Friday, February 27, 2009

please give us solid ground

I know we dont live here anymore
We bought an old house on the Danforth

She loves me and her body keeps me warm

I'm happy here

But this is where we used to live


- Barenaked Ladies, "Old Apartment"


Last week (my goodness, has it only been a week?), Tuesday, I lay snuggled under our verdant duvet in our deliciously soft queen-sized bed, beside my husband, and sighed.

"Do you remember moving in to this apartment?" I whisper.
"Mm-hm..."
"Remember how nervous we were - after we had mastered living with each other at a resort in Cuba for a week - to start all over again here? How awkward were we?"
Andrew chuckles.
"And now we're professionals."

That was the last night that we slept in our apartment on Annette Street. As my breathing deepened and my logic blended to dreams I could hear the clock in the bathroom marking the seconds as they passed. Tick-tick-tick-tick. I knew I would miss our apartment. It smelled like ours.

In a post I wrote about changes, I quoted Jonathan Eibeschutz: "All pleasures contain an element of sadness". In time, there will be many more posts about our new, butter-yellow house, renovations, paint swatches, interior decorating, celebrations, memories. I know it because it has already, in one week, begun to smell like ours.

And on the first night we slept there, I lay snuggled in our deliciously soft queen-sized bed, beside my husband, who had already put up the the clock in the bathroom. I drifted to sleep while it marked the seconds as they passed.

Tick-tick-tick-tick.


Sing to me a prayer of hope and strength
I will sing to you
As if my chest is glass

As we build, please give us solid ground

When the rain becomes a flood
I believe that we will find
Tree branches to climb
Far, far, far from here

Sing to me a prayer of hope and strength.
I will sing to you
As if my chest is glass.

When the weather settles down
We will search through this mess
Where I believe that we will find
Through things left behind
The place where we began

Sing to me, please sing to me
Always through these times
And we’ll begin again.

- Sleeping at Last, "Sing to Me"















linkalicious!



From previous posts you'll have recognized me as a 24-7 Prayer enthusiast. If anyone is still reading this blog from back in the day you'll even recall a pilgrimage I made to the land of its uprising, here, here, and here, visiting as many points of 24-7 Prayer as I could in a five-week stint. We even hosted a week of 24-7 prayer in Toronto, with a paltry blog to go along with it (soon to be revamped and reborn - stay tuned!).

And, now, I find myself sharing my insights, dreams and vision for 24-7 as part of a national base team (email me!) for Canada. Last week, we had our first national jamboree in Niagara where I met 24-7 crazies, like myself, from B.C., Regina, and Brantford.

Since the days of my wanderings around the U.K. I've discovered many more initiatives that 24-7 is doing worldwide, such as:
Here's a simple enough definition of the 24-7 Prayer movement from our very own 24-7 Prayer Canada website:

24-7 Prayer Canada is first the invitation to pray.
And out of this prayer comes community.
And out of community we pray.
And out of community and prayer will flow justice and mission.
We celebrate this profound mystery and welcome it with a unified "Amen".

Although, according to the last 24-7 international gathering, they toyed around with the idea of making their new motto:

Just pray.

Amen.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

leadership

I have had leadership on the brain recently.

That, in combination with an addiction to Band of Brothers, courtesy of my husband, has me contemplating what makes a good leader. Really.

"The only hope you have is to accept the fact that you're already dead. The sooner you accept that, the sooner you'll be able to function as a soldier is supposed to function."
- Lieutenant Spiers

In war, the good leaders are easy to find. For the most part, they're the ones who aren't getting themselves and their men killed. In the church, death is less obvious. We're living, breathing, praying, preaching but are we on the offense or are we on the defense? Have we lost our vision? Do we know what we're fighting? Or why we're fighting?

Or who?

Are we, each of us alone, digging foxholes with our bare hands out of fear, unaware that we've torn off all our fingernails?

President Roosevelt, who faced an America similar to President Obama's, stated:
"Without leadership alert and sensitive to change we are bogged up or lose our way." (from here)

To be alert and sensitive to change requires me to look beyond my own circumstances long enough to realize someone else's. It requires me to look beyond my present long enough to realize the future. It requires me to live beyond myself. Leadership is an end to me.

"To save a life, you must take responsibility for it." - Defiance

Saturday, February 07, 2009

gotham


Jo: "It seems like the city just pisses you off."
Michah: "Nah, I love the city. I hate the city but I love the city."
- Medicine for Melencholy

Bruce Wayne: "Gotham isn't beyond saving."
- Batman Begins

"Hello city,
You've found an enemy in me
Hello city, hello city."
- Barenaked Ladies, Hello City

I dig my toes into the cool sand of Chuam Beach, South Korea. It is my birthday. I am 25 years old. I took this weekend trip, by myself, because I felt, at 25, there was no one on the planet that could celebrate my quarter-century milestone better than myself. And Jesus. I packed, took a train, to a bus, hailed a taxi, and rented a minbok by the shore.

The pre-summer weather isn't conducive to sunbathing but, then, I'm not here for a tan. I'm looking for a sign. While my year teaching ESL has been marked with singlehood, footloose and fancy freedom, I'm digging into the future with as much focus as my toes dig the sand.

A Korean family - uppa, umma, harboji, halmoni*, and the prescribed two children - dawdle along the shoreline in front of where I sit. The father and mother snap multiple digital photos. The grandma helps one of the children find and collect shells. The other child runs in front of the pack marking a crazed path of small footprints.

"Don't you want a home?" Jesus, my birthday buddy, asks me. "Don't you want to know the people, the streets, the weather, the language? Don't you want to raise your children next to your parents?"

And right then, in June 2005, I knew I did. I went home to virtually nothing. No assets, no romantic prospects, and hardly any friendships that had sustained my global wanderlust. I went home because, "it's not good to go far from your native village; then you you forget who you are". (A Fine Balance, Rohinton Mistry)

* "father, mother, grandpa, grandma"