Posts Tagged ‘relationship’

Front porch of the Kingdom.

I spent today painting windows and doors at a mission outpost in Cleveland.  Work camp, basically. The five of us who worked on those three windows and two doors for five hours weren’t superstar construction workers or even all that coordinated.  We weren’t exactly what you would call, “handpicked for success.”  One of us was really short.  One was not about to go on a ladder for money.  Three were blind.  But we painted and laughed and talked about the Obama administration and health reform and made jokes (mostly blind jokes… One, I admit was pretty bad and included singing the song “Three Blind Painters” to the tune of “Three Blind Mice.”  That got booed down pretty quickly) and told stories to one another.

And I kept thinking about how easy it is to write off one another because we size ourselves and everybody else up in one glance or one sentence and *know* everything there is to know about them in an instant.  And how alot of the time I assume God needs a particular type of person in order to build the Kingdom.  And how this is just plain wrong, if not sinful thinking.

And I couldn’t stop thinking about how eyes are the windows to the soul and that those windows we were painting, this motley crew, were windows onto the soul of God’s Kingdom.  How those doors were opening onto the porch of the Kingdom and inviting people in.  They were simply doors to rooms full of paint supplies and construction materials and those windows merely let in some light on our little breakfast room at the mission… but even five hours of work painting in a basement for the sake of a corner in the city of Cleveland, Ohio, builds the Kingdom.  It does.  Especially when in the process we get four new friends with whom I never would have spent a whole Saturday morning and afternoon, with whom I had the privilege of being thrown together, covered in paint drips and mixed up hinges and a seeing-eye dog named, of all things, Esther.

God, you’ve got to be kidding me.

 

Poster child for the human condition.

I was angry with my friend./ I told my wrath, my wrath did end./ I was angry with my foe./ I told it not, my wrath did grow;/ And I water’d it in fears,/ Night and morning with my tears;/ And I sunned it with smiles,/ And with soft deceitful wiles;/ And it grew both day and night/ Till it bore an apple bright,/ And my foe beheld it shine,/ And he knew that it was mine,/ And into my garden stole/ When the night had veil’d the pole./ In the morning glad I see/ My foe outstretched beneath the tree.  (A Poison Tree, William Blake).

We’ve all heard this poem, or some piece of it, I think.  The old story, the ancient lesson.  Hiding our bitterness and anger in our own hearts, directing it inward, poisoning ourselves even as we poison others with it.  I’m living this experience right now, from two directions.  The first is with a dear, old friend who is deeply angry with me.  I know it, she knows it.  But she won’t tell me, out loud.  Instead, every conversation we have is spiked with discomfort, anxiety, even resentment.  She won’t tell, and I can’t ask.  At least, yet.  I’m watching us sun our friendship, and this hidden hurt, with smiles, watering it with tears in the shadows, hoping the other person will do the right thing.  And neither of us is, because of pride.  And because of hurt on both sides.  So one of us is going to end up eating that apple.

Then there’s the other direction, one I’m struggling with even more.  In this, I’m the one who’s angry.  Exceptionally, truly angry.  You know, that kind of roiling orange rage that is so hot it turns blue near the source, where it sears away the ability to think rationally or compassionately about the real problem.  The source of it is an injustice.  The result of it is a lost relationship.  The problem is the secrecy in between.  The reason isn’t really important.  In fact, it’s meaningless.  The problem is my reaction.  I don’t believe in a God who punishes people for doing wrong.  In fact, the God I’ve clung to for the last year or so, hoping desperately I’m right about some-damn-thing in this world and please-let-this-be-it, gives more grace to people who are messed up and who make messes and disasters for others than for those who don’t (my theology professor may be throwing her head into her hands right now, or drinking).  I believe that there’s a bigger serving of grace for those of us who are truly screwing things up.  Because we need it more.  That’s the God I know.  It’s the God I’ve met and recognized.  It’s the God who, against all odds, loves me and the rest of this world.  So.  That doesn’t change the fact that whenever I think about this person, I sort of desperately want God to strike her over the head with a two-by-four.  Or a lightning bolt, old-school.  At least make her fail at something today, or tomorrow.  Hell, I’d go for a heel breaking on a favorite pair of shoes.  Something, anything to prove that I’m right and she’s wrong and this isn’t fair and somebody Up There is getting all this on video.  Hmmmm…

See what I mean?  The problem is, I’m just about that angry, but I’m smiling and being normal when it really counts.  Which is disingenuous and feels pretty dirty to me.  And it’s exactly the opposite of what I’d really like for her to do, which is finally admit to me what she’s done.  Not to smile and stroke that lie with soft deceitful wiles.  Not to make me eat that apple.  But she won’t.  So I keep thinking about Jesus, ’cause that’s what a person should do when she’s this angry and feeling pretty self-righteous.  I keep seeing the Jesus who looked with pity on Peter in his idiocy and on Thomas as he tried to believe and on Mary when she didn’t recognize him.  That soft, sad, sort of flabbergasted look of love.  The one where I think he would have said, “Listen, kid, you’re just not really getting this.  I love that you’re trying, but turn about 180 degrees that direction… yeah, there you go… see that?  There’s where you’re supposed to be looking.”  Which is to say, inside.  Because it’s really nice to point fingers.  But it’s sort of ineffectual.  If I’m hiding my own stuff behind a smile, then it’s rather unjust to ask that everyone else be straightforward and open just because I’m feeling particularly righteous that day, especially targeted.

