Thursday, December 31, 2015

The Four Seasons of Gratitude’s Perfection (Why I am Grateful for a Mostly Crummy Year)

Writer’s note – this is by far the most indulgent thing that I have ever published.  No apologies…just a warning.  This one was for me.  Here’s hoping divine circumstances have something in it for any and all who read…

 

 

I am very much looking forward to 2016.

Very much so.

To say the least, 2015 was a crummy year.  To put it more succinctly, 2015 was painful.

My biological dad died in May.  He left behind a benevolent legacy, deep friendships to most all who knew him, a loving wife, and a mountain of broken glass.  

I’m not much of a janitor, but have been doing my best to dispose of that glass since his passing.  

My adoptive father (the man who raised me, and whom I have called “Dad” the longest) has slipped so far down the rabbit hole of dementia that it is hard to recognize the man that I once knew inside of the mortal shell that houses his current being.  

There were other hardships in 2015.  We lost my wife’s grandfather, and attended two additional funerals this year in support of a close friend and an even closer family member who also lost loved ones.  

I suppose I didn’t expect to be bombarded with the realities of time’s passage at the ripe old age of 39.  Perhaps I was ignoring the truths of which I have espoused in previous writings.

Mostly, I just miss my Dad(s).

I’ve heard from others that the holidays are particularly hard for those who have lost loved ones.  I can attest that they are.  Albeit, not for the reasons that I had expected.  It’s not the memories of happier days, or the ghosts of Christmas past, or even the time spent reflecting that hit me this Christmas.  It was the hard stop to life’s daily grind.  That’s what got me.  

I’ve always appreciated the respite and renewal that the last two weeks of the calendar year bring.  Not so much this year.  As most sunk into the tradition and revelry set in motion by the annual anticipation of ringing out the old and looking forward to the new, I was forced to (finally) allow the spiritual and temporal inertia of things that have been occupying my time and carrying me for these many months to bring me to a place of stillness and real reflection.

Words have always been my coping mechanism.  Speaking them helps a little, especially if spoken to the right audience.  But, for me, there has always been a magically cathartic quality to writing my thoughts down.  Whether it be a personal shortcoming, or a spiritual gift…I am never really able to let go of a thought until I express it in writing.  I am ready to let go of 2015.

So here goes…

The Four Seasons of Gratitude’s Perfection (Why I am Grateful for a Mostly Crummy Year)

In hindsight, the worries and anxieties of the new year’s winter paled in comparison to the other three seasons that made up 2015.  Hindsight, being what it is, was little help to me during the months of January and February as I watched both of my daughters struggle at the things that had brought them success and joy for most of their lives.  

First, my oldest was struck with a string of significant swimming related injuries that led to the realization that she had a choice; continue to grind and hope that her doctors’ warnings of potentially very serious injuries did not occur, or dial it back.  She chose the latter.  Which lead to a lot of heartache and eventually culminated in her walking away from the swim club that she got in to after working harder than any kid I have ever seen work.  She took it OK.  My heart broke for her.

My youngest went through a separate, but equally frustrating time on the basketball court.  It wasn’t the end of the world.  It was eighth grade, and actually made her more determined to succeed in the game. But, it still wasn’t easy to watch.  

For those without kids of a certain age, both of these events will seem trivial.  

They are.  

My girls are amazing and not at all defined by what they do.  It is who they are that makes them special.  And, if you have read anything that I have written in the past, then you will note that I am a big fan of using adversity to become a better person.  With all of that having been said…it’s not easy to watch those whom you love the most struggle due to reasons and circumstances that lend validity to the notion that life isn’t fair most of the time.   

I prayed for peace most of January and February 2015.

Then, as is so often the case, Spring did in fact spring eternal.  My Lilly (the swimmer) decided to focus her energy on serving others.  She thought that she might want to go into Nursing after college, and spent the spring applying and interviewing for an internship with one of our local hospitals.  She not only got selected to participate, but out of the hundreds of interns that were selected from an even larger pool of applicants, she was the only one allowed to choose the area in which she would work over the summer.  She chose the delivery ward. Her dad was grotesquely proud of her.

