Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Scribbles and dots...
I used to feel that art was constraining.
If I was to draw a picture it had to look like the real thing. If I was to take a photo, it had to be perfectly framed and make sense. This must have stemmed from my elementary art classes where paste had to be conserved and paints should not be mixed.
Someone once told me that if you're going to create art, you cant be afraid to make mistakes.
I love this idea.
Sure, perhaps that picture is fuzzy, but it captures the feel of the moment. That story doesnt come to a conclusion...yes but it may just be a small snapshot of life, and sometimes in life conclusions are not made. It is the ultimate frustration, but oftentimes conclusions are miles and miles away: soaking in some rays on some tropical beach, sipping martinis while we are freezing in the rain, huddled up in some alley.
2009 has been a year where I have felt a bubbling of creativity, spouting up from places I knew it might be residing and from some places I had no idea it was there. There have been some key participants in my life that have seemingly unlocked this discipline in me. And it has been exhilarating.
But the most freeing thing is that I have come to love art and expression as a place with no rules: it can make perfect sense and come together or it can be completely nonsensical and just be.
I am so grateful for an outlet to just create something planned and poignant or perhaps to just throw some abstract concept that may have been floating around in my head down on paper. That is the beauty, it is ultimate freedom to just do. Do something that makes you satisfied.
Create for the sake of creativity.
I just really appreciate that. I love that you don't have to be good or smart or calculated to create something. Just go for it. Don't be afraid to make no sense. Everything can have its place and should be appreciated for what it is. I actually think we go wrong when we actually try hard to make it too good.
When trying too hard comes off in art I think it leaves a bad taste in the observer's mouth. The artist shouldn't have anything to prove to people. Therefore, don't try to. Just go, go, go.
Its as if we need to take off the parking brake and just let our minds roll down the hill, gaining speed and not stopping for anything.
I want to encourage creativity because it has been a huge outlet and a place to enter into worship for me. I am thankful for a creative God who literally speaks and creates. And I am thankful that he allows us to jump in there and make our own creations.
However grand or slight they may be.
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
A day's prologue...
And I don’t mean getting up and getting dressed and meeting a girl-thats-a-friend-but-maybe-im-interested-in for coffee. I mean groggy, smelly, bed-hair, pajamas hanging out. When the day is just beginning and you and friends just sit around, nod at one another, and wait to peel the layers of sleep off your brain.
There is a feeling of nakedness or vulnerability when one awakes. No one is dressed up, everyone is at their most disheveled. And yet, no one cares. There is just something about the morning that brings calm agreement among friends.
It only happens on rare occasions: a sleepover, a group trip, if all the roommates happen to be home in the morning.
The latter happened today.
This week I’m working an odd 12:30-9pm shift at work, which is somewhat unfortunate, but it affords me that precious morning laziness that I have missed since college. I stumbled down the stairs and made my way haphazardly to the kitchen, pushing the wandering coffee table out of the way and throwing some newspapers on the couch.
As the sunlight snuck in through the window, Robert was his chirpy self already dressed for the day in smooth plaid and pants. He was making coffee and doing dishes. I was thankful for his diligence and productivity at 9am.
I like to ease into my day (except when I go to work) as if I am wading into a cool lake, when you suck in your stomach to brace against the water.
Then Bradley came in, much like a bear emerging from a winter’s hibernation. I was thankful for this too, because it made me feel more comfortable for being a slow mover.
We drank coffee and I made cheese eggs and for twenty minutes we just sat and breathed in the day.
And I realized how thankful I am for so many different people in my life: people that drive me. people that comfort. people that are different. people that are the same. people that challenge. people that calm. people that laugh. people that hug. people that dance. people that color. people that cry. people that make me cry. people that make my stomach jump. people that make my head hurt. people that confound. people that make perfect sense.
I am grateful for all the puzzle pieces that come together to make up my life.
You are loved.
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Stopping to smell...
