Archive for friends

Broken and Beautiful. (Finally.)

This is long. And it was written for an English class. I’d love feedback, both on the level of hey guys, here’s my story, and hey guys, I want an A on this paper. You are talented writers. HELP.

We want life to work out, the way it does in the movies. Romantic heroes, beautiful heroines, devoted best friends, and hateful villains twisting and turning as they make their way through The Plot. Beautiful moments stacked back to back until we sit in our seats, unable to move, because we have felt so deeply and fallen so quickly in love. That’s what we want life to be. Pragmatists will caution that life is never like that. Friends betray, hearts shatter, and happily ever after, the cynic will inform you, is a fantasy – worse still, a fantasy that is a waste of your time.
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If I leave here tomorrow…

I’m broken hearted tonight.
But two of my very best friends have just left. One left the state, moving to the Midwest, and the other left the country!

HP has been like the big sister I never really had, someone to go to with problems from the major to the inconsequential. I feel like a piece of my heart is driving to Kansas right now. Coming home from her going away party, I cried so hard that I had to pull my car over.

KH is departing for Colombia, to receive training in ministry and sharing the gospel. She’s got a beautiful heart, and a beautiful soul, and I know that the Lord will use her well… But MAN. I want here HERE.

I feel like I’m just doubting God’s plan for my life. I don’t doubt the work He’s doing in the lives of KH & HP. But I wonder why He keeps dropping people in my life, only for me to watch them walk away. I wonder why I have finally made deeper connections than ever before – only to have them ripped away.

It hurts.

Even as I see Him working in my life to bring new friendships, to deepen other relationships, I mourn the ones that are changing due to distance. I mourn the loss of hugs and late night drives and trials shared and triumphs celebrated. I want my friends back.

I’m just very sad tonight.

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Grocery Shopping…

My Big Girl Place To Live (BGPTL) is a petite little basement apartment. Upstairs live my friends, J & L. J is a great girl and an amazing wife and someone I admire a GREAT deal. L is a seminary student and a pretty cool fella.

So, tonight, J knocked at my door and asked if I wanted to go to the grocery store with her. Sure, why not?

Who knew grocery shopping could be such fun?

We laughed and talked and giggled, made jokes, made other people laugh in the grocery store, and generally had a blast.

Things accomplished:

  • I am left realizing, again, how much I very much want to get married.
  • The guy in the yogurt aisle knows too.
  • I have realized the connection of female friendship is undeniably wonderful in one’s life.
  • I often do things that absolutely don’t reflect what I want them to. (See: Boy I heart thinking that I’m flirting with a boy that I heart but I don’t… HEART. See?)

Anyways. It was a good night! So, here’s to you, J. You’re awesome.

Up in the next few days: Coffee and dinner with a good pal on Wednesday, coffee with another pal on Thursday, bible study Thursday night, and hopefully some fun shenanigans in the upcoming weekend.

Not on the slate? Writing a novel. Bah.

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Rock & Roll, bee-yotch!

Okay. So, I have, for some silly reason, signed up for both National Novel Writing Month and National Blog Posting Month. This means that I have pledged to both write a 50,000 word novel and post on my blog every day. Go me! Insanity becomes me, right?

So, does anyone have any ideas for posts? I’m sure I’ll need them.

In the meantime, I leave you with a quote (as I am so fond of quotations.)

“The vision that you glorify in your mind, the ideal that you enthrone in your heart – this you will build your life by, and this you will become.”

- James Allen

For this month? My vision includes the following:

  • Blogging once a day
  • Writing a 50,000 word novel
  • Doing an in-depth bible study on the character of God.
  • Spending less time at the computer and more time with friends, building relationships.
  • Seeking God with all my heart.

Hm. Well, I’m writing a Christian novel. But I’ll be on the computer a lot. So we’ll see, I guess. There’s a lot on my mind, and I’ve got the Chronicles of Narnia on the brain.

