Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Ballerinas, bouquets and a Navy Seal named Grace







When I hear the word "grace", I think of little girls named Grace, pink tutus pirouetting around a stage, bouquets of feathery double camellias.  I think of being a grac(e)ious host, or of a graceful falcon turning effortlessly on the wind.  I think of Grace Kelly - a woman who truly fits her name.  Even the way the word sounds when we say it connotes a delicate beauty. 

Well, let me tell you - there's another side of grace that often goes unspoken.  I get it, we like ballerina-pink-rosy-nice grace.  We appreciate the warmth of a gracious host.  We hope to have grace extended to us when we miss a deadline or err in our calculations.  Heaven knows churches like to talk about the grace of God that covers our failures and mistakes (and even our "on purposes"), and we like how that feels.  That's all well and good, and I should say hosts ought to be gracious and ballerinas to be graceful and churches ought to talk about the grace of God. 

But.

What of the giver of grace?

Are we naïve enough to think that grace given freely comes at no cost to the giver?  That the gracious host hasn't been preparing dinner all afternoon, cleaned house and spent money on the candles that smell like October?  We just think all of that appeared and fell into place the moment we walked in the door?

 flexible much?From the time I was two or three until the time I was twelve, I took ballet.  (I blame this early encounter for my preoccupation with dance.) By took, I mean I went to class several hours a week and worked.  And worked.  And worked.  We jete - ed, we turned, we arabesque-ed.  Again and again and again.  We stretched, we planked, we took account for the angle and curve of every finger and toe.  We internalized every beat of music and turned it into movement.  Only after hours of drill did we turn to the choreography, to the dancing itself.  Only after months of choreography did we take to the stage for our end of year recital.  Only then were we graceful. 

The year I took pointe, I learned more about the difficulty of grace than ever before.  Wearing pointe shoes is like taking a wooden box, disguising it with pretty pink silk, stuffing the end with foam and then cramming your toes in and tying it on tightly.  Within a week, my feet were blistered, red and sore.  This was not effortless grace.  This was not the glamor and glory I'd seen on stage watching The Nutcracker at Christmas.  This was excruciating. 

Grace is excruciating.  Literally.  See that little second syllable there?  Cruc?  It means cross.  Excruciating.  What excruciating really means is pain so intense it feels like  you're being crucified.  Jesus was crucified for grace.  Suddenly, grace doesn't look so pink anymore.  Grace doesn't seem so soft anymore.  Grace seems more like a Navy Seal than a three year old with pigtails.   

This grace, which comes to us freely was not acquired for us freely. 

Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick.  Go and learn what this means "I desire mercy, and not sacrifice." For I came not to call the righteous, but sinners. - Matthew 9:12-13

For while we were still weak, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly.  For one will scarcely die for a righteous person - though perhaps for a good person one would dare even to die- but God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. - Romans 5:6-8

And you were dead in the trespasses and sins in which you once walked, following the course of this world, following the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work in the sons of disobedience… and were by nature children of wrath, like the rest of mankind… for by grace you have been saved through faith.  And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God.  - Ephesians 2:1-3, 8

Let's be honest, friends.  We were in pretty dire straits.  I mean, look at those words used to describe us - sick, sinners, weak, ungodly, children of wrath.  I don't know about you, but that's not usually how I answer the question, "What are 7 words you would use to describe yourself?". 

Not only were we in a mess, but we were incapable of getting out of it.  As a generalization, we aren't a people too used to feeling helpless.  We have resources, networks, insurance policies.  We are rarely without recourse, or so it seems.  But all those words?  There was no undoing them.  There was no "figure it out" or "do better next time".  The only ransom was the death of a perfect life.  I fear we become accustomed to Christianese - of course Jesus "died for our sins".  Of course, as if it were a simple thing. 

When's the last time you heard of someone dying for someone else?  Sure, it happens now and then.  When's the last time you heard of someone dying for someone that had never heard of them?  Well, that's kind of weird.  OK, when's the last time you heard of someone dying for someone who belonged to an enemy who didn't even acknowledge them?  That enemy was me and you.  And that someone was Jesus.  And that death he died?  It wasn't a "put down your old dog with a needle and some chemicals" kind of death.  It was as though the Son of God was an insect specimen ruthlessly tacked on a board with pins to die for the world to see.  Excruciating.  Cruc.  Cross. 

Jesus didn't come to die so we could color eggs at Easter.  Jesus didn't come so we could go window shopping and drive around looking at lights on Christmas Eve or eat monkey bread at Christmas breakfast.  Jesus came so that grace, like a Navy Seal, could accomplish the most extraordinary rescue mission the world has ever known.  He came to pay the ransom for a people held helplessly captive and set them free forever. 

Don't forget that grace has grit.

Love,
Little Miss Sunshine


Sunday, September 8, 2013

Marriage Matters





 neckline

I was thinking this morning as I was cutting cantaloupe.  (I love cantaloupe.)  I was thinking about marriage.  When's the last time you heard a little kid playing on the playground holler that he wants to be a super duper awesome…. Husband?  Yeah, I've never heard that, and you know how much time I spend with kids.  Now, I haven't read Piper on marriage or Real Marriage by Driscoll or any of that.  Sheesh, I'm not even married, but it seems to me as an innocent bystander to the institution of marriage, IT'S PRETTY FLIPPING IMPORTANT.

