It's nights like these, in self-imposed confinement to these four oatmeal colored walls, that I find myself thinking most about transitions.
I'm procrastinating, as per usual, perched at a desk in a corner lit by the soft light of a small lamp. I should be writing an essay, the draft of which is due tomorrow, and as I'm finishing up the first paragraph at 9:45 pm, I'm thinking about transitions. As a writer, in any piece, transitions are ultimately the glue that binds together the random strings of words and ideas we throw down onto paper. Essential.
Anyways (see what I did there?), today was the first day-- in the month I have been here-- that I did not see the sun. I walked to class with my head down, scuffing my heels against the cement that is collecting orange and auburn leaves every day. It was overcast all day, and drizzled through dinner in the early evening. It's finally fall in California.
It seems so strange to me that it is only just beginning, as I am used to an earlier emergence of autumn weather in Colorado, frequently trudging through a foot of snow around this time of year. So the summer seemed longer than ever, and now it is blurring into the chill that is expected of October. A transition much needed.
And I am in transition now, still adjusting to this new place far away from home, discovering faces I have never seen every time I walk across campus.
I keep thinking of church. The school hosts a big welcome mass a few weeks into classes, which is called the Mass of the Holy Spirit, and all are welcome to attend. I know and love the Catholic Church, and I am happy to call it my home. And one of my favorite aspects of getting to know the Church intimately is learning about the meaning behind each ritual, the root of each word, the significance of everything. From the moment that the priest kisses the altar. The word "mass" itself comes from the Latin phrase "Ite missa est," meaning, "It is sent," or "You are sent," and that is why every mass concludes with a sending phrase akin to that. And at this Mass of the Holy Spirit, the priest said in his homily, "Saint Ignatius signed almost all of his letters with a variation of the phrase 'Go forth, and set the world on fire.'"
It seems like such a significant message. It can be made alive every day in this transitional state. When change seems to be engulfing you, when you are overwhelmed with the pressures of adapting to newness, becoming something new, keep this to guide your way.
Go forth. Set the world on fire.
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Friday, September 28, 2012
Freckles.
We're driving through Utah where the river runs red from the desert earth. We're some 400 miles from home, and still have so far to go. I'm listening to sad songs as the rocks become castles and the clouds hang lower than ever. Then it's Jack's Mannequin in Arizona and days later we're downing skinny lattes going 80 on the interstate toward Nevada.
I've been thinking about stars lately.
On our trip out to California, we camped at the Grand Canyon for three nights. When I was eight years old we hiked the Grand Canyon and stayed at the Bright Angel Campground at the bottom. Seven miles in and ten miles out in 120 degree July heat. It was just Mom and Dad and I, and some of the greatest memories of my life. At night, we would open the flap on top of the tent and just lay under the stars in our tee shirts and talk in a whisper.
And here we were ten years later, and I've still never seen so many stars as you can there. The nights are hot and the Milky Way runs wild across the heavens, a sheer stream of gossamer illuminating the deep blackness. The stars are overwhelmingly numerous, dizzying in a way you cannot imagine unless you have witnessed them.
Andrew McMahon, arguably my favorite musician, has always had a preoccupation with the sky and with stars. In almost every song, a reference to the sky or stars or space can be found. He has Van Gogh's Starry Night tattooed on his forearm, and said once in an interview that at the top of his bucket list was to go to space. I love it.
And now I'm all moved in and comfortable, two weeks into classes. California is beautiful and the mild weather, overabundance of longboarders, and towering palm trees make it feel like paradise. Lilacs and roses grow alongside my building on one side, and their fragrance pervades the air at all hours.
But I don't see stars. Some nights I only want the stars. I want Orion's Belt in the winter and the Big Dipper in the summer and I want to know that the universe is expansive beyond my wildest dreams. I want to see the stars glow and imagine that they are God's freckles. Or the watermelon seeds He spat out. I want to talk to Andrew McMahon. I want to know how big the biggest star in all existence is. Why are all the poets and songwriters and romantics so obsessed?
This home is new to me.
I've been thinking about stars lately.
I've been thinking about stars lately.
On our trip out to California, we camped at the Grand Canyon for three nights. When I was eight years old we hiked the Grand Canyon and stayed at the Bright Angel Campground at the bottom. Seven miles in and ten miles out in 120 degree July heat. It was just Mom and Dad and I, and some of the greatest memories of my life. At night, we would open the flap on top of the tent and just lay under the stars in our tee shirts and talk in a whisper.
And here we were ten years later, and I've still never seen so many stars as you can there. The nights are hot and the Milky Way runs wild across the heavens, a sheer stream of gossamer illuminating the deep blackness. The stars are overwhelmingly numerous, dizzying in a way you cannot imagine unless you have witnessed them.
Andrew McMahon, arguably my favorite musician, has always had a preoccupation with the sky and with stars. In almost every song, a reference to the sky or stars or space can be found. He has Van Gogh's Starry Night tattooed on his forearm, and said once in an interview that at the top of his bucket list was to go to space. I love it.
And now I'm all moved in and comfortable, two weeks into classes. California is beautiful and the mild weather, overabundance of longboarders, and towering palm trees make it feel like paradise. Lilacs and roses grow alongside my building on one side, and their fragrance pervades the air at all hours.
But I don't see stars. Some nights I only want the stars. I want Orion's Belt in the winter and the Big Dipper in the summer and I want to know that the universe is expansive beyond my wildest dreams. I want to see the stars glow and imagine that they are God's freckles. Or the watermelon seeds He spat out. I want to talk to Andrew McMahon. I want to know how big the biggest star in all existence is. Why are all the poets and songwriters and romantics so obsessed?
This home is new to me.
I've been thinking about stars lately.
Monday, September 3, 2012
New Beginnings.
It's 2 am and my eyes are burning. I'm running barefoot back to the front door. I know I can't look back to the glowing red of your tail-lights because I know I will need you more. And the moment that pickup truck roars into gear and drives away, the only thing on my mind is how I wish it would come right back.
A few people have recently mentioned the prospect of blogging to me, so here I am now. It sounded like fun initially, but my more valid excuse for starting this is perhaps that it could be beneficial in some way to my dream of being a writer. Also, I think it might be something I could personally thrive off of in some way. It could be food for me.
He was both right and wrong. He perhaps never imagined that I would be with the same boy, and so in this way, he was mistaken. When I fell in love with you, it was absolutely overpowering. I truly believed that there was no more fervent love in all the world. What I had found was the epitome. I was consumed by my love for this boy. But my father was correct, however, in that what I thought was the epitome was only a faint reflection of the love I feel now. Because every day, heaven's existence is proven to me simply in the existence of this boy.
And the notion of moving thousands of miles away from him has me torn.
The coast is calling me. I am bound for travels, for this great adventure. But he is my North Star, my compass for these brave explorations. Take a dive with me.
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