Monday, August 31, 2009

Layers of Grace

A pearl doesn’t start out as a pearl. It starts out as a mistake inside an oyster. Something that doesn’t belong. An irritation the size of a grain of sand. Who would think something that small could make any difference?

Oysters deal with an invasion of a foreign object by covering it with the same stuff that coats the inside of the shell. You’d think that a couple of layers around a grain of sand would be enough to take the edge off (like a couple of drinks at the end of the day) but the oyster is still irritated and the object is still foreign. A million layers later there’s a smooth shell around the intruder.

Pearls become pearls one layer at a time, and each is different in size, shape, surface and color.

Salvation happens gradually like the formation of a pearl. It starts with something wrong. Something that doesn’t belong, like a thorn. We would pick it out ourselves, but it’s impossible. Perhaps we pray, but God doesn’t touch it with a ten-foot pair of tweezers. It is not removed. We live with it.

So much for instant salvation.

It’s more like frustration (“coming up empty”).

I don’t offer a solution, but I have had decades of experience with foreign invasion.

I’ve found that with the right amount of Steadfast Love and Compassion---one layer at a time---the wrong is covered by grace. What is unacceptable is accepted. What is unlovable is embraced; even transformed into something priceless.

Sunday, August 30, 2009

The Art and the Craft

The light seldom comes on all at once. We usually “get it” gradually. We expect to go from dark to light immediately, but it’s more like sunrise.

Healing is gradual. We don’t get well overnight. Change is gradual. We don’t break self-destructive habits overnight. As Chicago sang: “Good things in life take a long time.”

There are seasons in our life however hard we fight against them. Seasons of joy and sadness. Seasons of realism and denial. Seasons of intimacy and loneliness. Seasons of hope and despair.

Winter finally gives way to spring; and spring surrenders to summer. It can’t be rushed no matter what or who you know.

In Jerzy Kosinski’s book Being There, Chance the Gardener is on a talk show and says to the host: “In a garden things grow…but first, they must wither; trees have to lose their leaves in order to put forth new leaves, and to grow thicker and stronger and taller. Some trees die, but fresh saplings replace them. Gardens need a lot of care. But if you love your garden, you don’t mind working in it, and waiting. Then in the proper season you will surely see it flourish” (page 67).

This is the art of letting things happen. This is the craft of making things work.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Static

I bought my first CD player in 1983. I was in California. I had enough cash left over to buy “Linda Ronstadt’s Greatest Hits”. I loaded the disc, pushed “play” and ran to the couch (no remote). “Love is a Rose” began to play. I listened to the first half-minute and thought: “Hey, wait a second! The first part of the song is missing.”

I got up and started it over. I was right. They cut part of the intro. I called my neighbor David Wettstein to come over.

“Listen to this, Dave, and tell me if something is missing.”

Dave listened to it twice, and smiled. “Something’s missing all right, but it’s not part of the song. The song’s all there. You’re missing the surface noise---the pops and crackles the needle makes during the first two revolutions of the record before the music starts. What you’re missing is the static.”

Static. One of my dad’s favorite words. As in, “Don’t give me any…”

When I went into alcohol rehab they asked us to identify the static in our lives; the unnecessary noise.

For me it was anger. It didn’t take long to identify it. Most of the time, I could feel it brewing like the strange silence before a storm. Still can.

I never figured out where it came from, even though I underwrote several lengthy archaeological digs.

Every counselor tried to get me down to the root of it. Not possible. For one thing, I was holding onto it so tight for fear of what else I would lose if I let the anger go. Would I lose my link with my dad? Would I lose the raw fuel to my creativity?

So what am I doing these days? Still trying, one day at a time, to separate (not eliminate) the static from the music of my life.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Priorities

Every time we meet for lunch he sits with his back against the wall facing the crowd. He must’ve been ambushed when he was a younger man. I’m late and he’s early. He carries an internal clock like the crock from Peter Pan.

It’s Monday and I’m breaking bread with the blue-eyed Cherokee.

There’s no telling where the conversation will wander off to. One week we’re Don Quixote and Sancho Panza slaying windmills and dreaming impossible dreams. The next, Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday. The next, two old cats stuck in the 60’s. He’s already ordered my diet Coke and I sit down where it’s sweating. He asks how I’m doing and I tell him things are going pretty well, but that I’m having some trouble juggling things. Keeping them in the right order.

Ever read your own writings, Doc?” he asks me. “You wrote something about priorities a while back.”

“What did I say?”

“Not enough,” he says. “You didn’t go far enough.”

“Life is a box,” he says, “with all different size holes in the top and a peg that fits every hole. The trick is getting the right peg in the right hole. The trouble starts when you try to put small pegs in the big holes.” (I’m trying to listen but one thought keeps going through my mind: “I didn’t go far enough?!”)

“So what do you do,” he asks, “when your little box gets a hard shaking and all the pegs fall out?”

“I put them all back in.”

“No,” he says. “You find the biggest peg and put it in the biggest hole. That’s the first thing you do. Then, find the next biggest peg and put it in the next biggest hole.”

“That’s it?” I ask

“That’s it,” he says.

“What’s the biggest peg,” I ask.

“That’s what you left out,” he tells me.

“God?”

“The biggest peg in the biggest hole,” he says. “Whatever that is for you. That’s where you start.”

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Light in the Darkness

There is a story about a buck who loved his horns and hated his feet. But when the hunter came his feet saved him until his horns, caught in a thicket, destroyed him. The story is from Emerson who said, “We’ve all been hurt by a point of pride in our life, while at the same time, we’ve been helped by our weakness, even our character defects.”

I saw Stephen Hawking, theoretical physicist, ten years ago at Cambridge University in England. He was in the teacher’s lounge between classes. Lou Gehrig’s disease had incapacitated him, but his mind and his wheelchair were state of the art. His assistant tied a bib around his neck for afternoon tea and poured nine cups down him, one after the other. The bib was wide with a deep pocket that caught the tea as in ran down his chin.

