Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Christmas: loving God, loving the world, and the endgame is redemption

If there is any secret to this life I live, this is it: the sound of what cannot be seen sings within everything that can. And there is nothing more to it than that.
-Brian Andreas 
I take literally the statement in the Gospel of John that God loves the world. I believe that the world was created and approved by love, that it subsists, coheres, and endures by love, and that, insofar as it is redeemable, it can be redeemed only by love. I believe that divine love, incarnate and indwelling in the world, summons the world always toward wholeness, which ultimately is reconciliation and atonement with God.
-Wendell Berry


How strange it is to imagine that three years ago I was just about ready to step into a journey through the Middle East. That I did actually live for a month in Syria, that I walked in Bethlehem and Jerusalem.

Such heartbreak in this world. 

How grateful I am to think that God came to us as one of us. That God knows what it is like.


It is not a terrible thing to love the world, knowing that the world is always passing and irrecoverable, to be known only in loss. 
To love anything good, at any cost, is a bargain.
-Wendell Berry

Thursday, December 19, 2013

a christmas adventure


i'm making good progress on my list of things-to-do. by which i mean, i am getting so good at dc public transit!


the dwight d. eisenhower executive office building. quite impressive.


the national christmas treeeeee!


and some random model trains.

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

a progress report

I don't really remember what it was like to feel like I was actually learning a new language, jumping skill levels in leaps and bounds in piano, but I think if I could go back to being a little kid with the awareness of an adult, it would be a lot of fun. ;)

Monday, December 16, 2013

sometimes I think about what my conversations would sound like from the outside

and I just have to laugh.


a conversation about toxins

Lab member #1: You couldn't get rich selling toxins.
Lab member #2: But they're so expensive!
Lab member #3: It's too small of a market.
Lab member #1: Yeah, too small of a market.
Me: If anyone was listening in on this conversation, they'd probably think we're a bunch of incompetent assassins.


a conversation about American English:

Lab member #1: The thing I don't understand is plurals.
Lab member #2: You don't have them in Chinese, right?
Lab member #1: Yeah. English is weird. Like, if you have half of a hotdog, you say, "0.5 hotdogs." But it's less than one!
Lab member #3: ...huh, I guess that's right. So in Chinese you'd say -
Lab member #1: Two hotdog, three hotdog, 0.5 hotdog!


a conversation about American TV shows:

Lab member #1: Cat and Mouse! Cat and Mouse!
Lab member #4: [blank look]
Lab member #1: Ah, the TV show, with the cat and mouse. What's his name. Tom and - Jerry?
Lab member #2: Yeah, yeah.
Lab member #3: Are the Simpsons big in China?
Lab member #1: ...yeah, yeah I think. But not as much as Cat and Mouse. Ah, Tom and Jerry. But in China we say Cat and Mouse.


a conversation about Americans and their drugs

Lab member #1: Do most Americans smoke marijuana? Did you smoke marijuana?
Me: ...No?
Lab member #1: Really? [looks shocked]


a conversation about gmail chat:

The Housemate: I can see you.
Me: No you can’t, I’m invisible.  
The Housemate: Wait. I thought you could still see invisible people.
 Me: ...I'm very curious about how you did that. [sent a message to me while I was invisible]
The Housemate: I just know because I talk to J when we’re both invisible.


a generic, daily conversation:

Me: whoa, this news article says that a US district judge just wrote that the NSA’s surveillance program is likely unconstitutional.
The Housemate: I’m going to go stretch out my shrunken sweater in cold water. 
Me: ... okay?
The Housemate: What practical knowledge have you gleaned?
Me:... None.



another generic conversation:

The Housemate: Why are you writing that down? That isn’t funny, it’s practical.
Me: It's still funny.
The Housemate: Well. I decided that this year is my year of gaining practical skills, so if this works, I'll have gained the practical skill of stretching out a shrunken sweater.
Me: I thought you were going to say, 'Gain the practical skill of starring on someone else's blog.'

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

this is so exciting


^^ learning a new language



^^ still rough, but getting there :D
(the clicky sound in the background is my laptop, sorry)

snow and ice and fog, oh my!








Sunday, December 8, 2013

the first snow





 the housemate ran a 10K today in the snow. "you are intense," i said, and then i sat and waited in the car with a DFW book. i did make her a sign, though. (i'm not totally useless).



now it's time to do some christmas decorations around the apartment. :)

Saturday, December 7, 2013

you couldn't pay me to do it

at 5 pm on Friday I found myself calling the pastor of my church in Harrisonburg, volunteering myself to drive a stranded member of Early Church back home from DC.

in the rain.
in the dark.
late at night.

file this one under crazy, impulsive, irrational. 



