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Monday, March 10, 2008

A Hair-Made Unfair Trade

So this is what happened:

I wasn’t paying attention at the moment I needed to brake. Strands of hair fell across my face and danced for my attention. Anguish! No, I would not split my hair! I tucked the strands behind my ear—one small victory. A split-second later, my eyes darted to the left in horror as another car was about to slam into me at the intersection.

 

I hit the brake and jerked the steering wheel with all my might. I just missed hitting his car, but I was not as fortunate. I smashed into a post. My head hit something hard. My initial thought: “I’m still thinking. I’m still alive.” And the second thought: “I finally got into an accident because of my hair. Lord, I wish I were dead!”

 

I pulled myself out, with only a few bruises and a thrashing headache. When I saw the mangled mess of my car from outside, I was stunned that I’d been spared.

 

Being a two-way stop, the crash was fully the result of my trespass. I knew what lay ahead: over-worried family, cold doctor hands, crappy lesson plans, mountains of paperwork, valleys of debt, and malicious teasing from my male friends.

 

The car I almost hit was very pretty. (I know nothing about cars.) It was a black Mercedes-Benz and it was pretty new with pretty headlights.

 

The Benz owner speedily approached me. I dreaded a tirade. All I wanted was for him to not be mad at me. As he walked closer, I began pleading on and on, “Are you okay? Are you hurt? I’m so very sorry. I’m so sorry.” 

 

When he was standing directly in front of me, his hands grabbed my shoulders. He looked me over with what seemed to be the deepest concern. As if he didn’t hear my rambling apologies, he asked, “Where are you hurt?”

 

I replied, “I’m fine. I’m fine,” and kept on with the apologetic pleas.

 

He persisted. “Tell me if anything hurts.”

 

“I know I’m shaking but it’s just the shock. Only my head hurts a little. I really think I’ll be fine.”

 

We were at a quiet intersection in the farm roads of rural Champaign where there is no cell phone service. He led me to his car. “You need to have a seat.”

 

I sat in his new Mercedes-Benz, trying to slow down my heart while spewing silent prayers. Even though it wasn’t a cold day, he turned the heat high. The leather chair beneath me toasted up.

 

He shared about his profession and his lovely baby daughters; all this to help put my thoughts at ease. My shaking subsided eventually. 

 

"How are you feeling now?” Again, I was touched by the sincere care of his whole presence.

 

“Much better, thank you. My head’s not pounding as much. I think I’ll be okay really.” I smiled at him to prove my point.

 

We got out of his car to examine mine. At the sight of the mess, my insides mangled alongside the wreck of rubbish. How am I still alive? Thank you for protecting me.

 

“So you’re okay?”

 

“Yes sir. I’m really fortunate. It’s a miracle, thank God.”

 

Then this is where the absurd happened. He put his hand into the pocket of his sports jacket. I thought he was fishing around for his phone, but instead he pulled out his car keys.

 

“Here. You take these.” He held out his hand and dropped the keys into mine.

 

“What do you mean? Why?”

 

Gesturing to his car, he replied, “It’s yours. I don’t need it. And you can’t drive around in your car anymore.”

 

“Wait… I’m sorry?”

 

“You can have my car. To keep. It’s yours. I’ll just take the money you can salvage from your car.”

 

All sorts of thoughts were tumbling in my mind. “I’m sorry, sir. That doesn’t make any sense to me.”

 

“I want you to have my car. I know it’s not a fair trade but I’m not concerned about that.”

 

“I don’t understand what you’re trying to do—” The shape of the keys dug into my palm.

 

“I just want you to have it. And we’ll tell them that this accident was all my fault.”

 

There was no arguing with him. He asked me to drive his car back to Champaign to get help immediately. He would stay with the remains of my car which was now his: worthlessness. I drove away dumbfounded in what was now mine: a prize so unfairly traded.

 

Doesn’t make any sense to you either, right? It's absolutely absurd. How much more confounding is the grace of God. I don’t get it until I truly trust in the one who handed over the key—that he can do whatever he wants and yet is so infinitely good he wants me to have it.


