Archive for September, 2004

novels, hoods, and flying stars.

Wednesday, September 29th, 2004

It’s hard to believe that we are only one month away from NaNoWriMo!!

For those of you who have never heard of it- National Novel Writing Month is a fun, seat-of-your-pants approach to novel writing. Participants begin writing November 1. The goal is to write a 175-page (50,000-word) novel by midnight, November 30. I’m thinking of pulling out last year’s sketchy outline and attempting a rebirth. But then again, I wouldn’t mind starting a clean slate and writing a memoir of sorts. I have one month to plan!

In interesting bank news, the new $50 bill comes out tomorrow. (A new $100 bill is scheduled to be released soon as well) It’s exceptionally patriotic with a little bit of stars and stripes in the background. Here’s a link if you want to know more. Also, please don’t wear sunglasses into a bank. There is the Creep Factor to consider. But I would be so pleased if SC would introduce a “No Hats, No Hoods, No Sunglasses” law. Fuss.

The walk for Curing Diabetes is on November 9 this year. It’s being held in the glorious downtown area and I’ve been “peer pressured” into joining. I get a free t-shirt. Wheee. But, I’d much rather be at the Starflyer 59 concert in New York.

painting pigs.

Tuesday, September 28th, 2004

I curled up in the conference room and painted pigs all day long. It’s a “marketing ploy” to get clients to open minor savings accounts for their children.

painting pigs

stepping out of the box.

Monday, September 27th, 2004

Zephaniah 3:17 says, The LORD thy God in the midst of thee is mighty; he will save, he will rejoice over thee with joy; he will rest in his love, he will joy over thee with singing.

There is a name written beside that verse.

I stepped out of my familiar box tonight. Made a decision that I might regret in the morning. Not because it was wrong (I very strongly felt the Lord leading me to do it), but because fears have a way of becoming stronger with time.

But after reading that verse in Zephaniah, listening to Watermark’s new cd, and a thought-filled drive back from Anderson tonight… I am left with the impression that stepping out of the box is sometimes necessary.

You repair all that we have torn apart
And You unveil a new beginning in our hearts
And we stand grateful for all that has been left behind
And all that goes before us

We will dance as you restore the wasted years
And You will sing over all our coming fears
And we’ll stand grateful for all that has been left behind
And all that goes before us

Lord, You mend the breech
And You break every fetter
And You give us Your best
For what we thought was better
And You are to be praised…

between here and there.

Sunday, September 26th, 2004

Trapeze artists swing back and forth to build up momentum, finally letting go of one bar as kinetic energy sends them off into the unknown. I mean, they know they are headed for the next bar, but between here and there it’s a blind leap of faith that carries them through some very serious unknown.

They are instrument flying.

A few years ago I was coming home from the funeral for my dad’s mom. I was somber, and it was hard to leave. Add to that, I was booked on a four-seater “paper” airplane that flies between Hyannis and Boston. It was me and the pilot and my bag. We were the last flight they allowed out that morning because the notorious Cape Cod fog had begun to consume the air. The pilot had made the trip hundreds of times, but you tend to think of it as his first when it’s your first. As we rose into the curtain of air, I strained to see anything in the grayness ahead of us.

When we were up a few thousand feet, the perky pilot turned around in his seat to face me and started up a conversation. I answered with quick one-word answers, hoping he would turn around and pay more attention to where we were going. Finally I blurted out a bit of concern, and he calmly explained to me that he didn’t need to see where we were going because we were flying according to the instruments.

I thought about the last few years of my grandmother’s life and how most of her memories had disappeared into the fog of Alzheimer’s. She left this world through that fog, holding hands with Jesus, to head full speed into the known and yet unknown. Instrument flying.

Everyday I get up and sit at my computer and stare into another empty document that needs to collect an assemblage of characters that will form words, sentences, and thoughts. I start with a vague idea of where I’m going, but mostly it is also instrument flying. I type on word and then another word and hope that that sentence will lead me to the next one. It is familiar but always as scary as the first time. You have to attack it full steam and trust that you will get where you are going. And if you don’t, you will pick up and start again tomorrow until you get there.

Anne Truitt says this is like the run the horse rider must make. The creative writer, painter, sculptor, (mother, father, professional, dreamer, planner, husband, wife, friend, pastor, plumber, doctor, etc.) gallops into the night in the driving rain catapulting themselves fully into some direction. When on occasion, it is discovered that it is the wrong direction, the rider might stop and while regrouping, may enjoy the company of friends and peel the mud off their feet for a bit. But “in the back of their minds, they never forget that the dark driving run is theirs to make again.”

