Thursday, November 19, 2009

The Sweet and the Hollow

The wind smells sweeter this year, more so than years previous. There is a strangeness to it; elements of past, of present, and of future mingle with the smells of fresh air, earth, and the snap of cold. There is a sense of being lost in it, and yet, rediscovery. It's almost like a whisper, telling of thing ancient, and things to come. It brings to the mind memories, many memories.

Memories of Mama braiding my hair and making crafts with me. The times when our small kitchen, warmed by a real wood stove, smelled of homemade oatmeal cookies and coffee, and if you were to take 4 steps away from the kitchen counter you would catch the scent of burning wood. I would watch as Dad slipped on an old leather glove, opened the black, ash-laden door to the stove and pile more logs on. I love that memory. It reminds me of how simple things used to be.
Or all the times that my sister, brother, and I would hose down our back patio at night. We would wake up extra early the next morning before school, just so we could slip across the ice and catch a few extra giggles before we hit the books. We smiled so much then. There was snow, and snow angels, and snow sleds, and even a snowman family that greeted passing cars at the end of our long driveway, dirt churned with snow. One year there were even icicles, something I had never seen before that year.
We bought real Christmas trees then, and the house permeated with the scent of pine. Pine, wood, smoke, cookies, warmth, hot chocolate, and pumpkin and spices and cinnamon and apples; an aroma that was so strong and savory it seeped through the wood our house was built from and into the outdoors.

I am also flooded with memories of people. People who lived in the small town we did, the people who have changed my life and will always be apart of it whether they are present in it or not. People like Emily Bosma, Brianna Forewood, Melissa Graves, Mr. Farris the Jr. High band teacher, and the nice man who ran the local corner store, Ranchers. I don't remember his name, but he always smiled when we went in. I was welcome there, even as an unsupervised 13 year old. That said something.

But we moved from that small town. Our new house smelled of its previous owners, old drywall, and every so often the waft of animal. It was heated electrically.
Mama made Amish bread in the new kitchen, and Dad didn't chop wood anymore. We got a fake Christmas tree to replace the real ones we had every year. And there was no snow.
People from this new town resurface: people like Josh Paschall, Chloe Weick (who is now a Chloe Vaughan), Dani DelRosario, Rose Barnes, and Alyssa Elliott.
There are many memories with Josh Paschall in them. Pressed Skittles between my Bible pages, that horrible orange sweatshirt he loved to wear, and I will never forget Halo and fried chinchilla tacos and 7-layer burrito cakes. He was my best friend for years.

We don't talk anymore.

This chill wind, tainted with sadness, also reminds me of a church. Not a quaint country church, but a church that met in the industrial center of town. The church where most of the people I cherish from our new town went. It was a place called Safe Harbor, and the youth group was on fire for Jesus. They loved the Lord with a passion you wouldn't expect from high schoolers. And it was amazing.
I remember Dani Del and Rose leading worship. It wasn't just music. It never is for them. You could hear the deep love they held for their Lord, their reverence for Him through song. The youth there followed suit, arms held high, fingers spread wide, some with tears of joy or pain or submission or thankfulness streaming from their eyes. The message was solid, the Christian support true, and the common question of evangelism was never absent: they went, they did, no questions asked.
And then people gradually left, some willingly, some unwillingly. Pretty soon all that remained was the backbone of the had-been administration and the few faithful families whose love for the church exceeded their need to move on. That church faded away, slowly and painfully, leaving a deep chasm of pain and misery in its wake.

Our best friend Alyssa managed to stay with my sister and I after the church split, but even that didn't last long. I blame the boy, but after 2 years and much prayer I can thank the Lord for reconciliation.

Many more memories swamp me. Relationships that came to a painful end, plans made that were never executed and executed plans that never worked out. People who were once so strong, who I looked up to, but who slammed themselves into the world and lost their way. People who I've hurt, and people who have hurt me. People who I have lost, and people I have gained. Love given and love taken; hearts mingled with excitement and soon after, bitterness.

Indeed, the wind is sweeter this year, more so than years previous. It smells of the beauty of remembered memories, the warm ones that are reflected in the eyes of every child. But the wind is hollow, too. It whispers the words of unheeded wisdom, it taunts at wrong decisions made, and strokes the heart where loneliness is, ever intensifying it.

Is this what growing up feels like?

Thursday, September 3, 2009

So Very Gone.

