How Mom Taught Me to Express Myself

How Mom Taught Me to Express MyselfGeniuses at Work

My Real Memoir

How Mom taught me to express myself: Until you start school, your life revolves around your parents. They can do nothing wrong. Only later, in your teens, do you discover they can’t actually do anything right, and that your sagely friends and major pop stars have all the real answers. But until then, it’s your parents who teach you what matters most in life.

Mommandad were my best friends, along with a little side-coaching from Weird Eddie, Babysitter Frieda, and Crazy Old Alice. But Dad went off to save the world every day. So it was Mom who showed me what mattered most. And for her (apart from family) it was stories–books and movies–and self-expression–crafts and decorating. It was the Age of the Housewife, so housekeeping was her day-job, but stories and self-expression were the real her.

So that’s what they were for me.

I Was Finally Going to School!

Which was neato. But what was even neato-er was that I got to cross the street all by myself! I still remember the delicious terror of crossing for the first time. I’d been warned that if I attempted to cross alone, cars—hundreds of them—would suddenly swoop down upon me and kill me over and over again. Yet here I was, crossing the street and not being killed even once!

But there was one thing I was even prouder of: my new Artist’s Smock! Mom had learned at Open House that we would be doing Art in kindergarten, and would need smocks. So she did what any mother of an Only-Child-Who-Happens-to-be-a-Genius would do. She spent two weeks stitching my personal “Authentic Parisian Artist’s Smock” to perfection. Then she finished her masterpiece with a custom monogram just like the ones the penniless impressionists in Paris wore.

The First Day of Kindergarten…

…was excruciatingly slow. I blew bubbles in my milk and tapped my toes through nap time, until Art finally arrived. But then Miss Shirley spoke the fateful words, “Alright, children, go to the closet and grab the first smock you see.”

By the time I got there, my smock had been snatched by a little cretin named Davey, who wouldn’t know a real artist’s smock from a dress shirt! Which was, in fact, what all of the other smocks in the closet were—kid’s dad’s dress shirts. Mine was the only Authentic Parisian Artist’s Smock. So I went straight to Miss Shirley, and pointed out her hideous error.

“We all need to learn to share,” she replied.

“Share?” I was an Only. Onlies don’t “share!”

Mom Was Heartbroken

She called the teacher and begged her to reconsider: “I made that smock just for him. It has his monogram on it!”

No exception was made. And I was irrevocably scarred, becoming at last the shattered shell of a man you see before you today.

OK, so I got over it.

But I still treasure storytelling and self-expression…

Thanks to Mom.

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An Open Letter to Christians

An Open Letter to ChristiansPainting: ‘My Friend by Helen Thomas Robson (fineartamerica.com)

Thought for the Week

“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I tell you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you. And then you will be the true children of your Father in heaven.” ~Matthew 5:43-45

An Open Letter to Christians

The life of Jesus, and the life he commands us to emulate, is one of unconditional love (agapaó) toward others. It’s the same unearned love that saved us “while we were yet sinners” (Romans 5:8). In its operative form it’s called grace, undeserved favor toward those who have no right to such a claim. In other words, it’s loving the way Jesus loved. We, the Body of Christ (1 Corinthians 12:27), his followers, are called to be his active, physical presence in the world.

And Yet…

The message the world seems be hearing from many who call themselves Christians these days is not “We love you unconditionally” but “Here’s a list of our demands!” No wonder they’ve turned away from Jesus. When did the Body of Christ become just another special interest group demanding its rights?

“But our country has abandoned its biblical values,” is the response. “It’s turned pagan and evil — and it’s up to us to save it!”

No, it’s not.

Jesus didn’t call his followers to save the Roman Empire—a world of pagan beliefs and abominable practices (widespread slavery, child abuse, torture and murder as public entertainment) ruled over by a dictator considered a living god. Instead, Jesus called his followers to save people, individuals.

But how, if not by saving their nation? By showing them the love Jesus spoke of and embodied, by being his living presence in the world today.

Brothers and Sisters

“Christendom,” the era of powerful nations loosely guided by Christian principles, has ended. We are rapidly returning to the kind of society Jesus encountered 2,000 years ago, a society that doesn’t even pretend to be Christlike–because it doesn’t know who Christ is.

No wonder our culture is turning away from Jesus. They’ve never encountered him. And until we show them the real Jesus…

We’ve shown them no Jesus at all.

