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. 

Belief

I find I’m coming to be an avant garde kind of Christian who may quite possibly be considered no Christian at all by people I do and don’t know. I persist, however, in believing in Jesus, so I myself am unable to fully separate myself from the term “Christian” even though I find some supposedly Christian views to be in direct opposition to the person I believe Jesus to be. 

I believe in God and I believe he is good. He made the universe out of an overabundance of love. I believe he made us and when he said we should have “dominion” over the natural world he meant we should serve it and care for it, or else the leadership style of Jesus means nothing. I believe Jesus is the son of God and provides a bridge between ourselves and father God, but I also believe that anyone who is truly seeking for God in love and truth will be able to spend eternity with him, no matter their faith background. No one can serve darkness with a pure heart, so I believe there are people serving the triune God who may not even know they’re doing so. Hell is only a place where people can go if they choose not to be with God. He will not force himself on anyone, so the only people who go to hell are the people who decide to do so. 

I adamantly refuse to believe that God allows suffering so our characters will improve. He does sometimes end up improving our characters when we’re in the midst of suffering, but that’s because he specializes in making good come from bad things. It’s not because he planned for disaster to happen for our spiritual “benefit”. Birth defects are not the equivalent of an ethics and moral compass lesson. They’re tragedies, as are the rest of the diseases, wars, social injustices and the rampant destruction of the natural world. 

I don’t know why he sometimes answers prayer and sometimes doesn’t. He’s a deity. I suppose it’s his prerogative. I do have to admit, however, that his seemingly unpredictable nature leaves me feeling insecure, even while I admit that in the balance between my knowledge and God’s, he will certainly win.  This is why I still think he is good. My understanding  is practically inconsequential when determining the character of someone who happens to be infinite. As such, he did create a stunningly gorgeous and bizarre stage on which our little human dramas play out, and for this I am grateful. I do believe we mucked up his original intentions for the place, although he must’ve known we’d do it. He made us anyway, which means he’s a hell of a lot more sure of his plans than I am. 

And by the way, I don’t see how the fact that something is divinely inspired (in this case, the Bible) means that it’s perfect. Artists and poets and musicians are divinely inspired all the time, and it doesn’t mean there aren’t any errors in the work. In addition, we have over a dozen versions of the Bible and each of them focuses on different things. We’d need to know Hebrew to have even a shot at a correct-type interpretation. The stories recorded were placed in a particular time and culture. How do we manage to take these stories and mold them into messages that promote discrimination, homophobia, mysogeny, and other acts that are not initiated by love, when Jesus was himself the embodiment of love?  He never became infuriated by anyone but the religious leaders of the day. I believe that if we’re really going to follow God, pride, self-importance, greed and cruelty must be abandoned. Pride is a big one, which I believe the church as a whole has tripped over for millennia. We can become so certain of our own views and correctness that we forget the main point of the whole story I think the Bible is ultimately trying to tell. Jesus himself gave us the most important rules to follow, which are to love God and each other. And what does God require but justice, mercy and humility (rough translation)?  These are my cornerstones.  

I freely admit to being scared of God, which emotion I’m supposedly supposed to both feel and not feel, having both the fear of God and having been perfected by love which casts out fear. God is love, but fearing him is the beginning of wisdom. I know there are different translations of fear in this context which makes me refer back to my earlier statement about needing to study the Bible in Hebrew.  Figuring out who God is feels like trying to package the Milky Way so it will fit in my kitchen cupboard. He’s enormous and mysterious and loving and inscrutable and odd. If you don’t think he’s odd, take a look at those fish that live in the dark and are made of teeth, except for one glowing lure right in the front. Weird. So I guess the fact that I can’t figure him out is actually quite reasonable. 

I must admit, I like the idea of knowing him as a person, which some have interpreted to be possible. I also have to admit I feel very much like the main character in that old animated film called “Antz”.  The main character is talking to his therapist and saying something like, “I just feel so desperate to do something important with my life but I can’t escape the feeling that I’m insignificant.”

“This is wonderful!” the therapist replies. “You’ve made a breakthrough!”

“I have?” replied the ant. 

“Yes! The therapist continues, throwing open the window curtains to reveal the outside world.  “You ARE insignificant!” he says. 

