Wednesday 14 November 2018

Fluxxed!



I thought it was Life that  I liked.

I was wrong, though.  When I googled it, it turns out it was just Careers.  

One of the websites did offer the comment, though,"if only real life was as simple as the game of careers."  Maybe I'm not the only one who has ever confused the two.

Careers was a board game we played as kids.  Success was measured by achieving levels of fame, money and happiness that each player decided for themselves.  Winning was being the first to achieve your own goals.  And everyone played on the same board by the same rules.

We played it a lot.  And enjoyed it, no matter who won.  Kind of like life.

But this past Saturday I played a new game.  My sister and brother-in-law and their son Sean -- our nephew, were over for dinner.  We were celebrating both Jim's and my 65th birthdays, which seemed far less a milestone than we had thought they would be.  Both of us are still working full-time for a few years yet because life and careers haven't turned out quite like we were taught they would -- like they did in the old days.

The game was Fluxx -- a card game Sean gave me a few Christmases ago, that it turns out I had not yet even opened, but that he and his friends enjoy playing.

The game is chaos.  I found out the only unchanging rule is you play the cards you hold in your hand.  Beyond that?  It's anyone's guess.

The cards are of four types -- Actions you can take, Goals you can put on the table for all to have to achieve, Keepers that help you achieve a goal, and Rules you also put on the table that become binding for all players as soon as you put them there.  Within the four categories, every card is unique.  And sometimes odd and irrational.

The result as people play is unsettling.  Both the goal of the game and what you need to achieve it constantly change.  The actions you can take at any time are random, limited and sometimes unhelpful.  The rules of the game are never set and are constantly being changed, added to, manipulated, and even erased by other players.  Which means at almost every stage along the way you have no way of knowing really how close or far you are from achieving anything like success.  Kind of like life.

No wonder it's called Fluxx.  

I can think of other names for it as well.  Including a few I can't mention here.  But maybe also including Life.  And Careers.  At least as we experience these things today.

Sean really liked it, though.  He did well.  In the end he won with an amazing, complex play of the ten or twelve cards he had amassed in his hand that in a sequence of plays he used to change the goals, rewrite the rules in his favour, make good use of his keepers, and make him the winner.  

He not only survived the game's intentional chaos, he revelled and excelled in it.  I, on the other hand, had by that time already emotionally checked out. I was exhausted by the chaos.    

I used to like Careers.  I probably used to like Life as well.

But I also find myself wanting to play Fluxx again.  

I wonder if I might get better at it.  I wonder if it might be therapeutic.  Somehow healing, to learn to play well the cards I have in my hand.  As unique, odd and irrational as they may be.

Wednesday 31 October 2018

Trick or treat


I heard a conversation on the radio yesterday about a proposal to relocate the observance of Hallowe'en permanently to the last Saturday of October and also make that weekend, rather than the first weekend of November, the time for the time change.  The main reason seemed to be to allow kids to go trick-or-treating not on a school night, and to give them even more time to sleep off their sugar rush on a Sunday morning.

Really brought home the secularization of our holy-days.  Also made me imagine somewhat fancifully the delight among the vast array of dark spirits -- once believed to be afoot and seeking openings into our world on the Eve of All Hallow's, at such secular naivete, and how it leaves us so foolishly vulnerable.

Traditionally (in Celtic regions, at least) the night of Oct 31 to Nov 1 has been regarded as the time of transition from summer to winter -- the beginning of the "dark half" of the year.  As any time of transition, this is by nature a "thin time" when spirits pass more easily than usual between this world and the other.  And given the time of year, it's dark spirits and the malevolent -- or even just mischievous, souls of the dead that especially seek entry into our world, our homes and our lives. 

And how to protect one's self and one's home and family?  By appeasing the dark spirits (or people dressed up to represent them) with treats, and/or by warding them off with your own representation of an evil spirit or a soul of someone dead (think jack-o-lantern).

But of course we don't believe in any of that kind of stuff anymore, do we? 

And if Hallowe'en is really just about candy and how much of it can be bought and collected, why not shift it to Saturday night and let the kids sleep in the next day?