Gabs (the baller) tried out (and didn’t make) the AAU team that she had been dreaming of playing for since she could understand what an AAU team was.  However, the coaches asked her to come in and practice with the team a couple of times each week.  If she wanted to, she could go to games and sit on the bench in street clothes and help out where needed.  They told her they thought that she was good, just not quite good enough to be on this team…which they thought had the makings of becoming a very good squad.  

She cried when I told her she didn’t make the team.  I took her out for a milkshake and told her to pay more attention to the good that they saw than the not-good-enough that kept her from earning a jersey.  Being the baller that she is, she dusted herself off and went back to work.  Within 2 weeks of practice the coaches decided she had earned that jersey.  Then she earned some playing time.  Followed by a little more. Then she shaved over a minute off of her previously best 800 meter time on her track team.  The girl who had been broken by winter’s events decided to show the world what she was made of in the spring.  Again, her dad was awfully proud.

Then, in the middle of the night in the middle of May…my phone rang.

And time stopped.

My dad had died of a massive heart attack.  I was the first person notified.  Lots of wheels were set in motion and lots of things happened that I led or took part in.  Most of those things occupied a great deal of my time.  Many of those wheels remain in motion today.  But I swear to you that for the remainder of the spring of 2015, time stood still.

The only way that I knew to get time to start again was to pray.  I prayed most of May and early June 2015 for a return to some sort of normal.  I also prayed that in all of this, I would, once more, make my dad proud.

Normalcy began to return in the summer of 2015.

It turned out that the baller’s coaches were right.  This team was very special.  The little bit of playing time, turned into major minutes.  And, those minutes contributed in a real way to that team winning the NTBA 8th Grade Girls National Basketball Tournament in Myrtle Beach.  The tournament was amazing.  Myrtle Beach was gross.  My other dad (the one who raised me and who I love just as much as my biological dad) came to one of Gabs’ games.  He was sweet and cheered at the right times.  He hugged her and told her good job.  I’m going to visit him in a few days.  He won’t remember anything about the game…or much about my childhood either.  He is still alive, but in a lot of ways he has already left.  That’s the wicked cruelty of dementia.  I pray a lot that a cure is found.  I hope that dementia doesn’t steal a father’s pride for his kids…but I suspect it does.

Back to happier news of the summer, Lilly had an incredible internship experience and got to be around for the birth of our neighbor’s new son.  She knows for sure that nursing is what she wants to do.  Both Lil and Gabs have a grotesquely proud dad, a fact that only made the physical loss of one of my dads and the mental loss of the other that much harder to take.

Friends reached out to me.  I reached out to others.  There were offers to get together and talk.  I wanted to.  I even agreed to meet up with a couple of them.

I never saw any of those friends.  I didn’t want to talk.  As cathartic as words are for me…there is a time and a place for them.  I wasn’t ready.  Looking back, that was very selfish on my part. Even if I didn’t have the emotional capacity to talk about it, I should have been better at following through.

I prayed a lot to hear some words (from the here and now as well as that which lies beyond) from either of my dads during the summer of 2015. Those words didn’t come either.

For the first time in a long time, I was at a loss for words.  And, at the same time, was mourning words that had been lost.

Then came autumn, which was both of my Dads’ favorite season.  I never asked them why.  Maybe it’s because football really gets going.  Maybe it’s because the leaves change colors.  Maybe it is because there is something in the air that makes things feel and smell and sound different…more so than any other time of the year.  

This autumn was weird.  The leaves never really had a chance to turn.  They just seemed to fall to the ground all at once.  Science blames El Nino.  I say it was just a fitting end to 2015.  

That brings us back around to Winter…which just started.  I’ve prayed  that things that seem to have fallen all at once, are lifted just as quickly in the coming spring…and stay that way going forward.  

They won’t.  

And, so we’re left to sort out the task of remembering the presence while experiencing the absence.

How do you remember without sinking back into despair?  How do you reflect without coming apart at the seams in a year like 2015?  I don’t pretend to have all of the answers, but I can tell you that the one thing that has helped more than anything else, has been finding the commonality in all of these experiences.  From the ups of being a proud dad in 2015 to the downs of losing my dad(s) in 2015 there is a common truth to which anchoring my emotion has led to real comfort.  

