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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

dreams

The luchador, a poet, an Englishman and me

July 20, 2017

It was a few weeks ago and I was feeling particularly bummed about life. Well, one part of life in particular. I had received some news I didn’t want which sent my thinking down a no-good track from which I couldn’t break free. I was alone in the house and I probably should have been working.

Instead, I curled up in bed with my computer and Netflix and watched “Nacho Libre,” a Jack Black movie I have only seen once, years ago. I remember laughing at its ridiculousness and this day was no different.

If you aren’t familiar with the plot, Jack Black plays a Mexican monk named Ignacio who has a dream to become a luchador, a Mexican professional wrestler. He pursues his dream even though it is in conflict with his vows as a monk. He is not a great luchador, but he cannot give up his dream.

After a string of losses, Ignacio, in frustration, prays these words:

“Precious Father, why have you given me this desire to wrestle and then made me such a stinky warrior?”

I belly-laughed. Alone.

It was just what I needed.

Part of my funk that day was directed at my writing, and I could identify with the prayer of a fictional movie character.

Photo by Oliver Thomas Klein on Unsplash

 

I could pray those same words, and sometimes I pray/wonder something similar:

God, why have You put this thing in me to write and yet I see no real success?

Or, in Ignacio’s words: Why have you given me this desire to write and then made me such a stinky writer?

Don’t ask me my definition of success. Ignacio has me beat there. He, at least, knew what success at his dream looked like. Me? I’m not so sure. Will I be “successful” if I have a certain number of blog subscribers? If a blog post goes viral? If I sign with an agent? If a publisher wants my book?

I don’t know.

—

Years ago at a used book sale, I picked up an old volume of poetry. It is one of the only books in our house that smells old, and every time I open it, the scent surrounds. They are a collection of religious poems, but I can’t say I’ve ever read any of them before. I have a renewed interest in reading poetry, so I’ve been trying to read one of these each day.

Not long after the Nacho Libre day, the selected poem I read was by Robert Burns. (Can we just pause a moment here and recognize how ridiculous it is that I just used the words “nacho libre” and “Robert Burns” in a sentence?)

O Thou Unknown, it is called, and I will admit that some of these poems contain theology I’m not sure I agree with. Still, there are turns of phrase that are works of beauty.

This stanza stopped me as I read:

Thou know’t that Thou hast formed me

With passions wild and strong;

And listening to their witching voice

Has often led me wrong.

I could not help but think of how I was feeling about my writing. I echoed the poem’s cry: You know You’ve made me this way!

And though I did not want to admit it, my passion for writing sometimes leads me wrong. Especially when I dwell too long on the results and what I think I should get from my writing. I am drawn back to the words I started asking myself months ago: What would it look like if I only wrote for God’s pleasure, with no “result” in mind?

Yes, my passion is often wild and strong, and yes it often leads me down an untrue path, but it is still part of me. Something I cannot rid myself of, even if I wanted to.

—

Photo by Dan Gold on Unsplash

On Tuesday nights this summer, my husband has been on an adult men’s soccer team. The guys are all mostly like him, passionate about soccer, in their 30s and 40s, and with bodies that won’t quite do what they want them to do, at least not without pain.

But they love every second of it. I mean, they all complain about their aching body parts but they don’t stop, not really. They rest when they need to and they rub medicines on their muscles and pop pain relievers and talk about drinking beer to numb the pain afterward.

Honestly, I was a little worried the first time he came home from a match and could barely walk the next day. Really? We just paid money for you to hobble around and maybe not be able to work this week? That’s what I thought. But when I started going to the games, I saw that they were all, mostly, in the same state and for some reason that made me feel better.

Several of his teammates are foreign-born and that gives me an extra fondness for his team. They have a lot of fun and they play hard but they don’t take themselves too seriously. It’s a joy to watch.

I don’t know a lot about the rules of soccer, though I’m picking it up a little after several weeks of watching. During a recent game, the play from the opposing team was not as honorable, it seemed, as it could be and the official did not always intervene. During one play, a shot on goal, our team’s goalie seemed to think a player was offsides before he shot. I don’t remember if they scored a goal on that play, but our goalie had maybe given up a little because he thought offsides was going to be called.

