Saturday, December 31, 2011

Roll Call

John.         Here.
Andrew.     Here.
Marcy.       Here.
Brenda.     Here.
Linda.       Present.
Bruce.       Here.

This was a scene repeated so many times in my childhood in various school years that the names run together ... but the answer was always the same.  Either "here" or "present".  

There's a hint in that little scene.  A reminder that in order to learn in life, we must be in the moment - we must be here.  

Too many times I've gone round and round in the past.  There's been no escape; it's like I was trapped there.  I do believe that the past is useful to visit when it's done with the purpose of healing - or of reminding ourselves of the blessings we have known so as to encourage ourselves to keep believing, keep hoping.  But living there, wallowing in our pasts, leaves us sad, bitter, estranged from or entangled within our roots.  Either way, we cannot be present in the now.  Our energy is all tied up in what has already happened, what might have happened if we (or others) had only done things differently.  Emotionally and physically, we tire easily. So it was with me.  I held deep resentments against those who had injured me, nursed each new wound and compounded it upon the old.  I berated myself for not living up to my own expectations.  It sapped my strength.  

There've also been times when I feared the future: feared it so much that I would sleep poorly (if at all), fret and stew about things that might happen (most of which never did), and try to influence or manipulate the circumstances or the people involved in my own future so much that I would end up creating the very thing I feared.  It robbed me of many moments I could have enjoyed.  It stole away the present... so that I wasn't here for it.  I was in tomorrow.  Next week. Next month. 

In the last 3 years I have been learning to exist in the here.  In the present.  In the now. The struggle is never-ending: it is difficult to accept what has been, what is.  To not try to change what will be.  When I do live in the now, though, the weight of the backpack of yesterday and the chains of tomorrow drops from me like Pilgrim's pack when he gets to the cross.  I am freed to spend my energy in things that matter, right now.  Enjoying the moment, now.  Helping the person who is in front of me, now.  Hearing the still, small whisper of the divine, now.  Breathing the rarefied air in the presence of God, now.  Worshiping Him, now.  Not ten years ago.  Not next Sunday.  NOW.

If I carry anything with me into the new year, I wish for it to be this.  That when I am called upon, that whenever and wherever God will speak to me and give me that inner nudge - I will be "present."

Friday, December 30, 2011

Truth Hurts - Lies Hurt More

This evening I was talking to someone who had just found out second-hand about something he should have been told two months ago when it happened.  Yet people kept that information from him, fearing he would be upset. "We were scared of just such a reaction," the person told him when he angrily confronted one of the conspirators.  

Truth, even if it is hard to accept and might not be well received, is still better than withholding it only to have the person find out, and then feel that he or she wasn't considered worthy of the truth to start with. That's the thing about lying.  It speaks of a deep and abiding mistrust of the person being lied to.

People lie - about a great many things - and call it all manner of things.  I know.  I've done it.  I can't promise I will never do it again.  And the justifications abound....

Sparing the person's feelings.
Bending the truth.
Protecting.  (Protecting whom??)
The greater good.
The lesser of two evils.
Withholding information. 
White lies.
Fibbing.
Joking. 

Even more damaging are the lies we tell ourselves about either our own behavior or someone else's.  

He didn't mean it.
She's not really like that. 
I'm not controlling.  I'm concerned. 
I'm not manipulating.  I'm just pointing out the facts. 
I'm not playing the victim.  I AM one.  

When we start telling the truth, to ourselves first and then to others, it is no guarantee that we'll never be hurt.  Truth does hurt sometimes.  But it is more damaging to lie - or to be lied to - than to live in an atmosphere of honesty. 

Withholding the truth from someone just because we are uncomfortable with confrontation does a disservice to both parties.  It leaves us with a fear of being found out - and trust me, it WILL be found out - and it leaves the other person with a deep and abiding sense of betrayal.  Betrayal is inviting the spectre of death into a relationship.  It takes a very long time to recover from it.  Some never recover.  Never.  

Telling someone a hard truth should never bring us pleasure.  I say again, if we take secret delight in telling someone some truth that will make them sad, or hurt, or uncomfortable, or angry, then we are not operating in love, and we will be held accountable.  Yet on the other hand, the fear of negative repercussions from someone that loves us or whom we love is not reason enough to lie to that person.

Relationships are messy.  Life - and truth - is sometimes hard.  
We owe it to each other to be lovingly and graciously honest.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Psyched up - Let Down

It happens every December.  People get psyched up for Christmas, young and old, with a flurry of activity: social, culinary, and shopping-related, and it all comes to a head on the 25th of December.  After that, it's like the air being let out of a balloon.  Enthusiasm deflates.  And people face reality.  Some face truckloads of debt that it will take all year to repay.  Others feel like they need to take a steamshovel and a hose to their house - or their lives - and clear out all the stuff and/or guilt that has been accumulated over the past few weeks/days.  Still others have been hoping for some sort of emotional miracle or breakthrough with a significant other ... that never happened.  And then there are those who have thoroughly enjoyed the season only to have family and friends return to their own routines and leave them with all those decorations to put away - and loneliness and self-pity creep in and wrap their cold fingers around their hearts again.  

C. S. Lewis noted in his book, "The Screwtape Letters" that humans are cyclical beings - that is, we all experience a normal ebb and flow of emotion, and this is normal.  Some believe that a person should be "up" all the time and feel guilty or somehow defective when they inevitably feel "down" - this is something that the enemy of our souls can capitalize upon to make us doubt ourselves, to doubt whether we are loved and/or cared for by God.  The truth is, however, that people do have ups and downs, that there is a natural rhythm to our emotional lives.  Accepting that, feeling what we feel honestly, and then moving on, is a healthy response to this natural phenomenon.  

It's when we deny what we feel and lie to ourselves (and others) about it, pretend to be fine and act like everything is just peachy - that we are in dysfunction, that we put ourselves under undue stress, and that our bodies (if kept too long in that state of dishonesty) will react by making us sick, or in pain.  

Of course we can stave off the dark specter of being let down by taking care of ourselves, looking after our inner life first instead of always taking what's left over. If we look after ourselves regularly, the "downs" don't tend to go as low or last as long.  They still do happen, though.  Denying that, living the lie of saying that it doesn't exist, only serves to deepen those "down" times and shorten the "up" times. We find ourselves wondering just how long the happiness will last, which robs us of the joy of it - and wondering how long the sadness will last, making it last longer.  Instead of living in the moment, we worry about the future. Or we regret the poor choices of the past.

