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.

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.

Legacy.

I’ve been thinking about my legacy for some reason – what I want to be remembered for – and I can’t honestly say whether or not it’s good.  It’s difficult to say what people would say about me, and that kind of worries me because I’m a people pleaser.  Deep down, I think a lot of us worry about that – what would people say about us?  What would they remember us for?

I’d like to think that there are a lot of good things that people would say about me, but what would they not say that they wanted to say?  When I’m at a funeral and people stand up and speak about the dead it’s always good stuff “He was dedicated to his family…” or “She loved sharing with others…”  If you walked in on a funeral and you heard these people talk, you’d probably think the deceased was the greatest person to walk the earth.

But the truth is we’re not all that our eulogies will make us out to be.  As good as it sounds, we won’t always be ‘nice’ or ‘kind’ or ‘loving’.  We won’t always be ‘giving of ourselves unconditionally’.  It would be somewhat relieving to hear an honest eulogy at a funeral: “He was a good man, but he drank a lot and yelled at the kids…”  ”She cheated on her husband once and hid it from him…”  But it won’t ever happen because that’s not the type of stuff we want to remember about someone.  We want to remember the good things, the happy things that that person did or was.

Whenever I drive my mom out of town for one of her doctor appointments I always try to pry some history out of her – about her life as a kid, about her parents or siblings.  As much as I want the nitty-gritty stuff I can never seem to get it out of her.  There are hints and underlying clues that her growing up in the 1950’s wasn’t  Leave it to Beaver-ish , but she doesn’t get into details.  I think she does it because she wants to remember the good – the bad stuff is gone and should stay there.

On one hand I think it would be nice for people to stand up during my funeral and just get it all out there – “Sheth was a nice guy, but sometimes he could be a real jerk” “There were times when he just couldn’t shut off the sarcasm” “For once I would have liked it if he was serious with us instead of always joking around”.  But then again, it’d be nice for people to reiterate the good and decent things I did, the heart that I had, the life that I lived.

One of the things I love about the bible is how brutally honest it is about the characters within it.  It doesn’t cover up the fact that that Paul brutalized Christians prior to his conversion.  It doesn’t gloss over the fact that Noah was naked and drunk, and Moses was a murderer, and David slept around.  The fact is, as much as these men rose to greatness with God, they also failed along the way.  A lot of times we remember these men as they were in the end – not as they were along the way – just as we do with eulogies.

In the end people are going to remember you the way they remember you.  As hard as you try to please them, or make them happy, or put on a good exterior they’re going to see through it.  They’re going to think back on your life the way they remembered it – the good, the bad, the not so friendly.  They’re going to remember you when you didn’t shower for 3 days; when you lost your temper and swore at them; when you gave them the flowers for their birthday out of the blue; when you laughed together until it hurt.  I figure the best I can do about my legacy is to make sure the good memories outweigh the bad, that the good things are easy to remember and the bad are hard to recall, and that along the way we had some excellent times.

.much love. sheth.

Q&A For Realsies.

Every church has its ‘meet and greet’ session, usually somewhere towards the beginning.  The pastor will get up and say a few words, maybe make an announcement or two, then say something like, “Now will you take a moment to greet those around you”.  And there are hands being shook, friends talking, and gossip flowing (yup, even in church).

It’s kind of fun being the new-ish guy in a church (even though I’ve been there a while) and seeing how people tend to stick to those they know.  I’ve been approached by a few people, but by and large I’m ignored, or at least not noticed.  Part of me completely understands – it’s difficult and sometimes scary introducing yourself to someone new (I usually never go out of my way to make new friends).

Discussions in church usually go like this: name, how I am doing, what I do, how the weather is today.  That’s the good, American, superficial way to make small talk.  There’s never anything brought up in the conversation that’s too hard to deal with or handle.  This kind of conversation is easy to be in – it’s simple, on the surface stuff.

There are times when I like to throw things for a loop with people and I’ll drop in something serious just to make the conversation uncomfortable.  The other person, being polite, will ask how I’m doing, and I will answer with something about my mom’s cancer still being in remission, or my dad struggling with work, or how we all worry about how we’re going to take care of each other with less and less money, or that I’m feeling lonely; sometimes I’ll throw in some stuff about my bankruptcy or divorce or son that I know nothing about.

