11 February 2013

mixtapes from babylon, vol...10 or 11, i think...


bro·ken  (brōkən)
Share: bro·ken
v.
Past participle of break.
adj.
1. Forcibly separated into two or more pieces; fractured: a broken arm; broken glass.
2. Sundered by divorce, separation, or desertion of a parent or parents: children from broken homes; a broken marriage.
3. Having been violated: a broken promise.
4.
a. Incomplete: a broken set of books.
b. Being in a state of disarray; disordered: troops fleeing in broken ranks.
5.
a. Intermittently stopping and starting; discontinuous: a broken cable transmission.
b. Varying abruptly, as in pitch: broken sobs.
c. Spoken with gaps and errors: broken English.
6. Topographically rough; uneven: broken terrain.
7.
a. Subdued totally; humbled: a broken spirit.
b. Weakened and infirm: broken health.
8. Crushed by grief: died of a broken heart.
9. Financially ruined; bankrupt.
10. Not functioning; out of order: a broken washing machine.
--American Heritage Dictionary
Ring the bells that still can ring.
Forget your perfect offering.
There is a crack in everything.
That’s how the light gets in.
--Leonard Cohen


I never saw a wild thing
sorry for itself.
A small bird will drop frozen dead from a bough
without ever having felt sorry for itself.
--DH Lawrence

The Word became flesh to communicate to us human beings caught in the mud, the pain, the fears and the brokenness of existence, the life, the joy, the communion, the ecstatic gift of love that is the source of all love and life and unity in our universe and that is the very life of God.
--Jean Vanier



What I can tell you for sure about living in Babylon is that getting right with brokenness (my own and the world around me) was and is what could be categorized as “a major undertaking”. I don’t deal with brokenness, especially my own, very well, at all.  Other people’s brokenness or the way society is broken—those just make me uncomfortable, like the way a tension headache sets into your back teeth, and slowly heats up the back of your head and neck-- just achey enough to not be able to concentrate, but not achey enough to stop what you’re doing and take an Advil.  I’m realistic enough, on most days, to deal with the fact that brokenness, as a construct, exists. 

When I say “getting right with brokenness” I’m not just talking about those odd days when brokenness rears a very obvious head, all wobbly and woozy and wonky in the middle of my regularly scheduled Tuesday.  I’m talking about the brokenness that lives at the bottom of all of us, the gaps that gape over chasms, the way we have such a hard time being kind to each other, and how sometimes, for no good reason, people are broken in ways that cannot be transcended in this life.  I’m talking about 24/7 broken. 

It’s miserable.  It’s life-changing.  Once I engaged it, nothing was ever the same.  See, I think sometimes we forget that part of being a real person, with his or her shit together doesn’t mean that we only get to feel one thing at a time.  We imagine the divided lunch room tray of adult life, where the fun parts don’t touch the sad parts don’t touch the romantic parts don’t touch the political parts don’t touch the religious parts don’t touch the delayed or impaired or physically or mentally impaired parts.  And everything, whether it’s sad or happy, is tied up in 30 minutes, with only four two-minute commercial interruptions.  That’s the format.  That’s the way be believe we do business, because that makes us feel safe and kind of superior.  Because when our broken edges rub up against the veneer of polite or politically correct or post-modern society, things have a way of bleeding in a rather unsightly manner.  And we hate seeing things that are unsightly, or hearing  a cry that can’t be soothed, or knowing that some things just stay broken. 

Which brings me to Theodore.  God…Theodore.  Poor Ted.  I mean it.  Poor Ted.  He was just “with it” enough to know he wasn’t “with it” enough to really be independent and live on his own.  Ted’s momma was older than Enoch, and probably had Jesus in Vacation Bible School, and I think was just too tired to die, when it came right down to it.  I imagine it had just been Ted and Momma for a long time, because I knew they hadn’t driven themselves to church in…decades.  Same for the grocery store.  Ted’s momma fought to keep that much independence for her youngest son, and managed to do it at a time in history that wasn’t particularly kind to children and families with the kind of differences Theodore exhibited. 

I don’t imagine growing up in that house was much fun for Ted’s brother.  I don’t know how much fun it was for Ted, either.  I hope it wasn’t just awful.  I don’t know many details about the early chapters of Ted’s story, or the middle, really either.  I sort of inherited Ted and his momma through my job.  For much of my tenure, all I did was check in on them, every week or so.  They handled their own transportation, and shopping, and doctors’ visits.  All I had to do was wonder what was in the rolling suitcase Ted carried with him EVERYWHERE, and whether or not his mother would ever part with her old-school Czech kolache recipe, which I knew had to be good.

