A couple of days ago, I was desperately awaiting my moment of freedom from my poetry class. I'm rather picky about that class. There are days I like it, but then days that I feel like I could accomplish better things. Anyways, I'm backing away from my main point.
Once I left the room we met in, I wasn't in the mood to head back to the apartment immediately. I wasn't even hungry for supper. It was like an electrical shock went down my spine and I was eager to have an adventure. I just wanted to run around the old building I was in, spy out secret rooms, secret passage ways, and see if I was daring enough to sneak into any of them. I went to the basement mainly, because in our one campus building, that floor seems particularly suspicious. I walked around quietly, like I was hunting for wildlife in a forest. I could hear voices, but I desperately hoped they wouldn't hear my footsteps. I found two locked doors, clearly with no one on the other side (or so I hoped). I found one door that I wanted to find a way to get into. It looked very interesting and I spent some considerable time staring at the key code on the door. Perhaps I was turning on the Sherlock Holmes part of my mind in seeing how faded the buttons were, which ones had the most scratches on them, and at what angle they were going in.
Did I figure out the code to get in? I'm sorry that I must say that I didn't attempt a break-in. I gave up that quest, thinking that it would be more fun if I had a sidekick there with me, to watch if the coast was clear. Need I say, where was my Dr. Watson?
I am getting distracted again, though, so let me keep the story going. I decided that my adventures could be put aside for the time being. I had to get something to eat, or else I would have a very upset stomache. I crept up to the doors at the end of the hallway, and jogged up the set of stairs that would lead me to a back door leading outside.
But I stopped. I couldn't move. I heard something coming from above me. It sounded haunting, but beautiful at the same time. There was a choir singing in the chapel on the second floor. I felt glued to the spot as I listened to their voices echo down the stairs, their voices needing no musical instrument to blend their harmonies together. Looking out a window, the world began to look very bleak, like it was a simple factor in a larger number. There were people walking around outside, laughing and chatting away, but I couldn't hear them. All I saw were mute mouths speaking about absolutely nothing.
It was a sad moment when the songs ended, and there was no more joy to be felt. But was it joy that I felt? No. If anything, I would of guessed it to be some sort of longing. What was holding me there? Did I expect the music to stay, because the sad truth is that it never does. Music only lasts as long as one can breathe, but if you lose breath, how can you keep going? The instruments die down when fingers are cramped, and knuckles are locked.
I'm not one for religion. It sucks the beauty from your lungs and keeps you hanging on rules that you'll never be able to keep right. But I swear, for that one moment that the choir sang, I understood God. He was scary, but lovely. He was a soldier, but majestic. He was harsh, but caring. He was just, but holy.
Yet it all passed. I was left to wonder if any of it was real. I picked up my bags, and threw the door open. And I guess I'll never know why my heart felt sky-high in that moment. I had no choice, but to leave it behind me. One cannot linger always on things that are lovely. Neither can they linger on what hurts.
But what if when I stood there alone, I felt both?
"Here is my freedom! The incomprehensible feeling of hanging on edge, and falling fast!"
Saturday, October 6, 2012
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
This Isn't a 'Beauty' Sermon
At long last, my college years are bringing to me the classes I have been waiting for....well, some of them. In due time, there will be more. I suppose that what I am really excited about is that for once, I can use my creativity. This isn't to say that I never did before (we all have to be creative with most of the homework given to us), but it's English this time. It's poetry. It's stories. It's life on a whole new level.
But I'm not really here to talk about my college career. That could get pretty boring, I think. We all know the deal. We've got to get good grades, show up to class everyday, eat enough food and exercise frequently. No, what I'm here for in this moment is to relate a story that happened yesterday, something that both hurt and confessed some truth.
I got up Monday morning and thought that I would try something different. I had thought about it over the weekend and came to terms that it wouldn't hurt to give it a go. Not only was I going to dress a little cute (as in, I put more effort into it), but I was going to apply a bit of makeup to my face. Boom. I know. It's shocking if you know me. It wasn't anything entirely drastic. I played with the eyes mostly, using some eye liner and eye shadow. I tried some fancy lip gloss too as an after touch.
So there I was, staring at the stranger looking back at me in the mirror. That looks nothing like me, I thought, but nevertheless proceeded in gathering my books and slinging the backpack on me, I headed out the door.
Now, there can only be a few assumptions on my part with the next statement I'll make. I like to observe people (don't judge me, because people-watching isn't always creepy), so when I say that people were looking differently at me, that's just what I thought was the case by looking at their expressions. These were just people I didn't know as well, so I couldn't make any statistics from this. Later on when I went to lunch, I bumped into a girl that has been in a few of my classes. We said hello and all that polite talk, when before I left, she stated ecstatically "You look really nice today!" I said thanks and walked away, but this one little comment got me thinking for the rest of the day. There was a part of me that enjoyed the compliment, but another part that made me feel upset the rest of the day. It didn't help that I had to go to a night class and take a test. I was better by the time I could go back to the room and relax.
So what was my observation from all this? It's a very easy one and rather common, but it still makes me mad when I contemplate it. When I wore makeup, I was suddenly termed pretty. Sure, I've gotten compliments on clothes and what not, but what about the natural beauty? Just so you all know, this doesn't change who I am. I'm not going to start wearing makeup everyday just to impress everyone, but the standard of beauty is sadly lowered from what it was a long time ago. I think I'm beautiful without having to 'make' myself that. I am that.
It's just a shame that there are still lots of people who try too hard.
But I'm not really here to talk about my college career. That could get pretty boring, I think. We all know the deal. We've got to get good grades, show up to class everyday, eat enough food and exercise frequently. No, what I'm here for in this moment is to relate a story that happened yesterday, something that both hurt and confessed some truth.
I got up Monday morning and thought that I would try something different. I had thought about it over the weekend and came to terms that it wouldn't hurt to give it a go. Not only was I going to dress a little cute (as in, I put more effort into it), but I was going to apply a bit of makeup to my face. Boom. I know. It's shocking if you know me. It wasn't anything entirely drastic. I played with the eyes mostly, using some eye liner and eye shadow. I tried some fancy lip gloss too as an after touch.