He was being interviewed by a reporter from the Manchester Guardian newspaper. He communicated with the help of a machine attached to his keyboard. He didn’t speak in sentences, or even in words. He built the conversation letter-by-letter, like he was laying brick.

I could hear pieces of the interview from where I was sitting. I heard him tell the reporter that he was scatter-brained, undisciplined and at loose-ends before his disease, but as his body grew weaker his focus grew stronger. Once he faced his powerlessness over his disease his hidden resources grew. As if the disease opened a door for him.

This is how it is with my periodic battles with depression. If I don’t fight against it, but, instead, listen to it---even befriend it---I am surprised to find a light in the darkness. It’s not like the searchlights car lots use to lead you into the parking lot. It is more like a candle, or a porch light.

The light is always on, but when we are unraveling we tend to see only darkness. But the light is there. In the darkness.

And sometimes, like with Dr. Hawking, the thing we thought would ruin us turns out to be the very thing that opens the door to a new life.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Secrets

There is always one guy in the neighborhood that is so good at hide-and-seek that you’d swear the guy can disappear. The crazy thing is that he was always hiding close enough to home base that he could see who had been found and who hadn’t.

I learned to hide in the third grade after I got into big trouble with my dad and I promised myself I would never be found again. By anybody.

Hiding takes a lot out of you. It is hard on you to swallow a big secret and keep it down. Some of us have been hiding so long we can’t remember the reason we’re hiding. Whatever the reason, it usually goes back to something that hurt and we want to make sure it doesn’t happen again. So we become a turtle with head, legs and tail pulled in under the shell.

Some of us are not much more than a shell.

There is a scene in the movie Absence of Malice where a young woman’s uncle (Paul Newman) is accused of racketeering. She knows he is innocent because they were together at the time of the crime (out of town for her abortion). She doesn’t dare confess it to the newspaper reporter who is covering the story (Sally Field) because she was in Catholic school at the time and it would hurt her family and the sisters.

She ends up telling her story to help her uncle. The next day it was on the front page.

Before sunrise she is sitting on the front porch waiting for the paper. She hasn’t slept. She is in her robe.

When the paper is thrown in the yard you can feel her fear. She scans the story. Then, she goes from house to house in the neighborhood picking up every newspaper. Later that day she commits suicide.

Everyone is carrying something that is heavy and difficult to bear. Some secret. A reason for hiding.

There must be a way we can help each other hear some of the best words any child of any age can hear: “Come out, come out wherever you are;” and then, “All-ee, All-ee in free!”

Wherever you are, whatever your secret fears, you are closer to home than you know.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Finding or Being Found?

I’m not sure anyone finds God. It’s more like what I saw happen in a large grocery store in Texas.

There was an announcement over the store’s intercom system. It was a woman; somebody’s mother. Hearing her voice was shocking because it was so real and vulnerable; unlike somebody calling for a price check.

She said, “Jenny, this is mommy. I know you are lost and scared. I know you are looking for me.

“Jenny, just sit down where you are. You can stop looking for me. Wherever you are, just sit down Jenny girl and I will find you.”

Finding, or being found?

“It’s not that you haven’t done enough. It’s that you’ve done too much” (Martin Luther).

Monday, August 24, 2009

Cracked

The first time I heard the word “cracked” I was walking home with a ninth-grader, Glenn Curry, who had just moved into the corner house before school started. He was a foreign exchange student from Mississippi. He was a tall, skinny red-haired guy still mad about the move. I was in seventh grade and we had been in school one month.

We were talking about one of the kids in my class who lived one street over named Larry. Larry was slow and I don’t mean in the 50-yard dash. Glenn was making fun of him, mimicking the way he talked. So was I. He talked like a younger version of Billy Bob Thornton in “Sling Blade.”

“You know he’s cracked,” Glenn said.

“Yeah, I know,” I said. “He’s real cracked.” (I had no idea what it meant).

Later that night, in the heat of battle, I told my sister she was cracked. I got a whipping for it; and a lecture about the Insane Asylum in South Presa in San Antonio. So I figured out cracked means crazy.

That year Larry sat beside me in English class. We were reading “The Road Less Traveled.” The teacher asked where the road less traveled is. Nobody knew. When Larry raised his hand we rolled our eyes and knew he would “boldly go where no man has gone before.” I can’t remember his words verbatim, but the essence of his vision of the road has stayed with me.

“The road,” he said, and it took him a while to say it, “the road is where no one is taller or shorter, faster or slower, where nobody has to catch up, nobody’s stupid and nobody’s alone.”

We should be so cracked.

Leonard Cohen wrote and sang, “There are cracks, cracks in everything; that’s how the light gets in, that’s how the light gets in.”

Sometimes, that’s how the light gets out.

Sunday, August 23, 2009

Love Without Understanding

George Mason wasn’t the first person to tell me I had a problem with my dad, but he was the first person I listened to. We happened to be leading a week-long camp together and though we had never met we stayed up late every night talking in my room. That’s when he brought up the thing about my dad. He asked if I’d ever considered letting go of some of the baggage.

“It’s that obvious?” I asked him.

“It’s obvious,” he said.

For weeks I thought about what George had said, but what could I do? My dad had been dead for 10 years. I called George in Dallas. He asked me where my dad was buried.

“In the panhandle of Texas,” I told him. “In Plainview between Lubbock and Amarillo.”

“Let’s fly over there and see him,” he said.

So we did.

We got to the cemetery late in the afternoon. It was rainy and cold. Every grave marker is flat at Roselawn. Great for mowing, not so great for finding your father. And if that’s not enough, the grass had been mowed the day before.