Perhaps someday God will respond to this desire of mine to know him in what appears to me now to be a ludicrously personal way. If so, he will have affirmed his weirdness and a crazy streak of affection for minuscule things. I, however, cannot make this happen. No amount of studying supposed facts about his character is going to substitute for him stepping into my life in a perceptible way and saying something like, “Hey. What’s up?  What’s going on in your heart and mind?  Why don’t we go get some fair trade, organic tea in a compostable mug at a family-owned shop (because I don’t support child labor or slavery or racial inequity or wanton destruction of people or natural environments)?  I think I’d like that. 

God and Babies

Well, in the middle of my time of existential angst, some of my dearest friends had a baby. So like life to send such a jumbled mix of light and dark all at once. He’s perfect, a little angel boy with long fingers and dark hair. His cooing sounds could break your heart. A gift, a new life full of possibilities, laughter and tears, he’s a treasure. 

And here I am trying to figure out the meaning of life, and the character of God. I know my friends think God is present, reliable, personal, generous and kind. And yet, when I read the Bible he seems unpredictable, occasionally brutal, and available to only a few. Yes, there are promises of good things, but there are promises of “trials and tribulations” as well. This world has fallen from perfection and there’s no changing that until such time as God decides to really intervene. I do not know how to reconcile the appealing idea that God is a perfect father who wants to have a personal relationship with me, with the picture of this unpredictable, far away God whose ways and thoughts are so far beyond my own that he is completely inscrutable. Of course he’s inscrutable. He’s an omniscient diety powerful enough to create the fracking universe. I feel like I’ve been sold a bill of goods, that he cares about the things that matter to my heart. It’s easier to relegate him to some distant position of indifference than to try to overlay a Daddy God with one who commands the slaughtering of thousands. I’m irretrievably confused and feel destined to remain so because I cannot simply agree with one camp and ignore the other. It seems as though both are true, if I take scriptures into account, which leaves me either doubting the scriptures or accepting the paradox in such a way that I distance myself from him to some degree. I had one unpredictable father. I don’t particularly want another. I don’t especially expect capital G God to take an interest in my personal affairs, but then I have to admit that at times providence has at least appeared to do so. 

Again, I find myself returning to fundamentals. What do I believe in?  Love, mercy, justice, humility, and more love. These are aligned with the words of Christ, who I do believe was the only perfect man who ever lived. Is this enough?  Even if I’m relegated to “fallen away” status by those more zealous and sure of themselves, can I live a full life in service to Love?  The fact is, I’d really like a perfect Dad. I’m disappointed that I don’t think I can trust him, and that the fact that he’ll suffer beside me isn’t enough for me to feel safe. We are not safe. That I know. 

Then I remember the baby. I think of his parents. I think of all the perils in life alongside all the wonders. It occurs to me that baby’s world is small and immediate. It consists of one moment followed by the next, eating, crying, sleeping, being loved. I’m no more important than he is. Maybe it could be enough to live now, loving and being merciful as much as I’m able and not trying to reconcile inscrutable mysteries of an enormous God. Maybe. 

Stories

I know you like I know my great-grandmother. She was in photographs. I heard stories of how kind she was, and how stubborn. She decided she’d never give birth after the first time and that was that. She never had sex after that. She had white hair by the time she was 35, and Great-Grandpa died young so I don’t think I can recommend it as a lifestyle. She used to read dog stories to my dad and they’d cry together and it was the only time in his life my dad ever showed his feelings to anyone. I’d like to meet her. If she could get my dad to cry, I think we should talk.

There aren’t any real pictures of you. Well, there aren’t any good ones. Pasty-faced Jesus and big fireballs don’t count. There are plenty of stories. You’re imaginative, I’ve got to give you that, and you don’t seem  to give up easily. Tenacious, I’d say, if you want to be friends with me (though I don’t have a guarantee on that). We don’t think the same way, you and I. You’re a mystery but you are enormous, like the inside of a black hole thrown outward so all its bits are spread over the boundaries between our universe and another we haven’t discovered yet.  I feel ridiculous when I’m upset with you. I’d like to meet you. I think I’d start by asking you to read sad dog stories and wait to see if you cried. If so, we might be able to talk. 