Let's not even pull out the big guns yet.  Let's just talk about romance.  Choosing to stick with someone til death do you part, forsaking all others and toughing it out through sickness and health, feast and famine, laundry and dishes - now that's romantic.  Shakespeare didn't write Sonnet 116 because we're supposed to just date people forever.

it is an ever-fixed mark 
That looks on tempests and is never shaken...
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, 
But bears it out even to the edge of doom.


Do we love fairytales because the prince rescues the princess from the dragon/villain/evil step-whoever/magic spell and takes her out to dinner?  NO!  We love it because they ride off into the sunset (however she manages that in her poofy princess dress), and they live happily ever after.  They don't live happily ever after because that was the last of the dragons or because the princess never burns the toast or because the prince never ever tracks mud into the palace.  They live happily ever after because they're together, they're committed, they're in for the long haul.


What about kids?  Think it's better if they have two married parents living at home?  Think it's better if they can enter adulthood without 12 suitcases of relational baggage from a divorce or a dysfunctional unmarried parents scenario?  Now, I get it.  Stuff happens.  People make the best out of the situations they have, but we're talking ideal situations here.  Practically speaking, it's just easier.  Coordinating who goes to whose house and who picks up whom when and for what holiday and who pays for gymnastics and baseball...  I had a student last year who switched houses EVERY DAY.  Let's just say she had a hard time keeping track of her homework. 

OK, big gun time.  Marriage is a picture of Christ and His Church.  God set it up as a sort of earthly analogy of the closeness we experience with Christ and the kind of sacrificial love that exists between Christ and His Church.  What do you think it says about the Church when our divorce rate is the same as everyone else's?  What are you saying about Christ with your marriage?  It's not just this thing that started out romantically, ended up with a few kids and a mortgage and is now this habit you'll probably maintain for a while. 

*brief hiatus for frustrated explosion*

MARRIAGE IS HARD.  I get it.  Life is easier if you just date people or cheat on people for other people or remain the eternal bachelor because you love drinking out of the milk jug.  Sometimes you lose sight of Ephesians 5 - "walk in love, as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us… a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife… let each one of you love his wife as himself, and let the wife see that she respects her husband."  That's HARD.  It's natural to love yourself the most and hand out your leftovers to whoever's standing closest.  Loving someone as yourself is a supernatural crazy kind of love.  It's easy to lose the vision of marriage somewhere between making dinner and golf with the guy.  You get busy choosing paint colors for the living room or buying socks for the kids or doing dishes or figuring out where you're going to spend Christmas. 

But what if, aside from you walking with Jesus, your marriage is the most important thing you ever do?  Oh sure, your career is important.  Making that quota is of real long term value.  *Here's a tissue for my sarcasm splatter.*  Being on that non-profit committee is so great.  You racking up hours at the gym is super duper self-discipline.  I get it, we need to do stuff with our lives.  Big stuff.  Little stuff.  Middle stuff.  But shouldn't looking like Jesus and loving like Jesus be our first and main thing?  I'm not saying you can't love Jesus and be Committee Chairperson Extraordinaire, but if you think that takes precedent over your marriage because it's obviously more charitable and philanthropic, you've lost the vision of marriage. 

Sure, I'm not married, so for me, looking like and loving like Jesus is not going to look like nurturing a marriage.  (Sometimes I get frustrated because I'm not sure how to properly affirm and uphold the institution of marriage while simultaneously affirming the role of single people in the Church.)  But good heavens, married people, your marriages are important - not just because it's cheaper to be married or because it means you have someone to go to the movies with.  They're important because you're the picture people see of Christ and the Church!  I almost feel like buying some pompoms and being your personal cheer squad.  In no other relationship will you have the opportunity to show off God's grace and patience quite like the way you do in marriage. 

What would have to change for us to start hearing the veneration of marriage on the playground?  Married people, I think it starts with you.  You have to start believing your marriages matter, that the promise you made that day you walked down an aisle is STILL the most important promise you've ever made.  It's not just important to you.  It's important to culture, social norms, the Church, kids, single people, the economy.  We have to start talking about marriage like it's a good thing - not a rut, not a habit, not something to try when you hit 30 - but a good thing that's good for people.    

i love seeing old married couples holding hands-keeping the romance alive<3

Do you get it yet?  Geez louise, I sure hope so.  Know that I'm on my knees for you and in your corner, but not even a fraction of the way Jesus is interceding for you. 

Go be awesome and married,


Little Miss Sunshine

Monday, August 12, 2013

If You Really Loved Me...


 
If you really loved me, you would let me eat that whole bag of cotton candy.  It starts simply enough when we're little.  We want the whole bag of cotton candy (I speak from personal experience).  We want to do what we want when we want.  The habit grows with us.  If our parents really loved us, they wouldn't give us a curfew, or make us stay home from certain parties.  We equate love with the other person doing what we want.  

As adults, we see straight through this faulty logic.  Love means doing what's best for the other person.  We never use conditional, leveraging in our  love.  We never say things like "if you really loved me, you wouldn't be such a slob" or "if you really loved me, you wouldn't mind watching what I want to watch".
 
It's bad enough that we do this with each other, holding affection hostage until we get what we want, or employing the cold shoulder, or whatever other weight we can throw around.  

