Right Place, Right Time

The great moments of your life won't necessarily be the things you do, they'll also be the things that happen to you. Now, I'm not saying you can't take action to affect the outcome of your life, you have to take action, and you will. But never forget that on any day, you can step out the front door and your whole life can change forever. You see, the universe has a plan, and that plan is always in motion. A butterfly flaps its wings, and it starts to rain. It's a scary thought but it's also kind of wonderful. All these little parts of the machine constantly working, making sure that you end up exactly where you're supposed to be, exactly when you're supposed to be there. The right place at the right time. 

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Striving to become a fine wine

When God needs to speak to you, he speaks into parts of your life you either don't expect or, more probable, into the parts of your life not yet turned over to him.


In Colossians 2, Paul writes about a circumcision of the desires of our old self, not yet submitted. "In Him also you were circumcised with a circumcision made without hands, by putting off the body of the flesh, by the circumcision of Christ....And you, who were dead in your trespasses and the circumcision of your flesh, God made alive together with him, having forgiven all our trespasses by cancelling the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands, this he set aside, nailing it to the cross..."

I'm feeling the heat of conviction that I've been living my life out of the parts not yet submitted instead of walking in the redeeming grace he's ALREADY shown me. His work has been done. No acts of mine can change that or earn it. Understanding this should steer your heart to seek things from above.

*Note to self*
James,
   You want to know why you feel lame spiritually? Go to battle against the flesh. PUT ON your new self.

"Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I am filling up what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the church" -Colossians 1:24

This doesn't mean that Christ's sufferings weren't enough, Christ's sufferings are sufficient to save, but rather His people will still suffer. Paul is talking about being filled up with those sufferings that were ordained for him.

That makes me wonder: What sufferings were made for me? And why?


We take our own spiritual consecration and try to make it into a call of God, but when we get right with Him He brushes all this aside. Then He gives us a tremendous, riveting pain to fasten our attention on something that we never even dreamed could be His call for us. And for one radiant, flashing moment we see His purpose, and we say, “Here am I! Send me” (Isaiah 6:8).
This call has nothing to do with personal sanctification, but with being made broken bread and poured-out wine. Yet God can never make us into wine if we object to the fingers He chooses to use to crush us. We say, “If God would only use His own fingers, and make me broken bread and poured-out wine in a special way, then I wouldn’t object!” But when He uses someone we dislike, or some set of circumstances to which we said we would never submit, to crush us, then we object. Yet we must never try to choose the place of our own martyrdom. If we are ever going to be made into wine, we will have to be crushed—you cannot drink grapes. Grapes become wine only when they have been squeezed.
I wonder what finger and thumb God has been using to squeeze you? Have you been as hard as a marble and escaped? If you are not ripe yet, and if God had squeezed you anyway, the wine produced would have been remarkably bitter. To be a holy person means that the elements of our natural life experience the very presence of God as they are providentially broken in His service. We have to be placed into God and brought into agreement with Him before we can be broken bread in His hands. Stay right with God and let Him do as He likes, and you will find that He is producing the kind of bread and wine that will benefit His other children.
           -Oswald Chambers

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Delaying Adulthood

At what point in our development do we put away childish things and move on to adulthood? A most recent article in the New York Times suggest that America has fostered a culture where it's acceptable for 20 somethings to delay adulthood. Let me try to explain in short, while painting with a broad brush stroke.

 At issue is a generation that is stuck at home, sleeping in their childhood beds into their late 20's. If we've managed to get out, we're covering our expenses with mom and dad's plastic while jet-setting around the world. When we finally feel motivated, we jump from job to job to combat eventual disinterest in the mundane. We struggle with identity, confidence, commitment, and a long list of issues we will gladly bitch about before taking the time to correct. Relationships are treated as a library card, where swapping people in and out after using them for gain is completely acceptable. When we're finally ready to settle down and show our ambition, we are faced with the daunting task of playing catchup in the development that should have been taking place all along.

I can see it in my friends; I can see it in myself; and I don't like the visuals I'm processing.

I've had a few conversations with friends about this, and have gotten mixed feedback. Here are just a few thoughts I have about why this is happening.

Self-entitlement and Unrealistic Expectations
 We are not the generation of our grandparents and to a lesser extent our parents. We just aren't. Strong work ethic is something to be admired but not necessarily something to strive for. I see it in my work environment and in the lives of acquaintances. We expect the world to come knocking on our door and we wait anxiously to open up and have the opportunities come storming in. Let me give you an example.

 I have a good friend who graduated with honors in his respected major. After graduation he continued working at the same job he held throughout college. He didn't put out any resumes or work for internship opportunities or put himself in position for further schooling. One day I get an email that was sent to our core group of friends asking if we knew of an entry level  position that paid at least $60,000 a year,allowed him to travel, and covered almost all of his expenses. Wow! "Well, buddy...if I knew that job existed don't you think I probably would have been applying there myself?"

 I think part of this is self entitlement, but I also believe we were sold a bag of goods in school. We were told that we would never amount to anything unless we got our college education. Some of us took out loans that we will never be able to pay back, all the while chasing after an unrealistic expectation of what our paychecks would say. The current job market has all but abated this supposition. While the truth remains that most white collar jobs require (at least assumed) a college education, a college education in large part doesn't prepare you for the challenges of the corporate world. The biggest preparation for me was having gained experience from internships, previous jobs, and knowing how to interact and communicate effectively with people. These are things that our universities just don't cover.

We've lost ambition

Wonder why there's a disconnect between the way we picture ourselves and the way we are perceived? Maybe you have a hard time feeling excited or ambitious about what is going on in your life - career, school, relationships, etc. At some point we have felt enriched by fulfilling potential and achieving the goals we believed to be important in life. When those goals are reached and the targets you had set your eyes on are now things of the past, we often fail to replace them with equally meaningful goals. Unless we are feeling stimulated in our progressive pursuit of goals life seems to stall somewhat.

Ambition requires fresh ideas, new ways of thinking through problems, and overcoming challenges and obstacles that threaten to entangle us. More importantly it requires us to constantly evaluate ourselves and set the bar to higher levels. When I think of my own lack of ambition, I see a deep-rooted problem of finding too much satisfaction in being entertained rather than challenged. The distraction of what we find comfort in takes our eyes off of what we dream for.

There's also this: Cynicism is a killer of ambition, and we have a large infestation. I wonder sometimes if I have anything worthwhile to say. Cynicism asks "Why would anyone be interested in what I have to say?"  "Do people value my input?" "Am I important?" This sort of thinking spawns from letting fear and other's intentions enter our creative process.

We need to find our appetite to move forward to greater levels again, and reawaken the ambition that is inside us all. Society wants us to succeed, but without failure, but keep in mind that failure is just just a start of a lesson not an end.

What are your thoughts? I'd love to keep the conversation going. What else do you see?

(I plan on writing a blog on lessons we've learned while delaying adulthood and how it may not be all bad. Just an F.Y.I. for those of you overwhelmed by the negativity of this post.)

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A friend passed this along

 "Men are not content with a simple life: they are acquisitive, ambitious, competitive, and jealous; they tire of what they have, and pine for what they have not; and they seldom desire anything unless it belongs to others."
-Plato

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Can you see it?

No one knows what's wrong with them but everyone else can see it. 

-Mad Men

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Guilty Pleasures

I must confess, I'm a man with guilty pleasures. I got to discussing them with friends tonight and wonder why it's something we feel the need to be ashamed of. Wikipedia defines a guilty pleasure as "something one enjoys and considers pleasurable despite feeling guilt for enjoying it. Often, the "guilt" involved is simply fear of others discovering one's lowbrow or otherwise embarrassing tastes, rather than actual moral guilt. Fashion, music, and food (especially unhealthier foods high in sugar and/or fat) can be examples of guilty pleasures."


I'll admit, I'm a sucker for frozen fruit, fudge ice cream bars, and.....The Bachelorette. So what are you guilty pleasures?