An English (as in born in England, not the “not Amish” version of English; in Lancaster County, you have to make this distinction) teammate of my husband was on the sidelines at that point.

“You’ve got to play the whistle,” he said to himself, although I overheard.

And I understood immediately. On the field, you play as if the game is going to proceed until you hear the whistle called stopping play. The players can have an opinion, but the official is the one who gets to decide when play stops. If you want to win, you can’t let a couple of missed calls stop you.

Somehow this also made sense to my attitude about writing. I think I’ve been taking myself out of the game while play continues around me. I’ve been waiting for someone to make a call in my favor while the other players on the field keep working the ball toward the goal. Then I get upset when they score.

I’ve not been playing the whistle.

As long as I can still write, I need to be writing, not sitting around waiting for something to happen to my writing that gives me an advantage. It might never come. But the words are always there and no matter what happens, the words together make something and it is not wasted effort.

The only way to “score” is to get on the field and play the game. And not everyone can score but everyone contributes. Maybe I will never score that goal I want, but that doesn’t mean I’m out of the game. And if someone else scores, that doesn’t mean it’s over for me, either.

—

Gosh, I hope that all makes sense. It clicked together in my mind, these strange pieces of wisdom, if I can call them that.

God made me a writer. (I can tell you more about that someday.)

I can’t always trust my writing desires to lead me in the right direction.

And I have to keep writing, even if I think the “game” is unfair.

I know not everyone who reads this will be a writer, but maybe you can apply it to your dreams, too. Maybe there is something that was put inside you from a young age that you can’t not do. And sometimes it goes wrong and sometimes it’s not fair.

Keep playing. Keep doing that thing you were meant to do.

We need all the players on the field.

Filed Under: dreams, Writing Tagged With: nacho libre, play the whistle, robert burns, writing success

Banged-up groceries and a bruised soul

June 8, 2017

We filled a shopping cart with groceries from the local scratch and dent store this week. If you don’t have these where you live, let me just tell you that you are missing out. We didn’t have them where we lived in Illinois, not that I knew of anyway, but in Pennsylvania, there is at least one in every county, if not more.

Inside these groceries you will find shelves full of outdated, beat-up, dented and sometimes damaged goods. Our cart full of groceries cost us less than $70 and re-stocked some of our basic pantry needs, not to mention filled our shelves with snacks for summer.

While I am generally wary of food with expiration dates from a month or more ago, sometimes the food is just fine. Sometimes there are pallets of Cheez-its with March Madness marketing, no longer relevant on the shelves of the chain grocery stores, but the crackers are still edible. I notice this a lot more these days, that when the special marketing period ends, the value of the product decreases. I bought back-to-school name-brand tissues for half-price once because school had been in session for months.

It seems to me a waste to spend so much effort on marketing products like tissues for a season when they don’t actually “expire.” I think this is why I prefer Aldi so much these days, although even there, I am not free from the special deals and the target marketing.

Still I wonder: Why must the value of the product decrease because the external packaging is seen as outdated? Why is the quality in question because the container shows slight damage?

—

I didn’t really come here to talk about groceries. I’m not really sure what I’m doing here right now. Blogging these last few weeks has been a struggle to say the least. If you’re a regular reader, maybe you noticed the silence save for a book review or two. Maybe you didn’t notice at all.

I’ve noticed, but I’ve been trying to ignore what’s been slowly happening. I’ve been withdrawing from things. Retreating like a turtle into its protective shell, snapping at those who dare get close. (This, at least, is what happens in my mind. I’m not sure I’ve literally snapped at anyone.)

Nick Abrams via Unsplash

This year, I’m supposed to be cultivating tenderness in my life, and in a way, I have. But I misjudged the amount of hurt that can come with a tender heart, how easily one’s soul can bruise when it softens. Somewhere on the journey, I started building a shell around the tender heart. And with each new hurt, new perceived insult, I drew back a little more and a little more until I didn’t even realize I had retreated into a dark hole with no light, just me and my tender heart protected from a big, bad world.