I wish I could say that we just need to retrain our interpersonal habits and read some good books on the topic and everything would be fixed.  Just throw a little Five Love Languages or Dr. Phil on the problem, and it'll clear everything up. 

But it doesn't stop there.  I wish it did.  We not only do it with each other, we do it with God Himself.  We get uppity and entitled with the Alpha and Omega, the Word made flesh, the maker of butterfly wings and thunderstorms.  We want what we want when we want it.  Why? 

Well, for one, we deserve it.  We maintain long lists of why we deserve things from God.  He owes us because we do things for Him.  We led that Boyscout troop.  We fed the homeless that one time.  We go to church every Sunday, sometimes even when we're on vacation in Iowa.  We ____________.  Insert your own list of why God owes you stuff.

Let's not gloss over the fact that this God we barter and try to leverage with is the God who sent His Son.  To die.  To be spit on.  To be tried unfairly.  To be smacked and whipped within an inch of His life.  By us.  The people He wanted to show His love to.  Do we really have the gall to ask God to prove His love?  Can we really be audacious enough to ask for our own way when we were the ones being rescued at such great cost?

For another thing, God loves us, and love means the other person serving us and giving us what we want.  Forget all that stuff the Bible has to say about love being patient and kind and keeping no record of wrongs.  We prefer the version of love where we get to eat the whole dang bag of cotton candy. 

Warning: this is about to get up close and sticky.

God's version of love is a little different than ours.  It isn't tainted or marred or riddled with hidden motives.  His love never fails.  His love seeks our good.  That last sentence can be a little misleading.  Sometimes our version of "our good" can be different from God's version of "our good". 

God, if you really loved me, my parents wouldn't have gotten a divorce.

God, if you really loved me, I wouldn't have gotten laid off.

God, if you really loved me, I wouldn't feel so alone right now.

God, if you really loved me, my kids would be following You.

God, if you really loved me, my life would be easier.

Surely it can't be for our good that we lose jobs or people we love.  Surely it can't be for our good that sometimes we have to endure pain that seems like it doesn't have a stopping point.  Surely it can't be for our good that sometimes we go through seasons of being alone or waiting or heartrending struggle. 

It depends. 

Does this sound like a kind of love worth clinging to?

~ He heals the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds.  - Psalm 147
~ The Lord is gracious and merciful, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love.  The Lord is good to all, and his mercy is over all that he has made. - Psalm 145
~ He is my steadfast love and my fortress, my stronghold and my deliverer, my shield and he in whom I take refuge - Psalm 144
~ Behold, to the Lord your God belong heaven and heaven of heavens, the earth with all that is in it.  Yet the Lord set his heart in love on your fathers - Deuteronomy 10
~ fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.  - Isaiah 41

God never promises that life will be "fine" in following Him.  In fact, He pretty much guarantees it's going to suck sometimes.  I don't think He used those words, but He does talk about it a lot - Matthew 5, John 16, not to mention all that stuff He says about "taking up crosses".  What He does promise is His Spirit, His love and His sustaining presence. 

Sometimes we think we have God figured out.  We aren't the first people to make this mistake.  Ha, read the book of Job if you want evidence of that one.  We think He operates in a certain way, something formulaic, systematic.  Hello, have you ever seen a 2 year old?  Well, God created those.  He also created quantum physics and the Grand Canyon and light particles that don't behave like particles or waves so we had to imagine some kind of weird combo theory. 

Tame is not a word that is synonymous with God.  He is a grand God with a grand, intense love that pursues people in crazy ways.  Sometimes in my small view of who He is, I wish He would give me what I want when I want it.  Then I remember I didn't design Plutonium atoms.  God did.  Maybe He has this timing thing figured out.  Maybe even though I can't understand why all the time, I can trust the One who causes or allows all things and who always keeps His promises. 

Hang in there, kiddo.  You know who loves you.


Little Miss Sunshine



Monday, July 29, 2013

The Waiting Place

 


This summer at church, we've been doing a series in Psalms.  Usually when you hear the word "Psalms", you think about nice, non-controversial, happy Bible verses that people write in birthday cards or quote as their favorites.  Well, I feel like this summer series hasn't seen a whole lot of that.  Two weeks ago, we talked about how Psalms addresses life's big letdowns.  Last week at our at our young adults/college/career/inbetweenhighschoolandhavingkids gathering at church, we talked about the idea of waiting in Psalm 13.
David has been promised the crown of Israel, but Saul's still got his derrière parked on the throne.  David is waiting for his big promotion, and it takes longer than he expects.  Psalm 13 is not one of those cheery, soft, snuggly Psalms.  It's frustrated, languishing, maybe even a little mad.  Now, remember, a psalm is a song, so Psalm 13 starts out a little more punk/rock/emo than your typical hymn.  It's kind of funny because in the notes above the Psalm, it says "To the choirmaster.  A Psalm of David.".  The Jews used this song in church.  I'm not really sorry if that rocked your boat just a little. 

Waiting makes me think of a passage from Dr. Seuss's "Oh the Places You'll Go"  (the book you got 17 copies of after high school graduation).


You can get so confused
that you'll start in to race
down long wiggled roads at a break-necking pace
and grind on for miles cross weirdish wild space,
headed, I fear, toward a most useless place.
The Waiting Place...

