Saturday, March 26, 2016

The Meaning of it All

It's Easter weekend.
It's sunny today.
It's Saturday.
The weekend.
For some.

I'm happy I have the day off.
I'm pissed I don't have more clients keeping me busy.

I remember the sacrifice of Jesus.
I hunt relentlessly for my dreams.
For what I want.
For what I can achieve.

I am greedy.
Self focused.

I am determined.
A provider.

I am humbled by God's sacrifice.
His devotion.
His external focus, and compassion.

I've been given a life of comfort.
Luxury.
Ease.
I want more of it.

I forget his sacrifice.
I don't know how to live in his sacrifice.
Live out of his sacrifice.
How do I mirror the holiest of holies devotion?

I don't.
I meander.
I squandor.
I reap what I have not sown completely.
Barely.
Hardly.
So I give a little.
I pray a little.
I remember a little.
And I try not to be that bad.

But at the end of the day,
on every good day,
I will never stop asking myself,
what am I called to?
If I am not to be fully enveloped in my own interests.
I've always gotta ask that question.
Dream about that question.
And hold the answers above my head,
in a little more than a prayer,
and a little more than a hope,
and a little more than I could ever expect of myself.

Not that there's meaning in all of this.
Not that I don't write from sneaky shards of my own desires.
I acknowledge my weaknesses.
But more importantly, I acknowledge my place.
And my perspective.
From the confines of a comfy couch on a sunny Saturday where my debatable joy pauses long enough to know the meaning of it all.
The answer of it all- is simple.

How do you breathe, after you've asked yourself the question?

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

City Love

There's something about loving a city. Despite it's crime. It's pettiness. The show-offs and the have-not's. Cities are eclectic. And real. And they're hard. And dirty. And amazing. And things are always changing. And staying the same.

There's something about the place we call home. The neighbors that we know, and the spots we frequent. Our routines and the places we love with all our hearts that most people will never notice. The hole in the wall bars and taco trucks and the homeless guy whose name you know and you bought lunch that time and every time you drive by him you remember how unsettling the reality of the world is.

There's something about where we keep ourselves. From not moving from yesterday or tomorrow, the place we've placed ourselves in a certain proximity and structure, that single address where we always go back to. Cities aren't easy. But a cozy home with a locked door and full fridge can mean so much. And those without, just outside half a block away idling by the Salvation Army or Wilsons Delicatessen's. They remind us how unsettled the world is. That there is sadness. And heartbreak. And things we wish we're different.

Theres something about the shelterless sad man in the rain. He is not the problem, he just graces us with reminding ourselves that there are so many problems. So many damned problems. And in the scary city we love where we cozy up in our warm homes, we remember the distressed, and the hurt, and the sorrow of our world. And we love our broken little city for it. Cause it reminds us of reality, and every dream we've ever had.