Thursday, December 20, 2012

2012: A Year in Review

Today, as I sit in my house, snowed in by Draco, I thought it was the perfect time to do a little reflecting on what 2012 has brought me.

Simply put, I live an awesome life.

I mean really. I just don't know how life can get any better.

I'm still enrolled at Edgewood College, at the halfway point of becoming a doctor. That thought is sort of surreal to me, a first generation college student who thought she was going to be a ballerina, a teacher, a marine biologist, an engineer...I'm well on my way to a blossoming career in higher education with so much of my career yet in front of me.

I am still in love with UD, though I am keeping my options open. Now calm down. I'm not going anywhere just yet. I love my job and my students and the many opportunities that I've been given, and I fully intend to keep on living out my calling in this wonderful place until I know for sure that it's time to go. And that time is not today. This past year, I was not in the classroom at all, which I am finding that I miss, but the additional "free time" has been great to dedicate to other things like Edgewood. But I've found myself on some great committees and teams that both improve my own professional skills and improve UD. I can't wait to see what 2013 has in store for me at UD.

I have a great home. The longer I live here, the more I love my little house with its little yard, wonderful neighbors, and cozy spaces. Earlier this fall, someone tried to break in to the house while I was away for my birthday. I, understandably, freaked out when I walked in to find the back door open a crack late one night, but after getting everything put back into place and a few good nights' sleep, I realized that I have nothing to fear. Little house did exactly what it was supposed to do. Doors stayed closed, windows stayed locked, and personal belongings were safe. I'm blessed to be able to live in such a great place, warm and safe, and surrounded by friends and family.

Derrick and I have been together for six months now, and what a crazy unexpected six months it has been. I went from hearing of this mystery man, this son-of-my-friend guy, that I was quite sure I would never meet, to having our lives thrust together through a set of not-so-accidental circumstances. Our relationship has not been perfect (is anyone's?) but it sure has been a wonderful ride. It's been a journey of building friendship, love, trust, and understanding that we are only just beginning. I am just hanging on, enjoying this wild adventure of trusting God with our futures, whatever is to come for 2013 and beyond.

Dad and I continue on our adventures each summer, trekking out to Colorado for the thrill of 14,000 feet. This year was by far our hardest year with some treacherous trails that we faced with all the confidence (or ignorance) of expert climbers. My improved fitness this year gave me an advantage I hadn't had before: endurance. Though I still struggle to wake my body up in the wee morning hours of trailhead arrival, I blazed through the days with a new sort of strength and confidence that running has given me. Running continues to be an obsession in my life, too, giving me the space and quiet that I need to get through long weeks at work surrounded by the noise and hustle-bustle of college campus life. I'm excited to get to my first half marathon coming up in a few short weeks in Key West, Florida. As for Mom and I, well, we continue to make birthdays a big deal with days full of shopping, eating, and girl-talking. I love birthday weekends with her. So special.

You know, I sort of feel like I'm just now starting to come into my own as an adult. I know that probably sounds kind of funny from this 29-year-old, seemingly independent go-getter, but I've never really felt like a grown up, not at work, not at home, not anywhere really. But this year, I feel like I just started to get a grip on what adult life was like. It's a balancing act that doesn't necessarily look all that much like balance. It's getting everything done, fulfilling promises, cooking dinner and eating well. Enjoying red wine with friends or alone, paying bills on time, working, studying, playing, laughing. It's mentoring, praying, caring for others. Making hard decisions. Making easy decisions. It's mowing the lawn and growing a garden. It's success and failure and the grace to accept both. It's confidence even if you have to fake it a little every now and again.

Maybe what 2012 gave me throughout all of the blessings and wonder, maybe the very best thing that 2012 taught me was that I really did, at some point, grow up. And do you know what? Being an adult isn't so bad. Actually it's sort of wonderful. Sort of awesome.

So there you have it. 2012: an awesome year. Filled with friends, family, adventure, blessings, and many wonderfully unknown things to come in 2013 I'm sure. Some years, I make predictions about what might be to come for the next year, but this year, I am truly content to just allow 2013 to be what it will be while I thoroughly enjoy the last half of my 29th year (the Year of Go!) and the first half of my 30th year (with absolutely no trepidations about becoming 30, really!).

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Where was God?

This post is not a political statement. At least I don't think it will be. It is not a flagrant display of Christian privilege. It is not any sort of prideful lash against non-Christians. 

The combination of Christmastime and the national tragedy in Connecticut have spurred quite the conversation in numerous online forums and networks. Friends and acquaintances from all places on the pendulum have posted comments, thoughts and feelings for and against God, Christmas, beliefs, values...all in an attempt to define, perhaps even just for themselves, what it is that they believe when faced with opposing views in society. Questions arise in hearts and minds that make it difficult to make sense of what we personally believe and what we see in society. And frankly, events of evil, pain, and suffering do not make defining what we believe to be true any easier. 

I don't think I can adequately define, even for myself what I truly believe about politics, good and evil, Christians and non-Christians. But I must try to make sense in a senseless world because I don't have the option of removing myself from it and miraculously altering it for the better. 

I have come to believe that there is indeed right and wrong. Throughout various cultures, be they Christian or not, values and morals show up. Nowhere in the world is killing right. Nowhere in the world is hatred good. These values had to come from somewhere. They were instilled in our very hearts. Only a Creator could do such a thing. Individuals' beliefs and values cannot and will not make any sense at all if we push culture away from beliefs and values of any kind, which is what seems to be happening in the world. In attempt to offend no one, we devoid everyone of the possibility of carrying and acting upon the beliefs and values that we know to be true. We cannot be individuals with values living in a valueless society. 

I'm not trying to indoctrinate anyone with my own beliefs. I am merely trying to love. I acknowledge that not everyone is Christian and not all non-Christians are bad; rather, most are good. Our Creator has given us hearts that understand good and bad, right and wrong. These values must act as a foundation not only in our personal lives, but also in our collective lives because we cannot separate the two. They are intertwined. They are the elements of one coherent life that we all are trying to live. And we've tried so hard to separate them that we've become confused and forgotten the most important foundational value of all: love. 

