Sunday, April 15, 2012

water words & book river



I remember once hearing a doctor say that the strongest natural drive is thirst. Our need for water (or it’s 1st cousin diet coke) is stronger than our need for food or sleep or sex or comfort. Water covers the earth; We drill into lands to find it fresh. It grows crops that are harvested into raw food, and water feeds animals that are harvested into delicious chickfila. Water is our most basic unit of physical nourishment that keeps our bodies running.  

Our non-physical self needs water too, and closest thing we have is language. Words feed us in very basic ways: We get thirsty-lonely and thirsty-confused and thirsty-in love and these things are quenched with water-words. Letters, the most basic building-block of communication, are little droplets that collect into tall glasses full of words and wash ourselves clean in bathtubs of books. The right words can irrigate the mind for a harvest or wrong words, or no words, can bring about the dust bowl of depression and the terrible drought of loneliness.
Human body is ¾ water, I was sure that most of mine came through memoirs or fiction. X-ray would show lines from Virginia Woolf and JD Salinger mixed in with my blood. For that reason, I don’t part with my DNA easily and don’t give my books away easily either (and frankly I encourage you to look twice at being close friends with someone who does). I just let them pile up around my room and lay sideways on the top of the bookshelf and masquerade as decoration on my desk. This might look like I’m messy (which I absolutely am) but the truth this particular choice is quite intentional. I would love for you to walk in my room and say, wow, you have a lot of books. I would feel like a proud mama fussing over her babies or a peacock trying to hide all his feathers. Also, I figure this is basically the same as feng-shui because I’m putting flowing water in my space to listen to it quietly babble.
Reading is a solitary activity which never posed a problem because I never felt alone. When all the words from all the other places became bone dry to me again, I would wade into the river of books.   I had learned very early how how to make my way the river, dive down deep and float at the top. The river is generous and wide, and, in bookriver, the water rests on the soft silt of truth rather than the hard dirt of fact.  I remember laying in my bed in my freshman year in college reading Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller. I went to MTSU in a freedom march away from Knoxville. Rather than the brilliantly successful experience I had hoped, I was actually miserably lonely and felt in stuck in Murfreesboro: “where dreams go to die”. I had exactly one friend who was a grad student I met in the writing center. I tried to stave off my ever-increasingly neediness and desperation but she was gracious and very nice and talked to me about books when we got coffee occasionally. She casually suggested one day that I might like this book called Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller. At the time, this book played formative role in making me feel less crazy and less alone.
On the other hand, the only problem with all that is that I did not ever feel alone. This was as much of blessing as it was a curse- The deeper I was, the more peopled and connected I felt. In fact, I often felt so much less alone in that pages than in the pews or the in streets or in the classrooms. I read She’s Come Undone when I was junior in high school and I could have sworn to you that I knew Dolores and Wally Lamb must know me. I was witness to rich lives in print, pages and pages of qualification to end up at a novel’s last line that gave me chills. There were such beautiful things in the binding, until I realized that people on the shore were out of the water and their lives had more actual people that pages.

In his beautiful, beautiful author’s note to his book Through Painted Deserts, Donald Miller writes, 
No, life cannot be understood flat on a pageIt has to be lived; a person has to get out of his head, has to fall in love, has to memorize poems, has to jump off bridges into rivers, has to stand in an empty desert and whisper sonnets under his breathI’ll tell you how the sun rose/ A ribbon at a time…

