgingironsmrThe following is an excerpt from my newsletter from April 30, 2003, while I was serving overseas as a missionary. I re-read it the other night as I was looking through old files (hunting, of course, for something completely unrelated). However, the lesson God was teaching me at the time seems so relevant to what I experienced this past month.

Isn’t it crazy how I’m still struggling to learn the same lesson four years later! Yet, as I look back at what happened in that four years, the storm in my life that had been brewing for nearly a year at the time of this newsletter and then exploded with violent force just two months later, I realize how invaluable the insight in this newsletter was for me, and how it kept me deeply connected to God and confident of His presence through the darkest time of my life. Discovering that God truly wants to be not just my Savior or my God, but also my bosom friend created a new reality in me that continues to this day. What I said in that newsletter four years ago about God’s desires for our relationship have now, four years later, become reality.

Earlier in this newsletter I discussed a cd-rom project I was putting together to be used for advocacy and mobilization by the various unreached people group teams working in my region. I was at the point in the project of rewriting, revising, refining and polishing. As errors or problems were uncovered by my proofreading teammates testing the cd, I became increasing frustrated and discouraged, struggling constantly with a worry that I would never get the cd-rom "right".

I have seen this process repeating itself in my walk with Christ lately, as He points out the inconsistencies, clutter and messiness of my heart, and works to move me from a woman of average character toward one of strength and godliness. I am so grateful for His deep love, and His longing to see me become who He knows I can be! But I have to tell ya, there are many days I feel overwhelmed and frustrated. And l often wonder if I’ll ever get it right.

In my failure and frustration, however, I have seen God pursue me with unbelievable abandon. The more time I spend with Him, the more I realize I’ve been missing the point of my refining fires for far too many years.

While He is very concerned about my character and desires to refine it; and while life isn’t ultimately about me and what I can “do” for God, what I have learned lately is that the ultimate purpose of the refining fires in my life is to draw me into a deeply intimate relationship with Him. He longs to be my most intimate companion, my bosom friend, as Anne Shirley would say; the first one I want to talk to in the morning and the last one I want to hear from at night, the first one I call when something amazing happens and the one I turn to when the unthinkable occurs. He is relentlessly pursuing me, in a way no hero in any romantic story could ever come close to! And He has made it clear He will never give up.

I admit, this all sounds so “me-centered” and writing this felt almost arrogant. But I have experienced the reality of it. Truthfully, I cannot fathom why the Awesome God of the Universe, who could have anything or anyone His heart desired, would choose me. But I am so grateful He has!

DNFTEC

Years ago, long before the creation of the World Wide Web, when the Internets was still an idea stirring in Al Gore’s brain, I belonged to an online community established using General Electric’s company mainframe.  GEnie had bulletin boards and chat rooms dedicated to people crazy enough to use a modem in their computer, dial in to a local node, and converse with people they didn’t know in person about a vast array of topics. I used to hang out in the SFRT (Science Fiction/Fantasy Round Table) boards, mainly in the Star Trek topics.  Yes, I am a geek. Geek1 This is not news.

At any rate, I learned an important principle during my time on GEnie, called DNFTEC. "Do Not Feed The Energy Creature." The principle is borne from the reality that there are certain people in the virtual world who feed off the negative energy of others. They are strengthened and invigorated through other’s anger or frustration and through choleric exchanges with people even if they don’t personally engage every stormy response. As long as they can invoke outrage and vexation to the point that someone responds in kind they are happy. To that end they intentionally "flame" a thread (create conflict) by bringing up hot-button topics or just plain picking a fight.

It works incredibly well. You’d think we humans would be smart enough to stay out of pointless arguments and debates, but you’d be surprised (or not) how quickly you can get sucked in by an Energy Creature. All they have to do is find the right button in your head — or heart — and, boom!, you are screaming mad and using words you thought your mom had expunged from your vocabulary way back in grammar school when she made you spend two hours with a lovely bar of Lava soap in your mouth.

It took me a while to get what it really means to "not feed the energy creature" but finally I understood. The only way to "win" with ECs is to just not play. Don’t answer. Don’t respond. Don’t take the bait. Just let their comments hang out there alone where everyone can see their futility, their ugliness and even their cruelty.

It’s taking me a lot longer to understand that perhaps the same principle applies to dealing with the ECs out here in the real world. But out here it’s simply called "Healthy Boundaries."