A society that won't stand for anything will certainly fall for anything. And today it seems that we've fallen for the lie that we're better off without values, beliefs, and love, when nothing is more true than the very opposite of that. 

Thursday, October 25, 2012

The Year of "Go!"

Today I was thinking to myself, I wonder what I usually write about on my blog around birthday time. And that right there reminded that I am indeed getting older. 

My 29th birthday is tomorrow, and I've been celebrating hard for a week now. Last Thursday night I took off for the folks' place for some mama-daughter shop and eat retreat time, something that has become something of an annual tradition. This year, it was Williamsburg and Iowa City shopping followed by the Lincoln Cafe for dinner. Then Derrick came down and my parents came up for a play day including Sunday brunch, apple orchards, and the perfect weather for some romping and picnicking in the Mines of Spain. It was such a great weekend to kick off birthday week. 

But unfortunately, the calendar didn't know it was my birthday, and the week at work hit me hard. Projects stacked up, deadlines loomed, and I even had a mini meltdown last night. Poor Derrick was the recipient of that episode. 

But now that I've made it nearly through the week, just one short work day left in front of me, I can look back and remember that even though the week wasn't perfect, it still was sure good. I am blessed to have a career to pour myself into that I love, a man who loves me even when I make life miserable, family that I can enjoy and spend time with, and enough projects to keep me moving my whole life. This is good stuff, people. This is blessing. 

It always seems that we're just waiting, right? Just waiting until we've got life all together. Just waiting to be an adult, or waiting for that big promotion, or waiting for Mr. Right to come along. Some things we must wait on, and they can be worth the wait. And some things depend on God's timing rather than our own. But I think that far too often, we find ourselves waiting on the wrong things because frankly we won't ever have it all together or be perfectly financially stable or win the lottery... But life can be so good without those things. So let's blow past all those things we're waiting on but won't ever necessarily come true. Let's live into the blessings we've been given despite all those things we're waiting for. 

In that spirit, I deem tomorrow the first day of the year of "Go!" It is not the year of "Wait" or the year of "Caution" or the year of "Get it all Together". Messy, wild, crazy, filled with ups and downs, bold, emotional, adventurous, brimming with blessings, not always perfect. That's my 29th year. The year of "Go!"

Monday, October 08, 2012

Life on the Edge: Lessons from 14,000 Feet

Below is more or less the chapel talk I gave today. It came packaged with lots of pictures of views and scenes from our mountaintop adventures, but I guess you'll just have to thumb through my facebook photos for the full effect. Enjoy!

---

Five years ago or so, my dad and I had a crazy idea. We wanted to take a vacation, just he and I to do a little hiking. But we decided that it couldn't be just any hiking. No, we decided that we would climb 14,000-foot peaks in Colorado. With 58 14ers in the state of Colorado, we had quite a goal in front of us to climb as many of them as we could in our lifetime. And now, each summer, we load up the truck and take a road trip to hike for a week or so together. As of this past July, we've conquered a few of them...okay, 21 summits together. With those 21 summits, we've hiked 149.5 total miles while gaining 63,750 total feet in elevation (or 127,500 feet of total elevation change), all in a matter of 16 total days of hiking. To give you some perspective of what climbing 14ers is like, usually the hikes we attempt are between six and eighteen miles long round trip and gain anywhere from 2,000 to 6,000 feet from trailhead to summit. Usually there are trails to follow, but not always. And we usually plan between six and twelve hours to complete one peak. So this is not ropes and helmets and ice picks climbing, but it's no walk in the woods either.

It's been an incredible and indescribable journey so far, and along the way, I've learned a thing or two about technical hiking and scrambling as well as the proper equipment and fitness required for such a hobby, but I've learned so much more about God, life, my dad, and myself in the process. There's just something about the wilderness...there's a silence out there, without all of the buzzing and noise of normal life, and it just seems like conversations have freedom to roam where they otherwise might not, and the thoughts and prayers in my head and heart seem almost crystal clear, and there's just something about the experience that creates countless opportunities to grow.

Now please keep in mind as we get started here that I'm no preacher, so this is not really a sermon as much as just a few reflections and lessons learned from an adventure loving girl learning about life while living on the edge.

The first lesson I'm going to share today is one of the most recent and freshest, most vivid memories I have from this past summer. And that is, sometimes, friends, it can be dark!

Summer afternoons in the Colorado mountains are, if nothing else, predictably unpredictable. You can count on most afternoons to be wrought with thunderstorms, perhaps with sleet and hail, and probably lots of lightning. In order to avoid being the only lightning rod for miles up there above the treeline, hikers need to plan to be heading down off of a summit by about noon each day. Now I will confess to having left more than one comfy warm hotel room bed at the very uncomfortable hour of 2:45 am or so to drive some nasty mountain pass to a trailhead and get ready to hike by 4:00 or 5:00 am. And in case you aren't all that familiar with that time of day, it is dark!

On one particular morning this past summer, we were at the trailhead, ready to climb by about 4:15 am, knowing we had a very long and difficult hike in front of us. After fumbling around the frigid parking lot for a few minutes trying to stuff last minute gear into our packs, which is by the way my least favorite part of each hike, we took off up the trail with flashlights in hand. Now, I'm not afraid of the dark per se, but there have been very few circumstances in my life in which I have experienced such total and utter darkness as this particular morning.We had to hike for nearly an hour and a half like this before the sun gave any indication that it wanted to rise. My eyes were constantly trying to strain just beyond the flashlight edges, looking for anything beyond the tiny bit of light I had with me. I could hear flowing water on one side of me, but I didn't know if it was a stream right near the trail or if it was a hundred foot cliff to the water below. And I can't tell you how many rocks and roots I tripped and stumbled over as we went. Every step became a challenge because I honestly began to doubt that the ground would continue to be underneath my next step.