...for people just waiting.
Waiting for a train to go
or a bus to come, or a plane to go
or the mail to come, or the rain to go
or the phone to ring, or the snow to snow
or the waiting around for a Yes or No
or waiting for their hair to grow.
Everyone is just waiting.

Waiting for the fish to bite
or waiting for the wind to fly a kite
or waiting around for Friday night
or waiting, perhaps, for their Uncle Jake
or a pot to boil, or a Better Break
or a string of pearls, or a pair of pants
or a wig with curls, or Another Chance.
Everyone is just waiting.

NO!
That's not for you!

Somehow you'll escape
all that waiting and staying
You'll find the bright places
where Boom Bands are playing.

With banner flip-flapping,
once more you'll ride high!
Ready for anything under the sky.
Ready because you're that kind of a guy!


I think he's right about some things.  I don't have an Uncle Jake, so I can't wait for him, but sometimes, just sometimes, I do wait for my hair to grow.  The Waiting Place can be excruciating.  You feel like you've been there forever and an answer will never come, things will never change or the situation you're stuck in will go on forever.  It can be heavy, crushing, even, waiting for the call, waiting for the test results, waiting for the court's decision, waiting for that other person to say something.  It can be frustrating, feeling like you have no control over the situation, like there's nothing you can do to make it better. 

But. 

I think he's wrong when he calls it "a most useless place".  I think he's wrong when he assures you that waiting is "not for you", as if you can somehow earn a "Get out of waiting FREE" pass.  Waiting can be boring at best, or heartrending at worst, but what it doesn't have to be is wasted.  God doesn't waste our time.  He doesn't place us in situations where we must wait for no reason.  Waiting is not (usually) some kind of punishment.  Waiting is not a sign that God has momentarily forgotten you but will reopen your file over His cosmic lunch break.  God is always working in the middle of our waiting. 

Well that's peppy.  Waiting is for our best.  It isn't a wasted life experience.  It doesn't mean you've slipped through a crack and been forgotten.  Yayyyy waiting!  No way, José, or Kristen, or Nicholas or whatever your name happens to be.  I'm not trying to say that waiting should feel easy.  I'm not trying to say that it won't feel like you've got an anvil sitting on your heart.  I'm not trying to say that you won't go through a whole range of emotions.  But read the end of the Psalm.  David feels all these things acutely, but at the end of the song, he writes this,

But I have trusted in your steadfast love;
my heart shall rejoice in your salvation.
I will sing to the LORD because He has dealt bountifully with me.

We can hang our hats on that word "but". 

This is painful and tiresome and frustrating and I have doubts and I have fears and and and… all these things.

But.

We are not forgotten or alone or unloved.  (Though it might feel like that sometimes.)  We cannot see the full scope of what God will do, but He can see it.  He has been gracious to us in rescuing us out of our mess and giving us a second (third, fourth, eighty-fifth) chance because of Christ. 

Hang in there, kiddo.  Your waiting is not wasted. 


Little Miss Sunshine

Dates of the Up Variety


No, this post is not about dates, but you knew that.  The summer has been a little slow on the blog because I haven't had the PCs to keep me supplied with laugh-attacking, heart breaking, pull my hair out-ing moments.  Shoot, what HAVE you been doing all summer, you ask?


Well, there was that month of weddings…

After that, I came home for a couple of weeks and unpacked/did laundry/post travel stuff.  Oh, and I slept.  A lot.  I remember Cami Jones always saying that she slept a week straight after coming home from college in the summers.  Since I'm going to be in school schedule for a while, I probably will be doing that for years.


At the end of June, I ditched the desert for the country in northern Colorado.  You probably don't know how much I love the country.  And cows.  And fields.  And the smell of hay and horse.  And banjo.  And most things country.  We went to the Greeley Stampede and watched the rodeo a few nights and listened to some country music.  On the 4th, we decked ourselves in red, white and blue and watched the parade.  (And hollered our lungs out.)  We set off fireworks too, thanks to Preston and Elliot who went on a mission to Wyoming to get them. 

Friday morning, Dora dropped me off in Denver for my family reunion. 

A word about our family reunions…
My mom's side of the family is loud, competitive, crazy, and loves being together.  The logical consequence of that is our family reunions are LOUD, competitive, and crazy happy fests.  Aunt P organized a Minute to Win It Family Tournament, and she and Mal coordinated the food department.  There were a jillion details I don't even know who to credit, but let's just say it was an all-star family reunion. 

Oh, somewhere in there, I got a job.  I guess I should mention that.  This year, I'll be teaching 3rd grade at a little charter school near my house.  I'm so thankful to be teaching 3rd again this year, and ecstatic to have the details of licensure behind me (for now). 

Of course, as is the case in my non-summer life, there has been plenty of spending time with my community group from church, playing volleyball, dancing, and things that can be categorized as "general adventuring" like a roadtrip to Sedona with Bethany and riding wave runners with Mike, Jared and Chelsey (I'm still sore from that one). 
This week, I'll be finishing up decorating my classroom, and school starts August 5.  Am I excited?  Duh.  Also, I'm shaking in my boots, but that's OK.  There will be a more substantial post about the new year of PCs coming soon. 



I don't think I've left too much out.  The littlest bro is going off to *gasp* college and the older younger bro is happily married (and I get to reap the benefits of having a sister!). 