So there I was, staring at the stranger looking back at me in the mirror. That looks nothing like me, I thought, but nevertheless proceeded in gathering my books and slinging the backpack on me, I headed out the door.
Now, there can only be a few assumptions on my part with the next statement I'll make. I like to observe people (don't judge me, because people-watching isn't always creepy), so when I say that people were looking differently at me, that's just what I thought was the case by looking at their expressions. These were just people I didn't know as well, so I couldn't make any statistics from this. Later on when I went to lunch, I bumped into a girl that has been in a few of my classes. We said hello and all that polite talk, when before I left, she stated ecstatically "You look really nice today!" I said thanks and walked away, but this one little comment got me thinking for the rest of the day. There was a part of me that enjoyed the compliment, but another part that made me feel upset the rest of the day. It didn't help that I had to go to a night class and take a test. I was better by the time I could go back to the room and relax.
So what was my observation from all this? It's a very easy one and rather common, but it still makes me mad when I contemplate it. When I wore makeup, I was suddenly termed pretty. Sure, I've gotten compliments on clothes and what not, but what about the natural beauty? Just so you all know, this doesn't change who I am. I'm not going to start wearing makeup everyday just to impress everyone, but the standard of beauty is sadly lowered from what it was a long time ago. I think I'm beautiful without having to 'make' myself that. I am that.
It's just a shame that there are still lots of people who try too hard.
Friday, July 20, 2012
Love and Suicide Don't Hold Hands
Last night, I decided to watch the 2011 film of "The Deep Blue Sea". I can say that it was a good film, though it definitely was not what I expected it to be. The way in which it was filmed had a haunting sort of beauty to it. There was normally no music; and if there was, it was the saddest string music ever to be heard. There would be the occasional singing at the bars or in the tunnels, but other then that, the movie was silence. I think this made the dialogue between the characters richer. It made it realistic, as though you were sitting in the room with them at that very moment. If anything, I believe the film was more focused on the character's emotions or thoughts instead of how impressive the filming was. It was kept simple, because what mattered was getting into the character's heads.
That was not the only thing that shocked me about the film. What first surprised me was the beginning. The main woman, Hester, was attempting a suicide. She did not succeed, for some people found her and revived her. From there, the movie explains who she is, where she's come from, what she is living for and what she was trying to escape from. In short, her past consisted of marrying a rather old man, not liking her life there and then meeting a younger man, Freddie, who she falls desperately in love with. Her husband, Bill, finds out and doesn't care that she leaves, but he makes the matter difficult by not filing the divorce. So she can live her scandal, but it would be more of a scandal because she was still married. Nevertheless it all takes place and she leaves him. Her suicide attempt came from, I believe, spite to the young man who didn't seem to be present on important occasions. He had forgotten her birthday and was not there to celebrate it. She had wrote a letter to him so he could find it after she was dead, but since that never took place, he accidentally finds the letter and is hurt deeply. The rest of the film proceeds in a manner of her trying to make everything right again.
Now the matter I wish to discuss here is what I noticed were some of the responses on the internet to this movie. Considering her suicidal state, most did not like the fact the Freddie left her after finding out what she had almost done. At first, I agreed with them, thinking "She just tried to kill herself that day and the best thing he thinks he can do to stabilize her is to leave? She'll probably attempt another suicide as soon as he walks out the door." Then the more I thought about it, the more I pitied Freddie over Hester.
And why is that, you may ask? Suicide, to put it simply, is selfish. Most people who take their lives only have one thought in their heads. It's all about them, all about how they can't be happy and get what they want. Hester was upset that Freddie forgot her birthday. In my mind, her attempt at suicide showed her true colors about that relationship. It was all about her. It was not about how Freddie felt. Her marriage to Bill was not about how he felt. It was all about her. I won't put names out, but I know someone who stayed with their spouse merely out of the reason that the spouse threatened to kill theirselves if the other left them. Needless to say that that particular relationship ended badly.
So in short, I think Freddie did the right thing. It was hard and he knew the risk he was taking, but he couldn't live with someone who, if he didn't entirely make her happy, would end her life. That's not a stable relationship. Unless I have mistaken the ending, she didn't kill herself at the end; and I think it was because of Freddie's last act of kindness. He almost bailed out that very night, but decided to stay with her one more night before he left. Everything was packed in the morning and they had their sad farewell, where he said "Be safe." and she replied "Be good."
Well, to say the least, I'm not entirely sure what I wanted to point out in this post; and I certinaly don't want anyone to think I am cruel to the people who struggle with suicide. That's definitely not what this is about, because I pity those people too. I suppose it's up to every individual to take from this what they like. I guess my main goal was not to put the people who voted for Hester down, but to give the frank and dangerous mindset of suicide. I've had my fair share of knowing what the mind can do when in a state of depression and I know that suicide is all about yourself. Other than that, the movie was very good. I would recommend it to anyone who wants to watch something that will make them think.
That was not the only thing that shocked me about the film. What first surprised me was the beginning. The main woman, Hester, was attempting a suicide. She did not succeed, for some people found her and revived her. From there, the movie explains who she is, where she's come from, what she is living for and what she was trying to escape from. In short, her past consisted of marrying a rather old man, not liking her life there and then meeting a younger man, Freddie, who she falls desperately in love with. Her husband, Bill, finds out and doesn't care that she leaves, but he makes the matter difficult by not filing the divorce. So she can live her scandal, but it would be more of a scandal because she was still married. Nevertheless it all takes place and she leaves him. Her suicide attempt came from, I believe, spite to the young man who didn't seem to be present on important occasions. He had forgotten her birthday and was not there to celebrate it. She had wrote a letter to him so he could find it after she was dead, but since that never took place, he accidentally finds the letter and is hurt deeply. The rest of the film proceeds in a manner of her trying to make everything right again.
Now the matter I wish to discuss here is what I noticed were some of the responses on the internet to this movie. Considering her suicidal state, most did not like the fact the Freddie left her after finding out what she had almost done. At first, I agreed with them, thinking "She just tried to kill herself that day and the best thing he thinks he can do to stabilize her is to leave? She'll probably attempt another suicide as soon as he walks out the door." Then the more I thought about it, the more I pitied Freddie over Hester.