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Dear Future Self

I've been reading through a new book recently, Through Painted Deserts, that is about a man's road trip in a beat up VW van with a friend. I came to an interesting point in the story where the author writes a note to his future self as he is sitting at the bottom of the Grand Canyon. After being struck by the honesty of what he said, I tweeted a question that I would now like for you to carefully consider. If you could write a letter to your future self, what reminder would you give about who you are now?

"Dear James,

I don't know where you are at in your life when you're reading this but if I know you like I think I do, then you've weathered quite a few seasons in your journey. I'm hopeful you've remained true to who you really are through them all. In case you forgot, you weren't so bad of a dude but you had become critical of friends, circumstances, and  expectations. You had placed an importance on money, and stuff, and people's admiration. Wherever you are right now, just remember that that stuff doesn't really matter and that a critical spirit can wound you in ways you don't even realize. It's better to just let go. You felt free and alive when you went sky-diving. Sometimes it takes facing death to show you how alive you really are. Even when you feel slightly paralyzed with fear, facing it is the only option of conquering it. The rush of adrenaline made you realize there's still a lot of living left to do. I hope you still feel that way. Do you remember that before you jumped out of that airplane, you had a beautiful conversation with God? The 20 minute ascent was spent reflecting on what led you to that point: family, traveling, music, girls, friendships, passions, heartaches, regrets, and lessons learned. During the free fall, everything disappeared and your only reaction was to laugh at yourself for being crazy enough to jump. When you finally reached the ground nothing from the past mattered. Money didn't matter. Stuff didn't matter. What people thought of you didn't matter. You were speechless. You were captivated by the adventure. Whoever you are right now, and whoever you are with, find the adventure and keep talking with God. If you have found a woman or have a child or two, the only thing that matters is the love you have for them. Go into your living room and dance with your wife. Visit your kid in his room and give them a kiss on the head and sit down and spend time with them. There is all kinds of beauty in this world that doesn't have a damn thing to do with your social standing. I just want to remind you that if you're feeling paralyzed by the heights of your problems, the faster you face them the quicker they disappear. If you're not where you want to be in life, if the job sucks, or the car keeps breaking down, or the house isn't big enough...don't worry about it. Lose your worries...life is going to be ok. Enjoy it while you can. If something seems too big to handle, you always have a little brother to go through it with you. He's the best friend God built for you so be good to him. That's really all I have to say right now. You really do have a good heart; I know sometimes it may seem cold but fight through it. I wish you nothing but the best. "

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Warning: Toxic

"Spiritual nature, like bodily nature, will be served; deny it food and it will gobble poison"           -C.S. Lewis


Over the past few weeks, I've noticed something creeping into my life. It was slow and subtle at first, the way you often find habits or feelings forming. I felt it in my thoughts with coworkers, feelings with friends, conversations with loved ones, and actions with those close to me. The deliberateness of it soon took control.

Have you ever heard the old saying that if a frog is placed in boiling water, it will jump out, but if it is placed in cold water that is slowly heated, it will not perceive the danger and will be cooked to death? Well that's where I'm at right now. I've let the toxins swell within me to a boil. I'm suffering from a critical spirit and it's poisoning me.

I'm not going to try to hammer out why, or where it comes from. That would be to exhausting to uncover and certainly to read. I sat through a sermon several weeks ago and something was said that I found enlightening and I think is an answer for how to deal with my criticism. We all pray. All of us. Even those with doubts of a deity.

Darrin, my pastor, reasoned that we've engaged in an idolatry of some degree in our life. Most of us, in our relationships. When we bitch and complain to our friends, it is taking the frustrations that we should be taking to God (vertically) and dispatching them instead to those we value above God (horizontally).

This is why my prayer life sucks. I treat God like most North-American Evangelical Christians treat one another; act like life is great on Sunday with people you have shallow connections with and then "get real" with the drinking buddies or sororiety sisters or high school best friends during the week.

It's just a thought for an idle Monday, but instead of letting the cynicism take control, take your frustrations vertical before you think of taking it horizontal.

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Let the River Take You

Recently, I went kayaking through part of the Ozarks with my brother and some friends. I've kayaked before and fell in love with rush of manning a fragile one man craft through the waters.  Outdoor activities like that have a way of speaking to my soul that goes unmatched. I'll be honest; I needed this. I've felt for awhile that I've reached a dry season in my pursuit of finishing this list. It was a great trip to quiet down, get away, and reflect on how I got to this point where the adventures have slowed to a crawl and the expectations and responsibilities of my day to day life have consumed me.

We got in the water just past the Table Rock Dam. The water was frigid enough to numb your hand if left in long enough. The water from the bottom of the dam was being systematically released causing a current to flow into Lake Taneycomo. The current was steady enough to take us on our way. And with that, we paddled our way through Taneycomo. The coolness of the water kept our brows dry from sweat as the heat that day was imposing. Along the way we witnessed the breathtaking views of the Ozark hill country, sights of fisherman, and incredible architecture that lined the river banks.



I decided early on to find my rhythm within the current and ride it out much like a good groove in song. With the paddle as my dance partner, I started a slow dance that gave way to some time of reflection. At one point I looked up, took in the view, and felt a peace I haven't felt in awhile. For some reason this phrase came to my head in that moment, "Let the river take you," and for the remainder of the trip the river, and my thoughts, took me.

Family relationships take on the life of water. There are times of calm stillness and then there are times of hectic swells. For a better part of my adolescence, my relationship with my brother could be described in that way. Brotherhood, much like the flow I was on, can run a course that ends in a different place than that in which it began. However, the chemical identity it started with remains largely unchanged; water remains water and brothers remain brothers.

Growing up with a house on a lake, we would spend countless hours swimming, jumping, diving, fishing, and boating. Our summers were spent in the backyard of our house as our mother would look on while sunbathing at the edge of the lake. On one occasion a trip to the emergency room arose and several stitches were required after Matt stepped on an old, broken glass bottle. Despite the hidden dangers, the lake was our playground. Our youthful energy was exhausted by the waters during the day, and by night we would let its calmness lull us to sleep through the windows.

Where we often butted heads, we found agreement in the splashes of carelessness the lake brought out in us.

For a majority of the float, I lagged behind my brother. In some ways, I've always let Matt run out and explore in front of me, looking on with worry as only a big brother can do. Growing up I didn't understand the boy who had a sense of wonder that couldn't be contained. He had a thirst for knowledge of the world and a penchant for attaining it that must have skipped me when being passed down from my parents.

As the first born, it must have been prescribed that I would become a people pleaser. Therefore, I mostly made safe decisions growing up. Because of that, Matt was always a step ahead of me in flirting with adventure. (His numerous broken bones to my unscathed marrows can alone testify to that.)  And in that sense, my brother has largely remained a mystery to me. I have heard it said that middle children are more difficult to define because their identity growing up changed from last born to middle child. This affects their personality and environment in unpredictable ways. In what I was ignorant of, Matt was a lessoned trailblazer in the rough and tough things that make most boys men.

While Matt was off being wild at heart, I felt expectations of perfection that weighed heavily on me through my teens. I tried, often for not, to be an example, but it created a wedge that caused tension between us. Because of that, a large part of wanting to leave the nest of home was to leave behind the cautiousness that most first-born children have. And for awhile I was successful.

In the period of five years I had moved halfway across the country, played music in three bands in front of countless people, experienced my first drink and smoke and a number of other "firsts," met friends that would challenge me and shape me, went through heartbreak with women (both given and received), went through school after school (4 different schools in 4 consecutive semesters!), took chances with an internship away from family, left school in my last semester for the promise of a music showcase in NYC, traveled, at times drank to excess, partied and partied hard, and formed opinions that differentiated from what I was taught during my upbringing.

The funny part about all of this is that while I was off doing these things, my brother and I saw a role reversal in our personalities. It was almost as if we were guaranteed to be opposites of each other for eternity. He became more reformed and cautious. He looked after my younger sister and became the achiever that I always strove to be. He would give warnings to me when I would come home from school about the dangers of drinking and worried about me like a father.