So George and I went from marker to marker raking off the wet grass with our fingers and looking for Joseph Perry Wood, USAF.

I was carrying 15 pages of things I wanted to tell him. I hadn’t held anything back.

An hour later I found him. I knelt down in the grass and began to read. George was there beside me with his hand on my shoulder. I was losing it big time. I gave up after page one and shoved the rest in my pants pocket.

Everything I had written on those yellow pages, the raw and ragged sentiments I had carried in my heart seemed smaller. I’m not saying they were little things. I’m just saying they weren’t the main things. The main thing was that I loved him. However flawed he was I loved him.

There comes a time when you finally begin to let the pain go a little at a time. Underneath the pain is love. Not understanding, but love.

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Rags

Things happen we wish we could take back. Something we did, or said. Everything spins out of control. Anger is delivered with a flame-thrower. Lines are crossed and somebody gets hurt. Children die in friendly fire. Somebody earns a black belt in sarcasm and draws blood. Someone dies a thousand deaths, but has to go to work in the morning.

Every one of us has scraps of memory we’d like to throw away, but who would want them? Who could possibly want every humiliating failure that is a part of our permanent record? Who salvages our self-destructive choices and wasted years? Who picks up the pieces of broken dreams?

In the early 30’s, a man pushed a cart through the neighborhoods of Cleveland shouting, “Rags! Rags!” Women would come out their front door bringing him bags of old rags and scraps of material. A boy asked his mother what the man did with the rags.

“He takes them home, washes them and makes the most beautiful loop rugs. His rugs are big and round with every color you can imagine. He has been making rugs out of rags ever since I was a little girl.”

Nothing that happens to us is lost. No experience is worthless. No moment is empty. Nothing is junk. We store away scraps of our childhood when we felt left out and forgotten. But when we tell children these stories, especially after a sad day at school, they feel less alone.

Do you ever hear someone pushing a cart down the streets of your life asking for the rags and scraps you’d like to forget? This Artist has been working since the beginning of time; and will accept any and every scrap, however dirty and worn, to work into a beautiful and original pattern that tells the story of our lives.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Unloading

We were on our way to a meeting. There were three of us in a green Pontiac. We passed a long line of 18-wheelers waiting at a weighing station. The driver at the front of the line was pulled over and unloading part of his load. He was over the weight limit.

What if there was a weighing station for us? Don’t suck in your stomach; I’m not talking about fat. I’m talking about a different kind of load. The kind that is hard to see. The kind that shows up in your eyes.

Imagine being pulled over periodically, stepping up on the scales and hearing some hairy-knuckle type say, “Sorry, but you’re carrying more than the maximum weight for a load-bearing rig of your make, model and year. You’ll have to unload the excess, put it on another carrier, or leave it behind. That’s the only way we’re going to let you back on the road.”

It could be guilt, or grief; shame, anger or disappointment…. It could be a truckload of good deeds. Overload is overload whether you’re carrying gold or garbage.

Lewis Grizzard’s father died, broken and cut-off, one Christmas.

“I asked daddy a thousand times, ‘What’s wrong? Why can’t you stay sober? What can be so bad you can’t talk about it?”

He began crying. I think he wanted to tell me. I think he wanted to tell somebody, but he never had the courage.

“I made a terrible mistake,” he said. “A bad mistake.”

“What did you do, daddy? Please tell me.”

“I made a terrible mistake,” he said.

“Did you kill somebody? Did you rob or cheat somebody? Were you a child molester; or guilty of cowardice?”

Whatever his sin, his secret, I loved him---and I loved him anyway.

Who in your life has the love and power to pull you over and say, “Enough! You’ve got to unload some of this. You are not safe.”

And who do you trust enough to pull over and unload the excess baggage?

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Paradigm Shift

My friend was studying all night for his last big test. It was all that stood between him and his doctorate. The night before the test he settled in at his desk. He heard a dog barking. He tried to ignore it, but it was one of those hairless rats that yip like there’s no tomorrow. It went on all night.

He was too angry to study. He gave up at 3:00 and set his alarm for 6:00 so he could bang on the neighbor’s door. A woman in her late 50’s came to the door. It was obvious she’d been up all night.

My friend said to her, “In six hours I will take the biggest test of my life. Your dog has been barking all night and I haven’t been able to concentrate. Would you please keep him quiet?”

She apologized and said, “My husband died suddenly yesterday and I didn’t even hear the dog. I’m sorry he disturbed you. I’ll let him in.”

Everything changed. My friend asked if she would like some company. She pushed open the screen door and touched his back as he walked in. He sat with her for a few hours, went to school and passed the test.

We never know what’s going on inside a person when they are not themselves. It might be as simple as a restless night, or as sad as a lost love.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Reunion

When I was a kid we went to the Holmes family reunion in Oklahoma. My dad’s mother was a Holmes’ before she was a Wood. The Holmes’ were less fun than the Wood’s and the Wood’s were no fun at all.

The day started out heavy: hot biscuits with churned butter, sausage the size of pancakes, pancakes the size of hubcaps, bacon as thick as a Butterfinger, eggs fried in bacon grease, red-eye gravy, potatoes, grits and coffee. Grease…is the word.

Boys and girls couldn’t swim together. I didn’t understand this. We were cousins. Then again, this was Oklahoma. The boys swam first, right after lunch. Why should girls be the only ones with cramps? We swam in the river in long sleeves, jeans and tennis shoes. We sank like stones, but we did not lust after each other.

I don’t know what the girls wore. I hid in the hedge once, but my aunt Nella found me and pinched my arm all the way to my grandfather.

We had church every night and when I say church I don’t mean four verses of “A Mighty Fortress is Our God” in a brick building. The ceiling was stars and the floor was grass. There were guitars, drums, tambourines, banjo and bass…singing and shouting, dancing in the spirit, rolling in the aisles, and speaking with other tongues. It was a trip.