Note: only an allegory that doesn't do justice to GRACE!

 

 


Wednesday, October 31, 2007

A short story inspired by a Halloween incident. Post dedicated to Sharona!

 

Seeing the Hallowed on Halloween

 

On October 31, 2005, I met the devil and she smiled at me.

 

Earlier that night, I was asked to accompany friends in Halloween debauchery. At that time, the breakup and its personal consequences were still a fresh mess. But my idea of escapism did not involve dressing up like an angel-whore. With the gas tank three-quarters full, I turned the ignition key. As if I had invoked an incantation, my Camry leapt and came alive. I pulled my little monster out of the parking spot for what was to become the longest joyride of my life.

 

I discovered during my freshman year that I could find clarity by going on long drives alone. As I drove across campus that night, I was transported into a world of slutty nurses escorted by pirates and giant bananas. I pressed harder on the gas pedal and turned up the melancholy concert blasting in the car.

 

When I hit Windsor Road, I turned left to travel east. I decided to take my regular route several miles down Windsor, channeling myself into yet another world: the expansive Midwest cornfields. Past Philo Road the farms begin and never end, stretching on into infinity. In those fields, the paths are narrow, the cars very far between, and the globes in the sky sparkle. As I passed the threshold and the tall corn started to loom ahead of me, I couldn’t ignore the feeling that the stalks were spookier tonight as they had never been before. 

 

In a split second of apprehension, I contemplated turning back. But the other world behind me had nothing to offer either, no comfort and certainly no love. At least the darkened acres were not laced with reminders of broken promises.

 

I drove further away from the lighted city. My anxieties passed. I fell back into the wisps of music and drowned myself in thought. I let unknown forces guide my car, like the planchette of an Ouija board allows the spirits to possess it. At one point there was a sharp bend in the road, a spot I had encountered before on my previous drives. But on this night, the bend had been malevolent because lying in the road was the corpse of a large deer.

 

Where did the life inside go? Do people have souls? Is the soul the thing that makes us crave? Makes us desire love even though it leads to abuse? Where’s the soul escape to when we become lifeless corpses?

 

I drove past a graveyard. Feeling a sense of obligation to observe Halloween, I made a three point turn and drove onto the dirt path which ran through it. It the deepest shade of dark that night. Even directly outside my side windows, I saw only a blanket of black which clouded the evil spirits from my vision. I had trespassed on this night when ghouls are awakened and come forth to haunt. In a burst of fright, I felt around my car door and clicked the locks shut. I speedily put my car in reverse to back out.

 

Back on the main road, the green colon of the digital clock blinked in time with my racing heart. An hour had passed since I began my trip. I decided to head back, meandering another hour through the mazes of corn and thoughts until I arrived home in Champaign.

 

Forty-five minutes later, I expected to see familiar landmarks or at least the hazy glow of lighted civilization. But I didn’t. After an hour, I should have been back in Champaign, but it was as if the city had fallen off the map.

 

I turned the music down. The only light I saw was the faint glimmer of a porch lamp every few acres. The last time I had seen a car was hours ago. I had been utterly alone for a long time. But a chill raced through me as I had a subtle awareness of never actually having been alone. I looked in my rearview mirror and to my horror, I saw the corn stalking me in an aura of red light. The tall reeds chased me, never diminishing in my mirror, even as I sped off.

 

In frenzy I tried retracing my driving path, trying to find that bend in the road again. And I did. I found a bend, but the deer carcass had mysteriously disappeared. And so had the house which should have been near that bend. I turned the music off. I could taste panic in my dry mouth.

 

The orange needle informed me that I had mere miles left of gas. I had not even an inclination of which direction Champaign was in. My internal compass was spinning wildly, trying to gravitate toward true north.

