Writing Exercise #4:

“He’s suck a jerk,” Amy said, looking to the ground with that pouty face. God, she can be so much sometimes.

“He’s a jerk? Do you remember when you used to follow him around? You had his schedule memorized, didn’t you?” I started. “You know, I think they classify that as stalking today.”

She didn’t say anything at first. She always knows I’m right but never likes to admit it. So she’s stubborn. So is every 17-year-old girl.

“So what if I did,” she retorted, still practicing that lip curl, “People change. And he became a jerk.”

“Yeah, people do change,” I said. She knew where this was going. “You changed. I remember in eighth grade when you were having a slumber party and you all got up at some ungodly hour to make chocolate chip cookies. But rather than actually bake the cookies, you just ate the cookie dough. Do you have any idea how many calories are in one bite of chocolate chip cookie dough?”

Amy only glared at me. Her lip curl was turning to a snarl.

“Of course you do, you’re the anorexic queen, what was I thinking.”

“Oh fuck you,” she snarled.

“Yeah, I get that a lot.” I said with a smile. I can have such an annoying charm sometimes.

“So what if I changed. We’re not talking about me. We’re talking about him. About Aaron.” At least she was making sense now.

“Yes, we are talking about Aaron. Does it really upset you that much?”

“Well, isn’t he supposed to like me no matter what? Isn’t that what boyfriends do? He only wants my body, why should he care whether I eat or not?” she asked.

“You have a point there. I won’t try to defend the fact that he thinks with is crotch.”

“Why do all guys do that?” she asked, finally looking me in the eye.

“They don’t. A lot do, but you’re incriminating all of us. And that’s not really fair.”

“Who cares about fair? He dumped me because I’m fat.” Her eyes fell to the floor again.

“You weigh 92 pounds.”

“Look at me, I’m fat.” She huffed, finally throwing herself onto the nearby couch.

“You’re as fat as a bean sprout. I bet the scarecrows are jealous. Do you just suck up the schtick they feed you in those fashion magazines? Don’t you have a brain?”

“You’re so heartless.” Red hot tears of anger were beginning to well in her eyes.

“If I was heartless I’d be off with Aaron, thinking with my crotch.” She finally quieted for a moment, and I let the silence linger. I can only push her so hard.

“It’s just that I try so hard. But nothing ever works.” She mumbled between sobs. “And you want me to still like this guy after what he did? You’re so fucked up.” The silence lingered again.

“First of all, you’re the one that’s fucked up, remember?” I reminded her, as gently as I could. The reminder slowly sunk in and her swelling anger quelled. She didn’t say anything.

“Secondly, I’m not asking you to like him. He is a jerk. You’re not required to like jerks.” A faint smile appeared at the corners of her mouth. She likes it when I admit she’s right, even if it’s only in so many words.

“But you are required to love him.”

Writing Exercise #3:

I could stand to lose some weight. I’ve been thinking about it for a while, and I’ve just turned into a pig lately. It’s really just a matter of being healthy. I should probably start exercising, too. Just to get in shape. I hate being winded after climbing a flight of stairs. I really shouldn’t be that inactive. Maybe I’ll start running. And this time I’ll have to do it more than once or twice a week.

And I’ll look so much better if I just lose a little weight. I’ll be such a better person if I took better care of myself, was healthier, ate better, exercised. It’ll be a whole new me. A me people actually want to be with. Nobody likes the fat girl. Sure, she’s fun to hang around with and be friends with, but nobody actually pays attention to her. I guess it’s just time for a change.

If you could read her mind, that’s what she’d be thinking. Kind of sad, isn’t it? That’s what I keep saying, but nobody seems to listen to me. I guess we’ve all got problems. Her name is, well, I don’t know what her name is yet. That’s not important. She could have any name. Why don’t you pick one? Pick the name of a sister, or a daughter, or a cousin, or a niece. It really doesn’t matter, it’s probably happening to them anyway.

She’s been like this for a few years. It probably started as early as elementary school, as much as we all hate to admit it. They’re just kids, right? Yeah, but kids aren’t stupid. Kids see what goes on. And if the world is screwed up, they’ll just follow suit. She wasn’t always skinny, either. She was one of the biggest babies in the nursery at the hospital. Until she was about five she was a pudgy little thing. But then she started stretching into a green bean, and she’s been tall and slender since. Her hair’s brown and straight, lately it’s been looking like the cover of Cosmo. But I won’t go there yet. She’s 17 and has just about everything going for her. She’ll graduate in the spring and go off to the wonderful world of college. Right now it’s just the state school, and she’ll probably go into education like every other girl.

