While scrolling through radio stations in search of a satisfying song, I came across "Living Dead Girl" by Rob Zombie.
Not exactly my style, my hand rested on the knob just long enough for a spark to fire in my brain.
Having no idea what the song was meant to be, the phrase began twisting and churning in my brain.
How many people are wandering about their days - step, step, step - feeling the absence of life in their numb yet functioning bones?
How many women have lost their heart's breath at the hands of insult and abuse?
How many boys have lost their power in the absence of a gentle father?
How many men have lost their will to a suffocating spouse?
How many girls are both alive and dead, stuck in a self-loathing image?
How many people?
Society is, if not dead, broken with multitudes of "living dead girls".
How do I, a stranger and a friend, help infuse life back into the lifeless, before metaphor becomes literal?
A tear slips down.
My only hope is for Hope itself.
Amen.
A glimpse into my more serious side as I explore life inside my heart, soul and mind, even as I type these words. Please, join the dialogue!
Friday, January 20, 2012
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Protective Layer of Cope
I grew up knowing Jane Fonda to
be a fitness tape guru and not much else. The desire to apologize for that
ignorance is strong, strong indeed.
As I was flipping channels the
other day, I caught her telling some of her story. Recollections of childhood
gave my heart a familial ambience as she divulged both raw and dull emotion and
dynamics from her past.
Magnetically, she lured me into
her narrative and fascinated, I sat perfectly still, listening. As my decaf
coffee sat untouched, growing colder phrase by painful phrase, she came to make
a profound statement that has revolved and evolved in my mind ever since. It
was this:
“We develop coping mechanisms to
survive but we keep them longer than their shelf life and they become impediments.”
What once was a cloak wrapped
around the heart to protect from the cold bite of pain, now becomes a lasting lacquer
leaving no possibility for breath, in or out. Its impenetrable nature chokes
life and love both from the host, and those in their midst.
Coping mechanisms are a necessary
evil, in fact originating innocently and helpfully. Sometimes we must protect
from harm. If we don’t, we might be obliterated in the process of relationship.
But the need to remove the cloak
before it solidifies is urgent. If not destroy, at minimum we must keep it
pliable, to be used only when necessary.
How do we accomplish this?
I wish I knew. For I fear this
progression has already completed its task deep in my heart.
Can the barrier be fractured? I
pray it may, letting the air of freedom and love seep in.
Amen.
Thursday, January 05, 2012
Love God. How?
Loving God.
Without total certainty due to
ignorance on my part, but with a fair guess, I would think most people with a
sense of spirituality would aim to achieve this at some level - regardless of
who or what they see God as being. Although we will not all realize agreement
on that subject, today’s concept disregards our differences and can only truly
unite, if put into practice.
I have grown up with the idea
that worship of God is the ultimate act of love towards Him. Worship was
defined as singing songs of praise to Him, thanking Him for what we have,
praying words of adoration to Him.
I have since come to disagree
with this idea.
I struggle to view God as the
supreme essence of megalomania.
I do not deny the benefit of
worship as I’ve been taught, to be a helpful
reminder of how we view God or of how we endeavour to be, but I now embrace
doubt that those actions profit Him.
This leads me straight into the quest for the answer of how truly to love God.
I can only come to one
conclusion: The act of loving others
is the crucial, essential and implicitly singular method of actually loving Him.
I think God, as we do, recognizes
the old adage that “talk is cheap”. I don’t think He wants our words aimed back at Himself, but rather
His love directed straight at others through what we do. Exponential measures of changed
lives can be achieved through pure love shared by those who truly love Him.
We could:
Sing “I love you Lord”
Or
We could freely babysit for an overworked single
mother and rock her babies to sleep with tenderness.
We could:
Say “I am thankful for many
blessings”
Or
We could give our warmest leather
gloves right off our hands as we come to a street corner with a man sitting freezing
in the cold, begging for change.
We could:
Lift our hands as we sing “Your
love is amazing”
Or
We could embrace a homosexual and
love them just as they are, as we
would any cherished heterosexual daughter.
We could:
Bow our heads as we sit in the
pews and pray for our sick neighbour
Or
We could hold their hand, cry
with them and pray for peace as they lose the battle to cancer.
We could:
Pray for humility
Or
We could volunteer to clean the
overused toilets at a teen drop-in centre.
We could:
Pray for forgiveness
Or
In an attitude of repentance, humbly
ask for the help we need to take steps to change our negativity.
I have a confession to make.
I have recently wept over my own
failures in some of these very areas.
Inadequacy chokes as I type who I
desire to be, but know I can never
totally become. That is – a complete lover of God.
Love of self stands in the pathway.
I must hope in the redemption
of error. (That is, in spite of my faults good can still result, often on
the part of others.)
At the same time I must attempt
to express my love towards God by rather aiming it towards others.
Amen.
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