So here’s the deal.  I’m going to keep these friends.  I’m going to apologize to the first one so that one day I don’t wake up and find her passed out under that toxic apple tree and regret my error too late.  I’m going to look with compassion on the second one and wait patiently for her to turn around and look inside.   I’ll pray for them both.  But first I’ll pray for myself, that the sun shining out of my eyes is really light and not some false attempt to blind other people from seeing what’s really going on, that the fruit of my life is wholesome and healthy and not about to break apart a treasured relationship.  I’m going to learn a lesson from Eden.

Not what I thought I said.

During the last few weeks, I’ve had the strange experience of feeling as though someone else is talking through me.  No, don’t run for your DSM-IV.  I’m not hallucinating.  It’s just a plain ol’ problem with communication.  Human to human.  We all remember the childhood game of telephone, where you pass a message through a chain of people until it gets back to its original speaker, usually garbled and entirely different in both form and content than when it started.  Let’s call this a game of telephone with only one intermediary – me.  Have you ever had this experience?  You know, the one where you could absolutely swear you’d been clear, that you’d thought out what you had to say, had smartly assessed the information, the conversation, the person with whom you’re speaking, and then… bam… what you said isn’t at all what that person heard?  They repeat back to you what they understood you to say and it’s not only not what you said (or some version of it, translated), but it’s not the message you wanted to send?  Or, worse, it’s exactly what you said, but when repeated sounds entirely unlike the point you were trying to make?

Sometimes, this is a good thing, and I can see relationships being built out of it.  Preaching is like that, I think.  Pastors simply can’t predict exactly which parts of the good news people are going to be prepared to hear that day.  Everyone comes from a different place, a unique context, and fundamentally special background, and this difference creates difference of interpretation.   I preached my senior chapel last Tuesday on 1 John 3 and focused on loving not through word or speech but through truth and action.  I had my message all thought out, I’d planned the service down to the last second, I was prepared.  I knew what I was going to say, how I was going to say it, what I wanted people to hear.  And then… every last person who came up to me afterward to talk about worship heard something different.  I had no control, after all.  And, most strangely, each person’s connection point, each interpretation, was entirely correct.  The words spoken to them were the same, but they all heard different things, each helpful or illuminating or healing (thank you, Holy Spirit) in their own way.  So, what I thought I’d said, indeed had said, meant something different simply by virtue of leaving my mouth and entering the hearts of someone unlike me.

And then, this week, I had two conversations with a friend with whom I’m still negotiating the nature of our friendship.  We’ve both got some stuff to work through with each other, and we’re desperately trying to talk about what it’s like to be in relationship, how we can move into a future friendship that will look the way we want and need it to.  And over and over again, I heard myself explore a thought or feeling, had it repeated back to me, and it came back all mangled.  And this relationship is important to me, so I don’t want to just drop the issue altogether – it’s worth it to keep working on the hard parts.  The two of us have to keep talking, even if (when) we have no idea whether the words we’re saying are being heard as they were intended.  This is, I think, one of the hardest things about being in relationships… this not knowing, never knowing, how we’re being perceived, but having to keep at it, nonetheless.

As I’ve sat thinking about this during the last week, it’s made me wonder about the times I write off the message I’m getting from people.  What are the times when my ability to listen and hear what someone is actually trying to say has been compromised by what I’ve already got going on in my head?  Even actively, intently listening, leaving all the stuff aside that I can about what I already know of a person, what I think about the words they’ve chosen, of their tone, sometimes it’s hard to really hear. And maybe that’s the problem.  Rather than really trying to take all of those things and integrate them, we assume we know better than another person what they are trying to say.  Does that make sense?  On some level, in order to really hear, we have to both take things at face value, without laying on top of them everything we already know, and simultaneously use every bit of contextual information we have in order to understand it.  Meanwhile, if we’re trying to be heard, we have to understand that the other person is trying to do this very thing, on the other end, and be patient with that.  I’m thinking of Jesus’ parables.  “Let those with ears to hear…” Each of us hears something unique, even if there’s a core if elusive message to capture, a central and valuable core to the story.  It’s important, but we bring a lot of ourselves to the table, and it’s hard to hear through that baggage clogging up our air space. This is true in human relationships of all kinds, it’s true when trying to listen for God’s voice, it’s true when sharing a thought or the gospel.  And I think it’s probably good for me to try to remember that, when I get frustrated that I’m neither hearing nor being heard the way I’ve intended.  Perhaps I’m making listening into something more complicated, more difficult, than it actually is.  But I doubt it.

Resistance, light shows, and other super powers.