She’s outgoing and likes to hang out with other people. She’s been into party scene since middle school, and before that she was the queen of slumber parties. She has a gaggle of friends just like her, all of them probably have the same problems and the same hang ups. And of course they don’t talk about it. All of them lost their virginity in the back seat of a car with a random high school hottie — but the interesting part is they all did it in the same park, and not one of them has yet admitted it to the others. For our little sweetheart it was an awkwardly handsome young stud named Craig. They slowly worked their way up from sucking face, to feeling each other up, to Craig getting a little too excited on the back seat’s upholstery. Finally Craig learned to contain himself long enough for the two to consummate their two month relationship and stumble into the wonderful world of sexually active children. Luckily she came to her senses a few weeks later and dumped Craig. But don’t worry about Craig, he’s a real swift guy and picked up a friend of his ex the next week and consummated his back seat again. Apparently he discovered that you don’t get breasts with masturbation, so he had to find himself another insecure girl.

But Craig is so last month. She’s over him now. Not that she was into Craig in the first place, he was just an accessory. Like so much in her life, Craig was just something to make her look good. On the bright side, she is smart enough not to accessorize with cheap beer and LSD. One day that will be Craig’s downfall. It’s usually plentiful at the many parties she attends, but she knows enough to limit her consumption. She got plastered once as a sophomore and it wasn’t a fun morning at work the next day. Every customer who walked into the Gap seemed to be talking way too loud, and her supervisor seemed to find something wrong with everything she did. She spent the second half of her shift in the back room, away from customers, away from other workers, quarantined from all human contact. Her supervisor said something about dark eyes and bags don’t sell sexy clothes. What did she know?

Her parents are pretty clueless. Most parents are. If her father knew of her back seat exploits he’d have to commit himself. He still thinks she’s his sweet little girl, and he tries to ignore everything that says otherwise. The fact is he’s stuck in a marriage that hasn’t worked in quite a while, and he hopes having a perfect daughter will make up for it. If not he pleasures himself with porn on the Internet, just to be on the safe side. He needs to have something pleasureful in his life, and his wife definitely isn’t that.

Mom is another story. She could be her own story, I’ll have to see if anyone’s covering that one. Her marriage is a sham, and only continues because divorce looks bad. So sex is pretty much out of the question. She definitely has the same problems as her daughter, but hasn’t discovered a way to deal with it yet. Right now she gets by with repression and being pretty much completely repulsed with her body. The idea of her husband finding her attractive makes her ill, and she hasn’t let him touch her in five years, and then she was drunk. She works in a big office building for some national company and does some work that nobody really understands. It’s basically glorified secretarial work, but don’t tell her I said that. If she wasn’t so worried about what everyone else thought, she’d be scoring with the guy across the hall, the one that checks out her ass when she goes to make copies, the one who’s actually gay.

So it’s a fairly complicated life. Right now she’s finishing up with high school and beginning to understand that college is the same thing as high school only with more freedom and more ways to ruin your life. Prom is coming up, but she sees that as another show, another chance to make an impression on people who already have more than an impression about her. She’s hoping to lose enough weight to really wow everyone, leave them with one last image of her as the undying hottie of high school. At least that’s what she thinks. Half the girls there want the same title, and the other half think they already own the title.

Besides working at the Gap, she spends her time doing homework, figuring out how to look like someone she’s not (have a tighter ass, have slinkier hair-whatever that means, and make her breasts look bigger than they actually are), and believe it or not, volunteering with kids. That’s the one redeemable aspect of her life. She volunteers at the Y and leads an after school group of elementary kids. They do crafts and have snacks and play games. It’s basically after school baby sitting until the parents get off work, but it’s given her a sense of purpose. This is why she’s going into education, which really isn’t a very promising thought, if you think about it.

So that’s where I come in. It’s my job to keep our little friend from doing something harsh. It’s probably a little late for that, but I’ll do what I can. I’d hate to see her thrown in a psyche ward, or worse, lying motionless in the bathtub, wrists slit, eyes drooping back in her head and soul departing for another world.

Eulogy for my Grandpa: 1922-2002

My GrandparentsMy grandpa died last week. I pulled these thoughts together for the funeral, and read them to a packed house. I had the whole place laughing, and I think that’s the way Grandpa would have wanted it. The words may not mean a lot to you, but for me they capture my grandpa.