Eventually, I learned to tame certain desires and settle back into a comfort zone that looks less dangerous, less wild, and more predictable. The regression back to the norm is partly what's driving me to see this list of mine through to completion.

After all our collective experiences, it took some settling for both of us to find the water again. The boy I didn't understand growing up, is now the man I admire. I can see us back in our youth running down the hill to the lake and splashing the other with our cannonball jumps. By necessity, those days we were each others only friend. We've since grown up, but today we're each others friend by choice. It's weird to think that the bond of brotherhood could go unknown to some. I look at my dad, and I wish he had a brother so that he could have the adventures I've had with mine.

Let the river take you. Enjoy the slow dance. Embrace the adventure. Entertain the mystery. Be aware of where you are heading, but look back from time to time and see where you've drifted from.

"Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it. The river was cut by the world's great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time. On some of the rocks are words, and some of the words are theirs.
I am haunted by waters." -A River Runs Through It

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#17: Digital Cleanse

I sent my last tweet out Monday morning  at 7:24 a.m. and immediately felt anxiety over how I was going to make it through the week with no fb,twitter, or text messaging. I was bombarded with an array of thoughts such as: "Will anyone even text me?" "How will I know what's going on?" "How will I spend my downtime?" "Am I going to get sick of being productive?"

I spent the first few hours picking up and then putting down my phone as if I had some "phantom" message awaiting me. I could tell the habit was going to die hard.
**Monday: Read 3 chapters of a book, watched Cardinals game, didn't interact with anyone outside of work.
**Tuesday: Created a Budget, Read, Had family over for dinner where we discussed a variety of topics including social media's impact on family relations, problems with one another, frustrations, jobs, trips, further schooling, and caring for one another.
**Wednesday: Listed and sold household items on Craigslist. Read.
**Thursday: Did proofreading for the Journey, Worked on invitations for Mom's party, Called an old friend, Emailed from my computer Kristen while she is in Europe.
**Friday: Dinner with my parents, Made mojito's from home, watched "A River Runs Through It"
**Saturday: Read on the back deck, Went to my cousins graduation party, bookshopping at a Goodwill, home for the evening
**Sunday: Church in the morning, finished up a book and got a nice lobster tan, Afternoon drink with Josh, Self-analyzation in the evening.

I feel refreshed after a time of quieting all the noise in my life. To be honest I didn't miss what I gave up too terribly much. It took a little adjusting at first to stop picking up my phone and point the curser to my twitter app, but in the end I hardly touched my phone unless it rang or I called a friend. I've given thought to downgrading my phone plan. There is something troublesome to me that I'm so easily accessible to people. I guess that goes both ways.

I highly recommend others taking a week off and trying this. Some of you need it.

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Digital Cleanse: Simplifying the Brain


Mention to anyone with computer savvy that your laptop has somehow gotten slower over recent months and they’ll ask you the same thing: “have you defragmented your hard drive?” Defragmenting works by taking small slivers of information stored in various locations and consolidating them so that they’re in the same place on the drive and thus easier to access in larger chunks. Hard drive fragmentation is a great metaphor for - if not a literal manifestation of - what’s happened to our brains over years and years of processing small bursts of information. 2009 took fragmentation to a whole new level given the rise of Twitter and the social acceptance of texting people as a substitute to making phone calls.
That’s where the one week digital cleanse comes in. I’ll be defragmenting my mental and psychological hard drive during the first seven days of the new year, and I invite you all to participate.
The cleanse will begin at 9am on January 1. This gives everyone a chance to text and tweet their new year’s well wishes, and theoretically begins upon waking up the morning of January 1. The cleanse will end at 9am on January 8.
Guidelines:
*email only from laptop or desktop computers
*cell phones can only be used to make calls, and no text messages or e-mails are allowed - if you receive a text, you must reply in voice over the phone. E-mails must be returned from a laptop or desktop computer.
*no use of Twitter or any other social networking site - this includes reading as well as posting.
*no visiting of any entertainment or gossip sites. (No need to detail which ones - you know what they are.)
I floated the idea last week on Twitter to see if anyone could envision themselves doing this, and the responses were interesting; some said they could definitely do it, but many were resigned to the idea, calling it impossible. If it is impossible, than my theory is already proven and we’re in big trouble as a society.
This can be done, people. Do it with me. When we pop back up on the grid on January 8, let’s trade stories on what it felt like, how hard it was, and maybe how hard it actually wasn’t.
JM

This was an idea John Mayer had at the beginning of the year. At first glance, I thought it was the dumbest thing ever. But after feeling disconnected from family and friends recently I’ve decided that I’m in need of stepping away from the areas of the internet I waste so much of my time on.

In today’s world we’re all so used to be tuned in and plugged in every second of the day, that it’s probably a good thing to step-away from it for awhile. Social Media has become a window into our world that people can peek through without engaging with one another. It saddens me to think of how superficial we've become because of it.

I don’t know about you but I’m tired of wasting my time with brainless activity. I’m tired of lost interaction with friends and family. I’m tired of being unmotivated to chase after my passions. I’m going to use the next week to read, call and talk to friends I haven’t talked to in awhile. I’m going to catch up on things that need to get done around my apartment. I’m going to be more productive.

So this is what it has come to, a digital retreat. Back in the day, men would go out wandering in the wilderness, or in solitary retreat in some dark cave, reflecting upon the world and the nature of reality. This is a way for me to "get away." So come Monday, I'm signing off, turning the apps on my phone off, shutting down the laptop at home, and getting re-acquainted with my friends in their physical form.

Today, with the digital overload, I can understand the need to filter out and quiet the noise. This “digital cleanse” is about relearning how to interact with the world.

Who’s in?

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Ragamuffin:

A person who is honest about their personal failings and knows they desperately need the grace and love of God; someone more concerned about finding an intimate relationship with God than fulfilling the expectations of cultural Christianity.

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A Personal Inventory: Fear, Anger, and Anxiety

And Moses said to the people, “Fear not, stand firm, and see the salvation of the Lord, which he will work for you today. For the Egyptians whom you see today, you shall never see again. The Lord will fight for you, and you have only to be silent.” Exodus 14:13-14
A month back I read this verse while reading my way through the bible this year. And while it read pretty and powerful and oddly relevant, I tucked it away and continued on. Weeks came and went; life was good. I was feeling liberated from some of the pressures I had felt. Like a sponge to water, my issues had finally felt absorbed. And then - BAM!!! I was wrung out. Having been told something that sent me into an emotional coma for a day or so, I felt the helplessness that the people of Israel felt. What I went through was nothing I haven't felt before: Fear, Anxiety, Anger, Malice. The emotions were more intense this time. I couldn't fight for myself, I needed someone else to.

In that moment I couldn't see what the salvation of the Lord looked like. My emotions had temporarily blinded me. If I'm honest with you, and I think you deserve that, I've been living in fear for years. I had learned to mask it well to the casual observer. When, in my blindness, I was forced to deal with my fear, I learned how deep the roots of it had become.

Isn't it ironic the things we fear are the same things we respect? It just looks a little different. For instance, you cannot have a fear of heights without having a respect of how miniscule you are when towering 500 feet above something. Those who have a healthy fear (i.e. being afraid, not living in fear) are those who have proportionate veneration. So when contemplating fear, one must also give thought to where/who/what too much reverence is being given to.

In my comatose state, I reflected on this. I had just heard a sermon the previous Saturday regarding how affirmation idols (those people or things we seek affirmation from) can cause people to live in fear (being driven by their fear) and I was sure I was getting to the root of it. So as I sorted through my personal inventory, I identified that I value acceptance from people way too much. This is no surprise; I've written about it before here.

"Ok, great. I already know that about myself. So what's my fear? Why am I so driven to earn people's acceptance? Why am I wrecked when I don't recieve it?" My inner dialogue was revved up pretty rampant at that point. *sigh* "So what is it?"

Rejection.
Complete rejection.
The nothing-you-ever-do-will-be-good-enough-rejection.