A drop of sweat trickled down his forehead, landing on his eyelashes just long enough to catch his eye by fracturing the sunlight in a thousand directions. He wiped it before it dripped further and burned his eye.
Exhaustion.
He had been walking for what seemed like hours, his heart pounding, every step resounding with resignation, yet echoing with fear. Flashbacks came frequently. His mother, when he was eight, reaching for the flyswatter intended for his rear end. The 8th graders who introduced him to his first swirlie. The high school sweetheart who intoxicated him, both in mind and body. The one who said she "respected his values" but slipped just enough into his drink to get him to sleep with her. The one who stole his virginity.
The father he never knew.
Neglect.
Even the little things haunted him. No, you can't have a dog. No, you can't go to school there. No, you can't afford a family. No, I can't, because we don't have any food to eat. No no no.
He stopped to tie the lace on his cement-encrusted work boots. "A steel toe," the shoe salesman had said. "Real cow leather. It'll never wear out." He admired the amount of holes he saw in the dirty brown boots, cynically chuckling at his own gullibility. Shouldn't have trusted that dirty mexican.
Distrust.
How much farther? He squinted his eyes towards the street sign ahead of him, allowing his eyes a few seconds to adjust to the distance. Damn, I'm getting old, he thought. Life is ironic. You're young just long enough to realize you're stupid, and you're old just in time to realize that you could have done it better. Like he could have.
Depression.
His face hardened, his eyes set, his lips slightly drawn into a thin line. He shifted the rope to his other shoulder, picking up a faster pace than he had set before. Not too much farther.
Just the thought of them made him boil. Her gentle curves, the giggle of his 2-year-old daughter, the pleading of his 6-year-old son. Dad, come play with me! That voice haunted him more than anything else.
But it wasn't his fault, was it?! SHE had left HIM. Her pathetic, weak excuse for it was a mere, "it's for the kids' sake". He snarled.
Bitterness.
More of her words flooded his mind.
"You really need to change."
"I can't do this! I need you're help with them! I need you to BE here!"
"Don't you love me?"
"OUCH! Sto--STOP!!! Don't TOUCH me, you bastard!!!! KIDS! Go back to your room! OU--"
That didn't even teach her to obey him. She left anyways. He couldn't control her, the b****.
Hatred.
She was his, wasn't she? The kids too. Both were his, and he couldn't control them. And even though he had beaten her into submission for a time, she had left. She stole his kids and left.
Greed.
He knew better. He really did. He shook his head, let out a wail of frustration, and placed his hand on a street pole for support.
He had apologized. He begged her to come back. She refused, and he didn't blame her. He was drunk, wild with rage. How could he have?
Regret.
And he was there. He looked over the edge at the cars below, each headed to their own destination, each busy with their happy little lives. The guy in the black BMW talking on his bluetooth. The soccer mom in the minivan, swatting at the kids in the back seat. The cab driver with the rosary on the rear-view window, eating a subway sandwich. He sighed.
Was anyone watching? Did anyone notice?
Did anyone care?
The road noise continued, just as before.
Cars passed over the bridge behind him, too, all caught up in their little worlds.
The cop with his dog. The freshman, on her way to college, her car packed with living essentials. The pimped Toyota Camry with a load of gang members in it.
Alone.
He loosed the rope from his shoulder, dropping it onto the sidewalk, observing the dust that swirled. Picking up one end, he began tying it, just like his friend taught him in boy scouts when he was thirteen. A few minutes later, it was secure.
A teenager passed by on a bike, a Wal-Mart bag secured to his handlebars. Giving him a cursory
glance, the teen passed by, his face blank and thoughtless.
Very Alone.
He thumbed the rope softly before removing his boots, hat, and plain white t-shirt. Hanes. He always thought Hanes was better. Fruit of the Loom just sounded...wrong.
Taking his bandana out of his back pocket, he wiped the sweat from his brow and into his shaggy sandy-brown hair, now specked with gray. Being old wasn't so bad, he thought. If he could, he'd give it another run. And this time, for its money, he chuckled, recalling the meager paycheck he made. He never could dig himself out of the debt he had gambled himself into as a teen. And as an adult, actually.

It was a perfect fit. Snug, yet firm. A breeze licked at the back of his neck as he climbed. A car behind him honked and stopped.
But they were too late. He inhaled, close his eyes, stretched out his hands, and allowed himself to fall. This world wasn't worth the fight.
Hopelessness.
Cars screeched. People screamed. Cell phones rang. A dog barked. Then sirens. People were given, orders and giving orders. Chaos. Tears. Ambulances and more cops.
But they were to late.









Gone.






