To me, this was actually strangely familiar because it represented how I sometimes felt in life. In times of trials or struggles, I find myself beginning to beg God to show me more than I can see. I strain to try to understand what is beyond what I can comprehend. I honestly begin to question if there will be something to stand on in the next step I choose. Maybe you know this feeling too? What happens when we get there, to that very dark time in life? I suppose I could just plop down on the trail and wait for sunrise. "No thank you! I'll just wait for things to get better." But we can't ever move ahead that way, can't accomplish what we set out to do, can we. Instead, when we get scared of the darkness of life, we can cling tightly to God knowing that He is the one that puts our paths in front of us and that the sun will indeed rise at some point. We can have confidence that we will not be left in the dark forever. But it is in the darkness that our faith and ability and the necessity to trust in a good and loving God can grow.

And when our faith grows, so can we. Which leads us to lesson number two: I'm stronger than I thought I was. And I'm stronger this time than last time.

Our first year out, we didn't know too much about climbing mountains. Sure we had done a few leisurely strolls through the likes of Yellowstone National Park and the Mines of Spain, but we were not mountain climbers. We weren't aware of proper equipment needed, the right clothing, good food for the journey, or proper physical conditioning. We just, well, we just went. And for whatever reason, that first year out, we decided to try something that you can only find in exactly one place in Colorado: a four peak combination hike. What that means is you hike up the side of one mountain, then you hike down a saddle a few hundred feet, then back up to the next peak, then down another saddle, up another peak, down another saddle, up another peak, then down the mountain side of a forth peak. And we just went. Looking back, I'm not really sure what we were thinking. There were times on that journey that my lungs burned so bad that I thought they might actually explode. My legs cried out for mercy, and I found myself wondering, "Um, why are we here again? Is this still fun? Can we go home now, please?" It was cold and windy and steep and that ten miles or so that made up the trail from end to end seemed like it would never end. I remember looking up along the trail in front of me and picking out one of the closest pile of rocks I could find and telling myself to just make it to that rock, then I could take another break. My dad was usually a few hundred feet in front of me, yelling to me to keep up. There were moments that I wasn't sure I could. But do you know what? I could, and I did. Together we made it through all four peaks and managed to do two other summits that same week. If I wouldn't have been tested with some really tough climbing that day, I would have never known how strong I really was.

Four years later, we're doing peaks that are far harder, believe it or not, than that four peak combo. We're doing steeper, longer journeys that require more knowledge and care and equipment. And over the years, we've acquired those things that we have needed to keep us safe and successful. Each year provides us with opportunities to gain strength and confidence through being pushed to what we think our limits are and surprising ourselves when we surpass them. And that, friends, is known as growth. When we're just walking on flat ground, our abilities, the true potential of our strength isn't really made known to us. All we know is that we can walk. But when we're called to do something tougher, like climbing a mountain or serving others or making the right choice in a difficult situation, only then can we find out what capabilities we've been given. And over time, when faced with numerous "mountains", whatever they may be in life, we grow. We get stronger. Some days, let's be honest, growth is no fun. Some days, it's like being on peak two of a four peak combo with thirty mile-per-hour winds whipping you in the face and going back or going forward are both the same torturous distance away. Some days growth is hard. But strangely, even though it's hard, I think few of us can argue that it is not also good. Gaining in wisdom and knowledge and strength and abilities are all good things and allow us to be God's presence in the world in whatever we're doing, but we only can really know the strength that has been given to us when we are pushed to the edge of what we even thought possible.

Last lesson for the day: the risk is worth the reward.

Lest we lose perspective here, I want to take this moment to let you know that climbing to 14,000-feet is hard! It's hard! The air is thin. I mean like suckin' wind every ten steps thin. It's high. Most people that are affected by altitude sickness begin to experience symptoms between 12,000 and 13,000 feet. That's where many people might find themselves with a headache or a bloody nose or worse. Yep, it's that high. The terrain is steep. It's rocky. It's sometimes unpredictable and dangerous. Add into that a few pounds of food and water and layers of clothing on your back, the potential for storms and wind and rain and snow, and of course the occasional wild animal encounter...it's no easy task, these hikes. So why do them? Why work so hard, train so long, risk life and limb just to hike up a big pile of rocks and then back down again? Well...this (these views) (pictures) might have something to do with it. I wish these photos did any justice at all to the beauty of this special place. But there is also just some sort of  personal satisfaction that comes with the accomplishment of gaining the strength to be able to climb like this, of growing physically, mentally, spiritually. You see, I feel like I've been given this gift in life, this deep desire to climb these mountains, to get to the top, to experience the wild of it all, and to experience God in it all. And to me, the reward is worth the risk every time.

We have been given a great gift, too, you and I, far greater than a few mountain views. We've been given the great gift of salvation by a loving God. But when we accept it, life doesn't suddenly look all smooth and even just because we said yes to the gift. When we accept in our hearts the gift that God offers us, we are not guaranteed that the risks of life disappear. Life is still hard. Trails are still steep, and sometimes they're dark, but we can have confidence in the reward that awaits us in the end. So it becomes worth every trial, every struggle, to live into the life that God has gifted us.

I want to share with you a brief word out of Hebrews, chapter 10, verses 35 and 36 that goes like this: "Therefore do not throw away your confidence, which has a great reward. For you have need of endurance, so that when you have done the will of God you may receive what is promised." Now, I'm no Bible scholar, and I'm not sure I can do this, but hey, I already made clearly known that I'm no preacher, and I think that maybe that gives me some liberties here. You see, to me, this verse sounds a little bit more like this: Friends, do not throw away your confidence, which has a great reward. Even when you have to walk in the dark, have confidence that God puts ground beneath your feet. Keep pushing ahead. For you have need of endurance, and you will gain that endurance with every step you take, every challenge you overcome, every mountain that you climb, you will grow so that you can do the will of God and you may receive what is promised. And trust me, the risks that you'll encounter along the way, each of them will be worth the promises you will receive in the end.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

All Stirred Up

And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near. (Hebrews 10:24-25)

I came across the verse on accident yesterday. A verse-of-the-day that pops up on my phone led me to Hebrews 10, but not this verse. As it turns out, there are a lot of great verses in Hebrews 10. I'll need to spend more time here in the near future. So, I sort of happenstansically fell into this verse (though I doubt that much with God is ever true happenstance), and it's been on my heart since I found it. 