How much better it is to just be who we are and feel what we feel in honest relationship with God, ourselves, and others.  How much more healthy it is to accept ourselves the way we are without berating ourselves and falling prey to the "shoulds" which some folks try and make stick to our spirits, either by criticism and condemnation or praise and applause.  I have spoken about this externally-based self-esteem before - see my post called "You Are Special" - it really pinpoints the dangers of getting our sense of worth from other people's opinions, and highlights the necessity of spending time nurturing our own spirits. At such times, we can get "let down" far more quickly because our spirits are underfed, running on empty, depleted, whatever you want to call it.

As the year ends ... perhaps it's time to consider spending more of our time doing the important things, before the urgent things steal those moments from us and leave us with more seasons where we are drained of energy. It doesn't have to be super complicated. It can be as simple as carving out time in the run of a day to read an inspirational reading - or go for a drive to see our favorite kind of scenery - or listen to a song - or talk to a good friend - or go for a walk - or put in a good movie and watch it.  Or we can even do something creative that we enjoy doing, like baking ... or painting ... whatever it is.  

Let's just do it.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Centering

I've been reading a book I got for Christmas - "Hungry for God" by Margaret Feinberg. I started reading in fear and trembling because so many books on getting to know God are so incredibly NOT about getting to know Him but getting to know more ABOUT Him.  Knowledge I have.  What I lack is experience.  

Anyway, this book didn't turn out to be as I feared.  It talks about the mundane things of our lives and how God uses them to reveal Himself to us through them.  If we listen.  

One analogy she uses in her book - one which is not original to her of course - is the one about the clay and the potter.  But she happens to mention the part that is so easily overlooked about creating a piece of pottery.  It's the first part - the part a potter calls 'centering'.  

Source (via Google Images):
http://pottery.about.com/od/centeringonthewheel/
ss/centering_2.htm
The potter doesn't just plunk down the clay and start to make a pot or a vase right away.  The first part after smacking it down on the wheel, is holding the clay in a lump as the wheel turns beneath it, squeezing it toward the middle of the wheel, making sure it is perfectly in the inner circle of the wheel, even before the clay has an inside part. The potter keeps adding water, squeezes some more, and shifts the clay on the wheel until it seems to be standing still even though the wheel is still spinning.  This is to make the clay pliable and to prevent disaster later on from the creation being off-center.  

And yet the pot cannot hold anything yet because it doesn't have an opening.  Any water poured onto it would just slide off.  The potter wants to make sure that the clay is where it needs to be, first and foremost. He tests it by squishing it down with the heel of his hand. Then squeezing it toward the middle so that it's tall. Then down again. Then up.  The clay - if it could think - might wonder what in the world was becoming of it.  Yet all this time it is being shaped, and its goodness is being slimed all over the potter's fingers, sinking into his pores, under his nails.  The potter is inexorably connected to and involved in his creation. 

Only then, only after the clay is perfectly centered and pliable, is it ready to be "opened" - the potter squishes the lump again, the clay's outside becomes the general shape that was intended, and then the thumb starts pressing down in the very center of the lump - "opening" the clay and creating an inside that will make the piece usable. 

There are quite a few steps involved in pottery, but the one that stood out for me is the centering.  Again I stress that as the clay in this analogy, we cannot be 'opened' until we are 'centered.'  And it's all God's work including adding water (which symbolizes His divine presence being infused into us); He is the one who does it, we are only available to Him.  He works a work on the wheel of our lives (which HE set in motion) and it is HIS choice how long that takes or what shape will eventually be produced.  

It's messy. It's uncomfortable sometimes. There's a lot of pressure.  It takes a long time.  And it's necessary.  

Totally.

Monday, December 26, 2011

Accepting What Is

Earlier today I found myself singing an old Irish tune I heard for the first time on Star Trek: the Next Generation.  Sometimes my insides will tell me what's going on in my subconscious, and this time was one of them.  The story line behind the singing of the song in the show was that there was a fellow who was convinced that the enemy was building a secret base - but there was no proof.  He became a renegade and started to attack the supply ships going to this area of space - the no-man's land so to speak - to single-handedly expose and destroy the covert operations of the enemy.  A former crew member was able to finally get to him to talk some sense into him and get him to turn himself in.  Here's the scene to which I am referring - it's about a minute and a half long.  




I've learned to listen to those signals from my subconscious mind . . . especially if they take the form of music, since music is important to me.  


The message I finally got from this scene (which for the last few days has been playing in my mind) is that I've been fighting a battle lately in my insides, a battle that comes from trying to hang onto things, habits, relationships, and attitudes that used to work for me but which no longer do, which tend to keep me bound, or hold me back in some way. Sometimes it's because I've held on to some attitude that is selfish, self-seeking, or otherwise controlling or care-taking (and not in a good way).  If that is the case, God usually shows me, and I have to acknowledge it and take steps to correct it.  

But in the vast majority of cases, it's because I've moved on - and it's time for me to let go.  Part of me, the part that remembers the good times and the times when this or that behavior, relationship, or belief worked for me, is saddened by its passing.  Yet in nearly all of those instances, I've grown in areas that make that thing or person no longer "fit" into who I'm becoming.  It doesn't mean there's anything wrong with whatever it is, or that it wasn't needed at the time.  It just means I'm no longer in that place.

It's allowed for me to grieve that loss.  My emotions are perfectly normal for someone who has lost something that has carried any importance.  Since feelings are intended to be transitory states, I know that it's okay to feel those feelings, to work through them and understand why they are there, and then let them go. This is healthy and right.  Letting go means that I accept what is.  I say goodbye inside.  And then I walk away.

And as hard as it is to let go, it would be harder still to hold on and try to resuscitate something that for me, no longer has any life in it. 

Sometimes I just have to sing the song of the weary soldier - and then say to the Spirit, "I'm not going to win this one, am I Chief?"  and accept what is .... and then give myself up.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Current Events

I was reading a fellow-blogger's article yesterday at One Crafty Mother. (Yes, that's a link.)

She describes a concept she calls "downstream."  It was just what I needed.  

Lots of things are changing in my life lately - there is much about which I know little, and over which I have absolutely no control.  As a recovering control freak and rescuer, I have a difficult time with not being in control even though I know it's good for me.  

She talks about letting go as lifting your feet off the bottom of a river and letting the current carry you.  The metaphor of swimming is more than a little uncomfortable for me.  But that's because I'm a non-swimmer and don't like the water.  My feet must always be able to touch bottom.  Always. Otherwise I panic.  

