Hope.

I’ve been suffering through pre-Christmas since early October when Wal-Mart decided to put out their leftover Christmas items – dusty boxes of greeting cards, ornaments, flattened wreaths. Each week it seems the store has slowly been gathering momentum: putting out more decorations, newer cards, bigger fake trees, piping Christmas songs through the P.A. system. I’m not a big fan of holidays for a lot of reasons and there are times when I wish I could just blow it all off and go on with the day as if it were any other day. But no one else I know feels the same way that I do, so I push through it all and get to the other side of the holiday.

Now, I’m not anti-Christmas. I like the church-y Christmas stuff a lot. I’ve been going to church almost my entire life, but never did the Advent thing until I started going to the Presbyterian church and it’s given me some new perspectives on the season. I love Christmas Eve services and all the families being together and the larger church family being together (plus, we do candles…fire in church…awesome!) . Honestly, I even like a few of the Christmas carols.

I suppose you could say I’m torn between enjoying the holiday and despising it immensely.  The secular Christmas with the gift giving, and trees, and sales, and annoying commercials really put a damper on the whole season.  But looking at God’s gift to us and all the awesome things attached to it – that’s what saves me from just blowing off the whole thing all together.  The first candle of Advent – the one we lit this morning – is the candle of Hope. That’s what a lot of us (especially me) need this time of year – hope.

Hope that finances will balance out.
Hope that God keeps His promises.
Hope that loneliness doesn’t feel so lonely.
Hope that something will change for the better.
Hope that a dream or two will come true.

This time of year is when all hope can seem lost – it’s cold, it’s dark…people can seem fake, rude, presumptive, egotistic…church can even be a place of contention at times.  But our hope doesn’t rest in the weather or other people or even the church. It rests in Jesus – the one who can calm our fears, ease our tensions and stresses, and comfort our loneliness.  When it all seems like a little too much to handle, take a minute to think about our Hope through Jesus.

.much love. sheth.

Junk.

When I was in high school I worked for my dad in construction and my coworkers were always seedy men – guys with stories that would make anyone uncomfortable because of their crudeness and vulgarity.  Many of these men were hard workers – a good example for me at a young age.  But they also had no conscience, no self-control, no modesty – a bad example for me at a young age.  They shared their life with me as we worked trimming out a house or shingling a roof.  Their jokes are still rattling around in my mind; their stories of debauchery still linger.

It wasn’t always the crusty and lowbrow men that added things to my mind.  When I first went to college the internet was just gaining momentum and friends were emailing friends dirty pictures, crude jokes, and links to websites.  It was a time of unabated freedom for me because in high school we didn’t have the internet at home [and we rarely used it in school], so getting to college and having all this information available to me was like an avalanche.  There before me was a whole world of information, humor, music, thoughts, and ideas.

And let’s be honest, some of it was from my own choices – the music that I’ve listened to, the books I’ve read, the people I’ve been with.  Sometimes I knew something would be vulgar or crude or offensive and I wanted to listen to it, like George Carlin’s “Seven Words You Can’t Say on Television” or Lenny Bruce’s “To Is a Preposition…”  Other times I had no idea what something was about and it all snuck up on me at once, an appalling blindside to my morals.

So here I am, now in my 30’s, with all this junk in my brain.  All these tasteless jokes, these dirty songs, images forever burned into my consciousness.  It’s frightening, really, because I don’t want any of this in my mind.  I can’t help but think of all the useful stuff I could be using that space for – like how to find the center of a circle with only a ruler, or knowing all the states and their capitals, or remembering important historical dates.

I pray every day that all this junk will be taken away from me, because I don’t want it to be a part of my life anymore.  But it’s hard, too, because for better or worse all this stuff formed me into the person that I am now.  I now recognize what’s good and what’s bad for me.  And at the same time I suppose some of this stuff is going to be stuck with me for a long, long time.  Like the theme song from The Brady Bunch.

much love. sheth.

Toddler Jesus is Better Than Me.

Even as a small child, Jesus had the remarkable ability to love his neighbors in a way that we rarely do.  Matthew 2 tells the story here.  We often think of these three guys on camels riding in the desert guided by a star.  Weird hats, flashy clothes, rings on their index fingers, long pointy beards.  One of whom is probably non-white skinned…just to keep the story more exciting!  But we don’t think about the guys themselves – they weren’t Jews.   They didn’t know God. They were strangers.  They were foreigners.  But they came to honor the Messiah.  Joseph and Mary opened their doors to these men and let them present gifts to their son.  They didn’t just give gifts, either – they “…bowed down and worshiped him.”

