Friday, December 19, 2008

We'll Sweep Out the Ashes

Marie and I did an incredibly courageous thing in the last few days.

First, we reunited our home after ten months of separation. We packed up our boxes and gym bags and scraped together a thousand dollars and took the enormous risk of trusting each other with the rest of our lives and our hopes. We could have turned away. We could have continued the numbness and escapes of our divided lives. Marie is a captivating and alluring woman, with an essence that can light a room or chill one in an instant. She could have another man in the time it takes to smile. But she chose me. I'm a vigorous old dog, resourceful and stubbornly independent, always finding a way to make my way through life, and I chose her. I wanted her more than the lure of the open road, more than all the illusions and dimly lit paths the world has to offer, far more than the "safety" of not trying and not risking and not belonging to anyone. I belong with her, and she, thank God, belongs with me.

We could have turned away or given up, or given in to despair or bitterness. A dozen times, two dozen times, we almost did. Hope is the most wonderful thing, but it is remarkable what it can endure. We overcame ten thousand bitter and poorly chosen words. We overcame a hundred rash acts. We overcame searing abandonments and empty wrenching hours. We kept trying. Love won. That's an incredible thing in a world that tosses corrosive poisons into the waters, daily and hourly. Turn on the television for an hour and invariably you'll encounter innuendos and leering cheapness that can burn the retina of your mind's eye, half the time to sell a beer or a car or cheap steak sandwich. We overcame it all. We chose life and hope and a new beginning, and thank God we did, thank God He gave us the strength and heart to love that much.


It won't be easy. But it will be better and richer and more full of abundance than anything we have ever done. We know it's a process that has to be completed carefully, and we're seeking counseling, together and separately. In the last two days we have had the hardest, best conversations we have ever had, and we have had to face fears and failures and secrets, and we did so with a transparency and courage and compassion I didn't know we had within us. Shame feeds on secrets, and I've spent my life running, running from secrets, shame and doubt. I've always tried to hide when I should have stepped into the light, and my wife, my remarkable, incredible, unceasingly desirable and wise wife, let me do that. I spoke to her gently and without defensiveness. I confessed the dark, deplorable underside of me, and she heard and listened, and vented her justifiable and considerable anger, and I listened, and heard her, and acknowledged her pain and her need, and we grew, and learned, and began the transformation of a broken relationship to a healing and joyous one. We became new and renewed people, by believing in one another and the God who made us, and choosing grace over bitterness and regret. It wasn't easy and it isn't over. Both the hardest and most joyous days are ahead. But I'm amazed at what love can do and overcome, if given the chance.

We had the best evening yesterday, just a simple one but grand. After I assembled the kitchen table we sat at it and ate cheese and apples and talked. Marie has finished most of the organizing and unpacking and she set out Christmas decorations, a Nativity scene, candles, a Santa Claus, a tiny ceramic tree (our lovely fake tree goes up this Saturday) and the march of the sinister snowmen, a tableau of red-scarved snowmen with their arms in the air, set out in rows on a small coffee table, looking eerily like yuletide zombies on the prowl. We suspect that they'll attack Santa Claus in the night, for stealing all the glory, but Santa is tougher than they think. He's endured hundreds of bitter arctic winters and traverses the entire world in one evening, lugging a pack that brings joy to billions. Malevolent snowmen are no match for him: Christmas is safe, and so are we in one another's arms. And that alone is more delicious than two plates of Christmas cookies, and the rarest and most valuable present in the world.

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This is the Way the Transformation Begins


"Some men see things as they are and say why? I dream things that never were and say "Why not?"
George Bernard Shaw, Robert F. Kennedy


This is the way the transformation begins.
It begins in me.
It begins now.
It begins with small incremental changes and shifts in attitude
it begins with positive action
failing forward
and suddenly I start looking at the world and my place in it in a new way. I speak differently and dress differently and project a different energy, and the world opens up like a glorious pink azalea bush, eight feet tall and blooming like mad.


photo by Kajo123 from the website flickr.com

Good morning!

An engineer builds a bridge and every bolt and weld has to be exactly right; every measure has to be perfect, or the bridge collapses or fails to take its place. Fantastically detailed blueprints have to be laid out. Impact statements have to be filed, sediment has to be studied, years of effort, months of planning, and a man-made marvel rises in the sky. Park somewhere and take a good look at a bridge, and think of all the skill and knowledge and hard honest work it took to create it. Consider how a few thousand years ago we were living in caves.

It is not so with a dream. Some people are remarkable dreamers and dreams spring whole from them, or they can leap up from bed and pages of creative genius flow out of their pen, intricate and perfect. Most of us though are baby dreamers, new at it and tentative to the trust the power of what we wish for.

Start the dream! Whether you want to go to nursing school or college or learn to play the guitar, take a first step, now, even in the wrong direction. Don't wait for the blueprint to come to you, the environmental impact statement, the permits and the 200-page budget and legislative dream approval. Rough it out, sketch it on a napkin, tell a friend, and take action. Your dream begins the moment you step out in first moment of believing, and the result can touch a thousand souls. Listen to Jim Valvano: never give up, never surrender. Believe in the audacity of action and your fantastic potential for change and new opportunity.

The Hawthorne Bridge at sunrise, Portland Oregon. Photo by Joe Collver, from flickr.com
Genuine happiness and success start with an attitude of abundance

Make it a daily practice to begin your day with five minutes of thankfulness. You can even do it in your car on the way to work. Do it in your own way, whether it's thoughtful reflection or a prayer or singing out loud, but focus on your rich, amazing, abundant life.

Feeling grumpy or resentful or worried instead of thankful? Change direction! Consider the incredible gifts you have--mind, body, spirit, senses, your family, your friends, your clothes, your car, and the breakfast you enjoyed this morning. By the standards of 99% of the world, Americans are incredibly, amazingly rich. You truly have no idea how richly blessed you are until you start thinking about it. Even the heart that beats within you and the lungs that breathe your air are an intricate and amazing miracle.

Some of my favorite movies are ones that feature a once-defeated character waking up to an absolutely new day: "It's A Wonderful Life," the various versions of Dicken's "Christmas Carol" and "Groundhog Day." How exhilarating it is for George Bailey to wake up and realize his life isn't over, it's just beginning, and that today truly is a brand new day.


"It's a Wonderful Life"

"It's a Wonderful Life"
George returns home to everything he ever wanted.