Scrambled Eggs

Okay, I know what everyone else has figured out already. Getting upset about the seagulls wasn’t just about the seagulls. The problem is that I don’t understand what it really is about. I’m pretty darned tuned into the universe so I suppose part of it could be about hearing the earth groan all the time. It could be about all the devastation humans wreak on each other and the planet. It could be about watching my mother suffer all her life, or watching my dad give up all his dreams, or being their “all we’ve got in the world.” It could have something to do with being married to my dear husband for over 18 years and still dealing with a multitude of issues around physical intimacy. Perhaps it’s about being rejected and/or misunderstood by my in-laws, having little family of my own and feeling sort of alone. Adopted family is great, but it’s never quite the same, is it? It could be related to my desire to create, always thwarted by my need to earn a stable income and teach others how to be more creative. I’m writing a terribly depressing paper about the unseen human costs of cheap production of goods, demanded by people who expect rock bottom prices so they can take mission trips to help the poor, when the truth is, the demand for low prices is creating most of the poor, supporting slavery and child labor, and decimating the environment the most for persons of color and few economic resources. Is it about all that? I almost cried when someone let me pet their dog today. I cried at a commercial on T.V. I’m walking with a limp.

It’s not as though any of the above is new information. I think that’s why I’m confused. I’ve understood and accepted all of this and more. So why now has my body decided to grieve?

Maybe the seagulls were the last straw-the latest instance in which love has failed and suffering has won the day. It was in my face, a blatant violation of one of the factors that has allowed me to continue thinking that living on earth is something I can accomplish without being completely destroyed. My seagulls were stability. They were hope. I counted on the ritual of their lives as one of the anchors in my universe. And yes, I know seagulls don’t live as long as us and are susceptible to tragedy like everyone else. I worried about it, but to see their home destroyed so carelessly, thrown in the trash as though everything beautiful and precious to me were worthless shit to be taken away in just a matter of time. That surprised me.

We are promised nothing while we’re here. God says he’ll be with us, but I don’t understand him. Some of my friends think he’s attempting to perfect us by allowing a series of afflictions, and it’s all for our own good. Some people say he’s in control of everything, and everything happens for a purpose. To this I say, “bullshit.” I think shit just happens. I’m not interested in a God who allows birth defects so we’ll gain character. There’s got to be something I’m missing, but if God actually wants relationship with me he’s going to have to do more than meet me halfway. He’s God, after all, and I have the stature of a flea when it comes to the size of the universe. So I guess I’ll just wait here and send this invitation out into the spiritual dimension. God, I need you to show up. You owe me nothing. I’m sort of banking on the “God is love” theme being true, even though I have no idea how that actually works. Without something outside of and greater than myself to give meaning to this brief, astounding and devastating life, I’ve got nothing. I never believed in that whole idea that children give a person a sort of immortality, and I don’t even have kids. Maybe the point is in loving each other, but we’ve proven we all suck at that. I do have a lot to be grateful for. I didn’t haul my water from a dirty river today. I’m not living in a war zone. I can move around and do stuff. I need more. If you’re the one who decided I’d be a deep thinker then it’s your own damn fault. If all we have is this breath then I need you to show me what that breath is for. I’m asking for your help when I know I deserve nothing. I’m asking anyway. What the hell. It never hurts to ask, right?

Elf Warrior, Bunny Lover

I decided to wait a couple days before writing any more. I’ve been depressed, and it’s shown in my poetry. Who really wants to read “Happy new year! We’re all going to die!”  It may eventually be true, but it isn’t particularly helpful to dwell on it. And if I’m honest, death isn’t the real problem anyway. The difficulty is in how to live life fully, and how to keep facing all of life’s disappointments and troubles without becoming disillusioned, angry and generally grumpy. I interact with people who deal with these challenges on a visceral level whenever I ride the bus or walk very far downtown. Seattle’s center is wonderful.  Nevertheless, it is a collection area for human beings who’ve suffered things I can only imagine, and been filled with so much hurt that there’s no room left in them for joy. Or at least this is the way it seems. 

Yesterday we went to see The Hobbit. I read the book once when I was a kid. I read the Lord of the Rings trilogy seven times. The Hobbit just didn’t grab my imagination to the same degree. Nevertheless, I found myself tearing up as the “good guys” triumphed over such obvious evil in the movie. It wasn’t fully logical, getting misty over an Orc beheading, so my own emotions caught my attention. 

