Thursday, February 21, 2008

I have nothing else to hope for

Sometimes I believe all the lies
So I can do the things I should despise
And every day I am swayed
By whatever is on my mind

I hear it all depends on my faith
So I'm feeling precarious
The only problem I have with these mysteries
Is they're so mysterious

And like a consumer I've been thinking
If I could just get a bit more
More than my 15 minutes of faith,
Then I'd be secure

(Chorus)
My faith is like shifting sand
Changed by every wave
My faith is like shifting sand
So I stand on grace

I've begged you for some proof
For my Thomas eyes to see
A slithering staff, a leprous hand
And lions resting lazily

A glimpse of your back-side glory
And this soaked altar going ablaze
But you know I've seen so much
I explained it away

Chorus

Waters rose as my doubts reigned
My sand-castle faith, it slipped away
Found myself standing on your grace
It'd been there all the time

Monday, September 17, 2007

Essay

Transmogrified by Fire and Ice:

(And a disdain for Garfield)

“Now you can transmogrify things just by pointing at them! Say you don’t like the color of your bedspread. Well, you just zap it, and presto, it’s an iguana!” - Calvin

So there I was. Doha, Qatar. Sitting at the computer desk of the 2nd floor of our villa with its upchuck green and mucous yellow paint scheme. I was perusing the information super highway full of its many roundabouts, Cul de Sacs, bloody 10 car pile ups, little old ladies in their Chrysler LeBaron’s with ceramic kittens glued to the dash and a hint of 10,000 spent cigarettes wafting through the air, and all other sorts of annoying bric-a-brac, in search of a future. Not just anyone’s future though. I would find no benefit in trying to figure out the when’s and where’s of Joe Nobody’s future. No, this was mine.

So there I was, in search of an open door to tomorrow. I was in my last year of school with no desires of pursuing any sort of post high school education. I didn’t want to be a doctor; I could live that life vicariously through the cast of E.R., without any of the residual guilt of lives lost under the knife. I didn’t want to be a lawyer; insert denigrating joke here. And Clown College was just too expensive and time consuming. No, I would defy the status quo, and NOT go to college. I was treading into waters that the rest of my small graduating class of 54 students would have found unfamiliar, and perhaps a little wet.

So there I was, and there it was. A small outdoor centered Christian Bible school with bi-weekly hiking trips, tucked away in the fjords of Norway. Ahhhh, such contrast! My mind and body breathed in the fantasized crisp cold air. But in the realm of reality, outside the window in front of me, beyond the AC controlled comforts of my home, the desert heat of South East Asia blazed across the Neo-Arabian cityscape carrying with it a saccharine aroma of date milk and biblical multitudes of feral cats in heat. On this particular day, those aforementioned smells were found courting with the stench of aged livestock urine and cheap gutter water cologne. My nose voraciously hungered for Norway and was on the brink of mutiny against my face if I did not take all necessary measures to take it there.

So there I was, having returned to my native abode in the Pacific Northwest with its granola, rain, left-wing politics, pants made of tree bark, lumberjacks, stoned out drop outs playing hacky sack, and every other facet that makes up Washington State. I would be there for the remainder of the summer, spending the days preparing myself for the transition from sand to snow. Shorts and sandals would not fare well in the frozen tundra.

Forays into subfreezing temperatures require but are not limited to:

1. Gloves to protect my digits from rabid and senile Old Man Winters frost bite

2. Gloves for my gloves (mitts as they are actually known) to keep them company on lonely nights

3. Sturdy, comfortable, polar bear stompin’ hiking boots

4. Gaiters (No relationship to our reptilian friends, but they do keep snow out of your boots)

5. A down jacket filled with the fuzzy insulating offerings of Mother Goose and all her little goslings

6. A back country hiking pack big enough to smuggle out prized seal pelts (relax, I never did…)

7. Various knick knacks and such, thermal skivvies, wool socks, some spares of those little plastic bits at the end of shoelaces and so on and so forth.

