18 June 2012

babylonian time zones

time (tīm)
 
n.
1.
a. a nonspatial continuum in which events occur in apparently irreversible succession from the past through the present to the future.
b. an interval separating two points on this continuum; a duration:a long time since the last war; passed the time reading.
c. a number, as of years, days, or minutes, representing such an interval:ran the course in a time just under four minutes.
d. a similar number representing a specific point on this continuum, reckoned in hours and minutes:checked her watch and recorded the time, 6:17 AM.
e. a system by which such intervals are measured or such numbers are reckoned:solar time.
--american heritage dictionary

i believe in intuition and inspiration. … at times i feel certain i am right while not knowing the reason. when the eclipse of 1919 confirmed my intuition, i was not in the least surprised. in fact i would have been astonished had it turned out otherwise. imagination is more important than knowledge. for knowledge is limited, whereas imagination embraces the entire world, stimulating progress, giving birth to evolution. it is, strictly speaking, a real factor in scientific research. ---albert einstein

“one’s personal legend is what you have always wanted to accomplish. everyone, when they are young, knows what their personal legend is. at that point in their lives, everything is clear and everything is possible. they are not afraid to dream, and to yearn for everything they would like to see happen to them in their lives. but, as time passes, a mysterious force begins to convince them that it will be impossible for them to realize their personal legend…
whoever you are, or whatever it is that you do, when you really want something, 
it’s because that desire originated in the soul of the universe. it’s your mission on earth.  
--paulo coehlo, the alchemist


mostly, time passes in a flash and a blur.  sometimes, i can catch snips of what's happening at the edges,  if i look out the corner of my eye, but things are usually so fast and furious, i keep my head pointed straight ahead and capitulate to the tunnel vision that comes to take over, and help me not feel like i'm about to throw up everything i've eaten in the last seventeen years.  it's hard for me to remember that time is a convention we've invented, in our wisdom and our blindness, to help us not feel so...small.  

sometimes, when i watch my favorite movie, and see that fresco of lions painted 30k years ago (a full 20k years before our voices had developed enough to speak words you and i would hear as intelligible), i almost can't breathe.  we leave such small and stunning things behind us, to mark our time.  some of what we leave behind will never be found or uncovered.  other pieces, moments, poems, paintings, remnants of bone, hand prints, etc...they end up staining the walls of where ever we live and move and have our being, and the people who come after us will come to know that while time has passed, it is somehow mysteriously still in motion, with everything still happening, still rushing and flowing and shaping us with it's unseen and ferociously tender hands.  i can look at those pictures on that cave wall and believe in a forever that i was never able to see, before.  

i remember the first time i left the central time zone.  we were on a family trip, to new mexico.  i was six, and my brother was two.  ...white sundress with tie straps and red piping and smocked down the front, and little white sandals, and sitting as still as i possibly could while the man with the box full of colors drew a picture of me for my momma to hang on the wall... eating the hottest enchilada of my entire life, and my poppy smiling the whole time, while my eyes watered and i giggled the whole way through dinner... kachina dolls and getting lost in a giant truck stop at carl's corner.  there was something mystical about the idea that this trip to an enchanted land (tip of the hat to you, new mexico...) was a WHOLE hour different from the life i lived in my little yellow house in btex.  i was very insistent that EVERYONE adjust their watches, when i read the road sign that proclaimed "NOW ENTERING MOUNTAIN TIME".  i was fascinated by the idea that just by moving yourself around on the face of the planet, you had to change your clock to keep up with where you were.  at least, that's how i believed time worked, when i was six.  frankly, i still kind of believe it works that way.  

in babylon, it's easy to believe that some time passes more quickly than others.  it's so easy to believe-- i make up shit that isn't true, just to pass the time.  i tell myself that mondays are forever long, and that the week between christmas and new year is the fastest week of the year.  i agonize over time away from things i need to do, accomplish, finish, start, sew up, love, grow, weed, burn, bandage, rock, and carry.  i forget, in my haste to cross things off my list that every minute is 60 seconds long, every day is 24 hours in length.  i get the same time, every day.  