Photo via Google Images at:
http://blog.travelpod.com/travel-photo/vandall/zardoz-
2003/1087766820/dscf0030.jpg/tpod.html
That said, the analogy is still quite powerful - in life, in my journey of healing, I'm learning how to let go of the need to supervise, control, fix, or otherwise have an influence over the situations or people involved in a particular desired outcome.  I remember sitting in someone's office recently, and seeing a little card attached to the person's computer monitor - identical to the one I have in various places at home - which gives a slightly different version of the Serenity Prayer.  The original goes, "God grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change, Courage to change the things I can, and Wisdom to know the difference."  This one says, "God, grant me the Serenity to accept the people I cannot change, Courage to change the person I can, and Wisdom to know it's me."  

It's hard to let go of the compulsion to know what's happening every single minute.  There's a certain comfort that comes from that kind of control.  But letting go and allowing events to unfold, without having (or wanting to have) any control or influence over what happens or any fretting over whether it does or doesn't - that is a skill that I had to learn, and I have succeeded a few times.  Which is more than before (which was zero.)  My fellow-blogger calls this picking up your feet in the current and allowing it to take you "downstream" - wherever it will naturally take you.  

Going against the current is occasionally necessary to stand up for what's right when the people or events are going toward an unhealthy place. 

But doing it all the time is exhausting: I speak from experience! And most of the time, it is more healthy for me to "go with the flow" - to go where God is leading and not to fret about where it might take me.  The events that happen to me in such a current often lead to the most amazing opportunities to help someone or experience something awesome in my relationship with God.  Or to discover something I needed to know about myself.  These 'current events' - more often than not - lead me to myriad 'God-moments' that I would never have experienced otherwise: where God is in complete control and brings things and people into my path that I never would have dreamed.  

The unpredictability of it all both unnerves and exhilarates me.  Sometimes I gasp for breath and clutch out wildly for some point of reference.  Other times, I can actually see some of what He is doing and I'm in awe.  

One thing I will say.  It is never boring.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Song in the Night

"All Your breakers and Your waves have rolled over me." - Ps. 42:7

That's what fear - that's what panic - that's what depression - looks like.  It's overwhelming, suffocating, destructive.  

King David struggled with these feelings on a regular basis.  He spent a lot of his youth running from the wrath of a royal madman obsessed with not losing his kingdom - to the point of living in caves even.  Even after he came to power, there were times when his life was horrible.  One of his sons raped his daughter, another killed the son who did it, and a third son tried to lead a coup take his kingdom away from him by force.  Talk about stress!  

Photo (via Google Images) :
http://allworldbest.blogspot.com/2011/12/ocean-waves.html
Read any of the psalms written by him (some weren't) and they will usually talk about the tumult he experienced inside.  Most were prayers.  Of those, most started out with some version of "God? Where ARE You??"  Then a whole litany of complaints - David didn't hold anything back. No "speaking in faith" for him! at least, not the way that folks today think of it. He was honest.  Brutally honest! Near the end, though, he would usually speak to his soul and tell it to remember God's goodness, to remember all the wonderful things He'd done for His people, to take heart from this, to remember to be grateful and to praise Him.  Over and over again we can see him struggling to believe in what were sometimes horrific circumstances - betrayal, loneliness, despondency, and waiting for God to do something when it seemed like the heavens were made of bronze. 

I quoted Psalm 42:7 at the beginning of this post.  Verse 8 says this:  "The Lord will command His lovingkindness in the daytime - and in the night His song will be with me, a prayer to the God of my life." The "song in the night" has come to me so many times as I have wrestled with God in the wee hours of the morning, wondering why this or that situation had to happen, whether things will ever be better, if I'll ever see the light of day in my heart again.  Everyone has times like that.  The "song" might have minor chords in it - at first - it's okay. The important thing, I believe, is to lift up whatever thoughts I have to God.  No matter what they are.  The important thing is that I talk to Him.  Even if I doubt.

David goes on to say that he would continue to be honest with God, to ask Him why He has forsaken him - and then after this outburst of emotion, he begins to ask himself why he is so disquieted.  He encourages himself to hope, to trust, to rest in God.  

The rest can't come for me unless and until I am honest with Him.  When my heart is heavy with grief or fear or depression, the singing isn't possible until the fists go into the pillow, until the shoulders heave with sobs, and the knowledge comes - usually afterward - that even at those times, He is holding me and letting me be who I am, feel what I feel, and that loves me in spite of it all.  

That kind of song is worth more than all the ones borne of denial and duty.  It is the song of Love.  

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Milestones

Every December we get a new calendar for the upcoming year.  And before it goes up on the wall, there is one thing I always do.  

I take it out of its package, get some fine-point indelible markers in at least two different colours, and then take down the existing calendar.  Placing them side by side, I transfer all the special dates (birthdays, anniversaries, and other important dates that happen every year in our family, such as new celebrations that I've written down as they happen) by hand from the old calendar to the new one.  I also take all the dental appointment stickers we had been saving for the last four to six months and place them on the appropriate dates in the new year.  

Once the transfer is made, I open the new calendar to January.  Then I put it up on the wall, and cover it with the old calendar opened to December.  When January 1 comes, I remove the old year's calendar and save it with the others in a special spot.  I have a good decade or more of memories in those calendars, because as events happen in our lives they get written on the calendar: deaths of family members or close friends, special dates that commemorate milestones of achievement - whatever the case may be.  

It's good to remember important dates, milestones, places where (as Abraham did to commemorate special memories) we build altars as a reminder that this is where God met us or when we survived this or that thing - or accomplished something.  Or to remember how long it's been since whatever it was happened.  It helps to have those visible reminders so that we can recall that things do have a way of working out - no matter how hard they seem at the time.  Or that good things do happen and that it's not all bad.  And finally, milestones help us know that we're on the right road, that we haven't strayed and that the journey is still in progress.  We need that too.  We need signs along the way to show us we're doing okay.  If we get that assurance, we can leave something permanent - pass on memories somehow - to show those we love that this is a safe path.

Some of the milestones we can celebrate don't have to be big things to us - but they can be huge to others.  The simple fact of backing up loving actions by saying loving words (and vice versa) can make a tremendous difference to other people, especially those closest to us.

Someday it won't be about milestones anymore - but about the gateway to another existence.  Then, we'll be even more glad for the road signs we've left along the way.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Enough

How much is enough?

Good question.  I was chatting with someone in a store tonight and we were mentioning how it's really difficult to fit our petite frames when there's a belly involved.  We commiserated about that, and were quick to be grateful for certain lines of clothing that cater to our specific body type needs.  It made me think about wanting to lose weight - a topic that occasionally rears its ugly head.  