"Wow... I need to see a counselor.....Where's my bourbon?"

Out of my fear of rejection I had built walls that, in return, had constructed rooms, many of which I was uncognizant of. My fear had driven me to shallowness in the relationships I was in. It had pushed many people away. The people that most wanted my attention were the people I avoided. I had returned the hurt that I felt. My fear had driven me into a viscous, repeating cycle. People reacted to me differently, which caused anger to swell up inside of me. My anger was a result of feeling the need to be in power at all times, and when I wasn't, bitterness and malice took control.

I'm just now understanding the extent of my brokenness.

Coming out of my "emotional coma," I felt a renewed peace about things. I wasn't going to heal if I didn't let go of the emotional baggage that was robbing me. The only thing in life worth fearing, is God. A healthy fear is caused by a healthy respect. Knowing that I'm accepted by God, not because of anything I did or can ever do, but on account of Jesus' sacrifice on the cross. That's a sobering idea to let your heart take grasp of.

Anger towards people will kill you emotionally,spiritually, and physically. When you are fast to anger then something is wrong. It is usually a result of an underlying issue. For me it was a result of losing control of people's actions or their reaction to the things I said or did. The way to purge anger from your life is by showing kindness, tenderheartedness, and forgiveness. That last one is hard for me. It's hard because it is a conscious decision to absorb the wrong done to you. BUT, having received forgiveness, it's wrong not to offer that myself.

Anxiousness is a byproduct of these things. The way you deal with anxiety is through prayer and a lumination of God's goodness.

 "Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say, Rejoice. Let your reasonableness be known to everyone. The Lord is at hand; do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus."-Phillipians 4:4-7

Fear not, stand firm, GROW A PAIR and see the salvation of the Lord, which he will work for you today. For the FEAR, ANGER, NEGLECT, ANXIETY,  etc. whom you see today, you shall never see again.

These things were worked out for me in my time of solidarity. Maybe that's what the heart needs sometimes.

The Lord will fight for you, and you have only to be silent.

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#30. Go to Cardinals Opening Day


When I was a little boy, I remember sitting down in front of the television and being in awe of the spectacle that baseball opening day brought out. Growing up near St. Louis, Cardinal baseball was more than a mere game, it was religion. I never went to more than a few games a year until after moving into the city and having the convenience of living so close. I've written before about how I love this game and how the excitement of a new season inspires me. With that said, it was a no-brainer to add Opening Day to my list to help ring in the annual return to baseball.
I couldn't have asked for a better day. The sky was clear, the sun was out, and temperatures reached into the 80's. I had gotten my buddy Aric and I bleacher seats and we were within shouting distance from our other friends that were at the game as well. We arrived downtown a little past 10 a.m. and walked around the various opening day rallies and ceremonies that took place. After enjoying a few pre-game cocktails, we headed inside for the unveiling of the hometown team.

We witnessed the usual parade of Cardinals, past and present, that I've seen so many times before on TV. The parade along the outfield and infield walls got off to a start with the Anheuser-Busch Clydesdales. They were impressive to see in person. Next, the Cardinal hall of famers drove by one-by-one. They were met at homeplate by the greatest of them all, Stan Musial.
The players came out too, offering their waves and smiles as they passed by. It's always a cool experience when you can see your favorite players up close and personal. As the players lined up along the foul lines for the singing of the national anthem, I thought to myself: "This is America."
The game itself was all I could ask for as a Cardinals fan. Wainwright threw 8 shutout innings, Albert hit a 3-run home run, and the bullpen didn't give up a run. The bleacher seats were hot, but a ton of fun hearing the conversations and the heckling take place.

After the game we all went out to Hrabosky's and then Shannon's for post-game celebration. It was the end to a great day with great friends. It's something that I will remember for a long time and hope to do again.

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Finding A Good God Among Us

It's funny, there are some hard truths in the bible. Some are so hard to digest that many don't and simply push it off as contextual,mistranslated, or completely false. (I warn you of accepting that dangerous theology.) I have enough faith in God and reliance on the accuracy of the bible to accept most of which many find controversial. However, there is one simple truth that I keep coming back to. Honestly, it's becoming irritating as hell to me. It's like a pesky fly that won't leave you alone. It keeps buzzing in and around your ear, until finally you just have to stop what you're doing and end it. It is this hard truth that's become a fly to my ear and I need to deal with it.

That God is good.

"God is good." To me this phrase has become a mantra of sorts. I've heard it from the time I was a child in a dreadful Sunday School classroom. I can almost always associate this saying with the thousands of fake,plastic smiles I saw when people said it. Did they really mean it? If you cut away the prosperity in their life, would they have said the same thing? What do they even mean by good? And what's the deal with the smiles....all the time? Damn.

I have periods of time where I doubt God's goodness. It's particularly frustrating, when it feels as though my prayers aren't being answered or even heard. As an adolescent, I didn't perceive other's had the same sentiment so I learned to ignore my skepticism. I've been able to ignore it until now. What's to come is a verbal throwup of texts,quotes, and random thoughts. Get ready.

The reason I'm even writing tonight is because I don't know what else to do to work out the frustration I have. A very close friend is going through something that I cannot even begin to imagine. It's messing with my mental and spiritual hinges. It's not fair. It's not right. It's certainly not good.

When we make the statement that God is good, our natural tendency is to believe that if God is good and He loves mankind, then He will make life pleasant for us. Consequently, when things go well for us, we're inclined to think that God is good, and when they don't, we question His goodness or even His existence.

For argument's sake, there's a problem here whether you believe in God or not. The world we live in is messy and cruel. For some people, this is reason enough to let disbelief rule supreme. Tim Keller strips that reasoning down with this:

the problem of tragedy, suffering, and injustice is a problem for everyone. It is at least a big a problem for nonbelief in God as for belief. It is therefore a mistake, though an understandable one, to think that if you abandon belief in God it somehow makes the problem of evil easier to handle.

For some reason I felt the need to address that the problem of "goodness" is universal. From here, I'm going to proceed with the understanding that that there is a God and he has a reason for things...a good reason for things.

I think to the story of Job and the trials he went through. (Read it here) It is the honest portrayal of God allowing a good man to suffer. At first read, it seems his life becomes a game between God and Satan. Later in the story, it reveals God's loving authority and wisdom over human wisdom. It was faith that Job rested in alone, to believe that God is good despite everything that went on. In the depths of agony he could still proclaim, "I know that my Redeemer lives" (19:25) In the end God silenced all discussion with the truth that he alone is wise. He vindicated Job's trust in him, proving that genuine faith cannot be destroyed.

It seems that the fallacy of the heart is that we hold all wisdom. Who the hell are we to decide in our finite understanding, what is good or not?

We are not the center of the universe, not the reference point against which goodness can be judged. It sounds silly even to say it, but we act and think as though God's goodness depends on how well we like what's going on.

We are not in a position to judge the goodness of God's actions. We see too small a part of the overall picture - a picture that covers all of time and all of mankind.

Circumstances cannot be the barometer of God's love and goodness - only the cross can. And since the cross was designed, destined, and carried out by God's providential plan, shouldn't we put our faith in the goodness that came from that?

"If you have a God great and transcendent enough to be mad at because he hasn't stopped evil and suffering in the world, then you have (at the same moment) a God great and transcendent enough to have good reasons for allowing it to continue that you can't know." -Keller, The Reason For God.

I'm starting to believe those old Sunday school teachers now. I still doubt whether they truly believed it, but I'm glad they hammered it into my head. It is a fly that SHOULD not be shoo'd away. Sometimes it takes suffering to see serenity.

"We do not know how much of the pleasure even of life we owe to the intermingled sorrows. Joy [alone] cannot unfold the deepest truths, although deepest truth must be the deepest joy." - George MacDonald

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It's just a season thing...

I've been listening to John Mayer's "Wheel" nonstop this week. It's a simple tune, but I've been struck by the stripped down guitar playing mixed with lyrics that are laden with rich imagery and beautiful illustrations. It's quickly become my favorite in his catalogue.