those hours seem to be flying by when i am  actively engaged, even if it's active engagement with something i'm not crazy about...sometimes, that same exact amount of time drags when i have to do maddening tasks  or have tedious conversations or fold laundry or be sick or spend time with people i don't like in places i'd rather not be.  but, i don't always get a vote on where/how/with whom i spend my time.  i do get a vote on how i choose to view it, on whether or not i allow it to spin by me in a blur, or take it by the reins and slow it the eff down.  the real trick is to keep this at the front of my mind: "make every minute count".  as long as i remember that, remember that the shot clock and the game clock are one in the same, i do fine.  and that clock isn't one that lives on the wall, or one that's regulated by some cesium core in a basement in brussels.  that clock belongs to G-d, and has numbers on it that i can't read.  i have no idea how much time has been counted by that clock, nor how much is left in the tank.  truth be told, i could care less.  all i can do is hold the time i have gently, and make every single second count.  and sometimes, annoying as it is, i have to say that out loud to myself, and sometimes to other people.  i can't lose track of that.  can't. won't. must not.  but i have to hold it like an egg...one of those faberge jobs that goes for like $10k at an auction.  

the tighter i held on to my idea of time, timing, and what it all meant, the smaller my idea of G-d and love was.  letting go of that clock, my clock, the shot clock i was convinced i would never beat, never best, never fully comprehend was harder than anything i've ever had to do, ever.  harder than burying people i loved, because time is tied up in that bit, too.  i stopped wearing a watch when i was twenty-five, as part of a lenten discipline, but also because i knew i was looking at my watch way more than i was looking at the faces around me, more than i was looking out the window of my office, more than i was looking at anything else, to tell the truth.  i didn't like that.  i didn't pick up another one until i had to wear one at camp.  i was so glad to take it off at the end of the summer, to see that inch of untanned wrist glow in the dark, to be unshackled from that band of time that made me hurry and rush from one thing to the other, when what i really wanted  to do was be still and sit and process. 

being in babylon is all about time, the illusion and the reality of the concept of time.  it is totally analogous to "doing time" in a strange and somehow familiar/slightly unknowable jail.  it's hard to make my peace with that.  we are captives here. 

the upshot is that every now and then, we can find these spaces and these people within which and with whom time becomes very fluid and thin, and we can just peek over the walls and into that place of promise. sometimes, we even get visits to that place.  we get to sneak over the wall or under the wire, and hike back into that green and lovely morning-place where it's all new and flush and vivid and there are no clocks or alarms or hourglasses or punch cards or anything, not even a stuffed crocodile with a clock in his mouth to remind us that we've won this part of the war.  there's just the sun and the trees and the clouds and the birds and crickets and centipedes and a flock of turkeys and something new to see around every corner.  we don't get to stay there for long, because even though it feels like time stops in this place, it really doesn't... but we can find the way back, any time we like, if we're willing to close our eyes and believe in the space we make between ourselves, when we are honest and good and kind and true.  it's very much the Kingdom of G-d between us, it's the intersection of the-already and the-not-yet.  and it is breathtaking.  

it's not magic.  but it is a miracle.  

he says we have our own time zone. 

mil besos,
rmg  

04 June 2012

Job Description

"as time wore on did she think much about the beloved parents she had left behind her?...wendy did not really worry about her father and mother; she was absolutely confident that they would always keep the window open for her to fly back by, and this gave her complete ease of mind. 
what did disturb her at times was that john remembered his parents vaguely only, 
as people he had once known, while michael was quite willing to believe that she was really his mother. 
these things scared her a little, and nobly anxious to do her duty, she tried to fix the old life in their minds by setting them examination papers on it, 
as like as possible to the ones she used to do at school…
 --peter and wendy, j.m. barrie

"when she stopped conforming to the conventional picture of femininity she finally began to enjoy being a woman."
--betty friedan

"i do not believe that the accident of birth makes people sisters and brothers. It makes them siblings. 
Gives them mutuality of parentage. 
Sisterhood and brotherhood are conditions people have to work at. 
It's a serious matter. You compromise, you give, you take, you stand firm, and you're relentless...
 --maya angelou


"the highlight of my childhood was making my brother laugh so hard that food came out of his nose."