And then one day, his momma went to the hospital, and Theodore was left at home, all alone.  He’d been on his own for a day or two, here and there, but this time, Momma wasn’t going to be able to come home.  And despite everything I tried—down to bribing him, Theodore refused to even consider moving from his home into a group home, or retirement center, or even the place his mom was living.  RE-FUSED.  I’m talking heels-dug-in-over-my-dead-body-this-is-a-closed-subject refused.  Whether I agreed with his choice or not, I had to admire his desire for independence, his desire to organize his day and his space independently, for the first time in his life. 

I know Ted missed his mother terribly, even as he relished his version of a swinging bachelor life.  We went to see her on Sundays, and he would take her a donut from coffee hour, and the Czech-language newspaper she still had delivered to the house.  And we’d all have communion together.  Then, I’d drop Ted back home, and back out of the driveway, silently praying that this wouldn’t be the week he’d decide to try and boil eggs on his own, on the gas range, and blow up half of the neighborhood and parts of the interstate.  Ted, among all the interesting things he could do that would surprise you, did not see well, at all.  I mean, Mr. Magoo aced his vision test, comparatively. 

Ted understood and used the entire bus and handicapped accessible taxi system all over town.  He could navigate them like a pro.  And he would stand there, asking questions of drivers, ticket vendors, station managers, what-have-you, until he understood where he was, and what he needed to do to get to his next destination. 

He loved figuring out how things worked, and as a result, took apart several medium-end men’s electric razors, trying to clean them.  He understood how to do this, understood how the mechanisms worked, but couldn’t see well enough to put them back together without breaking these really irritatingly small and oddly fragile little plastic filaments.  And Ted was not interested in waiting for me to clean them, when I brought him his groceries once a week.  So we went through three of them in six months.  Three.  I could almost have charted out when he was going to break one.  And even though I knew he couldn’t help it—not that he was on the bad side of blind, or that the pieces were really small and tricky, or that he loved to tinker—it still drove me ape-shit every time I had to go buy a new razor. 

During a time in my life when I was solely shopping at the grocery store for cat food and litter, cans of soup, toilet paper, bagged spinach, and shampoo, I agreed to go to the grocery store once a week for Theodore.  And truth be told, it probably saved both our lives.  There was a stretch of weeks that the only things that kept me sane were ritualistically grocery shopping for Theodore, and cleaning out the cat box.  Theodore only got Meals on Wheels during the week—he was on his own during the weekends, and Meals only delivered two a day.  (The cat…well…you know cats—if I had just died from being worn out and sad, Jinx would have waited maybe two days to eat my eyeballs, depending on how much food was in his bowl.) This was something I could do, I could help.  I could make someone feel better at a time when I had no idea how to do that for myself.  Because I’d gotten to that point in life where I had realized that some things, no matter how much therapy to you’ve had, or how realistically you’re looking at a situation, hurt us down to our bones, and it takes us a little while to get back up.  And that is just life.  And it happens no matter how much you love Jesus.  Loving Jesus just helps you make a way to get up.  I had also realized that sometimes, the best thing you can say about what you’ve accomplished in a day is that you didn’t lose any ground.  Being with Theodore taught me those things.

Shopping for Ted was easy—it was pretty much the same thing, every single week.  The only variances would be choices for breakfasts, or a different lunch meat, or cookie option.  Sometimes, he would need toilet paper, or shower soap, or would want ice cream.  During one month, he asked me to buy dishwashing soap three times.  I finally asked him why he was going through so much soap—hoping he wasn’t developing some kind of hand-washing thing.  Come to find out, when we were putting his groceries away, I’d put it too far back in the sink cabinet, and he couldn’t see it.  …so he had three huge bottles of Orange Ajax lurking under the sink.  We moved the soap. 

The putting away part of the grocery shopping mostly made me want to have a drink. Ted was a close-stander.  He would stand in your armpit, if you let him, occasionally whacking you in the knees with his giant roller bag, which he sometimes had to be reminded not to bring into the kitchen (…because we’re just unloading groceries, Ted.  You won’t need those missile launch codes, or anything else in that overhead-compartment sized-suitcase, any time soon, buddy...).  I think part of that is because of his visual impairment.  I also think part of it is just Ted…there is something about him that is odd, and has nothing to do with his visual impairment.  After about ten minutes with Ted, you’d know he was not like anyone else you knew, and that his physical and psychological differences really weren’t what made him different.  But that’s just my opinion.