Balancing the input of experience and intuition with the knowledge factors of empirical data, we daily put one foot after the other, flying by the instruments. Instrument flying has a destination which can only be glimpsed by flying on through to the other side of the fog. It is sending a child off to college, moving from one place to another, losing a family member or friend to death, taking on a new job, leaving an old job, starting school again after raising a family, trading in the rat race for a fishing pole or watercolor brush, leaving singleness for marriage, childhood for adulthood, day for night, and doubt for faith. It is a call from the past to the future, from what was to what is yet to be. Sometimes it is a call away from the familiar, but to something more desirable in the end. But to be sure, instrument flying can be quite exhilarating.

Noah was an instrument flier. He built a very large boat. He was faithful to the call of God on his life even when the fog was thick and it was difficult to see where he was headed or why he was even doing what he was doing. Everyday when he faced another piece of cypress that had to be planed and wedged into place on his incomparable task, I’ll be he wondered if he was riding full speed in the correct direction. But everyday he got up and made his dark run, with an eye to the sky watching for clouds. Eventually it rained. And he needed his boat.

Moses flew by instrument. Inexperienced travel guide that he was, he gathered up God’s people and led them away from a threatening past into the promise of a future. Trusting his instruments, Moses came to know the provision of God on a daily basis. With the vision of promise as his distant goal, for 40 years he got up every morning to throw himself full speed into his wilderness fog.

Marten Luther King, Blaise Pascal, Benjamin Franklin, Michelangelo, William Wilberforce, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the young virgin named Mary who was pregnant with the Son of God, Paul the apostle, the disciples after the resurrection. All were courageous instrument fliers. Daring the unknown, they flew to the other side of the fog, trusting not in their own senses but in the faith that had sustained them so many times before.

Flying by instruments is what walking in the Spirit is all about. I surrender my own intuitions and senses to something I cannot see. That surrender is called faith. Dallas Willard says, “Faith is not opposed to knowledge, it is opposed to sight.” So when I walk, ride, or fly into the fog, I trust the instruments, because my senses will mislead me.

I can’t see the next page I will write. Or how I will get through the fog of midlife to the other side, whatever is over there. But I know that if I will fly by faith and not by sight, I will land in the right place. I know that as a promise better than I know it by practice. I can’t help thinking that if I could just see a little bit more clearly, I’d be better at this. But then, that’s not faith. And it seems that faith is the best way to travel between here and there. Between this trapeze bar and the next.

– Kim Thomas, Living In the Sacred Now

license plate.

Saturday, September 25th, 2004

When I bought my car about a month ago, I had to drive around with a paper tag for a few weeks. I finally got the call saying my license plate had arrived at the dealership and all I had to do was drop by and someone would put it on for me. Now, I can put a license plate on a car. But this dealership is all about “service.” So one of the Mechanic Boys put it on my car and I drove off the lot with a brand spanking new license plate, having never even glanced at it.

My first hint that my license plate was odd was when a co-worker came running into the office one day, out of breath, and laughing loudly. She asked me if I had asked for those specific letters and I said, no, of course not. What’s wrong with my license plate!? She strongly encouraged me to run outside and glance at my plate for the first time.

I did. And my jaw dropped.

And then a few mornings ago, I pulled out of The Valley a few seconds before my mom and she followed me all the way to West End School. While sitting at the red light, I saw her lower her sunglasses and stare at the back of my car. Stifling my giggles, I waited for the ring of my cell phone.

Sure enough, it rang. DO YOU KNOW WHAT YOUR LICENSE PLATE SAYS? Ha! Yes, mom. Isn’t it cute?

Yesterday evening I was on the freeway when I noticed this truck tailing me. I wasn’t going particularly slow (I was on that long stretch of road where 70 isn’t speeding. Mmm) so it bugged me that he was all over my tail. I adjusted my sunglasses and gave the driver the “rearview mirror stare.”

It was two guys and they were pointing at my license plate, smirking, and blowing kisses.

Sigh. Whichever little prisoner made that plate must have been having fun. Hey, George! I think I’ll make this one say SXY.

~

Saturday “To Do” List:

1. Attempt to return a certain purchase
2. Finish Sunday School bulletin board on Rahab
3. Return dvds to library
4. Laundry
5. Finish the dishes in the sink
6. Take out the trash (which just means setting the bags on the back deck and phoning my dad to come pick them up)
7. Write two letters
8. Reply to an email
9. Finish Stained glass drawing
10. Work on proposal for minor savings accounts
11. Copy piano music for church
12. Vacuum, dust, Febreeze
13. Blog
14. Find some time to read Anna K.
15. Bring books down from parents house and organize for Ebay
16. Buy groceries

Update:

Well, I accomplished a few things on the list. The rest will have to wait.

My evening has been consumed by watching the police break into a vehicle that’s been sitting in the parking lot of our church for the past few days. A group of us were up there tonight (I was putting up my cute little Rahab board) and we began swapping stories as we remembered shootings, bears, and Mrs. Porter who use to sit in our church graveyard at all hours of the night.