I have just said a word that tends to set the Christian world on end. Boundaries, healthy or not, are so often vilified by Christians because they can appear to others, especially those prone to co-dependency, to be quite selfish, self-serving, and even unfeeling, mean-spirited and unChrist-like. We Christians are supposed to be open and loving, allowing others into our hearts, not closed and holding others at a distance. Boundaries too often sound much more like an electric fence or concrete wall than the God-honoring self-defining borders healthy ones really are. And indeed, unhealthy boundaries, often are electric fences and concrete walls that hold people at a distance. Or they are floppy, wet-noodle sort of things that move all over the place, never providing any real protection or consistency. I have friends who’s boundaries are so large that you have to scale six huge stone walls, cross three very deep crocodile-infested moats separated by miles of tall-grass fields and remember on which side of the rickety drawbridge it’s safe to step ("walk on the left side!") just to get to know them. But then they turn around and let the skankiest, cruelest people of the opposite sex right in to the center of their heart and let them rule.

Healthy boundaries aren’t floppy or nearly that big (think more suburban neighborhood than kingdom). They are like picket fences with gates or backyard wooden slat fences just tall enough to protect but not too tall for neighborly conversation (think Wilson from "Home Improvement"). There’s room for interaction  over the fence, and others can come and go into both my yard and my home. Yet who I am and what I allow/how I expect you to treat me are clearly defined and immovable. My gates can be shut and locked should you refuse to treat me with the kindness and respect I deserve. We can still have good conversation and friendship over the fence, you’re just not allowed in to my private sanctuary places because you’ve proved I cannot trust you.

I’m still working on this whole concept of healthy boundaries and making it a reality in my life. I didn’t grow up with them. I grew up in a boundary-less family where I learned that everyone but me has a "right" to define me. It’s taking me a while to understand that’s not at all the way God intended. I’m also discovering that until I define and build my healthy boundaries, I have a hard time respecting yours. I think this is why I have always had such a hard time not feeding the Energy Creatures.

Some people just need chaos/drama in their life. Have you noticed that? I don’t get that – because I hate chaos. But there are some people I’ve run across in my life that just seem drawn to it and if they go very long without encountering it, they’ll create it themselves. They love to suck you into their vortex of chaos/drama, tie you up in some argument and guilt you into apologizing and "reconciling." If it’s not you this time, then it’s someone else in their life, but you’re still sucked into the drama through their constant recounting of their emotional stress and trauma.

What’s wild is they seem to be at their thriving best through it all; as if all that chaos and drama brings out their strengths… or that the only time they can be who they truly are and feel good about themselves is when they are embroiled in chaos, drama or conflict. So they continuously sabotage and destroy the relationships and successes in their own lives to feed that need.

For years my co-dependent tendencies kept me from seeing that the chaos/drama/conflict in some friends lives was in fact created by that very person, and not just life getting out of control. Several years of intense counseling (at least it feels intense to me) and working to understand and change my own hurtful/harmful patterns has made me a lot more sensitive to the harmful ones in others. For this I both thank God and cry out to Him, "why???" Because now I can clearly see how some friends sabotage themselves on a regular basis. I desperately want them to stop but I cannot do anything about it.

I cannot just run from these people either — though perhaps prudence would strongly advise it — because I love them dearly. But I also cannot let their chaos continue to wreak havoc in my own life. So the only thing I know to do is develop healthy, durable boundaries that lets them continue on in their cycles of chaos as long as they so desire, but keeps the chaos off my lawn and out of my house. It sounds so simple. Doing it, however, has been the hardest thing in my life.

Online Energy Creatures can be ignored when they spew their drama, but EC friends cannot be. They get in your face and demand attention. Learning to walk away from arguments, to not perpetuate their drama by responding in kind; learning to say, "I’m sorry you feel that way" and mean it — to truly be sad that they feel the way they do and not just angry that they refuse to listen; learning to state clearly how I expect to be treated and not treated, saying "this is unacceptable"; learning to guard my heart, holding these people at  an arm’s length, even though I love them deeply, so that my heart and soul are protected from getting tangled up in their chaos and drama — these tools are helping me. They are some of the pieces of re-setting boundaries and holding those boundaries as sacred, even in the face of hurtful accusations of selfishness. This, I think, is the real-life way to "not feed the Energy Creatures."

Happy Anniversary…

Sassysamathastarbucksm
…to me! One year ago today I found my Sassy (full name: Sassy Samantha Starbuck — the triple-S threat! — after two of my favorite women television characters). You can read about the adventure here, here and here.

…AND to my beautiful, passionate sister, Nina, and her amazing
Ninatoby_3
husband, Toby. They were married on a  gorgeous South Carolina spring day 15 years ago. I got to be there and witness their union as the Maid of Honor and I don’t think any of us Everett girls (except maybe my oldest sister, Paula, who always manages to hold it together in public) had a dry eye during the ceremony. I think mom started the water works, and once I looked at her, I was done.

I have to admit, my tears were quite selfish. It felt for all the world to me like I was losing my best friend. Our relationship would never be the same. That last part is true, but thanks to God and Nina, the first part never was. Our friendship has just grown deeper through the years. I am so proud and so honored to call her not just "sister" but one of my best friends.