People have the right to fly
And will when it gets compromised
Their hearts say "Move along"
Their minds say "Gotcha heart"
Let's move it along
Let's move it along

And airports
See it all the time
Where someone's last goodbye
Blends in with someone's sigh
Cause someone's coming home
In hand a single rose

And that's the way this wheel keeps working now
That's the way this wheel keeps working now
And I won't be the last
No I won't be the last,
To love her

And you can't build a house of leaves
And live like it's an evergreen
It's just a season thing
It's just this thing that seasons do

And that's the way this wheel keeps working now
That's the way this wheel keeps working now
And you won't be the first
No you won't be the first
To love me

You can find me, if you ever want again
I'll be around the bend
I'll be around the bend
I'll be around,
I'll be around
And if you never stop when you wave goodbye
You just might find if you give it time
You will wave hello again
You just might wave hello again

And that's the way this wheel keeps working now
That's the way this wheel keeps working now

You can't love too much, one part of it

I believe that my life's gonna see
The love I give
Return to me
I believe that my life's gonna see
The love I give
Return to me
I believe that my life's gonna see
The love I give
Return to me

I read an interview that Mayer gave about this song. He intro's the song as an existential double meaning; in the same way you love someone and they move along and you can't control it, you also are born into this world and then leave it, without a say. Despite that sort of morbid approach, Mayer twists the existentialism into a "carpe diem"-like upbeat mood... he warns us not too love one part of life too much: not money, not success, not even love. Because, as he says, in the end it all evens out. And that the way, this wheel, keeps working out...


"Cause I have a feeling it all evens out...
at the very end of your life,
you're gonna sit down at the table,
and you're gonna shuffle out the good and the bad,
and it's all gonna make perfect sense to you
when you figure out that in the accounting books
it comes up completely even...
and then you're gonna ask,
'Well, what was it all for?'
and they're gonna say, 'Well you did it, didn't you?'"

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On Reading

Maybe it's just me, but there is a distinct feeling of loss with regards to valuing the company of those who are well read. There was a time when we used to seek out those who were more than knowledgeable, more than conversant in this topic or that, but those who had the ability to discuss a wide variety of topics intelligently. We enjoyed the conversation because they were not limited to a single topic, field of study or discipline. It was the ability to draw the connections between two seemingly unrelated topics that we valued. In a lot of ways, the death of being well read is due to the rise of social media.

This is one thing I'm determined to change about myself this year: I want to reshape my literacy. Even though my mom was a teacher and placed an importance on reading, I never valued it innately. To change that, I'm trying to lay down a foundation for myself this year that hopefully will transform my reading habits. I have two literary goals this year that I'm a quarter of the way through accomplishing. (#4)I want to read at least a book a month and (#8) also read the bible in a year. It's been challenging at times, but I'm discovering some benefits of it.

Being well read gives you confidence at social gatherings as you would be sure of not being stuck talking, even about a simple topic like the weather, unless something tremendous happened to it recently. Being up-to-date in current affairs helps you keep your head high at social gatherings.

I heard it said once that 'reading is thinking.' I agree with that statement if you advance what was read through discussion. I think a solid foundation in literature, philosophy, and classics can provide you with the self-sufficiency to teach yourself and formulate your own philosophies. How you digest is how you learn.

So where does that leave you? Maybe it's time for you to turn off the tv, shut your laptop, sit down, and start reading. Want more culture? Want to understand the world and it's history? Ready to travel or adventure or reflect?

Remember, a well read life is not far from your reach. What’s important is not how many or what books you read, but rather if you are in touch with books throughout your life.

Be open minded, be dedicated and find the time to read. A well read mind is an engaged mind, a wise personality who can move well in society, with better decision making capabilities and a broader knowledge base.

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Mayer for Mayor

On Saturday, the 20th day of March, in the year of our lord 2010, James Rennie will be going to see John Mayer play rhythm and blues from pit sits at the Savis Center.

However, this is not the first time James has had the opportunity to see Mayer. Case and point, summer 2008. Two tickets were made promptly available for James to use and because of his passion for the Cardinals he missed one of the biggest gatherings of swooning St. Louis females thine eyes have ever gazed upon. The tickets were wasted and an angel died because of it.

When opportunity arose again James stood resiliently and proclaimed:

"We will not go quietly into the night! We will not vanish without a fight!"- he didn't really say that, I just happened to watch Independence Day awhile back and love that speech....I digress.

It should be a good time. He is my brother.

Let me just take a quick moment to discuss a subject more near and dear to my heart. For countless people across this country there has been a huge problem lately with the quality of snack items at the local grocery and convenience store. I'm gonna be blunt and ask for chips and Butterfingers that don't stick to my teeth.

I have been asked to do an analysis of Continuum vs. Battle Studies. I have nothing really to say other than Continuum was better, hell, even John said it was better. I think the reason that Battle Studies wasn't as good was because he didn't commit one way or the other. What I mean is that his first two albumns could be considered pop, then with the Trio/Continuum/Live In L.A. CD's we see him switch to blues. With his newest cd he doesn't seem to know what direction to go and it leaves you wanting more of either the pop or the blues depending on your mood or taste preferences.

My brother must be pretty trusting of me, gave me his password to type a bunch of stuff on here. I could have put all sorts of wicked stuff, but I wont. I respect the man.

What I like about Mayer:

He is loved by the media, even when he screws up
He has an anxiety/personality disorder like me
He actually can play more than power chords
He openly points out hippocrates
He controls every interview I've seen him in from the second the tape starts rolling
He respects his elders- See Crossroads dvd
He has an education
He isn't the trendy concert to go to like Dave Matthews Band

What I dont like:


He played guitar for fall out boy on that beat it cover

I have yet to see this Mayer/Clapton compilation album that has been talked about

-M@

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#44 Shave Head: Where James Discovers His False Self


Baseball spring training has been under way for a little over 2 weeks now, and I have to admit, I love this time of year. I love thinking of how each team enters into the season with a fresh slate, with hopes of making a run to post-season play. Every fan wonders if this could be the year their team wins it all. This feeling only lasts a little while though, because after opening day, teams will no longer be tied. As the season progresses it becomes obvious, more and more, who the real contenders are. Finally the season ends with the spoils going to the victors and the 29 other teams looking on.

Alright, enough with the baseball talk for now. What I really want to get at is something that has come up in a book I just finished reading.(Wild at Heart) It's the idea of the "false self." For almost all of us, we are wounded. And most of the time the wound isn't shallow, but deep down into the core. The wound comes from our fathers or mothers. It comes from the scorn of a lover. It comes from neglect or embarrassment. It comes from never receiving the answers to our deep questions. "From the place of our woundedness we construct a false self."

I've been doing a lot of soul searching the past year. I guess it comes natural when you move out of the time of your life where you experience your "firsts." (first kiss,first car,first day of college, first drink, etc.) I came out of that time of my life with a lot of questions still that I have no answers to. Who am I really? What am I passionate about? Where do I find my adventure? Do I have what it takes? Am I powerful? Can I really love and be loved?

"Until a man knows he's a man he will forever be trying to prove he is one. while at the same time shrink from anything that might reveal he is not."
Somewhere, some way, I've forgotten my name. I tried to make up for it and find my identity in other ways. Music. School. Religion. Women. Unfortunately these have yielded unwelcome results. Cynicism. A biting sarcasm. Solitude. Selfishness. Narcissism. A sense of entitlement. But worse of all, I've picked up a need of affirmation.

I want to be well thought of, well-respected, and loved by everyone. I will do whatever it takes to make that happen. That usually means either lying, hurting someone else indirectly, or shrugging off things because it fits my "go with the flow" mentality. I can't begin to tell you how many times I've lost my spine and backed down from a fight or disagreement that needed to happen. I'm a bitch...but a well liked bitch.

This isn't who I want to be and it sure as hell isn't who I think God made me to be.

Wow. I just had a body shake. I'm feeling pretty vulnerable right now. But that's good every now and then.

