Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Didn't I used to write stuff?

October 14, 2009 - Fiction

She usually watched them after Sophie was in bed. From her living room chair she had a clear view of Sophie’s bedroom, the television and the house across the street. The house she watched was brick, offered one large window stretching the expanse of a room and was the stage on which the family the woman watched performed.

The woman’s house only had two small front windows that sat on either side of a white wall. Sophie liked to run from window to window, her curly head bouncing up to see out to the yard and street. She would often call her mother to chase her with a high-pitched giggle but the woman would just smile and gather Sophie close to her body, tickling kisses into a small neck. Then she would put Sophie down and return to her daily duties.

Of daily duties the woman had many, and it was difficult for her to catch more then little glimpses of the show across the street-- Sophie would need to be fed, or her husband, Stan, would require attention. Furthermore, the family that lived inside the watched house was busy- a mini-van was always coming and going, the mother waiting for one of her three daughters to run, barefoot, to the car holding a pair of shoes.

The woman would think of Sophie when she watched the girls running. She would remember Sophie learning to put her shoes on by herself, how she would sit and carefully match the Velcro so it sat straight. Stan would usually grab Sophie by the arm and drag her to the car before she was finished: he had no patience for such nonsense.

But the best time to watch the brick house was Sunday night, while Stan was gone playing poker and Sophie was asleep. Sunday nights the mother and her daughters sat on a beige couch and, each engaged in some task-- homework, laundry, etc.-- would flail their arms and talk at the television. There was always laughter and sometimes the watching woman would flip through her television to try and match a program with the expressions held by the family.

This particular Sunday, the woman sat watching the three girls as they giggled in the large window and munched on popcorn. She thought of Sophie asleep in her room and was envious. An hour passed and the woman watched the mother kiss each of her daughters on the forehead and whack their behinds as they scampered off to bed. She could practically hear the “I love you’s” and “Angel-baby’s” and imagined what it would be to be one of those girls who had a solid woman smiling at them and waiting for them to run to the car.

The phone rang. Stan was calling from his poker game to remind her to iron his shirt. Is that the television… what are you doing? He asked his wife in a tone regular to Stan.

Stan’s wife agreed, yes, she should be doing something productive, and no, she didn’t want to be disciplined before assuring that she would take care of his shirt and hanging up the phone.

The mother now sat alone in the window, her face unsmiling, folding laundry without glancing at the television. The watching woman stared at the decision in front of her: to stand in the reality of a mother’s life alone, save her children, or to sit and wait for Stan to come stumbling home.

Sitting made her legs numb.

The woman walked to the bathroom and turned on the light. She noticed the shine it made on the white porcelain sink and the faucet. She stared at the sink, unwilling to lift her gaze. Turning the faucet on, the woman let cold water run over her hands before she splashed it on her face and finally looked up to the dripping woman reflected in the mirror. The bags under her eyes slowly emerged as her cover-up smeared and bits of her thin hair stuck to her face at her cheekbone and under her lip.

Suddenly a small blonde head appeared in the doorframe, giggling as it ducked back out of sight. “Follow me, Mama!” came a voice as feet padded down the hall. The woman took a deep breath and exhaled slowly in resolve, before following her daughter into a future that smelled like hope.

Several hours later, Stan returned home to an ironed shirt and an empty house.

Monday, September 27, 2010

My eyes are weak.


I contemplate spending my days

Upon a wooden bed.

Wasting into sheets and pillows,

I am stuck inside my head;

I am a watercolor person

Painted purple by The King.

Beneath His brush I'm smoothed

I am saved from reckoning.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

My soul is restless for

"The place where I belong" (Thanks Phil)
Sister photoshoots
A coffee stained notebooks
Rain wiped from a windshield
Green hats
Loud music
A river rock
Two years ago
Postcards
A letter
A hug
Affirmation
The sound my great grandpa makes when it is quiet
Small children
A church community
TRUST
Baristas who know my drink
The future
The kingdom... am I already back where I started?

Friday, September 24, 2010

Where will I find silence?

"The Spirit of the Disciplines" by Dallas Willard is blowing me away. I may or may not be writing this from my Biblical Interpretations and Spiritual Formations class where the required reading for today was taken from the fore-mentioned book. Willard deals with Salvation as a life process as opposed to the heightened spiritual moment or ritual that our culture has come to define it by. He then moves on to discuss each discipline, be it that of abstinence or of engagement, and encourage the reader to be experimental with each spiritual discipline to become experienced seekers of a deeper and fuller relationship with Christ.

Here is an excerpt on the discipline of silence that really stirred my soul,

"Silence goes beyond solitude, and without it solitude has little effect. Henri Nouwen observes that 'silence is the way to make solitude a reality,' But silence is frightening because it strips us as nothing else does, throwing us upon the stark realities of our life. It reminds us of death, which will cut us off from this world and leave only us and God. And in that quiet, what if there turns out to be very little to 'just us and God'? Think what it says about the inward emptiness of our lives if we must always turn on the tape player or radio to made sure something is happening around us.

