Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer. Show all posts

Monday, June 11, 2007

On Being Vulnerable and Enjoying Summer

I’ve been a rather negligent blogger since I last informed you all on my thoughts of the ripeness of summer, but I suppose that’s because I’ve been savouring the loveliness of summer (which, I suppose, is the proverbial fruit in my analogy about ripeness). I feel kind of absurd when I blog about things that I’m happy about, because it seems as though I’m just rubbing in how great life is, but I do indulge in grievances here from time to time as well I guess (see: Living in the Tension parts 1 and 2). Thus, I won’t shy away from burbling on about the joys of summer. About 23.81% of my summer has been taken up by work, which is turning out to be better than ever; I have so many coworkers who are deep-down good, in addition to being silly and chatty, and they make me think and laugh and blush every single day. People often underestimate how much mental energy goes into working in a café, and generally assume that we don’t work very hard, but it’s true that my job is pretty peachy keen. I can talk about God and politics and life with them, and we really do love and care about each other oodles and oodles. This makes working for dimes and nickels more than worth it; as aforementioned, I kind of like that I have more reasons to work than just the moolah.

I’ve slowly been chipping away at my list of things to do this summer, although there are still quite a few to be checked off in the next three months. I’ve been doing a fair amount of reading, which is truly one of the best parts of these lazy days, and I’m loving the ability to keep my window open at night so that I can get even more fresh air and wake up to the chirping of the birds that reside in our yard. I am now the proud owner of a blue fighting fish (who isn’t quite as cool as a lizard, so clearly you should let me get a lizard Mom!). My fish seems to enjoy pretending to be dead at random points during the day, and likes to smash his head into rocks at the bottom of his aquarium in a seemingly futile attempt at suicide. I have decided that he is quite similar in personality to a crack cocaine addict going through symptoms of withdrawal, but perhaps as I nurse him back to health, he’ll start to behave in a more sane manner. My fish was formerly known as Ted when he lived at the café, but shall henceforth be known as Ghandi (Matt said that I had to name it a fighting name, so I christened him Ghandi instead; Matt noted that this is also an appropriate name because I didn’t feed Ghandi for an extended period of time when I first got him, which is akin to a hunger strike).


Speaking of this Matt fellow, I have been, as people would colloquially put it, dating him for the past little while. I really think that someone should invent a word that has more meaning and sounds cooler than “dating” because the word seems to suggest that the relationship is based on dates, when really I think it’s best when a relationship is more than just a bunch of dates. However, dating does rhyme whith skating and baiting, so perhaps it’s not so bad after all. Regardless of nomenclature, I’ve officially decided that this whole relationship business is pretty splendid, although it’s mainly Matt that makes it so great. It’s quite absurd how long I can talk to a single person, how wistful I get when we say goodbye (which we’re kind of awful at), how hard someone can make me laugh, and how well I can understand and get along with someone (i.e. Matt). A lot of you blog readers know Matt already, and it feels quite self-indulgent to go into great detail about this in a blog entry, so I’ll limit my effusive depiction of him. He really is a first-rate individual with a good heart, and he cares about people and his faith a great deal. He is also quite silly from time to time, and is excellently funny and smart (although perhaps excessively intelligent when it comes to the freezing points of mud, the accumulation of rain in buckets, and the provincial trees of Alberta).

One of the oddest things I’ve found in my extremely limited experience with being coupled is the beauty of vulnerability. I’m making myself somewhat vulnerable by typing these things about Matt. Maybe I’ll sound ridiculous or naïve or creepy, or maybe I’ll regret writing these thoughts down if things don’t work out (which would be rather sad), or maybe I’m being too candid. But that’s kind of the beauty of it. One of my favourite chapters in Sex God speaks about the vulnerability that’s at the heart of God’s relationship with us. God came here as a vulnerable man because, in part, all the other ways he might have come would have scared us speechless. The Israelites told Moses that they couldn’t listen to the voice of God when he was giving the Ten Commandments because it was so overwhelming that they felt they would die if God spoke to them. So Jesus is born in a feeding trough in a stable. It doesn’t get much more vulnerable than that. I think the paradox of the Son of God’s vulnerability speaks a great deal about how deep God’s love for us is, how we’re meant to love others, and how upside-down His Kingdom really is.