I am 60 now and my life hasn’t worked out the way I’d hoped, but when worse comes to worse I still see those Oklahoma stars, and every face around the table.

Sometimes I borrow their faith when I don’t have much of my own.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Letting Go

Do you remember the poster with the picture of a cat hanging onto a rope with a knot in it? Caption: “When you come to the end of your rope tie a knot and hang on.”

We know about being at the end of our rope. My aunt called it “being at your wit’s end.” So you make like a cat and hang.

The thing I hated most about high school P. E. (besides showering) was climbing the rope and be graded on it. If you climbed using only your hands - A. If you climbed using your hands and feet- B. If you could hang on the rope for 30 seconds - C.

Hanging on is harder than it seems.

I’m still hanging on to all kinds of things. I have trouble letting go.

My oldest daughter, Tiffany, is 32. I let go with one hand and hold on with the other.

My daughter Sarabeth is 17. She is in her senior year. How do you ever let go?

When both girls were learning to ride their bikes, each screamed, “Please daddy, don’t let me go!” They didn’t need to say please.

I know why we tie a knot when we come to the end of our rope. Because it’s better than letting go and getting hurt. But it hurts to hold on, too. We get stuck.

Sooner or later, cats like us have to open our paws and let go. But the threat of breaking something is always there.

I am constantly surprised that the only thing broken is my fall.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Hunger of the Heart

No matter what I eat for dinner I get hungry again around 11:00. One minute I am writing at my desk, the next I am standing in front of the refrigerator. I don’t know how long I’ve been there, but I am getting a nice tan. When I close my eyes I can still see the Miracle Whip.

I’m not sure what I want. Here are some options: ham, fried chicken, and barbequed ribs in aluminum foil. Sandwich stuff. Breakfast. Cold pizza. Ice cream. Nothing knocks me out, but I’ll have something.

I am now in front of the pantry. There is bean dip here; and Fritos. Picante sauce. Keebler. Nabisco. Jalapeno Cheetos. Popcorn. Bananas. Peanut butter. Moon pies. It’s not that I don’t have a lot of choices, but I can’t make up my mind. I will. I always do.

When my hunger alarm goes off at 11:00 I go directly to the kitchen. But if I will slow things down before I get up out of my chair I can locate my hunger. I usually find it a few inches above my stomach. The hunger is in my heart. But I have always responded to all hunger signals by making myself a sandwich.

By late evening I start to feel the deep hunger I have ignored all day. The same hunger I used to drown every night for years with a bottle of Scotch.

I am hungry for honest, faithful relationship. I am hungry for intimacy with God.

I am hungry for what Emily Dickinson calls, “the only Food that lasts.”

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Paths

The dog is lying just inside the front door. He opens one eye when I come in. He doesn’t get up. He knows me. He is sad because the woman of the house is dying.

I say hello to her husband who is sitting alone at the kitchen table eating lunch. I offer my hand and remind him of my name. I ask if I can see his wife. He says yes and gets back to his sandwich.

The house is still like summer. Her bedroom is big. So is the bed. She looks so small for a woman over six feet tall. She is asleep on her back, barely breathing; but still she shines.

I pull up a chair beside the bed. She opens one eye, sees me and tries to sit up.

“Don’t,” I say.

She gives me her hand. Her fingers are elegant and worn. The hand I hold has been places.

I want to talk, but she is out of words; so I sit while she sleeps.

On the nightstand in a crystal dish is a gold whistle. I pick up her lipstick---plum brandy. There is a thick, double-sided emery board. I notice that her nails are done. A small glass cookie jar sits in the corner near the lamp, half full of yellow gummy bears.

Her daughters, Marsha and Lee, are smiling in a photograph. They have their mother’s natural beauty. A painting hangs above her side of the bed. Two little girls with their mother at the lake. The younger girl is barefoot, lying in the grass at her mother’s feet. The older is skipping stones.

There is one sentence of Scripture slipped under the glass on the table: “He leads me in paths of righteousness…”

Paths! It is plural. There is more than one way.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

I Shaved My Father

I shaved my father’s face before he died.

“Don’t you think I need a shave?” He rubbed his whiskers with his hand. He had never asked my opinion about anything.

“You look fine to me.” I always told him whatever I thought would make him glad.

I didn’t want to shave him. I wanted someone from the hospital to do it. It’s not so much I was afraid I would cut him. I was afraid of the closeness; touching his face, moving his nose from one side to the other.

He pointed to the cabinet above the sink. He was really going to make me do this. I found the shaving cream. I stood looking in the mirror wondering how I was going to get through it. I lathered him up. Then, with the smallest strokes I cleaned him up with a Gillette Super Blue blade.

I remember when he first shaved me when I was heading out to a church Sweetheart Banquet. It was with the same kind of rig, and he seemed proud to be doing it. Fourteen years later I was shaving him for a whole different kind of date.

He asked me to move my chair near his bed. He started telling me last minute things, like where to find the important papers. It took everything I had to stay in the room. When he mentioned the Will, I said, “We don’t need to get into all that now.” I got up and went to the sink to wet a wash cloth. I looked in the mirror, pulled myself together, went back over to the bed and wiped shaving cream from the corner of his mouth and behind his ear.

He asked me to get his calendar. He wanted to know his schedule for the next few months. I knew where this was going.

“I’d like for you to cancel everything.”

I told him no, that we didn’t need to do that. I told him that we were going to get through this; “we’re going to beat this thing.” He asked my brother-in-law to handle things.

That was 31 years ago. I was 29 and he was 52. I’m sure he expected that I’d become more of a man; I never expected he had become more like a boy. So here we were, two boys---one freckled, the other fair---together for one last summer day; finally daring to love each other, and to lean.