One of the first things a person learns when dieting living a new lifestyle is how much is enough.  So accustomed to ignoring the body's signals that it's full - the person keeps on eating and over-fills the stomach.  I can't count the number of times I've gone to bed in agony because I didn't know when to say when - and ended up overeating to the point of pain.  Then promising myself I'll never do it again.  But I do.  I forget the pain and focus on the short-term pleasure of making the other kind of hurting go away: the emotional kind.  It's true that people like me (there are so many of us out there!) really are "FEEDING their feelings."  This is to avoid FEELING them.  

People can be like that about anything.  Some are like that about housekeeping.  Others about fitness.  Still others about social activity - never able to get enough interaction. Some people can't seem to stop trying to rescue other people. I have to constantly guard against that one and if I can't with this or that individual, if I am constantly compelled to try to fix someone ... I need to walk away. 

People can be irresistibly drawn to shopping - to television - to sports - to motor vehicles of any description - to ... anything you can name.  These things provide an escape - a pleasurable escape - to the person that is trapped inside of them.  But even though they're pleasurable prisons, they are still prisons.  Any doubt about that ....?  just try to get out of one.  See how difficult it is.  

In relationship with God, escape from the endless trap of pleasurable diversions ... is possible.  With His help on a moment-by-moment basis, it is possible to get out of those prisons, those chains, those wrappings.  And the route isn't by attacking the wrappings - it's by tackling what's inside.  

Remember what I said about feeling our feelings instead of feeding them?  That's the ticket.  Emotional healing is the way to heal - focusing on relationships with God, the self, and THEN with others will allow all those other escape mechanisms to just drop off like unwanted baggage.  

And then someday, we'll be able to be in a situation and just know that this is "it" - that this is as far as we will go - and have the grace and courage to say, "ENOUGH!"

Real healing happens from the inside out.  If it doesn't, it will only be temporary.  And only God can heal the heart.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Bah humbug - really?

What's the first thing you think of when I say the name, "Scrooge"? 

I'll bet it isn't the 'after' picture.  It's probably the 'before' picture. Which is weird because it's the story of how someone changed from the before to the after. You'd think the after picture would be the one that stuck.  Hm. I think that the "after" picture was the one Dickens originally wanted to leave with people.

My all-time favorite film rendition of his famous short story, "A Christmas Carol"  is the one which stars Patrick Stewart, produced in 1999. Mr. Stewart did a far better job of projecting the inner anguish of the man - and the inevitable gratitude and joy - than anyone I've ever seen portray the character.  

Image found through Google at :
http://southernchristmascarol.blogspot.com/2009/01/
fred-nephew-good-ol-boy.html
Although I love the "after" picture that Dickens paints of his famous character, I still hesitate to call anyone "Scrooge."  It conjures up - for most people - a mean-spiritedness that overshadows and poisons interactions with others in a way that frustrates even the best efforts to include the person.  Yet the story of Scrooge delves into the reasons for his sour disposition.  Life had not been kind to him so he was not kind in return.

I must admit that a lot of the time I tend to avoid all the interactions and festivities that go on at this time of year, and I'm sure that some people think that I'm a "Scrooge".  In some ways I guess I am.  I'm not sure if it has to do with my own introverted nature (probably a lot of it right there) or just that I've seen so much that goes on in the name of "Christmas spirit" which - to me - just isn't.  

Loneliness dogs my steps at this time of year, something like a hungry wolf who isn't just satisfied with the rodents he finds along the trail but is after bigger game: me.  Sometimes I wonder why I even go to the trouble of decorating and going to social functions.  If I go, I feel out of place, excluded.  I probably am not, but that's my perception. Even in a crowd, I can relate a lot to the child Scrooge, being left behind when his school mates were off to spend Christmas break with their families - feeling like he didn't have anywhere he felt accepted.  Many times I've felt like that.  Sometimes I've even wanted to check out.  Especially when I have been reminded of just how alone I am, how people just tolerate me and don't "get" me at all.  

It is a short step from that perception of non-acceptance, that feeling of utter misery, to putting a hard crust over my heart and not letting anyone in ... so as to avoid being more hurt.  Probably I have already done that in some ways. 

Some days are better than others.  I'm up, I'm optimistic, I'm ready to face the world.  Life is good.

Some days, however, it takes all I have just to get out of bed and face the great gaping black hole of not fitting in anywhere.  I feel that I don't fit in at work - there I'm "too religious." Or just "too weird."  I don't fit in at church because there, I'm not "religious enough." Or just "too weird."  On such days, I cling by my fingernails to the slogan, 'one day at a time' because if I think about the abyss of endless days looming in front of me, I could easily fall into it and lose myself in despair.  

At such times, the festivities and the usual chit-chat only serve to highlight for me how "apart" I feel.  And I can fully understand why the highest rates of suicides are at Christmas-time. The crowded streets, the even more crowded stores, and all the talk about family get-togethers and parties and so forth, all serve to heighten my misery.  There's nothing wrong with parties, family get-togethers, and all the festivities this season has to offer.  It's just that when a person doesn't feel accepted or appreciated, maybe not even loved, the last thing he or she wants to attend is another social function that highlights how excluded he or she feels.  It doesn't mean that the person is anti-social or that he or she hates Christmas.  I happen to like Christmas - just not all the frenetic activity surrounding it (or any other family-oriented holiday going), the pushing people around in stores (jostling elbows and people saying "excuse me" all the time - which, after the 100th time I've heard it, sounds more like "move your fat rear" than "I need to get past you.")  That, combined with the social expectations, the family obligations, and so forth, tend to make me want to do my Christmas shopping online and vastly limit my social and family obligations.  Most folks call that a clear-cut case of 'bah humbug.'  .... I kind of don't. 

I prefer, instead, to rid myself of what drives me crazy about all the crowds and so forth, to dissociate myself from the idea - however accepted it may be - of reciprocity (you give me something so now, I'm obligated to give you something) and of one-upmanship (Aunt Sue had us to her place last year and she had a sumptuous feast; we have to outdo her this year at our place), and instead take a trip in my mind to a dripping cave in a hillside in Middle-Eastern springtime to visit a little baby.  His mom has wrapped him tightly in strips of cloth like a mummy is wrapped, and placed him into a hollowed out rock (nothing wooden in that place except perhaps the pitchfork to toss hay into the rock manger).  That humble scene brings home to me the wonder of the distance God traveled in order to become one of us - all for love.  Not that we loved Him, or that we even COULD - but that He loved us first.