There are a lot of places in life where I think the vulnerability that Jesus modeled is healthy, and I’ve found my own vulnerability to be particularly evident in this guy-girl dynamic that God set up. Even the simple act of liking someone a lot is kind of risky. They might not reciprocate, or your feelings might get out of hand, or you might end up looking rather silly by acting on your feelings. I think this is an illustration of the vulnerability that characterizes God’s relationship with us, and His ultimate act of weakness that paid the price of our redemption. I was reading Hosea last week, and I find it so interesting that God would use a marriage to represent His love for His unfaithful people. Hosea marries a prostitute, and continues to love her earnestly despite her disloyalty. Hosea marries a woman who repeatedly cheats on him just as God loves a group of people who continually reject Him. Chapter 5 of Song of Songs speaks about the interplay between two people. The man asks the woman to let him into her house, but she waits too long, and he gives up, leaving her alone and regretful. It’s very risky, but very worth the risk. I can get frustrated with Christians when I self-righteously think that they aren’t willing enough to just love people without being judgmental and selfish about who and how they love, but people’s hesitation to be vulnerable is understandable, I think (although still not justifiable).


C.S. Lewis puts it this way: “Love anything and your heart will be wrung and possibly broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact you must give it to no one, not even an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements. Lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket, safe, dark, motionless, airless, it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. To love is to be vulnerable.” And so, maybe by doing things that are sometimes unappealing to the sometimes-shy Cait like initiating phone conversations, deciding how to fritter away an evening, or hanging out with Matt’s parents, I’m learning more about God and His Kingdom and how radical His vulnerability was. (In fairness though, I don’t think that God is as shy as I am. However, I have written two entire honest paragraphs on my blog about my thoughts on dating, so obviously I am getting good at being vulnerable.)

I’ve been thinking about milestones recently, not only because of the aforementioned dating, but also because my family just celebrated a boatload of birthdays, Jess just graduated and is five days away from becoming a full-fledged adult, my family just got a new yet-to-be-named car, dear friends are convocating, and I am now a proud (albeit slightly incompetent) pet-owner. I like that we define little moments in life as especially significant, even though sometimes they’re just arbitrary points at which we recognize someone’s achievements, the life of someone we love, or the beginning of something splendid. Life really is more of a progression rather than a series of steps, I think, but having a graduation bash or making a big deal out of the first drive in a new car helps us to gain perspective I think. Jess’ impending bday has made me think a lot about how far we’ve come since she was born nearly 18 years ago, and what our years as adults might look like. Not that she will miraculously grow an inch overnight on June 16, nor will she suddenly be imparted with special grownup wisdom, but she has slowly been growing into an adult and increasingly becoming intimidating in her knowledge of baking, black holes, biology, and various other topics starting with the letter “B.” Jess really is growing up. She’s taking a year off of school, which I know from experience will be a great break, will teach her a lot about people, and will allow her to define herself outside of academics and extracurricular activities. She’s nabbed a big-deal job at an ophthalmology clinic run by her friend Jessie’s dad (she visited the clinic last week, and it sounds awesome, although rather intimidating). She’s doing a job that is usually done by people who have gone to school for two years, but she’s more than smart enough to handle it, and she’s enjoying reading through ophthalmology textbooks and showing me highly disturbing pictures of eye infections and bulbous eyelids.

I can still distinctly remember the day that Jess was born; to say she’s come a long way since then would be an understatement. One of my favourite things to do in the entire world is to watch home videos and browse through old photo albums. I’m an overly sentimental person at times, and so I derive pleasure from making a big deal out of past landmark occasions, whether it’s be Jess’ first birthday, our move into Evergreen the House, or my grandparents’ retirement party. Thinking back on these times reminds me of how little I’ve changed, how much I’ve changed, and the numerous plans we had all those years ago (and how the carrying out of these plans has been met by mixed results). Caitlin’s been gone on her world travels for more than a month now, and I’m missing her a great deal already (I’ll send the review to you soon other CJ!). I can only imagine what it will be like when I’m faced with milestone of friends leaving Edmonton (perhaps even my baby sister leaving, or maybe even me leaving). Needless to say, I will require a lot of Kleenex if and when that time comes.