Of course, it isn't just about that.  It's also about community, and about grumpy people like me having our hearts enlarged as we happily hand out candy to total strangers, try to guess at their costumes, and savour their happy voices.

And that could be done just as well on a Saturday.

But I wonder ... do we lose something when we schedule holy-days and once-spiritual activities according to our convenience? 

I wonder if our desire to rationalize everything that has spiritual roots is perhaps a sign that there truly is something dark and sinister in the world around us, that we have unwittingly allowed to take over our house and our lives?
 

Wednesday 24 October 2018

Clear the decks


It's time.  I've known it for some time.

It's the season.  And for several weeks I kept saying, "I really need to clear the deck."  

Said it in so many ways.  With so many different words.  And always with such good intentions -- even longing, to do the one needed thing.  Or with wistful resignation.  Or, to be honest, also at times as quiet lament and complaint.

It really is true that the more we talk about doing something, the less likely we are actually to do it.  The mere talking about it somehow satisfies some little powerful part of our brain into feeling we have done something -- enough for now, about it.

But Monday I said only, "I'm going out to put the deck stuff away," and then went and did it.  And the only reason I had to say even that much was so Japhia would know where I was going and what I was doing.

And now it feels so good.  To have and to see and to walk into the space cleared, stripped down, simplified and prepared for the coming dark and cold.  

There will come a time again to pull all the stuff out and set it up anew.  See what still works.  Replace old with new where needed.

But for now it feels so right to have shed the extraneous, and to rediscover the bare bones of what really is and always will be no matter what.  The foundation of what will be again.

And I wonder what other decks might still be waiting to be cleared.



 

Wednesday 17 October 2018

Through a glass darkly ...


It looked ugly.

Five or six kids were standing on one side of the street, one of them throwing something at one kid alone on the other side.  The lone kid on the other side was not hit, picked up whatever it was that had been thrown, and defiantly threw it back.  Neither side moved from where they were.

I was sitting inside the coffee shop at my usual table, inside the front window.  I was looking out, watching these high school kids on lunch break as they played out their drama on the street. 

I could see that the lone kid was black.  I wasn't sure about the identify of the five or six on the other side, but mostly they looked white.

I felt shock at the scene.  In Canada.  In Westdale.  In front of me.

I felt dismay to feel confronted by such racial division and violence in a place I consider home.   That's been good to me.

Remembering another incident of racist violence some months ago in a parking lot, I knew the only action I would choose if any seemed necessary or helpful, would be to leave the safety of the coffee shop to stand with the lone kid.  No more.  But no less.  

I waited to see if I should get up, go out, and be ready to stand with him.  I wonder now, was I the only one at that moment watching, holding my breath, and readying to act?

For fully a half minute, then a minute, and maybe a few more the two groups -- rather, the group and the lone kid, stood facing one another across the street.  I couldn't tell if any of them were saying anything.  I saw a few gestures.  But couldn't understand what they were gestures of. 

I grew anxious.

And then I saw the lone kid start to saunter across the street.  Slowly.  Agonizingly slowly.  I looked for any clue in each step-- the slightest sign, as to what this meant.  Or would mean.

Then halfway across the street the group itself became less a group distinct from and against the lone kid.  The kid kept walking towards them, and they seemed suddenly to be several groups of two or three.  The lone kid as he reached the other side blended in with them.  The now six or seven of them milled about.  Were clearly all friends who had been acting out some play-drama among themselves.  And now were happily making their way down the street together.  Wherever they were on their way to.

I relaxed.

And went back to my work.

But not without wondering.
 
About how quickly I interpreted the scene the way I did.  About when and how I learned to do that.  About the sadness I felt at this change in me and in us.  But also about how good it felt to know I was prepared this time to act in some helpful way if necessary.

A loss of innocence.  

But the growth of something else in its place.  

Maybe even better than innocence.

Thursday 4 October 2018

The universe in a grain of sand ... and a brief moment's smile

 
A few evenings ago I was sitting in my car, waiting for a turn in the light. Waiting for the green arrow so I could make my turn left onto Main Street from Cootes Drive.

With the University and McMaster Children’s Hospital on the left there was a lot of pedestrian traffic to watch while I waited.  Mostly university students.