Congrats on 15 wonder-filled adventurous years, sis!! And here’s to the next 50+! 🙂

The Most Important vs. The Not-So-Important

Where do we draw the line on publicly memorializing the dead, or whom do we memorialize? How do we choose who’s honored and who’s not?

My friends KatRose and Marti have brought up some very solid, valid points in their comments about public grieving. I thought to address them in the comment section, but felt they deserve a post of their own.

KatRose hits the core of what I’ve been thinking when she says,

I’m not suggesting we shouldn’t feel for the people directly and indirectly involved. But is it justified to have a national moment of silence for the dead when the vast majority of us have never been to VT, met a single student or even were aware of the college until this happened? I feel badly for the families and friends of the dead. I feel awful that the school has to deal with the emotional, mental and financial aftermath of this gunman’s handiwork. But is flying flags at half-mast (which was happening all over Vegas and LA this week), something that should be done for a localized event?

I have to say I heartily agree. I feel so sad for all involved too. But what was the deal with President Bush ordering flags to be at half staff all week? At first I thought it was just my company, because one of our own had a child wounded in the shooting (and that shows you how much I notice flags outside my own work campus). I thought it was a kind gesture, even though that co-employee lives in Virginia. However, on Friday I noticed the flag at the Post Office also flying at half staff. Shouldn’t that be reserved for dignitaries, veterans, soldiers and true heroes?

I don’t mean to make light of the students who died or were wounded, but I’ve yet to hear any stories of true heroism among them. Most just didn’t have the time to react, or were just trying desperately to escape. What’s happening in Iraq and Afghanistan every single day, that’s heroism. Soldiers going into dangerous neighborhoods in order to root out the enemy and restore peace, driving down dangerous roads littered with road-side bombs in order to provide a fighting chance for those who really desire democracy, and crawling into burning vehicles, risking their very lives to save the life of just one fallen comrade. The VT shootings are tragic, yes, but they are not so tragic nor heroic to warrant our national symbol lowered to the mourning position. if we’re going to do it for them, then why not all the other school violence? Domestic violence every day? Every officer killed in the line of duty every day? Do you see what I mean? Lowering our national flag is supposed to mark a significant national loss, not individual tragedies. 

Indeed, even soldiers are wondering what’s going on. One soldier took the time to write an opinion piece questioning why Bush would order the flags lowered for students of what now looks for all the world like a random act of violence done by a very sick individual, but states will not lower it for the soldiers from their state who die protecting our rights to freedom (and flag lowering) every single day. What gives?

Marti brings up another issue that’s even closer to my heart: people who are hurting, and our international mission/purpose as a Community of followers of Jesus.

…at a church retreat this weekend they had us read out the names of the kids who died. Thirty-some senseless deaths… but are they more tragic than others? I felt the same twinge I’d felt at the office, trying to decide if we needed to pray about the Virginia situation, instead, when I had prepared stuff for us to pray about regarding the significant religious persecution going on in Ethiopia and Nigeria; more believers have been martyred in both places recently. (emphasis mine)

A church has daily updates on the kid with cancer while nobody notices the old woman wasting away in depression. Or worse, bitterness. Not so cuddly.

So: what gets attention, what does not, is not fair, is not even.

What is it that causes us to be more moved by students killed in a random act of violence than the thousands killed purposely and specifically because of their religious beliefs? The former is just tragic, while the latter is an abomination that ought to stir some semblance of righteous anger within us. Hopefully enough to do something.

Church, what is it about us/in us that we  are more apt to pray for a boy with cancer than search for, pray for and walk beside the bitter woman struggling with depression? Why are we more apt to pray for people hurting in another state than we are for our own persecuted brothers and sisters in another country?

What are we reminding ourselves of when we "read out the names of the kids who died"? What purpose does that serve, really? Yeah, okay, God can use anything to bring our attention back to Himself. But It seems to me all we’re doing with that is reminding ourselves of our own mortality, rather than turning our attention toward God. Shouldn’t we, instead, be reminding ourselves of our responsibilities before God to the world? Look, I’m not talking about America here. At least not in the America The Nation sense. I’m talking about followers of Christ who by living here in America have been given incredible blessings from God when He determined this time and this place in history for us to be born.

"From one man he made every nation of men, that they should inhabit the whole earth; and he determined the times set for them and the exact places where they should live. God did this so that men would seek him and perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from each one of us."  Acts 17:26-27 (emphasis mine)

We, the community of followers of Jesus in the US, have been chosen and determined by God to be Americans at this very time. Appointed by God, ya’ll! That’s huge! Do you get it? He. Chose. Us. Why? Beats the hell outa me. We ain’t nothing special. But here we are. And with great privilege and blessing comes great responsibility.