I should head off to watch Barefoot Contessa with Hessica before this blog becomes incessant. In a couple of weeks, she’ll have no school to use to excuse herself from watching non-Food Network TV with me and enduring horrible movies called The Fountain. I can’t wait! My parents are nearly on vacation (to NEW YORK!) as well, and Jess and I will have the house to ourselves in a short while. I plan on baking a great deal with Jess, watching movies late with friends, and festooning the door to our house with absurd decorations. I’m additionally looking forward to upcoming festivals, concerts, reenactments of scenes from Rocky Balboa, potential learning how to drive, and more of the already-enjoyed camping/reading/working/walks outside. I’m nearly finished reading Anne Lamott and Pascal now (both of which I’d recommend, although I’d recommend the former less heartily as she might offend readers quite easily), and am hoping to start reading through some stuff by Shane Claiborne and Tony Campolo and Eugene Peterson soon. I have also promised to give Harry Potter a chance this summer, so perhaps I’ll become an obsessed Harry Potter reader before school returns in the fall. If you’re not reading, I really suggest that you crack open a book; you can learn things and be entertained all at the same time. Besides the previously mentioned activities, I’m also nursing my poor summer-battered body back to health. The assaults that allergens, UV-laden sunrays, and blood-sucking mosquitoes have subjected me to have rendered me somewhat sore, but still alive and able to type at length, which you may have noticed. Anyhow, I’m off for TV fun with Jess and another agonizing application of aloe vera onto my back! I hope you’re all wearing SPF 30 and making yourselves vulnerable some of the time and enjoying all that summer has to offer!



Cait and Matt’s Incomplete List of Camping Adventures
- Cait stubbed her toe
- a thrilling ugly shoe comparison
- cracker snacks
- invented a game
- Cait NEARLY won Crazy 8 countdown
- we ate good Subway sandwiches, Matt ate 12.5 inches of sandwich, Cait was stared at for not wearing shoes due to aforementioned stubbed toe
- we saw the mountains
- Jordan was an expert animal-spotter
- Matt watched for deer and followed a semi
- Cait thought about #72 and watched mountains
- named and set up and admired Merman the space station
- a few select people “basked” in the “glow” of the candlelight
- Matt named Frederick the Fire Site who was reincarnated part way through the weekend
- Matt and Rob and Allan talked for a short period of time
- Matt and Allan felt each other’s sleeping bags
- the boys -Rob pretended they were macho and pushed cars for no good reason
- slept in waaay too late
- ate cereal from small boxes and Matt spilled milk all over
- Cait failed at President until the very end when we stopped (WHICH WAS A TRAGEDY OF EPIC PROPORTIONS)
- ate lunch at the Bear’s Paw and observed that turkey was better than roast beef
- Crystal was afraid of feces
- threw snowballs at each other
- Matt broke his backpack
- sang songs on the way such as Fly Me to the Moon, Down by the Bay, Row the Boat, Amazing Grace (to the tune of In the Jungle), Matt’s Christmas song (that included lyrics like: “please put a penny in the old man’s hat” and “the geese are getting fat” and had stomping actions)
- climbed a mountain and especially scary, unstable rocks and did not die
- saw many chipmunks at the top of the mountain
- drank snow
- attempted to ski down the mountain and ended up falling, charging, sliding, getting stuck and rolling
- skipped as high as possible
- made our own path down the mountain
- sat in a hot spring pool and had a snack in the café where they were playing Joni Mitchell and jumped in the cold pool and the lifeguard saved Matt from freezing
- a nurse corroborated “everything” that Cait said regarding vegetables and body temperature (but Cait is deluded)
- Cait did not blow dry her hair (what a wonderful and low maintenance person she is!)
- admired the ample-sized blue bruise on Cait’s toe
- made hotdogs that reflected our respective cooking abilities and Cait thought her hotdog stick was amazing, which it was, but it looked weird
- Cait was the only one who enjoyed smores
- Rob and Crystal ruled for a time at President together then Rob became the worst Janitor in the history of the game
- chatted about topics both silly and serious in Merman the Space Station for a long period of time
- were sadistic towards the sleepy Crystal and Rob when we got up in the morning (flashlights, Cait’s fighting skills, and Matt’s preaching were utilized quite effectively)
- ate poutine and delicious pizza for breakfast
- Cait spilled poutine on her jeans not once, but twice
- Matt ate ketchup with his poutine, and somehow did not vomit
- lazed around at Pyramid Lake while making miniature forests and throwing rock ammunition into the lake and splashing water on the faces of lazy nappers
- Sufjan serenaded us while we admired the pretty mountains and listened to Brit rock that Rob totally loved
- ate leftover marshmallows and watched Venus and chit-chatted