***

I remember spending summers in Kansas with Grandpa. I grew up in the suburbs of Detroit, and now I live in St. Paul and take the city bus to work everyday. Spending summers in Kansas was a bit of culture shock.

I remember waking up early and sitting around the kitchen table and listening while Grandpa and my mom sipped coffee and talked. The Hutch paper was always spread across the table, and inevitably, the conversation would turn to me.

“He probably fails all his classes, don’t he?” Grandpa would ask. A slow smile would spread across his aging face as his gaze shifted from my mom to me.
Continue reading Eulogy for my Grandpa: 1922-2002

What Do I Want To Do?

Since it’s very likely that I’ll be moving across the country in a few years to follow my job, it’s really made me think about what I want to do in life. And I’m not just talking about the big picture, I want to write a book and have a few kids kind of thing. I’m talking about my job type stuff. Where I’m working, what I’m doing, how it’s going kind of thing.

Basically, is this really the job I want to have forever? We always have this image of constant advancement. It’s as if I’m always supposed to be moving up in the world. I can’t be an Assistant Editor forever. Some day I have to be just the Editor. Then the Managing Editor. Then the Supreme Editor of all. Or something like that.

But I’m beginning to question that. Do I really want to be the managing editor? At this point in my life, the answer is no. I like my job. I like that I don’t have to be the final answer. I like that someone else has to deal with the really sticky questions. I like that I can go home at the end of the day and let things go. Maybe in a few years I’m yearn for more responsibility, but right now, I don’t want to advance.

That seems so anti-establishment. Can you really want to just stay where you’re at? Financially it doesn’t make a lot of sense, especially being an editor. I guess maybe I’ll just have to wait and see what happens. Maybe in several years I’ll have changed and want something more. But for now I’m not really worried about the financial matters and moving forward to advance my career.

I’m reminded of the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.:

“Each of us lives in two realms, the internal and the external. The internal is that realm of spiritual ends expressed in art, literature, morals, and religion. The external is that complex of devices, techniques, mechanisms, and instrumentalities by means of which we live. These include the house we live in, the car we drive, the clothes we wear, the economic sources we acquire—the material stuff we must have to exist. There is always a danger that we will permit the means by which we live to replace the ends for which we live, the internal to become lost in the external.” (Strength to Love, page 70)

Neelam Mistry 1979-2000

Receiving correspondence from high school can be an effective catalyst for memories you haven’t dredged up in a while, and with good reason. An e-mail showed up the other day from my high school English teacher, Mr. Palizzi. It was completely unexpected, and the credit goes to the wondering glory of the Internet. I had Mr. Palizzi for American Literature my sophomore year, and a semester of World Literature my senior year.

Apparently Mr. Palizzi was bored one night and started searching for himself on the Internet. He stumbled across one of my odd ponderings from many months ago and decided to drop me a line (little did he know he’d once again be the subject of these thoughts). It was a simple e-mail, mainly replying to a few things he discovered about me. On one hand it presents me with a dilemma; he signed off as Steve Palizzi, and now I have to decide if I’m going to address him as the formal yet familiar “Mr. Palizzi,” or the friendlier yet odd-sounding “Steve.” I hate coping with what to call people. It was bad enough in college when it varied from Dr. So-and-so to Joey. Now as a burgeoning adult all the former names that were solidified in formalhood somehow slip into informal mode without telling me. It usually makes for a correspondence of full names (Hi Steve Palizzi, …), and avoiding actually using someone’s name when you meet them.

But on a more serious note, Mr. Palizzi’s e-mail did prompt a lot of reflection. He didn’t mentioned much news from high school, but did note at the end of his e-mail that one of my classmates had died in the last year or two. It took me a while to figure out who it was, but then (again thanks to the Internet) I discovered it was Neelam Mistry. We weren’t close friends, but then again I didn’t have a lot of close friends in high school. She was one of the many friends I hung out with in class and at the high school radio station and such. If I ever bumped into her outside of school (which I don’t think I ever did), I definitely would have talked to her. I’ll use that as an example because there’s a lot of people from high school who if I saw outside of school I probably would have avoided.

It’s probably more accurate to say that Neelam would have talked to me. She would have bounded over as soon as she spotted me, and bubbled with excitement and laughter. She wasn’t the giggly type of high school girl, but rather happy. She was one of the few people in the halls that actually looked happy most of the time. She’s also one of the many people I completely lost touch with after high school. I’m sorry to hear that she died.