We’re called to love.  We’re called to love as Jesus loved -by sacrificing, giving, encouraging, teaching, helping, living for others before ourselves.  We’re called to be less and help others to be more.  Matthew 22:39 says we are to “Love your neighbor as yourself.”  The word for neighbor used in this verse is ‘plēsion’, meaning “…any other man irrespective of race or religion with whom we live or whom we chance to meet…”  That pretty much means anyone.

Many times I hear my non-Christian or non-church attending friends talk about how hypocritical Christians are – saying one thing and doing another…called to love, but exclusive.  And part of me thinks they’re right.  Some Christians are unloving.  Some are racist, homophobic, and xenophobic; they don’t like people in different social or economic classes.  They’re afraid of change, afraid of new things, afraid of what or who isn’t in their idea of ‘Christian’.

How many times do we have the chance to love as Jesus loved?  Not just to the ones we’re comfortable with loving, but the ones we don’t even know?  How often do you have the chance to love the homeless, the sick, and the weary?  How often do you have the chance to love Muslims, Hindis, Sikhs, atheists – people who don’t agree at all with your beliefs?  How often do you have the chance to love people of other races, other sexual orientations, other income levels?

These are our neighbors.

They need to see Jesus’ love as much as we do.

They need to know Jesus’ love.

They need to see us expressing that love.

.much love. sheth.

The Postman Always Worries.

I’ve been working for the Post Office for two years – I’ve only stuck with one other job this long.  It’s not that I haven’t liked my other jobs; I’ve just never been in one place that long of a period of time.  It’s been a great 2 years at the post office – I like my co-workers, I love spending time with them talking about their families and learning about their life outside of the building.  I enjoy the camaraderie we have each morning as we all work hard to get out of the office and onto the pavement.

I love my customers and actually look forward to seeing them every day.  I work hard to make sure everyone gets their mail in a timely fashion.  I try to help the older people on my route by taking their mail to their door, or taking their packages inside for them.  I greet everyone with a smile – not because it’s the right thing to do, but because I am actually happy to be doing what I do.

I came into this job after a year and a half of being unemployed.  I spent a year and a half doing odd jobs here and there, but nothing steady enough to pay my bills.  It was scary, disheartening, and emotionally draining on my life.  When I was hired with the Post Office a huge burden was lifted off my shoulders.  And it’s been a great two years since.

I can’t say my work is always sunshine and lollipops – there are days when I think I’m never going to be able to get done.  When I started there were days that I wanted to quit after working 15 hours and delivering mail in the dark.  I get frustrated when things don’t go right, or a package is lost in the system, or a customer’s letter is shredded by the sorting machines.  Because I get the blame.  I take it, too, because I’m usually the only one the customers see and someone has to be apologetic.  But I keep at it because it’s a good place to work.

With the Postmaster’s announcement on February 6th cancelling Saturday delivery, a lot of questions began swirling through my mind.  I’m mainly worried about what’s going to happen to me.  Selfish as it is, it’s still my biggest concern.  Losing Saturday delivery cuts deeply into my paycheck.  It’s difficult not knowing what to do and what should be my next step.  I wonder if I should look for another job, or if I should transfer somewhere else, or if I should just stay where I am and pick up a second job, or just quit everything and move to Mexico.

Life is filled with these choices – some of us live with them coming once in a while, some of us have them coming at us on a daily basis.  It can be scary and unnerving and draining.  As a Christian I am to totally trust that God has it all worked out and that everything is going to turn out well…but I am still scared and worried and unsure.  I know that God has always come through for me, but I still worry because I’m human.  I try to trust, and I pray that God knows what He’s doing, but sometimes I just wonder what He’s doing and whether or not He has me in mind.

