There would be
1. more nakedness
2. more hair forgiveness
3. more patience
4. less texting
5. more tattoo reading
6. worse inner ear equilibrium
7. more screaming
8. more diverse community
9. more sunburn
10. less sitting
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Q4: Confetti
I was walking through the parking lot in front of Panera Bread. A small silver car slid into the front row spot that a woman in a black car had been waiting for.
The woman in the black car honked. Well, she put the full force of her body onto her horn for about 7 seconds. She drove directly behind the silver car, parked, got out, and walked over to the window of the silver car.
"I HAD BEEN WAITING FOR THAT SPOT FOR FIVE MINUTES..."
I gave them a wide berth. You just don't interfere with sacred moments like those.
The woman retreated to her car. She reversed. The silver car backed out and drove away. The woman in the black car claimed her spot.
So I can stand in the Panera line and judge her.
Or realize that I am her. And, given the proper life circumstances and mood, I would have done the same thing.
Or I can judge her.
Or both.
Because grace is like confetti and it gets on everybody. If you're the woman in the black car, the silver car, or the woman looking on.
The woman in the black car honked. Well, she put the full force of her body onto her horn for about 7 seconds. She drove directly behind the silver car, parked, got out, and walked over to the window of the silver car.
"I HAD BEEN WAITING FOR THAT SPOT FOR FIVE MINUTES..."
I gave them a wide berth. You just don't interfere with sacred moments like those.
The woman retreated to her car. She reversed. The silver car backed out and drove away. The woman in the black car claimed her spot.
So I can stand in the Panera line and judge her.
Or realize that I am her. And, given the proper life circumstances and mood, I would have done the same thing.
Or I can judge her.
Or both.
Because grace is like confetti and it gets on everybody. If you're the woman in the black car, the silver car, or the woman looking on.
Monday, May 20, 2013
Q3: Great Expectations
My problems is that my expectations are too high.
We're going to the grocery store? Good, because I've always needed to bump into my future husband while selecting the right avocados...
I'm saving my journals. Good thing, too, because after I'm dead and famous, posterity will really appreciate my thoughts as an adolescent. And as a third grader. Maybe it's all secretly brilliant.
I'm still looking for a summer job? Fortunately, the right one will fall into my lap, and I'll love every second of it. It's going to pave the way to my perfect career. Also, I'll probably meet my future husband.
That is, if things with avocado guy don't work out...
I miss out on things that are good because I want them to be the best.
Maybe good is the best. Which doesn't mean I need to settle. But camping out in the real world for a few months wouldn't be such a bad thing.
There's this great part in 500 Days of Summer. The scene is a party, and the screen is split into two sections: one headed "expectations" and the other "reality."
Rewind to May 4.
Expectations: I walk into the Rockrimmon Public Library and ask about open positions. There's an opening, and I'm offered the job on the spot. I spend my summer shelving books, forging relationships with misunderstood preteens, and organizing things like "Teen Read Week." It looks great on my resume. I'm a cornerstone of the little community, and I'm wildly humble. My motley crew of friends - the old men who come in early to read newspapers, the lady who reserves the whole kitchen sink to her designated section of the holds shelf, the twihards, the stuffy librarians, and the many, many moms - are all sad to see me go on August 16.
Reality: I've spent two weeks sick, lazy, and jobless. My family is good, but we're nothing to brag about in the fall. I've watched lots of television. A couple adventures are thrown in there, but it is all somewhat forgettable.
But this is good. No, it's not what I planned, and I feel some sort of loss. Not about the library. Just about being awesome. Being important. Mattering.
We're going to the grocery store? Good, because I've always needed to bump into my future husband while selecting the right avocados...
I'm saving my journals. Good thing, too, because after I'm dead and famous, posterity will really appreciate my thoughts as an adolescent. And as a third grader. Maybe it's all secretly brilliant.
I'm still looking for a summer job? Fortunately, the right one will fall into my lap, and I'll love every second of it. It's going to pave the way to my perfect career. Also, I'll probably meet my future husband.
That is, if things with avocado guy don't work out...
I miss out on things that are good because I want them to be the best.
Maybe good is the best. Which doesn't mean I need to settle. But camping out in the real world for a few months wouldn't be such a bad thing.
There's this great part in 500 Days of Summer. The scene is a party, and the screen is split into two sections: one headed "expectations" and the other "reality."
Rewind to May 4.
Expectations: I walk into the Rockrimmon Public Library and ask about open positions. There's an opening, and I'm offered the job on the spot. I spend my summer shelving books, forging relationships with misunderstood preteens, and organizing things like "Teen Read Week." It looks great on my resume. I'm a cornerstone of the little community, and I'm wildly humble. My motley crew of friends - the old men who come in early to read newspapers, the lady who reserves the whole kitchen sink to her designated section of the holds shelf, the twihards, the stuffy librarians, and the many, many moms - are all sad to see me go on August 16.
Reality: I've spent two weeks sick, lazy, and jobless. My family is good, but we're nothing to brag about in the fall. I've watched lots of television. A couple adventures are thrown in there, but it is all somewhat forgettable.
But this is good. No, it's not what I planned, and I feel some sort of loss. Not about the library. Just about being awesome. Being important. Mattering.
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Qlog the Second
A Snapshot:
It was Kari's idea.
"I've always wanted to go on a pedestrian bridge! You know, one of the ones over the highway in Denver? Can we please?"
So, we parked illegally and hiked up the stairs. There were four of us, and we were the only ones on the bridge. Somewhere along the way, we all started skipping. Over eight lanes of traffic and an office park. We skipped right up to the doors on the other side, racing to touch them first. Then, winded, we headed back. The world passed under us and we walked in our own direction.
A Soundbite:
"My big heresy is that I believe that there will be more people in heaven than we ever imagined possible. Because God is that gracious and that good." - Raleigh Gresham, Sunday morning, 5/19
Monday, May 13, 2013
Qlog 1: Summer
I wanted a quiet summer.
After a busy semester, I justified it. A quiet summer. That's exactly what I need. I'm not going to get another summer like this, so...
I just didn't plan anything.
Last Monday, I was settled on the couch with Netflix and a couple library books when panic set in.
I have nothing to do... I have NOTHING to do... nothing to DO...
What am I going to DO???
I applied to be a teacher's aid for summer schools, and a book shelver at the library, and a tutor at this local math center, and a "College Nannies and Tutors" nanny...
Nothing.
I may have to swallow all my pride and check out the Chick-fil-A applications...
I'm going to blog about summer again. Last summer, it was the Clog (Camp Log)... right now, it'll just be the "Log."
OOOh. The "Qlog"... because it's all about how things were going to be "quiet."
And if I SAY they'll be "quiet," they won't be, and I'll have something to do!
Three cheers for trying to jinx my life through the internet...
Anyway...
After a busy semester, I justified it. A quiet summer. That's exactly what I need. I'm not going to get another summer like this, so...
I just didn't plan anything.
Last Monday, I was settled on the couch with Netflix and a couple library books when panic set in.
I have nothing to do... I have NOTHING to do... nothing to DO...
What am I going to DO???
I applied to be a teacher's aid for summer schools, and a book shelver at the library, and a tutor at this local math center, and a "College Nannies and Tutors" nanny...
Nothing.
I may have to swallow all my pride and check out the Chick-fil-A applications...
I'm going to blog about summer again. Last summer, it was the Clog (Camp Log)... right now, it'll just be the "Log."
OOOh. The "Qlog"... because it's all about how things were going to be "quiet."
And if I SAY they'll be "quiet," they won't be, and I'll have something to do!
Three cheers for trying to jinx my life through the internet...
Anyway...
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