I found this to be true in an annoying and inconvenient kind of way. This meant I had to return to dry land, soaked with the thick, sour smell of the river. There would be humans there. Off the page, humans wear flesh and not standard type of black ink. Something about flesh fills humans full with really annoying things like questions and feelings. They are given to phrases such as “bless their hearts”.  They get together in big groups and do things like create elaborate network of reality television and elect George Bush (twice). There is no narrator that gives me back story or explains people’s thoughts to help me love them.  Shore-people have bodies and having a body is just the worst. I once read that bodies are just soul containers, and I’ve always loved that description. The book that is inside of me is so different than the soul container looking back at me in the mirror. I really don’t know exactly what my inside story would look like on the outside, but I’m pretty sure that it isn’t 5’2”, lumps in some places that should be smooth, skin sensitive to hot and cold and pimples on my face.  In that sense, even the sounds of my own body were lost in the water which was great because my own body was something I was always trying to get away from.
Maybe a part of the draw of the bookriver is the underlying belief that if I stave off the actual people for long enough, I might not ever have to come back to shore. But I inevitably do go back and inevitably love some of them anyway and have to deal with my own human fleshiness. The truth is that the pages are so much safer than the people and this fact has not failed to complicate my life. This off-the-page business is clearly flawed. So when I have free time, I always go back to the river. I cannot emphasize it’s generosity enough: It wash over me again and again with warmth like home- something familiar and forgiving.

Monday, March 19, 2012

An open letter to UT fans ...

“sweet baby jesus in your manger crib, please please please bring Peytie-pie back to the great state of ten-ay-see. Even though, as everybody damn well knows, he will not ever, ever play at a collegiate level for the University of Tennessee again- because that’s not how football works-I sure would like him to be closer to the big orange motherland. I sorta miss him. Also, please remember to punish Lane Kiffin until kingdom come. And I’m talking about some hell, fire and brimstone kinda shit, too. Everyday. go vols, give ‘em hell, amen”.

so yall. Now I know I dont know much about football, but here’s the thing. Peytie Pie ended in college career with Vols in 1998. NINETEEN AND NINETY EIGHT. That’s 14 years. Just off the top of my head, I’m pretty sure the first 14 years of my life was long enough for me to be born, learn to walk, talk, feed myself, go to school, hate boys, chase boys, kiss boys, learn cuss words on a school bus, “become a woman” and build about a billion forts in the woods. SO, Surely to God, 14 years is long enough to for yall die hard vol fans to be getting over some Peyton Manning. Break-ups are hard. It’s tough, I know. He’s very “all-american, boy next door”, he might even have had some brain cells to rub together in a classroom, and he’s even one of those football players that has never, ever been caught with an unregistered weapon in bar. He’s special, I get it. I’d have a hard time letting that tall drink of water go, too. But for crying out loud, it is time.

In your defense, for a while, it is good to mourn. To just wear that 199whatever year championship hat and your #16 jersey just weep about how “Peytie was ROBBED of the Heisman, nobody has ever looked so good in puke orange, he was soooooo taaaaaaaall, it’lllll never the ssssaaaaaaaammeeee … I know there are other quarterbacks to be recruited but there WILL NEVER BE ANOTHER PEYTON MIDDLENAME MANNING.” Get it all out, that’s good. But listen, after a while, you need to actually move forward. This part is the dirty work: block on him facebook and unblock him like million times, call him and cry, call him and hang up, flirt with his friends, tear his pictures up in fit of rage, try to glue them back together whilst sobbing, set some other pictures on fire (but make sure you back those up on your hard drive first because you’re going to hate yourself for that one after about 5 minutes), or belt out that “I’m not missing you aaattt alllllll song” that Julia Roberts sings when she’s riding away in the car at the end of Pretty Woman. Y’all need to do me a SOLID and try some of these. Now, disclaimer: While each of the above stated suggestions represent evidenced-based tried and true break-up behavior, these are more geared toward real-life stuffs, and might need some tweeking with pretend break-ups with famous folks. But whatever it takes, move on. Whatever you need to do, because Peytie is not thinking about you. He’s not. He’s just not that into you, but you’re going to be okay. You will.

So give it one more good cry, snot all over your sports illustrated clippings- Then dry those tears up, because you’re great. I really hope you don’t hate me after this tough love. When you’re ready, I’ll help you make an online dating profile, and we can troll all the weirdos. It’ll be great fun.

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Maybe you'll avoid parked cars in purgatory: Grandma's Story.

SO LISTEN. I’ve got a bone to pick with a Catholic.