I read in Matthew 6 about Jesus preaching on the mountainside, giving all kinds of wisdom and knowledge and sharing how to live a righteous life.  It’s great stuff, really.  Starting at verse 30, Matthew records Jesus’ words as this:

“If God gives such attention to the appearance of wildflowers—most of which are never even seen—don’t you think he’ll attend to you, take pride in you, do his best for you? What I’m trying to do here is to get you to relax, to not be so preoccupied with getting, so you can respond to God’s giving. People who don’t know God and the way he works fuss over these things, but you know both God and how he works. Steep your life in God-reality, God-initiative, God-provisions. Don’t worry about missing out. You’ll find all your everyday human concerns will be met.” –The Message

This is comforting to me in a way, knowing that Jesus understood about worry and the effects it has on our lives.  He knows that life is full of worry and doubt and that it’s not always going to be one great thing after another.  He calls us to do our best in understanding that He has our best in mind.  It may not be easily seen or heard or understood, but He pushes us to keep going, to keep striving to know God and trust that it will all work out.

much love. sheth.

Learn From My Mistakes.

Don’t drink and drive.  No credit cards.  Say no to drugs.  Save sex for marriage.  Don’t work for family.  Keep your heart close.  Wait.  Save money.  Find a hobby.  Don’t hold grudges.  Spend time outside.  Enjoy your family.  Don’t let small things become big things.  Explore.  Play in the dirt.  Love those who need it, and love those who don’t.  Feed the hungry.  Don’t get burdened down with the stuff of life.  Listen to different music.  Don’t stick to one news source.  If you haven’t used it in the past year, get rid of it.  Research.  Smile – a lot.

Make new friends.  Take time off.  It’s okay to get dirty.  Give without expectations.  Eat right.  Ask for help.  Build something.  Learn something new.  Pray.  It’s okay if you’re not who you thought you’d be.  Hug, even if it’s uncomfortable.  Loser is a hurtful word.  You’re right where you’re supposed to be – now go where your heart leads you.  Money isn’t everything.  Drink lots of water.  Read anything.  Call people back, even if you don’t want to.  No one cares if you split your infinitives.  At least give it a try.  If you feel like it, sing out loud.

It’s okay if your expectations are different from other people’s expectations.  Express your opinion.  Laugh.  Go to the mall and watch people.  Tell someone you love them.  Visit an old friend.  Don’t shun your feelings.  It’s okay to say no.  If you think it’s not good for you, it probably isn’t.  Measure twice, cut once…but if you don’t, it’s okay.  Mistakes happen Regrets only hold you back.  It’s fine if you use your fingers to count.  Compliment someone.  PDA’s are okay.  Some people want nothing more than for you to really listen to them.

Eat candy now and then It’s okay to go to the movies alone.  Strike up conversations with strangers.  Help the elderly – you’ll be in their shoes someday.  Speak up for what’s right.  Defend the defenseless.  Don’t stand back and let things happen.  Be a part of something bigger than yourself.  Hope.  The change in your ashtray can buy a meal for someone.  Remember the good.  Forget the bad.

Learn from my mistakes.

.much love. sheth.

Aging Mothers and Moses.

I found this old picture of my mom the other day; she’s in her mid-thirties, she has dark brown hair, smooth skin, and is smiling widely as she sits on the ground with me and my friends during a Sunday School class when I was young.

When I got home from working at my brother’s ranch today I asked my mom how her day was, twenty-eight years after that picture was taken.  The more I looked at her, the more I saw the years that have passed.  Her hair is mostly gray, skin is wrinkled, and she doesn’t smile nearly as often as she used to.  She said her day was rough, despite having the day off from work.  It turns out she fell at work yesterday (again) and tweaked her back (again) and it has been hurting more than usual (which is pretty bad to begin with).  It seems like each day is just a little harder than the one before it, and yet she keeps going.

It’s really difficult for me to see her in pain, to see her having to shuffle here and there because of the pain.  It’s hard to see her be so uncomfortable in any sitting/laying/standing position.  It’s hard to imagine what’s going through her mind each and every day.  It’s hard to see her in her condition and know that there isn’t a single thing I can do to make it better.

I can cook and clean and do the grocery shopping and attempt the laundry and run other errands, but this doesn’t make her pain any better.  It doesn’t alleviate the aches, the stresses, the hurts, the emotional struggles that she goes through.  To be quite honest, I could do everything in my power to help, but it wouldn’t do a thing.

And this frustrates me, both as a son and as a man.  Men love to fix things – I love to fix things.  Engines, broken glasses, phones, farming equipment; if it’s not working right I’m more than willing to tinker with it and get it running again.  But I can’t fix my mom’s pains.  I can’t operate on her, I can’t even begin to figure out where the pain may be coming from (the doctors can’t even do that).  Frustrating.  As a son it’s really difficult to see one’s mother in pain – physical or emotional.  We’re supposed to take care of our mothers, help them, respect them.  But as a son I can’t take away any of my mother’s pain.  Frustrating.