And I do this because, frankly, it’s stuff I want to talk about.  It’s stuff that needs to be talked about.  We all have this kind of stuff in our lives that we want to talk about.  Serious stuff, life stuff.  Divorces, bad relationships, cheating spouses, abuse, issues with raising kids, money problems, medical issues, aging parents, work problems.  There’s so many things in our lives that we desperately want to talk about, but we never really feel like we have the opportunity to talk about them with other people.  A lot of times I think that people don’t want to know the dirty stuff in my life, the real stuff, so why should I even bother
them with it?  Sadly, I’m sure that’s what a lot of other people feel and that’s why they don’t open up to me.

We’re all a little closed off from one another.  We ask them how they are, they say fine, and we say good.  Then we move on to the next outstretched hand to shake and repeat the process.  We need to look for the hurting, the broken, and the weary that are in our own homes, our own churches, our own neighborhoods.  It’s great that we send out missionaries to other countries, but sometimes I really think we need to get our own people taken care of first.  We need to feed the hungry family that sits next to us in church.  We need to visit with our elderly neighbor.  We need to pay for a tank of gas for the single mom struggling to make ends meet.  But we don’t do this stuff because a lot of times we just don’t know that people have these needs.

I can’t find it anywhere in the bible where Jesus asks people how they are doing.  He never has a casual conversation with anyone:
“And the Lord sayeth to John, ‘How’s it going?’
And John answereth, ‘I’m alright.  Just fishin’ and what not.’
The Lord smileth with gladness and went about his day.”

Jesus is portrayed in the bible as going out and looking for people to help, he asks what’s troubling people, what’s wrong, and what he can do to fix it.  We need to be asking more of the hard questions, the real questions that people want to be asked.  Look around – there are people dying to talk, people that need help, people that want a shoulder to cry on.

.much love. sheth.

A Dilly of a Pickle.

I have a tv.  It’s 13 inches diagonal.  Not flatscreen.  Not HD.  Aftermarket remote that has ‘up’ and ‘down’ for the channels and volume (if I’m on channel 45 and want to go to channel 9, I get to flip all the way through to channel 9).  Truth be told, the tv isn’t even mine – it’s my parents’.

Over the past few years I’ve been whittling away at the stuff I own.  I have gotten rid of countless textbooks that I thought I would use in my career (which never panned out).  I have given away dozens of other books on youth ministry, books I loved, books I hated, books I’d been given but never read.  I’ve thrown out old letters, old school reports, half-used journals.  I’ve tossed a lot of stuff, too.  I don’t even know how to even describe it, but it’s just stuff.  Gag gifts, gifts from past girlfriends, past friends, acquaintences, things I’ve found, collections, clothes, shoes, tools, things I’ve been wanting to fix, or take apart, or couldn’t get up the nerve to throw away.

There’s been a lot of reasons why I’ve narrowed down what I own to two boxes and some clothes – part of it was because of my many moves, part of it was because I just got tired of actually having it.  I think about our worldly possessions and how attached we can be to them, and how important some ‘stuff’ can be to us.  I have a small model canoe made of birch bark from the village elders in Alaska; a glass from a restaurant I ate at in Austria; a piece of pottery from an artist in Mexico.  I have a pocket knife that my great-grandfather used; a piece off of the Jeep that I wrecked twice; a few old books that my grandfather used when studying the Bible.  I don’t know why these things are important to me – if I got rid of them I’m sure I’d still have the memories.  But that glass from Austria represented more than just a restaurant – it was from the first mission trip I ever went on and learned about true poverty.  The birch bark canoe was a gift made just for me from people who distrust outsiders.  The hood latch from the Jeep helps me to remember to drive safely and don’t be in a rush, because it’s not worth it.

So what’s really troubling me is this: I don’t want to keep stuff in my life.  The less I have, the better I feel.  But honestly, I really want a fancy tv.  One that I can watch movies on.  And be blown away by the HD 1080p 120hz refresh-rate goodness that comes along with it.  Am I content with my little tv?  Yeah, I am.  But part of me, part of me wants the big, the better, the nicer.  Part of me wants the fancy tv, the 2004 Porsche Carrera GT, the house, the woodshop.  Part of me wants it all.

But thankfully, the part that doesn’t want any of this stuff is still winning.

much love. sheth.

Encouragement Sandwich.

Philippians 4:13: “I can do all this through him who gives me strength.”