What I can guess is that Ted would probably have been an odd little bird, even if he’d hadn’t been visually and cognitively impaired…some folks are just different, all the way down. But because Ted is impaired,  it’s impossible to ignore his brokenness. 

Ted was also deeply paranoid.  He would worry a lot that people had been listening in on his phone conversations.  Sometimes, when he’d call the office, he’d almost be speaking in code, in these very veiled references to conversations we’d had about his grocery list or the next time we would be going to see his mother.  Ted was constantly reporting to me that things disappeared and reappeared, and he had no idea who or what was happening.  He also had periodic focal point and grande mal seizures, which were only kind-of –sort of-not -really-well-controlled with medicine.  All those things would run through my mind when I was finally ready to get into my car and go home, every week.  But I could only do my little part, I couldn’t fix the vast majority of things that were broken in this scenario.  I could just do my little part to make the mess less bad, or at least not to contribute to it.

I could kind of tell when he’d maybe had a seizure, or when he might be about to have one, but I was mostly just guessing.  I’d try to convince him to sleep at night (because there was that three week period when he convinced himself that he could speed up his metabolism, if he kept moving all the time), or not to work on his projects so late.  Or to sleep on the bed, instead of the sleeping bag next to his perfectly good bed.  I’d ask him if he was eating.  I’d ask him if he had any doctors’ appointments he needed help getting to.  I bandaged his head when he fell, trying to put up a book case out of brackets and boards that had collapsed.  There was blood everywhere, and I was worried he’d poked one of his eyes out.  He kept insisting he was fine, that he was just distracted, that he thought the bracket was right by his hand, but it had disappeared, and then everything came crashing down. 

Being with Theodore, trying to help him live on his own terms, was sometimes so frustrating I would cry from the minute I left his house, until I arrived back at my own.  I wasn’t angry with Theodore, ever.  Not really.  Most of the frustrations I had were about the ways he was broken, about how that brokenness made me feel, about how confronted I felt, about how sad I was that I had no idea how to help Theodore plan and execute any kind of long-term independence. Every call I made to his family was a dead end.  Every call I made to social workers put me in a message queue, and I’m still waiting for a couple of returned calls.  There was no way for me to save Theodore.  I was having a hard enough time managing to keep myself independent, so becoming a conservator or guardian wasn’t something I was even remotely equipped to handle…but I thought about it.  I thought about it a lot. 

Those last months at that job were brutal.  And at the same time, they were some of the most important months in my adult life, and I knew something really important was happening inside me. Some days, it felt like everything around me was broken.  There were no soft places.  There were precious few safe places.  There were car rides from all manner of places, back to my little house, where I would run a bath and cry for hours, because everything was broken.   And buying groceries for Ted, and unloading them and explaining them to him in that abysmally small and claustrophobic kitchen both seared and soothed my tender spots. 

On the one hand, I was engaged in an activity (buying Ted’s groceries) that was never, ever going to end, unless I ended it.  Ted would have lost at least half a day in a grocery store, and likely suffered physical and verbal abuse in the cereal aisle, not to mention what might have happened in the freezer case.  Every label, every coupon option, every bit of information on every box and bag he purchased would need to be read and understood before it went in the buggy.  I know this because I took him to the market with me once.  I can’t say much about that trip, but I will say these  things: 1) I never took him to the market with me, again.  2) I totally understand why parents beat their kids in grocery stores.  3) I didn’t yell at Ted.  This took a lot of doing.  On the other hand, the act of buying essentially the same items every week, unloading them in the same fashion, issuing instructions for when to throw things away and when to put them on the grocery list for next time became a kind of liturgy for me.  It became an offering not just to Theodore, but to God. 

When we see people who are broken on the outside, broken in un-ignorable and unmistakable ways, we are sometimes confronted with the inner brokenness in ourselves.  Some of what is broken on my insides (and probably yours, as well) has been caused by interactions with people who have been less than careful with me and my little self.  But there are other jagged edges, hidden faults and knicks that just come with being human, come from living a life that is full and active, come because everything in this world is broken and dying.  That is something that I must intellectually accept as a tenet of faith, stemming from my understanding of the allegory of the Fall. 