One couple stood out.  A man and woman, just a few years older than the undergrad crowd, but old enough to notice.  Dressed one step less self-consciously than the students around them.  Looking a little weary.  Walking away from the hospital to cross the street in front of me.  The man was carrying a small cooler.  Dark blue with a white handle.

I watched them for a second as they began across Cootes Drive in front of me.  Then my gaze went ahead of them to where they would be in a few seconds -- to the other side.

There, another woman stood out.  Maybe late twenties or thirty.  Also less self-consciously dressed than the students who breezed around and past her.  Also a little weary-looking as she stood on the sidewalk’s edge, waiting for the signal to cross Main, close enough to the curb’s edge not to be in the way of the students.

I wondered about the two of them – the three of them.  The couple and the woman.

As the couple reached the far side of the street – the corner where the woman stood waiting for her own crossing in another direction, in the midst of and set apart from all the students around them, the three turned to one another and shared – offered to each other, a little smile.  Only that.  But definitely and quietly that.

At that point the light changed.   

The woman started out across Main and the young couple, without missing a step, made the little turn a bit to the right to begin the short walk into Ronald McDonald House.

One woman off for a short walk or an errand, maybe before heading back into the hospital to see her child.  A young couple after a day sitting at the bedside of their child, walking back to their temporary refuge together.

So much anxiety, exhaustion, hope and love they must have been carrying – alone and together, like a cross.  And in that quick and simple smile, a welcome grazing gift of the love of God.

Wednesday 26 September 2018

Pay it forward


It was the "pay it forward" that caught my attention and made me start listening more intentionally to their conversation.

"Yeah, you know, 'pay it forward,' " he repeated to his friend, as though it were the most natural of human impulses that surely everyone must understand and practice in some way.

His friend -- every Saturday they meet to talk about everything and anything, at the coffee shop where I like to write my sermons -- seemed at a loss for words.  Either because he didn't get the concept, or because he couldn't believe his friend would actually do such a thing.

"Yeah.  You remember that time I put up my house to post bail for that kid?  The one who was picked up and charged.  His mom contacted me to see if I could help.  He didn't do it, and we knew it.  I believed her.  So I used my house to put up $100,000 for bail so he could stay out and keep his job while it got sorted out."

"And what happened?"  I was glad his friend asked the question that I didn't feel free to, sitting at the next table over and just kind of listening in.

"The charges were dropped.  He didn't do it.  And he got on with his life.  And he's done well."  And then a few seconds later, "And you know ... he never thanked me for it.  Or the lawyer who helped him."

Spell-bound until that moment by the wonder of his friend's risky generosity, the second man almost thankfully now had something comfortable to say.  "That's pretty low class!" he offered.  Pause.  "Really low class!" he repeated.  "Some people in this world just don't know how to act."  He was clearly glad to be back on familiar territory, back from that strange world where his friend's story about paying it forward had taken him. 

His friend didn't follow him back there, though.  Just quietly said, "I felt good.  It felt good.  I was glad the way it turned out okay for him."

Silence.  

And then from the second man, a quiet "You're a good man."  Guarded, but not grudging.  "I don't know if I could do that."

Pause.  Then a quiet, accepting, non-judgemental repeat of the three words, "Pay it forward" from the first man, before the two of them got up to say goodbye and move on to other, separate appointments for the day.  A warm hug, and they moved from their corner table back into the heart of the shop on their way to the front door and the street.

No more than a half-minute later one of the shop staff came to wipe their table, and noticed a leather satchel left behind on the floor tucked between the wall and the leg of the chair where the "Pay it forward" man had been sitting.  The kid picked it up, and it was clear he had no idea who had been sitting there.

I told him it was the two elderly black men.  That that chair was where the bigger of the two had been sitting.  

He knew immediately who I meant.  They were regulars.  He ran off to see if he could still catch them.

And maybe ten seconds later, from my table inside the front window, I saw the "pay it forward" man walking out the front door, out into the neighbourhood, across the street towards where his car was parked.  

With his leather satchel restored to him, carried nonchalantly under his left arm.

Thursday 6 September 2018

Rest in Peace


I'm sad.  And a little bit anxious.