And why is that, you may ask? Suicide, to put it simply, is selfish. Most people who take their lives only have one thought in their heads. It's all about them, all about how they can't be happy and get what they want. Hester was upset that Freddie forgot her birthday. In my mind, her attempt at suicide showed her true colors about that relationship. It was all about her. It was not about how Freddie felt. Her marriage to Bill was not about how he felt. It was all about her. I won't put names out, but I know someone who stayed with their spouse merely out of the reason that the spouse threatened to kill theirselves if the other left them. Needless to say that that particular relationship ended badly.
So in short, I think Freddie did the right thing. It was hard and he knew the risk he was taking, but he couldn't live with someone who, if he didn't entirely make her happy, would end her life. That's not a stable relationship. Unless I have mistaken the ending, she didn't kill herself at the end; and I think it was because of Freddie's last act of kindness. He almost bailed out that very night, but decided to stay with her one more night before he left. Everything was packed in the morning and they had their sad farewell, where he said "Be safe." and she replied "Be good."
Well, to say the least, I'm not entirely sure what I wanted to point out in this post; and I certinaly don't want anyone to think I am cruel to the people who struggle with suicide. That's definitely not what this is about, because I pity those people too. I suppose it's up to every individual to take from this what they like. I guess my main goal was not to put the people who voted for Hester down, but to give the frank and dangerous mindset of suicide. I've had my fair share of knowing what the mind can do when in a state of depression and I know that suicide is all about yourself. Other than that, the movie was very good. I would recommend it to anyone who wants to watch something that will make them think.
Monday, July 9, 2012
Emotionless Dancing and Mourning
This summer has been spent in a lot of thought for me. I am constantly, however, reminded of a picture a friend of mine posted once on Tumblr. Though I do not remember the original artist or link of the photo, I can clearly recall what the picture held. It was the image of a man lying on a couch. A giant lightbulb had smashed his head, leaving blood on the floor and furniture. The lightbulb was cracked and pieces of it lay all over the place.
The meaning of the picture? We think too much. Sometimes our thoughts can lead us to a sort of mental death, to a point where we can't think anymore, we can't live happily or in peace.
This is precisely the place I have been trying to avoid going to. I know my thoughts can rule me, can push me to think the most unthinkable ideas. Even worse is when I am thinking of five or six different things at once. That truly makes me go mental and I have no way of talking to anyone with a straight conscience. I have been outruled by my unrelenting mind.
And this leads me to ask the question of whether or not our thoughts are one cause of the misery and joylessness of life. Although I'm hardly a vigilant prayer person, I tried to go back to it today. In these moments, I sometimes open my Bible, hoping that there are words to find that will suit the prayer, since I hardly have the words left for such an act. Curious as to where my book-ribbon was, I flipped to the location of it. It was stuck in Matthew. I usually have reasons for the ribbon being in certain spots. Obviously there was a day in the past where I saw something that struck me and I decided to save it for another looking. I looked and looked on those pages today to see what I had saw that I liked. And I did. It started in chapter 11, verses 16 and 17:
"To what can I compare this generation? They are like children sitting in the marketplaces and calling out to others: 'We played the pipe for you, and you did not dance; we sang a dirge, and you did not mourn.'"
Of course, my first response to the verse is "Those are part of the lyrics in 'Torches Together' by Mewithoutyou!" My second response was a bit more sinister. What are we? What do we do with our minds and our actions? I cannot help but feel that we are the emotionless people of that generation spoken. Children are trying to cheer us up. They are singing and dancing; they are mourning and sad; but we have no emotions left to spare. We are the adults who have duties to pay heed to, familes to take care of, bills to pay, cars to fill, groceries to eat and thoughts to think on. There is no time for being happy or being sad. We can only be hard as stone, for letting ourselves be vulnerable through love and emotion is to surrender our wits and discipline.
Is it? Is it really surrender? Can laughing and crying be all that bad? This is one area in which I see the ruling of our mind's thoughts as key to the trouble. After spending a lot of time this summer with my niece and nephew, I've learned that children understand the balance of emotions better than we do. They would cry if they didn't get their way or if they got hurt, but not long after that, they were back to their happy selves. There was the time for sadness, but they knew joy was just around the corner. Children have taught me a great deal. They have shown me that if I let my thoughts control me all the time, it could drive me into madness. If I just know when to dance to the flute or to mourn to the dirge, then I'll be on the right track. Tears are not a weakness and dancing is not a sin.
Our generation needs to lighten up; that goes out to every person of every religion or no religion. If we take our lives too seriously, we'll kill ourselves from the inside. This isn't to say that I don't struggle with this part. I am very serious to the point that I can appear to be a jerk to some people. I apologize if any who read this got that impression from me. It's my stone-cold wall I've built because I don't want my emotions to get the best of me and I have a hard time trusting people.
I've got to listen to the kids. I've got to be the emotions without shame.
The meaning of the picture? We think too much. Sometimes our thoughts can lead us to a sort of mental death, to a point where we can't think anymore, we can't live happily or in peace.
This is precisely the place I have been trying to avoid going to. I know my thoughts can rule me, can push me to think the most unthinkable ideas. Even worse is when I am thinking of five or six different things at once. That truly makes me go mental and I have no way of talking to anyone with a straight conscience. I have been outruled by my unrelenting mind.
And this leads me to ask the question of whether or not our thoughts are one cause of the misery and joylessness of life. Although I'm hardly a vigilant prayer person, I tried to go back to it today. In these moments, I sometimes open my Bible, hoping that there are words to find that will suit the prayer, since I hardly have the words left for such an act. Curious as to where my book-ribbon was, I flipped to the location of it. It was stuck in Matthew. I usually have reasons for the ribbon being in certain spots. Obviously there was a day in the past where I saw something that struck me and I decided to save it for another looking. I looked and looked on those pages today to see what I had saw that I liked. And I did. It started in chapter 11, verses 16 and 17:
"To what can I compare this generation? They are like children sitting in the marketplaces and calling out to others: 'We played the pipe for you, and you did not dance; we sang a dirge, and you did not mourn.'"