The other day I read Exodus 14:14 – “The LORD will fight for you; you need only to be still.”  I have a love/hate relationship with this verse right now.  I love it because it’s so reassuring – God’s going to do all the work so just relax and be at peace.  I hate it because…well, frankly because it’s so reassuring.  It’s telling me to stop being frustrated, to stop worrying, to stop freaking out about how helpless I feel with my mom.  It’s telling me to let God take care of it and to be at peace with it – not the normal human reaction.

Moses was dealing with a load of people, all who were whining and complaining – ‘It’s hot…my feet hurt…the Egyptians are going to kill us…’  They were in such dire straits that they said that it would have been better for them to be abused under the Egyptians than wandering around in the desert with Moses.  Frustrated, worrying, freaking-out-people.  Like me.

 Matthew Henry’s commentary  explains the 14th verse nicely, “If God himself bring his people into straits, he will himself discover a way to bring them out again.  In times of great difficulty and great expectation, it is our wisdom to keep our spirits calm, quiet, and sedate; for then we are in the best frame both to do our own work and to consider the work of God.”

If you see me and I start whining or complaining, tell me to shut up and be at peace.  I’ll do the same to you.

much love. sheth.

Reality? TV.

I’m tired of TV.  Night after night I flip through the channels in hopes of stumbling across something decent to watch, but I have yet to find anything worthwhile.

The reality tv thing isn’t for me – it never has been. 16 & Pregnant, 19 Kids and Counting, A Double Shot of Love, Ace of Cakes, Addicted, The Amazing Race, America’s Best Dance Crew, America’s Got Talent (I especially dislike this one because I don’t like the word ‘got’), America’s Next Top Model, American Chopper, American Idol, American Gladiators, American Pickers, The Apprentice, Anthony Bourdain…the list goes on and on and on.

I don’t like the idea of sitting down and watching people do something I wouldn’t do.  Why would I want to watch a bunch of people in Louisiana catch alligators?  There’s nothing to the show.  People go out, bait hooks, go back out and bring in alligators.  As a career it sounds really boring, why make a tv show about it?  I doubt people would be interested in watching me on tv as I delivered mail day in and day out.

Granted, some shows were good to watch once or twice.  Ace of Cakes was a good watch – it’s astonishing to see some of the things they make out of cake.  But season after season of cakes?  Unless you’re in the field, or really like cake, I doubt the show has much of an appeal to the average viewer.

And I’m tired of the fighting.  It seems like every episode of every reality show has to have some conflict in it.  Girls slapping and pulling hair.  Guys chest bumping and yelling at one another.  Fathers and sons feuding over money.  Couples crying.  There’s enough real fighting in the real world that I try to avoid (shootings, bombings, massacres), so why would I want to watch it in my spare time?

I can’t stand the cut-aways, either.  Where the show reaches a high tension, and just before it’s shown the show goes to commercial, leaving the viewer in suspense.  But it’s been done so many times it’s not suspenseful anymore – it’s annoying.  The best example of this is the storage auction shows where people bid on abandoned storage sheds hoping to cash in on the winnings.  Two or three times we are left hanging before a commercial: The box is opened and Joe peers inside, “Oh…my…”  Commercial.  Then we are shown what’s in the box, and it’s usually nothing big – just an Elvis record or some statue that has value to one guy on the other side of the country.

What disturbs me is that reality show gives us a false view on the world in which we live.  These shows portray extremes, and occasionally the things of which we want no part.  Reality TV has given us false hopes, false expectations, heightened extremes.  It’s saying that it’s okay to punch another guy just because he said something stupid.  It says that dating can be done with multiple partners in a short amount of time and that love will develop quickly, eventually ending in marriage.  It shows us that with a few household items we can cook a fabulous dinner in 24 minutes.  It pits people against one another – doing almost anything to one another – for money.

I’m tired of TV.

much love. sheth.

Independence.

There’s a great divide in our country and in our churches – people are being separated from one another based on beliefs, race, monetary status, theological stances, child-rearing, languages.  Democrat, Republican, Tea-Party, Independent, Communist, Green-Party.  Hunting, PETA, vegetarian, vegan, organic.  Pre-trib, mid-trib, post-trib.  Serving communion weekly or monthly.  Bible-belt, steel belt, green belt, liberal, conservative, ultra conservative, far left, right, center.  King James, NIV, NKJV, ASV, NLT, ESV, AMP, GNT, TNIV.  Only English, ESL, bi-lingual, native tongue.  Poverty, low-income, middle-class, upper middle-class, upper-class, rich, poor, working poor.  Spanking, time-outs, consequences, free parenting, exploratory.