Tonight, as I sat in a Greek Council meeting with representatives from most of the fraternities and sororities on campus, the conversation turned to an upcoming event that has been an (albeit less than stellar) historic tradition on campus. For the last few years, I've watched them come together, formulate some sort of lack luster plan, and then haphazardly attempt to execute it during Homecoming Week. This year, the leadership took a different approach. They came to the meeting pumped for the event, with a few crazy ideas that they'd love to see. And a funny thing happened. The room came alive. Students were talking over each other, laughing, coming up with crazy ideas, asking how far they could push the limits of possibility... They had become stirred up. They began encouraging one another, pushing each other to produce a better event. And they ended up more excited than I had seen any of them yet this year. 

The other day, I started talking with my boss about long term plans and the new building being built on campus and my place in it all. I later apologized for getting so tied up in possibilities or limitations, but my boss thanked me. In my strange combination of frustration and excitement for the future, he noted that he had felt a renewed sense of urgency and passion for projects that he had maybe not been pushing hard enough on yet this year. His heart was stirred up, encouraged to action, by my passion. 

This weekend, Derrick and I got in a stupid tiff about nothing, but in it's own way, it stirred us both up and got us communicating in a way that we really needed to. 

When things get stirred up, they aren't left the same. They can't be left the same. The trajectory is changed. The storyline is altered. There are lots of ways that people get stirred up. Stirred up to anger, to passion, to excitement, to action. Attitudes are contagious, for good and bad. Hebrews 10:24-25 reminds us that we need to stir each other up every now and again, stir each other toward love and good works. We are to encourage each other. We're not supposed to just let the story lie there on its own. No, we're supposed to change the trajectory, jolt people back to life through passion and gifts and action, stirring them up. This week has been a great reminder of all of the ways we get stirred up and all of the ways that I want to intentionally stir up the people around me. And I look forward to being stirred up all the more by those around me, encouraging me toward good and love. 

Time to get stirring, people! 

Monday, September 24, 2012

Faith to Move Mountains

"For truly, I say to you, if you have faith like a grain of mustard seed, you will say to this mountain, 'Move from here to there,' and it will move, and nothing will be impossible for you." Matthew 17:20

Some days, I feel like I'm standing at the base of the proverbial mountain discussed in the book of Matthew, shouting at the top of my lungs, "Mountain! Move! Get out of the way." And to God, "God, I believe you can move this mountain. But it's not even trembling. It's not moving, God. Why?" 

Oh, He could move that mountain. He without a doubt could pick it on up, turn it on it's tiny little peak-side, and set it down in perfect balance somewhere else as proof of His ability to do the most impossible of things. Or He could smash it into a million pieces in front of me as a testimony to His great strength and power. He could make that mountain do a jig or roll it out flat like a red carpet or part it down the middle like the Red Sea. 

Not only could God do any of these things, sometimes He indeed does. And oh, how we praise Him for the miracle He produces in front of us. And then we walk on over or around that mountain and go on with our lives. I move on in life, impressed and thankful, but perhaps otherwise unchanged. Yep, sometimes God moves mountains. But what about the times when I'm standing there shouting at that stupid mountain in legitimate faith that God can move it and He doesn't? Is He ignoring my cries? No, He knows me too well. He knows that I need to learn and grow lest I miss the miracle. So instead of just moving the mountain, He is holding out His hand and asking me to move it with Him. One stone at a time. 

So I pick up one stone. It feels heavy in my hands. But God stays beside me. I walk it off the mountain and place it on the ground. Then I go back for another. And another. And He stays by me. When I get tired and sit down for a rest, He's still there. When I get frustrated by the assignment, He doesn't give up on me. And one by one, the stones begin to come down, and with each stone, I gain strength, maybe a little more understanding. I learn to move stones and listen to God at the same time because He's stayed by my side. I keep trusting, keep learning, keep growing. And then one day, I look up and the path is clear, the mountain is gone. 

But that's not where I am today. I know that day will come. But today, I'm at the base of that big old mountain, the one I've shouted at for so long, with one cold heavy rock in my arms, knowing that this will not be easy, but God is still good. And this mountain will move. 

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Praying when you don't know exactly what you're praying for...

Umm.....uh....well, I guess... Okay, so... Sigh. 

Look, I don't really know what to say here. I don't know even really how I'm supposed to feel. You've brought me to this place, I have not doubt about that. You unsettled me, shook me up, in ways that only You could know I needed, and now here I am. Sort of confused, but not really panicked. Sort of frustrated, but not really angry either. Am I just supposed to keep trusting, God? Things aren't really any clearer than than were before. I guess, well, I guess I'll just keep hanging on.

---

What happens when you know you need to pray but you have no earthly clue what exactly you're praying for? Lately, in a battle of trust with God, I have found myself stuttering and stammering around without much direction of my own. But I'm beginning to think that maybe God's getting me right where He wants me. My pride is being stripped away, one situation at a time, and I'm left with my arms in the air wondering what's next, completely clueless. 

In these moments, who can I rely on? Who can I turn to? Certainly no one around me has answers for me. When the path is dark, and I'm not sure if the ground is going to be under my feet, the only thing I can really do is look up, take a deep breath, and cling to the hope that I know God knows what He's doing. 

Romans 8:26-27 reminds me that it's okay to not have words. 

Likewise the Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know what to pray for as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words. And he who searches hearts knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God.

 This has happened to others. I am not the only one who has been speechless at the throne of God, as I wait for His will to be done. And through my speechlessness, through my blabbering random ramblings that don't make much sense, the Holy Spirit, who knows my heart, not only speaks on my behalf, but He groans without words according to the very will of God. Which is exactly what I want. Even if I don't know how to ask for it.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Choices

This morning, one of my favorite traditions at UD took place: Opening Convocation. I'm not sure what it is about convocation that I adore so much, the faculty dressed in regalia for the first time in an academic year, the choir, singing hymns with students, staff, and faculty all around... 

