Wednesday, October 29, 2014

The 5 People You'll Meet on the Freeway

1. The Man in the Minivan
The entire car smells like some hellish combination of Cheerios and McDonald's. "Let It Go" is blasting from the radio. Kids are screaming. Boogers are flying. Diapers are stinking. Needless to say, my manhood has been insulted. Watch out 'cause I'm driving with a vengeance and something to prove. Not to mention we're late for soccer practice.

2. The Young Prissy Woman
I am perfectly justified in my right to blast music that objectifies me and smack my gum and coat my eyelashes and text on my iPhone and fix my hair and check myself out in my rearview mirror and drink my coffee and take a selfie at the stoplight and change the song 10,695 times and slam on my gas and slam on my brakes and drive like FREAKING CRUELLA DEVILLE!

3. The Car That's Had Its Blinker on for 5 Solid Minutes
I'm not really sure what's going on or where I'm going or what my name is, but I'll bet you $50 that I'll realize it's time to exit the freeway the moment you drive into my blind spot.

4. The Semi-Truck Driver
Everything about me is large and in charge and if you're in my way, well, I'm sorry, but frankly my dear, I don't even care.

5. The Expensive and Glitzy Sports Car/Unnaturally Jacked Up Truck
I sold my soul to drive in a car that looks this good so let's just say I'm not about to let you pass me unless you look about as good as I do, which is impossible, so don't even try or even think about trying.

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Spiritual Stitches

Last weekend, two things happened: First, it was the weekend of General Conference, a semi-annual event for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints where, over the span of two days, our leaders give us spiritually instructive messages broken down into four, two-hour sessions. Second, I got ten stitches in my knee and it turned out to be an experience that was unconventionally special.

This was my first time getting stitches ever in my whole life. I have also never broke a bone, but I pray that is a record I will never break. (Haha. Get it? Break?) Anyway, how it happened is I was running along an asphalt trail, when suddenly I tripped on who knows what and slammed down into a broken chunk of the trail. My whole body started shaking as I stood up and lifted up my pants to survey the damage. What I saw almost made me puke: There was a gaping hole in my knee, so deep that I could see the fat. Long rivers of blood coursed down my leg. I had no phone with me and I was a mile and a half away from home, so I was forced to focus all of my mental faculties on staying calm and walking back one step at a time. 

About two hours later, I was lying on an emergency room bed with a PA bent over my knee, weaving his silver contraption in and out of my shredded flesh. Thankfully, my mom was with me, sitting next to the bed. We decided to turn the television on to watch conference, since my hospital visit had extended into the Saturday Afternoon Session. 

There was a certain degree of hilarity to the whole situation. There I was, unbathed and sweaty, lying in an emergency room because I had tripped on practically nothing. One nurse had dumped copious amounts of salt water into my wound, another nurse had pulled down my pants to give me a tetanus shot. I hadn't shaved my legs in a while, yet everyone in the hospital was examining them, up close and personal, hairs and all. Zero dignity. Zero. And, through it all, General Conference continued to play on, showing speakers dressed in their Sunday best and delivering profoundly articulate and composed messages that contrasted sharply against my slightly pathetic circumstances, circumstances under which I never would have imagined I could feel close to God. 

Yet somehow I did. Maybe it was because ripping open my knee had humbled me enough to finally open my eyes to the fact that I was becoming blinded with worldly aspirations. Maybe it was because getting stitches was a startling awakening to my own human frailty. Maybe it was because I finally let myself be vulnerable, forced to surrender myself into the hands of those who knew so much more than I. 

Whatever it was, listening to the conference messages in that room made me feel I was not only being stitched up physically, but also spiritually. The messages touched my soul in places I had not realized were wounded until I felt the pang of healing flowing into them. It was like drinking a glass of cool water after spending hours in the sun. The words were literally healing me from the inside out.

Of course, this healing process is not over and complete with the conclusion of General Conference. Just like with my stitches, I must continue to care for my spiritual wounds and make sure they heal properly. I must keep trying to be better than I was yesterday. Everyday I must cleanse my soul and rub the ointment of faith and devotion on my wounds to avoid infection. It takes work, a lot of it, but it is the most worthwhile thing I will ever do.