To be honest with you, I'm fine to admit all of that. The problem I have is that I want to turn my inadequacies towards something. I take my few gifts that work for me, and I try to live off them. The impostor is my plan for salvation. More often then not, relationships are where we turn.

In Wild at Heart, John Eldredge warns,

"As we walk away from the false self, we will feel vulnerable and exposed. We will be sorely tempted to turn to our comforters for some relief, these places that we've found solace and rest. Because so many of us turned to woman for our sense of masculinity, we must walk away from her as well...Stop looking to her to validate you, stop trying to make her come through for you, stop trying to get your answer from her...A man needs a much bigger orbit than a woman. He needs a mission, a life purpose, and he needs to know his name."


It may be getting ahead of myself, but I also look at Spring Training as a result of the year before. Players,coaches, managers,executives on mission to avenge the loss from the year before. You see, they start over with an awareness of what happened but an opportunity for something new. And that's where I want to put my focus on, the excitement and sense of wonder that comes from fresh starts.

In a way #44 on my list was symbolic. A fresh start. Shaving off all the old to make way for the new.



In each of us there is a blank canvas that holds the promise of action,life,and color. It is this redeeming quality that has lead many men and women to take drastic actions. There is a deep desire within us to spur the soul and it usually requires great tension to accomplish. Your canvas awaits to be explored, ventured, and filled.

I'll end this post with a Psalm that rang true to me this week.
"Behold you delight in truth in the inward being, and you teach me wisdom in the secret heart." -Psalm 51:6

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A Cliffhanger, I Am Not


I went and conquered #25 (rock climb at Upper Limits) off of my list tonight and I have to admit; I am no Sylvester Stallone. I've gone rock climbing before, but I was 12 years old and don't recall much from the experience. So naturally, going into this experience I considered myself a professional.

I was humbled pretty quickly.

Upper Limits was a really cool place. As soon as I walked in I was greeted by two massive walls and an overhang of sculpted climbing surfaces. At 35' tall, the main climbing area included slabs, aretes, roofs, dihedrals, cracks, and two massive arches. I was not prepared for any of this, so me and my friend Jonathon headed upstairs to start small.

The upstairs area was a little less intimidating. It was only 20' tall and had a lot of smaller bouldering challenges to warm up with. Bouldering, is climbing that is done close to the ground and is a good way to build strength, power and technique for climbing and does not require instruction. After about a half hour of figuring out footwork and movement along the wall, I was ready to start climbing.

With Jonathon belaying me, I was ready to top rope climb with the big boys. The top rope system consists of a climber tied into one end of the rope, the rope runs up through a set of anchors at the top of the climb then down to the belayer. The belayer's job is to take the slack out of the system as the climber goes up a route. Using a special device attached to the harness, the belayer can take in slack, hold a climber's fall, and lower the climber back to the ground when they are finished with the route. I did 4 top-rope climbs in total. The last of which was on the big wall. After a while, my hands started to give out. They weren't prepared for the stress that was put on them.

I plan on going back soon. It was an adrenaline rush to get to the top and look down at what you conquered. One day I hope to be as good as all the beautiful, trendy climbers that surrounded me tonight.

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Living a Narrative-My Bucket List for 2010

Don't get me wrong, a comfortable life is really not that bad. But I needed a change. I had just gotten out of a relationship and I was feeling pretty drained. I felt like I had been slowly shutting myself down. I was exhausted, I was bitter, I was angry that my life felt ordinary. Feeling as if my time was running out, I realized quickly that the window for many unbelievable experiences is only open for a limited time.

As I'm sure some of you may have noticed, I've been writing a lot lately about a "list." It started out innocently enough by my friend and roommate Chris having an idea of listing out things he wanted to accomplish in the new year. It was New Years Day after all, and it was appropriate to come up with resolutions. As the ideas slowly developed, it became much more than resolutions. It became a list of narratives to live out.

There were 2 guidelines to follow: 1)It had to be within reason to accomplish and 2)it could not violate our morals/law. So with those guidelines we sat in a neighborhood bar in South City, brainstorming ideas for a bucket list to accomplish in a year. We grabbed a bar napkin and started writing. We asked the question "What would you like to do with your life before the end of the year?" to our waitress, our bartender, and after changing locations, to a table of 4 attractive, college age women.

(Now I know what you're thinking. You're thinking this sounds a lot like the show on MTV right now and my response is: "yeah, you're right." In our defense the show had not come out until a month after we started. And if Chris knew anything of the show beforehand I was completely oblivious to it.)

Anyways, when we drafted the initial list, the three of us said we would all do it. Aric quickly bailed, and I dragged my feet for a few weeks. Meanwhile, Chris started living with purpose after that night. I saw him sacrifice, be humbled, gain confidence, and find joy with it. In that I found my motivation to finally join him.

A few other things happened that really got me moving, I'll share those stories one day. But for now, here it is: my 2010 bucket list. 52 things I hope to accomplish by years end. There are a lot of items listed that are intended to challenge my comfort level or challenge me physically. There are also a few things that I've always wanted to do in addition to a few soft-balls to keep me rolling. I'll try to write about each one as they come along. I've completed 10 so far, so my list is far from complete.

If you find yourself thinking of drafting a list, consider this question: Who do you want to be this year?

All the best,
James

(P.S. Oh also, if any of these interest you and you'd like to do it with me, send me a message or comment below)

1.     Write a song and perform it at an open mic night

2.     Encourage at least one person a day for a week

3.     Mentor someone by year’s end

4.     Read a book a month (one month read a book with a friend and have a discussion on it)

5.     Blog at least once a week for 3 months

6.     Have a “yes” day

7.     Have a friend make all decisions for 24 hours

8.     Read the bible in a year

9.     Paint something

10.   Write a short story

11.   Fast for 24 hours

12.   Go to a winery

13.   1 month without vice*

14.   2 month alcohol fast

15.   Take a train trip spur of the moment

16.   Take my camera everywhere for 1 month

17.   Digital Cleanse

18.   Weekend Trip somewhere new

19.   Hike

20.   Kayak

21.   Mountain Bike on a trail

22.   Right a wrong

23.   See my grandpa’s grave

24.   Skydive with Matt

25.   Rock climb at upper limits

26.   Embarrass Aric in public

27.   Go to Soulard Market

28.   Captain a team for Mission St. Louis

29.   Camp alone at Huzzah (end of March, April)

30.   Go to Cardinals Opening Day

31.   Put this list on display

32.   Surprise Someone

33.   Journal every day

34.   Deer Hunt

35.   Invest in 401K

36.   Enroll in Grad School

37.   5 in 5 *

38.   Buy Keg Beer & host a party- see what happens/who comes over

39.   Fast Eddie’s

40.   Read a book in one day

41.   Smoke Pipe Tobacco

42.   Grow a plant

43.   Be 100% opinionated on everything for 1 day

44.   Shave my head

45.   Offer to do a favor for someone I really don’t want to do

46.   Make a decision based on Paper,Rock,Scizzors

47.   Run a 5K

48.   Theology at the bottleworks

49.   Cannot spend money for an entire week

50.   Meet Matt Holiday

51.   Friends choice

52.   52 Tattoo if list is completed

*Details not important

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"Ephphatha"

It didn't happen on purpose. For some people these sort of things you just slip into. The temptation just wasn't there for me until I got involved in the music scene out east. I didn't have my first taste of alcohol or smoke until I was 19. Once I started though, it was something I found easy to indulge in.

I wouldn't consider myself a heavy drinker by any means, but I enjoy an occasional spirit from time to time. And sometimes I enjoy too much of it. From the time I was 20 until now, I can't, for the life of me, remember a time I've gone a significant period without having a drink. I'm realizing now how much of a crutch my vices have become to me as I'm going through a 2 month alcohol fast.

Drinking is a crazy thing. It is so nestled into the very fiber of our social lives. For a majority of us, we dedicate at least two nights a week (Friday,Saturday) to socializing with friends, maybe family, over a few drinks and lively conversation. I'm starting to doubt whether we as a society know how to interact with one another without the comfort of a glass bottle in our hands.