We break things all the time—each other, the planet, the church, homes, relationships, you name it.  And this is why we can’t have nice things, people.  We are so twitchy, sitting next to brokenness, watching it be awkward and lost and other.  And if we touch the different, it might get on us, or make us sad or remind us that we really are all in this together.  It might bruise our shins with its giant fifty pound rolling suitcase, or breathe all over us while we put the Oreos in the stay-fresh container in the fridge, and it might take up every inch of the front seat of the car as it fumbles around for the seatbelt clip.  Sometimes, the different keeps us up at night, and we spend sleepless hours trying to figure out how to see it from another angle.

Ted had to deal with my brokenness, too.  I couldn’t always come at the same time, every week.  Sometimes, I wasn’t able to take him to his mother’s assisted living facility. There were also days when he’d ask for a specific item that I couldn’t find in the regular grocery or big box store, and I’d have to explain to him that I couldn’t find something.  When he asked me to help him figure out how to make his handwriting better, so he could start sending Morse Code messages, I was unable to be of much service.  But what I could do was buy his groceries for him, once a week.  I could also teach him how to peel boiled eggs, after they ‘d cooled down (and after I’d made sure they were boiled, and the gas was turned off).  One time, he asked me if it would be ok for him to buy some new underwear and pants, and showed me a couple of pair that were mostly holes, and I said that yes, I thought that would be fine.  He said he had a bunch of clothes money, but because he couldn’t see well, he didn’t know if he needed anything new.  And that was one of the days I cried in the driveway.  Because there were things that he had never had to do for himself, and that I never anticipated he’d need to have explained.  There were so many ways in which my brokenness was something Theodore had to deal with.

Going to the grocery gradually became this thing I loved to do.  I mean, the list making was total hell, because it would necessitate at least four phone calls between me and Ted, and BOY…he was not good on the phone.  And he would try to read his list to me, but wouldn’t be able to see well in the hallway where the phone was, or he wouldn’t be able to find his list, or he could only find the lists from two months ago, or he didn’t think he would need milk until the middle of the week, but that would be between visits, or he might need batteries but would need me to double check the sizes on his (insert only partially-working electronic gadget here:  see also: tinkering with shit) before I went to the store.  That list, as I have previously mentioned, ALMOST NEVER VARIED.  Like ever.  Except that I refused to buy him prune juice and Fiber One Bars on the same bill of groceries.  We had to have a very candid conversation about constipation, and I made Ted promise me that he’d never have a prune juice cocktail with a fiber bar chaser.  I told him there was not enough toilet paper in the world to deal with that issue, and he even laughed a little bit. 

If I had stayed where I was, I probably would still be doing the grocery run for Ted, once a week.  I couldn’t and can’t do anything to fix any of Ted’s brokenness, and he couldn’t and can’t fix mine.  But for a chunk of time, I like to think we didn’t further any breakages.  I can’t fix his eyes, or his mind.  Ted couldn’t fix the brokenness at my office, or the sadness I felt at leaving a life I’d spent years building.  But I could buy his groceries, and he could help me put them away.  An exchange like that—kindness and cooperation—goes a long way to roughing down some of those jagged places.  I’m not saying that Ted was broken for my benefit, that somehow his otherness were some kind of boon to me.  And I’m not saying that my brokenness was for Ted’s benefit, either.  What I am saying is that we were broken in corresponding ways—ways that for a season in our lives intersected in a powerful way, that our brokenness fit together, and made a whole space. 

That’s amazing to me.  


mil besos,
rmj

18 December 2012

our brother's keeper


...when they grew up, Abel became a shepherd, while Cain cultivated the ground. when it was time for the harvest, Cain presented some of his crops as a gift to the Lord.  Abel also brought a gift—the best of the firstborn lambs from his flock. the Lord accepted Abel and his gift, but he did not accept Cain and his gift. this made Cain very angry, and he looked dejected.
“why are you so angry?” the Lord asked Cain. “why do you look so dejected? you will be accepted if you do what is right. but if you refuse to do what is right, then watch out! sin is crouching at the door, eager to control you. but you must subdue it and be its master.”
one day Cain suggested to his brother, “let’s go out into the fields.” and while they were in the field, Cain attacked his brother, Abel, and killed him.
 afterward the Lord asked Cain, “where is your brother? where is Abel?”
“i don’t know,” Cain responded. “am I my brother’s keeper?”
but the Lord said, “what have you done? listen! your brother’s blood cries out to me from the ground!  
--Genesis 4:2-10