There's my summer in a nutshell,


-Little Miss Sunshine

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Getting the Girl - What you can learn from Bad Boys






And then Princess Buttercup ditched Prince Charming for Evil Villain and they rode off into the sunset on his Harley and lived happily ever after. 
Ok, I know that doesn't ever happen in the fairy tales, but sometimes it happens in real life.  The princess falls for the bad boy and misses out on the prince charming standing right beside her.  This is a phenomenon that has baffled good guys for ages.  Trust me, dudes, I don't completely understand it myself.  I mean, if that girl had half a brain in her head, she'd be falling for you - the sweet, upstanding gentleman who will take care of her instead of that goodfornothing snakeinthegrass lilylivered twofaced… you get the idea.  So where's the breakdown?  How in the world did she miss you standing right next to her?  Good girls want good guys!  They admire them and speak highly of them and aspire to marry them...


So why, oh why, oh why in the world do good girls go off with bad boys? 
Let's start with the simplest option - she's an idiot.  Let's face it, sometimes girls just do dumb things.  It's entirely possible that she wasn't thinking straight and made the wrong decision.  I want to take that idea of "not thinking straight" and blow it up on the projector for further examination.  What do bad boys do that get girls' attention and help them along in the process of "not thinking straight"?  After all, if the bad guys are getting the good girls and you aren't, they're doing something you're not.  What is it?  And is it something worth adapting with some tweaking so you don't get your "good guy" card pulled?  I would like to suggest, yes. 

1. Bad boys are gutsy.
Think about it.  The typical bad boy rides a motorcycle or drives a fast car (or drives the car he has too fast), has no regard for authority, and acts like he owns the place.  He takes risks because his opinion of himself is a little inflated. 
Why girls like this: While being gutsy might really just translate to being stupid, often times it comes across as brave, independent, and confident.  It makes us think that he's got courage to do big things in life.
What it means for you: I'm not telling you to go drive your car really fast and be disrespectful to your parents.  In fact, I would highly advise otherwise.  Look at the principle - girls want a brave guy.  Where's the largest deposit of "havenofear-ite" in the world?  Yeah, the Bible.  It is Biblically sound for you to not be afraid.  It is Biblically sound for you to disregard the opinion of the world in preference for what God has to say about things.  It is Biblically sound for you to courageously oppose evil.  All those things are good for their own sake, but they're also good for catching Good Girl's eye.

2. Bad boys are forward.
Bad boys know what they want and how to get it.  They see a girl they like, and they get her number.  They call her.  They ask her out.  They give her compliments.  They impulsively hold her hand.  They ask her out again… and again, until she'll sleep with them.
Why girls like this: We like it when you're clear about how you feel about us.  If you ask for our number and ask us out, it communicates that you like us and aren't afraid to do something about it, and we like that.  It also reinforces #1. above.

What it means for you: DO NOT SLEEP WITH GIRLS UNLESS YOU'RE MARRIED TO THEM.  That aside, look at the principle - if you like a girl, do something about it.  Listen here, Good Conservative (possibly homeschooled) Well Read Gospel Grounded Guy, I know that you've been raised to "take it slow" and "be cautious" and "be the initiator" and "lead" and "be strong and courageous".  So, find a balance.  Don't be slow as Christmas or we'll think you don't know we're alive.  You don't need to rush either, just ask that Good Girl out.  Be clear.  If it's a date, call it a date and pay.  (I should NOT have to tell you that.)  If you never go out again, that's OK.  One date is not committing to lifelong relationship.  Just be one notch higher on the forward scale?

3. Bad boys care about their image.
josh bowman.Bad boys usually turn out to be self-indulgent, well, bad boys.  They care about how they come across.  Their hair needs to have the perfect dirty-don't-care-put-together amount of gel in it.  Their clothes need to say I'm-a-bad-boy-what-are-you-going-to-do-about-it.  Their car is shiny.  They do pull ups and keep their abs looking washboard-y.
Why girls like this: We notice when guys are put together.  It means they put a little time into getting ready in the morning and hit the gym now and then to take care of themselves. 
What it means for you: Limit the oversized t-shirts with funny slogans to once a month.  Wear pants that fit.  Know what an "accessory" is (here's a clue: watches, sunglasses, and the occasional bowtie or man bag).  No more eating like you're in 7th grade - a whole pizza, a Mountain Dew and a box of Mike and Ikes.  I'm not saying you have to have the perfect model bod and suddenly be able to afford Buckle watches.  I AM saying you should take care of what you've got and learn how to dress more snappily than a t-shirt with an LOTR reference and khaki pants that are too short and show your white Adidas socks.  You know what's important, and fashion isn't really, but that doesn't mean you can't take 10 more minutes getting dressed in the morning.  Good Girl will sit up and notice the change. 

Granted, being gutsy is hard, not every girl you ask out will say yes, and you might hate me for suggesting you ditch the LOTR t-shirt.  Good girls don't want you to be bad, but they do want you to be brave, clear and put together.  I do hope that I unraveled the intellectual knot that is the bad boy and helped you come one step closer to becoming the Knight in Shining Armor (or should we say Amor?) you're meant to be.