This year, one of my favorite professors gave the address, and it was simply titled Choices. She walked the congregation through the story of Joshua ushering God's people into the promised land by first gathering them into an assembly. He urges them to reject the gods of the people around them and serve the Lord, but that either way, it was up to each person to decide. The moral of her story was that it's not just the one life-choice of accepting Christ into your heart that is the decision to be made, but rather it is the choices we make in the everyday situations we face that turn our hearts toward God and away from other gods and idols. 

Entangled in this message was the central idea that the people were set apart, selected, to come into the promised land, and we are also chosen, set apart to serve the Lord where we have been placed. But it's still a choice. A daily choice. 

The past few weeks at work have not all been exactly spotlight weeks for reminding me of my love for UD, but today, today was a reminder that stood apart in stark contrast. As I looked up at the stage, filled with faculty and administrators, looked around at the students, the staff, I was reminded that my purpose is to be right here, right now, serving this group of people in this place. God has placed a love in my heart that allows me to pursue my purpose with a reckless, tireless abandon for His glory and for the betterment of this part of His world. My life is a part of the greater narrative, the story of the world. God equips me to work and serve out of love for Him and His creation, and He uses me as a tool in His plan for restoration in His kingdom. 

"...choose this day whom you will serve...But as for me and my house, we will serve the Lord."  Joshua 24:15

Thursday, August 23, 2012

...use them...

Okay, so my timing isn't great. I mean for me. It's 8:10 pm, and I'm still sitting in my office, trying to dig out from several days of orientation related emails, voicemails, post-it notes... And of course, tonight, for the first time in what seems like forever, I feel compelled to write. Well, it may not be great, but it is pretty textbook me. And really, the timing is probably more like just about right. 

It's busy season around here, and I do mean busy. Orientation programming is upon us, and we've got 600-some students coming to campus on Saturday and Sunday, and somehow this campus expects me to do something with them. Something fun. Something meaningful. Something that will keep them here. No pressure, right? I've come to embrace the challenge, the first year, out of ignorance, and every subsequent year, out of stubbornness. 

As can have a tendency to happen around this time of year, I go from highs to lows and back again. Who knew Orientation planning could be such an emotional experience? The students have been doing great, and if I do say so myself, I've even been doing pretty great. (It is possible that in the past, I've been good for at least one major meltdown, usually embarrassingly in front of students that look to me for guidance and a plan and a general lack of panic.) But today, someone called me with an asinine request for this particular time of year, and though I handled it okay in the moment, the emotional backlash for me was generally unpleasant. I immediately fell into a deep hole of self-pity, wallowing in the fact that I don't get paid enough and that certainly no one understands even one iota of what I do, so unfair, so exhausting, blah, blah, blah. 

Here's the thing. It's mostly true. People don't really have a great grasp on what I do for a living, but generally speaking, it's viewed favorably. That's a win. I am probably somewhat underpaid, but to be fair, I do a lot of things that probably were never asked of me to complete my job. Here's the real thing. I can't not do what I do. I've lost a few of you here, I know. Let me explain. I've been given this job. I've been given my gifts of masterful detail managing, beautiful big picture viewing, people skills (and yes, I do sometimes consider intimidation a gift), multitasking skills, stress management skills, spreadsheet skills (can that be considered a spiritual gift? sure.), and a love of people that makes all of the other skills worth having. I do all that I do because God has given it to me to do. I love God with every fiber of my being, with every chaotic moment of the day, with every success cheer and disappointment tear. I love God. And that love makes me want to do more, use my gifts more, fight more for good. Do I have to do it to please Him? No. He is pleased with me just because He made me. But He made me with these gifts, and out of gratitude I do my best to honor Him with the good stewardship of those gifts. 

I don't need money, though it's nice to pay the bills, and you know, eat. I don't need recognition. In fact, sometimes the lack of recognition is a signal to me that things are going so well that my work doesn't even seem like work (you'll just have to trust me that it really is a lot of work). I don't need people to even really see what I do to make it worth doing. I just want to love God. The work that I do is not always easy. Some would even argue that the work I do seems downright torturous and terrible. And frankly, some days, maybe it is a little. We weren't promised easy living. We weren't even promised pure joy in our gift-sharing. Sometimes using my gifts is more like sacrifice, more like pain, a little more like suffering. But it still brings glory to God. And that's why I keep pushing, keep working so hard. I can't not. I am inspired to it. 

So, I climb back out of the pity-party pit. I brush off the dust, and I get back to the work that God has given me to do with the gifts He has granted me to do it with. Glory to God.

Having gifts that differ according to the grace given to us, let us use them… (Romans 12:6)

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Surprising Strength

I'm midweek through my annual mountaintop adventure in Colorado, and so far, it's been mostly good. I had one minor meltdown after a back road discovery was made; it was a literal you-can't-get-there-from-here situation. But with some quick thinking and a little luck, the trip was saved, and we've happily relocated to a new town. 

After the first day, I knew something was different than previous trips, but it wasn't until the end of the day that I knew what it was. Though I was typically slow on the start as we headed off into the woods with layers of clothing on, pretending not to be cold at 4:30 am, I discovered as we went that I had developed a new strength. It was partly physical strength, and after the first day, I noticed that for sure. After the second day, it was even more noticeable. Today, as I continued to encourage my dad up to the summit, it was profound. I am strong. My legs hold me upright and carry me onward in ways that they had not in previous years. Tonight, I know that I'm ready to go another three peaks in two days. 

But what is even more significant to me is not necessarily my physical capabilities, although exciting, it's the significant change in my mental strength. I was trying to explain to my dad how I knew things were different. And the best I could come up with was that I think people usually have two voices in their heads when they're trying hard things. One says, Give up. It's too hard. You don't really want to do it anyway. Is it worth it? The other cheers you on as if what you're doing is the greatest thing on earth. What you hear from that voice is, Yes, yes, yes! You're going to do this! You LOVE this! Yes!

Over the past year or so of running, I have learned that although running has its physical benefits, as displayed this week, it has given me so much more. I have learned over countless miles, good days and bad days, to push back the voice of defeat, the one that tries to convince you to stop whatever it is you're doing, and tune into the cheers of the voice that says I'm stronger than I know. 