P.S. I am clearly a more expert blogger than you, Matt. I'm not sure why you would even attempt to keep up with my consistency in posting, but if you want to try, you should blog soon.
P.P.S. Football season is nigh. I am reeeeeally excited. We touched actual Commonwealth grass last weekend at the Police concert, which I'm sure means good luck and guarantees that the Eskies will make it into the playoffs this season. If they fail to make it into the playoffs again, I simply won't know what to do with myself.
P.P.P.S. I have decided that I should visit Albertan lakes more frequently. They make me happy.

Monday, May 07, 2007

A Season of Ripeness

Sometimes life just feels ripe. Ripe with possibility, with beauty, and with truth. Summer is one of those seasons of life that is rich with all the best things in life, and the lack of school and related responsibilities make savouring life all the more trouble-free. School’s been “out for the summer” for a couple of weeks now, and it’s been a welcome change from four months of school, limited sunshine, and reading mainly textbooks and lecture notes. I got a stack of summer reading out from Rutherford last week, finished with taxes for another year, and enjoyed lots of lovely moments with friends and family. Even with the gruesomeness of allergies in this month of pollen and birch tree flowering, I’m kind of wishing that it were always summer. I’ve been reading through Joshua for the past couple of weeks, and was really challenged to trust God despite crummy things that friends were going through and my own ambivalence about where I wanted to work this summer. God asked Joshua and the Israelites to do some pretty crazy things (not just difficult, but seemingly insane things), and they trusted Him big time in spite of all the reasons they had to be skeptical and glum. Even when life is messy, I’ve learned that it really is best to give my worries and hopelessness up to God. It was hard to see how God would work through all the mess that I was struck by last month, but He totally did. My uncle’s recovering from successful surgery on his legs, dear old Brian has been in especially high spirits this month, and school and work have been treating Jen well this month. God’s worked through struggles that friends were facing last month, despite my finding it difficult to be hopeful about them, and although I don’t want my faith in God to depend on Him being overtly good and generous, it’s a blessing to see that He really is sooo good in ways that I can’t foresee.


Even shifts at the café, which I’d been fretting over, have worked out rather nicely; I’ll be working just Monday nights this summer, and will get about 40 hours a week (48 this week). I really wasn’t sure what I’d do this summer, and had scouted out some other jobs last month, but none of them were people jobs in the way that being a barista is, and I’m relieved that I can continue to nurture relationships that have grown over my time at the café. I love the friends that I work with so much; we bake for each other, go out for meals and shopping excursions together, and have some of my favourite conversations ever. I make relatively piddly money working at the café, but I’m kind of love that I can work somewhere for reasons besides earning money. I was talking with a friend a few weeks ago about prayer, and she was explaining me how she finds it strange to ask God for things when He might not even answer those prayers, and praying about God’s splendour and her own sin is much more appealing much of the time. Sometimes it’s easy for prayer to turn into a request bonanza rather than a dialogue with God, but it’s so freeing to give worries and concerns up to Him. Even if a prayer isn’t “answered,” it’s such a weight off my shoulders to leave something up to God, and realize that ultimately, He’s got the whole world in His hands, what I need to worry about mainly involves me living in a Kingdom-way, loving others, and loving God. I like to collect quotes in my journal, and my favourite find from last week was one that goes, “Everything is okay in the end. If it's not okay, then it's not the end.” How true that is. Life is hard, and messy, and confusing much of the time, but if I trust in Him, God’s will ultimately take care of me, and as Morrie would say, His love and justice and grace really will win in the end.

