Sunday, January 30, 2011

Haste, then, on from grace to glory




Jesus, I my cross have taken,
All to leave and follow Thee;
Destitute, despised, forsaken,
Thou from hence my All shalt be.
Perish every fond ambition,
All I've sought or hoped or known;
Yet how rich is my condition!
God and heaven are still my own.

Let the world despise and leave me,
They have left my Savior, too.
Human hearts and looks deceive me;
Thou art not, like them, untrue.
And while Thou shalt smile upon me,
God of wisdom, love, and might,
Foes may hate and friends may shun me;
Show Thy face, and all is bright.

Go, then, earthly fame and treasure!
Come, disaster, scorn, and pain!
In Thy service, pain is pleasure;
With Thy favor, loss is gain.
I have called Thee Abba, Father!
I have stayed my heart on Thee.
Storms may howl, and clouds may gather,
All must work for good to me.

Man may trouble and distress me,
'Twill but drive me to Thy breast;
Life with trials hard may press me,
Heaven will bring me sweeter rest.
Oh, 'tis not in grief to harm me
While Thy love is left to me;
Oh, 'twere not in joy to charm me
Were that joy unmixed with Thee.

Take, my soul, thy full salvation;
Rise o'er sin and fear and care;
Joy to find in every station,
Something still to do or bear.
Think what Spirit dwells within thee,
What a Father's smile is thine,
What a Savior died to win thee;
Child of heaven, shouldst thou repine?

Haste, then, on from grace to glory,
Armed by faith and winged by prayer;
Heaven's eternal day's before thee,
God's own hand shall guide thee there.
Soon shall close the earthly mission,
Swift shall pass thy pilgrim days,
Hope soon change to glad fruition,
Faith to sight, and prayer to praise.

Hymn #423 from The Lutheran Hymnal
Text: Luke 18:28
Author: Henry Francis Lyte, 1824
Composer: Rowland H. Prichard, 1855, alt.
Tune: "Hyfrydol"

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Pie, anyone?

The Beltway got between 2 and 4 inches of "thundersnow" this evening. Of course, that caused the federal government to shut down 2 hours early and forced the entire region into such hazardous gridlock that friends of mine spent over 6 hours commuting less than 10 miles.

To all of the men who spent any amount of time tonight using a snow shovel (particularly those men whose sidewalks happen to stretch along my 3/4 mi. walk to the Metro, and especially those men who also happened to use a moderate but sufficient amount of salt), my most sincere thanks.

And to anyone who happens to live within walking distance of my apartment or who has snow-appropriate tires, please come help me finish the desserts that I was supposed to bring to small group tonight. My lactose intolerant roommate will thank you. (Actually . . . she might give you the evil eye, because she likes this peanut butter pie so much she had two slices. But, eventually, she will thank you.)

Update: The Break-Up Starbucks II

Well...I thought I would give you the update. I apologize this took a while to write. The story went like this...

The holidays came and The Break-Up Starbucks guy, who didn't pay for my coffee, returned from his mission trip and didn't call...he emailed. Oh my Lord! That is so lame. Okay...his emails were pretty sad. They incorporated dull questions, statements and updates. I didn't know what to do. I was questioning his motives... like, "dude, if you aren't going to step up to the plate, why pretend?" I didn't say that to him but was thinking it very loudly. I responded to the emails and after about the 5th email and 0 calls I responded with an email without any questions. The end of conversation.

For the record...this is a very sad attempt at talking to a girl. I mean, I seriously don't think he was trying to impress me...at all. I don't get it. Why waist anyone's time? Men, we know when you are scared, not interested and not giving it your all. And, we are not impressed.

If you are not that interested, it's okay. I can handle it. We all get rejected. But, why work with a mediocre attempt? At least when I am not interested in a guy, I have the guts and respect for the person to at least be upfront about it and be honest with him.

Got to love dating? Since, then, I have purchased my own coffee, at it was really tasty, and gone out on another date with another guy who took me to a great dinner. Thank the Lord for men who know how to respectfully treat women. NEXT!

And...it's another addition to the Break-Up Starbucks record of failing dates. I highly recommend not going to this Starbucks on a date unless you intend to break-up with that person.

Monday, January 24, 2011

On coughing & kayaking.

I've been sick recently, which has forced me to practice a skill at which I'm not particularly adept: sitting still.

It is most likely this persistent urge to keep moving which drove me to sign up for the Army Ten-Miler a couple years ago. And it was running that race which caused me to be as sick as I can ever remember being. (How's that for a convenient narrative device?)