"if you're sure, that would be a blessing to me, emily," he said, the static of a bad connection hissing in my ear.

i crouched in the hallway, scribbled a phone number down on a bit of graph paper. i'm crazy. "i'm sure."



i remember my dad telling me about working for habitat for humanity, one time; how he said "there are some things you couldn't pay me to do, but i'd do them for free."



what is it that takes hold of people and shakes them into this crazy, impulsive, irrational behavior?



...file this one under love.

Monday, December 2, 2013

why I write (an exercise in attention)

IV ii

in the middle of traffic at Church and Gerrard I notice someone, 
two women, for a moment unfamiliar, not crouched with me
in a hallway, for this moment unfamiliar, not cringing at the
grit of bombers, the whine of our breath in collapsing chests, in
the middle of traffic right there for a moment unfamiliar and
familiar, the light changing and as usual in the middle of almost
dying, yelling phone numbers and parting, feeling now, as the
light beckons, all the delicateness of pedestrians. I wish that I
was forgetful. All that day the streets felt painful and the
subways tender as eggshells.

-Dionne Brand


---

in the middle of traffic at Greentree and Old Georgetown I notice the 
two black women waiting for the crosswalk to start counting down,
20, 19, 18... I step confidently past them, I walk across the six lanes, 
the light is green; I have the right of way, the light is green and I step into 
traffic; I step out on to the dark macadam and the car turning right
honks, the driver leaning into the sound, and I keep walking. The solid thunk
of my books keeps thunking across the six lanes and the light is green.

I'm not who I was. I hold my head up. I stare into middle distance. My boots
thunk on the solid road.

all the delicateness of pedestrians. the last time a driver honked at me while
I had the right of way was while crossing a four-lane (five lane?) (six lane?)
road in Damascus. I do not wish that I was forgetful. 

And yet: all that day the streets felt painful and the subways tender as eggshells.


---

"And my personality is such that I'm more likely to just sit and try to figure it out. But I'm getting better at using M___ as a resource, I think."

He looks at me closely. Nods. "Constitutionally, I'm like that. Maybe it's a Mennonite thing. Take care of yourself, be self-sufficient. You know."

I can feel the corner of my mouth tipping up. Yes. I know.

"But you're still having fun," he asks, before sending me on my way to catch the bus. "You're still feeling like you're growing? Because that's high on my priority list."

I pace in the elevator, too alive to keep still.

---

I close Dionne's book, holding my place with my index finger, think of what else I've read on this bus route. Fahrenheit 451 is the first thing that comes to mind.
Everyone must leave something behind when he dies, my grandfather said. A child or a book or a painting or a house or a wall built or a pair of shoes made. Or a garden planted. Something your hand touched some way so your soul has somewhere to go when you die, and when people look at that tree or that flower you planted, you're there. 
It doesn't matter what you do, he said, so long as you change something from the way it was before you touched it into something that's like you after you take your hands away. The difference between the man who just cuts lawns and a real gardener is in the touching, he said. The lawn-cutter might just as well not have been there at all; the gardener will be there a lifetime.
The man next to me gets off at Rolston Road. I think of Jacqueline Berger's poem The Failure of Language, think "there are no right words," ask myself "...or does it only deepen what we know of loss?" 

I get off the bus at my stop. Marywood Road. I start trudging up the hill. It is dark; I think of the little red cabin in Pennsylvania that my grandparents took us to when I was small. I think of the streetlights on South Fulton Street. I think of walking late at night on the roads west of EMU.

I think, as I walk, of Jacqueline Berger writing about her friend's kitchen; I don't have the whole poem memorized but I know the line about the glass, the etched walls, "and add it to a box marked Kitchen."

That line is the whole poem, I told Thia once. The weight of it, the amber against the glass, all of it wrapped in words (newspaper) and reduced to a brown, nondescript box... the poem was trying to rescue rescue her friend from her radiant perishing, was trying to see and love what was vanishing, and the language was important. The language was so important, was the thing that could keep a life from disappearing into a small brown box.

---

I estimate that since January 1 of this year, I have written very nearly 100,000 words. They have taken the form of academic essay, poetry, blogging, journal entries, and attempts at fiction.

Oh, and letters. Maybe - maybe add a few thousand more words to that tally.

---

I just want someone to hear what I have to say. And maybe if I talk long enough it'll make sense.