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Be Someone’s Answer

Be Someone's Answer

There’s a Reason…

Alcoholics Anonymous sponsors are recovering addicts. Lost people don’t want slogans, they want to be shown the way out by someone who’s actually found it. So don’t just give answers. Whenever possible, be someone’s answer, even if only a partial one. And then two people will have found encouragement: The one who’s being helped. And the one whose own sufferings turn out to have had a greater purpose than they ever imagined.

“The most beautiful people…are those who have known defeat, known suffering, known struggle, known loss, and have found their way out of the depths. These persons have an appreciation, a sensitivity, and an understanding of life that fills them with compassion, gentleness, and a deep loving concern. Beautiful people do not just happen.”

~Elisabeth Kübler-Ross

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Hope Springs Eternal…

Hope Springs EternalSource: Farmers’ Almanac

Today is the official first day of spring, the Spring Equinox, (in my hemisphere). It’s the time every year that our Creator says, in living color, “I haven’t given up on you yet.”

“Hope springs eternal in the human breast
Man never is, but always to be blest
The soul, uneasy, and confin’d from home
Rests and expatiates in a life to come”

~Alexander Pope

Click on any image to enlarge it, or to begin slideshow.

“When there is nothing left to learn from the winter, move on to the spring!” ~Mehmet Murat ildan

    “You can cut all the flowers, but you cannot keep spring from coming.” ~Pablo Neruda

“What a strange thing
to be alive
beneath cherry blossoms”
~Kobayashi Issa

         “In the spring, at the end of the day, you should smell like dirt.” ~Margaret Atwood

“If people did not love one another, I really don’t see what use there would be in having any spring.” ~Victor Hugo

“Do not abandon yourselves to despair. We are the Easter people and hallelujah is our song.” ~Pope John Paul II (Karol Wojtyła)

“Wrong will be right, when Aslan comes in sight

At the sound of his roar, sorrows will be no more

When he bares his teeth, winter meets its death

And when he shakes his mane, we shall have spring again.

~C. S. Lewis

φ

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The Winter of Our Discontent

The Winter of Our DiscontentThe view from my office window

I Spend a Lot of Time…

…admiring the view from my window, while accomplishing very little. I did capture this lovely image, however–and a rather unlovely metaphor to go with it: I’ve spent too much time frozen in place. My calling, my purpose, has been in hibernation. I want to finish what I’ve been called to do in this life, not merely convince people I have. How about you? Well, then, let “the winter of our discontent” end now. It’s time to spring forward!

          “Delusion detests focus and romance provides the veil.” ~Suzanne Finnamore

“So, make a careful exploration of who you are and the work you have been given, and then sink yourself into that!” ~Galatians 6:4 (MSG)

“You can read a hundred books on wisdom and write a hundred books on wisdom, but unless you apply what you learned then its only words on a page. Life is not lived with intentions, but action.” ~Shannon Alder

“All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered. The point is to discover them.” ~Galileo Galilei

          “I am so clever that sometimes I don’t understand a single word of what I am saying.” ~Oscar Wilde

“If you reach for the stars, you just might land on a decently sized hill.” ~Stuart Hill

“Accomplish but do not boast, accomplish but without show, accomplish but without arrogance.” ~Lao Tzu

“It’s amazing what you can accomplish if you don’t care who gets the credit.” ~Harry S. Truman

“You measure the size of the accomplishment by the obstacles you have to overcome to reach your goals.” ~Booker T. Washington

The biggest obstacle being ourselves

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My First Kid Friend

Image sources: Left, reecesrainbow.org — Right, freepik.com 

My Real Memoir: My First Kid Friend

Eddie Was Different

He wasn’t my first human friend (that would by Crazy Old Alice). But Weird Eddie was my first kid friend. He sort of looked Chinese, and I liked that. He also talked differently, and very little. And even though he was bigger, he didn’t seem as smart as me, but I didn’t mind. His mom seemed grateful when I visited, and offered us non-stop treats. But Eddie had two big obsessions which kept us outside.

First, He Collected String

Even the tiniest pieces were treasures. The moment Eddie found one, he’d add it to his Humungous Ball of String. Which I found kind of boring. But what happened next was amazing!