If you spent any amount of time in church or around Christians then there is no doubt that you have probably heard this verse; it usually comes after you tell someone about a difficulty you’ve been having in your life:

Person 1: “So yeah, I ended up losing my job and have no food on my table for me or my family.”

Person 2: “Wow, that’s rough.  Remember what the Bible says, ‘I can do all this through him who gives me strength’.  You may seem defeated now, but you’ll bounce back.”

Words meant for comfort sometimes end up hurting more than helping.  How many of the people who are giving these words have ever been in the same situation that you’re in?  How many of them have dealt with the things you have to deal with?  How did they feel when someone told them, you’ll make it!  I understand the premise of the words – the reason the words are given, but a lot of times it doesn’t really help.  I’ve been guilty countless times of doing the same.  The guy doesn’t need just encouragement – he needs a sandwich, too!

A lot of times we assume that God is going to take care of those in need, and all we have to do is offer up some words now and again.  I’ll do the speaking, God will take care of the rest.  Where is the sandwich going to come from?  Yes, God can make food appear.  It’s in the Bible countless times – both old and new testaments.  So often we wait for God to take care of those in need when in actuality he’s given us all the necessary tools to help & take care of those in need.  He wants to help – through us!

A question I’ve been asking a lot of people that I meet in church is this: do you think people should attend services before they receive help from your church?  I get a mix of answers, from yes to no to it depends on the situation.  And I can’t wrap my head around the last two.  The church should be giving, giving, giving to everyone – members, non-members, Christmas-time members, frequenters, and people who have never ever stepped foot inside their door.  Never once did Jesus say, “I’d be more than willing to help you, but first I want you to come listen to me next Sunday…what?  Yes, I realize that it’s Tuesday and your rent is due on Thursday.  But you’ll benefit from the message.”  Jesus helped first and talked later.  He knew the seriousness of the situations and he understood that meeting the immediate needs were a stepping stone to meeting the other needs of the person.

When you hear of needs, maybe our knee-jerk reaction to answer those needs should be the right answer.  I know from experience that people who have helped me out have done it not because they wanted credit, or they knew that it would bring me closer to God – they knew I had a need and they met that need.  There were no questions, “So, after I gave you that money, did you go back to church?”   When we help people, the immediate needs lead to the deeper issues, to God.  By all means, offer up words of encouragement, but if they need food then give them food!

much love. sheth.

Sin, Cows & Speedy Cowgirls.

Yesterday I was working down at the salebarn – selling kine (the plural for cow – bet you didn’t know that!), 2 sheep, and one horse.  It was a usual sale – people come & drop off their animals, they go into the ring, are sold, then I pen them back.  My job is relatively simple.  I have a map in front of me, and when a buyer purchases an animal I call out the pen number the animal is to go in over a PA system.  The people doing the actual work then release the animal into the alley and they guide it to the pen.  Simple.

Well, there was a cow waiting to be penned back – I had called out the number and it was sitting on the scale waiting to go.  But it wasn’t going.  She was rather grumpy.  This girl was in there trying to get the cow to move but she wouldn’t budge.  I go back there and try to help from a safe distance, waving my hat and yelling to get the cow’s attention.  All of the sudden she drops her head and bolts after the girl on the scale.  The girl’s eyes got as big and round as tea saucers and she turned tail and ran.  So I’m standing there helpless as a girl is being chased down by an angry cow.  Now, this girl was quick – I’ve never seen anybody move so quick in my life.  She hit a gate and leapt up it like a frog, and the cow turned down the alley.  This girl knew the danger behind her, chasing after her, and she did all she could to avoid it.

My prayer life is in recovery right now, and the best I can do is journal to God, which is what I’ve been doing for almost two months now, every day.  It’s been helpful to actually write down what I’m praying about and it’s nice to look back and see the progress God has been making in my life.  I related the above story to God and told him how thankful I was that the girl wasn’t injured.

And it hit me: why is it that when we see danger in our spiritual lives we don’t turn tail and run to God?  Why is it that we usually sit back and let the sin, the evil, Satan plow us over and injure us so badly?  I cannot imagine the pain and hurt that girl would be in today if she had been hit by that cow.  But I know the pain and hurt that I feel when sin & evil run me over.  And yet, it hasn’t been enough to make me do my best to avoid sin altogether.  I keep going back and trying to face it on my own and it always plows me over like a train hitting an old Volkswagen Beetle.  I’m torn, beaten, shredded – destroyed again and again.  God comes along, puts me back together, and I go out again to do the same thing.