We've connected consumption with enjoyment but disconnected our head from our hearts.

It's been only two weeks since I started my fast, and for the most part my life has been pretty uneventful. Last night I had to force myself to leave my apartment for some sort of interaction with the world outside. I discovered it's sort of a lonely world out there if you you're not a drinker. I went to the mall and then went and saw a movie with my roommate. Aside from the fact that the movie was great, I wouldn't consider this too lively of an evening.

I'm realizing that there are many things that I'm not sufficient in. This will never change as hard as I try. I may not, at this point, have physical ailments, but I definitely have ailments in my character and behavior. All I can do is seek what needs to be opened in my life. "Ephphatha." As the two months of this year have progressed I've done more abstaining and unselfish things than I've done for quite sometime. I'm a work a progress, yes. But I know that without the help of a loving savior I'll never be open and exposed to the life I've been created for. There's a secret to my heart somewhere out there that I'm on an adventure to find.

And they brought to him a man who was deaf and had a speech impediment, and they begged him to lay his hand on him. And taking him aside from the crowd privately, he put his fingers into his ears, and after spitting touched his tongue. And looking up to heaven, he sighed and said to him, “Ephphatha,” that is, “Be opened.” And his ears were opened, his tongue was released, and he spoke plainly.
-Mark 7: 32-35

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A word of encouragement

I spent some time this week reflecting on the people in my life that are important and the people that need encouragement. By nature, I think most people are self-absorbed and it's one of my least favorite qualities.

A lack of encouragement is often at the root of a variety of ills that bog down relationships or stunt the work of progress. Giving a word of encouragement has never came easy to me. In a way, I've always figured that a person should just know how I feel or that their praises should come from someone else. When I take a look at the root cause, it really boils down to a lack of humility.

This week I spent all seven days encouraging at least one person a day. Some were easy, some were hard and awkward. The point of it all was to buoy relationships with a taste of gratitude and a word of support. Gratitude and encouragement is a fuel that can keep people in our life running and that's what I hope I accomplished this week.

Say your thank-you's to the people in your life that got you where you're at. Praise the people that are fighting the good fight and often times go unnoticed. This can be done with a simple text, phone call, post it note in the morning, email, or best in person. So take some time, give a someone a good word.

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I had a conversation with a stranger tonight...

I had a conversation with a stranger tonight that got me thinking; this is a wild trip we're all on. What steers us and shapes us into whom we are is a complicated matter. The way events intersect or run parallel with one another can alter our course. Often, when we look back on things, it’s easy to identify turning points that changed us. But sometimes it’s problematic to see what has shaped our present condition because the story is still being played out. My story is radically different from yours, and yours different from the next person.

Anyways, tonight was a reminder that people can change for the better and that it’s not always the opposite. The guy I met up with tonight realized there was a problem in his life and the only way he was going to overcome it was to remove himself from the environment that led him there. That takes balls.

I've been thinking a lot lately about who I want to be and who I currently am. I’m sleeping less and less because of it. The reason why is because I know it will take some heavy lifting to change things about myself. I consider myself this: irony personified. That was a humbling revelation to write out.

One of my favorite quotes is from Brennan Manning’s Ragamuffin Gospel;

When I get honest, I admit I am a bundle of paradoxes. I believe and I doubt, I hope and get discouraged, I love and I hate, I feel bad about feeling good, I feel guilty about not feeling guilty. I am trusting and suspicious. I am honest and I still play games.


I guess my point to all of this is that I want to fix the indiscretion there seems to be between my ideals and my reality. I’ve created a gulf that can only be shored up by me. Part of the reason me and my roommate are doing the bucket list in a year is to make a conscious effort to get uncomfortable and see what we learn from new experiences.

As my roommate told me “You’re only on this earth once, might as well get weird with it.”

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Fasting

I did a 24 hour fast today. I got to lunch and I was ready to cave. The last nine hours of it I spent in prayer and deep thoughts. Being hungry is miserable. It isn't fun. There was a point where I was so hungry that I wasn't hungry anymore.

I did it for several reasons. It's on my bucket list. There are things and people in my life that needed prayer for. I was seeking clarity.

So we fasted and implored our God for this, and he listened to our entreaty. -Ezra 8:23


Needless to say. I'm hungry now.

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About a girl

Taking a trip to Columbia this weekend to see about a girl.


Will: So, when did you know, like, that she was the one for you?
Sean: October 21st, 1975.
Will: Jesus Christ. You know the fuckin' date?
Sean: Oh yeah. 'Cause it was Game 6 of the World Series. Biggest game in Red Sox history.
Will: Yeah, sure.
Sean: My friends and I had, you know, slept out on the sidewalk all night to get tickets.
Will: You got tickets?
Sean: Yep. Day of the game. I was sittin' in a bar, waitin' for the game to start, and in walks this girl. Oh, it was an amazing game, though. You know, bottom of the eighth, Carbo ties it up at 6-6. It went to twelve. Bottom of the twelfth, in stepped Carlton Fisk. Old Pudge. Steps up to the plate, you know, and he's got that weird stance.
Will: Yeah, yeah.
Sean: And BAM! He clocks it. High fly ball down the left field line! Thirty-five thousand people, on their feet, yellin' at the ball, but that's not because of Fisk. He's wavin' at the ball like a madman.
Will: Yeah, I've seen...
Sean: He's going, "Get over! Get over! Get OVER!" And then it HITS the foul pole. OH, he goes apeshit, and 35,000 fans, you know, they charge the field, you know?
Will: Yeah, and he's fuckin' bowlin' police out of the way!
Sean: Goin', "God! Get out of the way! Get 'em away!" Banging people...
Will: I can't fuckin' believe you had tickets to that fuckin' game!
Sean: Yeah!
Will: Did you rush the field?
Sean: [surprised at the question] No, I didn't rush the fuckin' field; I wasn't there.
Will: What?
Sean: No - I was in a bar havin' a drink with my future wife.
Will: You missed Pudge Fisk's home run?
Sean: Oh, yeah.
Will: To have a fuckin' drink with some lady you never met?
Sean: Yeah, but you shoulda seen her; she was a stunner.

Will: I don't care if Helen of Troy walks in the room, that's Game 6!
Sean: Oh, Helen of Troy...
Will: Oh my God; and who are these fuckin' friends of yours, they let you get away with that?
Sean: Oh... they had to.
Will: W-w-w-what'd you say to them?
Sean: I just slid my ticket across the table, and I said, "Sorry, guys; I gotta see about a girl."
Will: I gotta go see about a girl?
Sean: Yeah.
Will: That's what you said? And they let you get away with that?
Sean: Oh, yeah. They saw in my eyes that I meant it.
Will: You're kiddin' me.
Sean: No, I'm not kiddin' you, Will. That's why I'm not talkin' right now about some girl I saw at a bar twenty years ago and how I always regretted not going over and talking to her. I don't regret the 18 years I was married to Nancy. I don't regret the six years I had to give up counseling when she got sick. And I don't regret the last years when she got really sick. And I sure as hell don't regret missin' the damn game. That's regret.
[pause]
Will: Wow... Woulda been nice to catch that game, though.
Sean: [sheepishly] I didn't know Pudge was gonna hit a homer.

-Good Will Hunting

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Identity Amnesia

"Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind"

- Dr. Seuss

I've been struggling with my identity lately. It's not that I'm uncomfortable with who I am, I just don't know how to live it passionately. There are many things I hold to be true that I don't necessarily live out, while the things I doubt and hold disbelief in are what I'm constantly engaged and entangled with. I'm a walking web of contradictions. I believe, but I doubt. I'm inspired, but I'm unaroused.

There's a Korean student that has been coming to my community group for the past 6 months that is looking into Christianity. I've learned a lot from him about his culture and his beliefs. He said something the other night when asked what he hopes to get out of the bible when he reads it. In his broken English he said that he hopes that he is able to do 1% of what he believes, because what he believes and what he does are so different.

