

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.


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
4 comments:
The Peter, Bjorn, and John video!!, or PB&J as rob pointed out the other day (HE thinks this is on purpose, which is probably true... but its more fun to disagree!) Anyway, I finally saw the video!!! I love it, even with the creepy movements! That song is sooo beautiful, it really makes me wish I could whistle!
We will have to get up to some sort of summer shenanigans soon, as I miss them, and you!!!
-and I read your blog!! which includes going online, and checking it, and reading it, and I replied...which is pretty amazing for me, I think I deserve at least 5 gold stars! hah!
Cait I am looking forward to reading your review. Shouldn't you add get a driving liscense to you summer plans?!
Prayer is so interesting. I like how you brought up the reality that "request bonanzas" (you could have rhymed and said request fests; that would have been cool as well) are still important even though they seem less than ideal. Sometimes I wish it was easier to strike a balance between a conversation or dialogue with God and a one sided list. Lately I have been just sort of talking to God about the things that I care about right now and telling Him why. I try not to make it about the request and the answer as much as about thinking through something. I always like to talk stuff out (if possible, sometimes msn conversations work well enough) when something is on my mind. I seem to think best "out loud." It seems like this flows over into my prayer life because I just pray about something that is important to me then and think it out with God. I'm not saying this is the right way to pray or anything like that. It just seems to be the way things just happened for me. I think it is interesting how unique and amazing prayer actually is.
And, as for your summer to do list, you better get started. That is an amazing list and it would be a shame to leave it all for the last couple months of summer. And your summer soundtrack gets two thumbs waay up from Matt. It is quite the great list as well. It has made me want to make a summer CYSI? volume. Or, I was also thinking about making a cd that had a song from every year since I was born. They would have to be amazing classic songs or, more likely, having personal significance. I could even write "leaf notes" for each song saying why I chose it. That could be a fun rain day project sometime this summer. Look, seem to have started a summer to do list in the comments on your blog. Maybe I should expand it and transfer it to my own... maybe I should do it later...
P.S. It's good to see some new content on someone's blog... summer bloggers seem to be such slackers.
cait, yet again you blog about your faith with sincerity and intelligence. i wish more people would take time to think about their faith, rather than get afraid when people question it for them!
I too am enjoying the peter bjorn and john video, it's such a summer-y tune. do they have any other good tunes?
I've also just bought a sufjan stevens album (michigan), i'd noticed you liked him a lot, then i noticed others with similar musical tastes to me also listed him, so i decided to try it out. I'm loving the album, initially i thought it was overlong, but it just gets better with every listen. Can you recommend any of his other myriad albums - there's just too many of them!
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