I got my new car in October. She’s a red Jeep Cherokee with a tan leather interior, v8 engine, bunch of fancy woodgrain shit on the dashboard, and listen, she can flat get up and go. She does not waste time peeling out of red lights at Kingston Pike and leaving those other silly cars in the dust … just to slow down 20 yards ahead for next stop light or the slow poke Buick motherfucker all in the way. Based on this description alone, you’re probably thinking, “oh snap, this car is way nicer than Jen should drive. This is like a bonafied ADULT automobile .. I really see Jen in more of a like Ford Taurus circa 1998 or a volkswagon Golf circa any year volkswagon golf was made.” And you would be right. Can’t believe it myself, frankly. UNTIL around finals time (cue the very sad slow piano overture) … it was the saddest of all days. I was being super studious (procrastinating, per usual) at a quiet carrel in the library (coffee shop, down the street from the miserable library) when I went out to get some fresh air (smoke a cigarette, obviously). It was then that I saw it. Somebody had hit Grandma (that’s my car’s name, did I mention that?) right in the front bumper. I am not talking about some little bitty dent either, I am trying to tell you that they smacked her right in the mouth, fucked up the bumper big time, plastic all torn off and smashed up and SHIT IT PISSES ME OFF TO EVEN TYPE THIS. ok. (turn that piano music off, we’re done being pensive now.) I’m not real sure how many people have heard me bitch about this, but there was a handful of days when I was bitching up a storm to anybody who would listen. I’d be hollering about “my new caaaaaaarrr,” “somebody smacked her right in the mooouuuuuth and leeeeft. No note with a phone number, no note with a ‘kiss my ass’, no nothing.” This was obviously a BD (big deal). So (getting around to why I’m needing to bitch at a Catholic), I had no idea where grandma had been assaulted until my brother, who apparently moonlights as mcguyver/sherlock holmes, finds little bits of little parts of what used to be grandma’s mouth directly outside my mom’s house. NOW - my mom lives right across the street from (bring back that fucking piano, real loud this time) SAINT JOHN NEWMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH. That’s right, I parked my car outside my mom’s house, went inside to practice my FAMILY VALUES YOU CATHOLICS HOLLER ABOUT SO MUCH and all those Catholics are all massing it up in there and one of them really gives it to Grandma good and flees the scene. BAM, kaPOW, case closed.

So. Now is the time when I go all V for Vendetta/Boondock Saints (pls note the Catholic pun) on behalf of Grandma. I am prepared to take it to the fathers and bishops and popes and what not. I will recount my story as politely and rationally as I just described it here and then get to the part about getting my retribution in the form of these three reasonable requests: 1) payment for reconstructive work on grandma’s mouth 2) pain and suffering (that’s for me) and 3) a simple apology. Except when I go to say, “thank you for apologizing, I forgive you” it’s really likely to come out sounding more like, ” …. yeah. so can somebody please show me the bible verse that says ” we do not accept amongst thou brethren whom are gayest or lesbianst but lo, very truly i say unto you, those among ye who do fuckest upest shit which does belong to you and then flee the scene, ye are righteous and holy forever amen” thus saith the Lord” One of those St. John Newman folk best be doing some serious confessing and/or getting their purgatory pants on cause are fixin to do some long sitting. Grandma, I will never forget your unsolved assault and will never stop fighting for justice. Imma make shirts and organize fundraisers and all that shit, whatever it takes.

Justice for Grandma.

Welp, I feel a little better. Grandma’s still a babe, even with her big ole gap tooth smile. GILF, all the way.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Things I could do with my graduate degree. By Jennifer Smith.


I will, hand to God, have an MSSW in May of 2012. The following are some possible “alternative” ways to serve my community and put my post-graduate social work education to use.