“for if you suffer your people to be ill-educated, and their manners to be corrupted from their infancy, and then punish them for those crimes to which their first education disposed them, what else is to be concluded from this, but that you first make thieves and then punish them.” 
― thomas more


"even if the whole world were to fall to pieces, the unity of the psyche would never be shattered. and the wider and more numerous the fissures on the surface, the more the unity is strengthened in the depths.
--carl jung
Civilization in Transition (1964)



in my professional life, i spend a lot of time with little people and their parents.  the vast majority of the people i see and interact with during the span of a working week are between 3 and 11 years old.  while i can't pretend to know or understand the depth of grief being felt by the Sandy Hook families, or the Lanza family, i know enough to be humbled by the relief that comes from knowing all my little faces are safe, today.

this is an altogether different kind of thing...i'm not even sure what kind of word to assign to Friday's event in Connecticut.  all i know is that it's awful, and ugly, and scary.  and no matter how far we follow whatever rabbit holes are left to us, i cannot imagine that anything we learn will make us feel any better.  i know that we must follow those trails, however slight or strange they may be, because even though it won't make us feel better, i hope like hell we can at least learn something.

and i also know this is not the first time i've had to figure out an artful, non-scary way to address a very adult and scary topic with small people, and find some kind of meaningful ways to comfort and reassure their parents.  and i am sick of this shit, people.  just sick of it.  we do not have to live like this.  we don't.  and most of us, on a day-in-day-out, where we live and move and have our being--we DON'T live like this.

but then there are random Fridays, and you imagine that all you have to do is buy your first Christmas tree, and pack the car, and wrap a present for your oldest nephew, and you'll just listen to NPR on the way to get the nail taken out of the back tire of your husband's vehicle, and you realize in a powerful way that we DO live like this...

the thing that happens after one of these events (and G-d, how awful is it that there's a pattern to follow...seriously?) started happening before anyone even really had an idea of what had really happened.  "news" and "facts" become sort of fluid and floaty, and the thing you know for most certain is that some awful and terrible is happening, but nothing beyond that can be confirmed.  and then some of the smoke starts to clear, and some solid actual information becomes known.  and then, some jerks with microphones start talking and prognosticating and pontificating, and everything that's really worth talking about is blotted out with station logos, commercial breaks, and retired specialists who can give you every scenario you need to have nightmares for days, without actually giving you any legitimate and accurate information.  and you know some douchebag is going to say it's because we don't allow G-d in schools, or because we don't have kindergarten teachers who pack heat...

***this is the part where i get up on my soap box, so if you're not up for that, go right back to facebook, and have a nice day.***

here's what i have to say to douchebags who blame this on "not allowing G-d in schools"--and i'm looking right at you, former Governor Mike Huckabee.  this statement is reductive to the point of being blasphemous, and people who espouse it should be deeply and profoundly ashamed to have such a small and faithless witness for G-d in the world.  shame on you.  G-d, or at least the G-d i know doesn't work that way.

i'd be so excited to get to have a cup of coffee with you, and tell you about how big my G-d is, how much my G-d loves, how sad my G-d is about this, and how i know that had G-d not been present in that school (and bidden or not, G-d IS present)...well, we are very lucky that G-d was there.  additionally, stop saying things that aren't true about the separation of church and state.  again, this is highly reductive, and not helpful, and NOT true.  what is true is that we're not all baptists, or methodists, or christians, or jews, or hindus, or jains, or buddhists, or zoroastrians, or neo-druids, or believers of any stripe.  but none of those identifiers mean that G-d loves us any less, or is any less present or active in our lives and world.  and while i am angry with you, more than anger, i feel great pity toward you.  i hope that you don't feel as alone and scared and unsure as you sound.  i'm totally seriously about that cup of coffee...

to the douchebags who say that teachers should pack heat, i have to say this:  Are you freaking kidding me?  Rick Perry and others--get your heads out of your asses.  that opinion is not limited to Rick Perry, not by a long shot.  i've seen it around my own little universe, and it makes me sick and sad.  this is NOT about guns.  JESUS.  i mean, yeah, we need to talk about guns.  but if you're dumb enough to believe that adding more guns to the equation is going to make things better, that's the biggest reason you're not fit to lead the country.  one more gun, or one more person with a concealed carry license isn't going to reduce gun violence, even in extreme cases. it's just one more gun on the streets.  