When I focus on that  -  I remember that there is definitely something worthwhile to celebrate.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

When Repetition isn't Vain

In the New Testament we are warned about using "vain (useless) repetitions." Jesus was referring to people who say the same thing to God over and over again, so much that it becomes just words and is done to impress others (or even God!). But there is a kind of repetition that isn't vain. In fact, it's essential.

I was in a co-worker's office today when I mentioned a concern I was having about some changes that are heading our way at work, uncertainty about what it will all mean, and so forth.  She reminded me that the changes of which I spoke were out of my control, that they had not yet been decided, and that there would be plenty of time to discuss them and deal with them when and if they finally did happen.

It reminded me again of words I often repeat in prayer:  "God grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change, Courage to change the things I can, and Wisdom to know the difference."  

Pendant shown at :
http://www.artfire.com/ext/shop/studio/lemonberrystudios
Good words. Important words.  And words I forget all too quickly.  

Mentoring and teaching people lately has brought home to me again the benefits of repetition in learning a new skill or a new way of living.  

It's not a sign of low intelligence or of poor moral character when we forget how to do something a new way or when we're unsure how to act in a situation which used to send us to bed with the covers pulled up over our heads. It's a sign we're learning, and we need repetition of the things and principles that matter in order to cement our new skill - or lifestyle - into our minds and/or hearts, as the case may be.  

And whether it's a skill or a lifestyle, one mistake doesn't mean we've failed.  It just means we need more practice, more repetition, in lots of various situations and circumstances, until finally it's the "new normal."  And that is FAR from useless. 

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Teaching and Learning

The last few days at work I've been teaching a couple of people some new skills.  I was honored to be asked; I'm excited to be able to pass on what I've learned.  And I've discovered something interesting.

When I was in my 20's, I thought that I would like to be a teacher - I had been told that I would be one and I figured that teachers worked in schools.  (Not all do, but it took me a while to think outside the box.) Since I'm a short person, I chose elementary school as my area of specialization, since I figured that most of the kids would be shorter than I was.  (I know - it was a pretty poor reason).  While I was doing my practicum, I learned a very important lesson.  I didn't like teaching people who didn't want to be taught, who were only there because it was mandatory.  They HAD to go to school; their hearts weren't in it - and soon, neither was mine.  

But in the stints I've had as a Sunday School teacher (adult class, so people wanted to come) and now in teaching these people at work, what I've discovered is that I love teaching people who want to learn.  

It's hard to describe the feeling of seeing someone understand something new for the first time after having it explained to him / her.  It's what every teacher lives for; I did see it when I was practice-teaching in elementary school.  Occasionally. I had a curriculum to guide me back then. But teaching adults has the added challenge of making ME think because while kids might look at you blankly if they don't understand (and you never know what it is they don't understand because they're too embarrassed to ask questions) adults who want to learn WILL ask questions.  The more they learn, the tougher the questions are - and even the more foundational questions make me think about why we do things a certain way and not a different way.  Explaining new information in terms that people can understand is a challenge, and it's helping me to think on my feet (click here for my previous post on that topic) - I stumble a bit, but I'm learning to roll with it and keep going.  

Hm!  Who knew?

Monday, December 12, 2011

Sitting with Pain

We live in an instant gratification society.  Fast food, online shopping and pre-packaged food (not to mention vacations and other kinds of things) make us accustomed to not having to wait for anything.  

We even have pills to take away pain (both physical and emotional) - and they act relatively quickly.  

Not often are we faced with the requirement to put up with the hurting.  But occasionally, there is nothing that can be done to fix something, and pain persists even after all means have been tried to relieve it.  

Sometimes it's necessary to "sit with the pain."  To allow it to happen, and to endure it until it's done.  Nowhere is this more a reality than in the emotional realm.  Oh, I know that there are happy pills - and that some cases of chronic depression, for example, can be treated with medication.  I'm not so much referring to that as I am to the normal kind of psychic discomfort - and some would say anguish - experienced by every human at one time or another.  

Studies now tell us that depression hurts.  Really.  It can have physical repercussions because it affects almost every body system!! The emotional side of us can really wreak havoc on our bodies. 

Depression.
Grief.
Rage.
Fear.

These things (and more) cause us to get sick - or sore.  It's not just "in the person's head."  It is real.  Psychological pain is real and it causes physical pain.  Who knew?  Probably every person who has ever suffered from depression or grieved the loss of a significantly significant other.  Most likely it's also anyone who has been in a major argument with someone, who holds a grudge - or who lives in constant fear of being hurt (or of being found out for hurting someone else). 

I'm not against a person taking medication if he or she is suffering from chronic depression.   I do believe that a lot of our emotionally-caused physical pain can be addressed if we deal with the cause of it - and I also believe that these things CAN be cured, without medication for some, and with the temporary use of medication for others.  However, it takes time - and commitment.  And that, unfortunately, is something that someone who is suffering emotionally doesn't want to hear.  That transition period between suffering and the cure - is the period during which the sufferer must - to some extent - "sit" with the pain. Feel it.  Don't hide from it.

And face it - and its source.

Yes, it's uncomfortable.  Yes, sometimes the emotions are overwhelming and there may even be disturbing ideas that come to the fore, and usually there are difficult memories.  But patience is a valuable virtue in this process, as is honesty - especially with the self. A program of recovery from the hurts of the past, especially one that involves a relationship with God before delving into those past hurts (while relying on Him), is a person's best shot at getting to the root of attitudes that sabotage mental and physical health.  


I remember being in that uncomfortable place - and occasionally I need to go there again, depending on the circumstances that bring previously buried or long-denied emotions to the surface.  I've sat with the pain, I've been through the process, and I've come out the other side better for having been there - and perhaps even more compassionate toward those who are still suffering and who want the pain to stop.  

No way do I claim to have arrived.  I still have lots of baggage.  But when I compare myself to three years ago, I know that I'm happier today than I ever dreamed of being then.  I got there by leaning pretty heavily on God and being committed to working through those feelings and memories, one at a time, and coming to a place of being able to let go of them.

If you are going through this process yourself, take heart.  It gets better.  As a friend of mine says, "It works if you work it, so work it 'cause you're worth it!"

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Ready for Christmas

Well, there are less than two weeks until Christmas morning.  How time flies!

Every year it gets harder and harder for me to find that special Christmas spirit I had when I was young and full of boundless energy.  Perhaps it's because as I get older I see more that jades me.  Perhaps. 

