Wednesday, September 12, 2007
"the cradle rocks above the abyss..."
Today I turn 20 years old. As a symbol of my newly acquired maturity (at least chronologically), I recieved a Motorolla Tracfone in the mail. My friends need no longer complain of my inaccessability...or of their thankless status as my secretaries. Calling home (and recieving calls therefrom) will no longer require a landline. The world just got that much smaller, my friends and family that much closer. Welcome, Abby, to the 21st century.
Even better, Dad sent me the final installment of the Thursday Next series--a hardcover copy with additional online features! I eagerly await the "brainy silliness" and bibliophiliac abandon to come! Vowsha, knowing my passion for Annie Dillard, purchased Living by Fiction for me--I book I've already come to love. With it, she wrapped up a bright navy mug with a graceful flowery painting on it. It fits quite nicely in my hand.
Tonight, Melody is escorting me to Starbucks--after which we will repair to the Kulick resident to pay our respects to its latest member: Chrissy! She arrived via c-section in the early hours of the eleventh, and already has made her debut in a Facebook album.
I'm finishing my conquest of Nabakov's memoir Speak, Memory...and noticing butterflies and various other lepidopteral creatures everywhere I go. Literature truly does give me fresh eyes and heightened joy.
Well--dinner awaits. Au revoir.
Sunday, September 09, 2007
keep in mind:
[marilynne robinson]
Friday, August 24, 2007
cheers to living ontologically!
In the midst of the festivities, I am doing my best to live ontologically. To BE: recognizing that each moment in time encompasses both the past and the future (thank you T.S. Eliot), and that I must not allow my self image (warped and murky as a funhouse mirror by starlight) to get in the way of my self (that elusive spirit that vanishes the moment I focus on it, that is most real when it is least aware of itself). Confusified yet? Because I sure am. (Thank you, Madeleine L'Engle.)
What I am attempting, day by day, is to live a life of humble integrity. That is living ontologically. And God knows (and has said) it is impossible. But the closer I approach it, the nearer I will approach wholeness.
Monday, August 06, 2007
happiness
I need thy help:
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
8:13 am
In her room at the prow of the house
Where light breaks, and the windows are tossed with linden,
My daughter is writing a story.
I pause in the stairwell, hearing
From her shut door a commotion of typewriter-keys
Like a chain hauled over a gunwale.
Young as she is, the stuff
Of her life is a great cargo, and some of it heavy:
I wish her a lucky passage.
But now it is she who pauses,
As if to reject my thought and its easy figure.
A stillness greatens, in which
The whole house seems to be thinking,
And then she is at it again with a bunched clamor
Of strokes, and again is silent.
I remember the dazed starling
Which was trapped in that very room, two years ago;
How we stole in, lifted a sash
And retreated, not to affright it;
And how for a helpless hour, through the crack of the door,
We watched the sleek, wild, dark
And iridescent creature
Batter against the brilliance, drop like a glove
To the hard floor, or the desk-top.
And wait then, humped and bloody,
For the wits to try it again; and how our spirits
Rose when, suddenly sure,
It lifted off from a chair-back,
Beating a smooth course for the right window
And clearing the sill of the world.
It is always a matter, my darling,
Of life or death, as I had forgotten. I wish
What I wished you before, but harder.
[richard wilbur]
Monday, July 16, 2007
presentiment

Sunday, July 08, 2007
what subterfuge is this?
So, upon returning home from church, devouring a meal, and sleeping it off--I logged onto Encarta to see what quotes my favorite encyclopedia had to offer. You know what I found?
One quote, out of volumes and volumes.
It reads thus: It is a mockery to allow women to baptise. Even the Virgin Mary was not allowed this.
My friends, Muhammed the Prophet has eighteen quotes. Encarta awarded Buddha five. Even Joseph Smith's voice was louder than Calvin's by three quotes.
It's moments like these when it strikes me how drastically different were the cultural emphases on my life than those on most members of my generation. Calvin, to each crop of Reformed Christians, is just beneath the Apostle Paul when it comes to his impact on the church's teachings. To the wide world (if Encarta can be permitted to judge), Calvin is a negative blip on the radar...a French fanatic whose extreme and narrowminded views contributed to the oppression of women in the world.
So I am even more resolved now to read the Institutes and judge for myself.
I still love the word subterfuge.
Tuesday, June 26, 2007
i'm gonna sit right down and write myself a letter...