But today was just a lazy, no-name, indifferent, Wednesday. I awoke at 10 with no plans and nothing pressing on my docket. It was as relaxed as I have been in a while. I inhaled the first breath of morning and eventually slid off the mattress in no real hurry. After sitting around for a while, the initial order of business was a roommate bike ride to the post office. It was a simple and organic venture: old transportation taking us to an increasingly archaic medium for exchanging ideas.
There is something about walking or biking through a cityscape. It is more real, everything is more defined. You are on the ground floor. You see things at eye level. You are immediately more involved with everything around you.
Whisking around corners, we nodded or smiled at everyone in our vicinity…had we been driving, not so much as eye contact would have been made. Also, on a whim, we stopped at the coffee shoppe and saw a friend who just happened to be working. In a car, I would have driven by, not wanting to find a parking spot, turn off the car and all that.
We then helped a man push his car out of an intersection so he could get a jump. I felt the compulsion to help because I was in the city. I was on the same playing field as this guy, who was clearly in a bind. Had I been in a car, I may have felt bad, but hey whatta my gonna do? Green light: time to move on. With the soles of my shoe wet with the leftovernight’s rain and the sticky sweat on my back, I was in this situation with him. There was nothing else to do but offer a simple push.
Then, at 11:40, Robert suggested we go to mid-day prayer at church. This is something I had wanted to do for a while, but of course, I’m never off on Wednesdays. So we hopped on our bikes and headed home to trade in two wheels for four, since highway travel was imminent.
The sanctuary was virtually deserted, but we were early, and by 12:15 maybe about 12 people were spread out among the first 4 rows. There was no band, no pomp and circumstance, just a dozen bodies there to think about our Creator. It was so intimate and so real. There were no motives for anyone to be there other than meditation and prayer. No cool clothes to impress that girl in row seven, no plans to see who is eating where after the service…just people there because it is refreshing to take a respite and be still amidst our hectic lives.
The service was so quiet and beautiful. Only a few scriptures were read and a brief homily was given. My favorite parts were silent confession and then a sharing of the peace. And for once, I was not nervous or afraid to turn around and shake hands and say “peace be with you, brother/sister.”
Now, I am typically an outgoing person, and I like meeting people. But for some reason the sharing of the peace always makes me nervous. I don’t know why, maybe I feel I have to strike up a conversation or I’m nervous about getting the “dead fish” handshake. But today was something different entirely. We had all just confessed our unholiness through prayer silently and then in unison. And, in the light of the forgiveness already bestowed on us, we shared the good news of peace with one another. It was a lovely, holy time between just a small number of people. But we all knew why we were there. I sensed a feeling of unity in that moment that is lost in big groups. It was pure and it was safe.
It gave me the feeling that we were in an ancient monastery and were all family and had been family for ages. That we all knew and loved one another fully. Each embrace and handshake was warm and fulfilling. I could almost smell the spirit of God in that place.
I would love to take that 30 minutes every Wednesday, or every day for that matter, and share that time with other Lovers. It was an oasis. Alas, life is sure to get in the way…probably in the form of my boss never giving me another Wednesday off.
But I had a taste of simplicity and a feeling of home that I haven’t felt in a long time.
It makes me long for my original home.
come quickly.
Saturday, September 26, 2009
Let's roast some corn...
Change is also something that is often unexplainable. It just creeps in like a kitten and before you know it a tiger is curled up on your couch.
Why do we hear a song for months and almost always hit “repeat” once…or twice? Then one day, the hooks aren’t as catchy, the lyrics seem stale, and its about one minute, twelve seconds too long. It happens. But why? Is it so we can store up a new favourite song somewhere in our temporal lobe? It is just because the synapses got tired of reacting the same way over and over and over again? Or is there just no reason at all. It just is.
The seasons change, although we typically see it coming, and can prepare for it. But honestly…why do they have to change? Why can’t it just be 78 and sunny with a light cloud cover and a sweet breeze all the time? Ok, we can even allow a soft shower at 4:24pm every day for the plants. But no…that’s not how it happens here. Spring, Summer, Autumn, Winter come and go, always changing. Apparently, as my roommate pointed out, Autumn is upon us, as recently as yesterday. This means change is nigh.
Trade in the flip flops I have gotten accustomed to for closed shoes.