you wanna know the real reason we want to hurt each other?  it's as old as our oldest stories...we are jealous, we are broken, we hurt.  and in our jealousy, our brokenness, our hurt, we grab the heavy or hard thing closest to us, and whale away, until we see red, until the noise stops, until the magazine runs out or the cops come, and then...well, by then it's all over but the crying.  and that is far too late.  all the guns, violent games and movies, objectification of relationships, bigotry, hate, all of it...all of it boils down to our hurt and brokenness coming out in blazing and startling technicolor. it's been millenia since we first heard the story of cain and abel...why can't we do better?  why are we still fumbling around in the dark, looking for ways to hide the blood, clean up the mess, cover up the lies and the wounds, instead of making things right?

there will be people who will claim that nothing meaningful can be done, who will "yeah, but" in the face of every articulated solution, who will demand that things must change, but will not be willing to be the ones to do the changing.  and it will be hard to love them.  but we have to.  we have to love them, and keep in contact and conversation with them, even when we want to run away or call them dumbs.  they feel the same way, right back at us.  but we are all in this together.  we have to remember that.  we have to keep and hold and love each other.  we are our brother's keeper, and they are ours, too.

mil besos,
rmj

27 November 2012

...for the means of grace, and for the hope of glory...


the dolly zoom is an unsettling in-camera effect that appears to undermine normal visual perception. it is part of many cinematic techniques used in filmmaking and television production.
the effect is achieved by using the setting of a zoom lens to adjust the angle of view (often referred to as field of view or FOV) while the camera dollies (or moves) towards or away from the subject in such a way as to keep the subject the same size in the frame throughout. In its classic form, the camera angle is pulled away from a subject while the lens zooms in, or vice-versa. thus, during the zoom, there is a continuous perspective distortion, the most directly noticeable feature being that the background appears to change size relative to the subject.
as the human visual system uses both size and perspective cues to judge the relative sizes of objects, seeing a perspective change without a size change is a highly unsettling effect, and the emotional impact of this effect is greater than the description above can suggest. the visual appearance for the viewer is that either the background suddenly grows in size and detail and overwhelms the foreground, or the foreground becomes immense and dominates its previous setting, depending on which way the dolly zoom is executed.
--wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


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

"... thanksgiving is more than eating, chuck. you heard what linus was saying out there. those early Pilgrims were thankful for what had happened to them, and we should be thankful, too. 
we should just be thankful for being together. 
i think that's what they mean by 'thanksgiving,' charlie brown."
--charles schultz
a charlie brown thanksgiving


so, i'm standing there in this little chapel  and looking at this incredible creature G-d said i should marry and spend my life with, and i all i could think was, "ohmygoodnessthisisreallyhappeningNOWNOWNOW".  time seemed to compress and elongate, all at the same time.  an intense and sharp focus fired it's way into my brain, and seemed to brighten the colors in the room, and as i made myself take deep breaths and willed my knees not to shake, that familiar and awe-inspiring tunnel vision and magnetic hum of Mystery seemed to gin up inside and around me, and i was able to kind of pull myself together.  i knew there were words i needed to say, knew there were words i was supposed to hear and to respond to appropriately.  all i wanted to do was not let go of his hands or stop looking at his face. 

we were talking about what it would feel like to finally be married, last week.  we wondered what, if anything, might be different.  he said he was going to stop holding in his farts.  i figured i'd probably actually cry over stupid commercials in front of him, instead of crying in the bathroom, or pretending like i was feeling my allergies.  G-d...were we wrong.  I mean, he really did stop holding in his farts, and I openly wept at a couple of really cheesy things.  but there is something...well, kind of big... to be said for the ontological change, for the profound grace imparted in that sacramental moment we shared between ourselves, with our families, and G-d, on last thursday.  

i didn't think it was possible to love him more, to feel more married to him, to have everything good and lovely about him seem so much...much-ier.  but...my G-d...it's the difference between the giant hole your nephew dug in the backyard and the Grand Canyon: one leaves you reaching for the bottle of scotch, and the other leaves you with the deep knowledge that you should definitely be drinking more champagne.  

loving him, from the very minute i realized that i did, has both shaken and steadied me, all the way to to very deepest core of myself.   he has maintained all along that we have our own time zone, and...as with so many other things...(and i'm sure this is not the last time this will happen)...

i have to say that my husband is absolutely right.  