Rather than carb-loading the night before the big race, my running buddy and I babysat a couple of sneezing children. We stayed out late, so I wasn't surprised when I woke up before the sun on the day of the Ten-Miler feeling terrible. I was also not surprised when, after the endorphins drained out of my insufficiently trained body, I ended the race feeling terrible. But 24 hours later, when my ribs were more sore from coughing than my calves were from running, I knew I was in trouble. Running that race had sent the virus from the adorable-but-germ-infested children coursing through my bloodstream and weakened any chance my immune system might have had to fight it off. I couldn't breath. I couldn't think. It was not pretty.

Unfortunately, I didn't exactly have a leisurely window of time in which to rest and recover. I was supposed to be leaving the country and heading to Panama (during the country's rainy season, because that's how I roll) with a backpack, a travel book, and three of my best friends on vacation. There was no chance I was going to miss the trip. But with less than 48 hours on the clock, I didn't even have time to schedule a doctor's appointment.

A few weeks prior, however, in a rare moment of advanced planning, I had visited a travel doctor to pick up some malaria medication for the trip. When I told him that we were planning on visiting some remote parts of the country, he had asked me if I considered myself an "adventurous eater." I said yes, and he handed me a heavy-duty prescription for some kind of cure-all virus killer which he advised me to pack it in my suitcase.

Deciding it was my best shot, I popped the first of seven wonder-pills, said a prayer, and boarded the plane. By the time we went white water rafting through the Chiriquí Province a couple days later, I was only occasionally aware of the low rattle in my chest.

With just one pill left and a pocket full of Kleenex, we took a crowded bus down from the mountains through the jungle to the coast, where we boarded a water taxi that shuttled us through the Caribbean Sea, past the Chiquita banana factory (seriously), to the small, crowded island of Bocas del Toro. The next day, we made a deal with a friendly but shady-looking local who owned an even smaller water taxi to shuttle us to a remote location that I had googled. What seemed like a sketchy idea to begin with suddenly became terrifying when, as soon as we could no longer see the shore, our boat driver abruptly cut the engine and told us to be silent. I though that our journey was going to come to an abrupt end. Instead, he pointed to a pod of roughly ten dolphins playing nearby. Amazing.

When we finally arrived at Coral Cay, it wasn't even an island: it was a clump of mangrove trees. There was no land; just a complicated root system surrounded by a boardwalk connecting a restaurant to three cabins on stilts. Magically, however, the owner had received my reservation via email and was expecting us (isn't technology amazing?). He handed each of us a snorkel, some goggles, and a sea kayak. If you didn't want to sit on the boardwalk or lie in a hammock, you basically had no choice but to be in the water.

This was completely awesome . . . for like 20 minutes.

Then I really, really wanted to go for a walk. On land.

To make matters worse, it started to rain. Hard. And we didn't realize that the "island's" only restaurant didn't serve dinner, so we were going to have to share a can of Pringles and some peanut M&Ms while playing speed Scrabble by kerosene lantern.

The merciful thing about Coral Cay, though, was that, for the first time on our entire vacation, it forced me to curl up in a hammock and REST. I didn't have a choice. I took a nap. And you know what? I stopped coughing.

(I ended up swapping a mild case of sun poisoning for the original virus, but that was a trade I was more than willing to make.)

Being sick made me a little more aware of my limitations and, consequently, a little more grateful for the peaceful quiet of those secluded cabins. Rather than causing me to go stir crazy, that night at Coral Cay became one of my most treasured memories.

When the rain stopped and the clouds parted from the night sky, we gently paddled our kayaks out into the sea to gaze up at the stars. Rarely have I seen anything so beautiful as the slow burn of those stars breaking and shimmering against the gentle, inky black waves.

I'm not particularly grateful for my cough, or for my achy muscles, or for my sore throat. But I am grateful for anything that shakes us out of our routine--out of our self-assured, independent, careless patterns--and causes us seek His face. God is so eager and able to bless us. But we have to let Him do it on His terms.

I can be grateful for weakness, because it allows His strength to shine through. (2 Corinthians 12:9)

A prayer for a friend who needs one.

We've all, at one time or another, needed such a prayer. - 1 Corinthians 12:26
Father,
Maker of all that is, seen and unseen: You hold all of history in Your hands and yet still have room to hold me.
My prayer tonight is for a friend who needs one. 
You are a God who sets the lonely into families. I praise You for this sister and for the playful ways that her persistent friendship has cracked and pried open my reluctant heart. I praise You for the countless conversations that have challenged and shaped my thinking; for the easy, comfortable laughter that once bubbled up like a wellspring of joy before this dry, searching soul; and for her determination and stubbornness that pushed my weary legs miles beyond where I would have stopped and on to new, beautiful sites I would not have explored alone. I praise You for this complicated, adventurous, kindred spirit.
I love her as fiercely as I can.
But tonight my friend is stumbling down a path that I cannot walk with her. I pray that You will run before her and make her paths straight. Guide her steps back to green pastures and beside still waters. Mercifully give rest to a soul that needs it.
I pray for silence, for sleep, and for space to heal.
Into that silence, whisper the words of truth that we cannot. Remind her of her faith. And as she sleeps, teach her troubled mind to dream again. Restore her ability to hope. And with that space, bind and set her broken heart. Reveal to her the greatness of Love.
Lord, in Your mercy, hear this prayer.
Amen.