All these different labels we have placed on ourselves, or had placed on us, have put us all in specific boxes in our country.  Sometimes these boxes make us feel inferior; others make us feel like the dominating population.  The US Declaration says, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal…”  Something self-evident is apparent without proof or reasoning – we take it as it is.  The authors of the Constitution made a huge leap in saying that everyone is created equal – no longer were there classes of people, no longer were the rich better than the poor, no longer were those in power better than those they ruled over.

Paul, in writing 1 Corinthians, had to really work on a difficult situation involving the church in Corinth – they were divided on a number of issues – worldly vs. biblical living, Jews vs. Gentiles, how to worship, how to love, etc.  Paul flat out tells the Corinthian church:

“But God has put the body together, giving greater honor to the parts that lacked it, so that there should be no division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each other.  If one part suffers, every part suffers with it; if one part is honored, every part rejoices with it.”  1 Cor 12:24b – 26

He’s basically saying that there shouldn’t be any dissection in the church – everyone should be equal with one another.  The poor, the rich, the Jew, the Gentile – if they are joined by God then nothing should separate them from one another.  Especially worldly things like money or class or race or career or languages.

Sometimes I look at our country, and our church, and I see such a huge division among the people.  Everyone thinks their ideas and thoughts and beliefs are right, and to hell with those who don’t have the same thoughts or beliefs.  The Constitution and the Bible call us to treat everyone with respect and equality.  There’s no need for hate or discontent based on beliefs.  Certainly we don’t have to agree with other people’s thoughts, ideas, or beliefs, but we shouldn’t cause such a division within our churches or our country to where one group feels excluded from the grand scheme of things.

Our country is a huge group of Christians, Muslims, Buddhists, atheists, Gnostics, Asians, whites, Africans, Indians, natives and immigrants, poor, and rich.  And every one of these groups are Americans, created equally and having the right to live here.  Just as those who read the NKJV, the NIV, the Message or are Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, Church of Christ, Disciple of Christ, Presbyterian, Catholic, believe in Pre-Trib or Post-Trib or Mid-Trib or believe in total immersion or sprinkling are all Christians.

Less division.  More addition.

much love. sheth.

Love Poems & Recycling.

This past weekend I went through my file box – it’s one of those things you get when you grow up and have to save papers.  There’s the usual important stuff – bank statements (I signed up for them to be emailed to me, but they’re still mailing them), pay stubs, tax forms, etc.  Some added stuff in mine include my divorce junk, old awards from high school, ACT scores, woodworking plans, college and high school papers, notes, ideas, thoughts, the beginnings of stories, bad poems, and parts of journals.

I went through the file box mainly to get rid of all the stuff I’d written over the years.  I must have started and quit journaling a dozen times in the past ten years.  They were kind of happy, but mostly sad because that’s when I tend to journal the most.  I have a hard time writing down, “I had a good day today!”.  It seems like it was much easier for me to write about the misery and hopelessness than it does the joy.

And the journal entries were mainly about three things: God, self-confidence, and girls.  These are the things that I struggled with all through high school and college (each and every time I went).  It was kind of sad in a way to look at what I wrote and how hopeless I was feeling at the time.  Granted, I still get those feelings now, but I’m more mature (haha).

I found stuff I had written about my first ‘girlfriend’ – we didn’t actually date more than once or twice, but she was the first one I kissed so I was a bit overwhelmed with feelings for her.  They were poems and notes never given expressing my uneducated feeling of love to her.  I found other stuff I had written about and for a girl I met in college that I fell head over heels for, only to have my feelings put in check quickly.  I found love poems for a girl I thought I was destined to be married to – but was told that I wasn’t good enough for her.

And I don’t know why I kept all these notes and poems and writings laying around.  I couldn’t in good conscience dig through them and give one to a new girlfriend.  They served a purpose for their time, but they are no longer needed.  Like a rotary phone, they were good once, but now they’re just old news.  Depressing news, really.  I couldn’t believe that I was hanging on to bits of memories of people who rejected me, turned me down, and used me.  Was I hoping that someday they would all come back to me, saying, “We were all wrong! Take us back!”?  Was I wanting to recall the good times by looking at the bad things that I could remember?