Of course, my first response to the verse is "Those are part of the lyrics in 'Torches Together' by Mewithoutyou!" My second response was a bit more sinister. What are we? What do we do with our minds and our actions? I cannot help but feel that we are the emotionless people of that generation spoken. Children are trying to cheer us up. They are singing and dancing; they are mourning and sad; but we have no emotions left to spare. We are the adults who have duties to pay heed to, familes to take care of, bills to pay, cars to fill, groceries to eat and thoughts to think on. There is no time for being happy or being sad. We can only be hard as stone, for letting ourselves be vulnerable through love and emotion is to surrender our wits and discipline.
Is it? Is it really surrender? Can laughing and crying be all that bad? This is one area in which I see the ruling of our mind's thoughts as key to the trouble. After spending a lot of time this summer with my niece and nephew, I've learned that children understand the balance of emotions better than we do. They would cry if they didn't get their way or if they got hurt, but not long after that, they were back to their happy selves. There was the time for sadness, but they knew joy was just around the corner. Children have taught me a great deal. They have shown me that if I let my thoughts control me all the time, it could drive me into madness. If I just know when to dance to the flute or to mourn to the dirge, then I'll be on the right track. Tears are not a weakness and dancing is not a sin.
Our generation needs to lighten up; that goes out to every person of every religion or no religion. If we take our lives too seriously, we'll kill ourselves from the inside. This isn't to say that I don't struggle with this part. I am very serious to the point that I can appear to be a jerk to some people. I apologize if any who read this got that impression from me. It's my stone-cold wall I've built because I don't want my emotions to get the best of me and I have a hard time trusting people.
I've got to listen to the kids. I've got to be the emotions without shame.
Saturday, June 2, 2012
Long-Lost Relatives and Selfish Prigs
Earlier this week, my father found me sitting by the poker table in the basement, intently immersed in a book, my nose close to touching the paper. Before my dad told me of his errand on seeing me, the first question that came from his mouth was, "Do you ever stop reading?" I stared up, an amused yet astonished look on my face as I replied, "No, I don't." The coincidence in this is that he wanted to tell me that he found two old books in the garage of which he was going to give me to add to my library. To my satisfaction, I was given an ancient copy of "The Epic of Gilgamesh" and an old Oxford Latin book (I suppose I have a legitimate reason now to teach myself the lost language).
I'm not ashamed of my being bookish. I find it to be worth my while to educate the mind always, even if it means reading a children's novel. I've come to the conclusion that we read because we're eager to learn, to broaden the scope of our brains. We seek to untie the knotted lies that society has told us about humanity.
I've just recently finished "Surprised by Joy" by C.S. Lewis and "Henry IV Part 1" by Shakespeare. I'm glad to say that I've been able to move on to "Henry IV Part 2" and it's already got my senses tingling with anticipation. I pity the souls of those who have no interest or respect towards Shakespeare, one of the greatest writers of history. I've met a few people in the writing field who don't like Shakespeare because they can't understand him. Again, I will say 'pity' for them. Just because they cannot understand him does not make him worthless. He understood humanity, and had one of the most creative ways of portraying it. Whenever I read his words out loud, I cannot help but fall in love with the story. I fear we've lost that beauty, that elegance in our writings today. There is no second glance at the old english; and half the time, it is because people 'cannot understand it.' Pity. Pity, pity, pity. I support my avid words with the words of Lewis in the novel that I just finished. "Liking an author may be as involuntary and improbable as falling in love." Yes, I've fallen in love with Shakespeare, as well as Lewis, both of whom I have never known in life. I wish I had. We would of had so much to say.
Speaking of similarities, I have found myself confronted with something of which I cannot shake off. Reading Lewis' book was a new journey for me. Granted, everytime I read anything by him, I am struck with the way in which he seems to address my very soul, as though he knew me. After reading "Surprised by Joy", I found myself metaphorically lifeless on the floor. I have become certain that Jack and I are long-lost relatives. Of course, I cannot prove this in any way (I don't have any map of my family tree), but I'm certain others can relate to the feeling. It's like admiring a musician, then finding out that person likes many of the things that you do as well. Time and space somehow pull the two together, though they have never met each other.
That is me and Lewis. I'll speak as a madman, and say that the spirit of this author is haunting me in my own home. I happen to be obsessed (strangely enough) with Norse mythology; then I find out that specific mythology was one of Lewis' passions, one of his first obsessions in the story world. Ironic? Well, it gets better. How does it happen to be that I am in the midst of reading Henry IV and Lewis uses the character Falstaff as an example to something he was explaining? There is too much that is relateable between this man and I.
Also, I've found that the place in his mind that he resided in during his youth is where I happen to be in as well. I'm sure all who read this will instantly interrupt with, "Well, everyone can relate to somebody of popularity somehow. You're no different." I entirely agree with this statement, but I must be boastful and ask a question in return. Have you ever related to someone so much, so keenly, that you were certain that you may be the new embodiment of their soul? That's how I've felt. I've recently teased the idea to my friends that I am the female version of C.S. Lewis that is still living. It may be a jest when I crack the joke then, but I come home and find myself seriously pondering the idea. Is it possible that two people who never knew each other in life can be so much the same person?
I realize that all these statements may come to be very priggish of me (oh damn! another similarity between Jack and I!), but I don't regret the fact that I am a selfish prig. Who isn't? We've all got our ideas, and we all live according to their boundaries.....but I fear this post will be too long for anyone to have the patience to read all in one sitting. Those are my thoughts of the day....at least a few. I could never write everything in my head. If I did, it would be considered the never-ending novel. It would go on...forever....
I'm not ashamed of my being bookish. I find it to be worth my while to educate the mind always, even if it means reading a children's novel. I've come to the conclusion that we read because we're eager to learn, to broaden the scope of our brains. We seek to untie the knotted lies that society has told us about humanity.