Hearing is said to be the last of our senses to go at death. Sound always strikes deeply and disturbingly into our souls. So, for the sake of our souls, we must seek times to leave our television, radio, tape players and telephones turned off. We should close off street noises as much as possible. We should try to find how quiet we can make our world by making whatever arrangements are necessary." (163)

This passage really inspired me to seek out silence so that I may truly "Be still and know" as in Psalm 46:10.

Perhaps I will end with Psalm 131:

My heart is not proud, O Lord,
my eyes are not haughty;
I do not concern myself with great matters
or things too wonderful for me.
But I have stilled and quieted my soul;
like a weaned child with its mother,
like a weaned child is my soul within me.

O Israel, put your hope in the Lord
both now and forevermore.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Love. Twenty. Love.





I had a fantastic birthday. Thanks, everyone :]

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Nowhere to hide.

I was itching to leave but I made myself stay
Out of love for the Father and faith
In a day when the pain in my chest, the sinking
sand hole, would be cleared by the man I met
2 years
2 months
and 12 days ago.

Make me uncomfortable.
Keep me uncomfortable.

The light from above, an unnatural glow,
Shines through my skin and bares
My soul to the audience watching
(How did they know) - I am not really worth it
I wasn't
I'm not
I won't
Go away.

Make me grow.
Keep me with You.
Let me praise You with my life.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Technology works for me.



You might think it sad (more telling of your character than mine), but the next best-thing-in-my-life is a thirty minute long YouTube video of rain falling with occasional thunder. When I listen to this I am able to concentrate, I feel better, I smile. God gave creation as an expression of His glory and God gave YouTube that I might experience it while in the desert we all know as Los Angeles. I suppose LA has expressive qualities of its own, I just miss those of the Land of Port. You feel me?

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Google did not pay a ransom for my soul.

The conversation over dinner this evening wasn't exactly light and fluffy.

Pray for Brad.

Tonight I experienced the Lord in a way that I am not sure I ever have before.

Natalie and I met up to work on some homework and were considerably less productive than usual (we are typically pretty focused when it is just the two of us). As we joked and teased, people-watching and scenario-hypothesizing, beside us sat a man who looked too old to be an undergraduate student. I imagined him to be a graduate student who had taken a few years off – a husband and a father of a 7-year-old child named Henry (trendy but classic) – and, in my ego-centric nature, I figured that the endless giggling that emitted from Natalie and my table was annoying to him. I apparently couldn’t be more wrong.

Brad is a businessman who graduated from Biola a number of years ago. He “fell away” from his faith and has proclaimed atheism for the past three years. Recently, in a state of frustration and hopelessness, Brad prayed to the God that he didn’t believe in for proof of His existence in the form of the counsel of another. While sitting on a park bench the very same night of the prayer, a man approached Brad and told him that he felt compelled to tell Brad a few things. This random man was a follower of the Lord and attributed this compulsion to God. The man then proceeded to tell Brad things about his life that the man had no way of knowing – the man spoke truth (hopefully) into Brad’s life and the experience has caused him to reexamine his beliefs. Fast-forward to tonight: happening to be in the area, Brad decided to go back to his alma-mater to do some work and reminisce about the days when he felt sure, when he “knew it all.”

This is where we found Brad: sitting in a comfy chair that faced the table where Natalie and I did very little homework. Out of some mutual overhearing of a rather amusing conversation, a conversation was struck up between Natalie, Brad and myself. Wasting no time at all, Brad relayed to us the circumstances that I described above and, as was CLEARLY the work of the Holy Spirit, words and encouragement began to pour out my mine and Natalie’s mouths. We were empowered by the truth of what we had to share and I personally found myself completely unafraid of boldly speaking truth to Brad. We told him to cling to what was tangible, to what he knows about God. I encouraged him to pray for God to show him the Truth. I advised him to read the scriptures with an open heart. We discussed humility and pride, life and purpose, pain and love. We discussed these things openly, boldly, and freely. In remembrance of this, all I can think is that God is so GOOD! I have never in my life felt so comfortable in sharing truth – especially in public and especially with a stranger. Brad admitted that he knows a decision must be made, that certain truths cannot be ignored and that the conversation that he had with us made him uncomfortable because it made him think.

How wonderful is it that we have a God who will not allow us to become comfortable in inactivity while we seek His face?

Praise God for the work of the Holy Spirit. Praise God for opportunity. Praise God for the environment of Biola University. Praise God for the salvation of our souls. Praise God for growth, for learning.

Praise God.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Matthew 6 as Art.

25"Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more important than food, and the body more important than clothes? 26Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? 27Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to his life[b]?
28"And why do you worry about clothes? See how the lilies of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. 29Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these. 30If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you, O you of little faith? 31So do not worry, saying, 'What shall we eat?' or 'What shall we drink?' or 'What shall we wear?' 32For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. 33But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. 34Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

I can't sleep.

I am writing this from an Ipod touch. It is very modern of me. Or something. I don't know how to feel right now. That is a lie. I know exactly how I feel, it is just that it isn't very pretty. I am trying to trust God with everything that is happening: I pray that hearts will change (mine included); I pray for peace; I pray that His will be done; I pray for acceptance and that my heart will desire this; I pray for safety and that He will be with her always; I pray these things with Phil's "Heaven Song" on repeat. I pray these things through Los Angeles rain in a bed that isn't mine with an old friend in a bed nearby.

I am scared. Psalm 42.