There is so much potential for the unexpected while hiking in backcountry, so you always try to be prepared and carry with you as much as possible while at the same time carrying with you as little as possible. The Outdoorsmen Conundrum.

So there I was. The summer had drawn to a close, and the gates to Valhalla, the paradise of Vikings, with its glorious halls filled with steins overflowing with ambrosia, opened before me as I said my goodbyes and stepped onto the plane, bound for Oslo. It would have been fitting to have left directly from the oil refinery ridden deserts of Qatar for Norway instead of leaving the comparably lush and clean surroundings of Washington, but the scent of camel feces still clung firmly to my nostrils and would not soon leave me. *Bing* You are now free to move about the country.

So there I was, slowly ascending to 35,000 feet

- "Portrait of a frightened man: Mr. Robert Wilson, thirty-seven, husband, father, and salesman on sick leave. Mr. Wilson has just been discharged from a sanitarium where he spent the last six months recovering from a nervous breakdown, the onset of which took place on an evening not dissimilar to this one, on an airliner very much like the one in which Mr. Wilson is about to be flown home--the difference being that, on that evening half a year ago, Mr. Wilson's flight was terminated by the onslaught of his mental breakdown. Tonight, he's traveling all the way to his appointed destination which, contrary to Mr. Wilson's plan, happens to be in the darkest corner of the Twilight Zone.”

with the 9 hour flight from Seattle to Amsterdam with a transfer to Oslo, and then from Oslo to Bodø (like Buddha but without the belly) where I would be picked up by a van for a 4 hour drive to my school in the tiny speck on the map village of Engavågen, but before any of this took place I had to survive my flight, and wouldn’t you believe it, I got stuck between the baby that was apparently born half megaphone/half baby, and a man suffering from uncontrollable muscle spasms and the worlds pointiest most painful elbows, and in front of me was the last woman on earth to experience the amazing technology of the reclining chair, so I could understand that she would be compelled during the entire duration of the flight to frequently marvel at the miraculous abilities of said chair with its up and down features, and here I was trying to enjoy some god forsaken steamed spinach with a dinner roll and pat of Land O’Lakes butter and feature presentation of Garfield: The Movie. Which by the way was a really smart step for Bill Murray because what better way to bring more Oscar Cred to your career then to give your voice talents to a film about a CGI cat based off the character of a newspaper comic that stopped being funny about the same time that Jim Davis conceived of the idea.

Me: “Wow, Garfield sure loves lasagna.”

Garfield Fan: “Hahaha! I know! Isn’t that hilarious?! I mean, he’s a cat! Cats are supposed to love cat food, not lasagna! Right?!”

Me: “Oh no, look out Odie, Garfield is about to kick you off the table…again…for the 10,000th time.”

Garfield Fan: “Hahahaha! You’d think I wouldn’t find this gag funny since it’s pretty much the exact same formula as its 9,999 predecessors, but you’d be wrong because I’m a moron. Man. They should make Garfield into a feature length movie!”

I don’t know exactly how it happened; perhaps the movie sent me into a zombie like trance, but before I knew what was going on, I was stepping onto the tarmac at Bodø lufthavn and into my future.

So there I was, Norway. It was dark and blacker than a coal miner’s bathtub when I first arrived and it wouldn’t be until the following morning that I would be taking in a land of epic grandeur. Think Lord of The Rings but with thick festive sweaters, snow sports and more blonde hair. God spared no expense in carving the fjords and mountains that surrounded the little school I would call home for the next 9 months. The details of my year above the Arctic Circle have all been but lost to the annals of history and may some day drift off into the unknown forever, but what I can say is this – “So there I was, and now…here I am.”




PS - I apologize to anyone that really does enjoy Garfield. It was all in jest.