1.Activity: Instillation Art/Construction. Relevant area of social work study: Feminism, theoretical perspectives, sarcasm.
Knoxville has the sunsphere. Situated in World’s Fair Park, The Sunphere is Knoxville’s own phallic downtown eyesore. Now me myself, I like a big useless building shaped like a penis just as much as the next feminist but (and I’m making an assumption here) I hope we can agree that female parts can represent downtown Knoxville just as well as male parts can. Female parts have always really gotten the shaft …. (see what I did there? read it again). So in the spirit of breaking that glass ceiling/emasculating Knoxville’s golden penis, I propose we organize a way to construct another equally large and useless monstrosity, except this will be basically two large round objects with circles inside of them- to represent boobs (naturally). This can be just as tasteful, subtle, and aesthetically pleasing as the Sunsphere (which sets the bar pretty low). Just two big ole boobies staring down the sunsphere to see who blinks first. (This experiment is also obviously evidenced based research/ final reckoning day for the work of Freud and everything he wrote about people’s body parts-which was virtually everything he wrote). Building boobs downtown and disproving psychosexual development is too ambitious? pish. posh.

2. Activity: Protest. Relevant area of social work study: Protest, shame, why you will never make fun of my blog again, sarcasm.
Apparently Knoxville has some pretty disgruntled labor workers who have taken to making huge banners to be publicly disgraced business involved in labor disputes. These protesters sit outside any given place with their umbrellas and their coats beside a big white sign that says in big red letters, “SHAME ON YOU CALHOUNS”. Now, you all can see clearly as I do that there is an obvious need to expand the use of the shame signs beyond just labor disputes. I prospose to research/execute a plan to get a hold of some of those to protest various things I think need protesting. Something like, “SHAME ON YOU CHICKFILA HATE MEAT”, (as I sit there chowing down on, i mean, a big ole order of waffle fries). Or it could be a birthday present, because, honestly, who doesn’t want to pull into work one morning and see me, posted up in the soccer field at the CLO, with an umbrella and a big gulp beside a banner that says “SHAME ON YOU STEPHEN BRADLEY JENNINGS” …” jen, what the fuck are you doing.” ”(mumbles) read the sign, asshole .. I'm shaming you." Now, I am still really unclear as to how this would happen, who would (wo)man the sign when I’m refiling my ketchup, just how one would piss of labor workers to the point of public humiliation, but apparently it cannot be that hard because those signs are everywhere. Maybe they’ll even let me keep some of them for posterity sake. not sure.

3. Activity: Moral depravity. Relevant area of social work study: Moral depravity.
If none of that pans out, I think I’d like to try my hand at a little moral depravity. Ya know, just for something different and my hedonism clock is tick-tocking away. I did not really experience the depth and breadth of “sowing my wild oats” and engage in regrettable youthful wreckless indiscretions that make great stories later. Evidently, I threw all my oats at Anne Lamott and school and following rules and bonding with my 3 friends that I actually liked. I think I just missed out on that the development stage of "being a wild ass" and I’m just experiencing some buyers remorse for my young adult responsibility. Sometimes I do legitimately wonder, did I miss anything at the 1 star bars in the middle of the night? There must be a reason why people put on those GAWD AWFUL unflattering uncomfortable clothes and get shitty 5 nights out of the week. For me, very often, social situations like that seem a lot more like something that feels like work than something that feels like fun. I think that whenever those girls were out buying the dresses so tight it cuts off their circulation and getting belly button pierced, someone evidently pulled them aside and told them something like, "Hey, listen, here is how you do this social stuff without being totally and completely awkward .. .and also, here is how you don't hate it". Maybe that is what that weird tattooed dude tells you before he crams that needle in your navel and then snorts a line of coke off the sterile instrument tray. I will find this gentleman and hasten to observe him in his natural habitat (Cool Beans, Electric Cowboy, Th’ Katch- except not that last one because I'm a feminist- see above). Just doing my part to keep my friends in some job security.

maybe I should volunteer to give the speech at graduation and read these ideas as serious proposals for future ventures. Don't know why not.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Saturday Night Fever