I put the bag of papers in the trash – I kept my school reports and papers because I spent A LOT of time on those and I’m not ready to just toss those.  But the notes, the love poems, the pages and pages of letters expressing my undying love for girls who have long since gone?  They’re making their way to the bottom of the landfill, and my memories of those who they were for are making their way there, too.

much love. sheth.

Five Part Race.

Note: There are parts of this essay which have non-politically correct language, and to be honest, some racial slurs.  I feel it’s necessary to put them in and I hope you understand the context in which they are used.

I grew up in the suburbs of Denver, which isn’t exactly as diverse or exciting as LA or Chicago, but a lot of races were well represented.  My school was a microcosm of the larger neighborhood itself: the majority was white, but we also had a good number of blacks, Asians, and Hispanics (we didn’t have the politically correct nomenclature that’s been used in recent history).  We had a nicely varied classroom and learned a lot from one another.

We were doing a study on immigration in fifth grade – learning about Ellis Island, the potato famine, and the large influx of immigrants during the early 1900’s. I was excited about the whole thing because I liked learning about my own family history.  I had classmates who could trace their lineage back to George Washington or Daniel Boone – the best I could do was talk about my great-grandmother being raised in Nebraska.

One of my classmates was Asian-American, and I was curious as to which part of Asia he belonged.  So I asked him, “Are you Chinese?”

“No, I’m American.”

“Haha, I know, but, like where are your parents from?”

“America.”

“Yeah, okay.  So what are your grandparents?”

“They’re American.”

I got frustrated at this point and asked the teacher for David to tell me what he was.  She asked, “David, what’s your heritage?”

He answered the same way he answered me, “American.”

She nodded her head and said, “There you have it.  He’s American.”  She went about her business and I sat there frustrated.  I knew by looking at him that he was Asian, and I understood that he was American.  But I couldn’t understand why he didn’t identify himself as Chinese, or Japanese, or Korean, or Vietnamese, or Thai.

*****

My family and I moved to Salida the summer before I entered 7th grade – I turned 13 that year.  At that age it’s difficult to make and keep friends, fit in, and not be awkward – it’s even more difficult when you have to do it in an entirely new environment.

I was shocked by how white the town and school was – there was one Hispanic in my grade, and one black in the grade ahead of me (his brother was two grades below me).  Walking around town all you saw was white people.  You went grocery shopping and there were white people.  You went to the park and there were white people.  You went to church and there were white people.  It was like a really, really weird Twilight Zone episode.

I came to discover that the town was really quite racist in its past and the residual effects of that still lingered.  I heard stories of families being run out of town, kids tormented until they quit going to school, and that the KKK was still around, lurking in the shadows.

But even stranger to me was the racism that occurred between the whites themselves.  There was a hierarchy between descendants of the Italians, the Germans, the English, the Irish, and other Anglos.  Each group seemed to gather together at lunch or in the classroom.  If you didn’t know a few words in Italian, couldn’t be angry like a German, or watch soccer like an Englishman then you didn’t belong in that group.

Being thirteen and trying to fit in, but also being of a varied background of Irish, English, Prussian, German, and whatever else you could throw in, I found it difficult to find a group that I felt comfortable with.  It was a weird feeling being a white kid in a group of white kids and still not fitting in.  I fit in better at my old school where the diversity seemed to erase the races.  Racism wasn’t an issue for us – in that school we weren’t white, or black, or Asian, or Hispanic – we were just kids.

****

In the late 1990’s the fashionable thing was for guys to wear their hats backwards, and wanting to fit in any way that I could I jumped on that bandwagon and rode it for as long as I could.  My brain told me it was a stupid thing to do – the whole point of the hat was for the bill to keep the sun out of your eyes.  But I did it anyways for fear of being uncool.

We had a family reunion in the summer of 1998.  I had just graduated high school, was looking forward to college, and was having a great summer and feeling really good about myself and my backwards hat.  All the usuals were at the reunion – aunts, uncles, cousins, second cousins, people that were somehow related to me but not sure how, or why.

In talking with other people I’ve come to understand that each family has one member who takes the cake for being the weirdest, oddest, most eccentric person in the whole family.  I’ve had numerous competitions with people pitting my uncle up against their family member, and I usually always win.  Now don’t get me wrong – I think the world of my uncle.  He’s very intelligent, funny, and very opinionated (which I am not, so that’s something I can respect).