 

In a splinter of hope, I reached for my phone and called my most reliable friend. As she waited for Yahoo Maps to load, I passed by an intersection that had a street sign. The ray of hope beamed brighter as I drove right underneath the post to read, “1900.” I asked her to search 1900th Road. After the sounds of typing, there was only silence.

 

“That’s not a real location.” My stomach dropped.

 

“WHERE AM I?”

 

“I don’t know, but I can stay with you on the phone if that helps.”

 

“I have some gas left. I’ll call again if I really need.”  My stupid voice of stupid self-reliance.

 

I drove deeper into oblivion and the orange needle kept dropping as the gas vaporized. All of a sudden, I again felt that eerie sensation of not being alone. I let out a small cry and stepped on the pedal harder to drive away from my demons.

 

Finally I burst out, “God! Help!” I rambled a prayer about having nothing to trust… no more ability… utterly lost! I had no bearings as to which way was right, which way was wrong, but I knew there was one way to get home.

 

A revelation formed in my mind: being directionally lost was a shadow of how far gone I was in essence. I was running nearly on empty, feeding off others’ approval. I brushed on glitz and glamour for my attractive costume that disguised the scarlet A underneath. I pranced around with my nose stuck up, believing I did it on my own. But now I was the attention-whore lying in deserted streets in need of someone to guide her home.

 

For the first time, I held onto faith like it was candy in my hand, like it was tangible. I couldn’t—and didn’t have to—trust anything more than the goodness of divine assistance. I felt light,but not empty. About ten minutes later, I saw the halo of a road sign which read, “HOMER,” with an arrow pointing left. I turned left. On the eleventh hour of Halloween I drove into a ghost town. All doors were shut and house lights turned off. Without directions I still had no way to get home.

 

Then in the distance, I saw a single neon light which cast a glow into my car. It was a gas station sign and it was open! I laughed and praised God and Halleluiahed! He helped me find my way! While praying and thanking the Lord, I stepped inside to ask for help. Behind the counter, the lady happily informed me that Champaign was only twenty miles away and that the highway was nearby.

 

I learned two things that night. First, God is my willing helper in every kind of lostness, if only I ask in dependence. And second, He has an amazing grasp of irony which knows how to make me laugh. When I had asked for directions, God provided the lovely woman dressed in red with matching luscious lipstick. The answer to my prayers was none other than Satan himself. Funny, God.


Saturday, July 28, 2007

Sour Sdey! Greetings from Kampuchea!

I've lived in Siem Reap Cambodia for 5 weeks. Besides the random happenings of, say, a girl on our team getting struck by lightning at the world's largest religious structure, or my roomie getting Dengue Fever, life is normal and ordinary in its own ways here. But boy, IS IT HOOOOOTTTT. I had no idea that you can sweat out of so many places. Surprisingly, I've only eaten ice cream once a week on average. Shocking, I know! I miss those Coldstone runs, my lovely ladies.

I like it here mostly because of the Cambodians. They have so many stories to tell--some heart-warming, some that are so sad. I realized last week I had never met a Khmer person until this trip.

I'm safe and enjoying my time, but I miss home. I'm looking forward to seeing everyone again but not quite ready to return yet. Especially with the news about James A., it was a rough reminder that the heart of life is in relationships. May these last weeks open my eyes to what's good and true.


 

Look! All my dreams!! A picture with a monkey! He's hiding behind the leaf!! Apparently, wild monkeys are not as nice as they are cute.

My love to everyone. I miss you all! No need to comment on my tan when I return. The Cambos tell me all the time how much I look like them!



Friday, August 18, 2006

A coffeehaus reading. 2 shorties and a PostSecret that was actually quite frightening to create. Open mic! Pass it on.

You Choo-Choo-Choose Truth?

In the icebreaker Two Truths and a Lie, a person interjects one false statement for every two truthful statement he or she makes.

A girl, let’s call her J, finds great amusement in this game. Sometimes she even speaks randomly in sets of three—1 lie : 2 truths. For instance, J (okay, actually just me) may say in an everyday conversation, “My first tooth didn’t fall out until I was ten. I had a rich ‘tooth fairy’ who always gave me at least $1 for every tooth. And I always got myself Laffy Taffy after every lost tooth.” Can you pick out the lie?