Love you, Good Guys, and good luck winning your lady fair,


Little Miss Sunshine

Friday, June 28, 2013

Demystifying the Dance Floor


 
Ok, friends, I haven't posted a dance blog for months.  I try to hold off because I know sometimes I come across a little strong?… passionately enthused? boisterously bliss-filled? when it comes to dance stuff.  I think dance is close to one of the best things ever invented, but I know lots of people don't feel that way.  I get it.  Dance can be scary for plenty of reasons.  I'm going to address some of these and hopefully give you a little more confidence the next time you hit the hardwood.

These tips will keep you on your toes… and off everyone else's.
 
Problem: You have no idea what you're doing (choreography)
Dudes: Don't let it deter you.  At a lot of dance places there's a lesson before free dance starts.  If you missed the lesson, just ask someone who looks like they know what they're doing.  It's a win/win/win - that person feels cool because they're showing you their moves/your dance partner's impressed you want to learn/ you learn a new move!  
Ladies: Follow as well as you can.  If a guy's worth his salt, he'll be polite and not give you a hard time.

Problem: You have no idea what you're doing (dance etiquette)
Dudes: If you follow these instructions, it is not unlikely that you'll have girls talking about you behind your back (in the best way).
1. Don't be a creepstar.  The quickest way for me to explain this is give a girl some space.  Unless you're married to her, engaged to her or dating her, don't dance like a PBJ sandwich stuck together.  It's weird, and we don't like it. 
2. Ask us our name at the beginning and thank us for the dance at the end.  Simple. 
3. Take our hand and lead us on and off the dance floor. 
4. Don't ask us to dance 3 songs in a row (unless the whole married/engaged/dating thing applies).  Give us a break and come back after half an hour or so if you really want to.
5. Pay attention to steering.  It's your job to not ram us into people, so pay attention to where you're going. 
6. Take breaks for a few basics steps between combos.  It's fine if you're a pro, but sometimes we get dizzy spinning our craniums into muddled confusion. 
Ladies: I don't really know if guys will talk about you (do guys talk to each other?) if you do these things, but I know they'll appreciate them.
1. Don't turn them down unless you have a darn good reason.  It took them a lot of courage to ask you, so unless your ankle is broken or he's a total creepstar, dance with the guy.
2. Laugh it off if he makes mistakes, be gracious.
3. If he's the best twirler/leader/dipper you've ever danced with, tell him.  Be a life giver with your words.
4. Let him lead.  Relax.  Chill out.  Have fun.
5. Wear clothes that make sense for dancing.

Problem: Dancing is dangerous
Dudes:  If you're trying a lift/aerial for the first time, think first - what's the floor made of?  Do I need someone to spot just in case?  Is this girl capable of doing this lift? 
If you drop a girl, it's probably not the end of the world.  Make sure she's all right.  Do what you need to do as far as common sense - 911, don't move her, get her a glass of water - depending on how hard she fell.  Your job is to do the move as accurately and safely as you can, but it's not all your fault if you drop her.  At that level of dancing, she knew what she was getting herself into.
Ladies: If you dance for a while, you're likely to get dropped at least once.  I can probably count on one hand the times I've been dropped.  Just remember, the guys feel terrible, and you might bruise.  The moral of the story is, if you don't feel comfortable doing a move, don't do it, or at least make sure you're on a forgiving surface with a spotter and you're dancing with a knowledgeable guy.

Problem: Getting from the wallflower wasteland to the dance floor
Dudes: This is your job.  I feel more strongly about this than most normal people, but you can ask most of my dance friends and they know I vehemently loathe standing on the wall not dancing.  I don't usually ask guys to dance, but I will now and then.  I know that it takes a lot of guts to ask a girl to dance, so bravo to you.  Here's a little tip - girls will almost always say yes, so remember you're walking into a situation in which you will most likely be successful.  What to say?  If you feel comfortable being clever or funny, that's fine, but a standard "Would you like to dance" is always classy and perfectly acceptable. 
Ladies: You have two options - ask or be asked.  I belong to the old school and prefer to be asked to dance, but every now and then I'll ask someone to dance.  If you are waiting to be asked, location and body language are the keys.  Don't be inaccessible - duh.  If you want to dance, stand close to the dance floor.  As for body language, don't look intimidating - crossed arms, hands on hips, wide stance, disappointed-you-aren't-dancing face.  Chill out and stop being terrifying.


In sum - relax and have fun.  I realize that things like dancing get more fun with practice as you figure out what the heck you're doing out there.  There are also people out there who just don't like to dance.  While I can't exactly understand, I can sort of stretch my imagination because there are things I don't like - olives being the prime example.


Summer love to you, unless you live in Australia,


Little Miss Sunshine

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

How to Earn Love

Really, what I want is to be loved.  I want to be pursued and chased and valued.  I want to get that poprocks-in-your-stomach kind of feeling.  I want to be wanted.  (Thanks, Hunter Hayes.)  I want someone to want to know what makes me tick. 

So here's the plan.

I'm just sort of working it out, so I'm open to suggestions.  I've got the grown up job, so that's good.  It might be even better that it's working with kids in a change the world/impact the next generation way.  I think that's extra points.  I'm at church almost every week.  I just got promoted to foyer hostess on the hospitality committee.  Last week at our college/career gathering, I met 12 new people.  Surely helping lead that small group is helping make my case.  I mean, what else could God want?  I put my dishes in the dishwasher.  I'm not out kicking children or committing fraud.  Maybe it's enough to be loved.

