Posts tagged life

Because who can be bothered to assemble the complex mechanism that is the hot dog on their own?

Because who can be bothered to assemble the complex mechanism that is the hot dog on their own?

The deep need of man is the need to overcome separateness, to leave the prison of his aloneness.
Eric Fromm

I labored for nearly an entire day putting together a meal for some friends, the old and the new kind. I tried a new thing that I’d never done before and it came together. People stayed late and they laughed. At some point I moved back to the kitchen and tackled the dishes, piled high up on the counter tops like a scene from Cinderella.  Yet, the whole time, from start to finish, all I could think of was how- if there is a such thing- this is some kind of snapshot of the Kingdom of God. How rare to get to be in the middle of such a thing, and how even further is it a gift to have some thin slice of an awareness. 

Let’s do it all over again tomorrow. 

Aren’t you, like me, hoping that some person, thing, or event will come along to give you that final feeling of inner well-being you desire? Don’t you often hope: “May this book, idea, course, trip, job, country or relationship fulfill my deepest desire.” But as long as you are waiting for that mysterious moment you will go on running helter-skelter, always anxious and restless, always lustful and angry, never fully satisfied. You know that this is the compulsiveness that keeps us going and busy, but at the same time makes us wonder whether we are getting anywhere in the long run. This is the way to spiritual exhaustion and burn-out. This is the way to spiritual death.
Henry J.M. Nouwen

What are the chances that you exist?

Unbelievable. We should all walk around feeling very, very… lucky? Blessed? Something….. other than stressed and worried about whatever it is that we’re usually stressed and worried about. 

So many sleeping people, all of them spirit, bound by flesh, held up by bone and trapped in time.
Donald Miller, from: Through Painted Deserts

What's Your Place In The World?

I was the 4,598,901,861st person alive when I was born and the 79,276,368,422nd person alive in human history. Click and find out where you stand. 

…. but people are tenacious of life, and will go on living.

The Once and Future King

(I know that if there is anyone who actually does read this blog that they must be getting sick of these quotes. But the process of this book and that poem did something to me, so I have to share it. I’ve nearly reached the end of these posts… until I read it all again and start from scratch.)

heathrow

I really should be in bed by now.  It’s not that it’s late, it’s that I need to sleep because that is just something that I don’t get to enjoy the way I used to. I went through most of this year with barely the right kind of sleep at all. I thought that when I came back to England things would have been a little different. Maybe a new bed, maybe a new house, maybe a new rhythm to my days.  Yet still, I wake every night. 

 

I remember the very earliest hours of my elementary school days; how I would sleep like a rock. I would go to bed late at night (maybe 10pm) on a Sunday night with the sounds of Rick Dee’s and the Weekly Top 40. I sampled the very best of American pop music from that twin bed with the light-up globe positioned perfectly on the desk by the window, my clear telephone with the red cord standing sentinel by my bed just in case someone called. I would lay awake for what seemed like ages listening through all those songs. Eventually, in my last spring in that house, in that autumn childhood, I heard a song called “Mr. Jones” on that countdown, and so I met one of my favorite bands for the next  20 years. 

 

My grandmother would come in to wake me early in those cold, winter mornings.  She would try but I would be half dead, barely registering a pulse. She would say, “10 minutes” and go to pop some cheese-on-toast into the oven.  I would stagger again to the couch, where I would sleep some more. I honestly don’t know how I ever made it to school at all, though I know that I was insistent on riding the bus because that was what it meant to be grown up in my 1st grader’s mind. 

 

I think about sleep so much because I lay awake in the middle of the night praying for it, wishing for it, remembering what it once was to get eight straight and crisp hours. 

 

But yesterday I woke at five to drive my friends to the airport. They were the last of my best friends on this island to leave.  We set our sails south to London Heathrow, arriving by the time that many of you were probably going to bed from whatever Saturday night excursions you were led on in your respective hemisphere. 

 

I said goodbye to them, the way that I said goodbye to Robert and Natalie and Benjamin, the way I said goodbye to Lauren Birkett last week, the way, in essence, I said goodbye late one night in July. 

 

Which is to say that I’ll see you again but I don’t know when. I will see you again but I don’t know who you’re going to be. I know that I’m not going to be who I am right now the next time we lock eyes, we take hands, and we remember the faint scent of home that is carried by everyone that we have ever loved.  

 

Nathan and I drove to Indiana one week several years ago and I forced him to listen to “Mr. Potter’s Lullaby” on repeat. I thought that Adam Duritz had discovered a new poetry like El Dorado or the philosopher’s stone. Saying goodbye to Nathan yesterday, I knew that he was not the same man who took that trip with me so long ago.  

 

Jenn and I officially became friends even further back with a trip to Octane. Upon a little bit of reflection, I recollect how many of the most beautiful and painful and peaceful and tense relationships of my life were borne in that little bricked house of the west Atlantan hipster. Jenn and I were friends and Nathan and I became friends and somehow, through the way of such things, they fell in love. I’ve enjoyed being near them for every bit of it. I have rarely met people so much suited for one another. 

 

And they have been my friends, my confidants, my laughter, and often- my tears.  Yet the time comes for us to saddle up our lives and head out west again because this is the way of us who left Europe a couple of hundred years ago.  West is just in our blood, it is where we go, it is where we belong.  So Nathan and Jenn go on in peace back to that wild expanse so far away and filled with all of you that I carry in my memories here in the east.  

 

I drove off from the airport, completely alone and quiet, only the sound of airplanes taking off for God knows where.  I am sure that this season of my life is something like a crux, maybe even a crucible. It is a time where I am kind of alone.  Not necessarily lonely, but alone in some kind of fresh and hot fire. I know exactly what it is that I’m supposed to be doing right now. I have a clear task, something that was almost audibly spoken to me from the deep a couple of months ago. Nevertheless, there is life to know between the here and tomorrow.  So when I drove off into the north of London I thought about who the people are who are going to be in my life in the next couple of years. I wonder now what they are doing and who they are. I want to know if they are feeling empty, if they are feeling poured out completely, if they are having trouble going back to sleep.  Whoever they are, I’m looking for them, I’m waiting for them, I’m expecting them. I’ll see you soon, my friends. 

Live the Language. 

If you absolutely must know… 

Know this. That I want to live life, and life to the full. 

I don’t want to be young forever, I don’t want to stretch out into the days of tomorrow, clinging to what is behind as if it could be retraced time and time again like a dull pencil over a thin sheet of paper. 

What I want is to grow old, but grow old well. I want to marry a woman who is, more than anything, my best friend, my companion. 

I want to run into the woods with her and all of my dear friends, my community, my accountability, all of them that they are— and I want to play like children in the twilight of life that is the Autumn. I want to brandish the toy swords, I want to trade the baseball cards. I want to argue senselessly over long games of Monopoly.  

If you really must know, I want to live well with those that I love. I want to give to them to the very end, spending my last moments of breath and grace and mercy on them, reminding them time after time that I did all that I could to love them well, to love them truly. In the end, I want my eyes to see them through the lens of God himself.  That all of these were beautiful and exactly as they should be. Though our skin wore thin and our bodies were frail, the lights in our eyes were ever bright. The smiles on our faces carried the deep resonance of a love lived well, a life to the full. 

If you really must know. 

How to Forgive Someone
A blog by Donald Miller

How to Forgive Someone

A blog by Donald Miller