“Aslan’s on the move…”

Yeah, He certainly is in my life.

I’m afraid this might make little to no sense, but… It does to me, at least.  And just think. Thirty days of rambling! Yay!

(Hilarious: WordPress’s spell check doesn’t recognize “blog” or “wordpress” as words. Awesome.)

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BFF (And Ever, and Ever…)

The most amazing thing happened to me today:

I told someone that she was my best friend and she replied. “Good, becuase you’re mine.”

That’s the first time that’s ever happened. I’ve always felt less important to people than they are to me. This is almost more exciting than finding a husband!

Best friends are forever, after all. And she’s mine!

Yay!

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Oh, y’all. I’m okay. Just prone to melodramatic si…

Oh, y’all. I’m okay. Just prone to melodramatic sighs and tearful confessions to my best friends.

Thursday night, I went to my church homegroup, a close-knit group of about 12-14 people who meet every week at “the boy’s house” to discuss life, love, Jesus, and all the rest. I was quiet during dinner, and then slipped outside to sit on the front porch.

It was quiet, and cold, and I sat alone, wrapped in a blanket. My friend J. came out, and sat beside me. “What is it?” He asked softly.

And I fell apart.

And it was okay. And I’m okay. Sometimes, you just have to lose it, so you realize that you’re okay. And sometimes, all you need is a hand holding yours and a few soft whispers into a cold March night.

I’m a lucky girl.

Sometimes, I lose sight of that.

Not today. Not tonight.

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Not the TV show, dude. The people.


In talking to the love of my life, Lara, I was thinking about friendships.

It’s complicated stuff. There are bracelets and rituals; songs and photo albums; books and scores of quotes devoted to the idea. Friendship. What do friends do? Get drunk with you? Hang out? Watch movies? Cry with you? Bail you out of jail?

Webster’s says:

friend·ship 1: the state of being friends 2: the quality or state of being friendly : friendliness

Well, that wasn’t helpful. The state of being friends? What does that mean? Friends, according to Webster, can be, “one attached to another by affection or esteem.” Or, helpfully, “Capitalized, a member of the Society of Friends. A Quaker.” Well, I’m not a Quaker. I don’t even like oatmeal!

Friendship. It constantly changes, and evolves. Friendships have a lifespan. Slowly, but surely, I’m beginning to realize it. As old friendships quietly fade, I make new friends. Some down the road, some across the world. It’s fascinating, really. The quiet depth when a friend looks at you and says, “I love you.”

To be equally considered is the agony of the moment when a friendship ends – maybe it unravels like a thrift store sweater, or perhaps it shatters like an icicle slowly melted. Maybe it doesn’t end, just gets put into a drawer to be pulled out at a later date, when things might fit better.

I’m friendly to a lot of people. I have affection for a lot of people. I toss the word around, a lot. Use it for people whose name I cannot remember: “Hey, Friend!” But I’m coming to realize that friendship is something more. It is reciprocal. If someone doesn’t want to be your friend, face it: they aren’t. It’s tough. Sometimes, friendship means facing someone head on and saying it. Bullshit. You are full of shit.

Making friends is difficult for me. I tend to believe that everyone else is SO much cooler than I am. It’s usually shocking for me when I discover someone wants to be my friend. But I’m making new friends. Realizing I’m cooler than I thought I was. Realizing that I don’t have to try so hard. I just have to love people and be myself.

And answer the phone at 4am. Because, dear friend, the answer is yes. I will bail you out of jail when you get arrested for protesting George W. Bush. I’ll even bring you a change of clothes and I won’t laugh at you. Too much.

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a conversation. in three scenes.

Scene: Matt’s Living Room. Thursday night. 6pm.