I thought it would be safe in there. In a way it is. But the farther I retreated into the darkness, the scarier the world out there became and the only people I could call “friend” were the ones I knew could understand the darkness, whose hearts were as tender as my own. Everyone else, they were dangerous. Enemies.

I might have stayed there in my dark shell. I wanted to. I still sort of want to.

But the light is drawing me out.

Jen Timms via Unsplash

—

I spend the majority of the time in my therapist’s office crying. Mostly, it’s my clue that whatever we’re talking about needs to be talked about. If it brings on tears, then I’m not okay with it. Sometimes, it’s entirely surprising.

During a recent appointment, we were cruising along talking about life and all of a sudden I’m bawling because I don’t want to go to church anymore. It’s not as simple as that, and I don’t want to drag it all out here, but my therapist started pulling on the loose threads of my arguments and before I knew it, I was a bare-naked soul with no solid answers for why I was feeling this way.

I left her office with raw emotions and a tear-stained face, thankful for a 25-minute drive and a couple of necessary errands before rejoining my family back at the house. She had reached into the shell and urged me to come out. And not only to emerge but to chip away at the shell encasing my heart. Where do these feelings come from? What birthed them? And what made them grow?

It would be easy to blame the election and politics and maybe there is some truth there. I have never before felt so much sadness and anger on a daily basis as I read articles, scroll social media and watch the news. I want someone to blame and “evangelicals” have been an easy target. I am angry that people who claim to love Jesus act in ways counter to the love of Jesus.

But if I am angry at them, I have to be angry at myself, too. Because me hating a group of people who don’t have faces or names because they hate people who don’t have faces or names is the definition of irony, I think. I have spent a lot of energy on anger in recent days. And that wouldn’t be a problem if I had let it fuel my actions. Instead, it has drained me, and I have lost a sense of purpose and passion. (My therapist used the D word–depression–and I’m not ready to go there again.)

I will spare you the specific laments I’ve been singing about my writing. Disappointment and discouragement have been unwelcome companions, and once again, I’ve wondered if I should just give it all up, the writing. (I won’t. I’m not.) In another session, my therapist provoked a question I hadn’t considered: What would it look like for me to write simply for the joy of writing? For the pleasure of the One who made me a writer? Not because I want more people to read my writing (even though I do). Not because I want to be published. (Also, yes.) Or because I’m being paid. (Just a little?)

But just because it is what I am meant to do.

Green Chameleon via Unsplash

I have not arrived at that place easily. Actually, I’m not there at all yet. Just on the way.

—

These feelings I have about church and evangelicals, they are tied to my desire to live in the city. In my mind, I am already there, but every day, I return to a house in the suburbs where I feel like I’m suffocating. Better to cut ties with the people in my “neighborhood” now before we move downtown, I think. If I’m honest, I am pushing people away, even if they don’t realize that’s what I’m doing, because I don’t think I belong and maybe I don’t want to belong and maybe they’ll reject me anyway so I’ll just go ahead and pre-reject myself.

Except I also had this realization: I tell people all the time that I don’t want to move to the city to save the city. That’s not what this desire is about. But I’m seeing that it’s possible I’m counting on the city to save me.

And it simply can’t.

Just like a person, if I expect the city to fix what’s wrong inside of me, if I move there thinking it will be what saves my soul and sanity, then I will find myself in a deeper state of disappointment.

The city can’t save me. It can’t heal me. It can’t fulfill my deepest longings.

For years, I’ve been told that only Jesus can do those things, and I do believe that He can. But it’s not as simple as it sounds.

It takes works. And I’m certain that He and I together can get to the source of these feelings.

I can’t promise I won’t snap or retreat to the darkness. But I tried something new at church on Sunday. I opened my hands to receive instead of balling them into fists preparing for a fight. It’s not easy to admit that my internal posture has been one of defense in the past months. Before I even set foot in the building, I was looking for a fight.

My words, my opinions, my voice–they still matter. What’s inside is still valuable, still useful, even if the outside is a little rough around the edges.

Filed Under: dreams, faith & spirituality, Writing Tagged With: disappointment, protective shell, tenderness, therapy, writing

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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