 --garrison keillor




"remember how it's always been...you and me against the world...how we always said we could do anything, as long as we did it together?"  --laban seth graves


honestly, it's the only job i've ever done that i felt remotely qualified to do.  that's probably because i was four years old when i took the job, and didn't know i was allowed to doubt my qualifications.  it's a good thing mom and dad didn't wait until i was six to have my brother.  and while i'm sad i didn't get to meet the baby lost between my brother and myself, or the one lost before i was born, i am grateful every single day that my little brother is mine

if he hadn't come along, or not been so entirely himself, all the time (even when i sometimes wished he was a sister or a dog or just not so loud and rowdy)...if he hadn't been such a good teacher, such a worthy opponent in damn near everything, i shudder to think what a wreck and ruin i might have become.  everything i know about how to live my life, navigate my life, relate to Jesus...everything i know goes back to being my brother's sister.  it's the job i've had longest.  being that kid's sister, learning how to do it, over the last 30 years, has made me better at everything else i've picked up, from actual jobs to being a girlfriend to working at a church for a wide and varied group of people...everything, everything, all of it goes back to being a sister.  

we have screamed terrible things at each other.  he's the only person i've ever been in a fist-fight with.  we have left marks on each other.  there are stories we would rather not remember.  but when push comes to shove...i know that he backs my play.  

he's the first person i'd draft into my army, if i had to go to war.  he's the person i would trust to broker the peace, once the war was over.  even on days when we don't understand each other, we have a bond that goes all the way to our bones.  nobody but us can ever belong to that club.  and my little brother...that kid could talk the devil into lighting himself on fire.  he's smarter and funnier than i am.  he knows this, but pretends that i'm the smart one.  and on days when i drag ass, or need to laugh, or need to remember the middle of who i am and how i am, my little brother tells me ridiculous jokes and puts my nephews on the phone or has my sister-in-law just laugh into the phone.  he is always teaching me how to be a better sister, holding my best self up to me, reminding me of who i am, of who we are, and where we are going.  

he's the reason my best friends are people i fold into my idea of family--he's the reason for all the brothers from other mothers and sisters from other misters i have spread all over the country.  he's one of the best ways i understand family, and have applied that sense of community, of unconditional love (relationships have conditions...but love does not...remember that...), of intentional focus on honesty and vulnerability, and serious, wild, crazy, unfettered fun.  he's the reason i like having roommates, most of the time.  he's the reason i think farts are hilarious, and don't gag at toilet humor.  he's the reason i never minded having guy roommates.  he's the reason i know i'm not supposed to talk in movies, or during tv shows, or even some commercials.  he's the one who explained football to me, and even though i know how, and can do it myself, he's always willing to bait my fish hook.  

when babylon comes calling, and it does, bidden or not, it's important to know my story.  it's important to know what i'm good at, what perspective i need to call on to get things done.  i have to know what's in my tool box, what's within reach, if it's a solo project, or if i'm going to get some help with the task at hand.  my little brother, my brave and strong and wildly talented little brother, the kid who has given me a thousand nicknames, who pulled the most incredible stunt at my 16th birthday party...he's one of the ways i know G-d has a plan, and that i am loved beyond measure or understanding.  

...my little brother...  he's been the face of Jesus on some hard days, in my world.  both of them, my Brother and my brother, have taught me the best things i know, have taught me a posture for life-- one that makes family out of all of us.  and in this foreign and strange place, this Babylon, living fully and freely and unashamedly into that posture is the way i live to make my life good.  


mil besos,
rmg