I love my daughters.  My dads loved me.  In the end, when everything that seemed so important reveals itself to be completely insignificant, love is the only thing that matters.  I believe it is the only thing that can both go with us to the next life and stay here to help those of us left behind to carry on.  Indeed, love wins. And, for that anchor…that ability to remember with joy…that flickering of light in the distance that allows for hope to remain constant…I am truly and profoundly grateful.

Love and gratitude…those are the answers to all of the tough questions.  

And, as far as 2016 goes…to all those who I avoided seeing in 2015 because I just didn’t have the words…

For auld lang syne my dear, for auld lang syne, I’ll take a cup of kindness yet, for auld lang syne.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

15 Reasons Why Carly Ledbetter Can Kiss My Charlottean Grits

If you are not from Charlotte, then you might not be aware of the literary smack down that little Miss Carly threw our way via the electronic pages of HuffPo yesterday. 

If you are from Charlotte and you have not tweeted some sort of cryptically southern insult at little Miss Carly then consider yourself in the minority.

I'm long winded....consider this my version of said tweet:

Dearest Little Miss Carly,

Congratulations on your Elon College Volleyball career.  I'm sure it was fulfilling and awfully important to the 3 people who loyally attended games.  I never saw you play, but I bet you were one heck of a digger.

Anyhooooo...

I read your clever little rant on my hometown yesterday.  Canon-bound for sure.

If it is meant to be a light hearted and benign homage to the quirkiness of the QC, then please do not read past this sentence.

If it is meant to be what it feels like it is meant to be, then please allow me to clarify on a few points...I'll write slowly...so that you can understand.

In the order you presented:

1) Downtown is called Uptown.

Yes, well you see when your city center is north of the primary population (which was the case when uptown was being developed) you would go "up" to town. If you don't believe me, then ask Atlanta or New York.  I believe they are both in similar boats.  I realize that we do not have a downtown or midtown like those cities yet, but we are drinking milk....and getting our play60 in. So....

2) No one is actually from Charlotte.

I am.  Born July 24, 1976 in Presbyterian Hospital...near uptown. 

3) #Jeah (Charlotte has 3 celebrities Michael Jordan, Cam Newton, and Ryan Lochte).

My 15 year old daughter swims on Ryan Lochte's club, and he's not the biggest celebrity on deck.  I'll be sure to tell Mandy Patinkin, Claire Daines and Dale Earnhardt Jr. that you think he is though. #powned

4) Everything is oddly evangelical.

What does that even mean?  I'll be sure to ask one of my Catholic, Jewish or Greek Orthodox friends who live and worship in Charlotte.  If they don't know, then I'll head up to NoDa which, according to your reporting, is apparently inhabited by the Godless masses.  Funny, I don't remember seeing that during my last trip up.  They do have excellent craft beer though.

5)  Everyone works for the big 3.

You've got me there.  Nucor, Sonic Automotive, and Duke Power are huge...or, were you talking about RCR, Hendricks and Joe Gibbs Racing....or, were you talking about Chiquita, Carolinas Healthcare and The Compass group.  It's kind of hard to tell with the 270 fortune 500 firms currently employing folks in the city.

6) Buzz City Bobcats

Your list is really starting to lose steam at this point.  I nicknamed this one the downward dog...it is one heck of a stretch.  I grew up in Durham.  I'm a dyed in the wool Tarheels fan.  You know not of what you speak.  This city gave a 60 minute standing ovation to a franchise that lost it's first game to the Cleveland Cavs by 40.  I was there.  In the immortal words of Dr. Peter Venkmen, "Back off man.  I'm a scientist."

7) B of A is trying to tell you something.

I'll admit, the paintings are interesting.  I walk past them everyday on my way to the office...where I work...as in am employed...by an entity that pays me.  Nice concept, employment.  California ought to look into it.  By the way, you're so right....no other city center high rise in America features really strange artwork in their lobby. 

8) The streets are always empty. 

I can surmise that you came to this conclusion at the time of the photo featured in your masterful work of prose.  That picture features snow on the ground.  Bless your heart darlin', we Charlotteans don't do snow.  You certainly could have made fun of that.  But, you didn't...and so you remain a bit uninformed.  Charlotte streets tend to be a bit of a jungle during office hours and one hell of a party after...sans snow, of course. Don't believe me?  Please try to make a left turn off of Tryon Street uptown between the hours of 7-11 PM any Friday night.