One of the messages that really stuck with me was Elder Jeffrey R. Holland's talk. I can still hear the conviction in his voice spilling over the hospital speaker as he spoke the following words in his talk, "Are We Not All Beggars?":

"For one thing we can, as King Benjamin taught, cease withholding our means because we see the poor as having brought their misery upon themselves. Perhaps some have created their own difficulties, but don’t the rest of us do exactly the same thing? Isn’t that why this compassionate ruler asks, “Are we not all beggars?” Don’t we all cry out for help and hope and answers to prayers? Don’t we all beg for forgiveness for mistakes we have made and troubles we have caused? Don’t we all implore that grace will compensate for our weaknesses, that mercy will triumph over justice at least in our case? Little wonder that King Benjamin says we obtain a remission of our sins by pleading to God, who compassionately responds, but we retain a remission of our sins by compassionately responding to the poor who plead to us. 
. . .
In that regard, I pay a personal tribute to President Thomas Spencer Monson. I have been blessed by an association with this man for 47 years now, and the image of him I will cherish until I die is of him flying home from then–economically devastated East Germany in his house slippers because he had given away not only his second suit and his extra shirts but the very shoes from off his feet. “How beautiful upon the mountains [and shuffling through an airline terminal] are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace.” More than any man I know, President Monson has “done all he could” for the widow and the fatherless, the poor and the oppressed."

—Elder Jeffrey R. Holland

We must work to stitch up each other. We must work to stitch up ourselves. We must be humble and obedient enough to allow the love of God and Jesus Christ to stitch up our souls—they know so much more than we do.

We need to spend less time condemning each other, and more time lifting each other. 

After all, are we not all beggars before God? 


The Joy of Spam

Sometimes you have got to wonder what is going through the mind of the poor souls that write spam emails. Take this one for example:

Subject: Married AND dating! Life is short, have an affair!

I mean, really. Let's just abandon all notions of dignity and morality and advocate the basest actions of human nature. Do they honestly think that anyone is going to fall for this stuff? I guess the fact that they continue to do it is an indication that some people do fall for it, which is a very sad and frustrating thing, and also slightly inconceivable that such an offer could merit any degree of legitimate attention.

However, this email did make me laugh for a good five minutes, so I guess it's not all bad.

Learning to Listen

This is from one of my favorite books, The Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein. The book is told from the perspective of the family's dog, so keep that in mind while reading this quote:

"Here's why I will be a good person. Because I listen. I cannot talk, so I listen very well. I never deflect the course of the conversation with a comment of my own. People, if you pay attention to them, change the direction of one another's conversations constantly. It's like being a passenger in your car who suddenly grabs the steering wheel and turns you down a side street. 

For instance, if we met at a party and I wanted to tell you a story about the time I needed to get a soccer ball in my neighbor's yard but his dog chased me and I had to jump into a swimming pool to escape, and I began telling the story, you, hearing the words "soccer" and "neighbor" in the same sentence, might interrupt and mention that your childhood neighbor was Pele, the famous soccer player, and I might be courteous and say, Didn't he play for the Cosmos of New York? Did you grow up in New York? And you might reply that, no, you grew up in Brazil on the streets of Tres Coracoes with Pele, and I might say, I thought you were from Tennessee, and you might say not originally, and then go on to outline your genealogy at length. 

So my initial conversational gambit—that I had a funny story about being chased by my neighbor's dog— would be totally lost, and only because you had to tell me all about Pele. Learn to listen! I beg of you. Pretend you are a dog like me and listen to other people rather than steal their stories."



Thursday, July 31, 2014

The Car Diaries: Part 2

Well, it's official now. The deed is done. I signed all of the papers and this little car is officially my child.


Joy. 

I can't even tell you how drastically the level of my anxiety has risen since I brought this little baby home and parked it in my driveway. But everyone I tell that to thinks I'm crazy, like buying a car should be some kind of joyous experience or something. And I guess it is, in some ways. And I guess I should let myself be happier about it. But this is a whole lot of responsibility! And I don't think I'm ready for this level of commitment!

But it doesn't matter because I signed the papers. And there is also the small matter of needing a car to drive to work everyday, because the beloved minivan (mentioned in this post) experienced major mechanical difficulties and was no longer able to complete the task.