Today we saw “The Imitation Game.”  It was so tragic on so many different levels. I weep for Alan Turing. There’s so much in the world that’s heart-breaking and broken and even what you might call “evil,” although the last word makes me squeamish. I think we’re too ready as a society to ascribe that word to individuals when in the vast majority of cases the fact is that when people are hurt, they hurt other people. I would argue that most atrocities (and atrocities they remain) are products of brokenness and admittedly poor to horrible decision making. 

This makes the world a much more complicated place than I originally thought.  I was taught that everything is black and white, concrete and absolute, and that people who believe otherwise have been lured by “the world” into a system that allows grey areas to exist. The truth as I see it is that we live in the world, with birth defects, human trafficking, homelessness, PTSD, mental illnesses, physical illnesses, loneliness, poverty, climate change, racism, pollution, and a host of other horrifying realities. All of these are enmeshed within systems that deal only partially with the causes and effects of each of these things. Sometimes we even live inside systems that nurture some injustice or another in the name of economic progress or blind tradition.  The suffering seems endless, and the grey areas irrefutable. 

I have watched my own mother battle daily pain for my entire life. I’ve watched my father, emotionally unequipped by his upbringing, as he’s worked three jobs and kept a stiff upper lip the entire time, never confiding in a friend or leaning on anyone else for anything including encouragement. Of course I’m not angry with them for how they’ve emotionally harmed me along the way (or at least not fundamentally so), but I’m certainly outraged at disease, and broken social systems and pain and loneliness and despair. I’m entirely pissed off that people can be on earth for over 70 years without ever really living.  So when I watch some kick-ass elf chick kill an Orc, something that is so obviously ugly and deeply wrong, I wish so fervently that I could do the same thing. I want to whip out my glowing elf blade with runes enscribed on it and slice that hideous creature’s head off. 

I know. Kind of gruesome, especially for someone who loves baby bunnies and feels bad for buildings when they’re neglected. But of course, it’s because I love so much that I feel this way. I want to protect those I love with every ounce of strength in me. Instead, I have to accept the fact of the survival of the fittest, the carnivorous circle of life and the human incursion into nature, with all its economic and humanitarian complexities. If someone I love gets sick I want to bomb the hell out of their disease, but I can’t. If someone of color is treated unjustly in the courts, all I can do is sit in town square holding a sign. I’m relatively helpless on a dangerous and unpredictable planet. Just once I’d like to have something in front of me obviously in need of extermination, and have the ability to beat the fucking hell out of it. It would be clear. I want to be an elf warrior, damn it, but I can’t. I have to watch, accept, understand, let go. 

I don’t know where exactly God is in this equation. Maybe he’s in our love for each other. Maybe Jesus is wailing with us in our loss and confusion and pain, but I find myself empathizing with Jesus’ disciples, who were really expecting him to blow the imperialist Romans to hell so justice and peace could reign on earth. I know the answer is much more complex than that. For one thing, there’s plenty of injustice without the ancient Romans.  I “get” Jesus sacrifice for all people of all time so everyone can see God’s love. I just can’t seem to separate myself from the here and now, and right here and now God feels far away and uninvolved. So I guess this is an invitation to a power infinitely greater than myself who seems historically to take a mysterious interest in the human race. I’m inviting you, God.  Show up. 

Impossible Soup, Part V

I don’t want to make you wait for part V so I’m posting both parts together. Even so, I must admit I’ve been avoiding writing the end of this story, but it’s real and true and needs to be finished.

Jason, Linda and Michaela left for school in Nebraska, in the summer of 2007. It was a long way, but we were planning to road trip out there as soon as we got a new car that would serve us more safely as we crossed the mountains.

I wasn’t particularly good at getting on the phone. I never have been, actually. They were well acquainted with this fact, though, and Facebook helped a bit. No matter, they were embedded in our hearts as family and we ached for their presence. We deeply grieved their leaving, but knowing they were enjoying their new life, doing things that they loved, was comforting.

Every time we heard from them Jason was ecstatically happy to be back in the world of theater. He wanted to teach because he was the kind of person who wants to share. He wanted to pass along his passion for the stage and help those younger than himself to find their own ways and discover their valuable places in life. He was a giver.

In October of 2009 I woke up to a text message from Jason. It was something about the hospital and ominous tests, but I couldn’t associate it with my vibrant, magnetic brother. I decided it must have to do with another friend. All day though, that text kept interrupting my other thoughts. By evening the air was ominous. Something in me knew that the ground under my feet was shifting. By 9:00 we knew that Jason had been admitted to the hospital in severe pain, and we were waiting for test results.