Friday, August 14, 2009

The Test Tube

Every Wednesday for three years I spent an hour-and-a-half with Mary Harris, a wise woman in her 80’s. I told myself I wasn’t going to her for therapy, but therapy was what was going on in her living room. I was in Seminary at the time. I had come to California from a big church in Texas. I figured I had exactly what California needed. How Texas of me.

One morning it occurred to me that maybe Mrs. Harris needed a dose of the old-time religion. I asked her if she’d ever heard a really good sermon. She said she wasn’t sure. I told her I had one. She asked me, “Whose?” I told her, “Mine.” She told me she’d be glad for me to bring it by next time. I touched her hand and told her I’d be right back. (I happened to have one in the car).

I fully expected her to pop it into the player immediately. She didn’t. Maybe she was waiting until after I left.

I fully expected her to call me on the phone that night and rave on and on about me.

She didn’t.

I came back the next Wednesday. She didn’t mention it. She didn’t mention it the next Wednesday either. Finally, I asked her if she ever heard the tape.

“Yes,” she said. “I heard it twice the day you left it with me.”

“What did you think?” I asked her.

“I don’t think you are ready to hear,” she said.

I told her I was ready to hear. I assumed she was afraid I would become too inflated from all her praise.

She said that both times she heard it she kept getting a recurring picture:

“There was a big test tube filled with people, like ants, working. There was a house 100 yards away from the test tube. Every day you would come out of the house carrying a tall ladder and a bull horn. You would lean the ladder against the test tube, climb to the top, lean halfway in and shout instructions down to the workers. But no one ever listened to you because they all knew you had never been in the test tube yourself.”

The next summer I fell in. It about killed me, but it was the most fortunate fall I’ve ever taken. I ran into God who had been living and working down there all the time.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Grace Will Find Us

The longest year of my life was the six months I spent as a volunteer chaplain on the transplant floor at Santa Rosa Children’s Hospital. When it was good it was very, very good; and when it was bad…

A five-year-old boy was waiting for a liver. The clock was ticking. His parents would come to see him every day, before and after work. One afternoon I didn’t want to see them. Everything was too sad, plus I was out of gas. I snuck out early. At 4:45, I headed downstairs for the parking lot. I got off the elevator in the lobby and saw them pulling into the handicapped space near the front door. I ducked into the bathroom.

I was looking in the mirror when I heard someone coming. I hurried into the last stall. Someone came in. I climbed up on the toilet, bent over and held my breath. I heard a flush, water in the sink, then his voice:

“I know this is hard. It is hard for everyone. We don’t expect you to be God, just our friend. We know you need to take care of yourself. We want you to. You can go home without feeling guilty about it.”

He opened the door and went upstairs. I stayed frozen in the stall, king of the toilet, for another ten minutes. Then, I walked out into the parking lot to my car and went home.

I discovered something that afternoon; something terrible and wonderful. Grace will find us wherever we hide.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

The Worst That Could Happen

I was in Seminary in Berkeley when I discovered a psychiatrist named Fritz Kunkel. He practiced in Los Angeles. When he died his wife donated his papers to the Church Divinity School of the Pacific (Episcopal) in Berkeley. I began a dissertation on his life and thought and received permission to read everything---letters, lectures and an unfinished book. I spent several months snooping through his stuff.

I ran across a lecture he gave in Chicago in the early 50’s. I don’t remember anything in it except one sentence written sideways in the margin in pencil. It was so smeared I could hardly make it out.

It said,” The greatest contribution a human being can make to life is through what’s wrong with him.”

I read it again, “The greatest contribution…through what’s wrong with us.”

I thought about it for days. Of course! What do we know more intimately than what is wrong with us? It haunts our dreams. It stares back at us when we look in the mirror. We can’t outrun it.

I am thinking of a recovering alcoholic in Austin who is a true “man of the cloth.” His cloth is a towel. He wipes faces, floors and beds of alcoholics when they come in sick. He is a high school teacher.

I am thinking of a woman who lost her baby sister in a fire. She was just a girl herself when it happened. She sometimes blames herself. She brings immeasurable depth of understanding and generous compassion to any situation. She is a stockbroker.

I was in a hospital room with a cancer patient doing my best in the middle of bottomless sadness. Suddenly the door opened and a cancer survivor came into the room bringing light and hope. She is a florist.

I’ve seen it in divorce, infertility, SIDS, abortion, drug addiction, death of a partner, job termination, chronic pain, bankruptcy, rape, crime…you name it.

It is just like God, isn’t it; to use the worst thing that has happened to us, the humiliating thing, the wrong thing, the thing we thought would kill us, to help in the healing of another.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

The Death of a Dream

My favorite game growing up was “The Game of Life.” I still like it. I played it yesterday.

Players start out with different color cars and cruise through the big choices of life: Will I go to college, or start a career? Borrow tuition, or get a job? Graduate? Career? Salary. Pay taxes. Vote. Choose a spouse. Get engaged. Get married. Buy a starter home. Have babies (limit two). Go back to school? Lose job. Change career. Sue. Get sued. Send kids to sports camp? Upgrade home? Buy lakeside cabin? Become a grandparent. Visit the Great Wall of China? Collect pension. Retire at Millionaire Estates, or Countryside Acres?

The game is so good and has lasted so long because we are born dreamers. We visualize the unfolding of our life from early-early. If it happens like we hope it’s great, but if it crumbles under our feet it’s an earthquake.

Ken Moses is a psychologist whose specialty is working with parents of “impaired” children. He interned in a Chicago Hospital. During his first week he met with a group of parents. He began by asking them to describe their children.

“We went around the room and everybody talked. I had never seen such emotional extremes: anxiety, denial, anger, betrayal, depression, rage, sadness, resentment. So much pain. People cried easily. Guilt poured out.”