I've just recently finished "Surprised by Joy" by C.S. Lewis and "Henry IV Part 1" by Shakespeare. I'm glad to say that I've been able to move on to "Henry IV Part 2" and it's already got my senses tingling with anticipation. I pity the souls of those who have no interest or respect towards Shakespeare, one of the greatest writers of history. I've met a few people in the writing field who don't like Shakespeare because they can't understand him. Again, I will say 'pity' for them. Just because they cannot understand him does not make him worthless. He understood humanity, and had one of the most creative ways of portraying it. Whenever I read his words out loud, I cannot help but fall in love with the story. I fear we've lost that beauty, that elegance in our writings today. There is no second glance at the old english; and half the time, it is because people 'cannot understand it.' Pity. Pity, pity, pity. I support my avid words with the words of Lewis in the novel that I just finished. "Liking an author may be as involuntary and improbable as falling in love." Yes, I've fallen in love with Shakespeare, as well as Lewis, both of whom I have never known in life. I wish I had. We would of had so much to say.
Speaking of similarities, I have found myself confronted with something of which I cannot shake off. Reading Lewis' book was a new journey for me. Granted, everytime I read anything by him, I am struck with the way in which he seems to address my very soul, as though he knew me. After reading "Surprised by Joy", I found myself metaphorically lifeless on the floor. I have become certain that Jack and I are long-lost relatives. Of course, I cannot prove this in any way (I don't have any map of my family tree), but I'm certain others can relate to the feeling. It's like admiring a musician, then finding out that person likes many of the things that you do as well. Time and space somehow pull the two together, though they have never met each other.
That is me and Lewis. I'll speak as a madman, and say that the spirit of this author is haunting me in my own home. I happen to be obsessed (strangely enough) with Norse mythology; then I find out that specific mythology was one of Lewis' passions, one of his first obsessions in the story world. Ironic? Well, it gets better. How does it happen to be that I am in the midst of reading Henry IV and Lewis uses the character Falstaff as an example to something he was explaining? There is too much that is relateable between this man and I.
Also, I've found that the place in his mind that he resided in during his youth is where I happen to be in as well. I'm sure all who read this will instantly interrupt with, "Well, everyone can relate to somebody of popularity somehow. You're no different." I entirely agree with this statement, but I must be boastful and ask a question in return. Have you ever related to someone so much, so keenly, that you were certain that you may be the new embodiment of their soul? That's how I've felt. I've recently teased the idea to my friends that I am the female version of C.S. Lewis that is still living. It may be a jest when I crack the joke then, but I come home and find myself seriously pondering the idea. Is it possible that two people who never knew each other in life can be so much the same person?
I realize that all these statements may come to be very priggish of me (oh damn! another similarity between Jack and I!), but I don't regret the fact that I am a selfish prig. Who isn't? We've all got our ideas, and we all live according to their boundaries.....but I fear this post will be too long for anyone to have the patience to read all in one sitting. Those are my thoughts of the day....at least a few. I could never write everything in my head. If I did, it would be considered the never-ending novel. It would go on...forever....
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
"Painfully Limited"
Earlier
this afternoon, I was reading “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” while
eating a rather unhealthy lunch. It has felt good to dive back into the books I’ve
wanted to read, but lacked the necessary freedom for it at school. As the food
was settling in my stomach, I picked up the book again and continued reading. The
famous trio of teens was visiting a man, Xenophilius Lovegood, who they thought
would give them some answers on a particular symbol that they kept seeing in
certain books or places. The man, who was a bit loony to most, had worn a
necklace with this mark on it at a different time in the book. When he
explained how it represented the Deathly Hallows, three items that when put
together would conquer death, one of the trio, Hermione, was adamant to the
whole idea that the myth was false. In her mind, there was no way those objects
could exist; there was no way to be a conqueror of death (even though in
secret, she and her friends knew that they had one of the objects). What I
thought was interesting was the man’s response to Hermione:
“ ‘But,’
said Hermione, and Harry could hear her restraint starting to crack, ‘Mr.
Lovegood, how can you possibly
believe – ?’
‘Luna
has told me all about you, young lady,’ said Xenophilius, ‘You are, I gather,
not unintelligent, but painfully limited. Narrow. Close-minded.’” (Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, p.
410)
I had to
read this passage about two or three times, because I liked it so much. It
struck a chord in me that continued to hum long after it had been plucked. It
somehow rang true to my ears, and I found myself thinking about it long after
my lunch was gone.
Now,
allow me to connect this thread of conversation between Harry, Ron, Hermione,
and Mr. Lovegood to the world of Christianity (don’t cringe yet, because this
will hopefully be worth your time). But first, let me say that in this moment,
Hermione even reminded me of Susan Pevensie from the Narnia stories. Ah yes, I’ll
bet you’re starting to get the drift now. Hermione would rather be led by
logic, by what she knows and is certain of, over an idea that had not been
proven real. Mr. Lovegood had no living proof that he knew those objects were
existent, that the story behind the objects was real, and that there was even
the slightest chance of finding them.
So how
does this unbelief stretch into another realm? I think we Christians have the
terrible tendency to trust our logic over our belief. If there is something in
the Bible that does not make sense, we either discard it or try to make it make
sense in our view of sense….. right? And that is exactly where I think we can
lose footing. There were just some things that Jesus’ disciples could not
understand that their leader was telling them. It all, I’m sure, sounded like a
cluster of incoherent English words. I’ll give a short glimpse into where I’m
reading from:
“On
hearing it, many of his disciples said, ‘This is a hard teaching. Who can
accept it?’
Aware
that his disciples were grumbling about this, Jesus said to them, ‘Does this
offend you? What if you see the Son of Man ascend to where he was before! The
Spirit gives life; the flesh counts for nothing. The words I have spoken to you
are spirit and they are life. Yet there are some of you who do not believe.’……
….From
this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer followed him.” (John 6:60-66)
This is
where we might gasp, and exclaim, “Wait! There were more than twelve disciples?”
Of course! Besides, we ought not to be counting just the ones who were with
Jesus 24/7. Any believer is a disciple.
So my
point is ultimately this: Hermione couldn’t make sense of Mr. Lovegood’s words,
and the disciples couldn’t make sense of Jesus’ words. Whereas later on in the
story, Hermione finally wakes up to what she doubted, the disciples merely walk
away. I can’t help but wonder if the disciples thought that they were smarter
than Jesus, and that was why they left…
I fear
that we may be in that slot: we may be ‘not unintelligent’, but we could be ‘painfully
limited.’ The reason our faith may seem to smolder under our feet could be
because we won’t push ourselves over the limit; we won’t experience Jesus in a
way that says, “I may not get you sometimes. I may think you’ve totally lost
your marbles. I may try to outwit you, but in the end, I’d rather believe in
your crazy tales than live a dull life filled with earthly knowledge.”