Our talks always end in family. Hannah lives at home, in the thick of the clamor and confusion, the caring so powerful that it sometimes ends up causing more damage than good. And I, listening to her, love them all so much!
During our conversation, the sky behind the treeline that borders the soccer field keeps flashing with sheet lightning, outlining the deep boiling clouds, while the thunder grumbles. Just as I return from the field, a crack of thunder precedes the sudden rush of rainfall that chases me the last few feet to my front porch. The rest of the night, it poured and poured...and this morning dawned overcast and puddlewonderful and mudluscious.
I've had my coffee fix, and my Hannah fix, and a pancake with bananas too! Listening to the "You've Got Mail" soundtrack as I type this and pack my Annie Dillard read into my lunchbreak bag, I am confident that it will be a good day.
Sunday, June 24, 2007
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
big comfy couch
From this very post, I have visited and revisited the spheres of Facebook and Hotmail, of Banner and People.com--humming along to Michael Buble or Rosie Thomas; chatting on occasion with my roommates as they pass in and out. I have reveled in the melodrama and tedium of reality tv shows. I have shared pot after pot of gurgling Maxwell House to visitors.
From this vantage point, I can say with a sigh of satisfaction, that it has been a good summer.
Cheers.
Tuesday, June 05, 2007
Sunday, May 13, 2007
i love this poem
Men go by me whom either beauty bright
In mould or mind or what not else makes rare:
I cannot, and out of sight is out of mind.
Christ minds: Christ’s interest, what to avow or amend
There, éyes them, heart wánts, care haúnts, foot fóllows kÃnd,
Their ránsom, théir rescue, ánd first, fást, last friénd.
The voice of this poem principally comes from that of a narrator, who describes his feelings as he watches a light with interest. In the first stanza, he thinks wonderingly about the owner of that light and his or her destination. The setting is somewhat eerie: he thinks “Who goes there?” like a guard, alert for signs of danger, as he watches “down the darkness wide, his wading light.” The adverb “wading” gives me the picture of a wavering light, moving through a dense liquid medium: the darkness. The adjective “wide” intensifies the ghostly imagery, making us feel the vastness of the darkness, which makes the light seem smaller.
In the second stanza, he discusses what sort of people pass by in this darkness. “Men go by me,” he writes, “whom either beauty bright/In mould or mind or what not else makes rare…” These people are “rare”, beautiful physically or intellectually or in some other way. In other words, all men that go by him are somehow uniquely beautiful and precious. These men “rain against our much-thick and marsh air/Rich beams, till death or distance buys them quite.” Men are the lights that he sees, shedding brilliance against the stifling boggy air in which he dwells…until they are snuffed out, either by death or distance, beyond his sight.
The third stanza emphasizes this last point by repeating it: “Death or distance soon consumes them: wind/What most I may eye after, be in at the end/I cannot, and out of sight is out of mind.” Even those that he most “eye[s] after”, the lights he tries to observe the longest, eventually are quenched. The last line is dismissive, “and out of sight is out of mind.” Once they vanish from sight, he no longer wonders about them.
But, even though he no longer minds these faltering lights, “Christ minds.” Hopkins writes about the comforting spiritual truth that “Christ’s interest, what to avow or amend/There, eyes them, heart wants, care haunts, foot follows kind,/Their ransom, their rescue, and first, fast, last friend.” These lights cannot depend upon the “interested” eyes of fellow men who observe them until they depart or die. Rather, they must depend upon Christ, who eyes, wants, haunts, and kindly follows them with the intent of ransoming and rescuing them. He, unlike fickle human bystanders, is a true Friend: first, fast (loyal), and last.
In this poem, I believe that life is personified as a wide dark bog: an eerie, dangerous place. Human beings “wade” through this bog like solitary lights, viewing each other with “interest” (and perhaps warily, like guards who demand “Who goes there?”), and recognizing the beauty and rarity of each individual light. Yet as soon as the light is quenched, or wades out of sight, they lose interest and become self-absorbed again, forgetting about the beautiful light that so entranced them. Christ, on the other hand, does not forget. He loves and yearns after these lights, haunting them, following with kind intent, not losing them in the dark mire. He alone is their friend, and they can turn to no other but Him for rescue and ransom from the darkness.
The poem is divided into four stanzas: the first two are quatrains, the second two contain three lines. Throughout the poem, Hopkins reverses word order, placing objects before their verbs and nouns before their modifiers. I don’t really understand why he does this or how this contributes to the overall meaning of the poem itself, but I love the resulting cadence of the words, and the way it sounds when read aloud. He also uses alliteration in the following instances: the “w” sound in the lines 3 and 4; “beauty bright”; “mould or mind”; “death or distance”; “foot follows”; “ransom, rescue”; and “first, fast, friend.”