So there I am at the reunion, sporting a backwards hat, newly graduated, and strutting around like I owned the place.  As I’m walking around I pass my uncle sitting outside by the pool and I say, “Hey Uncle Chuck, what do you think?”  It was a polite, but still edgy and cool thing to say.

He sat back in his chair and pulled a long drag from his cigarette, “I think you look like a God damn nigger.”  Needless to say, his comment was a lot edgier than mine.

This was the first time I had heard the word nigger in real life.  I’d heard it in the movies, both as an insult and a compliment.  I knew immediately which way my uncle wanted me to take it.  I was shocked to say the least, not because he called me a nigger (or used the phrase God damn which is a big no-no in my family), but because he used the word.  I knew it was not to be used.  I would get uncomfortable hearing it when I rented a movie, and now here I was hearing it in real life and I felt unbelievably uncomfortable.

I know the word has hate attached to it – I experienced that for myself.  But what I experienced doesn’t come close to the power it has when it is said with hate attached to it and directed at an African-American.  As bad as I felt for hearing it I can’t imagine what it’s like to feel it, to experience it in its fullness as an African-American.

***

In 2004, while going to college in Greeley, I worked at Wal-Mart with a guy named Luis who always had the radio we kept in the storeroom tuned to “El Tigre”.  There were a few radio stations in the area that played mariachi, salsas, sambas, reggaeton, etc, but El Tigre played the newest, hottest hits.  I fell in love with reggaeton – the beat, the timbre of the voices, the way the songs brought in so many different genres to make a great sound.  I’d drive to school or to work blaring the radio as the DJ would say the usual radio stuff, but in Spanish.

I don’t speak Spanish.  I can say ‘si’ and inquire about the restroom, I can say good, and count to ten.  But that’s it.  Listening to the station I picked up on words like ‘aqui’ and ‘ahora’, and phrases like, ‘es no bueno!”  And while I figured out what ‘es no bueno’ meant I had no idea as to what ‘aqui’ signifies.  I’d listen to ‘Ciento Dos punto Uno…El Tigre!’ but have absolutely no idea what was going on or what they were talking about.

Part of me felt a little embarrassed to be listening to ‘Ciento Dos punto Uno…El Tigre!’  Not because I was white, but because I wasn’t Hispanic.  Something inside of me tried to say that the radio station was theirs and I shouldn’t be listening to it.  I could have the other seventeen stations, but El Tigre was off limits.

My embarrassment went so far that when I would pull to a stop sign or stop light I would turn the volume way, way down so no one would know that I was listening to Ciento Dos punto Uno…El Tigre!  I imagined listening to Daddy Yankee and rolling up to a stop light, but forgetting to turn the volume down.  A group of Hispanics would pull up next to me and catch me head-bobbing and doing all the humiliating things that white people do when we listen to music.  After I’d inadvertently managed to get the attention of the entire vehicle next to me, they’d yell at me, “Hey gringo, that’s our music!”  Then they’d jump me.

**

It’s hard for me to understand intolerance when it comes to race.  I’ve seen both sides and I don’t get why it’s even an issue at times.  I’ve lived in both tolerant and intolerant places.  I’ve lived in integrated and all-white towns.  I’ve worshiped with stiff whites and hand-clapping-shouting-praise-Jesus-African Americans.  I’ve been in classes with immigrants, descendants of slaves, bilingual kids; I’ve been in all white classes where Martin Luther King Jr. was nothing more than a blip in history.

I suppose what bothers me is that I didn’t stand up to my uncle when he used the word nigger.  And it bothers me that I’m embarrassed about listening to reggaeton, because, truthfully, it’s not ‘their’ music – it’s everyone’s music (if I had to listen to my German heritage music, it’d be Lawrence Welk…heaven help me).  It bothers me that I think that people of different races want to be identified as Asian, Hispanic, black or whatever instead of American (how racist is that?).  Maybe, unknowingly… somehow…deep down inside I don’t understand how to love and respect all races.  I was taught to be very tolerant of all races – no one was better or worse than another, least of all because of their skin color.  I truly believe it.

But perhaps I should work on doing what I believe.

If you hear Tito el Bambino playing loudly on a car stereo, don’t get angry – be thankful that I’m working on improving myself.

.much love. sheth.