At first I was just surprised and a little repulsed.  

It was the smell that got my attention.  

Today is garbage collection day on our street -- a day later than usual (like this blog entry) because of the Labour Day holiday on Monday.  I was on my way to the back yard shed to get the can of yard waste from last week's weeding.  And as I got near the shed, I smelt it.  

The awful reek of rotting flesh.  The smell made me look down.  And that's when I saw it.

The rotting remains of a partly eaten grey squirrel carcass.  Lying in the grass two feet from the back shed door.

I've no idea what got it.  My guess is a neighbourhood cat.  But who knows, maybe somebody's been trying to get rid of rodents and it found some poison laid down somewhere.  Maybe it died a natural death, but I kind of doubt that.  

I thought about scooping up the carcass and including it in the trash.  But I didn't have gloves handy.  Japhia was waiting in the car.  We had to leave to drive the grand-kids to school.

I left it there.

And now I am sad.  And anxious.  I wonder if it's one of the pair of squirrel friends I have enjoyed watching all summer, and wrote about last week.

I am going to have to keep an extra close and caring eye on their usual meeting place.  See if only one shows up.  Or the two.  

Or none.

And now that I'm home from the errand with the grand-kids, there's still time.  And gloves in the back shed.  The garbage has not yet been collected.

I am going to go back, and take care of the remains of that grey squirrel.  

Amazing the different ways our hearts get opened.  How the muscles of compassion get stretched and flexed.  How we learn to be more human, more alive in the image of the Creator.

 

Wednesday 22 August 2018

I never knew


I never knew.

This summer two squirrels have been making themselves at home on our back deck -- most notably on the railing visible through our living room window, and I'm learning a few things I never knew.

I never knew, for instance, squirrels can make themselves that flat and seemingly lifeless when they bask in the sun.  Kind of a mini-version of a bearskin rug.  How amazingly and totally relaxed!

I never knew squirrels form friendships.  But I have no reason to doubt that the two squirrels I have seen on the deck railing through the summer are the same two squirrels.  That often arrive and leave together.  That also sometimes arrive separately -- one showing up first, the other a minute or so later, probably with some excuse about traffic or the kids or maybe that darned hawk that keeps circling the area as their reason for being late.

I also never knew squirrels groom one another.  Like monkeys.  And endlessly, carefully, day after day after day.  What an amazing and delightful thing to see. Two squirrel friends peacefully resting side by side on the deck railing like two friends at the bar, then over and over again giving themselves to grooming one another for 5, 10, 15 minutes at a time -- with hands and teeth carefully picking through and cleaning one another's scalp, back and sides.  Cradling each other's heads in their hands to get better purchase and just the right angle and leverage.  Not a single thing sexual about it as far as I can tell.  Not yet anyway.  Just amazingly tender, intimate and mutual care of one another.

And ... I also never knew this -- that this relaxed ease together, this faithful friendship, this mutual and intimate care for one another would happen so easily between black and grey squirrels.  For some reason I assumed that squirrels of different colours would not be such good and natural friends.  Would even be natural enemies.

I wonder where on Earth I got that idea from.  

The idea that creatures of one species but different colours might not get along well together, or would so easily take such good care of one another.

Makes me wonder about maybe learning from squirrels as well as about squirrels.

Wednesday 18 July 2018

In the garden - part two


A few weeks ago I was marveling at the lush, unbridled, and mostly neglected growth of the tomato plants in our garden, celebrating it as a sign of the miraculously gracious bounty of life simply to be enjoyed.  

And that's true.  Life does ooze out all around us, and bubble up even when we're not working at it.  

But a conversation since then with a more seasoned gardener than myself (you know who you are, MS!) has helped me understand the limitations of undisciplined growth.

Whoda thought that a jungle of stalks, branches and leaves intertwined in overstimulated, undirected, multi-tasking vitality might mean fewer or smaller tomatoes -- less fruit, in the end?  Because so much of the plants' energy is spent in just making branch after branch, and foray after foray in some new and interesting direction?

And why didn't I know that the tomatoes don't ripen if they don't have adequate time in the sun?  If they're so overwhelmed and overshadowed by the flurry and fury of all the branches and leaves that the plant has been busily putting out, that they don't have enough time just to rest in the light of the sun and mature inside?