So Very Gone.







































"Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to His abundant mercy has begotten us again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God through faith for salvation ready to be revealed in the last time.
"In this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while, if need be, you have been grieved by various trials, that the genuineness of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perishes, though it is tested by fire, may be found to praise, honor, and glory at the revelation of Jesus Christ..."
1 Peter 1:3-7

"But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us." Romans 5:8

And they do not know...


Saturday, August 1, 2009

Habit

I wrote this because of a friend once. Inspiration... you never know where it will come from...

Habit
The darkness is dark, isn't it?

Restlessness usually is.

Hardworking men forget

what life is like

apart from grease

and grime

and dirt.

They lose time.

Clocks are nonexistent

but to track responsibility.

tasks. chores. burdens.

Can you feel it?

The hot air in your throat

moving backwards:

stifling, suffocating.

Life-sucking heat that

leaves you without hope.

Or will or motivation or life.

It presses down on you like

an iron with steam engaged.

Pretty soon, you are left with

no lines. wrinkles. individuality.

You are withdrawing.

Climbing far into yourself

but far from your heart

to ignore it.

If you can't see it, it's not there.

...Right?

So you find yourself in a pool

of emotionless.

stagnant. oppressive. Black.

The darkness is dark, isn't it?

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Parking Lot Romance

She had long brown hair. Unkempt, slightly wavy, thrown up in quick ponytail to lend more time to her daily duties, but most definitely long. She was pretty, with a tan, even skin tone, a skinny, toned body, and a delicately structured face which perfectly framed sharp blue eyes.
But she was haggard, he thought, as he watched her.
No kids in sight. No stress-causing husband, as her naked left hand loudly announced, and no nagging mother waiting with her at the front of the market. She was alone, and obviously exhausted.
He sat from a nearby Starbucks patio in the unbelievable heat and observed her. The slight dash of freckles splayed across her nose, her short and somewhat neglected fingernails, and the only piece of jewelry she wore: a cross necklace. Real white gold (if he had anything to say about it) with an inlayed diamond in the center. He wondered if she believed what she loudly and elegantly proclaimed around her neck.
Slurping the last drop of his iced soy latte, he wiped the sweat from his forehead and opened his Bible. But no matter how many times he asked for focus- for direction- his energy constantly redirected to the woman sitting on the curb across from him.
What was her story? She had an air of strength about her, as if she passed through fiery trials and survived... but only survived. As if she were still fighting the battles that her history thrust upon her.

Where did she come from?

Her slender fingers dipped into her canvas purse and emerged with a cigarette. She fingered it for a few minutes, staring at it intently, as if she could see death itself in the small white stick. Her eyebrows pursed and she bit her lower lip, ever so slightly, evidently deep in thought. He placed his Bible on the table in front of him, allowing his allotted Jesus-time for the day to slip away and leaned forward, readjusting so his back sat more comfortably on his slipped disk. Watching more intently than ever, he observed her eyes slowly close, her lips begin to move, her fingers fiddle with the cigarette. Two minutes must have passed. Three. Five. After what felt like a lifetime, her right hand abandoned the cigarette to her left hand and moved to her tan cheek, wiping away a tear. It then took another dive into her bag and retrieved the full box of cigarettes as well as the lighter. With great hesitation, her gaze drifted towards a nearby trash can. She stood, revealing the long, beautifully toned legs of a dancer, and walked nearer the garbage can. He stared, mentally noting the emotions that were passing through her face with rapid progression: fear, curiosity, anger, remorse, hopelessness, stubbornness, brokenness, confusion. She finally relented, tossing the cigarette and its companions into the trash can.
It was then that her tears flowed freely.
A simple scene, he thought. A smoker. Low-life trailer trash who spent too much time at the gym and the tanning booth, finally making a good decision for herself.
But was that really what it was?

She knew he was staring. She didn't care. He was just like the rest of them, she told herself. All of them. Judgmental, sizing her up and equating her with her mother's kind with disgust, or picturing her naked and at his mercy. Either way, she was used to it, and she ignored it. There were heavier things on her mind.
The Lord had been speaking to her, but not just in a "manner of speaking". She couldn't place how, but she could hear Him. Really hear Him. It wasn't an audible voice, however. There weren't any signs, no rushing winds, no booming thunder. Not even a small whisper. She couldn't place the source, or the why. Why He would speak to her.
No more cigarettes. No more midnight bottles to erase her memories. No more self-doubt, low self-worth, and no self-denial. She had a job to do, and God wasn't going to allow her to continue in the way she was in to get there.
She wanted to forget everything that she had done. She wanted to forget everything that was done to her. She wanted to forget.
And here God was, telling her that forgetting was the last thing He wanted her to do. Instead, He wanted her to talk about it. Talk about it to anyone and everyone who would listen.
Her scars, her nightmares, her ghosts and demons and skeletons and sins and pains drudged up for all to see, and criticize.
Really, Lord? Really?!?
So she sat, and she cried, and she murmured prayers, pleading that God would release her from this task. Images of Christ in the Garden of Gethsemane played through her mind, but she couldn't stop pleading with her Savior to spare her.
I can't bear it. Remembering the pain is reliving the moment, Lord! How can I talk about it when I can't even speak about it?