Him: “Why so sad, sweetheart?”
Me: shrug, sit down beside him on the loveseat.
Him: slides an arm around me. “You want to talk about it?”
Me: shakes head, snuggles close.
Him: Long silence. He strokes my hair, kisses my forehead.
Him: “What happened?”
Me: it’s hard to force the whisper out. “I just did something really, really stupid.”
Him: “It’ll be okay.”
Me: big, shaking sobs. my whole body heaves with emotion. I have never before moaned with emotional pain.
Him: Holds tighter. “I love you. It’s okay.”
Me: “God hates me. I’m so sorry.”
Him: “God never hates you. Don’t apologize. You’ve already been forgiven.”

***

Scene: Matt’s Living Room. Thursday night. 10pm.
I’m laying on the couch, my head in his lap. He’s stroking my hair with one hand, his other hand on my arm, holding me.
Me: “I should go and let you sleep.”
Him: “Crash here.”
Me: “Okay.”
Him: “Can you stand?”
Me: “I don’t know.”
Him: “I’ll help you.”
Me: “I’m sorry.”
Him: “I know.”

He helps me to his bed. I crawl in, exhausted.

***

Scene: Matt’s bed. 3am.

Me: sobbing again. can’t breathe. can’t stop crying.
Him: wakes up slowly. “Sweetheart?”
Me: can’t talk. can’t breathe. can’t stop crying.
Him: spoons me, wrapping me up in his arms, kisses my hair. “It’s okay. You’re a good girl.”
Me: “I’m so scared.”
Him: “You’re safe. I have you.”
Me: “Don’t let go.”
Him: kisses my forehead. strokes my arm, holds me, murmurs softly, nothing in particular.
Him: whispers softly. “I’m not letting go. You’re safe here.”

***

Honest talk and real answers about sex and God in Lauren Winner’s “Real Sex: The Naked Truth About Chastity.”

She wrote Girl Meets God, as well as several other books and deals firmly with the challenges about being a Christian in a modern world soaked in sex. Excellent book, excellent perspective.

Also, she’s a cool girl. I met her at the Jubilee Conference in Pittsburgh, and she was COOL. She’s getting her Masters of Divinity at Duke University which is just down the road, and is friends with my chaplain. She’s cool!

Read the book. It’s good, I promise.

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Please tell me who you are. (Or: 10 reasons why I am a comment whore.)

When I first started writing this, no one commented. I wasn’t commenting on other people’s blogs, so they didn’t comment on mine. Mostly, because… they didn’t know I existed. Dur.

Now, I read AND comment.

And it makes me SO happy when people comment back.

Lara, Angela, Haley, Alynda, Lady M., Mocha Momma. Others who pop in from time to time and surprise me. (I guess that’s really SEVEN reasons why I’m a comment whore.)

It makes me delightfully happy when people pop in and comment on the stuff I’ve written. Sometimes, a gentle word of encouragement from Lara is all that’s kept me sane. Mocha definitely made me grin with her response to my Mall story. Lady M is one of the kindest people I’ve encouraged in the blogosphere. Angela is my book buddy. Alynda is my friend down under.

I’m starting to feel a part of a community. And it’s nice. I like it. And, so far? 77 comments in the history of my blog.

So, if you’re reading and I didn’t mention you, tell me who you are. Leave me a link to your blog, so I can check it out.

I heart you guys!

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A post in which I am angry and fail at trying to cover it with funny.

(Warning: This post contains some harsh language beyond what I would consider normal, even for a gal who curses like a sailor as I am inclined to do.)

Today, I went to the movies with a good friend I’ve had forever, a fellow named Malakai. Kai’s black. I’m not. Suffice to say, in 2006, neither of us gave much thought to this issue.* We went to the Big Regional Mall. BRM is what I call my “Home mall”. That is to say, I know it inside and out, worked there in high school, and basically, it owns my soul. (Nordstroms. Cole Haan. Macy’s. Apple. Cheesecake Factory. Urban Outfitters. Need I say more?)

We went and saw “Dreamgirls”. I sat next to an elderly African American lady who smiled, patted my hand, and told me about her days in a girl group in the 50s. The movie was amazing– who knew people would spontaneously burst into applause? At a movie. Like… Not a stage show. A movie. We did. The whole theater.