It could be that I am overwhelmed by the social expectations and the pressing crowds of people, both of which push me WAY outside my comfort zone.  Not to mention that a favorite gift that people tend to give to each other happens to be perfume, which they try out - in the store - before they buy. [Different post, different problem.]  ;)

Or perhaps I've allowed other things to creep in and rob me of the simple pleasures I used to enjoy a lot more often when I was younger: watching the lights sparkle off the tinsel, listening to the music the season has to offer, wrapping (or making) presents for those whom I love while imagining how much they'll appreciate them, planning a Christmas menu, making my famous deep-dish pumpkin pie (well, famous in my family anyway.) 

I do miss very much the old-fashioned Christmas Eve service, the kind with candles and singing those hard-to-play and almost as hard-to-sing carols, the kind of service that takes us back to the baby in the manger and doesn't focus on the gloom and doom that is all around us every day - I think we're aware enough to know there are people at war all over the world, and I want to hear about the peace inside - and the reason for it.  I miss that kind of Christmas message.  I miss it a lot.  

I would love to be more ready for Christmas ... and by ready I don't mean for me to have a whole lot of presents under the tree (although it would be nice to have the ones I ordered come in before the big day so that I can have them wrapped).  No, by "ready" I mean that I wish that my heart would be ready.  Sometimes I feel like there's such a hard crust on it, that it's so calloused by having to pay the bills and make a living that it's forgotten how to live.  I think that I might be more "ready" for Christmas year after year (starting with this year) if I were to make it a point to look after that calloused heart, to soften it with some soul-soothing music, to nurture it in reading uplifting words of hope and life, to rest it by taking more quality time to spend with its creator instead of running around half-crazed.  

It's really about time I got ready.

Friday, December 9, 2011

The Gift of Giving

This time of year, it's all around us... the idea of gifts and giving, presents and receiving.  

When we're small, we get very excited about the receiving part.  Okay, it's fun to get gifts, especially those ones that show that the person put some thought into it.  There's no denying it!

Source: (through Google Images)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/ethicallivingblog
/2008/dec/04/christmas
But as we grow up, we start to understand that there is a real gift in giving. There is such intrinsic reward in watching someone receive and appreciate a gift we've taken the time to pick out for him or her.  Whether it's the wonder on a child's face - or a tear of joy from a lonely old aunt - we start to learn the truth behind the saying, "It is more blessed to give than to receive."  

Not the obligatory kind, of course.  There's no enjoyment in that, only the repayment of an unspoken but very real debt.  Folks that use the gift-giving as a means of one-upmanship spoil the whole idea.   But real giving - the kind the other person doesn't expect and can't repay - is thrilling. It's a gift that gives back to the giver a hundredfold in satisfaction and happiness.  We were designed to enjoy it by One who knows the joy of giving.  

I could preach right now.  But I won't.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Thinking on my feet

The last several weeks I have been taking a class where occasionally I am called upon to give opinions on topics I don't know much about and have no warning about: impromptu topics.  

I knew it before and bemoaned it, and in the last few weeks I have re-discovered that I don't think very well on my feet.  I need time to reflect, to ponder.  More than just a few seconds.  This is one of the reasons I write rather than use any other means of communication.  

Often, I'm just not interested in the topic at hand.  Current events bore and depress me, so I usually refuse to read or listen to the news.  I haven't listened to radio on a regular basis since I was in my 30s.  I got tired of listening to twenty songs I hated to hear the one I hoped they would play.  And I found talk radio filled with nothing but idle prattle which might put me to sleep rather than stimulate me.  

This came home to me yesterday as I had to give a three to four-minute presentation on one of three given topics which were given to me just two minutes beforehand.  The two minutes were for preparation of what I wanted to say and how, and then I was to launch into it.  Moreover, the person who asked me to do this was a virtual stranger to me.  There was absolutely no rapport with this guy.

To top it off, I really wanted to do well, because in mid-January, I will have to do it for real - to keep my French-speaking levels up.

So I stumbled, backed up, repeated myself, made all the classic mistakes, and when I had exhausted all I could think of during the speech, couldn't figure out how to end it.  By the end of it, I was doing what is commonly known as "bullsh**ting." Grasping for words - literally not knowing what the next words out of my mouth were going to be.  

My problem was that I knew that my skills were being judged and I got nervous and insecure.  To top it all off, the presentation wasn't in my mother tongue and I knew that my grammar would be scrutinized as well.  I braced myself for the criticism I would receive.  But all the fellow said was that I had gone over the time, and that I had gone into too much detail while using a personal example.  

I know he was being gracious.  But the fact remained that this realm of not being able to articulate what I think "on the spot" is a known weakness of mine.  I knew it; I've always known it.  And I have always settled for just living with it.  

The Serenity Prayer says, "God, grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change, Courage to change the things I can, and Wisdom to know the difference."  I'm getting better at accepting things I can't change.  I still need a LOT of Wisdom.  And I'm finding that there are more things I thought I couldn't change ... that it appears I can.  

Like thinking on my feet.  Apparently it is a skill that can be learned!!  Who knew?  I went looking on Google this morning briefly, before anyone else was awake, "how to think on your feet."  I was surprised that there was so much written on the subject, and came up with some simple strategies to help me relax and structure my thoughts "on the fly".  As I get closer and closer to my real impromptu presentation, I hope to be able to use some of these techniques.  

One more way to grow.  On my feet.  Huh.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Buying Christmas

If I've heard it once this season I have heard it a dozen times. 

"Are you all ready for Christmas?"  

Hm.  I have to fight the temptation to say, "Do you really want to know? because if you do, I've got half an hour..."  

I like Christmas.  Christmas DAY that is.  All the stuff that leads up to it, I could do without. Shopping for people who don't really need anything, to get insincere thank yous - trying to figure out what I want and communicate that to the people who want to know so that they don't give me something I will never use.  And the food!  cookies, chocolates, short-breads, donuts, crunchy munchies - and for some reason a marked increase in the caffeine intake.  (Maybe it's the shorter days.)  Not to mention all the "fixings" associated with Christmas dinner.  And the stress!!!!!

I have to wonder what all the hooplah is about anyway.  

I'm sure that St. Nicholas would spin in his grave if he knew what had become of his generous idea of giving to those who could never afford to pay him back.  I'm so sick of the commercialism leading up to midnight on December 24 ... that for years I have been tempted to do something drastic.  Like get something for someone who can't possibly afford to pay me back, INSTEAD of get yet another toy or article of clothing for people who could well do without it.  I know one person who, every year, went into debt for the next 11 months to "buy Christmas" - as he called it - for his wife and kids.  What a crippling legacy to leave his family!  The only thing that produced was a brood of children who thought it was their right to be inundated with gifts - sort of like the Whos in Whoville before the Grinch set them straight. 