Of course, that's all rubbish. 

Never ever ever ever will you ever catch God saying "I will love you if _____________".  And yet… somehow… I get the idea that He will love me if.  If I kick the habit. If I volunteer.  If I go to church.  If I don't drink, smoke, cuss, or chew.  If I don't - you finish the sentence.  I treat love as if it's a paycheck.  If I do this for You, God, then You will owe me love.  I treat love as if it's a prenuptial agreement.  You will love me unless I _______, and then it's back to square one and I'm left with nothing.  But that's my idea of love.  I try to make love fair

God's love is never fair. 

(Right after the golden calf fiasco) Behold, to the LORD you God belong heaven and the heaven of heavens, the earth with all that is in it.  Yet the LORD set His heart in love on your fathers and chose their offspring after them, you above all peoples, as you are this day. Deuteronomy 10:14-15 (emphasis mine)

But you, O Lord, are a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness. Psalm 86:15

For God so loved the world, that He gave His only Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life.  For God did not send His Son in to the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through Him. John 3:16-17

But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ… so that in the coming ages He might show the immeasurable riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. Ephesians 2:4-7


God's love is not a paycheck.  It is not a transaction.  It would not add up, reconcile in a checkbook register, or be approved if it were a bank loan.  I cannot out run it, out smart it, or out sin it.  I got it when I didn't deserve it, so what in the big wide world makes me think I need to earn it now?  







The light dawns and the lie becomes clear.  Love is a gift, and it has always been.  Love is the richest, fullest, brightest gift, and God's is unending.

Suddenly that rush of realization about God's love spills over into how I understand human love.  So we must be careful.  The strychnine in the well poisons not only the well, but the lemonade in the pitcher and the flowers in the vase and even the cherry jello.  A crooked view of God's love - a view that love is earned or deserved or - perish the thought -  transacted - bleeds into all our other loves. 

Not "maybe if I'm funny and don't ask too much of them and send them cards on their birthdays then my friends will love me".  Quite the other way around.  Because they love me I will be funnier and ask things of them and send them cards in the mail. 

Not "maybe if I take out the trash and keep my room clean and am the biggest fan then my family will love me".  That's quite an upside down approach.  Their love makes me the biggest trash emptier/room cleaner/ fan.

Not "maybe if I look pretty and don't talk too much or just enough and have the sweetest attitude then Mr. Wonderful will love me".  Rubbish.  The love of Mr. Wonderful itself will make me pretty and will bid me talk or not and will encourage an attitude of sweetness.


That's the power of love.  It transforms things.  Love turns scars into stories of grace.  It makes peace out of conflict and action out of apathy.  It brings light to darkness and hope to despair.  

Love is a costly gift, but the greatest one.


Little Miss Sunshine

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Identity Crisis






When people ask me who I am, I like to have a kind of go-to list of things to pull from.  I'm a teacher, so I belong to that office supply/bookish/lamination-loving group of people called teachers.  I'm a first-born, so I give myself permission to be a little more bossy and fine with being in charge than the average human.  I'm an athlete, so I can identify when other athletes talk about hitting a wall or pulling a quad.  Of course, there's plenty of room for improvement- I wouldn't mind adding "successful gardener" or "avid language learner" to my list of identifiers, but I like to have a few things on hand for easy access. 

There are few questions whose answers can reveal more about a person than

Who/what are you

and

Who is God

The way you answer those questions gives away what you think is important.  If you [Heaven forbid] say "I'm a brunette" or "I'm a waitress", it is immediately apparent the things you find most important are your hair and your job.  (It wouldn't make any difference, by the way, if you said "I'm the blonde by which all other blondes are measured" or "I'm the Surgeon General".) 

But that's what you do, not who you are.  If Ronald Reagan and Channing Tatum are both in the movie business, does that make them the same person?  Consequently, if you are suddenly unable to make that sandwich or perform that surgery, what does that make you?  A nothing?  Now you're identity-less?  That might sound a little dramatic, but what if your identity is being supermom and your kids grow up and move out?  What if you're all about being that awesome husband or wife and the unthinkable happens and you lose that person?

I have two grandmas with severe memory loss.  In their day, they were matriarchs.  They were the ones planning menus for family reunions, never forgetting to send cards for birthdays and anniversaries.  Do they do the same things they always have?  No, but we didn't take away their names and fingerprints just because they can't do the things they used to do.

What about the stuff you have?  I know all you hipster antimaterialism-ists would raise a defensive ruckus saying you aren't attached to your stuff/you shop at thrift stores/music and art are so much more important than Fossil watches, etc. etc.  Great, not everyone is attached to buying brand names.  But don't you feel good when you get over 20 likes on Instagram?  Are you aiming at having 1,000 followers on Pinterest?  Things you have aren't always smaller than a breadbox.  Sometimes they're the size of a reputation or a Twitter feed. 

I haven't mentioned the second question.  Who is God?  What if your answer to that question shed some light on the first question?  Let's posit that there is a God who is all powerful, perfect - you know, all the stuff you have to be to qualify to be God.  Let's also posit that He created everything.  Even if we stopped right there, that helps us with our first question.  It says, "I am not an accident; I am an 'on purpose'".  If you are an 'on-purpose', it would make sense that you have some sort of purpose. 