Be still, child.


He moved.
He couldn't sit there, and he knew it. The Spirit that resided within Him was compelling him forward. He didn't know what he was to do, but he knew he had to move.


A hand fell gently on her shoulder. She started, opening her eyes and filling them with the image of the man who had been staring at her from the other side of the parking lot. He sat down with her, not uttering a word. He just looked into her eyes. Reading, analyzing.... and showing compassion.
Innocently, he wrapped his arm around her shoulders and held tight as he began praying for her. Her sobs escalated in volume, but his voice was steady, a calm stream of words directed to their Lord. And she heard Him in his words.
"Moses said to the LORD, "O Lord, I have never been eloquent, neither in the past nor since you have spoken to your servant. I am slow of speech and tongue." The LORD said to him, "Who gave man his mouth? Who makes him deaf or mute? Who gives him sight or makes him blind? Is it not I, the LORD? Now go; I will help you speak and will teach you what to say.*" "

But Lord, she thought, please, please send someone else. I can't do it. I'm not strong enough.

"Then the Lord's anger burned against Moses and he said, "What about your brother, Aaron the Levite? I know he can speak well. He is already on his way to meet you, and his heart will be glad when he sees you. You shall speak to him and put words in his mouth; I will help both of you speak and will teach you what to do. He will speak to the people for you, and it will be as if he were your mouth and as if you were God to him.*" "

She buried her face into the stranger's neck, soaking his collar with her tears. Finishing his prayer, he suddenly realized why God had sent him to that particular Starbucks, in the Texas midday heat, onto the scorching patio.

"My name is Aaron," he said, gently.

"Brianne," she responded, sobbing.






*Exodus 4:13-16

Monday, June 8, 2009

Letter to a Falling Brother

Beloved Brother,

I can't put you from my mind, or my heart. Memories of a sweet childhood race through my head: moments of laughter, of learning, of play. Each of these memories grasps at my heart; where once they gave me great joy, they now feed the ever-growing ache.
You were a sweet child. A generosity that time and time again surprised and delighted me was always in you. Brother, there were many times where you would sacrifice your earnings and your treasures for the pleasure of another. The Bible was not the book you kept in your closet on the highest shelf, but the book you kept by your heart. You were wholesome, with every potential for greatness that any child of opportunity had, despite your home life which was so tragically lacking in stability. You showed every sign of an overcomer, a conquerer of circumstance that few have the strength to fulfill. Now, it seems you have fallen into the majority, the sin-ridden many who rely upon themselves for salvation.
Your focus is ever on yourself. There is a mask that emerges on occasion now; a facade, parading as the generous giver you were as a child, but I see past the mask. Self-gratification is always your aim. Strokes to your ego are your primary concern. The friends you choose satisfy your insecurities, your need to feel independent, and most dangerously, your flesh.
The world has posed, flaunting its goods to you, displaying its disguised, contemptible features to you. It has exposed the raunchy amusement it offers to those who seem not to mind sinking to its level. The world has bared herself to you. The tragedy in your heart, however, is that not only have you chosen to climb upon her and take at a slow pace, pausing to relish each taste of her, but you have chosen to see the simulation of beauty where there is, in truth, none. She is more corrupt than your small mind, that anyone's small mind, could begin to comprehend. Her interior crawls with such hideousness, such repugnancy, such sin, that it is revealed on her devilish exterior, the very body you so eagerly ravish. And you see it not.
I do not hesitate to assume that your Bible lies somewhere forgotten. Perhaps you see it, and perhaps, when you go to church, you take it with you. But it is forgotten. The personal relationship you had with Christ has faded into the dusty, shadowy places of your heart and mind, taking with it the goodness and sweetness and innocence of the child I remember.
Every good and righteous thing that your hardworking mother, my parents, and the Lord has fallen from your mind. You think not of the wisdom they passed to you, that they tried to instill in you to prevent your fall. You think not of the scriptures and their meanings, though you could recite a dozen or more from your photographic memory.
I know I know I know... I can hear you recite those words. The words of dismissal, of disregard, to anything that those who love you desperately attempt to convey to you. If you were to ever read this, my words would fall on closed ears and an unreceptive heart. A heart that is now held in the hands of an adulterous, perverse, satanic world, far from the hands of a loving God who would do anything to wrap His tender fingers around your bleeding heart and clutch it to His.