After I heard the news I turned to my high school yearbook, the bastion of poor design, embarrassing photos, and spur of the moment messages in distinctive hand writing that will be so cryptically odd when we’re older. I found Neelam’s note and signature in a sloppy cursive on the inside back cover:

Nev!
Oh God of Yo-yos!
Good luck next year in all you do (as if you need it!). Never forget the back table groupie! From the time I’ve know you I’ve learned a great many things. Just to name a few: Your sensitivity; though you don’t show it, you express it beautifully in your writing; your amazing talents; four letters–yo-yo, need I say more? And your compassion and love of who you are, I really admire that about you. Your a great person! Good luck next year.

Love,
Neelam

PS – If I don’t see you next year, I’ll see you in he– (Dante)!

So many things in that could use some explanation, but I’m not going to try.

Now the flood of high school memories comes in. I read through the other signatures and odd messages, and it’s funny to compare what people wrote to what I remember of them. So many of these people I hardly knew, and they hardly knew me. It’s as if “Sign my yearbook!” is a request you can’t turn down, and it requires a writing of dishonest drivel, despite the four years of minimal contact.

Of course some of the writings are more telling than others. So many people commented on my yo-yoing ability, which is to be expected. To many people that’s all I was. Others commented on religious convictions, as they might describe it. They remembered me as being extreme, but honest and sincere. I guess that’s all I can ask for. Others commented that they wished they’d seen more of me senior year, and to keep in touch. Unfortunately neither happened.

Oddly, the year book doesn’t express some of the sentiments that truly stuck with me in high school, and even beyond high school. School and growing up in general was not a party for me. I didn’t experience what you see on TV or the movies. I’m not one of those damn Dawson’s River kids, and I never experienced the central element to every teen movie: the giant kegger party where half the school shows up. In my experience half the school would never hang out together. High school had sharper social divisions than that, and I’m surprised they still make movies ignoring the fact.

For me, growing up was about a deep desire to be accepted. Up until the fourth grade I had minimal problems with having friends and being accepted. I knew I wasn’t the most athletic or the coolest kid in my class, but that was okay. I still had friends who liked me for who I was. Fourth grade was probably the last year of acceptance.

With fifth grade the powers that be (sometimes I wonder if those powers that be realize just how much power they have?) shuffled me into a split fourth and fifth grade class. In my class there were only four fifth grade boys, and none of them were close friends. It was here that I realized the importance of being accepted, of having friends. That desire magnified with my lack of close friends and I learned just how uncool I was.

All my friends from fourth grade were shuffled into the other fifth grade class that year, the one that was all fifth graders. So they weren’t far away, but as elementary schools worked you’re consigned to your class for a majority of the day. Recess and a few special classes were the only times I saw those friends, and the relationships quickly diminished.

I was left with the three other fifth grade boys for friendship. Of course it wasn’t cool to be close friends with the girls, and I already had my share of problems with them. And there were a number of fourth grade boys in the class, but inter-grade friendships were looked down upon as well. I was a victim of unwritten social rules, and I didn’t have the self-confidence or the knowledge to know that I could rebel. I was a follower.

In the group of the fifth grade boys I was the whipping boy, the most un-athletic an un-cool. Apparently those are the only things that matter as you grow up. And it started my downward spiral.

Middle school wasn’t any better, and I’d really hate to go into details. Let’s just say junior highers are ruthless. It’s a terrible pecking order system, and you always seem to lose. It doesn’t help that some are dripping with hormones and others are still catching up.

I had my first love in middle school, and it was innocent and sweet. We traded notes and did the cute little things junior high couples do. It’s interesting that this stream of conscious remembering has focuses little on faith, because that played in as well. I think growing up is tremendously complicated, and I could probably re-write this sixteen times from sixteen different angles–and I’d still never get it right.

But I bring up faith with my first love because I think it illustrates what my faith meant to me. Her name was Tiffany, and somewhere in the closet I have a stash full of carefully folded notes that chronicle each school day of our relationship (I say school day because we rarely saw each other outside of school, another mark of the junior high relationship). My wife likes to read these notes and laugh. I tell myself she’s just jealous. She laughs some more.

As most junior high relationships go, there was an inkling of secret romance within each of us, a stockpile of hidden emotion just waiting for the right spark. The spark, of course, came from the chiding of mutual friends. During a field trip to the Henry Ford Museum for our Applied Technology class several of our friends taunted us about liking each other. We both denied the accusations, yet gave knowing smiles to each other. It was nauseatingly obvious that we liked each other. Our friends pushed and prodded us together, and at the same time ridiculed us like we were chasing forbidden love. Knowing the guys I hung out with at the time, they were truthfully jealous. Although they’d never admit it.