Turns out that choices have to be made about how and in what direction the plant will grow, and not grow.  And that the fruit needs enough time just resting in the light to really mature.

"And it's not too late," MS said.  "All is not lost.  You can still do some pruning."

So two days ago I was back in the Garden in the morning light, doing a little spiritual pruning of the plant and creating a little sabbath space for the tomatoes.  I cut away excess growth, removed unnecessary branches and leaves, and even sacrificed some of the tomatoes that were there for the sake of giving the rest a better chance to grow and mature.

It's good for me.  Hope it works for the plants as well.

Wednesday 4 July 2018

In the garden



Yesterday evening I ventured out back to check on our small vegetable patch. 



As I stood and surveyed it, I thought, “What have I done to deserve this?”



It’s lush and full.  Tomato plants form a dense jungle of vines with fruit beginning to form green and fill out under cover of all the leaves.  Pepper plants – jalapenos, Scotch bonnet and banana, have more than doubled in height and fullness, are strong, and sport little peppers hanging from the branches.  Garlic, still flourishing and growing strong.  Rhubarb, still offering ripening stalks well into July.



I’ve done so little.  Next to nothing.  Last fall, finally heeding years of encouragement from a friend, I sowed 10 or 12 little garlic bulbs.  First thing in the spring I weeded and cleaned up the rhubarb.  In one weekend I bought and planted tomato and pepper plants.  Gave one dose of fertilizer.  Maybe 3 shots of watering so far all season.  And weeded maybe two times.



I don’t deserve such a full garden.  Isn’t it amazing how indiscriminate is the goodness of life on Earth, how blindly gracious and freely giving is Life, and how happy I am when I let myself find myself within it – doing whatever little bit is mine within its seasons and cycles (and purpose) of indiscriminate goodness?



And I wonder … when and where – and why, considerations like deserving and worthy and earning come into the picture?  And into my own troubled self-image? 

I wonder if I should spend more time in the garden.

Wednesday 13 June 2018

Screening out the human


Jim sat in his wheelchair and with his permission I sat on the edge of his bed to be able to chat with him.  He lived at the nursing home where I came once a month to lead a morning prayer service, and this was the first time in years we had really talked.  It was the first time I was in his room, rather than just chatting in passing in the common room before and after the service.

Tomorrow is his birthday, he told me.  Said he will be 67, and when asked, suggested that maybe the reason he looks younger than me is he still has a good head of dark hair.  Unprompted, he told me he is happy.  Asked why, he said because he is alive, because he "has his brain back" after suffering a stroke, and because of his family whose pictures he showed me on the wall above his bed.  "I have so much, and some people don't," he said, with one of the most honestly contented looks on his face and in his eyes that I have seen for some time.

The reason I was talking with him was that I missed the memo.  The nursing home activities director had emailed me earlier in the morning that due to staff turn-over and illness, they were cancelling the prayer service.  Not enough staff to manage what needed to be done to make it happen.  I didn't log on, though; I was out of the electronic loop, showed up not knowing the plan ... and found myself with some unexpected free time just to visit with some of the prayer service regulars.

And because I was out of the electronic loop, because I failed to plug in and log on and look at my laptop screen, I found myself serendipitously receiving some wonderfully warm, personal and welcome schooling in gratitude, one of the foundational elements of any honest spirituality. 

A few hours later I was on the run again, this time rushing into a Tim Horton's for a meeting with another staff member at the church.  I placed my order, paid for it, and got my coffee.  Then, in the very few seconds it took to move down the counter to the prep area to wait for my Chicken Ranch Wrap Snacker (my lunch), disaster struck.  The in-store computer network went down, all orders were lost from the now-blank screen in front of the prep person, and no amount of hitting the refresh button was bringing anything back on line.

And she did try.  A lot.  Frantically.  Panic gripped her face, and terror of the unknown pooled deep in her eyes.  She wasn't trained for this.

Shortly, though, I and the couple waiting beside me were able to calm her, and convince her we could tell her what we had ordered, and she would still be able to prepare it for us.  And it worked.  What a wonderful system!