I’m sure
that even I may not be making any sense
as I type this idea out. All I know is that I got a feeling, and I decided to
follow it, even if it started to sound a bit mad. That’s okay. I think we are
all meant to be mental at some point.
Saturday, May 5, 2012
A Dream Between Europe and the States
Although
I have not been to the Outer Banks, N.C. in quite some time, I still carry the
memory of that one vacation with me always. It was such a great time to be with
friends and family, even if the time was short. I can still remember the grainy
sand between my toes, the sun burning my back to a lobster red (not to mention
the awkward white lines that ended up being on my skin because of my friend not
rubbing the sunscreen lotion in.) and the soothing sound of the waves hitting
the beach. All of this and more make this place in North Carolina a perfect
spot for a get-away.
All of
these factors, however, are not the only moments I cherished. There was one
afternoon where I sat in the sand, reading or listening to music. I took a
long, hard glance at the ocean in front of me. My eyes wanted to penetrate the
distance of that great body of water, but no matter how hard I tried, I knew it
would never work. My mind still imagined it, though, as I recall thinking in
that moment, There is another land,
another world out there. Somewhere across this massive ocean, there are places
I’ve always wanted to see. Maybe one day, somehow, I will be there, looking out
at the ocean from the other side, knowing home is somewhere beyond.
This is,
I’m sure, one of many thoughts that could go through anyone’s minds. How we
long to travel! How we wish to see the world! Sometimes, dreaming is the only
way to make it real.
In my
case, dreaming was the only way to make it not only real, but actually possible.
Yes, I can say this with confidence, because I’ve had the privilege this year
of making it all happen (of course, my parents definitely get most of the
credit for making it a reality). In the middle of my spring semester, I went on
a school trip that headed to Ireland. I know that one of my fantasies has
always been to see that place with my own eyes. To be quite frank, I hardly
believed that it was happening, but sure enough, I was on that plane and was
soon landing in Dublin.
Now I
could go on talking about all the fantastic things I got to do and got to see,
but I feel like the most important thing for me to say now is this: I felt at
home. Granted, their accents were sometimes a bit too thick for me to know
every word they spoke, or that I actually got lost in Dublin. The thing is I
have a lot of Irish background in my family. As much as there is all English in
me, the Irish is pretty big too; going to that place made me feel like I was
discovering a part of my past, a part of my family line. This isn’t to say that
I actually found out anything about my family (in fact, one of the Irish names
that I know is in my family has probably been long gone from that island for
some time). What’s important is that, every time the classic Irish music was
played, every time I drank tea in the morning, every time I walked into an old
monastery, I became alive.
Needless
to say that eventually, those 10 days ended and I found myself back at school,
my whole spring break used up. Whereas a lot of other students came back
refreshed, ready to kick the rest of the semester off, I was getting rid of
jetlag, not ready to do anymore work, or run around the campus to classes.
I don’t
regret the trip. Even if I was sorely tired when I returned to the States, I
wouldn’t change any of my decisions. Going to Ireland was not only a wish come
true, but a step out of my comfort zone. We all need those moments in our
lives. We need to not be afraid of the ‘what if’s when we are uncertain what
making a particular decision will cost us. I had every single ‘what if’ before
I signed the papers for that trip. What if I can’t afford it? What if I use up
a precious break without my family? What if I lose my passport and Euros before
I get there? What if, what if, what if, it doesn’t matter! Just do it! Yes,
there will come times where you must consider deeply what it will cost to make
a choice like that, but sometimes we miss a big opportunity because of it. I
probably won’t be making another big trip for a while, but I’ll be content with
what I’ve got. Besides, I still need to work on my giant scrapbook to put all
of my pictures from Ireland in and I’ve got to finished eating the Irish
Whiskey Fudge I bought!
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Being a Backstabber Without Knowing It
I know I am just as guilty as anyone. Talking about people negatively, saying things behind their backs. I can't say that I have always been aware of this. It's new to me; but how did I come to find this out?
That's easy. I found it out because of people I know doing precisely the same thing to me.
How positive a comeback this is to the blogging world! Hello, blogspot! I'm going to dump the problems I have been facing this semester right onto your lap. Enjoy. Eat it up.
Now let's get one thing straight. I'm not talking about the random people I run into every now and then. I could care less about what they think of me. If they've got a problem, that's fine. It's not like we talk. When it comes to the people I am close with, the people I've lived with, it's completely different. It has happened so much this semester that I am losing my patience. I don't feel safe in my own room at college anymore.
How does one become a backstabber? Through selfishness. You can't be a backstabber when you care too much (at least in my head, this seems to be the case). When the world revolves around how you feel and what you want, all hell breaks loose.
What are some causes for such selfishness? Right now, I could definitely blame men (or even women, if I had enough guy friends). They come into my friends lives, and then my friends don't give a care in the world about anyone else around them. Their whole world revolves around that guy. It hurts alot, mind you. When my friends ignore me, or shove me off quickly just because they have a significant other, it becomes extremely frustrating. Was the friendship fake to begin with?
Second of all, I am sick and tired of people complaining and being inconsiderate to others (I will not throw out names, of course). It is hard to try and get rid of my picky habits of always being upset at something or someone when everyone else around me habors that emotional spirit and doesn't care to be rid of it. I am starting to think that that is the reason I have a harder time sleeping anymore. My teacher retold the simple phrase today of 'don't let the sun set on your anger.' It's so true, though! When we harbor anger after the evening, it affects our bodies through the night.
And when I try to get a word in about it, I'm just told to shut up. They don't care. They are so desolved in their problems that anyone elses hurts don't matter. It's just 'me me me!'
Speaking of anger and the sun, I really ought to stop this rant now. Granted, I'm still aching inside. I've got too much work to do, too many thoughts to think, too many hurts to heal; but I can't linger on them. It will only hurt worse. I can only pray to God that He will somehow open up these peoples heads, and make them aware of all the infliction they are throwing around. If I can't persuade them, who else will? (and I apologize for my lack of editing. I'm too tired to think about it right now.)