I spoke with him in the hospital the next day. “I didn’t want to be a wimp if all I had were hemerroids,” he said, and I scolded him and laughed. We talked about the schools where he’d already sent his Curriculum Vita, looking for a teaching job. I was supportive and enthusiastic until he got to one in a city I rather loathe.  I was silent for a moment and he roared with his big Jason laugh. We agreed to hope for a different place to go.

Test results started coming in and I got over my phone aversion quickly. I had to know what was happening. The news wasn’t good and we asked if and when they’d like us to arrive in Nebraska to visit. Thanksgiving, we decided, would be a good time. It needed to be soon. Jason had stage four rectal cancer, and a bunch of us started getting back together on Fridays to pray, while Jason was on speakerphone. We took up a collection to get them a juicer, and I started trying to find funny gifts I could send to try to lighten their spirits. Jason got a colostomy. He actually begged for it after a few horrific times in the bathroom. He went to start treatments in New York City, where they had the best specialists. His wonderful family joined him there.  His brother, Matt, helped him travel.

The treatments started and he went home to Nebraska. He moved down to the basement because he was so nauseated he couldn’t stand to be jostled in bed. He felt sidelined and alone a lot, despite all the love so many tried to give. His Mom moved in to help for a while.

He was gray when we got there. He tried to hide his suffering but I grew up with someone in chronic pain. I know what it looks like. The spark had gone out of his eyes. I discovered that all I wanted was to be near him then, to soak up his presence as though I could keep it with me in a jar forever. We were still talking as though there was hope, but something in me knew. I just knew he was leaving, but hadn’t yet boarded the train.

We helped with his furnishings in the basement so he could be a little more comfortable and then we had to come home to work. Only a few weeks later, on 01/11/10, he did board the train and left us behind, bereft and longing. And yet, we couldn’t help but notice the exact date of his departure as one final message of hope. Jason was forever seeing repeated digits on the clock. They’d come to be a kind of language between him and God. They were reminders to him that he was right where he should be. I can’t tell you how often I see repeated numbers now, or how I sense his presence in those moments.

I flew to Nebraska immediately with a friend, and Keith followed a couple days later. If there was one good thing to come out of it all, I became connected with Jason’s warm and loving family. We all clung together for days as though we were on a life raft. It didn’t seem possible that a man full of more life than anyone else on earth would be gone at the age of 37. It was immutably wrong. Yet, it was true.

Here’s the thing. I don’t have any clear lesson to give about God here. I know Jason had a clear and shining faith and I believe he is with God now. He’s doing wonderful things, leading theatrical productions and writing musicals. What I want to avoid though, is even a hint that God allowed it all to happen for a reason, so Jason and all of us would grow and be better people. If that’s true, well, I’m not investing in that God. That’s the mad scientist God I grew up with, and whoever invented that guy can have him back. So I guess I lied. There is a lesson, at least about the God I believe in, after all. It’s a broken planet. There are many, many things that happen here that are fundamentally and excruciatingly wrong. God is with us in that. He teaches us how to love each other so we can survive and have life again, later. He groans with us and collects our tears. He takes us home, in the end. I don’t know why he doesn’t intervene more except for the whole “free will” bit, but I refuse to accept that it’s because we’re in a crucible he designed so we’d be perfect, like some crazy Aryan family. If he is love, that is not okay with me. I can’t reject God altogether, either.  He was Jason’s God, and Jason knew stuff.  I’ve experienced things of my own. I believe God sent us Jason and his family so I could have my first brother, be seen, hugged, accepted, and nursed in some sense, into accepting life. Jason would be heart-broken if I were to lose all those precious gifts because he’d simply had to shift dimensions. He’d want me to love more, to accept love more, to continue to open my heart to God and health and living my life as deeply as I possibly can, and I try each day to honor that.

Jason was right about one thing. He wasn’t the last brother I would have. I have at least two more, to date. I grew up without much family, and things were messed up with Keith’s family and me, too. Jason opened the door to having adopted family. I can share my life and figure out who the safe people are. And I can look over again at the clock, see 11:11, and know Jason is well, and near.