So last night I had planned to go out with a good friend in town from Nashville. He is also a good nephew and had spent all day “gutting” his Aunt’s bathroom, which is evidently a horrifying term that means doing construction that renders you exhausted and behind schedule. He took a rain check (or “gut check” -if you will, and I think that you will), and I found myself the proud owner of a Saturday night to myself. Not just any Saturday night, this one was deliciously devoid of distraction and my little house was decadent with quiet and dripping with sweet, sweet silence. (I realized as I was writing this that it was getting way too dramatic, so I just went for it. Now is when you picture me dramatically tonguing my silence a la one of those hyperfit moms in the commercial making the O face at her light-and-fit yogurt. Really burn that image into your mind. Hard).
The point is- this was great. Because as much as I love my friends (basically how much that lady likes yogurt but also very much not like that) I also really love puttering around the house, which is my main spiritual practice (St. Anne of Lamott).
My girl St. Ani Fucking Difranco has a song about being 32 flavors and then some. I don’t know exactly how many flavors are inside me, but I am coming to understand that the two big contenders are a fierce introvert who plays all day in the playground of her own imagination and a fierce lover of people without whom the introvert’s playground would be a sandbox and a stick. Now, obviously, this gets complicated. This is a lot like being an agoraphobic who loves to go grocery shopping and hit-up flea markets. (It is so sad that my clinical education has come to this. I literally sat around for fifteen whole minutes thinking of a non-clinical comparison and agoraphobia was the only thing I could call up. Chalk one up for you, UTCSW/Freud/Yalom/DSM/Dr NooePattersonCombs-OrmeBradshawandReneeDelapp). Much like our bargain shopping- hermit friend, these different “flavors” do not come without a battle (and the occasional compromise) between the introverted imagination playground and the rest of the wide world outside.
Let’s introduce our opponents:
....... In one corner, we have Jennifer Smith. Standing at 5 foot 2 inches tall, she appears to be a girl child but is actually the closest thing to an adult in this situation. She is technically funemployed, not counting 30+ hours of grad student free-labor as a public pretender. Jennifer’s likes are: therapy, eating Chickfila “hate meat”, asking people questions that usually pertain to her (was it weird when i said that????), and procrastination. Jennifer excels at making quick exits from lack luster social situations, which is almost every social situation. Dislikes: therapy, people who won't answer her questions, large parties, her own stutter, and most everything on TV. She gets tipsy after 3ish beers, is reluctantly responsible and occasionally organized. She self-medicates a significant amount of social anxiety with a steady smoking habit, and is currently giving her talents to "the real world" which she so far is finding to be the lackest of the lusterest. She has a significantly less amount of power than her girl-child counterpart. Everybody give Jennifer a hand!!!!!!!
In the opposing corner …. we have a girl-child who appears not have bathed in days. There are crayons in her hands and all matted in her hair. She can usually be found running from one thing to another causing quite the hullabaloo and sometimes even some brouhaha. Nothing in her world is lack-luster, in fact everything is chalk full of luster, the veritable Mount Vesuvius of luster, towing-up-our-stock-with-plummet luster. She cannot learn enough. She could not be more distractible. She doesn't talk without yelling. Likes: luster, pontificating, learning things, remembering things, coloring, curiosity, brouhaha. Dislikes: clean walls, using her inside voice, following directions. This creature excels at quoting lines from poetry and fiction by keeping a record of nearly everything heard, said or read on the walls of her brain using her handy crayons. These walls are covered with layers of wallpaper with quotes from books, faces of characters that have only existed in novels and highly developed scenarios that have only existed in her extensive network of daydreams. She has only colored enough when she's sweating all the colors in the Crayola 64 box and proudly displaying the new synapses and “wallpaper brain pictures” she has to show for her effort. She sticks her tongue out of the side of her mouth like Father Ragan when she’s thinking of something exciting, which is basically all the time. Let’s hear it for the lustered-up girl child!!!!!!!!!