We have responsibility to speak out about the suffering of our brothers and sisters around the world, to remind each other daily of our blessings and of their need, to do something about it and to pray fervently and continuously for them. It may sound like a piddly, weak-hearted thing, but sometimes the greatest gift you could give someone is your fervent continual prayers. I cannot explain to you how it works – and this post is not the place to try – but I know from experience that prayer really does unleash God’s healing redeeming saving power on those who are the focus of your prayer.

We don’t need to remind each other of our own mortality. That is made far too obvious to all of us in the everyday minutia of our lives. It is so easy for me to get so sucked into picking lint out of my own navel! I don’t need encouragement from my spiritual Family to do more of that. What I do need is continual reminders that there is life outside Lu’s Little World. I need to step into a moment like the one Marti led and hear about my fellow followers of Jesus who are dying because of their unwavering commitment to Him.

And lets step out of religiosity for a moment… I need to be reminded there are children dying every day in Sudan, running for their very lives and praying for just one night of peaceful uninterrupted sleep. There are whole families dying from lack of food and potable water in Ethiopia and Somalia, ethnic groups persecuted and oppressed in China, parents fearing for their lives and the lives of their children in war-ravaged Iraq, innocent people dying in suicide bombings all over the world, women bought sold and horribly abused as sex slaves in Thailand, survivors of the tsunami still struggling to survive in Indonesia, families still living in squaller in New Orleans nearly two years after Katrina… The list goes on and on. I need to be reminded of these things. I need someone to tell me to get my head out of my ass and pay attention to the world, otherwise I will spend the rest of my life contemplating my own colon. And let me tell you, that is not a beautiful, life-affirming, God-honoring thing.

It’s part of the job of Leadership to steer us, focus us, on the Most Important and teach us by example and prodding to let go of the Not So Important. When someone is hurting, to them that is Most Important, and often they feel it needs to be most important to everyone. Indeed, to others around them it rightly ought to be. But as a whole community, whether we speak of our national community or our spiritual community, that individual hurt may not be The Most Important. We need leaders who can discern what is Most Important and can gently but firmly, with compassion for the individual hurts, keep us focused on that. Bush used to be that kind of leader. I think he slipped up here.

But Marti — well in you, my friend and once-leader, I have such great faith and confidence. You are a discerning and wise leader. Grief may cloud your personal vision right now, but God guides you even when you aren’t aware. I have no doubt you were able to determine His desire for that moment, and that God honored your willingness to wrestle with the question of what is Most Important.

A Time To…

Nearly 4 years ago I lost both my parents within 6 days of each other. A few days later my overseas missionary team, which was highly dysfunctional to begin with, began a painful implosion, and I made a choice a few months later to stay home and get healthy rather than go back overseas and serve in my emotionally crippled state. In just a few short months I had lost my parents, my sense of "family", my job, my home, my career and my dreams. I was devastated. And my life was decimated.  I was told by three different counselors that I had enough losses tallied up to "send me to Mars and back," or at least to a loony-bin for a bit. One of them at least still seems to marvel that I was still walking and talking and functioning in the world at that point.

I think have a pretty good idea what grief is.

Over at Kat Coble’s blog-house there’s a discussion on public grief going on. Kat (both of the Kats in my life, actually) is always good at making me think. I guess this is why she won the Thinking Blogger Award. Doh. At any rate, Kat honestly asked, Does grief now need to be public in order to be real?

What a powerful, meaty question.

I have watched the public response to the Virginia Tech tragedy with a mix of curiosity and sadness. As someone who’s lost loved ones (I kinda dislike the triteness of that phrase, but it serves me well here), I know all to well the agony the next year holds for the families and friends of the dead. But truthfully I feel more pain and sorrow for my boss, who just unexpectedly lost his mom, than I do for the strangers in Virginia. Its not that I don’t feel for them or have compassion for their loss. Its just that I’m not connected to them. And therein lies my curiosity with the public grief currently sweeping the nation over this tragedy. What is it that causes us human beings to be swept up in other’s emotions?  And must grief now be public to truly be grief? If we don’t grieve publicly, does it mean we are unfeeling, disconnected and cold?

I struggled with the question of public grief a lot at the time of my parents’ deaths because in the beginning I felt only moments of agony (grief) followed by long stretches of blissful quiet nothingness. Because I didn’t cry at their memorial services I thought there must something really, really wrong with me — aren’t you supposed to cry at your parents funerals?? I began to be convinced I must be shamefully disconnected from my own self and emotions. Turns out I was, but without the shame. It’s called the “shock” stage of grief and it is a blessed, blessed thing to which I sometimes wish I could briefly revisit.