All I can do is watch. Watch and pray for you, beloved. Watch as you prostrate yourself to a world who will do nothing but deceive and rob you. A world who will strip you of every pleasure in the long run, leaving you naked and in the dark. I almost desire to pray for that moment to come immediately, so you may all the quicker see how dark her intentions are, and how trapped, how ridden with guilt and grief and pain you will be. It is in that moment, I hope and pray, that you will realize how the piercing light of the Lord is irreplaceable, especially by the darkness that satan brings, no matter how disguised it is.

Brother, I love you. Every step you take towards darkness is another quake inside my heart, widening the gap between you and I, taking those treasured childhood memories and quickly replacing them with an ever increasing, painful, ache. I fear for you, and while every fiber of my being fights to scream out to you, to shout, to madly tear into you in an attempt to make you see the path of destruction you are on, I know that I can't. My words would fall on dull ears, a dull heart, and no doubt cause an irreparable division between us. Brother, I love you, and though destruction is not my desire for your life, perhaps it is the only way for you to rediscover how sweet, how fulfilling, the Lord is. To rediscover how light and easy His yoke is compared to the one you are choosing now.

I will always love you, and though I can't stop you from walking the wide path you want, I will be here, doing my best to stay on the straight and narrow, awaiting your return.

Your sister,
Riley

Sunday, May 10, 2009

UCO TOUR- ENTRY 2

Day 2

Even though a plethora of my fellow choir members were so kind as to give me explicit details of the general format of homestead stays, I still didn’t know what to expect. Turns out it was just as my friends told me.

A lovely woman by the name of Raquel (ric-elle) Ewalt met Hannah Heinz and I in the sanctuary after the concert. She had dark hair, a black-brown color like fire-burnt wood, smooth skin that wasn’t quite pale but not quite tan. She was sweet-natured, the ideal hostess, ensuring that Hannah and I were well-fed and entertained. Upon arriving at her house, where we met her husband Kevin and children Jonah (5), Leah (3), Mical (2), and the newborn whose name escapes me, she introduced us to our room. Scantily decorated but comfortable, the room’s pale yellow walls welcomed us. A queen bed with minimal plllows gave us a place to set our things for a time. As if the room had the motto “don’t judge a book by its cover”, the mattress was quite cozy, much like the rest of the room. We moved into the kitchen while Kevin removed our suitcases from the trunk. All the while, Raquel conversed with us on multiple topics, making us more and more at ease. After a while, she set us up with her kids’ Wii, and I discovered the gloriousness of Mario Kart. That made me happy. J Soon afterward, Hannah and I checked our face books (our hosts were kind enough to offer their internet to us), where I posted my notes on Day 1. Then, we slept.

Back on the buses at 8:00 in the morning, after a pancake breakfast and a few sack lunches. The first of many turkey sandwiches, as I’m told. When we stopped for lunch at 12:15, I discovered a childhood memory that I had for too long forgotten. Inside my sack lunch, stapled shut, I found a note. It was simple- “Have a great tour! Love, the Ewalts”- but the many notes that my own mother had packed into my lunches as a child were resurfaced in my mind. Many “I love you’s” and “have a great day, honey’s” flooded my mind, and resulted in a huge smile on my face.

Thank you, Raquel.

And thank you, Mama. J

P.S. The scenery is getting better and better as we head North!!! Green trees, green fields, and haystacks. Who would have thunk we’d have such a thing in California?

It’s raining here in Redding, and everything is green outside. Becca Flint told me to be prepared for Washington, because it will most likely be raining the whole time we’re there. I’m excited! I love the rain! I’m just worried about the havoc it’s going to wreak on us ladies’ hair. Oh well… all we can do is the best we can do. Poufy, wavy hair isn’t the end of the world, right?....

Preparing for concert #2. Then, off to host home #2. Wonder what it’ll be like…

Okay, I know I’m only 3 days and 2 nights into tour, but this has GOT to be the coolest host family ever!!! Their names are Pat and…Cadesh?...whatever her name is, it’s polish. Oh just kidding- their last name is Polish. Her name is Pam.

As a reminder, I’m in Redding, CA currently, and it definitely has a country feel to it. Well, not a feel. It is country, compared to the Los Angeles suburbs I’ve lived in for the past 7 years.

I’ll tell you all about my stay here tomorrow.