Here’s a little picture of getting us all ready to go out.

adult-child: hey, listen … jen, okay, can you, like, stop that … for a second …
girl-child: (wildly waving crayons) IM LEARNING THINGS ON THE INTERWEBS.
a-c: I see that. well, I thought we could go out with some people later …. people we like, from school ….
g-c: I’M BUSY.
a-c: … with what?
g-c: COLOR STUFFS. BEIN DEEP. HEY LETS GO TO HODGES LIBRARY LIKE WE’RE STUDYING AND READ EVERY COOL BOOK WE CAN FIND EXCEPT WHATS ASSIGNED FOR SCHOOL!!!! (she smiles proudly as if that would be the first time we ever have done that).
a-c: …. yeah, well I don’t see why we can’t do that tomorrow … but, you know, you were busy last night with-
g-c: I WAS THINKIN’ ABOUT BOOKS
a-c: and the night before that-
g-c: EXISTENTIALISM
a-c: and the night before that-
g-c: STARING AT MY OWN BLOG. HEY, INSTEAD, HOW BOUT WE WATCH GOODWILL HUNTING AGAIN AND CRY?
a-c: No. we are going to wash that crayon war paint off your face and go be with people. that we like
…...

Adult, 1 hour later: He cancelled.
g-c: OHHH MYYYYYYY GOOOOOOOOOOOOD!!!!!! IMMA READ WENDELL BERRY AND MARY OLIVER!!!! THEY’RE BOTH SPIRITUAL/NATURE POETS WHO SHOULD GET MARRIED AND HAVE LIKE 3 BAJILLION POETIC SPIRITUAL/NATURE BABIES. FEED THAT BABY TREE BARK.
adult: … you’ve told me that like 200 times. for the 201th time, Mary Oliver is lesbian. And Wedell Berry is married. Both of them are way too old to be reproducing. and babies don't eat tree bark. even poetic ones.
g-c: WHATEVER, IMMA GO READ SOME POETRY TO DANDELIONS. I’LL SEE YOU WHEN YOU COME OUT TO SMOKE AND TALK TO YOURSELF.
adult …. mk, now. byebye then.

And a typical Saturday night comes to close.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

dx and tx re: grad school.


I haven’t blogged in a while. Since then everything/nothing has been going on, like it always does. I am at the midterm of the first semester my second and last year in grad school for social work. I am moving in on graduation (but I’m still not sold that graduation is not actually a mirage on the horizon like my favorite part from the epic movie Fifel Goes West.) Also, Jessica Boyd, roommate of the mostest, moved into Old North to encroach upon the hipsters to learn their ways. So far I’ve only learned that the neighbors kids start playing really early, really loudly, really close to my window, and I find myself kind of wanting to break their toys. School is do-able but my internship is hard. I have more work than I ever thought I could do … and I end up doing hugely irresponsible things things like sitting in coffee shops writing blogs for my faithful readership of two (hey mom and dad!). I basically do various social worky things, very few of which I am qualified for by any definition of the word qualified. No ones appears to have this figured out yet which is great for me.
In the meantime I’m testing my limits of sleep deprivation and playing a game of chicken with my stress level. I have perfected the art of turning coffee into pee and acting out on my ADD by eavesdropping on conversations in those coffee shops when I should be studying. (Very often I’ve wanted to be like, Whew, honey, listen, he is even boring TO ME and I’m not even in the conversation. I’m going to insert my headphones, and I suggest you do the same). I digress (ADD). Most importantly, I have brought back a skill I made up when I was a kid in which, whenever I feel like I might start hysterically crying in inappropriate places, I take a deep breath and hold it in for as long as I can. Then I let it out slowly and resume a normal rate of breathe, sans meltdown. I’ve tried to practice this often while I also practice being more adult on the outside than I feel on the inside. But it’s hard to make your outsides and insides match and extremely difficult when your breath is taking up all your inside space.
So I exercise my life pleasures on delicacies like sleep and food. Back to the basics. And as the weather gets colder my bed gets hotter (not in that way, very unfortunately). I am referring to my intricate system of bed heat that involves both a heated mattress pad that SantaDonna brought me last year AND a heated blanket that my granddad gave that probably dates to circa 1989. (Smokey the bear would have a cow (pun always intended), this thing is running rampant with all kinds of fire hazard possibility.) As my sister very accurately describes, “this heated mattress pad, it's like sleeping on a little baby angel … with a fever.” (Smith, 2011). You might think that both the mattress pad and the blanket would get really hot, and it probably would be way hot to a normal person. But lucky for me, my thermometer is broken and I never get hot. I only get toasted in my panini bed and wake up all golden and bubbly. and the mornings, LORD, THE MORNINGS. I tell you what- in the morning time, my inner child is a PILL. Every night I tell her, "listen, we’re gonna have to wake up AGAIN tomorrow morning while it’s still dark, just like we did this morning. and we are going to peel ourselves out of the panini and go to grown up things, like practice our skills of empathy and crossing things off sticky note to do lists and holding our breath and watching people who suspect dont have to hold their breath and acting like they act." Despite my patient nightly explanations, my inner child takes over in the morning, (she is freakishly strong) and pushes snooze up to six times (!). I finally (wo)man up and (wo)manhandle in her in “tough love” kind of way and rush around to do my morning things like brush my teeth in the dark so I don't’ have to look at my wake up face in the mirror.
Here is picture of her in the mornings