I suppose it’s my humanness that makes me head back in the same direction again and again and again and again.   But I’m tired of using that excuse.  I’m tired of having to put God through the torment of having to watch me crash over and over again.  I’m sure each time I do it he throws his hands up in the air, “Seriously, Sheth!  Come on!  We’ve been through this before!”  Maybe I’m a slow learner.

I’m trying my best to avoid the cow in my life that wants to run me down.  I’m trying to avoid sin, evil, Satan.  It’s tough, that’s for sure, especially in a world that is devoted to promoting it.  But I’ll keep a watchful eye so I can turn tail and run like the girl and head for safety in a split second.

much love. sheth.

Voyeurism, Hoarding, & Stuff.

The show ‘Hoarders’ on A&E really fascinates and scares me and I can’t help but watch it.  Certainly there is a voyeuristic approach to the show – the viewers get a chance to look inside other people’s homes and see how they live.  But it’s never as exciting as the word ‘voyeuristic’ makes it out to be.  If anything it’s heartbreaking, saddening, and frightening.

The show follows seemingly normal people with a terrible secret – they all have hoarded ‘stuff’.  Some of it may be part of a collection.  Some of it may be gifts for someone else that were never sent.  Some of it is just impulse buys.  But the fact is that it’s all ‘stuff’ that they can’t get rid of.  One man, adamant that he wasn’t a hoarder, said, “…we don’t hoard…we’re…we’re collectors…”  While a collection is typically themed, say sports cards or comics, these people had everything.  And collectors are proud of their collection – they keep it clean, maintained, and on display; these people had none of that.  The simple fact of it all is this: the hoarders have collected ‘stuff’ of all types, for many different reasons, with no way of overcoming the problem by themselves.

I’ve been in a few houses of hoarders – some minimal, and some extreme.  It’s overwhelming to be in a house crammed full of items of all shapes, sizes, smells, and value.  It takes a few minutes to acclimate yourself if it’s your first time because the sheer sense overload takes you for a ride.  When in these situations I always want to start cleaning up and throwing stuff away – old newspapers, broken cups and vases, photos of people no one knows.  But I can’t because it’s not mine, it’s not for me to say that this is trash and that is a keeper.

What’s especially difficult for me is dealing with my grandmother who is in her mid-eighties now.  She lived through the depression and learned at a young age to use what’s available, keep what may be usable, and don’t throw it away unless you’re absolutely sure you won’t need it.  Her thought process makes sense to me because I understand her background, but I can’t understand why she still thinks this way.  She hasn’t gone without in a very, very, very long time.  Her pantry is packed full of canned food, she has a full-size freezer loaded with all kinds of meats and fruits, and her refrigerator is maxed out to capacity.  When she is in plenty, why does she still maintain the thoughts of one who is without?

When I moved to (and from) Alaska, I had to really pare down my possessions.  On the trip up I had mailed many boxes of my belongings, and had only minimally weighed down my car.  But when I returned penniless I couldn’t afford to mail anything, so I had to abandon many of my belongings – printer, books, cd’s, etc.  A lot of things I assumed were precious to me were left behind.  Granted, my car was still loaded down on the return, I had essentially a quarter of what I did before I left to go to Alaska.  Through the years since then I’ve acquired new items, but I’ve also gotten rid of a great many items.  I learned that it’s okay to be without ‘stuff’ – I can survive without the books I never read and the cd’s I never listened to.  I’m proud to say that I can easily get everything I own into my little Mazda Protégé – with room to spare.  I can do without a lot of physical stuff because it’s replaceable, it’s temporary, it’s not all that important.

But here’s the sad fact: I am a hoarder.  I look at my life – my inner life (spiritual, emotional, feelings and all that) – and I realize that I have so many old feelings and hurts stored deep inside me.  So much so that it keeps me trapped, unhealthy, and unable to move forward in life.  I have memories of being hurt by old friends who told me that I wasn’t good enough to be their friend anymore.  I have resounding voices of girlfriends past telling me that it wasn’t me – it was them – when in fact it was me…they no longer wanted to be with me.  I have pictures of faces of people who have scowled, frowned, and yelled at me.  I hoard all this, and so much more, deep within my soul.