Anyway… I’ve since realized that I can no more predict how I will react in the face of painful, terrible loss than I can predict the weather in Tennessee. Nothing is normal so everything is normal.

The movie “The Queen” addresses this issue of public versus private grief in such a powerful way. It really made me re-think how I looked at the Royal Family during the public mourning of Diana’s death. And it reminded me of how most of my own grief has been quite blessedly private.

In just the last decade our country has had many reasons to mourn. Columbine, September 11th, the Iraq War, and now the Virginia Tech shootings, just to name a few. We’ve had a good deal of tragedy. Yet realistically, our parents and grandparents had much, much more. Vietnam, JFK’s assassination, Martin Luther King’s assassination, Korea, World War II, the Depression, World War I… And that’s just the national ones. There are countless other more personal, private tragedies for each one of them, made all the worse from ours by the lack of medical technologies and psychological understandings. Us Gen-Xers and Y-ers and the Boomers just haven’t had life all that tough in comparison.

Yet we seem to be the most melodramatic when it comes to public grief. Don’t we? I’m not saying our parents and grandparents didn’t publicly grieve. I’m saying we have a tendency to be so much more morbidly fascinated with and compelled to grieve publicly for people we do not know than they were. And I rather feel that most of what I see today in the way of public grieving is more of either an emotional mob mentality grief, or a misplaced focus of grief.

What I mean by the first is like what you see in preschool when one kid is really crying out of hurt or fear and the rest of the group follows suit.  It’s not that the other kids are faking it (if you’ve had to deal with this lovely phenomena, you know they’re not!), its just that the first child’s pain is so real and powerful that the rest become frightened to tears by the possibility that something that bad is coming for them too and the only way they know how to respond is to cry hysterically.

You see this with high school girls too. I remember some kid at my high school, not horrendously popular but known, died in a car crash (involving drunk driving) and the next day nearly every single girl on campus (and a surprisingly large amount of guys) all crying hysterically very publicly for the next couple of weeks. The school even called in a grief counselor to help get things back under control. Now, this was a school of several thousand students. My graduating class alone was around 1400, so even if this guy was Mr.-King-of-popularity – which he most definitely was NOT – that many girls could not have known him personally enough to be driven mad with grief by his death.

Sometimes the power of someone’s grief touches some wound, some fear or some pain at the core of who we are. We cannot identify that thing that was touched, we only know the touching caused searing pain or overwhelming fear and we respond with powerful emotions of our own, that others and often we ourselves mistake for grief.

What I mean by the second is that all too often we in America (or perhaps its all of western society) are, I think, convinced grief is about the people we lose whether we know them or not when nothing could be further from the truth. Grief is not about them, it is about us. It’s about what WE have lost. We grieve for ourselves and how our lives will never be the same because of what we have lost.

Nor is grief limited to people. It’s also about dreams, jobs, careers, homes, cities and towns, places, things, ideals… anything we have lost that deeply meant something to us. So many things in our lives die and deserve to be properly grieved! Yet I think people in America these days feel we cannot grieve over anything but people.

So our national grief over September 11th, became more about the people who died rather than what we truly lost as individuals and collectively as a nation. What tragedy! What a way to compound tragedy. What we who didn’t know anyone in the Towers lost as individuals was our sense of security, our sense of safety in our own homes, workplaces and towns, our sense of immortality, our innocence of the realities of war…. But because it’s socially unacceptable to grieve these seemingly selfish and trivial things when thousands have lost parents, siblings, spouses, children, lovers and dear friends, we take our grief and (mis)place it onto people we don’t know and claim we mourn their loss.

Aw, come on people! We need to grieve what WE lost. I wept bitterly over September 11th because I lost a great deal. No, I didn’t lose someone I loved, but dang, I lost the nation I thought I lived in! I lost the state of security and safety I thought existed around me. I lost my ability to trust foreigners – and I HATE that! You lost a great deal too. And even though the Virginia Tech shootings don’t have the national impact that September 11th did, there are still countless parents who suddenly lost any sense of safety for their children in college and students lost a sense of safety and stability in their college lives. Those are things worth grieving. And when we deny ourselves that time, and worse yet, deny we are truly grieving for those things by claiming our grief is for the dead, we rob ourselves of the chance to heal from that tragedy.

That is not to say that we don’t grieve with the families who lost people they loved in the Towers, or at the University this week. We feel for them; we feel sadness and empathy for the loss of the ones they love in their lives. BUT What we grieve personally is whatever we personally, intimately lost in that tragedy, and for most of us it isn’t people.