Although I’ve certainly found this post-school time of year to be lovely and amazing, it has definitely been detrimental to my vanity (which is likely a good thing). With the advent of allergies, my eyes have become puffy and resemble slices of Mandarin orange, while my legs are still rather bruised from a game of Grounders last weekend and I’ve avoided wearing skirts and shorts over the last while. Plus, I got my first black eye ever on Saturday, which was both exciting and strange. My grandparents are slightly concerned about the nature of the fun that I have with friends from our new church, I think, and customers are undoubtedly going to make fun of my shiner today and insinuate that I had a drunken fight over the weekend. Plus, the runniness of my nose and frequency of my sneezing can’t come to an end soon enough. I had a detailed dream last night in which I was doing research on sneezing. When I have dreams centred entirely around sneezing, my nose has clearly had enough of stifled achoo-ing. I like flowers and birch trees a great deal, but I kind of despise the pollen that accompanies them. Fortunately, I think that allergies will cease and desist in the next couple of weeks, and my face will return to relative normalcy. Besides the impending end of allergies, I’m also looking forward to football in one month, my parents’ trip to New York in two months, and a smattering of concerts over the next little while. Folk Fest tickets go on sale in three weeks, and Crystal’s promised to come on for one day, and hopefully I’ll lure in a few others to join in the fun. While it’s hard to beat the excitement of concerts, I’m even more elated by my grandparents’ return to their home and native land, and the upcoming 6 birthday bash and simultaneous Mother’s Day celebration Sunday night. I hadn’t seen Grandma and Grandpa for more than a month, and I was happy to see them at a lunch that I thought I’d missed the boat on yesterday. I’m fairly certain that my grandma and I are kindred spirits; we share a fondness for matters of correctness, both dislike cats, and laugh together for extended periods of time when we’re together. I’d missed them a lot, and my grandpa more than made up for his absence by telling dozens of bad jokes yesterday. I love them and Jess/Mom/Dad more than anything else, and I’m glad that they’re back just in time for summer fun.


I should likely be off now to pack a supper for tonight’s closing shift and to finish some laundry and reading, but I’ll write something worthwhile in the next week perhaps. Small group has agreed to read the splendid Velvet Elvis, as has Matt, and potentially Rob (what powers of persuasion I have!), so I’m sure that will generate some cogitation-worthy lines of thought. I started Annie Lamott’s latest book yesterday, and I’m enjoying it more than I thought I would; she’s rough around the edges, but writes with wisdom and honesty. I’m sure that her writing will send me off on some tangential ruminations as well. I’ve mostly finished the Oliver! review, Caitlin (it was a gooder; John Ulyatt made an appearance, and PJ Perry was in the pit), so I’ll finish it up after work tomorrow and send it off via email. I’m still sad that you missed it, but if anything could top Oliver! for you, it would, of course, be traveling to another country. Liz Nichols aptly noted that, “John Ullyatt, the Citadel’s favourite leading man, ... stops all stage traffic by his mere presence.” Fingers crossed that he stars as the beast in Beauty and the Beast next season. I’m off to finish some laundry and reading and vacuuming before work tonight, but I hope that you’re all finding this almost-summer season to be ripe, whether you’re in Deadmonton or some lovely other place!


Soundtrack for Cait's Summer
- Mika
- Peter Bjorn & John
- Feist
- Patrick Watson
- Beirut
- Alexi Murdoch
- Corinne Bailey Rae
- Modest Mouse
- Nouvelle Vague
- Rogue Wave
- Beck
- Of Montreal
- Jack Johnson
- Can You Say Indie? Vol 1-3
- Queen
- Rosie Thomas
- Thomas Newman
- Super Furry Animals
- Sufjan Stevens
- Broken Social Scene


Summer Preoccupations
- lots and lots and lots of festival fun
- laze around at the leg (pronounced lej)
- nighttime adventures in the country
- go camping
- walks in the river valley at sun rise
- cloud watch and star gaze
- Eskies football (I picked up my tickets last month; I am planning on forcing some of you to come to several games with me and Jess)
- cry and dance at concerts
- take up jogging (perhaps)
- use the paddle boats in Hawrelak
- take pictures
- Velvet Elvis with small group
- late-night walks
- road trip with dear friends
- BBQs with the familia
- improve upon my crocheting skills
- watch movies in Crystal's backyard (it has always rained when we've attempted to do this in the past)
- bake and cook dee-licious creations
- Arrested Development marathon
- swinging with friends
- people watch on the patio at work
- airport and spandex escapade
- devise a way to vacuum pollen out of the air
- river valley escapades
- caaamping
- convince Mom to let me get a lizard
- Rocky Balboa meets the Albertan Legislature
- practice guitar
- coffee/tea/lunch with amigos
- read a decent chunk of the books in Rutherford
- have plenty of picnics
- journal
- play Bruce Cockburn the Guitar
- go golfing in plaid and argyle outfits
- Star Wars night with Crystal and Ben (et al.)
- Grounders and other playground shenanigans
- dance in the rain