Jason head shot

Perhaps I’m Angry

My friends say I am angry 
but I don’t feel it. Stupid
really, waste of energy being
offended.  You are brilliant,
creative, vibrant (fucking) perfection
nice and far away – okay –
near and inside me breathing in
and out and through. Sure. 
You are love. 
Here is not. Here is broken, a
confused man on the bus glaring
hate while my eyes fix away, still
knowing because the fury rolls off
him like a fog. Here is cancer and 
depression and too often hair-
slicked back on preachers smiling
bright box teeth and selling hell for 
a living. Living
here certain of all the whys
and what everyone deserves. I 
don’t blame you for this. 
Free will is part of the 
contract. We can roll over 
this groaning planet and rape
and pillage and kill. Sharp ends
from our dirty means, and a feast for
all the carnivores.  So where there
is all your love down low, with the
dogs underneath the table?  How do
I find you here, on the bus, carefully ignoring the fury man?  I used to think
you’d protect me. Now, I think maybe
you’d just know what a beating 
feels like. Love me past my PTSD, in
my weakness see past to who
I really am.  I’m uncertain and
I’m okay with that. I don’t want
principles as though we could understand your mind.  Send me 
a friend to sit next to at the next business dinner so I don’t have 
to hide my shaking. Send me some marijuana so I can sleep without my back on fire. I know you could heal it, and that would be cool, but I don’t want to hold you to it. You’re big. I’m small. 
I get it. Just please don’t put me in a 
box and label me. Talk to me like a 
person. See me. Want me. Keep
me even though you’re (fucking)
perfect. 

Impossible Soup, Part I

A while ago I mentioned that I grew up as a fundamentalist evangelical. I did, in fact, but I want to say first that the pastor of my church was a man of great integrity, humility, intelligence and faith. He’s even come forward and admitted his previously held views about women in the church were wrong. It takes a lot of courage to admit something like that and move in a different direction. While there are beliefs that I’ve since questioned, revised or discarded, he has remained a true friend and someone for whom I have great respect and affection.  I want to make that clear.

When I look back on what was truly damaging to me during that time, for the most part it had nothing to do with the actual teachings in my church. There was a strong emphasis on grace and unconditional love. There are a lot of people who came out of that environment as strong, confident individuals who could think for themselves. I think what made the atmosphere so toxic for me was that what I heard and how I saw those teachings lived out at home were completely different, even though the language was the same.  Both the church and my family talked about grace and unconditional love, but at the same time my parents and I were living in constant judgment and what I’d call Christian perfectionism. When I made mistakes, affection was revoked. God began to appear to be an irritable, insatiable scientist attempting to perfect his creations. He put us through tests and torment to make us better people. He dealt with us as though we were rats in a maze. Later, when I was grown and married and going to a different church, I wasn’t emotionally capable of having children.  The looks and comments people threw my way gave the distinct impression that I was not just a rat, but a diseased one.  I was an outsider rat who made all the others feel weird about themselves, or me, or both. In retrospect I’m sure there were people who didn’t look at me that way, but they weren’t in my immediate Christian circles.

Now, just for clarity, I do not actually view Christians as rodents. I suppose at the time I generally viewed all humanity as trapped in a sort of puzzle box, looking for a way out so we could prove we were smart enough to do it. I didn’t think we actually were smart enough to succeed, so the whole thing seemed pointless. Let’s just say it was a melancholy time for me.

I also don’t know why I never dumped the idea of God altogether. I’ve certainly considered it. Who wants to worship a mad scientist?  Well, okay, Neil Patrick Harris as Dr. Horrible does deserve a second look, but even he (as the title would suggest) turns quasi-bad in the end. My only solid explanation for why my faith hasn’t died has to do with the people who’ve been in my life, mostly since 2001.  In August of 2001, my husband and I moved away from the mid-south, home to some of the most radically conservative groups in the country, to Seattle, Washington. Seattle is home to the opposite. I have to admit, I felt I’d come home for the first time. When people asked if I had kids and I said “no,” and they followed by asking if we were planning on kids only to receive an “I don’t think so,” they didn’t look at me like I’d grown an extra head. They generally said something like, “Cool,” and looked nonchalant. Simply not having to face that constant judgment was an incredible gift.  Beauty is also something that helps my heart connect with divinity in a non-judgmental way, so it didn’t hurt matters that Seattle is absolutely stunning. The city has mountains on both sides and water everywhere, enormous trees, and wild ferns in the abundant forests. The fact that the average temperature in the summer is 75 was pretty great too, especially after all those miserable summers of lawn-mowing in my youth. Seattle was my Mecca.