He went back to his office wondering what was going on. The parents had shown all the classic signs of grief, but no one had died. The next week he went back to the group and told them he didn’t understand their grief.

“Your children are alive!” he told them.

Over the next few weeks those parents taught him that what had died was their dream of who and what their children would become.

One mother wanted to be a dancer but her conservative parents said no. So when she married and became pregnant she was sure she would have a daughter with long legs and grace. Her daughter would become the dancer she never was. Her daughter was born with cerebral palsy.

Dr. Moses had dreams for his son. He would become the baseball player Ken couldn’t because of rheumatic fever. His son was born blind.

“I had dreams for this boy,” he said. “Dreams of who he was supposed to be. But if he is blind it won’t happen like I dreamed. Then what am I supposed to do, and how?

What do we do when our children can’t, or won’t, realize the dreams we have for them? Or a friend, spouse, or colleague? How do we cope?

Some cry alone. Others believe dreams aren’t real enough to cry over. But we all know what it is to watch a dream die.

Go ahead and grieve. These deaths are as real as any loss we experience.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Backlash

A father took his son fishing off an old pier. They stood 10 feet apart with a red cooler between them. They didn’t talk, they fished.

The boy made his first cast hoping his father was watching. Lucky for him he wasn’t because something went wrong. Maybe he was trying to cast too far out, but for whatever reason he ended up with a nasty backlash. The line looked like a bird’s nest had exploded.

It was his father’s reel, handed down like an heirloom, like an old watch, from his father. The boy had begged to use it. Now look at it. One cast. He turned his back and tried to untangle it. He couldn’t have done it even if he had fingernails. He was afraid the reel was a goner.

His father finally turned and noticed his son wasn’t fishing. He saw him bending over, working on the reel. He knew what was wrong without asking.

“Let me see the old girl,” he said. The feel of it took him back to his own boyhood, to the same pier and to Saturdays like this one---his father’s arms behind and around him, big hands over smaller hands, casting sidearm, practicing.

He worked at untangling the line but it was hopeless.

“I knew this day would come,” he told his boy.

He sat down on the edge of the pier, opened the tackle box, pulled out a new reel still in the package, unscrewed the old reel, wrapped it in his handkerchief and laid it down in the box like a loved one. Then, he mounted the new reel onto the rod, handed it to his son and said, “Now you are ready to do some fishing with your own rig.”

Backlash. There’s no way around it. And it’s easy to get the idea from well-meaning doctors and friends that we are supposed to trace the mess back to the beginning, find the root cause and untangle our knots. But sometimes all we can do is hand it over to someone who recognizes what is beyond repair and needs to be laid to rest. Often it’s the very thing that stands in the way of beginning again.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Normal

My mother volunteered at the Cerebral Palsy Center. She loved the children and they loved her. She would play with them for hours. Sometimes she would take me with her. I faked every kind of illness to get out of it. Those kids scared me.

Once a year they would pile the children into yellow busses and take them to the circus. One time I went along to help out. One time.

These kids weren’t what I’d call normal. They looked and acted different than any of my friends. They wore braces to walk; some wore helmets and gloves so they wouldn’t hurt themselves. They jerked; they talked loud and laughed most of the time. I couldn’t understand what they were saying to me. The harder I listened the less I understood. Sirens were going off in my head. I felt stupid. They touched me without warning. They pulled on me. They hugged me. They tore my shirt. I yelled at them and made them cry.

Naturally, we had front row seats under the Big Top. When the clowns came in the kids exploded. Anyone sitting nearby eating and drinking ran for cover. I watched our kids more than the circus. They were becoming the greatest show on earth.

They didn’t hold anything back. They were natural in a peculiarly human way. Like when the lions scared them, they screamed. When the trapeze artist fell, they pointed and cried. When little trick dogs jumped onto the backs of beautiful white horses they shrieked, jumped and waved their arms like windmills. I wanted them to tone it down. I wanted the strangers around us to be comfortable. I did the same thing in restaurants to my daughters when they were just children being children.

Something else. They were contagious. I started laughing instead of chuckling. I even shrieked a couple of times! I didn’t realize the circus was such a magic rollercoaster.

I don’t know what “normal” is, God knows I don’t, but I believe these rare children are closer to God’s idea of normal than we are. We are the disabled ones. We disable our hearts so we won’t hurt too much, or be too disappointed. We control our laughter so nothing comes out our nose. We dance better drunk.

I wasn’t tempted to run away and join the circus that day. I was tempted to run away with them.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Waiting

Waiting tables is no picnic. I lasted a couple months at a Café in west Texas. It started out a one-night stand filling in for my college roommate, Wayne. Halfway through my shift the owner motioned me over to the register and asked me if I wanted permanent work. I nodded. End of interview. End of Wayne.

The owner was huge. His nose weighed more than my niece. His thighs would throw sparks when he wore polyester. When things were slow he would sit me down at his special teaching table and “edgeecate” me on the general public. He told me they’ll swallow anything if you say it with a smile. Invaluable advice for the ministry. He told me to practice smiling in the shower and to keep repeating aloud, “I’m HAP-PY! I’m HAP-PY!” He taught me the two big questions: “What can I get you?” and “What else can I get you?”

He rehearsed me at his teaching table near the register and stopped me whenever I seemed insincere. When I’d get it right he’d let me bring him pie. He developed a high tolerance for insincerity.

The real money was tip money which was bad news at this joint. I got blamed for late food, raw food, burned food, cold food, wrong food, old food, ugly food, small food and hairy food. But I would stand there and take it like the Cheshire cat, invisible except for the smile.

An old farmer named Tom was impossible to please. At the end of his meal he would reach into his overalls and pull out his coin purse. It was a green plastic thing from the bank shaped like a football with a slit across the top. He’d squeeze the ends with his fingers and it would open like a mouth. He would reach in and delicately pull out a dime and three pennies. He would hide the change under his saucer so I’d be pleasantly surprised.