It’s a challenge, too, because I don’t always remember the good times – those I don’t always hoard.  Maybe it’s because the bad is easier to remember.  Maybe it’s because I want to hold on to that grudge.  Maybe it’s because the bad is the only thing I remember of that person or event.  I know I’ve had many good things happen in my life, I’ve had many great relationships and friends along the way, and I know the memories and feelings are down in my soul somewhere.  I am a hoarder of emotions, feelings, and all that.

So it’s up to me to say that this is trash and that is a keeper.  Whatever an ex-girlfriend said about why I’m no good – this is trash.  I must hold on to the truth that I am loved by many people – and that is a keeper.  The idea that maybe I never was a good choice for the kickball teams as a kid – this is trash.  Being told that I’ll never be able to read or write – this is trash.  Learning that God loves me in spite of all that I have done to him…in spite of what others think of me – that is a keeper.  That, most definitely, is a keeper.

much love. sheth.

Wide Paths & Rabbits.

This past week I took a drive up to the trailhead of Mt. Shavano & Tabeguache, and as I drove I looked up at the ridges leading to the tops of the mountains, others reaching from peak to peak like sagging cobwebs.  The narrower paths are typically taken when people are hiking from one peak to another, as some do in an attempt to conquer two fourteeners in one day.  And these paths are scary looking – nearly sheer drops for hundreds of feet on both sides; the footing consisting of unstable rock which can easily slip out from underneath your feet.  Only the skilled – or daring – challenge these passes from peak to peak.

At the church I go to we usually always do a responsive reading  – they’re the ones where the leader reads a line and the congregation follows, then the leader reads and then congregation reads, so on and so forth.  It’s usually only one or two passes between the two; an orchestrated juggling act where everyone in the congregation tries to read at the same pace and at the same tone, but never really works.  I’ve never understood the whole thing and it sometimes aggravates me because everyone isn’t working together on it – you have people reading fast, slow, too loud.  It’s hard for me to concentrate when all that other ‘stuff’ is happening.  Last week we read the following from Psalm 18:

Leader: I love you, O Lord, my strength.  You are my Rock in whom I take refuge.

People: You have given me a wide place to stand and my feet do not slip.

Leader: In my distress I called upon the Lord and God helped me.

People: For this reason, O Lord, I will sing your praises.

Leader: Let us worship God!

To be honest, I don’t remember much of the sermon that week because that one line stuck with me: “You have given me a wide place to stand and my feet do not slip.”  I have thought about this one line all week and it’s stuck with me, especially the first half, “You have given me a wide place to stand…”  I looked up the verse, Psalm 18:37, to get a translation of it and see it in the original Hebrew.  The first word, thrchib shows as being literally translated as “you are widening” – in the process, actively, currently, widening it right now.  God is widening the pathway – it’s almost like David can see it before his eyes…he can see God plainly expanding the width of the path that David is on.

I’ve spent many hours in the woods hiking around, taking the less-than-beaten path trailing deer and rabbit or looking for that one amazing place to take a photograph.  I’ve been in the thick of the woods, where I can’t see anything but trees and the animals know it’s a good place to be because I wouldn’t be able to see them.  It’s dark and cold and downright forbidding sometimes.

But there are moments when the trail just seems to widen up, sometimes out of nowhere I’ll find myself in a wide open space in the midst of trees.  Maybe it’ll be a small meadow, or an area where a stream runs.  It’s really weird, too, because it doesn’t always seem like it would ever be possible for there to be an ending to the thick woods, but then the path just breaks open.  It’s always a good thing when the path breaks open, when we can see it widening before our very eyes.  When you’re on a mountainside moving from peak to peak, or trudging through the dark woods, and the path opens up, slowly it gets wider and wider and you begin to feel that you are safe – that’s when the breath of relief comes.

Lately I’ve been feeling like I’ve been given the roadmap to take the path out of the dark woods – I’ve been given the chance to move along and the path is slowly getting wider and wider.  God is giving me a broader place to stand each and every day.  Sometimes I think it’s not wide enough and I’m going to fall at any moment, but it’s just wide enough to where I won’t fall off.  I can’t thank God enough for widening the path day by day and allowing me to see how blessed I am to have such a path.

much love. sheth.