I felt torn between representing my inner child as a crying baby or a crying monkey so I decided to go with a crying baby in a monkey costume. This is actually a remarkably accurate representation.

I have also resorted to buying meals in the forms of delicious pumpkin muffins at various coffee shops I patronize where switch between between typing furiously to aimlessly staring out the window. I also have developed a spidey sense to find vending machines that sell me delicious cheese crackers and animal crackers, always the animal crackers. That’s the way the vending machine cookie crumbles: no change, no lunch. It has recently come to my attention that at grocery stores, you can go get food to keep *in your house*. They sell the kind of food that you can in fact mix together with other foods and sometimes there is some stirring or a recipe to read and, if you’re real fancy, measuring and mixing. Then you just stick all the stuff on the oven (that’s what’s underneath the stove. (I know about the stove. (the stove is thing I once learned that made water hot and real bubbly for eggs or tea or ramen noodles (but not that the same time (that’s gross)))). AND I MEAN VIOLA, a bonafied cooked meal. (Apparently there are people out there who get so down with this cooking bidness and have enough copious amounts of free time to sit around for hours for fun and watch Paula Deen talk to sticks of butter in her southern accent. I love butter and accents as much as the next girl, but for crying out loud, people don’t you know you are not ever going get to eat this food. Take your inner child to chickfila and get her a happy meal). I digress (again). People have time for this shopping, home food storage, and have figured out how to work an oven- man, it can be delicious. It’s hard to believing that i was the kind of person that was at one time organized enough to go to the grocery store, buy things that are not in single servings that you take out of a box that says “lean cuisine” and heat up on some “magic grilling tray” (please come on, this not magic, I know because there is no stirring or mixing or ‘viola’ oven work). Those same people that do the oven magic, some of them also run loud machines over the carpet and take care to smooth out there bed things each morning. Such things remain a distant memory to me and perhaps when I’m a grown up I can bring these things back. I can make up my panini before I go out for the day. (Maybe not, I’m not really into details.)

I was thinking all DSM-y and wondering how to code my experience in grad school and the symptoms of my chronic persistent mental maladies. I was thinking that the DSM IV would probably code this 666.0- High levels of school induced stress and anxiety; characterized by 3 or more of the following:
excessive caffeine intake, procrastination escalating to the form of an art, lethargy, forgetfulness, grossly neglected personal hygiene and nutrition, listlessness, hopelessness, depression, death.

Recommended treatment:
developing thicker skin
tolerance for excessive amounts of caffeine
high tolerance for ambiguity in field/life/school
great breath holding skills
good friends afflicted with similar illnesses
Lots of change for vending machines

I would be a great case study.

Welp, my monkey/baby is getting real whiny. I need to put her to bed in my panini. Morning times comes early for babies in monkey costumes.

peace.