Who and what and why you are now becomes dependent on something, rather a Someone outside yourself.  This isn't just any someone like Taylor Swift or Napoleon, as great as they are in their own right.  This is an all great, all good God.  Apart from just existing (which would be enough), and creating you (that's a bonus) this great, good God took your record of messy lies, failure, anger, depression, ungratefulness and put that on Jesus so that you could have His clean record.  Not a fair trade, to say the least.  You don't even have to live with an identity of your own record anymore.  You might have to live with a few of the consequences, of course, but it doesn't own you.

But can you deal with that?  Can you unclench those hands hanging onto your rather forgettable identity and cling to the identity you're being handed?  Can you bear to cling to grace - something you didn't manufacture or build with your own two hands?  Something that could even be termed as a -gasp- handout?  Let me tell you from personal experience, it's to your advantage to let go of finding your identity in being a scholar/athlete/multitasker/artist/lemur whisperer.  You will lose games, get an 89.4, drop the spinning plates, choose the wrong color and miscommunicate with the monkey - or you'll forever live in fear of doing so.  Someone unchangeable, unshakeable and wholly sufficient is where you want to hang your identity. 

When you do that, who you are no longer tries to lean on what you have or what you do.  Your identity is now safe from, well, you.

Love you,


Little Miss Sunshine

Saturday, June 15, 2013

4 Weddings in 4 Weekends, #4. Katie and Mark





The title of grand finale wedding in the four weekends four weddings tour goes to Katie and Mark.  I didn't plan it this way, but it's fitting because Katie holds a degree in Theater.  Thanks for that, Katie.  The week in between Audrey & Jordan and Katie & Mark, I got to hang out with my friends Hannah and Sam.  We crafted, watched Elementary, and did a little bargain hunting.  (Plato's Closet!)  (Hannah was my roommate in my senior year of college, and I was around when she in Sam were falling deeply, madly, truly in love.)

On our way to the rehearsal dinner, we were trying to guess what the menu would be.  The venue was a country club nestled in suburban Richardson.  I guessed we'd be eating country club chicken or salmon with the standard mixed vegetables and bread.  Sam was quick to say he wished they'd just serve BBQ instead.  Lo and behold, we walked in to great steaming dishes of brisket!  Hallelujah, no chicken breast and green beans!  I didn't make it to the food for a while because I was too socially distracted catching up with all our college friends that I hadn't seen in a while. 

The day of the wedding, I hung out with Sarah & Alex, who had driven up early from Houston.  We got ready together at The Heights Chapel before the ceremony.  The Chapel was the perfect Southern city wedding venue.  The tall wooden ceilings arched to form a peak, and the focal point were the quartet of stained glass windows at the front.  The ring bearer - the groom's nephew (who had just learned to walk a month before the wedding) made it down the long aisle without mishap and almost stole the show. 

The nine bridesmaids, dressed in punchy pink satin, and carrying a mix of hydrangeas, daisies and baby roses stood in couples with the nine groomsmen at the altar.  Katie, escorted by her brother, glowed in a sparkling strapless dress and classic scalloped lace veil.  During this part of the ceremony I like to watch the groom's face taking in his beautiful bride.  Mark, in his usual steady, quiet way, smiled and couldn't take his eyes off of her. 
 
The service was performed by one of our Bible professors from college, and the text was taken from a letter Katie's dad had written to her as a little girl.  You would have been hard pressed to find a dry eye.  After that, the bridal party prayed over them.  Watching my dear friends exchange vows, it felt surreal, these were my friends Mark and Katie!  Now they were suddenly grown up and married.  They recessed in a cloud of bliss amid decorous whoops and hollers from their friends.

From the Chapel, we drove to the reception, a ballroom with a sweeping staircase tucked away inconspicuously in Carollton.  Continuing the theme of serving unconventionally flavorful food, Mark and Katie treated us to a fajita bar and Southern sweet tea.  A DJ kept the dance floor teeming by mixing retro and current hits.  We wore ourselves out between feather-boa-swathed stints in the photo booth and kicking it on the dance floor.  (Have you ever tried doing the Wobble in 5 inch heels?)

We saw them off in a shower of cheers and white rose petals.  They took off for island paradise the next day on their Hawaiian honeymoon.  By now they're settling into their new Dallas digs and unwrapping towers of eggshell/ecru/champagne - white wrapped wedding presents. 

After wedding #4, I stayed with my friend Liz for a few days.  Her couch is fantastic.  She's off for the summer before starting her doctorate in English at SMU in the fall.  We watched Cool Hand Luke, slept in, went shopping and I got to sit in on this sermon at the Village while Liz worked in the nursery.  Liz is one of those slightly scary people that I love having in my life because she knows me so well.  We can talk about anything, and she can always tell when I'm not giving her the full story.  We even sipped sweet somethings through straws while we increased the melanin levels in our epidermis… ok, we drank soda and laid by the pool.  It was a great way to end the trip. 


I would tell you that I flew home and started crafting for my classroom next year, but that would be a lie.  I got in at midnight Wednesday night, got up at 6:30 Thursday, unpacked, did three loads of laundry, repacked and was back on the road by 1 for Jarrett's volleyball tournament in California.  

C'est la vie, and it's a good one.

Little Miss Sunshine