We've made Christmas about glitz and glitter, sparkle and shine.  We've made it about getting and grabbing, rather than giving and grace.  

And the giving we do is more likely to be about guilt than generosity.  

I think there needs to be a paradigm shift in how folks think about Christmas.  Yes, it is the time of year we remember the greatest gift ever given.  But not because we - by any stretch of the imagination - deserved it.  This was a free gift made available to us, a gift which cost the Creator everything He had.  He made it available to pitiful people who had no hope of ever giving Him anything that would cost that much - He KNEW we could never even come close to being able to reciprocate.  Though we were morally, spiritually and in every other way bankrupt, He gave His best and most precious gift - Himself - with the full foreknowledge that He would be rejected.  

Why?  Not for tinsel and tinkling bells.  Not for snow and Christmas carols.  

It was solely for Relationship that He gave it all, spent it all.  Relationship with us. And this is the miracle of Christmas - not the peripheral stuff like angels singing and ho ho ho and presents under the tree.  Relationship.  Love.  Hope.  Rest.  Peace. A Savior was born for one reason and one reason only: to die as a ransom for people who couldn't possibly pay their own debt of shame and guilt, to give hope to the hopeless, grace to the fallen, mercy to the condemned.

We can't buy that. No one can.  But HE DID.

Monday, December 5, 2011

Celebrating growth

It happened again.  

The first time I noticed it, my eldest child was 4 years old.  

When she was two, people always told me to leave her to "cry it out" in kids' church.  I knew how it felt to be abandoned.  So I stayed.  "She'll separate from me when she's ready."  People looked at me like I had three heads.  

But it happened.  As I said, she was four; her younger sister and I were dropping her off at playschool on her first day.  I had parked in a limited time zone - and told her the truth: if I didn't go back to the car, the police would make Mommy pay money to get her car back.  

"Do you HAVE to go?" she said.  
I gave a wry look and said, "I'm afraid so, honey."  

Source of this image through Google Images at:
http://www.popscreen.com/v/37ug/Perfect_Strangers_-_The_Dance_of_Joy
She stared at me for a couple of seconds, as if drinking in everything about that moment.  Then she shrugged and said with a smile, "Okay Mommy.  Bye!" and she whirled around and started to play happily with the other kids.

As soon as I was back in the car and on the road again, I let out a whoop of joy! It had happened - just like I knew it would.  It was the threshold of a new era in her life. She felt confident and comfortable in her own relationship with me and with herself to be able to let go on her own.  What a triumph that was!

And today - as I was saying - it happened again.  She got her first paying job.  

The last couple of years has been leading up to this moment - I've watched her blossom in knowledge and confidence - turning into the amazing young woman I always knew she would be.  And today was just the opening of another door, just like that day in preschool.  A new job in her chosen field - loving the work, her co-workers, and the organization for which she is working.  What more can a person ask for!  And it couldn't have happened to a nicer person.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

The Heart Whisperer

National Geographic Channel produces a show starring Cesar Millan, also known as "The Dog Whisperer."  He understands dogs in a way that works miracles when people have tough cases of dogs' unwanted behavior.  I love watching the show, and I've used his techniques on occasion to salvage what might have been disastrous situations.  

Cesar Millan (left) and Pat Parelli (right) sharing a photo
op, found this at
http://www.westernhorsereview.com/blogs/
my-stable-life/dog-whisperer-meets-parelli/
One show I particularly liked was when he went to work with Pat Parelli  (also known as the Horse Whisperer). A lady at a therapeutic riding school was having a problem with a couple of the school dogs, and there was also a horse that was giving some problems - so she invited both men to come and help them.  

Cesar jumped at the chance to meet Pat because in essence, they work in the same field - just with different species.  Both of them rehabilitate the animals' mental or emotional problems, and train the owners to understand and work with the strengths and mentality of the animals in order to produce a balanced, happy family unit, be it a pack or herd. 

It was amazing to watch these guys working - and working together. 
Click here for the whole episode at NatGeo (The video will open in a new tab - and is about 45 minutes, but the first 32 minutes shows them working at the riding school.  If the video stops, saying that there's a commercial break, just close the tab, come back here, re-click the link, and move the slider on the video to just after the stopping place [dot] where you left off...)   :D

Okay, I have to admit, I watched the video again.  Wow.

Just as there is a dog whisperer and a horse whisperer, there is a Heart Whisperer.  All our lives we've been conditioned by people in our pasts - whether they intended the result or not - who have caused us to be fearful, dominant, disruptive, or just angry all the time.  But the Heart Whisperer is different.  He knows how we feel, how we think, what makes us tick.  Dogs need exercise, discipline, and affection.  Horses need safety, comfort, and play.  And humans need love, acceptance, and respect.  

The Heart Whisperer knows that because He created humans.  A voluntary relationship with Him is one that gives all three: love, acceptance, and respect - first from Him to us, and in growing measure, from us to Him. It is this relationship that is core.  It is foundational. The other two relationships (that of ourselves with ourselves, and that of ourselves with others) hinge upon that primary one with Him, and have the same three components: love, acceptance, and respect. 

The relationship has to be voluntary.  We were not made to be robots.  The process is slow.  We don't learn as quickly as horses or dogs.  With us, it takes time to really "get it."  Fortunately, His patience is endless.

Because He is the source of all love, His love is unconditional.  Because He is the source of all acceptance, His acceptance is total. And because He is the source of respect, the respect He gives is ultimate.  In relationship with Him, we learn how to love, accept, and respect Him first - not by means of a gigantic guilt trip or by striving all the time to follow rules which are impossible to follow - but by allowing ourselves to believe in and open ourselves to His love, acceptance and respect for us.  It is then that we can offer ourselves those same gifts, and then eventually give them to others.  

There is so much shouting around us to try to force or manipulate us into behaving this way or that way - trying to wind us up, to turn us into nice little toy soldiers.  But His kingdom doesn't follow the methods and philosophy of the world.  No, His realm is of the heart - and He continues to whisper His message to our hearts.  If we'll listen.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Buzz

It's been an interesting five weeks.

After a flare-up of a lower back condition at work, I went to the doctor and got a referral to physiotherapy.  The treatments have been helping, as have the exercises. 