I hate talking on the telephone.  Maybe this makes me sound anachronistic, or anti-social, or unlikeable.  I hate it.   My excuse has always been that I spent six years answering crisis calls at a rape crisis hotline and at a domestic violence shelter, where every call was guaranteed to be emotionally difficult or downright scary.  I don’t know if this is the case, but it’s a pretty decent excuse.  But, more than phone calls, I hate asking people for things.  Small things, big things, abstract things, concrete things.  Favors, things deserved and things needed.  Asking for help, for information.  It’s hard.  Part of it is likely pride.  But, thinking about some of the models I had growing up, it struck me lately that a portion of that resistance stems from not knowing what tone to strike.  Simple human interactions just seem so challenging sometimes, and the moment of request, of being vulnerable to “no,” heightens the feeling of being rather at sea in this world of people, most of whom seem to be able to interact with others with very little effort. 

I don’t know about you, but I’ve watched people my whole life, studied my classmates, colleagues, people on the street and on television, my teachers and friends.  Somewhere in my childhood, I learned the skill of reading a room.  Who is uncomfortable?  Who is the leader here?   Who’s the bully?   A good friend?  In pain?  Enjoying herself?  Most people do this, I imagine, but my sense of it comes viscerally, and usually in color, bodies and personalities subtly webbed together in my mind, a moving light show of human relationships.  The problem here is that along the way, I didn’t learn how to situate myself in the web.  I can’t read the ways I connect to others, which is where the watching comes in.  Meeting someone who does “human” well, I find myself dissecting how it is that s/he manages it, especially they wear it easily and with grace. 

You’re wondering about now… okay.  What do talking on the telephone, asking for things, and feeling connected have at all to do with one another?  Well, it seems that community organizing and the role I’ve been called to in the church require all of these skills.  I could just laugh, if it weren’t so frustrating.  During my internship this year, I’ve been commissioned with the task of building a lead team around the issue of healthcare in the West Ohio Conference parish.  I think I’ve frustrated the very soul out of my supervisor asking detailed questions about how, in fact, one goes about doing this.  She is one of those amazing people who seems to be effortless in her ability to build relationships with people, at the drop of a hat.  I’ve hemmed, and hawed, and reorganized my notes, rewritten my agenda, emailed, emailed again… but there has been a stony resistance, a nearly literal barrier between myself and making those calls.  Because… I do hate talking on the phone.  Crisis calls are easy – someone else is calling me for help, knowing that my expertise is available and focused, knowing that I am there for the sole purpose of saying “yes” to whatever they ask.  There’s little vulnerability there.  But, oh… these lead team calls.  Even to folks who’ve expressed an interest in the issue, I have to sell a product.  I have to sell myself, as a coordinator.  I have to sell the conference.  It makes me want to bite something.

So.  A couple of weeks ago, having spent some time sitting in the dark in my office, parsing out exactly why I was hating this process so much, despite the fact that I very much want it to be successful and believe in it… and, annoyed with the fact that I had let something get the better of me… I made the darn calls.  In my heart of hearts, I simply knew I would sound ridiculous, unprofessional, under-educated, young, and generally flaky.  Each person would tell me “no.”  I would fail, and paradoxically, I would be proven right – failure and success in one tight little package.  But I swallowed hard and dialed.

And had numerous lovely conversations with bright and accepting people about the state of healthcare in Ohio, its relationship to spiritual formation and simple living, and the possibilities for real change through a coalition of followers of Jesus who firmly believe that we can’t do the work of God to the best of our ability unless the bodies God gave us are cared for. 

Holy hell.  I hate to be wrong.  But sometimes, a psychological smack in the face is a good thing.  One woman, she even told me at the end of the phone call that she hadn’t been very excited about this project until she spoke with me.  Yeah.  I really giggled at that, when I hung up.  But then my little internal light show blinked like a cloud of fire-flies, and one little baby light flickered into view.  It was me.  The realization that not seeing how you fit into the greater picture is not the same thing as not being in the picture at all.   Just as our feelings that God is absent sometimes is not the same as God actually being gone… Our eyes just aren’t that well-adjusted.  We can’t see everything, and we really can’t figure out for ourselves how it all fits together.  This is what I keep thinking about as I reflect on these phone calls.  Yes, I still hate the phone.  I still really dislike asking people for things.  I still read a room and struggle to know how I fit into a group, how other people see me.  Those things will likely never change.  But they don’t have to, really.  Because I get to learn from them.  Resistance is an opportunity to figure out why we are the way we are.  Fearfully and wonderfully made, and all the junk, too.  Discomfort and anxiety, uncertainty and blindness, these are human traits, not God’s.  Not liking to talk on the phone, not connecting immediately with other people, being afraid to ask for things… just because these skills are important to the work I’ve apparently been called to do, and I don’t really have them, doesn’t negate that call.   Because I don’t have all of the information, and I’m often wrong.

I’m going to chuckle about that woman’s comment for a while yet.  All the things I think I know.  And the ways in which I have no idea what I’m talking about.  God’s probably laughing, too.

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