Day 3

The hosts, Pat and Pam, must be in their 40’s or 50’s. The awesome part? The first room we walked into had a full band set-up in it. Drum set, full keyboard (with weighted keys!), microphones, amps, speakers... you name it. They are both in a band whose name escapes me currently- a SKA band. Awesome, right?

What struck me the most however, more so than the hosts’ hobby, was the home. There was no outstanding décor, no fine furniture, no new carpet or prettily-hung curtains. There were no paintings, or even framed posters for that matter. The living room and the kitchen were an arbitrary conglomerate of country knick-knacks, grandma-made doilies, candid family photos framed in simple wood, and shelves supporting a number of antique-store quality goods. Rugged greens and browns mingled homey-like with pinks, blues and reds. The walls were wood, the kitchen floor linoleum, and the worn carpet a sea-foam green. The band room was the only stand-out, with its wan yellow walls hung with band photos, a poster of Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra, and Bing Crosby, and a variety of brass instruments long past their prime.

The best part was the wood-burning stove. The main source of heat, it must have been the newest addition to the home given its make and model, certainly purchased within the past 5 years. The heat it contained radiated through the house, touching it not only with heat but with a welcome hug-like warmth. The smell…oh, the smell. A light, smoky fragrance, trailing with it the memories of oak, pine, and redwood, bringing fresh to my mind the vision of the Leona Valley house. The home I spent 8½ of my growing up years in, heated solely by 2 wood-burning stoves. Memories of my father teaching me to build a fire, drying snow-wet clothes, and warming my hands and feet by the black stoves filled my mind. Needless to say, I was bathed in not only a pleasing aroma, but pleasant memories that I had nearly and so tragically forgotten.

I felt as if I belonged there, as if I were in a dreamworld where my grandmother was a warm and motherly individual, or I had discovered a magical hideaway that a long-lost aunt owned. The house was bedded in pine trees wet with rain, rich green grass, rustic red bricks, and an overfilled fountain that served as a birdbath.

The hosts themselves, despite their ska edge, were just as warm, just as welcoming, and just as comforting as their home was. They greeted us with open arms, encouraging us to scour the kitchen for any need we had. “Don’t bother asking us for anything,” Pam said with a wink in her eye, “I’m a mom. Get it yourself.”

Leaving their home, strange as it may seem, was sad.

On the road. It’s 10:32 AM, and we’re somewhere above Mt. Shasta and Salem, Oregon. EVERYTHING around me is green, lush, covered in trees, whose tops are threaded with scattered patches of fog, as if an oversized spider weaved a delicate web in their tops. The hills turned into mountains, and sometimes, I catch the glimmer of snow on a distant mountaintop. There’s no civilization to be found, but who needs the civil when God’s wild earth radiates His glory like no skyscraper could?

Day 7

It’s been a while since I’ve last written. I came down with a really bad cold on the fourth day of tour and haven’t felt up to writing until now. Let’s see… a brief overview of the past few days:

Day 4: Woke up with a head cold. I slept almost the entire bus ride as a result of some medicine that my host home gave me. The host home was amazing! The parents, John and Jonette, were very hospitable and thankfully clean. They had 2 children: Carson and, believe it or not, a 12-year-old girl named Riley, who plays the trumpet! They are a very involved family, participating in everything from sports to music. Carson, the 14-year-old boy, reminded me of my brother Travis, with his heart of gold, his servanthood, and his mad skills in everything from electric work to woodworking to dropping a transmission.

I had to sit out of the concert that night in Spokane, WA. I was feverish, complete with weak-feeling muscles, red eyes, and cloudy thoughts. I’m thankful I did- I think it lent to a speedier recovery, of which I’m still in the process.

Day 5: I stayed the night at an adorable elderly couples’ home with Candice. Dick and Marilyn were their names. I explained to them that I had come down with a cold, and they were kind enough to give me my own room. I experienced some panic the following morning, however. The Nyquil I took the night before caused me to sleep through my alarm, causing me to wake up 45 minutes past my set time. If it weren’t for Candice, who gently woke me with the question, “Do you need to be up yet?”, I wouldn’t have been ready at all. Through my hurry to leave the house, however, I left my bottle of Castille soap, which served as my facewash and bodywash. (Bummer.) We went to Montana that day, which was breathtaking.

I thought that I understood what “purple mountain majesty” meant, but swiftly realized I was wrong when I viewed the Montana mountains. They were steep and dramatic, the deepest purple lining the base, capped in heavy white snow tinted by the spacious blue sky with lavender. Fields of thick, long grass, greener than anything I’ve ever seen, covered the rest of landscape that wasn’t mountainous. As we drove further into the state, clouds became darker and lower in altitude. An hour after we arrived at the church, it began to snow heavily, drawing gasps from our turquoise-clad women and drenching anyone caught outside for a brief few seconds, including the guys already dressed for the concert. This church is where I lost my hairbrush. Needless to say, I did a lot of borrowing from my roommates, especially that night.