So, we’re leaving. We pick the car up from valet (Yes, I realize how that sounds. Shut up. It was impossible to find a place to park. $4 not to have to park my car during the holiday season? Sounds brilliant to me.) I’m driving my trusty SUV and we head out. I know this mall; I know this parking lot. I follow the traffic pattern through a series of small mall parking lot intersections, clearly designed by Satan and implemented by his bitches.

A very, very angry woman in an ugly burnt orange SUV about four times as big as my petite SUV tries to barrell through a stop sign and hit me. Oh. I should probably mention that owing to the fact that it’s 60 degrees (F), I have the windows down. Blaring rap music. Because I can. This woman, in this SUV, screeches to a stop as I’m caught in a bit of parking lot traffic. She throws her door open, as does her male companion. They’re shouting at me, screaming at me, but I can’t make it out. I turn down the music.

“I didn’t have a stop sign!” I called.

“… GODDAMNED NIGGER LOVER! MOTHERFUCKING NIGGER!”

“…”

(Dear Reader, that would be the sound of my jaw dropping and Kai’s middle finger flipping up in sheer reflex.)

They’re advancing on my car, and I realize that I, along with Kai, are about to get in serious, serious trouble. As if by the Grace of God, traffic clears, and I floor it. I’m shaking, laughing and crying all at the same time, while I try to drive. Kai is cursing up a storm, furious that my safety, his safety was threatened. I reach over, and take his hand. He reaches over, puts his hand in my hair.

“You okay, baby?”
“Yeah. I’m fine.”
“Good.”

He nods at me, and we sit at the light in a troubled silence, waiting to turn left, to head for home, eight miles away, to our liberal college mecca where that never would have happened. I literally, at that moment, had feared for my physical safety. But even now, I wonder about the damage to his dignity. To my dignity. Because we’re southern. And white. And black. And all of those things wrap up in a messy ball of identity that seems impossible to sort out or tame.

I take great pride on being from the South. I treasure it. My accent. The way I think about things. The idiocyncracies, and the silly turns of words, and ridiculous superstitions. The way small towns are, but especially small southern towns. The sweet tea and the magnolias and the postman who’s been your postman since you were 3. The high school teacher who you invite to your wedding and the parents of your friends who smile and stop to chat with you in the grocery store. It’s whistling dixie and being delightfuly, amazingly southern.

But there’s an ugly side to the south. And it hurts, when it’s thrown in my face; smacking me and knocking me into the mud. It’s the accent. The silly turn of words that seems innocent but means something nasty. The Flag, and The War, and whistlin’ dixie. The poverty and the ignorance and the hate and the violence. It’s being inexplicably, painfully southern.

Kai’s been my friend for a long time. He’s lovingly nicknamed me, “The Whitest White Girl” ever because of my fair (not pale, fair, damnit) complexion and my geeky taste in country music. He does admit, however, that due to the Otis Redding, James Brown, Sam Cooke, and Kanye on my pink iPod, I have a bit of soul.

He’s one of the only people I can honestly say has seen me cry, throw up, and pass out. Sometimes, all at once. (Don’t ask. You don’t want to know!) He’s that kind of man. You know the kind I’m talking about. The one who holds your hair back, or wipes away your tears, or undresses you as much as modest and decency will allow and then tucks you into his bed and sits beside you all night, watching you sleep. To make sure you’re all right.

Nigger lover indeed.

They can kiss my pretty white freckled ass.

We drove home. Rap music blaring. Windows down.

Holding hands the whole way.

*This is not to say that I don’t understand there are still a ton of race relation problems all over this nation, particuarly in the American south, but. Seriously. The *mall*. I live in a pretty socially, if not politically, liberal area, too. Who says that anymore? Who acts that way? In public? Fuck off, you ignorant fucktarts.

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