9) If you Ain't First, You're last.

I'm sorry.  We don't buy into the whole "every one's a winner, now here's your trophy" mentality.  There are winners and there are losers.  Losers tend to aspire to become winners.  The more enterprising losers work really hard and eventually become winners...thereby motivating the next generation of losers to start winning as soon as possible.  Sister, that's the America we want to live in.  Nice trophy by the way.  You get that playing volleyball at Elon?

10) Public Transportation is Hilarious.

You're so right.  Executing an idea that would enable thousands of low income workers a way to get to where the jobs are, connect hospitality entities to major uptown events like the CIAA and Major League sporting events, and re-invigorate a previously dead commerce corridor...that's frakkin' hysterical!

11) Rafting and Rapids.

I'll give it to you.  The US National Whitewater Center might have made more sense in Colorado.  I really don't have anything snarky to add.  We are really glad they chose Charlotte as it's home.  That's a very cool place.

12) Graveyards are Everywhere.

I nicknamed this observation the corpse pose.  Listen, Carly...whatever you do, for the love of all that is holy...never, EVER visit New Orleans...or Charleston...or Arlington, etc.

13) BBQ is an issue.

No darlin', BBQ is THE issue.  I have guests in from Seattle and we will be dining tonight upon pulled pork with your choice of eastern Carolina and mustard sauce.  That thing that you are feeling...that's called jealousy.  Deal with it.

14) Amelie's > America.

Seriously, Amelie's?  Did the Junior League sponsor your visit or something?  Wait a second...I get it now.  Your last name is actually Kuchar isn't it.  I am being punk'd right?

15) Charlotte is kind of like Purgatory. 

No sweetie...playing Volleyball at Elon College...that is exactly like purgatory.

Enjoy San Fran.

XOXO,

The Queen City Collective.



Thursday, November 7, 2013

A Message from My 17 Year Old Self...



Life spent in thought of the morrow,
leads one to feel nothing but fear and sorrow.

 
Silent dreams with fallow spirit,
left alone to wander through;
 
I cannot dream.
But, dream is all I do.
 
-me 4/13/1994
 
 
 
I stumbled across these words that I wrote nearly 2 decades ago while cleaning my attic the other day.

I have no recollection of writing this, nor do I have any idea why I saved it.  It was not an intentional time capsule. 

It's an amazing experience to revisit the forgotten fears and hopes of your 17 year old self.  To be reminded of where I was, and what providence has brought.  I was so afraid of being alone.  Those words were a prayer of sorts.  God knows all I ever wanted was not to be alone.

God has a plan.  And so...

The morrow's thoughts steadfast and strong,
though spirit wanes through hours long.
 
The dreams I dreamt so long ago,
scream on this silent wind;
 
When the morrow wakes;
My dream was always them.
 
-me 11/7/2013
 
 
Thank you Lord for my family.  I am so grateful. 

Thursday, October 24, 2013

On The Fault in Our Stars



SPOILER ALERT - IF YOU HAVE NOT READ THE FAULT IN OUR STARS YET.  DO NOT READ THIS.  YOU WILL HATE ME, AND I DO NOT HANDLE REJECTION WELL.

I'M SERIOUS - STOP READING THIS AND GO READ THE BOOK.  YOU WILL NOT BE ABLE TO PUT IT DOWN.













The first thing that you need to know about me as a reader is that I do not cry at literary fiction.

It's a hard rule.

Disbelief gets suspended well enough, but I do not cry at things that are not actually so.

The next thing that you need to know about me is that I hate cancer more than just about anything.  My hate for it is not a theoretial thing.  My disdain is galvanized by the trials of those whom I hold dear who have suffered it's unrelenting physical and emotional deathroll.

I hate the idea of burying a member of my nuclear family more than I hate cancer.  Which is to say, I hate it the most.

As for the afforementioned nuclear family loss hatred, I can only offer a hypothetical first person narative.  However, my narative is well informed.  I walked with a very close friend through the unexpected death of his child (the word tragic is intentionally omitted, because it is a dumb word when used to describe the death of a child).  It was and remains to this day horrible.  No, it is worse than horrible.  It is the worst.  THE WORST.