My Montana host home was amazing. The house looked like a Lincoln-Log cabin, had 3 stories, and an AMAZING view of the mountains. It was placed in the middle of green pastures, somewhat removed and isolated from the minute town of Hamilton. The generous hosts, who took in 6 of us girls, consisted of Less and Holly, Courtney, John, and another girl I can’t remember. The breakfast they presented us with was generous- homemade bread, toasted; eggs cooked to order, bacon, English muffins, and orange juice. So far it holds the record for the best host breakfast yet! Us girls stayed in the basement and in the loft, 3 to a floor. The loft is where I stayed, normally the 2 daughters’ room. It was carpeted in maroon, and held a myriad of craft areas and a walk-in closet that held multiple costumes. Cute decorating idea: the bathroom door was 2 saloon-style doors. J

Day 6: Left Montana, and again, slept a lot on the bus. The terrain we passed by for the second time, through a mountain pass, was gorgeous, blanketed in glorious pines, snow-capped mountains, and an innumerable amount of rivers, streams, creeks, lakes, and waterfalls.

We arrived in Wenatchee, WA, where we sang at a Free Methodist church. I’m not sure how I feel about that. I can say that the host home that took me, and 5 other girls, wasn’t the best I’ve had, however, I can gladly report that I was well taken care of, fed well, and still had a great experience. Peter and Beverly Black hosted us, and the entire time they only talked about themselves and their families, no questions directed towards us. Disappointing, but nothing to complain about, and certainly tolerable.

Today, we are on our way to Seattle. We just stopped at a town called Levinworth, a quaint German-style tourist town tucked away in the Cascade Mountains. People walked around in German clothing, styled after yodelers and the like. Gingerbread lined the roofs of the buildings, and the shops were quaint and homey. A festival featuring local artists and a live band, playing music authentic to Germany, lined on of the streets. By the grace of God this adorable tourist trap had a pharmacy, where I was able to purchase a new hairbrush and facewash. I’m again a happy person. J

Now, we’re passing through the Cascade mountains, and the picture outside my window reflects God’s creativity much like the Montana landscape did. Pine trees, a rushing river inspiring me to white water raft again, open pastures and patches of snow pass me by from my home on the bus. I’m going to cease writing for now, not only to chat with my bus partner Jordyn Gonzales, but to admire God’s handiwork in the state of Washington. Seattle, here I come! J

Sunday, May 3, 2009

UCO TOUR- ENTRY 1

I'm going to post these as much as I can, so you all know what's going on with me while I'm traveling with the choir!

Day One

I took a personality quiz on facebook recently that read my personality based on what my eyes look like. Facebook told me that I’m a deep thinker. Funny, but those personality quizzes are oftentimes quite accurate, and while I have nothing better to do sitting on a bus for 8 hours a day, I figured I should document my boredom. Hopefully, I’ll be able to post these updates on a blog, should I gain internet access at some point in my travels.

It’s 10:19 AM currently. The bus, though packed with roughly 53 people, is silent. A few voices can be heard among the hum-drum rumbling that the bus engine produces, and the faint sound of music drifts to my ears from Jared’s iPod, sitting on my left. I’m in the back of the bus, right next to the (thankfully) empty restroom. It’s a good spot for now, with a pleasant view of all the passengers on the bus. I’m told that later my seat will reek of sewage. Speaking of which, we’re an hour on the road and I already have to pee. Shouldn’t have had that complete shake for breakfast…

I hope the clouds, a solid fog transforming the sky into a solemn grey, aren’t a foreboding warning of the adventures that lay ahead. I’m not sure how I feel about this two week tour yet. A mixture of emotions that I have only somewhat sorted out and placed into realization: excited to travel, to see new things, meet new people, and bond with the individuals I have been singing with all year and yet do not know. On the other hand, grieving the mere thought of spending the next two weeks of my life singing, travelling on a bus for 8 or more hours a day, and carrying a smile through it all.

My bus buddies, for now, are Jared Gibbs and Jordyn Gonzales. I enjoy them both so much: Jared, with his laid-back, fun-loving spirit, balanced nicely with a level head and an innate ability to read any social situation and proceed with causing the least amount of drama, and Jordyn, a woman I don’t know too well yet. From what I have gathered about her, however, she has a knack for seeking adventure, a depth of character, a heart for God, and beauty to top it off. I’m looking forward to knowing her better.