Friday, January 14, 2011

The Text

In 2010, my parents decided to take up texting. At first I thought it was a little strange, then I eventually thought it was funny, then...I was a little annoyed and now I think they are finally getting it. At first my parents were very anit-text. I think they were a little nervous about the idea of sending brief messages to their children. They might have thought is was impersonal, uninformative and inconvenient.

Fast forward to around June 2010...Dad starts texting. The day I got my first text message from my father was around 9:00am on a Wednesday morning, "where are you?" I was kind of shocked that it was from my Dad and thought huh?...he's finally caved into texting! I replied with, "at work." Yeah, because I'm usually always at work on a Wednesday around 9am. So we exchanged a few more text messages and all was good.

Then the weekend came upon us. It was Saturday around 7:30am ET (so this is 6:30am Texas time). The text from my father said, "Good morning." Okay Pop, the nickname I call my father, just because it is a text and not a phone call doesn't mean that it doesn't still wake me up. The phone call rules still kind of apply to the texting rules in the sense that you don't call or text around certain hours. We had to talk.

December 2010. I go home for Christmas and I was watching television with my Mother in one room and my father was in the TV room watching some football game. Mom recieves a text. I say, "who was that?" Mom replies, "your father, he wants to know what we are doing for dinner." Me, "you mean to tell me, you all are texting each other now and no longer calling when in fact you are only a room away from one another?" Mom, "Yes."

Well...

I'm proud of my parents for embracing technology...like 3 years later. But still, this is a good step. My Mom is really into sending mass text messages now because she gets a kick out of all the responses. I think she will like FB and Twitter. Maybe 2 years from now?

This all stems from a link a friend shared with me the other day that I thought was hilarious. Here it is so you can enjoy it too, When Parents Text.

So to all the parents, grandparents and others out there. Don't be afraid of texting. But when you text, please keep in mind that it still kind of counts as a phone call in the sense that the phone call protocols still somewhat apply. Text away! Oh...but make sure your phone plan includes a text plan because if it doesn't....you are going to be sorry you sent and received so many text messages.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

In case you needed to see some data.

You know how everyone (including your mom and your Dove chocolate wrapper and the DJ for the morning show on the Christian radio station) is always telling you to "just be yourself?" Well, add one more group to that list: economists.

After running some regressions on data from an online dating site, the authors found that women who were polarizing (so, some men thought they were a "10," while others didn't find them attractive at all) were more likely to get attention than people who were considered generically "cute" across the board.

I'll spare you the algebra and just encourage everyone who sees this to take one giant, collective sigh of relief. Particularity is sexy.

Cue Buechner:
"Maybe nothing is more important than that we keep track, you and I, of these stories of who we are and where we have come from and the people we have met along the way because it is precisely through these stories in all their particularity, as I have long believed and often said, that God makes himself known to each of us most powerfully and personally. If this is true, it means that to lose track of our stories is to be profoundly impoverished not only humanly but also spiritually." (from Telling Secrets)

Friday, January 7, 2011

Resolved

Hello from Denver! I'm here for work, but I've had a small bit of time to wander around the Mile High City and collect inspiration for my new year's resolutions.

(You shouldn't be surprised that this is coming a few days late. For one thing, I'm not very good with deadlines. Also, unlike my tech savvy male relatives, I'm not an early adopter. I like to let the market settle a bit. You know, watch others test out their resolutions for a while and then see how I feel.)

So here they are:

5) Hike more. After walking through the entire REI flagship store here in Denver, I stumbled upon this LED trail hat and decided it was exactly what I'd always wanted but didn't know it. Watching it blink at me, all I could think was: this is genius. Shortly after purchasing it, however, I realized there would probably never be a situation in which I would actually need it. Thus, my first new year's resolution is to justify this purchase. Twilight hike, anyone?

4) Host one party per month. There are worse things than eating alone . . . but I think food just tastes better when you have good company. I was too exhausted to walk very far last night, so I brought a book to the nearly-empty hotel restaurant. Every time I had to turn the page, I'd either drop my fork or spill salad into my lap. There were two other men - clearly also here for the conference - at separate tables nearby doing the exact same thing. We'd occasionally exchange sympathetic glances and then bury our noses back into our reading material. It felt a little pathetic. So tonight, when some current and former coworkers arrived in Denver just in time for dessert, I was grateful for the friendly faces. It's nice to laugh over crème brûlée. Hence, I'm resolved to facilitate this for others.