-Ray Bradbury

---

Last week I was looking through an old journal in search of something and stumbled across this instead: 

...and also him telling me that he had heard i can 'read a book and know it.' 

They make good companions, books do. They are worth carrying around in your head, worth the mental space.

---

It's not books you need, it's some of the things that once were in books. The same things could be in the 'parlor families' today. The same infinite detail and awareness could be projected through the radios, and televisors, but are not. No,no it's not books at all you're looking for! Take it where you can find it, in old phonograph records, old motion pictures, and in old friends; look for it in nature and look for it in yourself. Books were only one type or receptacle where we stored a lot of things we were afraid we might forget. There is nothing magical in them at all. The magic is only in what books say, how they stitched the patches of the universe together into one garment for us.

-Ray Bradbury
---

There are no right words, if by right we mean perfect. But there are good words, and words worth remembering. 

As I walked up the dark sidewalk to the door of my apartment, I had a line of a poem knocking around in my head - "I am not done with my changes." 

I couldn't remember where it was from, and so I looked it up. Oh, yes. the layers by Stanley Kunitz. how shall the heart be reconciled to its feast of losses? 

yet I turn, I turn...
with my will intact to go
wherever I need to go...

I think again of my conversation with K___. "You're happy?" he asked me. "You're growing?" 

I think of Lancaster, of Harrisonburg.

Some losses. Some gains. 

Maybe I am finally learning how to love the place I am in.

---

In this language I have sought, during those years and the years since then, to write poems: so as to speak, to orient myself, to find out where I was and where I was meant to go, to sketch out reality for myself.

…A poem, as a manifestation of language and thus essentially dialogue, can be a message in a bottle, sent out in the—not always greatly hopeful—belief that somewhere and sometime it could wash up on land, on heartland perhaps. Poems in this sense too are underway: they are making toward something.

Toward what? Toward something standing open, occupiable, perhaps toward an addressable Thou, toward an addressable reality.

Such realities, I think, are at stake in a poem.

-Paul Celan

Saturday, November 30, 2013

thanksgiving poems

thanks
     by w.s. merwin

Listen
with the night falling we are saying thank you
we are stopping on the bridges to bow for the railings
we are running out of the glass rooms
with our mouths full of food to look at the sky
and say thank you
we are standing by the water looking out
in different directions.

back from a series of hospitals back from a mugging
after funerals we are saying thank you
after the news of the dead
whether or not we knew them we are saying thank you
looking up from tables we are saying thank you
in a culture up to its chin in shame
living in the stench it has chosen we are saying thank you

over telephones we are saying thank you
in doorways and in the backs of cars and in elevators
remembering wars and the police at the back door
and the beatings on stairs we are saying thank you
in the banks that use us we are saying thank you
with the crooks in office with the rich and fashionable
unchanged we go on saying thank you thank you

with the animals dying around us
our lost feelings we are saying thank you
with the forests falling faster than the minutes
of our lives we are saying thank you
with the words going out like cells of a brain
with the cities growing over us like the earth
we are saying thank you faster and faster
with nobody listening we are saying thank you
we are saying thank you and waving
dark though it is



from a window
     by christian wiman

Incurable and unbelieving
In any truth but the truth of grieving,

I saw a tree inside a tree
Rise kaleidoscopically

As if the leaves had livelier ghosts.
I pressed my face as close

To the pane as I could get
To watch that fitful, fluent spirit

That seemed a single being undefined
Or countless beings of one mind

Haul its strange cohesion
Beyond the limits of my vision

Over the house heavenwards.
Of course I knew those leaves were birds.

Of course that old tree stood
Exactly as it had and would

(But why should it seem fuller now?)
And though a man’s mind might endow

Even a tree with some excess
Of life to which a man seems witness,

That life is not the life of men.
And that is where the joy came in.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

a sort of fall-cleaning

I spent an hour today organizing the bookmarks folder on my laptop. A smattering of what I re-discovered:

on fitzgerald
a beautiful blog
raymond carver
on missions
a feminist analysis of rand paul
exposing sexism
gluten-free chocolate cake
syrian civil war reaches maaloula
congress is actually getting dumber
why we should support basic science research
on arguing
the case against high school sports
kim jong-il's sushi chef
a nuanced view of GM food
on systemic evil
on mountain top removal
on racism
why I love wendell berry
DFW breaks my heart
I had this guy as a professor
NSA pickup lines
how to create a letter postage scale
llama font
how a sewing machine works
the frog that didn't quite make it into space


The Housemate & I were talking recently about missing our Friday Night Dinner conversations from the past two years. That dinner group lead to so many interesting thoughts and conversations. But I said something about how my internal life has still been feeling really interesting to me, recently...I think it is possible to cultivate interesting thoughts just by being curious in all kinds of things. Like, for instance, the above links.