All of these elements combined create a stimulating, ear-pleasing poem that contains a comforting message about Christ’s love, even in the midst of our bleak lives. I believe that it also encourages individuals to care about their companions on earth even when circumstances make it difficult.
breakfast blend
I slept in this morning, brewed myself some Starbucks' Breakfast Blend coffee to sip along with my feast of "Melt in Your Mouth" Bisquick Pancakes. The sun continues to blaze outside, and the world is bright and golden and green. Lauren and Melanie still sleep in their respective bedrooms--so I settled at the kitchen table to type and listen to Kris Delmhorst's crooning ("So we'll go no more a'roving").
My plan for today is to get dressed, showered, and ready for church. This afternoon I want to go lay out at Highlands again, with another good book. After the evening service at Cornerstone, I will go for a jog in the twilight of Shadowland's field. It's been far too long since I've jogged...my life feels so disordered yet that I allow the chaos to distract me from doing the things that will actually contribute to a sense of law and order in my life. Funny how I let my discipline slide when outside circumstances start to confuse or disorient me. I need to work on being unflappable. I just love that word. And currently, I'm just flapping and flailing around. It has its attractions, don't get me wrong, but I know that in the long run it will have only negative consequences.
Oh my soul, steer us to uncharted waters, hoist the anchor, shake out every sail.
My brave soul, if they're out of season, heaven why should we not go where all maps fail?
We've been waiting in our harbour
We will head for deeper waters
Farther, farther, farther, farther now...
(Is that Walt Whitman?) Because I like it.
Saturday, May 12, 2007
the WEEKEND!!
I love slow Saturday mornings! Today I slept in until 8:30, took a long refreshing shower, and then watched another episode of The Office before heading out to Highlands with a blanket and a book to lay out and read for an hour. Upon my return, I've watched Buck and Melanie battle each other in Nintendo. Now that's a good day!
Quite a few of our team have departed for their respective homes in honor of Mother's Day, which signifies a low-key weekend. I sent Mom a letter yesterday, and am hoping that it arrives in time. I also intend to call her tomorrow.
All in all, I'm looking forward to this summer!
Thursday, April 26, 2007
sadness
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
blameless
I just realized, last night, that I've never appreciated what God means when he calls me to be blameless. It means that I live in such a way that I am above reproach--above blame--above suspicion. Like Christ.
That shakes me. That is NOT my life. Thousands of self-judged "minor" infractions characterize everything I do.
I need to stop rationalizing my sins away, and recognize that if I act in a way that could incur blame, I sin.
Just a thought.
Saturday, April 21, 2007
a memory...

And I wonder…does he tell the story of two American girls he met on the stairs of a fountain in the Piazza del Populo, who would not buy his roses?
Thursday, April 12, 2007
ah, the benefits of travel...
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
shantih shantih shantih
So in my American Literature class we are reading The Wasteland, which begins "April is the cruelest month." NO WAY. I love April! (Aside from the little important detail of it being tax month...but I don't believe that that's what Eliot meant anyway.)
I just returned from a trip to Vienna and Salzburg with Lauren. Tra-la-la--What can I say? (In the words of our exuberant hostess, Monica Byers...)
The first day we departed from the Trnava train station directly after class, and got a connecting flight to Wein Sudbonhof through Bratislava. On board, we met a fellow American--this guy was studying medicine in Martin, Slovakia and took the weekend off to party in Vienna. He gave us a lot of advice about what sort of things to look for while we were in Vienna, and then two other American guys heard us talking and came over. I cannot describe how great it was to be able to communicate freely in American English. We arrived in Sudbonhof and Lauren's friend (an elderly patient of her father's who insisted we call her Monica) picked us up and took us to her apartment, where we unpacked and then took off for the metro. We spent the evening wandering around Stephensplatz...looking at all the mimes and street performers, window shopping, and picking up some bratwurst for a euro in a sidestreet. Bed in a real homey environment was indescribably delicious.
The next morning we both felt so rested! Monica fixed me a whole pot of real drip coffee, with fresh bread from the market and yogurt and granola for breakfast. We got ready, and then took the train back into Vienna again. There, we explored the Belvedere--I got to see a lot of Klimt (not my favorite, to be honest), Kokoshka, and some other famous (and by now over-familiar) painters' works. After that, we went to visit the Schonnbrun gardens, and got sidetracked into checking out the Easter markets. There were so many gorgeous things for sale, and delectable dishes--it was great to just sniff and ogle everything. The gardens were gorgeous, and offered a marvelous view of the city as the sun set.