Today, on day three and peak four of our trip, toward the end of the decent, I found myself, strange as it may sound, desiring to run down the hill. My arms came up to my sides and a slight bounce came to my step as we worked our way through the rolling meadow back to the trailhead. I was astounded. Where did this come from? This energy, this strength? The cheering voice in my head is getting louder. Perhaps it's time to get serious about endurance sports...

Wednesday, July 04, 2012

When God says wait (a post NOT about patience)

Surely by now, you are quite familiar with my issues with patience. I've written about them enough, and I certainly exude impatience through my very lifestyle. Tonight though, I am not going to write about patience. No, I'm actually going to talk about what I'm doing while attempting to be patient. Because my lack of patience isn't going away. But I think there's a far more important focus at hand. Trust. 

The specifics of the situation aren't particularly important to the lesson I'm sharing with you, though they are quite important in the grand scheme of things. And perhaps somewhere along that grand scheme, the details will all come to light, but the shortest version of the story is: God told me to wait. 

Huh? Yep. A situation presented itself that I desperately desired an answer for, and God told me to wait. Clear as day. Unmistakable.  

Wait. 

Really, God? I don't want to wait. I want you to tell me now. I want a sign, some sort of writing on the wall, show me something. 

Not now.

Mmmkay. Usually, like a toddler, I would press on for my answer in a fit. Kicking and screaming and throwing myself on the floor and all sorts of other unpleasantries. Usually, I would start setting up signs for God to speak through. Usually, I would panic.

But for whatever reason, after fitting for a small while, my heart softened. My restlessness quieted. It became clear to me that I wasn't supposed to ask for a sign. I wasn't supposed to rush to find an answer. I was just supposed to trust. 

Trusting God seems like a very Christian thing to do, doesn't it? How lovely. Of course I'll trust Him. Ha. Trust is HARD. Trust takes WORK. Peace does not come naturally with trust. I find I must seek out peace in the Word and through prayer when I'm learning to trust. But honestly, the more I draw near to God's heart, the more trust I have for Him, and the more peace I find in Him. Why is that so difficult to remember?

But you know, if the only reason to have to wait on God is because He wants me to draw nearer to Him, to seek out peace in Him, then amen and glory to God for that. This isn't a battle of wills, who can outlast whom in an ultimate game of high-stakes trust. In fact, I don't really think it has anything to do with patience or risk or stakes at all. No, this is about God's heart. And my heart. And the two being closer together than they were before. And for that, I will wait. I will trust. I will find peace. 

Tuesday, July 03, 2012

Thoughts on Christian Music

It's sort of funny how my mind grabs onto one or two little tidbits of conversations or I read something on a blog, and I can't really let them go without sorting them out first. Honoring that today, I want to spend some time reflecting on why I listen to, enjoy, and sing primarily Christian music. It actually seems like a remarkably simple concept, but I suppose that even the simplest ideas sometimes need to be dug into, considered in new ways, and justified in one's heart from time to time. 

I started listening to Christian music probably around middle school, at the encouragement of someone at my church. Prior to being introduced to it, I didn't even know such a genre existed. The only music I knew was what this sheltered child heard on the shuttle bus back and forth to school each morning and afternoon. Looking back at that first introduction to Christian music, I remember being attracted to it not only for the sound (because arguably, I was listening to some pretty corny '90s praise music) but because my heart, even my young heart, immediately recognized something different about how the words impacted my heart. Regular radio music, songs of love/lust, partying, summer days, and whatever else, never reached into my life. They never caused me pause. But with Christian music, sometimes I would find and read the words over and over realizing that they meant something, they called to a part of my heart that loved God greatly. 

Fast forward to today. Christian music still does the same thing. When I listen, my heart is touched, as if God is sometimes speaking directly to me through the lyrics, even through the melodies and harmonies. Now, granted, Christian music is not always a gospel message directly, nor is it always even directly about God. There are songs about forgiveness, loving others, healing past hurts, having a good or bad day... Music is not the gospel. Music is not the Bible. Music was never meant to be these things. 

I guess, when it comes right down to it, I see music as a tool. A technology, perhaps. When I listen to Christian music, I am reminded. I am reminded of my Creator, my Savior, the cross and sacrifice made for me, about right living, being human, about great love. My heart is inspired. I desire to draw closer to God. I am emotionally impacted, moved to feel deeper. To me, music is a lot like murals or sculptures. A lot like visual representations of the cross. Like taking communion. Like a devotional book. Like a sunset or a rainbow. To varying degrees, all of these things serve as reminders of God's love. 

I don't know that there's anything inherently wrong with listening to non-Christian music. There's a lot of great music about other things. I enjoy this music from time to time, too. But I find myself becoming more and more discouraged about mainstream music. Increasingly, as I listen to lyrics, I realize just how many songs are representative of the world and what the world sees as acceptable. Drugs, extramarital sex, drinking, partying, hurting others or self, violence, hatred. These are things that I know are a part of the world we live in, but it doesn't mean that I want to dwell on them, to be reminded of them. If I have the choice, and usually I do, I am going to choose to be reminded of the things of God rather than the things of the world. 

There you go. A very long-winded way around a simple topic that just wouldn't let me go today. Thoughts? Arguments? Challenges? You know I like a good debate.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Such a Girl

Sometimes I wish I wasn't so much of a girl. I mean, clearly, I am indeed a female...not sure there's any confusion there. But some females are rational, calm, even-keeled people. Others deal with a mess of emotions, looks, reflections, crazily analyzing everything to death... That second one, that's totally me. I read this usually satirical, hilarious blog about Christian living that makes fun of reserved pews, drums in church, worship leader dress codes...but this one reminded me a little too much of me: http://bit.ly/KRuIas

I am SUCH a girl. 

I spend a lot of time fighting my girl-nature. I try to look "natural" but always end up wearing makeup. I try to sit quietly and enjoy conversation around me but usually end up talking too much. I buy clothes that make me feel like a pretty princess. I try to keep my emotions in check but end up crying at pretty much every emotion (afraid? yep. overjoyed? yep. overwhelmed? oh, yes.). I like having my nails done. I like dresses. I like curls in my hair. I think about everything way too much. Everything. All the time. I've actually even had people tell me that maybe I just need a break from reflecting on everything so much and just try to enjoy things for what they are. Far too much thinking. 