Saturday, November 16, 2013

reading back through my blog is fun

I've been going back through my blog to add tags to my posts and I came across this, which was just sort of sitting there as a draft. I don't know why I never published it.

Mennonite Writer's Conference: draft 3/31/12 
This weekend I was able to attend 'Mennonite/s Writing VI: Solos and Harmonies,' a writing conference hosted at EMU. It was an amazing experience. 
Throughout the weekend there were all sorts of presentations, panel discussions, poetry readings, singings, and book signings. I have a ton of new and exciting thoughts in my head... 
One of the most interesting things for me was attending the banquet this evening. Not very many EMU students were in attendance (the table I was sitting at held most of us); the rest of the people at the banquet were professors from Bluffton, Bethel, Goshen, Conrad Grebel; retired professors; people associated with Mennonite Media; editors of things like The Mennonite; authors of poetry, novels and nonfiction. 
I have to admit that I didn't know all that many of the writers that were present this weekend, the exceptions being Rudy Wiebe, Jeff Gundy, and Julia Spicher Kasdorf. I learned quickly, though: about writers of my grandparents' generation, and my parents' generation, and the atmosphere of things now in the world of Mennonite publishing - the way things will be for my generation. 
At the banquet, 4 writers were honored, two men and two women, interspersed with discussion about Rudy Wiebe's first novel, Peace Will Destroy Many. It was absolutely fascinating for me to hear and think about the community that these authors lived in; the things they have spent their lives pushing back against. 
All of the authors honored were older Mennonites, and every single piece of writing talked about was published after Wiebe's Peace Will Destroy Many - which is a novel that created quite the controversy, if you aren't aware. His novel is about a Canadian Mennonite community and their struggle in how to think about conscientious objection to war as well as moral issues and communication within their church. The book changed a lot of things for Mennonite writers; here is a great resource by Wiebe about the reaction of the Mennonite church to his novel.

Actually, I think the reason I didn't publish it to my blog was that I wanted to write something more, about how the weekend felt rather than what I learned. It felt beautiful and hopeful to me, so many artists gathered from this faith tradition that I belong to, this faith tradition that has such a tenuous and anxious relationship to art. And the women - ah, I wish I had tried to finish writing this last year, because now I don't remember it as clearly as I'd like to. But the best thing, maybe, was this one older women - in her eighties, maybe? - who was recognized at the banquet. I believe she might have been the first Mennonite woman to have a book of fiction published? Maybe not, but anyway, she was given a microphone and rambled on and on about people she remembered, about what church was like for her as a child, about growing up and gaining a voice.

And also all the connections shimmering just under the surface of things; that was maybe the other best thing. Like my great-uncle's brother introducing Omar Eby, and like eavesdropping on Jeff Gundy, who somehow has a connection to a different great-uncle, and like hearing all the things about Rudy Wiebe, who I first heard about from my uncle who is the pastor of a church in Lancaster (where I first met Julia Kasdorf.)

And, you know, that sort of paragraph, right there? Is one of my favorite things about Mennonites.

i'm not exactly sure why,

but this story keeps going through my head and making me grin, so I thought I'd share it.

When I was in Hburg for the pre-Thanksgiving Thanksgiving, we played a game of fishbowl. In the 'taboo' round, where you have to get people to guess the word by describing it, whoever's turn it was said, "That thing Emily is afraid of."

And instantaneously, there were three things shouted out:

"Crumbs!"

"Spiders!"

"Car crashes!"

My friends know me so well. :)



In other news, I am:

learning fingerpicking
teaching myself the tab for 'Frail' by jars of clay
reading a lot of poetry
making tiny bits of progress at work
(interspersed with repair work at work - I'm getting quite handy with a screwdriver)

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

there was an owl on my porch this morning,

perching on the handrail to the deck. Its face was turned away, and after a moment it turned to look at me with wide dark eyes, then lifted its wings and flew away.

It's going to be a good day.

Monday, November 11, 2013

this explains my life so well

I live in a super zip, and it means my life is so, so strange, and you should read this article.


some interesting quotes:


“It’s a megalopolis of eggheads,” said William H. Frey, a demographer with the Brookings Institution.


Life surrounded by affluence can also breed worries that might seem absurd to people who do not live in Super Zips — such as whether to hire a professional tennis coach to help a child make the school team, or get an iPhone for a child in elementary school.