This is coming from a Buddhist, who reads the bible probably more than I do. When I looked down at the bible that we had given him, he had post it notes and writings all over the pages. I can assure you, my bible doesn't look like that...but it should. I read, but I don't draw conclusions.

Reading through Romans 7, I found that Paul had the same thing happening in his life.
"For I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate."

Is it that we're all conflicted? Are we all weaving webs that entangle us? I've become a person that needs comfort, acceptance, and power. To most people these are good things, and they are, but desiring something too much can be suffocating. And this is where I'm at: My life is full of idols, and I can barely breath. My mind believes one things. My body another.
"So I find it to be a law that when I want to do right, evil lies close at hand. For I delight in the law of God, in my inner being, but I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death? Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord! So then, I myself serve the law of God with my mind, but with my flesh I serve the law of sin."

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I forgot I was on mission

I'm writing this because there has been something laid on my heart more recently that I think I need to address. Last fall my community group discussed what some of our core values would be (worship,beauty,honesty,mission), and while we've done a few things that have served the church, we can do more to be on mission. With that being said, I'd really like to get my group serving together in some fashion.

I read over this recently and it was helpful as a reminder to me. Here's an excerpt of what we as a local church believe:

"Mission is intrinsically connected to community. In the gospel of John, it is said that the unity of the church is vital if the world at large is to believe and experience the Christ sent from God the Father . Further, he said that we, the church, would be identified as followers of Christ only when we are sacrificially loving one another, which is another way of true Biblical community . It seems that the gospel of John points us to a reality that is both awesome and frightening: The believability of the gospel which the church proclaims is directly linked to the “realness” of its community. Could it be that many times, the gospel cannot be fully comprehended outside of this kind of real community?

Living the gospel, ie – being on mission, can take many forms: explaining the gospel to a friend or stranger, carrying out acts of compassion, or by being faithful to sacrificially love those in your church. The challenge is for all of us to stay in “mission-mode” and not to default to “maintenance-mode.” When it comes to being missional, it is easy for Christians and local churches to be content in our bible studies, worship services and small groups and to forget the world. We do not drift toward mission, we drift away from it. It is not easy to be missional, it is hard work, it takes intentionality. It is much less stressful to hang out with people who look the same, smell the same and believe the same things we do. It is uncomfortable and challenging to intentionally spend time with people who hold differing world-views. But we must push through this discomfort because we are the church. We are the church, the called-out ones. We are the church, the sent-out ones. We are the church, on mission for the sake of the world."


So here's the deal, I've been throwing around a few ideas of what we could do. I want to avoid the type of things that seem like a "quick fix" of serving our city without making a difference for more than just a few hours. I want to do something that makes a lasting impact on someone and will be a blessing to them for years. Whatever it is, I'd like to see myself and my friends become missional by getting uncomfortable and messy with the world outside our community group.

I've took the step of applying to be a Captain for a volunteer team with communityloopstl.com . It's a website put together by Mission St. Louis to identify needs in the community and gather people who have the resources to meet them. There are tons of opportunities to serve in different ways; Yard work, Home repair, Painting, Plumbing, Electrical, Small Fix-Ups, Cleaning, Moving, etc.

Anyways, I need to start thinking AND praying of what we can do, as a group, to love our city more. If you're reading this take a little time to look through the site and see if there's anything that you think we are capable of doing OR if there is a person in life that we can bless and minister to by our service.

Love you guys and am excited to see how we can follow Jesus,

-JR

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Are you full?

You make known to me the path of life;
in your presence there is fullness of joy;
at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.-Psalm 16:11


I asked someone earlier today if they considered themself a positive person. I guess that's also asking if they are joyful. When the question got turned around to me I had to give pause to my answer. I wouldn't consider myself negative or joyless, but the times of joyfulness and positivity don't last forever.

I need to constantly remind myself of God's presence in all aspects of my life and find the joy in that. Our joy should be an unforced rhythm as a response to His grace.

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Quarter Life Celebration

A few months back I did something spur of the moment. I bought 3 plane tickets to Chicago to celebrate my birthday weekend. 25 is weird age to me. I'm still stuck between dealing with life after college and life before I'm ready to settle down. I wanted a celebration that made me feel closer to the former than the latter.

The trip was a success. A lot of laughs, randomness, and good stories were created. It was a perfect way to enter the next quarter of my life.



Random thoughts from the trip: "Where we're going we don't need roads." Real World Fail. Jersey Shore. C-Titty, J Woww, Creepaz, The predicament. Bob Stoops. Red Paint. Bonified Bachelor. Buffalo. 11 second keg stand. Princess hat. Art Institute. Trains. Giordano's. Friend's making decisions. Jameson. Bosnian girls. Billy running. birthday shots at midnight. Mexican food. More red paint. Piano. Lady Gaga. Team Fun Car. Shots of coffee creamer, gravy, maple syrup. Suits. Pub crawl. Darts. Juke Box. Dancing with the waitress. Votive cups, plates, and menu holder. 100 curls. Kreeger's arm around me. Nearly missing the flight home.

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Not Forsaken

And those who know your name put their trust in you,
for you, O Lord, have not forsaken those who seek you. -Psalm 9:10


Came across this verse tonight and wanted to make a special note of it. It's easy for me to get discouraged when I don't feel God. When I feel distant from him and isolated I have a habit of doing religious activities in the hopes of getting his attention. This verse should serve as a reminder that God has and will never forsake those of us that know him, let alone those who seek after him. Rest easy, those who needed to hear that.
-jr

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There Your Heart Will Also Be

So starting Jan. 1st I have been reading through the bible with people from church. The goal is to the read the bible in a year. Ambitious, yes. Realistic....we'll see.
Anyways, tonight I was doing my reading for the day (Genesis 6 , Psalm 6 , Matthew 6 ) and I came across something that really spoke to me and something that made my mind wander.

Three verses in Matthew jumped off the page at me. It's something that I have felt God tugging at a lot more recently. It was in Matthew 6:19-24

“Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal, 20 but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal. 21 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.

22 “The eye is the lamp of the body. So, if your eye is healthy, your whole body will be full of light, 23 but if your eye is bad, your whole body will be full of darkness. If then the light in you is darkness, how great is the darkness!

24 “No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money.


For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.



Now when I would read that verse when I was younger I always associated treasure with physical objects I value. Now while it appears that Jesus is referring to a tangible treasures, I think he had in mind more than just that. Jesus is going after something that penetrates all of us; it's the treasure we allow to occupy our time, our actions, our admiration, our hearts.

When I get honest, I admit that I have a chest full of things I treasure, value, and take comfort in. I like to drink, and at times it can go too far. I value the luxuries that my job has afforded me. I would be content filling my days with my favorite television shows, movies, music, and sitting behind my computer. I take comfort in way too many other things to list out.

So what does it look like to chase after godly things? It's turns out that today's reading kind of answers this question. Looking at the verses in Genesis, we see it. Consider Noah. We are told that Noah "walked with God." Would he have been balanced if, after learning of God’s purpose to destroy the world by a flood, he had spent his time building a bigger and better home and obtaining more material possessions? What good would it have done him if he had gone on with his normal life and avoided the ridicule of the people around him? For Noah, living a balanced, simple life involved devoting full attention to God's instructions and viewing matters with a heart grateful for being chosen by God to be spared.

I'll end this with some quotations from a John Piper sermon.
"Lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven" is a specific instance of what seeking God’s kingdom involves. Seeking the kingdom of God and his righteousness involves not trying to be rich on earth but trying to be rich in heaven, that is, rich in God. Seeking the kingdom means treasuring God and freeing yourself from the drag of earth......But let’s be more specific. If Jesus means "devote your life to accumulating treasure in heaven" – which I take to mean increasing your joy in God in heaven – what is the main thing he has in mind that we should do now? My judgment from the context would be that it is giving rather than accumulating. If laying up treasures in heaven is the opposite of laying up treasures on earth, then probably laying up treasures in heaven will be NOT laying up treasures on earth but giving them away in ways that magnify the worth of Jesus.

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