The final thing that you need to know about me is that I have a deep faith in a very specific spiritual doctrine.  That faith did not grow to where it is now until well after the ages of the two main characters of John Green's book.





SPOILER ALERT UPDATE - SERIOUSLY, FOR THE LOVE OF ALL THAT IS DECENT, STOP READING THIS IF YOU HAVE NOT READ THE BOOK.  THIS WILL BE YOUR LAST SPOILER ALERT.








I cried.

Several times.

I'm crying right now thinking about several of the moments within the final few chapters of Augustus' and (presumably) Hazel Grace's lives.

So much for hard rules.

I'd never read a "cancer book" before this one.  I didn't want to read this one.  My wife and oldest daughter recommended it a long time ago.  I REALLY did not want to read it.  Reader's intuition I guess.  Ironically, it was an article written by Veronica Roth (Divergent Trilogy Author) about her literary inspirations that finally got me to turn the first page.  Damn you Roth!

My initial reaction to the story's conclusion was equal parts adoration and abhoration.  Then I fell asleep.

When I woke up, the recurring question in my head was "why?".  There is no way that you write a story like this without an answer to "why?".

I'm talking about the big "why?"  The "why?" that keeps you from falling asleep after you read about two teenagers who find each other in the middle of the worst possible circumstances, fall in love, only for one of them to die without seeing all of the things that young love aspires to see.

I repeat, damn you Roth!

Anyway, the book's answer to that "why?" seemed to hint at the importance of not letting your circumstances dictate your inability to (as they spoke about in the "Literal Heart of Jesus") live your best life today.  This sentiment came together in the climactic pre-funeral eulogy that Gus asked Hazel to write for him:

"I can't talk about our love story, so I will talk about math.  I am not a mathematician, but I know this: There are infinite numbers between 0 and 1.  There's .1 and .12 and .112 and an infinite collection of others.  Of course, there is a bigger infinite set of numbers between 0 and 2, or between 0 and a million.  Some infinities are bigger than other infinities.  A writer we used to like taught us that.  There are days, many of them, when I resent the size of my unbounded set.  I want more numbers than I'm likely to get, and God, I want more numbers for Augustus Waters than he got.  But, Gus, my love, I cannot tell you how thankful I am for our little infinity.  I wouldn't trade it for the world.  You gave me a forever within the numbered days, and I'm grateful"

I really cried after I read that.

The sentiment of gratitude for something amidst the backdrop of that something being stolen is laudable if not perfect.  But, it begs the question.  What happens when you get from 0 to 1 and the infinity between the two reveals itself for the fallacy that it is.

I am a slave to logic, and the logic within the eulogy is flawed.  Beautifully flawed.

I hate myself for thinking that. I mean we're talking about teenagers who are going to die after all.

Still, there is no "infinity" (mathematical or otherwise) that we can experience while stuck in the throws of a finite temporal existence.  Everything that we know is marked by time.  And, time is winding down for all of us. 

I really hate myself for that one.

Look, I'm not a callous man.  I really am not.

I believe that there is an infinity, but I believe that infinity is not found within the bounds of our humanity.  I believe our humanity causes the waters of faith to get really murky when you lose someone.  Especially if that someone has seen all of your brokeness and depravity and chooses to love you all the more for it or (even more heart breaking) in spite of it.  I believe that we should, in fact, live our best lives today, but never lose sight that our humanity...that same humanity that is prisoner to time's march from 0 to 1...points to something else.  Something bigger. Something that puts "why?" in it's place.

Our humanity informs us that our ability to relate, rightly or wrongly, to everything and everyone around us is what separates us from the stars.  In fact, our ability to gaze in awe at the stars and contemplate how we might relate to them, faults and all, points to an embedded purpose in every one of us.  Love is the best example of this purpose.

But, in order for a purpose to be embedded, there has to have been an answer to "why?" before the embedding took place.  An author of infinity perhaps.

I wish more than anything Gus and Hazel Grace could have known that infinity does not end. 

It is not bound by the dictates of time and space as we know it. 

I wish they knew that the author of love created infinity.  And, that love is the only logical answer to "why?"

I wish...