Notes were exchanged and before the end of the day we were going out. The idea still impresses me today. Me, the uncool, unhip, un-athletic nerd had a girlfriend. At the time I don’t think I felt that way, but now it amazes me. I realize what a dork I was back then.

But before Tiffany and I could officially go out (I love that phrase, it implies everything that dating, become boyfriend and girlfriend does, yet it works for the junior highers who will never actually go out anywhere together. It’s just a phrase that carries certain implied meaning, but on the surface is ludicrous. Much like most of junior high.), I had something troubling me.

I waited until Friday night, and if I remember correctly it was the same day as the infamous field trip that started it all. On Friday nights it was tradition for my family to go to eat, usually at Pizza Hut. The waitress knew us by name. After pizza we’d go our various ways, usually my dad and brother to some hobby shop in a far-flung corner of the suburbs, and my mom to some nearby mall for an evening of full-scale shopping. I was usually stuck in the middle and had to decide who I wanted to hang out with. Going with mom usually meant wandering the mall by myself, being dragged through a few dull stores, and ending up back at home for TGIF on ABC (it is here that I must admit that I watched and somehow enjoyed “Full House” starring Bob Saget. I was a junior high dork).

But this Friday night was different, and may simply serve as one of those transitional Fridays when my family spent less and less time together. On this particular Friday night I remember going home with my dad. My brother and mom were gone, mom probably shopping and brother probably out with his friends (he was after all in high school, and probably going through the same nightmare of acceptance I was). My dad retired to the basement to work on models or whatever it was he did down there, and I was left to wallow with the nagging feeling in my stomach.

I liked Tiffany. And despite the way my friends laughed, I wanted to go out with her. But there was one problem: I didn’t know if she was a Christian. For those who are unaware, there’s a well-known Christian doctrine that says you should not marry an unbeliever, and by logical extension, you should not date an unbeliever. Apparently I wasn’t making that logical extension in my mind, because the very thought of marrying the person I was going out with in eighth grade would have blown my little mid-pubescent mind. The Christian doctrine actually comes from a verse in the Bible that says, “Do not be yoked together with unbelievers.” (2 Corinthians 6:14, NIV). Apparently “yoked” is the first century term for “going out.” There’s actually a Christian dating service in the Twin Cities called Equally Yoked. They advertise on Cities 97, the local hip-rockers station, and I can’t help but wonder how they expect anyone to want to use a dating service called Equally Yoked.

Now I don’t think I understood the concept of this yoking business. I don’t think I had it in mind that I wouldn’t date a pagan. I just felt strongly about my Christian beliefs, and I figured if I was going to go out with someone it wouldn’t work very well if they didn’t understand my faith.

And so (here’s the good part) with Bible in hand I looked up her phone number and sat down at the kitchen table. Back then (this would have been the early 90s) my family didn’t have a cordless phone, so I was stuck sitting at the kitchen table, a place that usually would have afforded an embarrassing lack of privacy. But my dad was busily working in the basement and my mom and brother were gone. So I found her phone number and sat there with my Bible and the phone and got ready to call her. I figured I’d ask Tiffany if she was a Christian, and if she wasn’t, I’d make her one.

So with junior high butterflies in my stomach, I called her number. I don’t remember a word she said, but I vividly remember the overwhelming sense of relief when she said she was a Christian.

“Oh,” I answered, with a hint of disappointment. “That’s good.” It took me a moment to realize this was good news. I don’t remember the rest of the conversation, but it did include the phrase, “Will you go out with me?” and an affirmative response. As was the custom, the phone call didn’t last much longer. Tiffany and I had an acute dysfunction at talking on the phone, something that would haunt me in later relationships, and cause my wife to laugh all the more.

You may think my eighth grade relationship set me up as a bona fide player in high school, but that wasn’t the case. While eighth grade ended on an very high note with Kevin and Tiffany attending the eighth grade dance together (I’ve got a cute picture somewhere–you should see my spikey hair), and actually exchanging what would have been my first kiss. I think at that moment the cool social life and customs of being a teenager knocked on my door. We kissed, the dance ended, and mom came to pick me up. A bunch of our friends were heading to the Village Place and for some reason I opted not to go. I ended up in my room at home, before 9:00, wishing I could kiss Tiffany again. My social life had passed me by.