That's easy. I found it out because of people I know doing precisely the same thing to me.
How positive a comeback this is to the blogging world! Hello, blogspot! I'm going to dump the problems I have been facing this semester right onto your lap. Enjoy. Eat it up.
Now let's get one thing straight. I'm not talking about the random people I run into every now and then. I could care less about what they think of me. If they've got a problem, that's fine. It's not like we talk. When it comes to the people I am close with, the people I've lived with, it's completely different. It has happened so much this semester that I am losing my patience. I don't feel safe in my own room at college anymore.
How does one become a backstabber? Through selfishness. You can't be a backstabber when you care too much (at least in my head, this seems to be the case). When the world revolves around how you feel and what you want, all hell breaks loose.
What are some causes for such selfishness? Right now, I could definitely blame men (or even women, if I had enough guy friends). They come into my friends lives, and then my friends don't give a care in the world about anyone else around them. Their whole world revolves around that guy. It hurts alot, mind you. When my friends ignore me, or shove me off quickly just because they have a significant other, it becomes extremely frustrating. Was the friendship fake to begin with?
Second of all, I am sick and tired of people complaining and being inconsiderate to others (I will not throw out names, of course). It is hard to try and get rid of my picky habits of always being upset at something or someone when everyone else around me habors that emotional spirit and doesn't care to be rid of it. I am starting to think that that is the reason I have a harder time sleeping anymore. My teacher retold the simple phrase today of 'don't let the sun set on your anger.' It's so true, though! When we harbor anger after the evening, it affects our bodies through the night.
And when I try to get a word in about it, I'm just told to shut up. They don't care. They are so desolved in their problems that anyone elses hurts don't matter. It's just 'me me me!'
Speaking of anger and the sun, I really ought to stop this rant now. Granted, I'm still aching inside. I've got too much work to do, too many thoughts to think, too many hurts to heal; but I can't linger on them. It will only hurt worse. I can only pray to God that He will somehow open up these peoples heads, and make them aware of all the infliction they are throwing around. If I can't persuade them, who else will? (and I apologize for my lack of editing. I'm too tired to think about it right now.)
Friday, February 3, 2012
It Only Lasts So Long
Is it so difficult to make friend? Is it so hard to be friendly?
Sitting in this coffee shop, sipping a heath mocha, and reading “The Awakening” by Kate Chopin are now my strange relief from the cold world. Of course, trying to read for school is a chore. The point of the matter is that I’m alone. I can finally think…or can’t I?
Do I really want to be alone? The truth is that I don’t. The truth is that I want to have friends. I want to be in a friendly environment. I want to really be heard once in a while.
Sadly, even at a Christian college, you cannot find this.
This statement seems to change everything that I grew up to believe. The Christian body has become nothing but a mere crowd of people. If anything, they are the biggest liars.
Perhaps this is going too far; but how do we know? I believe we can only trust God (and occasionally ourselves). No preacher or church member is ever going to give you every right answer or every good gesture…but doesn’t God want us to have company and friends? I find this hard to contemplate, considering every year takes more and more people away from me. My world consists of nothing but change. I can never be constant. No, I take that back. I can be constant; my surroundings never are.
So why is this the case? I suppose my main focus is on the whole ‘friendship’ ordeal. I don’t think it is so much me not being able to attain friends as much as it is me being incapable of making friends. And college seems to be the worst place to attain them. Granted, I’ve got friends; but they’ll be gone sooner than later. By next year, I’ll have to start all over again, as though I were a freshman.
I wonder how many other people have had to experience what I have gone through. I doubt I’m the only one who has dealt through these cards before. Sometimes, my mind feels like a completely different entity compared to the rest of this place. I get put on the back-burner, hoping that I cannot feel any more pain. Or, I try to quench the flames, and be brave as though nothing is happening.
I hope this does not seem to say that I am continuously negative about life. I love life. It is in me somewhere…but hardly at present. One day, I’ll find it again without having coffee or tea (or even a pleasant book) to be the main source.
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Where are you, Gentleman?
The world of lovers is so complex in such a way that it’s messed up. People are continuously getting hurt by their partners. Bonds are thrown away as though they were nothing but an object. Emotions hang on the line. If we really, truly thought it over, dating is a waste of time. Love in that manner is a waste of energy. It makes me wonder whether we were truly made for anyone out there in the world…
The specific question I asked myself this morning after I woke up was whether or not a friendship could exist where neither admitted their feelings to one another, but just kept their friendship alive. I mean, I know we fear to even let our true intentions out in the open. What would happen if we did? Is it possible that the person who you were always meant to marry is the one you’ve been friends with for years and years (even back to your childhood)? I want to believe that there is ‘the one’ out there for me; but knowing my standards of men, and my logic in dating hardly permit me to be with anyone for a short period of time. In fact, if we were not friends to begin with, there is no point in us dating. We don’t know one another.
This just seems so silly to me right now, talking about the one subject that makes me the most frustrated and sick. One, because I see men as arrogant asses half the time, and two…well, maybe there isn’t another number. If there was, maybe it would all come down to respect of dating. It’s always a game to everyone. It’s no game to me. If I were to date, it would be because I’m seriously considering the idea that I’ll be married to that person one day. If dating is not this, I don’t want any part of it.
Of course, my avid reading and writing of stories makes me pursue the old ways of living, of how the world of love ought to be. I’ll read about true gentlemen, to which I’ll get the response “Those kinds of men don’t exist anymore.” True; as far as I can, there are no gentlemen (especially in my peers). However, I firmly want to believe that somewhere deep down, some secret place inside them that they don’t know about, there is that kind of gentlemen there. It’s been waiting to come to the surface, to at last be born into society. Each man can be a gentleman…once they allow their selves to let go of the typical ways of boys.
I know this subject probably came from a long conversation I had last night with a friend. We talked a lot about all this (and went into further detail, which I don’t have time to do at the moment). It was a good and refreshing talk. I’m so thankful for the friends that I have, even if they live far away. Honestly, I don’t know where I’d be without them. I’m also thankful for my family. They raised me well, and showed me what it really meant to love. I think that as long as I know that in general, I should have no fear of what lay ahead. I’ll wait for my gentleman, even if I have to wait a long time…
Monday, January 9, 2012
Struggling Perspectives
I couldn't help it today but to think about how all of the different opinions in the world seem to relish in fighting one another. Each belief wants to dominate; that person will think that what they know is truth.
