The Grind

The daily grind is a daily
grind down, or perhaps
a grind up if unlucky.
Grinding over flies
unsettled above the 
under where our
pavement falls sink-
hole deep and shoes
become irrelevant. We
are fine and then we
can only see ankles and
there’s no way out alone. 
Grinding beside doesn’t
happen in life. Only in
that instance of breathing
side by side without
knowing one from 
the other, being curled
like an infant inside,
invisible but bulging,
waiting at once to
become human. 

Glasses

My beliefs are like any 
other’s beliefs, flawed 
and filtered as through
sunglasses so everything
looks a certain color. I 
know this, but still must
wear the glasses, or I 
cannot see at all. 

“Humility is essential,” I
say with utter confidence,
and so, betray my own
statement. 

New Path

I’ve decided to take a new approach in my spiritual journey. I’m going to try believing what I actually believe instead of second guessing myself until I’m dizzy. I’m going to be willing to plant my feet to some degree, acknowledging that I don’t have a corner on all truth and maintaining an openness to conversation but refusing to be patronized. I’m going to attempt to give myself the same grace I give others, knowing I’m doing the best I can to be loving, kind and honest. If God has a problem with my beliefs he is surely big enough to get my attention and help me navigate in a new direction.  

I think I’ve simply reached the point of realizing that doing the same thing (that is, attempting to figure out a perfect theology with the goal of pleasing God enough that he will deign to become present to me) is far too close to insanity for my liking. I don’t even believe in that approach in my conscious mind. The problem is my subconscious programming that I must “get it right” or God won’t show up. Is he inscrutable?  Yes. I cannot understand him, but I do believe he is good in spite of all my railing, flailing and other expressions of frustration and desperation.  

I must say, it takes a very long time to overcome some of the embedded messages from childhood. It seems ludicrous, really, but I can hear my therapist’s voice in my head, reminding me not to judge. Healing takes time. Part of healing for me involves moving in a different direction. I know I have opinions with which others will disagree, and while I don’t savor the thought of being rejected, which does sometimes happen as a result of disagreement, I actually think it’s natural and healthy for people to have differing views. 

So self, listen up. Try to be kind to yourself. Do your best to just throw your perceptions in the air and trust God to catch them. In the meantime, it’s okay to put your feet on the ground in a solid pair of shoes and just stand there. Just be. Wait. Listen. Stay. When the voices come that tell you you’re going to hell for your flawed theology, turn around and tell them to talk to God about it, because those voices aren’t God. At least, they’re not the God you believe in, so stop and recognize that. Breathe. Accept comfort. Avoid comparing your journey to others’. Love. Try even loving yourself even though it feels stupid. That might be kind of important, but you have time to work on it. 

Stairs

Stepping up with 
one good leg I
make work of light and 
lift my bale, hoping 
under all my thought
that up is up and 
not a fall disguised
by some mean
trickery to make me
see the road ahead 
instead of down
before I fly with
tissue wings that 
cannot hold. 

Stepping down I
shift my load to give 
away for other arms 
the burden of my
thought and knowing 
little seeming more 
like fogging up the 
air where high 
things live and so
I doubt the down
and pause to 
ponder, adding to
my weight then
climbing when I
meant to drop. 

Flail

For the last month I’ve been engaging in the various phases of a collosal flail. I didn’t even know before that there were stages to flailing, but it was initiated by grief and there are stages to that, so maybe that’s why. 

When my beloved seagulls were displaced so casually from the roof across from ours, it triggered me in emotional ways I still don’t fully comprehend. I do know that watching their annual cycles had become a major way by which I measured the progression of my life. Their schedule was dependable in a chaotic world. I’d also come to think of them as a connection between God and myself. Their welfare had been previously threatened and I’d cursed and prayed helplessly from my window. Time and again they were spared and I began to think that perhaps God actually cared about things that I care about. 

When they were ousted my entire confidence in that single, seemingly tangible connection was lost. I know it sounds silly.  I guess it is, really, but it was my experience, just the same. I became uncertain of anything I’d been certain of, which wasn’t very much in the first place. I’d already been questioning many of my prior beliefs and reforming my thoughts on life and reality. 

I was reminded this week, however, that I’m still certain of a handful of things that hold great significance to me. I’m still certain of the central importance of love, mercy, justice, and humility. I’ve also been reminded of the presence in my life of a couple relationships through which I’ve been given comfort and wisdom in quite fatherly ways. They are healthy relationships with caring men who actually want me to talk with them.  I choose to believe that this is God reaching out to me in a healing way. 