But here's the thing about girl-nature: God made women. And God made men. And God made them drastically different so that they could compliment each other. If we were the same, we just wouldn't. And we wouldn't need each other. 

Men's hearts don't necessarily always dwell on things like women's. They can process information far more objectively. Thank goodness for that! Men are brave and fearless and strong; they protect and shelter and give of themselves in their strengths...because they were made that way. And women feel deeply, love deeply, dwell in moments and create significance out of them; they give of themselves in their own strengths...because they were made that way.

I believe that men and women were made differently to represent to the world different facets of our Creator, a complex and wonderful God. Together we tell the story of salvation to the world around us, just by living into who were are. And one day, that love story that we tell in a fractured, frail way during our time on earth will be told perfectly in the return of Jesus to reclaim us as His own. 

So, let me change a previous statement... I AM such a girl. I was created that way. My femininity complements men's masculinity because it is supposed to just as God's strength compliments our weakness because it is supposed to. So here's to mascara, pink dresses, do-I-look-pretty-Daddy?'s, tears in all circumstances, just the right pair of shoes, too much reflection, analyzing everything, talking too much, sappy movies, intoxicating perfumes, and blushing at compliments. I'm God's girl, and He created me in just that way.

Funny how attending a wedding of a good friend gets a girl thinking about such things...

Wednesday, June 06, 2012

A Real Professional?

Today, for the first time in a while, I felt like a REAL professional. Now don't get me wrong. I've been a professional for a number of years, clearly working in the field that I have a passion for, even seeing a few successes along the way. But today, two things happened that made me pause and think that perhaps I'm a full-fledged grown up now. 

First, I was taken out to lunch by an administrator...nothing too terribly new here. I've been taken out to lunch before and taken folks out to lunch before. But this one struck me as a little bit different, a little bit more of a glimpse into the world that I will more than likely one day be a part of. We went to the Country Club. Now, don't laugh. I know it wasn't any big deal. But there were sharply dressed golfers here and there. Well-off families and children were swimming in the private pool. The standard apparel for all employees was a navy blazer with gold buttons. Every third car (including the one that escorted me to lunch) was a BMW. And we walked in to a whole slue of "Hello, Mr. Dendy!"s and "How are you today, Mr. Dendy?"s. I felt out of place to say the least. 

I'm not an administrator. I'm not wealthy. I don't golf. But someday I will probably be an administrator. The wealth at this point is questionable (silly economy). But shoot. At some point in my adult life, I'm probably going to have to learn to play golf. How, exactly, did that end up being the affluent professional's game of choice anyway? Perhaps I will set this as one of my first goals after I complete my degree so that I'm not learning in a panic when I'm fifty and applying for my first presidency when I suddenly get invited to play a round as a way to get to know the administrators at a prospective school. And certainly fundraising is impossible without golf, right? Golf outings seem to be the standard in professional fundraising efforts these days.

The other, far less surreal but far more significant REAL professional quantifier happened when I got a phone call from one of my favorite faculty on campus. I answered and she said, "Pack your bags, we're going to Indiana." Of course, I knew what she meant. Our proposal to present at a national conference had been accepted. This is huge first in my career trajectory. Conference presentations typically lead to further invites, potential publication, and some peer notoriety, all of which will become crucial as I work to set myself apart from all the other middle managers out there trying to work their way to the top. A not-so-secret goal of mine is to have at least one article published in a journal prior to completing my dissertation. The reason? If for nothing else, I would revel in the opportunity to cite myself as a source in my own dissertation. Because really, how many people can say they did that? 

After all of the cloud floating that happened today, I was quickly brought back down to earth this evening as I returned to my messy, perhaps-a-teenager-lives-here house, my unmade bed, my piles of laundry, and my list of homework assignments to complete. As much as I felt like a real professional today, I now feel in equal measure like a real adolescent. But the truth is, that most days I live somewhere in between. Content to be one of the younger ones at the table while still taking the opportunity every now and then to command a room's attention as a professional. Leaving the dishes on the counter while still managing to get the bills and loans and mortgage paid. Running around in flip-flops while occasionally donning the one power suit I own. I kind of hope I never lose all of my inner kid style. Can a university president be a bit of a prankster? Are windows-down-stereo-up attitudes permitted from time to time in a professional's world? Perhaps as long as I take time for a round or two of golf...

Friday, June 01, 2012

The Patience Perspective

I've probably written about this before, but I am not a very patient person. In general, I don't like to wait, or maybe just don't think I should have to wait for things. Sayings like "Good things come to those who wait," are usually completely lost on me. I've been known to forge ahead blindly, push hard to get what I want, and sometimes even blow on stoplights to make them turn green (Corrina, Corrina reference). When people tell me they're praying for patience for me, I tell them to STOP IT! Do you know what God does when someone prays for patience? That's right. He gives them opportunities to practice it. No thank you. 

But like it or not, the last four weeks have become a bit of an exercise in patience, as I have been working through a silly little foot injury. I don't consider myself a running nut by any means. I've never done a marathon; in fact, I'm still contemplating my first half marathon. I don't run just everyday. But I did have a goal this year. I wanted to run 500 miles this calendar year. And I really just plain love running. It's my space, my breathing room, my energy booster. And four weeks without something you love is a really long time. Especially in peak season. Especially when there's a goal on the line. 

I've done pretty well to be patient during this time. I have listened to doctors. Rested A LOT. Tried other workouts. Today I was given permission to test the waters after a month of rest, and I was not optimistic. I figured I would head out the door, down the hill, and hit my favorite trail just in time to be in a lot of pain and grumpily mope back to the house. Not exactly the best attitude, I know. But I was pleasantly surprised after the first five minutes to still be pain free. So I went a little further. But then, something clicked in my head, and I thought take it easy. When all I wanted to do was get out there and pound out a mean five miles, my patience actually kicked in all by itself. A nice steady slow start this week and next may be just what I need to actually remain pain free instead of just be hurting again tomorrow. This natural patience thing kind of caught me off guard, and I'm sure it is not going to be a universal application in my life suddenly, but it's certainly a start, right?