mil besos,
rmj



22 October 2012

rearview

each friend represents a world in us, a world possibly not born until they arrive, and it is only by this meeting that a new world is born. 
--anias nin

he who does not see the whole world in his friends, does not deserve 
that the world should hear of him.
--goethe


the new is older than the old;

and newest friend is oldest friend in this:
that, waiting him, we longest grieved to miss
one thing we sought. 
--helen hunt jackson



the older i get, the more i realize how rare it is for people to maintain close friendships with people they've known since they were little.  i have close friendships with like...seven people i grew up with.  those roots go deep.  we're not just twice-a-year friends.  we talk regularly.  we know what nights not to call, who's got the day off, which way the wind is blowing in their corner of the world.  we have a weird short hand, and know ridiculous stories that happened WAY before college, WAY before hormones, WAY before crow's feet, or spouses, or when some of us still had two parents.  

this weekend, i got to watch one of my oldest and best friends be married to her beloved, by another of our oldest and best friends, with other old friends in attendance.  it was a day we had imagined as little girls, with barbies and kens and big poofy dresses, raiding her mom's old barbie collection for the perfect accessory, or at my grandmother's house, in the playroom, trying on old dresses and making veils out of old half-slips.  like so many things we imagine as little people, the reality far outstripped everything we were even kind of able to imagine about what weddings would REALLY look like.  but it is unaccountably sweet to think of those two little girls playing dolls, and dreaming about being brides.  we hear the voices of those little girls we were in our discussions about becoming wives, and i am constantly reminded of what a luxury that is.  i am profoundly grateful.  

my best best friend in the whole wide world was on the officiating end of the wedding.  he was married to the bride when we were in kindergarten, so the whole thing had a really nice bit of symmetry to it.  i was also so proud and excited to introduce my beloved and my bestest friend to each other, to be able to say to each of them, "this is one of the coolest people you'll ever meet, and i want you to be friends", to have them start to know each other.  they are two of the most important people in my life, two of my favorite men of all time, and it was fun to watch them navigate their first meeting.  they played well together.  listening to them, and talking with them, i was reminded of the things i love best about each of them, and was so awash with gooey girly feelings and the best possible sense of nostalgia, and wonderment about what's coming next.  

this man that i'm marrying is incredible.  just when i think i have a handle on how much i love him, on what i think must certainly be the deepest depth of my feeling and understanding of what it means to love and be loved by him, i have to run to the bathroom and cry a little bit, because i realize this really is just the beginning, and we are on such an adventure...one for the ages.  i know that in a very real sense, one day, years from now, i will look back at my thirty-four year old self with the same fondness and slight head-shake at her innocent musings( about married life and being a wife and wearing that amazing wedding dress and starting a whole new chapter with this glorious creature G-d made just for me) in much the way i have looked at my little-girl self in the rearview mirror  of my mind, all weekend. 

it's an amazing thing to learn than you are happier than you ever, ever, ever imagined you could be, over things and people and circumstances you never could have imagined, much less have had the sense to hope or pray for.  

to see your wildest dreams, your most far-fetched musings come into bloom in blazing technicolor, banishes thoughts of sleep or work or tomorrow, and demands you to be fully present, to wipe your eyes, and square your shoulders, and stare straight at the camera and smile, because this is now, and we can do anything. 

mil besos,
rmg





18 September 2012

learning curve

the godly union of souls in mutual forebearance with each other's infirmities, 
and mutual stimulating each other's graces--this surely is a fragment of true happiness 
that has survived the Fall.  --charles bridges


marge: homer, is this the way you pictured married life?

homer: yup, pretty much. except we drove around in a van solving mysteries. --the simpsons

with this ring I thee wed, with my body i thee worship, and with all my worldly goods i thee endow.
--the book of common prayer, 1928

what woman, however old, has not the bridal-favours and raiment stowed away, and packed in lavender, 
in the inmost cupboards of her heart?
--william makepeace thackary


so, i'm buying a wedding dress this weekend.  and ordering his ring.  and picking out a cake.  every time i think about that, i have to suppress this ridiculous giggle and squirmy feeling that starts in my toes and runs all the way up to the roots of my hair. i have these intense moments of emotion, where i tear up for no reason, or smile or laugh, or can't sleep. 

honestly, until about two, two-and-a-half years ago, i was convinced i would never, ever get married.  mostly i was sure of that because i was sure there was something really wrong with me, something missing, or not good enough, or bright and shiny and pretty or smart enough to be a good partner.  i had people i really loved and cared about and spent a ton of time would go on for hours about how being married conveys a sense of maturity and adulthood one cannot obtain outside of the marriage relationship.  and i simultaneously agreed and rejected that idea, because i was convinced that i was never actually going to fall in love or get married, and was going to be stuck in some kind of infant-adult hybrid life.  forever.