I think I’ve often measured my own relationship with God by comparing it with what I’ve seen of God’s interactions with other people. Their communication has seemed so intimate that at times I’ve been jealous, feeling shut out once again from having an emotional bond with any kind of father. I’ve prayed, begged, repented, waited, gotten prayer, tried not to try so hard, and continued to worship God even though he’s seemed far away and inaccessible. I’ve chosen to believe even against my own sense of judgment and good sense, because despite myself I cannot escape the desire for connection with him. 

A few comforting thoughts have slowly risen to the top this week as I’ve continued to flail. I already mentioned some helpful relationships. Every time I lie down on the chiropractor’s table I feel the gift of comfort and am reminded to open my heart and receive it. When I am able to talk through my quandaries with my therapist I’m reminded that I’m not alone in my journey to figure out how to live. When I teach I’m reminded that there is no one perfect way to think. There is no perfect perspective of God because the best of us see through the filters of our own knowledge and experience. Each of us is allowed and even expected to have our own thoughts or we’d not have been made with free will. I’ve even considered that the mixture of love and grief with which I view the world in its brokenness may be something I have in common with God, which would mean that he and I really may care about some of the same things. If he is kind in the all-encompassing, galaxy-rocking way that I hope he is, then he cares about every single creature with more clarity and insight than I will ever have. 

I’m still a big jumbled mess when it comes to my thoughts about the Bible and how much God is really involved in our daily lives. At least, however, I haven’t been left alone to both figure it out and let it go. A certain amount of mystery is to be expected and even embraced in life, and at times my need to understand has undermined my emotional health by rejecting this reality. 

Eventually we’ll move to another condo and I won’t have to look at the empty roof across the street, and maybe in the meantime I’ll have learned just a bit more how to embrace uncertainty, love, and my own unique experience with an invisible God who may well choose to speak to me in ways that are different than those he uses with other people. I’d love to think that along with the painful, protracted wrestling that is life can come the reward of becoming more fully oneself, connected, free, and fully loved. 

Laying Hands

I used to wish he’d lay
a hand on me, to
hold or even thrust me
down into the ground 
as though I were a 
shovel with a sharp
edge splitting the earth
to make room for some-
thing to grow
up
in a tortuous glory
of green and 
amber light. 
He never did, of
course. No bruises
we could see, but
a waifish vine 
ascending by
itself. 

Valentine

I got a card the other
day, from a woman I’ve 
always loved. I knew to 
wait for morning to open 
it. At night her words could 
flow to my feet and grind
their pace in the hallway. 
This time I waited then ran
to work, to think on other 
things, wishing my smile
weren’t thrown sideways 
by the air in the envelope. 

The card arrived from 
multiple planes and split 
into many translations. 
Linguists could debate 
the many few words
from a language known
only to three. I didn’t 
need a linguist. I read the 
note and knew the love, 
the unlove, and the 
twisted fight with 
anger.  The empty space 
where the words were 
born was bigger than
I could answer. 

Stolen Identity

Waiting for them to turn
off his phone, snatched
somewhere between 
here and 5th, we think,
as he walked past a 
thief, unknowing. That
phone’s a lifeline, a point 
or connection, a royal 
pain in the ass. 

Will he still be a person
without his access to
wi-fi and Google-maps,
to mark his place on
the pavement, in the 
spaces between 
destinations and the 
persons who hold his
identity in the ways 
they blink their eyes?

It’s blocked now, nothing
in or out, no words 
or numbers traveling
through the between, as
I write about it on my
own brain that I carry
outside my head. We’ll
see if we’re deleted in
the morning. 

 

Invisible Questions

I watch murder mysteries on
t.v.  There are so many to 
choose from. Some are even 
sweet, in their way. Many
require subtitles due to the 
accents. 

I save bugs from my class-
room, and here I am looking
at corpses. We all die, though. 
We’re all part of a storyline, full
of characters of sorts, picking
up mysteries here and there
as though they were chestnuts 
ready for baking or words to
a Christmas song. 

All our questions hide 
themselves in the sock 
drawer and make
themselves invisible in our 
daily lives, looking ordinary 
while whispering secrets just
out of reach of our ears. We 
like it that way. 

Mortality, our
insignificance, our importance,
diseases, hunger, poverty,
the sound of rain in the dining
room, all dress themselves in
everyday clothes so we pass
them by on the sidewalk, but
we watch the actors on t.v.
because we know we’re 
missing something.