Tragically, Tiffany and I never developed our over the phone conversation skills, and the summer passed with minimal contact and a few letters exchanged. As if the first days of high school weren’t traumatic enough, our relationship was on eggshells, and it came splintering apart those first few days. I can’t explain what happened, other than to say I was morbidly afraid of high school and retreated within myself for protection. It took an entire semester before I ventured out of my shell, and by then Tiffany was long gone.

Thus my introduction to high school, and forever struggling with friendship, acceptance, and being cool. This story could go on forever, and I’ll probably continue it later. But to give it some semblance of closure, let’s just say the yo-yo brought me out of my shell, and the rest is history. I earned acceptance by accepting my dorkiness, manifested in the yo-yo. By the time I entered college I finally learned to stop worrying about being cool, I stopped being self conscious, and I stopped trying so hard to be accepted. Unfortunately, the result may have swung me a bit too far in the other direction, evidenced by my wife’s sighs at my choice of attire. I think this is the beginning of the road fathers take to becoming so unbelievably unhip. Perhaps I am doomed.

Reading Yearbooks

Sometimes life is unique. You move on and leave behind a certain part of your life, and when you look back it’s never quite the same. The photographs don’t look like you remember and you discover a wealth of people and faces that once upon a time meant so much.

Some of those people have changed dramatically. I’m probably one of them. Some of those people probably haven’t changed at all. Some of those people are married and some may be divorced. Some have enlisted in the military, and some are settling down to careers. Some of those people I haven’t talked to since high school, and most of them I’ll never see again. Many of them I wouldn’t recognize if I saw them on the street, and I wouldn’t remember their name if I did manage to recognize them. Some of them have done some amazing things, and some of them are dead.

Life can be quite unpredictable. We look back to yearbooks full of end-of-the-year messages, and life seemed so ideal.

Writing Exercise #2

I guess I’m supposed to be upset. That’s what everyone expects. Weeping and the wearing of black and all that funeral crap. But I just don’t want to go there. It looks so fake, crowding into a stuffy church, a cheap stiff suit he never wore in his life. Everyone dressed up like Easter without the resurrection.

I’d rather be outside in the sun. The warm rays and the blue sky eases the pain. I’d rather take a drive into the country and bury him somewhere among the fields and cottonwoods. We’d dress him in a pair of faded jeans and a stained shirt. That’s the way he was. Why do we have to make him something he wasn’t.

I liked to think he loved me more because I was the youngest granddaughter. By the time it was my turn to spend weekends with grandma and grandpa they were already showing signs of wear and tear. He couldn’t toss me up into the air and he couldn’t run with me across the fields. Instead he’d sit in the chair and watch, calling out taunts and jokes, trying to make me laugh and squeel. I’d always come rushing back and put my hands on my hips and try to be as grown up as I could. I’d tell my grandpa he shouldn’t say that to princesses. Grandpa would laugh from his belly and reach out and grab me. He’d pull me into his lap and wrap his weathered arms around me and tell me that he didn’t mean it, that I was a good girl, and that I knew that. I always did. I just wanted him to wrap those tired hands around me.

Grandma would always witness this scene from afar, about to call us to supper but waiting to watch the intergenerational interaction. Now I see grandma across the aisle, teary face hidden behind a black vale. She could use a bit of the early evening sun. That’s the best time for the sun, that’s the best time to pull up a lawn chair and just watch the afternoon slip away. If only I could slip away I’d do it.

Why Do Christians

Why is it that Christians are expected to like everything labeled “Christian”? I get so frustrated when a new CD releases or a movie comes to theaters and it’s supposed to be dripping with Christian values and Christians are expected to be beside themselves with praise. That’s so shallow, so dimwitted, so dishonest. I’ve seen so many poor Christian movies and read some lame books and listened to some music that really shouldn’t have been made. Yet we’re expected to like it, just because it supposedly honors God.

You know, they say do all things to the glory of God, and sometimes I think you can do anything to the glory of God. All that matters is your effort and your heart, if those are in the right place then God is glorified, right? Sometimes I question that logic. If the plot sucks and the dialogue is forced is God really glorified? Maybe he is, and maybe he isn’t. But can’t a sucky plot be compared to a string of obscenities? Neither really glorifies God. Yet somehow the sucky plot gets off easy, and Christians rally around it. The obscenity laced movie, no matter how good and moral it may be, is picketed.

Why do Christians so easily damn some actions and so easily ignore others? And why are the actions they damn always in others and the actions they ignore always in themselves?