The time had come for Eddie to carry his Humongous Ball of String to a big tree out front, and begin ceremoniously stringing it from limb to limb. He started with the lowest limbs, and then worked his way up to the highest. And I got to help. Hours later, the tree had become a colossal spider’s web of string!

And Then the Fun Began

Eddie climbed to the top of the tree, and dove down into the spider’s web, bouncing from level to level until he’d reached the ground! So I did it too. And it was epic! And once we’d reached the grass, we did it again! And again. And again. Until we’d finally broken most of the string. Then Eddie began lovingly re-building The Humongous Ball of String for some future colossal spider’s web event!

Eddie’s Other Obsession…

…was collecting grasshoppers. Which at first I thought was neato. He’d add each grasshopper he found to his Red Flyer wagon — after tearing off one its legs in order to make it stay. “No!” I shouted, and ordered him to stop! But he absolutely refused. Which was not OK with me!

So one day, while Eddie was inside, I pulled his wagon to the front yard and set all 200 grasshoppers free just like I had my babysitter Frieda’s parakeets! When Eddie came back out, he was devastated. He screamed. And screamed. And then he dropped to the ground sobbing, and began tearing up of handfuls of grass. I went home, thinking, Boy, Eddie really is weird.

I felt good–heroic and noble. So, even when Eddie’s mom told my mom about the Great Grasshopper Liberation, I refused to apologize. I was grounded for a week, but refused to relent. Actually, I rather liked being a martyr.

Until Momandad Sat Me Down and Explained

Eddie was what some people back then called a “mongoloid,” a type of “mental retardation” that gave him those “Chinese” eyes* I liked. He was nine years old, almost twice my age, they said, but wouldn’t be going to school with me that fall.

After that, I felt bad for Eddie and apologized. In a way, it seemed to me, Eddie was a one-legged grasshopper.

When I did start school a few months later, and found myself surrounded by “normal” kids, I felt a little like Weird Eddie myself. So I made a point of befriending other weird kids…

Like me.

*Some people with Down Syndrome (the old term “mongoloid” was based on outdated, racist theories) have slightly upward slanting eyes.

To read My Real Memoir from the start, click hereTo read the next episode, click here.

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I Choose to Believe in Free Will

Choose to Believe in Free Will

Thought for the Week: I Choose to Believe in Free Will

There are those who do not believe in free will, of course. And they are free to believe that, if they wish (see what I did there?). But I do believe in it. In fact, I believe choosing to believe in free will is, in itself, an act of free will. But I also believe it is, as C.S. Lewis implies, the hardest and gravest thing we shall ever do. And that in the end — no matter what circumstances we find ourselves in — how we choose to respond will define who we are forever. So, if I may offer this bit of advice, which you are free to ignore, if you choose: Never surrender your free will.

Choose to Choose.

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What Is Faith?

What is Faith

What Is Faith?

Once, all of the villagers decided to pray for rain. On the day of prayer all the people gathered, but only one little boy came with an umbrella. That is faith.*

One of the least understood teachings of the Bible is the relationship of faith versus works (good deeds). Yes, faith is trusting God for his free gift of salvation (we truly can’t save ourselves). But faith without deeds is simply not real faith. Or at best it’s an infantile faith. Which is fine at first. But we’re not meant to stay infants. God is in the business of making disciples, not toddlers. We’re called to become mature followers who walk by faith, and in the process, show a desperate world how it’s done. So, want to live a life of faith?

Bring your umbrella!

*Story source unknown
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Time for a Feel-Good Friday the 13th!

Time for a feel-good Friday the 13thAfter watching a family working in their garden, this tiny fox “adopted” them (boredpanda.com)

It’s time for a feel-good Friday the 13th. After all, some people find Friday the 13ths terrifying. And the rest of us? The current state of world events has steeped us in doubts about the future. So maybe it’s time for a few reminders that hope, kindness, courage, love and compassion are still alive.

Click on any image to enlarge it, to read caption, or to begin slide show.

 

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Only Two Kinds of People

Only Two Kinds of PeopleImage by Johannes Plenio

There are only two kinds of people in this world:

those who know they’re broken

and those who believe they aren’t.

It’s the latter who keep this world from healing.

I know because I was once among the latter.

Posted in Culture, For Pastors and Teachers, Memoir, Quips and Quotes, The Wishing Map | Tagged , , , , , , , | 34 Comments