I think another thing we grieve but (mis)place onto anonymous people, is our loss/lack of deep connection with others. Stay with me here a moment…. What I saw in those girls back in high school was a desperate need to feel connected to something or someone in a deep way, perhaps even just to feel something real period. I don’t think we have that really anymore in our society. Oh, everybody wears their "feelings on their sleeves", yet very few really have truly deep relationships, ones where feelings can be expressed without fear.

There is something about detailed knowledge of someone that causes us to feel connected to them, and can deceive us into believing we are more connected to people than we really are. We are so informed about the lives of people we don’t even know that we have pictures and minute details of the last time they shaved their head and went a little nuts, and it makes us feel like we know them. But we don’t. So of course when we know just as much detail about the people around us, we think we must have a deep connection with them – because after all, if we have a connection to Britney and we don’t even know her, we must have a DEEP connection with those we know (for some odd reason in our society knowledge = relationship. How messed up is that?).  Too often the connections in our lives don’t satisfy us; more often than not they are superficial at best, and not deep as we suppose them to be.

The made-public death of a fellow-anything (student, co-worker, artist, etc), reminds our souls of that deep longing for real connection, real satisfying relationships, and grief over our own dissatisfaction bubbles to the surface. The current love-affair with public grieving gives us a free pass to cry and scream and get hysterical (to feel, in other words) as well as a safe way to grieve our own loss/lack of deep relationships without appearing self-centered in a moment of such tragedy for others.

Grief is so unpredictable. It sneaks up on you and bites you in the butt when you least expect it. It shows itself in public sometimes in ways that does not look at all like grief and other times reveals its true fire in private moments of agony. Sometimes it looks like sorrow, sometimes it looks like depression, sometimes it looking like a angry raging lunatic hell-bent on revenge, or at least a piece of somebody’s ass to chew off. And then, sometimes things that look like grief are not really grief at all. Fear especially loves to masquerade as grief, because it gets a lot more attention and acceptance that way.

I can’t say why all the people are crying over the shootings at Virginia Tech right now. But I have to wonder what it was in this incident that tapped into hidden losses and fears. For me it’s another reminder of all the losses in my life and my deep-rooted fear of losing someone or something else. Thankfully, my own pain and fears haven’t given me much grief over this whole tragedy (they’ve been deeply fixed on another, but that’s another post). But the huge public reaction – including my company opening up a meeting room for people to view the televised Memorial Service – does really intrigue me as I watch others struggle through the powerful emotions this incident brought forth.

Battle Lamp Needed, Inquire Within

I had the oddest dream this morning. I dreamt that there was a Civil War re-enactment of the Battle of Nashville going on, and it was happening all around my house. I was too busy getting ready for work to realize it at first, but when I finally figured out why there was all this louding booming and banging going on outside, I went outside to watch. By then, however, the most exciting parts were over and it was just little skirmishes here and there — and "dead" bodies lying everywhere. Still, it was fun to be a "part" of it all and I couldn’t wait to tell my friends that my house stood in the middle of an old Civil War battlefield.

During the heaviest part of the battle, some soldiers came in needing to borrow a floor lamp and walked out with one of my favorites. I found it later and brought it back, glad it wasn’t too worse for wear, but still…

What was that about?!?!

News Links Randomness

So where’s Los Angeles on this list of worst drivers? It ain’t there!! See, I knew it all along! This article proves that LA drivers are not crazy or "the worst", it’s all the idiot out-of-town drivers from South Carolina, Missouri and Tennessee that screw it up for everyone. I feel completely justified now in my frustration with Nashville drivers.

I can’t decide whether to say, "it’s about time!" or "too little too late" regarding Pac Man’s suspension from the NFL. One the one hand I’m glad he’s finally no longer getting away with murder on and off the field; finally he’s getting called on the carpet for his atrocious behavior. On the other hand, one year?!?!? Only one year?!?! Come on, guys. His career should be over. Honestly, this should have happened last year. — You know, I’d be a Titan fan if it weren’t for Pac Man. I can’t stand to watch the team when he plays. Even if he plays well I know eventually he’ll screw it up by letting his temper get the best of him. He needs some serious help and the Titans weren’t doing right by him by continuing to employ him and allowing him to play without consequence. At least the NFL has the compassion and wisdom to require counseling for the dude. He needs it. As for the Titans, they need to fire Jones and use his huge salary to get some consistently good players. I hope the Titans kick butt and take names this season, and prove to the owners they don’t need the expense of Pac Man Jones to have a quality, winning team. —- Of course, this comes from a girl who knows little to nothing about how NFL teams work. I just like the game.

This is so sad. I have to admit, I never paid attention to Johnny Cash while he was alive, and didn’t know much about him at all until I watched "Walk the Line". Even now I’m not a huge fan but I appreciate his music, his legacy and his heart. To hear people talk about this house, its as if it was as much a part of Johnny’s legacy as his music. I’d heard Barry Gibb was planning to turn at least part of it into a Cash museum kind of thing and that’s part of why they were renovating it. Anyway, I feel bad for everyone involved. It kind of feels like we’ve lost a piece of American history. —- Not to mention the teenage-rabid-Bee Gees-fan in me was desperate for some Barry Gibb sitings around town. Looks like that ain’t gonna happen any time soon.