Also, I made the same resolution last year, and my January brunch was so successful that the two love birds who met there ended their first date at my February Valentine's Day dinner. By August, I was hosting their engagement party, and the bridal shower was in November. Who knows what 2011 will bring?

3) Visit more great American cities. Exploring new cities is like meeting a new friend; each block is full of stories you don't know.

2) Go on at least two dates, consecutively, with the same person. I've been working in recruiting directly or indirectly for about five years now. While in Denver, I will be conducting 19 interviews in the space of 3 days. The point is: I know what I'm looking for, and I'm pretty good at reading people to find it. I'm also fairly comfortable in my own twenty-something-year-old skin and have a decent grasp of my own strengths and weaknesses. Therefore, when it comes to dating, I like to maximize efficiency. As soon as I'm confident that we're not going to work, I stop wasting your time.

The upside to this system is that I'm never wrong. If I decide that you're not the one and stop seeing you, then I'm correct about the fact that "our relationship isn't going anywhere" 100% of the time. Also, it minimizes the chance that either of us will get hurt.

The downside is that, because this system leaves me perpetually single, I routinely encounter situations like this: when dropping off a check request form at work the other day, my accountants cornered me and asked me when I was going to find myself a husband. They then proceeded to give me all kinds of helpful advice, such as: "Put Vaseline on your teeth so you smile more!" Thanks. No, really, that's helpful.

The other downside, of course, is that I'll never know what I'm missing.

I'm not convinced that this resolution will actually change anything, but it's not the worst advice I've received recently.  (D "give him a chance" DG, this one's for you.)

1) Pray boldly. I know people with some serious needs. And I know a God who cares about those people. In 2011, I want to take that seriously.

Monday, January 3, 2011

On the Road Again

On December 29th my Mom and I started our 4 day journey from South Texas to Washington, DC. The purpose of this trip was to bring my recently purchased car to my current residence in Arlington, Virginia. We traveled over 28 hours, across 8 states and over 1,600 miles. Let me tell you...I'm a tad bit tired right now.

I enjoy driving. I would say it's pretty common for Texans to drive for many hours. It's somewhat ingrained in us...born in Texas? ---> you love driving long hours. My family and I are used to driving long distances. When I was little we used to travel to West Texas every summer because the Valley was so hot and it was difficult to keep anything alive. So we traveled to West Texas (13 hour drive...in Texas and only Texas) and learned how to entertain ourselves. After 7 hours on this journey, as a kid, you kind of stop asking, "Are we there yet?" You just shut up and might as well figure out what you can do in the meantime to keep yourself from going crazy.

On this trip, it was just me and my Mom. We took turns driving about every 3 to 4 hours. It's always good to take a break. On day one, we traveled from the Rio Grande Valley to Mobile, Alabama. Had to take a break after 14 hours of driving. On day two, we drove from Mobile, Alabama to Greenville, South Carolina. Good friends of mine and Emily's were getting married that day. It was a beautiful ceremony and I am once again reminded of how blessed I am with such great friends. Mom got to attend the wedding. She enjoyed meeting some more of my good friends. On day four, we drove from Greenville, South Carolina to Washington, DC.

Side Bar

If you have never driven to DC and/or plan on driving one day to our nation's capital please note that traffic on any Sunday or day before a holiday is almost always HORRIBLE. Don't do it. Or...leave really early or really late. If you are coming from the South, expect frustrating traffic anywhere before or after Richmond, Virginia all the way to Washington, DC. And if you are planning to continue driving all the way to New York City, just call it quits and have a nice dinner. Trust me.

Quote of the Day for January 2, 2010: "Yeah...Just left Richmond. I hate 95." - Nathan Bowen

End of Side Bar

Thanks Mom for driving with me all the way to DC! You are a real trooper. Thanks to her, I now have my car in DC! And I can go to the grocery store and get what I need whenever I want! And I can drive to the gym that is almost a mile away when it is freezing cold outside! And...I can drive to the dry cleaners to drop of my work clothes. And...I can go to non-metro accessible weddings! Oh...the list goes on and on. I'm so excited and thankful for God's grace, blessings and mercy.

And just because God is so good!

"And the God of all grace, who called you to his eternal glory in Christ, after you have suffered a little while, will himself restore you and make you strong, firm and steadfast. " 1 Peter 5:10

Amen!

And...I'm really tired right now, caffeine is not working and I can't wait to go to bed. Driving does make you tired. No road trips for me in the near future.