at some point, and i could almost tell you the date, i stopped worrying about who was going to ever fall in love with me, and decided i deserved to fall in love with myself, as much as i was able.  and once i started down that trail, it didn't so much matter to me if anyone ever wanted to love or marry me, as long as i was loving myself and my life in the best ways i knew how.  i laid down on the floor of my bedroom, and surrendered myself...to Jesus, to the Universe, and to my deepest self.  and i tried to be kind and good, and treat myself the way i treated the people i loved in my life.  i stopped yelling at that face in the mirror, and crying over her in the shower.  i stopped thinking mean things about myself, stopped putting myself in no-win situations (as much as i was able), and really, really tried to know myself in new ways, all the way down to my toes and back up, again.  i tried to see myself as a real person, just like everyone else, with all the same chances and challenges as everyone else i know.  and once i did that, i could have really cared less if i got married, ever.  because my completeness wasn't attached to anything outside myself.  and that was a pretty amazing day.  

and then, on this funny little sunday in may, i realized i was hopelessly, irrevocably, and magically in love with this incredible man.  he walked off my porch, and toward the parking lot, and i walked back inside my apartment, and like some strange and silent earthquake/tsunami/catergory 5 hurricane/wildfire/hailstorm/you-name-it, this altogether familiar and wonderful voice whispered in my heart of hearts "so...this is how this happens.  this is how it was always supposed to happen.  it took every single step both of you took to get here. be here, now. and don't be afraid.  none of this is accidental."  

and so all these thoughts/hopes/plans/wishes i had concocted as a little girl, staring out my window, looking at the pecan trees in our front yard, and imagining what it would be like to be bride found their way back into my head.  and like so much i've learned in my adulthood, the actual doing of the thing is much different than the philosphy of the thing being done.  i can read a book about changing a tire and understand how to perform that task intellectually.  however, and as much as i hate to admit this..., until i'm shredding the knees of my jeans on the pavement, swearing at lug nuts and ragging up my cuticles, and sweating like Secretariat on the homestretch, actually changing the tire, i really don't know anything practical,real or factual about changing the tire.  it's kind of been the same with planning a wedding.  it's been exactly the same thing about pondering and exploring and becoming a wife, someone's partner, someone's next-of-kin, someone's (G-d...So.Cheesy, but true) last call of the day.  and it's not always the way i thought it would feel, or smell, or taste, or look, or sound.  it's better.  because i'm not thinking about it, not imagining it, not dreaming it, not putting together my best guess based on stories i've heard or read or made up. 

 this is real life, every.single.second.  
and it's his, and mine, and ours.  

and i never thought i'd be all gushy and girly over stuff, that i'd be one of those girls who gets all sappy and teary, that i would ever ever ever in a million years be this gaga over a guy.  but i am.     i always thought i'd want some big fluffy white wedding dress, until i realized that was pretty much the last thing i wanted to wear when i marry this man.  i thought i'd want a wedding with everyone i'd ever liked to spend time with in attendance, and gardens of flowers, and a string quartet, and lots of candles, and the london boy's chior, but what i want most is just to see his face at the end of the aisle, and i sort of surprised myself by genuinely not caring about any of the extraneous crap.  but i was still rock solid on the idea of having a cake, because...i mean, come on...there is no dessert better than wedding cake.  and i wasn't surprised at all that i wanted to use my parents' wedding rings to make the ring i will give to him.  i was surprised that i cried when my mother gave them to me, and that i cried when i wore them to church the next day, and sang a hymn that was played at my parents' wedding.  that was mystical and magical and miraculous.  and was another still and familiar voice, whispering in my ear, saying, " this is how this happens.  this is happening.  this is now."  

so, this weekend, i'm buying a wedding dress.  we're ordering a cake.  we're ordering his ring.  and i know it'll be different than i think it will be.  and that'll be exactly what it's supposed to be, because it won't be my imagination, it'll be reality.

and when i hear that still voice, (and it's always a still voice, ringing inside me like a tibetan prayer bowl) inside my deepest self, and i am shaken and steadied by what it tells me, what it reminds me, what is says is real and true and now, i know that now is worth everything. 

and it always was. 

mil besos,
rmg