I am so afraid I made the wrong decision! What if I bought myself a piece of crap car and now I will have to spend the rest of my life slaving to pay the debts of its medical bills? Ack! I can feel my heart beating irregularly already. (That's what my heart does when I am experiencing abnormally high levels of anxiety.)

Last night as I was driving home and imagining all of the things that could go wrong, and all of the upkeep I probably should start doing this very instant, and the tires I will need to buy (so much money for hunks of rubber!), and the new brakes and the oil changes, and yada yada yada, I had a thought occur to me. The thought was that I made a commitment to this car, and that commitment means that I will do what it takes to take care of it. Simple as that. I will bear the load. Willingly. I will drag it to mechanic shops. I will fill it with gas. I will wash the bird poop off of it with love and gratitude in my heart.

When you think about it, buying a car is a lot like marriage. It's a giant leap of faith. Some relationships have more problems than others. Some relationships break up before they can ever really get started. There's lots of maintenance required, and sometimes you wonder what you've gotten yourself into. But in the end, you made a commitment. You have a responsibility to each other. And that's enough to keep you going.

And, just like in marriage, it's important for me remember all of the good reasons that led me to make this decision. Because there are lots of them, but they can be easy to forget. It's all about remembering.

Remembering how cute we are together doesn't hurt either. ;)

*Disclaimer: I am not married.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

The Car Diaries: Part 1

Recently I made a decision that has caused me great anxiety ever since I did it. I don't know if this means it was a bad decision, or just the type of decision I never thought I would make. It's the kind of decision that can't really be undone, which makes me even more nervous. Now before you go thinking I did something scandalous, let me just say what it was: I bought a car. That's what I did. And let's just say it is not as happy of a feeling as I imagined it would be.

I'm the type of person that really thinks things out before I decide to do anything. I guess I'm kind of a perfectionist when it comes to making decisions, which is pretty much the stupidest thing when you think about it. Because what decision will ever be perfect? The answer is no decision. There will always, always, ALWAYS be pros and cons. This fact does not please me. Somehow I still think sometimes that if I just think enough/pray enough/research enough/consult enough, then I will magically become exempt from this fact of life and experience the honor of making the perfect decision.

False. All of it. Even though I hate to admit it.

But, sometimes, I rebel against myself. The crazy man inside my brain decides to revolt against the careful man who has been working so deliberately to do things just so and suddenly I just start doing things that the careful man thinks are absolutely insane. Let's explore some examples:

Exhibit A: Jumping off of a 40-foot cliff into a river. A RIVER. I didn't even know how deep it was. Getting a cantaloupe sized bruise on my thigh as my reward.

Exhibit B: Going off the trail and up a cliff while hiking, almost slipping, watching my life flash before my eyes, and then realizing that I just knocked a whole bunch of rocks down on a group of people and made some lady's leg bleed. I could have killed her!

Exhibit C: Whacking my brother on the head with a paddle while rafting with the family. Let's just say I was very upset.

It's oddly liberating in the beginning when you first start disregarding everything that the careful man is saying to you, but it never really lasts. There needs to be a balance. However, having said this, it's probably still a little bit good for me. Sometimes it's good to be overwhelmed with what it feels like to have made an undeniably stupid and ignorant mistake. It reminds you why you like making good decisions. Sometimes it feels refreshing to just do things and not think about it, to just make choices and not spend so much of life idling between options and never truly going anywhere.

Because even if the decision turns out to be a bad one, at least I did something. At least I took the shot.

Life isn't meant to be lived perfectly. For one, it's impossible, and for two, it would be intolerably boring because you wouldn't learn a thing. Sometimes you can murder life and all that's magic in it by dissecting it too thoroughly, by splitting it up into parts and judging some parts to be of greater value than others. But life is sacred, even in all its confusion. There is something beautiful in partaking of the madness as a whole.

And I'm trying not to forget that.

Magical tree I saw in England. If you hammer a coin in to its trunk, your wish will come true.


Monday, June 23, 2014

Whoa.

I graduated from college. I got a real job. Whoa. When did this all happen? How did I grow up so fast?

Lovely flowers and an Asian woman. Enjoy.