To discern well, bear in mind certain facts about the truth. The truth is not relative. All statements cannot be true, which sometimes is obvious. But often the statements do not seem mutually exclusive. One of the biggest mistakes is to assume that all the assertions could be true. They’re not! The presence of truth requires the presence of a lie, which by its very name and nature cannot also be true. Also, the truth is not contingent on the lie. In fact, the truth is not contingent on anything. The truth exists as truth, standing on its own despite the reality of falsehood. The truth is absolute.

 Or is it?

Yes it is.

Yes, of course it is.

No, not necessarily.


Wail Talk

One day a group of orcas held a discussion. It began when a scholarly whale declared, “If God exists, he cannot be simultaneously all powerful and all good.” The group asked him to explain.

            He continued, “The world is utterly flawed. If God is all powerful, how can creation be so blemished? Even if we assume he’s all powerful and he simply allows imperfection, how then can he be all good? Either God is all powerful but not all good, or all good but not all powerful, or he is neither. He cannot be both.”

            The religious orcas scolded him for his blind blasphemy. They recited to him God’s decree for them to believe in his omnipotence and benevolence. And so they must believe.

            But the great killer whale responded, “It is you who are blind, you who don’t question. You’ve swum thousands of miles yet can’t see the reality. The most innocent creatures get ensnared in death nets. Brother turns against brother when survival is threatened. Men mercilessly kill to the brink of extinction for pleasure and sport. Or even worse, they capture and enforce an atrocious enslavement. The seas are crimson with the spilt blood from their hands. If there is a god, either he heartlessly permits such cruelty or he cannot control it.”

            The orcas did not know how to respond. The killer whale challenged them, “Where is the evidence of omnipotence and benevolence? How can God allow such perversity and still be all powerful and all good?”

            One child orca chimed in, “But see! God also gave us Free Willy.”


Please Don't Judge: My PostSecret It :[


You Choo-Choo-Choose Truth? Part II

 If you were to ask J which two of her statements are true, she would reply with the following:

“My first tooth didn’t fall out until I was ten,” is true.

“My first tooth didn’t fall out until I was ten,” is false. 

 “I had a rich ‘tooth fairy’ who gave me at least $1 for every tooth," is false.

  Is the truth absolute?





Wednesday, March 15, 2006

In my Animal Science class we're learning about the mating behavior of various species. Here are some interesting habits of common animals. Can you figure them out, monos?

a) The female eats the male while mating. The male organs continue to function even as he loses his head and even when there is almost nothing left of him.

a) Mates are very loyal to each other. They are monogamous and typically mate for life. They are extremely loving to each other and spend time cuddling. When the female is pregant, the male is very supportive. Females are treated as equals.

c) Females live in self-sufficient groups consisting of mothers, sisters, etc. Males are redundant and called on only for purposes of reproduction.

**answers on bottom

I cooked last weekend. I miss cooking. I can't wait to be a mom.


Mini-muffins with Josie and Grace!



Sushi a la Frances y Debbie, culinary and compliment master.

This spring break I'm gonna learn how to cook:


and


and

 

Ever find an old school song and go crazy cuz you haven't heard it forever but still remember the words? Now I understand my daddy's reaction when infomercials for the Best of the 70's CD Collection comes on TV. Aiyah! You're a geezer if you remember this playing on the radio too. From at least 10 yrs ago...

        The Kry....Take My Hand

"Just like a child holding Daddy's hand, don't let go of mine. You know you can't stand on your own."

Timeless. Applied when we were 9 years old, applies at 19, and will apply when we're 109, God willing. For those who feel lost or alone or dejected or afraid, let this song encourage you.

 

Answers:

a) praying mantis

b) wolves

c) humans!! This occurs in a tribe in China. Sorry boys.  No need to open jars or reach high places. Apparently they doesn't think males are really good for anything.



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