Yeah, but can he carry other states? Or at least enough to win against Hillary or Obama? I like Fred Thompson as an actor, and I wish I’d lived here when he was a senator so I could judge his politics. But as much as I like him, I worry that even if he gets the nomination, he won’t be electable. I need a whole lot more information about his platform before I can get on this boat. — And by the way, what the—is this little gem from the Tennessean?

When former vice president and Tennessean Al Gore is added to the list of declared and potential candidates, Clinton’s lead slipped to 28 percent to Gore’s 25 percent.

Has Tennessee lost its collective mind?!?!? He’s out of Tennessee politics for a few years and you forget what an idiot he is (can you say the 2000 debates? sure you can! Here’s a good site to remind you, in case you forgot)? Come on, Tennessee, he didn’t even carry his own state in 2000. Don’t get stupid now just because Hollywood is slobbering mad for him. He hasn’t changed.

Finally, I am so sick of this story. When, I ask you, when will it finally go away?? I didn’t care about Anna Nicole’s life when she was alive, I certainly don’t care about it now that she’s dead. Can we please let her and all her drama rest in peace and actually get back to real news??? — On a side note, however, I feel so very sad for this little girl. She is gonna have some major abandonment and trust issues, with all this crap that’s gone on around her during such a crucial bonding time in her little life. As a woman whose mom was struggling with depression and incredible fear of her husband dying in Vietnam during the first 8 months of her life, and who didn’t see her dad for the first 8 months, only to have him leave again for a year when I was maybe 2 (I really can’t remember), I get how all this chaos, depression and loss is impacting her little soul. It breaks my heart.

I feel like a dork. Here I thought I was blogging on the "latest news" only to finally catch up on my reading over at Nashville is Talking and discover I’m nearly 12 hours behind the rest of Nashville. Such is the life of a full time career-girl/student, who spends her days buried in PowerPoint presentations and her nights buried in the books.

Yet Another Inane American Idol Post

I’m so disappointed in even my favorites tonight. Everyone was so
focused on getting the rhythm and dance moves right that they
completely neglected the meaning of the songs.

Latin music isn’t just
about the beat. It’s about the heart. Latinos/Latinas feel deeply (believe me, I have friends) and it all comes out in their music. No one got that tonight. No one. Even Melinda was off. Blake probably came the closest, but even he lacked the passion needed to carry it off. And Lakisha, good grief! Stop wearing those halter dresses, girlfriend. Your back-fat was flappin’ all over the place. Oh, and as to the music, yep, you had the moves down, but completely lacked any passion in your face or eyes. Maybe you need to spend a week on America’s Next Top Model. Let Tyra show you all her "fierce" face moves.

The worst performances were Haley, Jordin, and of course, Sanjaya. But of course, we all know the latter won’t be going home, so I predict the bottom two will be Jordin and Hayley, with perhaps Hayley finally going home.

Nashville is Wasted On Me

Today we apparently followed Tim & Faith — as in THE Tim (McGraw) & Faith (Hill) — for a bit as they drove home (??) in their boxy SUV from…somewhere and we headed to lunch.

I say "we" because I was with my friends Alex and Natalie, in their car.

I say "apparently" because I never actually saw Tim&Faith (you must say it as if it were one name, and as if they are friends of yours) because I was in the back seat, and Natalie said, "Oh! That was Tim and Faith," in such a casual yet happy way as if they were friends of her and Alex, that I indeed thought she was just talking about friends, so I didn’t bother to crane my neck to try to catch a glimpse.

And I say "home" with a question mark because I have no idea where they live but they did drive to a huge home with a big gate that just swung open for them without them having to stop to explain who they were to some faceless person on the other end of an intercom. So either it was their home or somebody’s got really sucky security.

Oh, and don’t bother asking me what the address or street name was. I think we were in Belle Meade, but since I wasn’t driving I wasn’t paying one bit of attention to street names and such. I was too busy having property envy (I desperately want to own my own 5-10 acres of tree-covered land), picking out my future home and negotiating with God for a husband who could afford to buy it for me (I certainly can’t do it!).