They call it “waiting” tables but it is a different kind of waiting. It is active, not passive. It is doing something for someone else. It is waiting, hand and foot, on somebody. Being present, attentive, patient and busy.

Imagine waiting on God. Also a different kind of waiting. Not being still, but serving. “What can I get you?”

Any chance we’ve misunderstood Isaiah? “Those that wait on the Lord shall renew their strength…”

Friday, August 7, 2009

We Are Not God

They led me into Silkworth Unit at Hazelden Alcohol Treatment Center on Mother’s Day, fourteen years ago. There were 22 men between the ages of 20 and 65 sitting on couches and chairs in a big circle talking.

I asked one of my gu
ides, “Which ones are the counselors?” He told me that counselors don’t work weekends. I thought he was kidding.

“Counselors aren’t the reason it works here,” he said. “We are. We help each other. It’s the group. That’s the way it works in here. That’s the way it works out there.”

I hadn’t flown from Texas to Minnesota to sit in a circle of failures, blabbing about what used to be. I wanted at least one bearded guy in a tweed jacket, smoking a pipe, quoting Jung and handing out a reading list. I wanted to sober up from the neck up. But I would learn that I am a bundle of appetites.

I was wrong about the counselors. They were competent, but the best help I got was from my peers. They opened their lives to me and we laughed, cried, prayed, worked hard, sat in silence, accepted each other as we were and began to articulate our dreams for a new life. We listened to each other carefully, expected honesty, caught each other in lies, told the hard truth and held each other accountable in all things. We scrubbed toilets together on our knees, made a thousand pots of coffee, swept, moped, washed dishes, cleaned windows, emptied ashtrays and trash cans.

Deeper than anything, we learned that we are not God.

Most of us got sober in those 30 days. Dobb and I have stayed sober for the fourteen years.

I arrived at Hazelden three weeks after a one-car accident which nearly tore my right arm off. My roommates from Arkansas and New York helped me in and out of the shower, buttoned and unbuttoned me, carried my tray, helped me make my bed and do my daily work. Gladly.

The business of the church was being done, without the wine, on earth as it is.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Intervention

Intervention. It’s when you’re in trouble, whether you know it or not, and someone shows up to help you, whether you want it or not.

I was in first grade, in the principal’s office for lying, when my dad intervened. “Let me handle the situation myself by taking the boy home for lunch,” he said. The boy ate standing.

I was eight, in the dime store. The yo-yo was a dollar, all I had was a quarter, so I pocketed the yo-yo. Before I got out of the store the manager collared me and asked for my parents’ name and number. “My mother is at the beauty shop next door,” I told him. He sent a girl for her while I sat in his office. My mother came in with wet hair. She apologized and made me apologize. “Let us handle this at home,” she said. On the way out she said the six words I dreaded most: “Wait ‘til your father comes home.”

I was in ninth grade, on my way home from school, when three senior boys started chasing me. Just as they caught me, Mr. Barton came out his front door and scared them off. Mr. Barton walked me home. “Watch your back,” he told me, “because there won’t always be someone to look out for you.”

In 1995, I was invited to sit down with the family in the den of my in-laws house. It was the Friday before Mother’s Day. My drinking was way out of control and I was the only one who didn’t know it. I thought, “If my work’s not suffering, I haven’t got a problem.” They told me that for the past few years I had been going through the family like a tornado. I flew to Minnesota the next morning and checked into a treatment center. As hard as rehab was, it wasn’t harder than the intervention in the den.

A father had a son who demanded his share of the estate. The father turned over the deeds to the property. The kid went through town selling off half of the family place. Prime land. He left town unpopular, but rich. He finally hit bottom. He decided to come home. His father saw him coming, but not before the townspeople, who had no intention of letting the spoiled crook come back to do more damage. So his father ran through town, through the angry crowd, to protect him from them. Then, he wrapped his own robe, the best robe, around his son, turned, the crowd parted and he walked him home.

Talk about an Intervention.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Pecking

I was swinging my youngest daughter in a tire swing when she was in first grade. Suddenly she told me, “Stop! I have to warn you about something!”

We stopped, she got out of the swing and I got in. No small feat.

She shook her finger at me and said, “Don’t ever help baby birds out of their shells!” I nodded. “Promise, Daddy!” “Okay, I promise”

“Do you know why to not do it?”

“Not really,” I told her.

“Because babies have to peck, peck, peck their way out of the egg so their lungs will be strong enough when they come out…and birds know exactly how much pecking it takes. You don’t.”

Then, we changed places on the swing and enjoyed the rest of the evening.

I thought about people I have rescued too soon. The hot air I have spent trying to affect change. Tears I have dried too quickly. Times I’ve thought: Get Over It. Individuals I have pushed into what I thought should be the next phase of their life. My daughters.

As Sarabeth said to me, “You don’t know how much pecking it takes.”

I am reminded of the story of the butterfly in Zorba the Greek:

“I remembered one morning when I discovered a cocoon in the bark of a tree, just as the butterfly was making a hole in its case and preparing to come out. I waited a while but it was too long appearing and I was impatient. I bent over it and breathed on it to warm it. I warmed it as quickly as I could and the miracle began to happen before my eyes, faster then life. The case opened, the butterfly started slowly crawling out and I shall never forget my horror when I saw how its wings were folded back and crumpled; the wretched butterfly tried with its whole trembling body to unfold them. Bending over it, I tried to help it with my breath. In vain. It needed to be hatched out patiently and the unfolding of its wings should be a gradual process in the sun. Now it was too late. My breath had forced the butterfly to appear, all crumpled, before its time. It struggled desperately and, a few seconds later, died in the palm of my hand.