The only problem in this is how we sift through all these facts in order to find out whether they are truthful or not. It becomes rather difficult to ever have an opinion or a belief without someone else judging it. Sometimes, though, it seems easier to just accept someone else’s beliefs, and just go with it. The only danger in that is whether you’re really being true to yourself, or if you’re a fake.
This, I believe, is one field that I struggle in quite frequently. It’s not that I am just following what the rest of the world says; it’s more that what I think of the world and what I believe would typically be frowned upon in society.
What I really question is the reality that each church in the world is separated because of how they believe in God. At first, it never occurred to me how silly that was. Then, it hit me. The truth of what I was taught becomes more apparent to me than before.
One, let’s look at how the church has ingrained us with their teachings. I’m not complaining about how they teach; what I am comparing, though, is how each church makes sure you know that what they teach is the ‘right way’. This is curious to me, because at this point, I don’t believe there is any right way to believe in God. I think what it comes down to is that you do believe in God. As a random example, think about how picky people are about how you worship in church. Some love to dance around and act crazy. Others are reserved and unmoving. Some churches find dancing a terrible thing (although if they saw how David worshipped in the Bible [if I am thinking of the right man], they would be rather astonished.) Others don’t. So….who is right? Who is wrong?
This is why I find that each church is going to hold a flaw (whether they admit it or not). I will not mention names, but I have heard of a particular situation where a church refused to talk about a certain topic in the Bible. They even said that if anyone wanted to know more about that topic to go to another church to find out. I can only imagine that you all are feeling exactly what I did when I first heard this bit of information. It was absurd, silly, and reckless. Whatever happened to preaching the Word? Picking and choosing what you think is important to talk about in the Bible is not bad…until it takes the big step that I just mentioned. I don’t know if this church was just scared of the topic, or that they didn’t like it. Then again, isn’t that how we all are with Christianity? There are some things we like, and some things we don’t. So, how do we deal with it?
I’m still working on these thoughts (and it doesn’t help that my humanities class this semester is probably going to make me ponder upon it harder than ever). On that note, I think I will leave my post. It may be a terrible ending; but maybe these are subjects of which you can now think over. I’m not pushing any sort of opinion on you. I just think it’s fair enough for us to ask questions, and to seek answers. It never hurt anyone….
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Inspiration comes with the weather.
I have finally gotten back into writing (for fun, that is). As a matter of fact to you all who may find it hard to write what is on your mind, or what you truly want to get across to people, let the weather inspire you. It truly makes a difference! I was writing on Sunday, and the weather was just spectacular! You could tell that there was snow on the way, but in the process, there were dark, ominous clouds lurking out the window. A terrible wind shook all that surrounded it. I went to open the door to the building where I was at a Christmas party, and the wind threw me outside along with the door. No, the door did not fly off its hinges (haha), but it opened so violently that I just ran along with it, tripping on the sidewalk. So.....yes, I daresay weather will have an impact on the words you put to paper.
On a different note, I am in the process of enjoying the freedom I've got this week before I head back to school. I'm honestly not sure how I feel about it all at this particular moment. There is a part of me that wants to read new stuff; but another part of me is going to miss being able to read whatever I want. Nevertheless, I've got to take what I'm given, and turn it into something useful. Hopefully, my subjects this semester will be interesting enough to make me be okay with going back on campus.
At this point, I'm anxious to see the world. I will be able to experience a different culture in two months time (which is insane to think about!). I'll be heading to Ireland. It's hard to believe it's going to happen at this point; but the fact of the matter is, I'm finally going out of this country again! It's not that I don't like my country, but I don't like the idea of my country being the only country I know. It was amazing when two years ago, I was able to go to Brazil and Paraguay. It was a refreshing, and crazy experience for me. However, it really opened my eyes to the truth that the world I grew up in and have known forever is not the only world out there. This is why I think it is important for everyone to get at least one chance to travel to another country. It will truly open your eyes.
Another thing that it will do to you, whether fortunately or unfortunately, is make you eager to travel more. =) I don't look at my eagerness to see the world as bad; but it does reveal the sad reality that I'm not nearly rich enough to just go anywhere I want. In these situations, I just believe and tell myself that money will not stop me from doing what I have always wanted.
Anyways, I will have to cut this blog short. I'm in the midst of adventuring with my sister, and it shall commence further! I was just in need to write a new blog. It's been far too long. Have splendid dreams od what you can do in the future!
On a different note, I am in the process of enjoying the freedom I've got this week before I head back to school. I'm honestly not sure how I feel about it all at this particular moment. There is a part of me that wants to read new stuff; but another part of me is going to miss being able to read whatever I want. Nevertheless, I've got to take what I'm given, and turn it into something useful. Hopefully, my subjects this semester will be interesting enough to make me be okay with going back on campus.
At this point, I'm anxious to see the world. I will be able to experience a different culture in two months time (which is insane to think about!). I'll be heading to Ireland. It's hard to believe it's going to happen at this point; but the fact of the matter is, I'm finally going out of this country again! It's not that I don't like my country, but I don't like the idea of my country being the only country I know. It was amazing when two years ago, I was able to go to Brazil and Paraguay. It was a refreshing, and crazy experience for me. However, it really opened my eyes to the truth that the world I grew up in and have known forever is not the only world out there. This is why I think it is important for everyone to get at least one chance to travel to another country. It will truly open your eyes.
Another thing that it will do to you, whether fortunately or unfortunately, is make you eager to travel more. =) I don't look at my eagerness to see the world as bad; but it does reveal the sad reality that I'm not nearly rich enough to just go anywhere I want. In these situations, I just believe and tell myself that money will not stop me from doing what I have always wanted.
Anyways, I will have to cut this blog short. I'm in the midst of adventuring with my sister, and it shall commence further! I was just in need to write a new blog. It's been far too long. Have splendid dreams od what you can do in the future!
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