Substitute airy tee shirts for scratchy cardigans.
But what if I chose to embrace the crisp air, the burnt leaves, and the smell of cider? Instead of looking back and missing summer, I can venture out into the unknown of fall. Maybe grow a beard to shield the winds or sharpen my pumpkin carving skills.
Change does not have to be bad, it just must be accepted. All we can do as this wild world rushes by is be still and enjoy where we are, even if its in a completely new environment than we were in yesterday.
There is no sense in worrying about why things are not as they were, or what they will be like tomorrow. For now, Im going to whip out my pocket knife, pick up a knotty branch, sit in a rocking chair and whittle for a little bit.
It seems like the best way to enjoy this fresh, unfamiliar season I find myself in.
Saturday, August 15, 2009
When the bulb dims...
Why is there such a tendency to not move? Moving requires energy. Therefore, I suppose it is easier to not move. By moving I mean acting, in any way. Changing. Loving. Anything more than just being.
I have a terrible habit of merely existing. The worst part of that is that time continues to go along- cells replicate, atoms crash into one another- and I slowly depreciate. The present me is still the past me that I thought would, by now, be the future me. Aspirations are still aspirations, not reality.
I let ideas marinate until they are a smelly, foul mess that never happened. Why am I so content with what I currently have? Im alright, Im good as is. Sure, I have all these ideas that I think I can impress people with, win people over with. I can sound so progressive and smart if I want to.
And perhaps sometimes, I can trick people into thinking Im very cool. However, at the end of it all... it seems that I just speak well. I can sound like I am going somewhere, but Ill prolly just end up staying right where I am. I didnt even want to use the energy to type out probably.
Back to my original thought: What happens to potential? When an idea is formed it has potential energy [eat your heart out DarDrone, if you're reading]. The potential to improve or destroy. The potential to explode, to heal, to change. That idea can do so many things. Yet what makes it fizzle out before it ever does anything?
I want to write a book with 3 of my best friends.
I want to go places.
I want to desire Christ like I say I want to.
I want to blog (ok, I finally did this; only took a year)
I want to be artistic.
I want to think of myself last in all situations.
I want to explore.
I want to be more gentle.
I want to ride my bike more.
I want to make a video.
I want to pursure relationships with those around me.
I want to read about 64 books (and that is just the current list).
But I will probably just end up hanging out here for a while longer. Hopefully until all those things dont feel quite as pressing or important. Then I will be free of my convictions and just being here will be enough.
Some people I know might think it's an asset to be relaxed and easy going. And, frankly, people who seem discontent and always striving for more annoy me.
Its like what is the big deal?
But I see why it's a big deal to do things. It is a very big deal to overcome that time in between. It is a tremendous accomplishment, and it requires energy, planning, and effort. A perfect example occurs nearly every weekday in my life:
1. I want to make the sandwich to eat for lunch so i dont have to eat (and spend money) in the cafeteria. I will do this in the morning.
The idea is hatched, the possibilities endless! The potential of turkey, ham, roast beef! Mayonaise, lettuce... oh the joy!
2. I go to sleep
The idea could grow into reality... or will it die? This is the hard part.
3. I wake up, I need to shower, get dressed, find matching socks... now that sandwich doesnt seem so important. Swiping my badge and getting a "hot entree" doesnt seem so bad. I can not smell the smoked turkey anymore, or feel the soft wheat bread I once was excited about. The door slams, the lunch meat is still in the refrigerator and I clip my badge to my pants.
What happend!??!?! Wait! No! Really? You couldnt just put in a little more effort to make. a. sandwich? Are you that lazy? Taking the easy way out? Sad.
The consequences of a sandwich/not sandwich are only about $0.35. But this phenomenon infects many other places. And consequences in those areas are far more devastating.
And now I have learned this about myself. I want to change it. I dont want to only muse about things, but I want to be a doer. a seeker. a changer.
The idea is hatched...
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Under Construction
Saturday, September 13, 2008
Through the keyhole...
This is an account on the events that took place between approximately 5:31 and 6:27pm on September the 10th 2008.