It really felt wonderful.  Yeah, there was risk to Tim Horton's that we would make up some order ridiculously more expensive than what we had actually paid for.  But for once -- and I never really noticed its absence until this moment of its restoration, we completed our order at the counter with a real, honest-to-goodness, person-to-person interaction about what we were doing, without a screen between us guiding our every action and making trusting, human conversation between us unnecessary.

It's enough to make me wonder.

Wednesday 6 June 2018

Thinking of The Second Coming outside an LCBO


Judgement of the Nations -- The Sheep and The Goats
(an image from South Yarra Community Baptist Church)  


I'm still troubled by something I saw early Monday afternoon outside the University Plaza LCBO.  As I sat in the car near the door of the store, waiting for Japhia who was inside to make a purchase, I saw the entire unfolding of an altercation between a man and a young, hoodied male.

The man was walking into the store, right behind Japhia.  The hoodied young guy came zooming between them on a stunt bike, missed the man by inches, dropped his bike against the store wall, and made to follow the man into the LCBO.  Rather than just go into the store, the man made a comment to the young guy about his lack of consideration.  The young guy got angry.  The argument escalated as they stood just inside the store door, until the young man abruptly and angrily turned around, left the store, and yelled back at the man, calling him a "f****** nigger,"  latching on to the most hurtful and disrespectful thing he could think of to say, focused on the colour of the man's skin.

The man came running out of the store after the young guy who quickly hopped on his bike and used it to stay a safe distance from the man while continuing to scream the racist taunt against him.  Not once but a number of times.  While the man yelled back, saying he would "get him."  

And I sat in the car not more than ten feet away.  Just watching.  From inside the car.

Japhia, who heard all this happen from inside the store, at least was able to touch the man on the arm a few minutes later when she stood beside him in the check-out line, to  communicate support and care.  Even then she was troubled that that was all she was able to do.

Like her, I would like to have that moment back so I could get out of the car, stand as brother with the man suffering the racist taunt, and make it clear to the hoodied young male that his racist slur is not acceptable and is not tolerated by people around him.

But I didn't.  

Why not? 

It wasn't fear.  Nor moral indifference.  
 
What I remember is that at the time it felt a bit like I was just watching TV.  I was totally drawn into what I was seeing, but somehow it seemed there was a screen of some kind between me and what I was seeing.  It wasn't that I rejected the thought of doing anything.  It's that doing anything more than just watch the unfolding drama didn't even really present itself as an option. Wasn't even in mind or on the table at that moment.  Just didn't exist.

And I wonder, how did I get there?  To that point of radical, unconscious disengagement?

Was it because by the time I got to that spot, I was already feeling depressed, disconnected and resentful from four hours spent that morning in the hospital sitting mind-numbingly through a four-hour test process?  Is that what predisposed me to such terrible disengagement, to merely spectating the social story being written around me without realizing responsibility to take a part in the daily writing of it?

But then ... I wonder if the young hoodied guy also feels that same mixture of depression, disconnection, and resentment in his life, for all kinds of other reasons.  And is that part of why he reacted as angrily, hurtfully and viciously as he did when he was challenged to be civil and respectful of others?

I think I've always found a secret satisfaction in the last two lines of the first verse of W. B. Yeats' sonnet, "The Second Coming":  "The best lack all conviction, while the worst / are full of passionate intensity," because even at times when I seem to lack conviction (or at least, the action that would express conviction), I can still imagine myself in some self-satisfied way as being numbered among "the best" -- superior to, and separate from "the worst."

But now I have to wonder, are the sadly uncommitted "best" and the passionately active "worst" more alike, and on more common ground than I have imagined?  Are I and that hoodied, young male more blood brothers than I know, in our common feelings at times of depression, disconnection and resentment in life?  And really co-authors together more than I admit of the terrible narrative of social unravelling being written all around us -- him by acts and words of vengeful hate, me by becoming mere spectator of the narrative being written. 

I wonder ... what does it mean and where does it lead, to see myself as brother both to the man who suffered the racist abuse, and to the hoodied young male who hurled the epithets with such recentful venom?  And at times maybe more to the latter than the former?