I learned a little something else about patience this time around. Sometimes when we're forced to wait on something, we get creative. Sure, waiting sometimes has its merits, but when it doesn't, it turns out that there is more than one way to get from point A to point B. For me, not running gave me a new temporary mission: find a bike. And yesterday, I bought a used road bike as a means of working out while giving my foot a little more rest. Why I didn't think of that four weeks ago is beyond me, but hey, I'm new to this patience thing, so give me a break. 

I'm sure that whether prayerfully requested or strategically absent from my prayers, patience is something that God is going to work on me either way throughout my life. I will probably kick and scream the whole way, but eventually, I might even grow a little. All that from a broken foot? Not a bad lesson or two. Thanks, God.

Sunday, May 06, 2012

Bravery

As another academic year wraps up, I've been reflecting on what this year had to offer me, and even what I had to offer it back. 

As for what I offered to the school year, generally speaking, I brought a much calmer and more even-keeled professional (at least on the outside...most days). I offered an unrelenting energy, just going at it from all angles, at all hours, all days. There weren't many days off at work, in classes, or in all the other of life. August, October, and April tried to run me ragged, but I kept pace just fine without a single incidence of napping in the office break room, life threatening injury or illness, or even major psychotic breaks (though I will confess to at least one minor one). 

And what did this year offer me? Upon reflection, especially of events of the last few months, this year has provided me with a fair share of lessons. Some of the lessons, I had learned before like biting my tongue in the moments when it really counts, the value of not yelling at your boss, and the importance of relationships even when it seems there just isn't time for them. But the biggest lesson I was provided this year ended up being a bit of a theme: bravery. 

When I was offered a seemingly sweet deal to lead a new rendition of a significant program on campus, it took all the bravery in my body to look administrators in the eye and say no. I was convinced that the program wouldn't succeed in its current model with its current resources, and I'm still convinced of that. I cannot save the whole world, though I try hard many days, and this program was not mine to save. The necessity of bravery allowed me to sit in a meeting with administrators, articulate the flaws in their plan, offer suggestions (all without crying, mind you), then get on out of there. A year ago, I'm not sure I would have had the fortitude to hold my ground, but this year, I was brave. 

Very recently, I requested some institutional documents for my grad class and was promptly told no. I went higher (all the way to the president of the university), asked again, and was promptly told no again. I could have let it go, given up, and figured out how to study the documents of another school, but I believed it was important to continue to pursue those silly documents. So, I reached out again to the president and asked for a meeting. I did not fear meeting with the president, in fact, I welcomed the opportunity gladly. And after a half hour or so, I received full permission to use what I needed. I felt almost as though it was a test just to see how far I was willing to go, how brave I was willing to be. And I persisted and succeeded in bravery. 

And even more recently (Friday), Danielle and I presented a 20 minute presentation to the board of trustees. Most of them liked it. At least one of them (the board's president) did not. And although, at first glance, it seems that the most brave thing to do would be to stand there and object to his worries, defend the work we've done, but upon closer inspection, it is the opposite that perhaps ends up being true. I stood in front of the 40 most powerful men and women of the university, allowed portions of our presentation to be ripped open, made vulnerable, made to seem even a little weak or off kilter. And I smiled, took a deep breath, and simply said thank you. I can do that because I know that we will prove ourselves right and strong and better just by doing, not by arguing. This will be a long-term act of bravery, stretched over years of hard work.

As I turn the pages that end my forth chapter of work at UD, I look ahead with great anticipation for what brave and exciting things lie ahead. How will next year transform me as a professional, as a person? What lessons lie in store on the rest of the pages of this amazing book? I bravely turn the page...

Sunday, April 08, 2012

Big Pond or Big Fish?

First of all, happy Easter everyone. In this season, I am reminded of just how blessed I am to have a Savior, one who was willing to die, then beat death, for me. The very thought overwhelms me... 

Speaking of overwhelmed...

Most days, I am a pretty confident person. I act like a pretty big fish in a pretty little pond. But this weekend, as I tried to read articles, search for more articles, write a tiny and most insignificant paper, and get a bunch of loose ends tidied up for the class I am currently in, my confidence got a little bit shaken up. Well, actually it was when I stared down the barrel of a very daunting syllabus for my next class that I got a little shaken up. Suddenly, I felt like a very little fish in a much bigger pond. 

Weird. I'm pretty sure I can handle it. I've handled it this far. What about today's syllabus review and textbook purchasing got me feeling like I'm back at the very first day of school again? 

But I think this fear is a pretty good thing. It keeps me grounded. It keeps me pushing, trying to do better, continuing to work harder. Maybe it's okay to feel like a little fish every once in a while. Someday I'll be a bigger fish...probably in a bigger pond. Either way, I've got to just keep swimming.

Thursday, April 05, 2012

Did I really make that bet?

Today, Danielle says to me something like, We should find a way to make us workout in the morning before work. *Shrug* and I kept working. An hour or so later, I started thinking to myself, I wish I didn't sleep so darn long in the morning. I could get so much more done. And then there was a light bulb above my head...complete with that little ding sound that comes with all great ideas.  

Danielle, were you serious about the morning workout thing? 

*Blank stare.*  I mean, I guess so. 

With the right incentives, it might just work. 

And thus, we launched the perfect type A, first-born, gold-star-loving competition to hopefully drag our bed-loving butts out of bed for some body-good sweatin'. We made a literal gold star chart. Seriously. The bet? Simple. The person with the least amount of weekday, before-work, substantial workouts (gold stars on the chart) pays the other's way to a play at Spring Green's outdoor theater, complete with the picnic and the celebratory drinks. There's also an ambiguous alternate prize for the winner of the bonus round of any other workouts which, of course, is represented with other colored stars on our chart. 
We may be nerdy, but we're going to be working hard before sun-up for the next six weeks. That's for sure. It doesn't take much to get us going apparently. But I'm glad for it. I hope I'm just as glad for it at 5:00 am on Monday morning.