Photo through Google Images at:
http://www.lakecharleschiropractor.com/subPage.aspx?
pageName=Electrotherapy&masterPage=treatment
I go to my treatments two to three times a week.  My physiotherapist lays out a moist heating pad covered by towels and I lie down on that.  Then she puts large electrodes on my lower back, hooked up to a device on a cart, which appears to be a super-sized TENS machine... and turns it up and up, until I can feel the vibrations penetrating into the deep muscles in my lower back.

The bed is adjustable, so I have my knees up, and am laying on my back on a slight incline.  I spend forty minutes in that position, soaking up that glorious deep heat and feeling the "buzz" - as she calls it.  The electricity activates and relaxes the muscles, as well as works with the heat to draw the blood to the area to promote healing of the irritated muscles.  The combined effect is quite physically potent.  

That's not the only way it is powerful.  Spending regular time looking after myself, in a peaceful place, forcing myself to be still, to do absolutely nothing, quieting my mind ... has paid spiritual dividends.  It's the perfect opportunity to spend some time praying, for one - and it also helps me to wind down and get off the hamster wheel of my mind from the stresses of the day. It reminds me to prioritize, to seek peace, to pursue balance in my life, to let the non-essentials drop away.  The spiritual contact gives me a spiritual "buzz" - it activates and relaxes my spirit at the same time, it promotes inner healing, and it makes it possible for me to function.  

Functional is good.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Lessons Learned in Class

The last few days I've been in an immersion class surrounded by nothing but the French language.

By choice.

I am bilingual, but needed a bit of rust knocked off my parlez-vous.  So - I asked for the course: five hours a week for ten weeks and an extra week spent full-time in class.

Source: through Google Images:
http://www.gorbould.com/blog/index.php/
2007/07/cbc-signage-of-the-apocalypse-french-class/
The first day of full-time was exhausting, really hard on the old grey matter - nothing but French for seven hours straight per day.  As time went on, I got a bit better. We all did. Our prof noted that fact today, and we looked at each other in mixed surprise and pleasure.  We'd noticed a change - but we thought it was just our imagination.  

I've noticed some parallels between this process of immersion and the new lifestyle I have been learning.  Both are exhausting and take a great deal of effort and concentration at first.  Both, when worked at consistently, get consistently better and the desired result comes more easily than before.  And both require commitment to keep those skills sharp.  

Errors can happen.  And they do.  But (especially with a good mentor) we learn from them, make a mental note, and then move on.  Though going through it might be difficult, there's nothing inherently complicated about the process.  

And the results are their own reward.  

Monday, November 28, 2011

A Long and Winding Road

Learning to live a totally new lifestyle, extinguish old patterns of behavior, and establish new ways of relating to God, to the self, and to others is an arduous journey.  It takes a long time.  There are many unexpected turns, many twists which make the road much longer than one would expect ... or want.  

Sometimes it appears as though I am covering much the same ground over and over again.  I didn't understand why this should be so. And then I saw a photograph of a mountain pass in the Swiss Alps.  The road seemed to fold upon itself so many times, covering what was essentially the same terrain, zig-zagging slowly up the side of the mountain.  

Source via Google Images :
http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/gallery/
2010/sep/18/motorbike-road-trips-drives
I plotted a more direct route with my finger.  But that route would have been far too steep for anyone to be able to travel it either by car or by bike, much less on foot.  

Then it became clear to me. My chosen path (the one I traced with my finger) might have been shorter, but it would have been impossible. The roundabout path though, the one which seemed to take too long, was actually achievable.  

Little matter that it is a long and winding road.  If the goal is to arrive at destination, the length of the trip needn't matter as long as it can be sustained from start to finish.  

Going over the same terrain can cement lessons learned and make them a permanent part of my psyche.  That it takes so long can develop patience and give an opportunity to enjoy the journey rather than rail against how far away from the end I am. 

Does this lesson the frustration of the moment? 

Sometimes. Sometimes not.  

But it does more to give me an understanding of the road I am traveling, and it allows me to keep from beating myself up for not being as far up the mountain as I think I should be by now. 

Occasionally people misunderstand my reactions, and I fall prey to the old pattern of caring what they think instead of knowing where I am in my journey.  At such times an off-handed comment from a family member or someone close to me can really hurt.  It doesn't necessarily mean that I have not progressed.  What it means is that I'm feeling my feelings as I feel them, and not pushing them down - which is a good thing.  It also means that I've temporarily taken my eyes off my journey and have been defining myself by what others might think instead of what I know - which is not so good. Sometimes it takes such a jolt for me to realize that I've wandered off the path a bit.  Usually it's not that far off, so I can get back on track without too much trouble: an apology, a mental adjustment and re-commitment to letting go, prayer, and self-care.  

And then I can start to enjoy the scenery again. 

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Strength in Numbers (SiN)

There's something I've noticed in society that has insidiously crept its way into the culture of faith.  It's even touted as honourable and desirable. People buy into it and play follow the leader, no matter how dangerous it is. 

It's a fallacy.  It's based on a complete lie. An age-old lie. 

Found this photo via
Google Images at:
http://www.picturethisgallery.com
/Artists/Terry_Gilecki.asp
It's the idea that human beings can change God's mind, can make Him do this or that or the other thing, just by joining forces, banding together, and overwhelming Him with requests by as many people as possible to do (or not allow) a certain thing.

It's based on the lie that we have been told since the very beginning: that we know better than He does and that we have a say in what happens to us and/or to our friends and family. 

We don't.  

You know, some folks think that's what prayer is about: getting God to do what you want Him to do.  Which spawns that other fallacy that more people getting on His case is going to get a faster and more acceptable answer.

But it isn't.  It isn't in either case.  

Prayer is about friendship with God.  It has nothing to do with getting Him to do something we want done.  Much as we might want it.  If He could be swayed by the number of people who ask for a particular thing, He would be no more than a glorified politician.  How unutterably disappointing that would be!  No, it's more about allowing Him inside of those lonely, parched places in our lives and letting Him take over and trusting His decisions.  It's not about us, it's about Him.  

Strength In Numbers (acronym: SIN - that tells me something right there) in what we call "prayer" is about making ourselves bigger, making God look smaller.  It's lobbying.  It's manipulating.  It's coercing.  It's imposing our will on His.  

It's ludicrous.  

It stems from a basic lack of belief that one person can matter to Him - that He would listen to one person and care about what matters to him or her.  It comes from a firm faith in the ogre-ness of God: that He's a killjoy, that He is a tyrant and needs to be appeased, placated, flattered, convinced to be good.  

Nothing could be further from the truth.  
He invites each of us into His heart .... and we break it by trying to twist His arm.