The following day, Monica took us on a personal tour of some of the quieter, more scenic Austrian cities: Baden (the place that Mozart, Beethoven, Strauss, and others all went to rest and rejuvenate when they were fed up with Vienna), Gumpensdorf (which had a lovely church), and Modlin (where she treated us to lunch on a panoramic hilltop outdoors). We returned to Vienna in time to catch Verdi's Simone Boccanegra at the Opera house--standing room tickets, which cost only two euros.
At seven am the next morning, Lauren and I were standing in Westbanhof waiting for the train that would take us to Salzburg for Easter, clutching our prepurchased tickets. I have never missed Sunday morning Easter service so much in my life. There seriously is no place to celebrate Easter in a non-Catholic fashion in Vienna...so on the train there Lauren and I read the Easter story and prayed for awhile. It was okay, but I was seriously homesick for Cornerstone, and coffee with the family afterward.
Arriving in Salzburg was a bit rocky at first, because we realized that we hadn't planned anything for once we actually arrived! But we scrounged up a tourist map, hopped on a bus to the center of the city, and found ourselves smack-dab in the middle of the Sound of Music Tour (and, I might add, a large number of elderly American couples). We traipsed through the gardens, picked a street, and started walking down it. It took us across the Danube, to the oldest part of the city, where we wandered through beautiful shopping streets and cafes, bobbing in and out of ancient cathedrals, and checking out stunning view after stunning view of the city as we climbed higher and higher in the foothills of the Alps. We took a trail that led to a castle, and took pictures of the view. Then we went back down to the Danube and just sat on the banks for about an hour, before heading back to the old city and finding a Franciscan cemetery. Just as we got there, the bells started tolling for Easter, and the air was full of them for about a half an hour! Transporting. Finally, we got dinner in an Italian restaurant and caught our train back to Vienna. Several train-switches and metro-rides and a ten-minute walk later, we were back at Monica's apartment--dead tired, and o so happy.
We left the next day, after visiting St. Stephen's cathedral (my favorite church so far!) and Starbucks.
It wasn't all spectacular, though. We were waiting in the Sudbonhof station for our train to come in, and the only open seats were across from these four men (probably late twenties), and next to a girl about our age. She had a half-empty bottle of Vodka in one hand, and she was so drunk. Her teeth were horrible, and her eyes were bloodshot, and she was wearing a very short skirt and boots and kept knocking these off her seat and muttering under her breath. The men started pointing and laughing at her, and she looked at them and started talking to them, asking if they could tell that she was "on drugs", saying she was waiting for "her man", that she had a little daughter but her mother was taking care of her because she was on drugs...all in broken English. Then she talked to us, asked us where we were from, and said she wanted to go to America because she heard they had great "disco-techs" there. She told us not to talk to the men because they "just want to fuck"...that they had propositioned her before we arrived.
I don't know--she was so kind and sweet and friendly to us, but so incredibly messed up! I was so upset that the minute we got on the train back to Bratislava I just completely lost it and started crying. After the "high" of being in Vienna and visiting all these marvelous places and experiencing Easter in a foreign country...to be reminded so graphically of the evil in this world... I just kept wondering if there was anything I should've said, any way I could've offered her hope, instead of just chatting sweetly and abstractly about "America." Just reliving the memory makes me sick to my stomach. In that sense, Eliot's poem makes more sense...I'm sure that girl would agree that April is the cruellest month. Without a risen Christ, this world is a horrible, horrible wasteland. Praise God that He is powerful enough to overcome death, and bring "shantih shantih shantih" (peace that passes all understanding...the last words of the Wasteland).
I think I want to teach English here once I graduate--and work with the Building in their ministry to the Roma here. I know I could get a job, and I really am beginning to wonder if God gave me this opportunity to point me in that direction. And there's such a need for people to work here and spread the Gospel! Slovakia is dark in so many ways, and most of the time I'm oblivious because I'm being a tourist, or sticking with my safe little group of Covenant friends. But that incident (along with a few others on a lesser scale) have made a really strong impression on me, and I'm wondering if God wants to use me here.
We return in two weeks, and every time I think about it, I get a sinking feeling because I LOVE IT HERE. I definitely want to come back someday.
Heirloom
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