Saturday, June 18, 2011

Romans 4 {The Message}

Trusting God
1-3 So how do we fit what we know of Abraham, our first father in the faith, into this new way of looking at things? If Abraham, by what he did for God, got God to approve him, he could certainly have taken credit for it.
But the story we're given is a God-story, not a story about us. What we read in Scripture is, "Abraham entered into what God was doing for him, and that was the turning point. He trusted God to set him right instead of trying to be right on his own."

4-5If you're a hard worker and do a good job, you deserve your pay; we don't call your wages a gift. But if you see that the job is too big for you, that it's something only God can do, and you trust him to do it—you could never do it for yourself-no matter how hard and long you worked—well, that trusting-him-to-do-it is what gets you set right with God, by God. Sheer gift.

6-9David confirms this way of looking at it, saying that the one who trusts God to do the putting-everything-right without insisting on having a say in it is one fortunate man:

Fortunate those whose crimes are carted off,
whose sins are wiped clean from the slate.
Fortunate the person against
whom the Lord does not keep score.


Do you think for a minute that this blessing is only pronounced over those of us who keep our religious ways and are circumcised?
Or do you think it possible that the blessing could be given to those who never even heard of our ways, who were never brought up in the disciplines of God? We all agree, don't we, that it was by embracing what God did for him that Abraham was declared fit before God?

10-11Now think: Was that declaration made before or after he was marked by the covenant rite of circumcision? That's right, before he was marked. That means that he underwent circumcision as evidence and confirmation of what God had done long before to bring him into this acceptable standing with himself, an act of God he had embraced with his whole life.

12And it means further that Abraham is father of all people who embrace what God does for them while they are still on the "outs" with God, as yet unidentified as God's, in an "uncircumcised" condition. It is precisely these people in this condition who are called "set right by God and with God"! Abraham is also, of course, father of those who have undergone the religious rite of circumcision not just because of the ritual but because they were willing to live in the risky faith-embrace of God's action for them, the way Abraham lived long before he was marked by circumcision.

13-15That famous promise God gave Abraham—that he and his children would possess the earth—was not given because of something Abraham did or would do. It was based on God's decision to put everything together for him, which Abraham then entered when he believed. If those who get what God gives them only get it by doing everything they are told to do and filling out all the right forms properly signed, that eliminates personal trust completely and turns the promise into an ironclad contract! That's not a holy promise; that's a business deal. A contract drawn up by a hard-nosed lawyer and with plenty of fine print only makes sure that you will never be able to collect. But if there is no contract in the first place, simply a promise—and God's promise at that—you can't break it.

16This is why the fulfillment of God's promise depends entirely on trusting God and his way, and then simply embracing him and what he does. God's promise arrives as pure gift. That's the only way everyone can be sure to get in on it, those who keep the religious traditions and those who have never heard of them. For Abraham is father of us all. He is not our racial father—that's reading the story backward. He is our faith father.

17-18We call Abraham "father" not because he got God's attention by living like a saint, but because God made something out of Abraham when he was a nobody. Isn't that what we've always read in Scripture, God saying to Abraham, "I set you up as father of many peoples"? Abraham was first named "father" and then became a father because he dared to trust God to do what only God could do: raise the dead to life, with a word make something out of nothing. When everything was hopeless, Abraham believed anyway, deciding to live not on the basis of what he saw he couldn't do but on what God said he would do. And so he was made father of a multitude of peoples. God himself said to him, "You're going to have a big family, Abraham!"

19-25Abraham didn't focus on his own impotence and say, "It's hopeless. This hundred-year-old body could never father a child." Nor did he survey Sarah's decades of infertility and give up. He didn't tiptoe around God's promise asking cautiously skeptical questions. He plunged into the promise and came up strong, ready for God, sure that God would make good on what he had said. That's why it is said, "Abraham was declared fit before God by trusting God to set him right." But it's not just Abraham; it's also us! The same thing gets said about us when we embrace and believe the One who brought Jesus to life when the conditions were equally hopeless. The sacrificed Jesus made us fit for God, set us right with God.