See, this is so sad. I live in an exclusive neighborhood, down the street from Leanne Rimes, or so I’m told. I frequent Fido and Bongo Java (Belmont) and Starbucks (okay, so I have a chai tea addiction, back off), go to church in Franklin and shop in Brentwood and Green Hills. You gotta know these are all places where country stars and Christian musicians frequent, or live, or whatnot. I’m sure many of them have passed me or stood in front of or behind me, perhaps even tapped me on the shoulder —- and I never knew! Movie people I know. Television people I know. But musicians? Don’t have a clue. Even the ones I know what they look like I miss because I don’t think to look for them. I wouldn’t even figure out it was them if they introduced themselves. Nashville is so wasted on me.

For Me

I grew up in church. I heard all the Bible stories while still in the womb. By the time I was old enough to know my ABCs I also knew that Easter was when we celebrated Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection. Still, my Easters were filled with coloring hard-boiled eggs, eating large chocolate bunnies and egg hunts in a neighbor’s yard. Pretty much your average minister-kid’s Easter. As an adult, Easter was still filled with baskets of candy and big family dinners, but I graduated from egg-hunter to egg-hider. Otherwise, all else was the same. I sang joyous songs and celebrated Jesus’ death and resurrection. And I praised and thanked Him for saving all of us from eternity in hell and to an Abundant Life.

Then my parents died. Holidays are never the same after someone you love dies. I hid for the first three years, going to church only because either I had to serve, or it was expected. This Easter, however, slapped me in the face a few weeks ago and awoke me to the fact that I didn’t have a connection to this particular holiday anymore. Sure, I know the "reason for the season," to borrow a phrase from Christmas (I’m sure it won’t mind) but that reason no longer resonates deep in my heart. Maybe it never really did, I don’t know any more.

I recently discovered I’m not alone in my sense of disconnection and that got me to wondering how many people plaster on smiles on Easter Sunday and lift up their hands in hollow praise in some vain attempt to convince themselves they feel the joy of Easter. —Yeah, maybe my drama queen nature is overstating that a bit… but I wonder…

Today I struggled with the decision to go to church. At first I decided I wasn’t going, because really didn’t want to go. But then I chose to go. My reason may sound odd to some. I chose to go because I love Jesus and I felt that He would want me to go to a celebration of Him. As I went I asked Him to help me connect to the meaning of this day in my heart, not just in my head.

The music made me cry — no it wasn’t because it was bad, sheesh ya’ll! — It struck something deep within me that’s still resonating in my soul like a tuning fork. The songs weren’t anything special, just worship songs but something just kept ringing inside. Jeff’s sermon was very good, but there was no "ah-ha!" moment and I began to despair that I would never feel the joy others seem to have for this holiday. I felt overwhelmed as I sat listening to the worship team sing "I know my Redeemer lives…."

That’s when I felt Him touch me. I’d heard Him talking to me all morning; little things like "I’m still here." "Do you want to go?" and stuff. But as I sat there, head bowed, He came and knelt beside me, wrapped His arms around me and began telling me how He’d seen me in that moment, sitting there crying, when He was on the cross. "Your face was before me throughout it all. The stings of the whips digging into me, the long walk carrying the cross, the nails and the hanging there. All that time I saw you. I saw your life. I saw all those moments you struggled, that you were in pain, that you cried out in desperation for someone to save you from the things that were crushing you." He was as close to my ear as I thought anyone or anything could get, holding me close. I could practically feel His breath on my ear as He spoke. "I saw you. I saw your heart. I saw all of you. And you are the reason I did all that, why I endured all that. I got through it by seeing your face and knowing what it would do for you. I did it for you. Just you. Because I love you."

I started to protest, to point out that there were other people there in that theater that He died for too, and that in fact needed Him more than I did and that I didn’t want to—that I knew I shouldn’t "hog" His time. He told me, "forget about everyone else. That’s none of your concern. I’m here with you. This is our time. You and me. This is about you. I did all this for you. Just for you."

I don’t understand that kind of love. Oh, I can understand Jesus dying for YOU. Or for all of us. But for me alone? Me all by myself? As an individual? No. I don’t deserve that kind of love. I don’t even know if I really believe in that kind of love. And maybe that’s why I’m having such a hard time with this. I cannot believe anyone would love me this way. I don’t do anything in my life, ever to deserve it. Even as a follower of Jesus, I screw up on a daily basis and do stuff I know is wrong, that hurts Jesus, for no other reason than because I want to. Why in the world would anyone go through all that bloody agony and death just for me??? No one would. Because I’m not worth it.

Yet Jesus persists and insists He did. He keeps saying He did it all just for me. Just for me.

Maybe I’m confusing the Good Friday feelings with Easter, but I can’t help it. I don’t feel that joy that I saw most everyone else display  today. I feel overwhelmed. I cannot stop crying whenever I think about my morning with Jesus and what He said to me. Maybe some day I’ll be able to have real joy over all this. Right now I’m just too blown away by it all to bounce off the walls. I can only sit in wonder, and cry, that someone would go through all that just for me.