Jared is on set-up and tear-down crew, which, in a nutshell, means he’ll possibly be riding on the van for the bulk of the trip. That’ll leave Jordyn and I, however, another thing I’ve gathered from her is that she has many friends in UCO that she will probably want to sit with. I do not. This should be fun.

I’d like to dwell on Jared for a bit. I’ve had many thoughts towards the trials he’s been through, and the man he’s become because of them all. This may sound extremely strange and rather disturbing, but I love to watch him. He projects a simple personality, yet he’s wrapped in a complex past, tainted by complex struggles, and held together by a complex God. He can laugh, he can socialize, he can be lighthearted and playful, but past the fun and games is an enormous depth that can’t be hidden, at least not from me. Depth of perception, depth in knowledge, and depth in character. Just 2 years ago he was a wreck, living with a woman (who is currently a passenger of bus 1), working 2-3 jobs, and a jerk living to gratify himself. One of the most amazing aspects of Jared Gibbs is that he has so obviously allowed Christ to infiltrate and change him. To those who knew him before, “depth of character” would not be a likely attribute to be said of him, but he has changed. Even in the short amount of time that I have known him he has changed. He is humble, yet strong; careful, yet bold; sweet-natured, yet a fighter I would never want to tangle with. He lives life simply, but enjoys the positive complexities he observes and abstaining from the negative. The more I get to know him, the more respect and admiration I accumulate for him. In summary, despite a horrendous past that has scarred him for the rest of his life on earth, he has given his life to the Lord and is quickly and vastly becoming a man of God.

To the reader, it may sound like I posses some amount of romantic feeling towards him. Let me assure you that that is absolutely not the case. Respect and admiration are indeed a necessary attribute to a romantic relationship, however, respect and admiration aren’t only an attribute to romantic relationships. They are required in any functioning friendship, and even acquaintance-ship. In this case, it is simply a friendship that I am honored to have.

It’s now 10:58 and I still have to pee. The catch: I do NOT want to be the first person to use the restroom, especially since my goal is to make friends (through respect and admiration), not repel them via projecting an image of weakness and lack of self-control. Or something like that. On the other hand, I’m confident that at least ONE other person on this bus has to pee. Sigh…. Story of my life.

I’ll fill you in on the result of my dilemma if I decide to write later on.

P.S. I’m looking at Magic Mountain! Wish I were there instead of cramped on a bus- they have public restrooms!!!

Just stopped for lunch in Bakersfield (thank the Lord- I definitely took advantage of McDonald's restroom facilities!). I was sitting on the curb outside of McDonalds with the Babb girls and Michael Bragonier, eating our Provider lunches, when a leather-clad Harley rider struck up a conversation with us. She asked us who we were, what our business was. Hers was more interesting. She has wanted to ride for years, she told us. Wanted to ride and minister to people she met along the way. “The Lord has divine appointments for everyone. You just have to look to fulfill them,” she said. She rides to different prisons, speaking and singing for the Lord into their lives, looking for the divine appointments that Jesus has had set for her since before time. “Pray for Michael,” she said. “He’s a member of the Mexican mafia, really high up in the ranks. A Mexican mafia soldier who wants to be a soldier for Christ.”

Before she left, she encouraged us with a word.

“Ya know, the Lord will give you the desires of your heart, as it says in Psalms 37:4-59. Just ask Him and He’ll give you the desires of your heart. I’m a 62-year-old woman who’s wanted to ride for 40 years, and here I am. A month on the road and instead of going home, I’m going to visit Michael. Ask Him, and don’t stop dreaming.”

That was a divine appointment. I needed to hear that.

Doc mentioned something in the concert tonight that struck me deep, and nearly made me shed a tear or two. Maybe.

It has been a hard trial, not knowing what the Lord's will for my life is when it comes to school. What does He want me to do in the fall? Am I staying at CBU? Am I moving on? Where does He want me to serve Him?!?!

Doc was discussing how he has never applied for a job as a choir director or teacher, but how the Lord provided him with jobs, one by one, until he became a well-known and prolific choir director. He looked right at the choir and said, "Kids, struggle for the Lord's will, and you'll find it." That hit me hard. He's absolutely right: finding the Lord's will IS a struggle sometimes, but God promises that for those of us who seek, we will find. Thank you, Doc, and thank You, Jesus, for the reassurance, the comfort, and the trust that those words spoke into my heart tonight. I am taken care of by the Lord, which is ultimately all I need.

Goodnight, everyone. :-)