It wasn’t without its challenges, though. My husband and I both had hard times with work. I landed a position in a hospitality firm where the work was fun, but the atmosphere was brutal. Take a whip to me and I do not get stronger, I get lacerated. I was working in this kind of environment when I developed generalized anxiety disorder, acid reflux, and IBS. I’ve since gotten professional help and done my own research, and there is a complex form of PTSD that appears to apply to people like me. Children who grow up in unpredictable environments of emotional abuse*, grow up with a lot of the same symptoms as those who grow up in war zones. The world is perceived as a profoundly dangerous place and there’s no escaping the sense of imminent doom. Perhaps (as in my case) the person learns how to keep up a facade of professionalism in certain, known environments, but can’t contain all the physical symptoms such as shaking hands or the need to keep a giant bottle of antacid at the front of the desk drawer. Then there’s the oppressive fear of having one’s brokenness discovered. Something can sometimes act as a trigger to a full panic attack and knowing that this can happen leads to increased anxiety.  Eventually a person can wind up at a faculty dinner staring at an otherwise harmless bowl of tomato soup knowing it’s physically impossible to get the soup successfully transferred from the bowl to the mouth without looking like an alcoholic coming down from a three month binge.

I believe the seeds for all of these issues were planted a long time before we moved to Seattle. It’s just that moving to Seattle and working for a brutal employer brought a dormant condition into a full-blown crisis. I developed insomnia due to the anxiety. My heart raced as though I were being chased by wild dogs, every single, absolutely otherwise normal day.

Nights were the worst.
“What do you want from me?!” I’d yell into the dark, pounding my fists against a pillow. “I’m sorry!  I repent!  Whatever I’m doing wrong just tell me and I’ll stop doing it!!!”  I knew I “should” have peace. The Bible promises the peace that passes all understanding, and if I didn’t have it, it was obviously my fault. I didn’t get help or go to the doctor for five years. I lived with it, if you could call that living, because if a person had Jesus s/he wasn’t supposed to need therapy.

This is the point at which some amazing people came into my life and loved me. I can’t explain why that happened then and not before, but it did. And these people happened to believe in a God who seemed better and kinder than the one I’d experienced. This is what kept me then, and what has continued to keep me from abandoning my faith altogether. Being surrounded by truly loving people who weren’t freaked out when I felt (and actually was) absolutely mental, was a miracle. It doesn’t happen for everyone. People slip through the cracks all the time. I don’t know why I was the recipient of such kindness, but I’m everlastingly grateful. On more occasions than one, kindness has saved my life.

This has deeply affected who I want to be for other people.  If I err in life, I want it to be on the side of compassion.  My grandfather would’ve curled his lip and called me a bleeding-heart liberal, but all politics aside, I really don’t have a problem with having a bleeding heart as long as I’m not bleeding out.  I want to be emotionally and mentally healthy so I have resources from which I can give.  I never want to be the person who excludes someone else because s/he’s different, or lives in different ways, or loves in different ways.  I know I’ll fail sometimes, but so help me God, I never want to look at another person as though s/he’s grown another head just because something about him or her is beyond my understanding.  I don’t want to look that way if I do understand and just don’t agree.  I don’t think agreement is a pre-requisite to kindness and love, and I don’t think it’s my job to go around correcting people.  For one thing, I can hardly navigate my own life without adding ill-advised attempts to figure out other people’s lives or even my own bookkeeping.  If God is any good at his job at all, he can take care of directing other people while he’s out there finding me a good accountant. There are plenty of people trying to impose their beliefs on other people, with extraordinarily damaging and sometimes horrific consequences.  What I don’t see enough of is the kind of love that can see beyond the surface to the value of another person’s heart.  We’re all in this together.  I want to act like it.

*Too often we view abusers as evil beasts who intend to harm others in horrible, violent ways.  My own experience is different from this.  My parents meant well.  Their parents meant well.  If you follow my lineage back you can find generation upon generation of abusive behavior, on both sides of the family.  We’re taught how to behave as children, and if we don’t have the courage or resources to confront our past, learn, grow, break down, and heal, we just keep the cycle of abuse flowing.  The catch is that just because someone doesn’t intend to abuse you, doesn’t mean they don’t do it.