When Kulp travels outside the region, he says he realizes that people he meets don’t talk much about things such as foreign policy and countering nuclear terrorism, as he does at home with other people with advanced degrees. Instead, he said, “people elsewhere talk more about what they see every day.”

“They mention ‘those people in Washington,’ ” he said, echoing a common feeling that the words are perjoratively pinned on everyone who lives in the region, not just its politicians and bureaucrats.

Saturday, November 9, 2013

it never ceases to amaze me

how much better I feel about life after I clean up my living space.

dishes. two loads of laundry. cleaned the bathroom. swept the floor. (the amount of hair that I shed each week never ceases to repulse me). clean sheets, folded the laundry. made real food for supper.

now it's writing time, I think! hooray. 

and maybe time to listen to the third period of the Blackhawks game online. which, here's my thought process for which NHL team I should be a fan of: I'm from southeastern pennsylvania, but let's be real, no one likes philly. my dad is on record as saying, "can't we just give Philly to New Jersey?" (which did make me think of Infinite Jest, yes, and the near-future dystopian US government forcibly handing over part of New England to Canada. but I digress). aaanyway. Philly teams generally are terrible and/or heart-breaky [although I admit, I've been stockholmed into caring about the Eagles - it's nearly impossible to escape WSMC unscathed in that regard, haha] and the Flyers seem to be no exception. I started watching hockey games during the playoffs last year when the Blackhawks won the Stanley Cup, and they have this guy, not to mention the best PR people ever. (Yes, I clearly have too much time on my hands right now). So I think I'm just going to call myself a Blackhawks fan, and continue to amuse and befuddle my friends who still can't figure out why I care about hockey at all.

***

Some pictures from my walk in the McCrillis gardens today:







Thursday, November 7, 2013

i need a more catchy phrase for 'petty grievances'

since graduation in April, classmates of mine have dealt with:

moving to a different continent and eating cow lung (as a vegetarian)
beginning work as a first-year teacher and having their house egged by a student
beginning work as a first-year teacher and having (high school) students who can barely read
not being able to find work
having manipulative bosses
long-distance relationships


my complaint today sounds really dumb in comparison, but here goes:

I'm kinda sad about how I can't complain about work to anyone but The Housemate. Not because I don't have great family & friends who listen to me talk about anything (even when I'm whining), but because no one will understand what I'm saying. 

Fluid dynamics is screwing up my life, you guys. AHHHH. I just about had a meltdown today at 4:00 pm when I realized the stupid suction tube on my setup was positioned wrong and was destroying my gigaohm seals. I was like, "Argh! That explains everything about this day and why nothing is working!!!" 

The Housemate happened to walk into my little closet right then and she looked at the computer screen and said, "Um, what's going on there?!" 

And I said, "I just figured out something terrible. The suction tube is sucking my cells off the pipette!"

And she said, "You didn't notice?"

On the one hand: yay, you know why I'm upset! On the other: Nope. That's why I feel dumb.


Then I realized that even if I wanted to, I couldn't call anyone and complain to them because the whole exchange would be utterly incomprehensible. 

Basically, my life is ruled by the flow of saltwater, which is surprisingly tricky to control. Between the RSC and the suction tube...woe is me. :/


On the bright side, a little retail therapy:


Buying boots felt a little like an entrance into adulthood. (Read: a paying job. Hah.)

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

i'm feeling witty

and hopeful. got an email today about an NIH book club from a post-bac in the NIMH. I responded! maybe I will make a friend! haha.


why witty, you ask? well, the email was funny [Are you a closeted reader? Do you cringe when people ask you what you did Saturday night because you realize you huddled in a blue polyester beanbag in the corner of your apartment next to the only good reading lamp and pored over Aurelius's Meditations (or some similarly nerdy book) and have to explain this fact in a way that doesn't seem pathetic (WHICH IT ISN'T!)?] and said something about a character from Infinite Jest, and when I replied, I changed the subject line to 'you had me at Hal Incandenza.'

what can I say. it's the little things. 

Thursday, October 31, 2013

some pictures of my life

butternut squash for a pre-thanksgiving thanksgiving party
 mmmm
but a surprising amount of work (ow, my sore hands)


recent-ish pictures of the trees near my apartment (they are a bit more fall-colored now)


I need to figure out what this kind is, it's my favorite. well, favorite after silver maples and willows and american sycamores and whatever the tree is on discipleship hill that I used to write in. and maybe dogwoods in spring.
the Halloween event in D.C. that The Housemate and I went to on Tuesday. (we observed the festivities from on top of a dumpster).