“That little body is, I do believe, the greatest weight I have on my conscience. For I realize today that it is a mortal sin to violate the great laws of nature. We should not hurry, we should not be impatient, but we should confidently obey the eternal rhythm” (Nikos Kazantzakis: pages 120-21).

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Wings

In Flannery O’Connor’s novel Wise Blood, a street preacher stops a guy in his mid-20’s to ask if he’s been saved. The guy answers, “Anybody with a good car doesn’t need to be saved.

It’s difficult to admit we need help beyond what we can give ourselves. We are raised to be daddy’s big girl or boy.

My grandmother slipped me a five one Sunday while we were at her house. It fell out of my pocket somewhere and by the time I realized it was gone it was time to go. I wanted to tell her, not simply because she might give me another, but because she’d take me into her lap.

“You’ll never be too big for me to hold,” she'd tell me.

A few years later, I didn’t want to be held by anyone. I wanted to be too big.

Then, the move into mid-life when we carry our umbilical cord around looking for a place to plug it in.

After one of the big fires at Yellowstone, two rangers were surveying the damage when they saw a bald eagle perched on the stump of a burned-out tree. The ladder in their truck brushed up against her and she disintegrated into ashes. As she crumbled, her three babies ran out from beneath her wings. She could have left them in the fire, but she gathered them under her wings and never moved during the intense heat and suffocating smoke.

The rangers took her babies to a wildlife refuge and a year later they were released.

There is a monument at the spot where she sheltered her babies. It says, “Here lies the American bald eagle whose protective wings gave her babies life.”

Every summer, three large bald eagles circle the spot, each wearing the red tag from the refuge.

I am remembering the One who lamented, “How often I would have gathered you under my wings, but you would not.”

Monday, August 3, 2009

Breasts

I was 14. It was Saturday morning and I was reading comic books when my dad called from work and told me to get dressed we were going to the doctor.

I waited for him in the front yard beside the mailbox. Nobody said a word on the way.

The nurse took us straight back.

I sat on the table with the wax paper, while my dad sat on the counter near the sink. He rubbed his eyes like he had one of his headaches. Maybe he was the sick one.

The doctor came in.

“How are you fellows doing?”

I looked over at my dad. So did the doctor.

My dad told me to take off my t-shirt.

“Take a look at his breasts,” he said. “The size I mean. Is there something physically wrong?”

I sat there and tried to cover up. Then, I turned away and put my t-shirt back on.

The doctor said something about “growing out of it.” I didn’t hear much. My head was spinning like that Exorcist kid.

On the way home my dad asked me if I wanted to stop for a hamburger. I said no, which was a first. I wanted to go home.

I didn’t shower at school after that. I would put my good clothes over the sweat and dirt after practice.

I am 60 and starting to wear t-shirts again regularly.

Tell me, where is the universal chart that establishes the acceptable size of body parts?

Sunday, August 2, 2009

The Art of Living

I tried to eat the 72-ounce steak at The Big Texan restaurant on I-40 outside Amarillo, Texas. I tried twice, in ’71 and ’79. They give you one hour to eat everything: shrimp cocktail, salad, baked potato, a roll and the beef. They make you fill out a form. I assume for your obituary.

There are rules:
1. You must pay in advance.
2. You must sit alone at a table for one on a stage so you won’t share.
3. The food must stay down.

I pulled into The Big Texan at 11:00 in the morning. I buttoned my top button, pulled my pants high and looked around pie-eyed like it was my first time out of the house. I told the manager “the biggest steak I’ve ever eaten is a filett,” and “is the 72-ouncer a heck of a lot bigger?” He looked at me like I was from California.

Strategy: “Even though you are competent, appear to be incompetent” (Sun Tzu, The Art of War).

I ate the shrimp cocktail, salad, potato, and roll in ten minutes. Then, I turned to my steak, “Hello, li’l dogie.”

Strategy: “If you know your enemy, you will not be imperiled in a hundred battles” (Sun Tzu, The Art of War).

I carved my steak into several smaller steaks. I tricked my stomach into thinking we were only eating six 12-ounce steaks.

Strategy: “To plunder a locality, divide your troops” (Sun Tzu, The Art of War).

I ate half the steak in ’71 and the whole thing in ’79. What was the difference? I will tell you now. I grazed without looking up. I chewed without ceasing. I mooed contentedly under my breath. In short, I practiced bovinity.

Strategy
: “The ability to gain victory by changing and adapting according to the opponent is called genius” (Sun Tzu, The Art of War).

The ability to change and adapt: the art of living.

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Kinky

I was sitting across from Kinky Friedman at a Mexican restaurant in Austin when out of nowhere he asked me what I believe. Being a “professional religionist” back then I jumped at the chance.

I was delivering great hunks of truth across the gulf between us when he held up his hand like a traffic cop and said, “Put it on a bumper sticker.” I didn’t appreciate it. For one thing I was on a roll. For another, I’ve never been able to put anything on a bumper sticker.

To put truth on a bumper sticker you can’t repeat everything profound that you’ve heard, or read. You can’t perform your Greatest Hits of songs somebody else wrote.

All Kinky wanted me to do what the restaurant had done. He ordered soup and they delivered. They brought him their specialty, hot, original and nourishing. What I brought him was dried tongue.

My high school career took a sharp turn for the worst when my 10th grade algebra teacher said three words: “Show your work.” Just filling in the blank with the correct answer was worth only two points out of ten. I panicked. If I truly showed my work, I would draw a picture of me copying off Trudy McTrusty.

Kinky wanted to hear the result of my own digging. He wanted to know what I believe, not some professional believers. He wanted a live conversation with me, not an encounter with some of my dead heroes. In other words, truth can’t be pickled.

I still can’t put it on a bumper sticker. I talk too much. But I have learned to put it in a story. That is what I am trying to do in this blog.

It is time, as King Lear said, “to say what we feel, and not what we ought to say.”