Tuesday, June 19, 2007

"Growing Pains" - With all of the growing pain and none of the Kirk Cameron and Alan Thicke


As I am relatively young (22nd birthday just over the horizon), I can still faintly recall the nights I would lay in bed and feel the aches of my bones as they stretched and groaned into what is now a frightening stature of a mighty 6'3''. I could remember wondering why I hurt at night. I had not fallen from a high place onto some leg snapping bone marrow spilling ledge many feet below. I had not received any massive blows to the shins by an angry Louisville Slugger wielding mob of ruffians and scalawags. My mom just used to tell me that I was a growing boy and I was going through growing pains. Bum deal!

Well eventually I stopped growing. And that was when I started running into pain that was far more unwelcome. And I didn't need my mom to tell me where it came from. Since I moved to Minneapolis over a year ago on Easter Sunday, I found myself wearing an engagement ring (Guys usually don't I guess, but I did). And now, well that finger is bare, and the sun has all but filled in the ghostly white skin that hid beneath my silver ring with its Celtic engravings and dark etchings.

I do have a few physical scars from the darker nights, but for the most part, I wear them inside. Its a painful thing to give your heart to someone and watch it trampled. Worse yet, sometimes by my own feet. To make a point and to not get all EMO - all of this pain is complicated and has a stubborn longevity. Its not like the cuts and bruises that followed me inside after a hard days work defending the Free World from make-believe aliens and imminent invasion by the Russians, or daring ascents up mighty pines. No, its that darn grown up pain that I am acquainting myself with as I trudge my way into adulthood.

Having shared that - Praise God for it all. Praise God for His rod. Praise Him for His discipline in my life. Praise Him that I feel His love throughout this season and trial. I know He is my Father because of the scars left by His rod.

To quote a song by Derek Webb-

don't paint my face
i need to see the scars
so i don't forget
the back of my tutor's arm

Monday, June 18, 2007

The keyboard is mightier than the sword, unless the sword is infused with some kind of powerful magic



I have hopes of telling stories someday so perhaps I should stay in the habit of doing so. I also have hopes of telling stories that people actually enjoy reading. So perhaps I should try to MAKE a habit of writing stories that are in fact enjoyed. Further still, I should get into the habit of writing stories that are WORTH reading.










But not tonight.








zzzZZZzzz





and to my friends that still speak the "Queen's English"





zedzedzedZedZedZedzedzedzed.

"The enjoyment of God is the only happiness with which our souls can be satisfied. To go to heaven, fully to enjoy God, is infinitely better than the most pleasant accommodations here. Fathers and mothers, husbands,wives, or children, or the company of earthly friends, are but shadows; but God is the substance. These are but scattered beams, but God is the sun. These are but streams. But God is the ocean. Therefore it becomes us to spend this life only as a journey toward heaven, as it becomes us to make the seeking of our highest end and proper good, the whole work of our lives; to which we should subordinate all other concerns of life. Why should we labour for, or set our hearts on, anything else, but that which is our proper end, and true happiness?"


- Jonathan Edwards



Tuesday, October 31, 2006

I am thankful for Godly men. I am thankful for there to be Godly men in my life. I am thankful that these Godly men can take all of my lifes chaos and confusion and point me to the cross without hesitation. I am thankful that I find peace and rest there. Nothing profound here. I am just thankful.

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

I wish I could weep again. A hardened heart is a burden I do not want.

Friday, August 25, 2006

What my eyes told me


Has anyone ever played a variation of hide and seek where everyone huddles around the seeker and then the seeker throws a ball in the air and the "hiders" run away to...ahem...hide? Well today I saw 4 little girls, possibly sisters, playing it in their yard as I rode home on my bike. I picked up on the rules in the brief 6-7 seconds it took me to pass their house. The ball was thrown, the girls scattered, except for the smallest one. Maybe 2 years old? She ran and grabbed the ball and curled up into one herself at the "seekers" feet. The ideal hiding place.

I would call everyone that owns a bicycle to take it out, no matter how rusty it may be, and ride through your neighborhood. Perhaps you too can capture a glimpse of children being children in a world that is saying "no" to their innocence before they just fade away.