Wednesday, December 28, 2011

even before coffee.

“God loves you because you’re a mess, and lonely, and His child. He loves you no matter how crazy you feel on the inside, no matter what a fake you are, always, even in your current condition, even before coffee. God loves you crazily, like a slightly overweight auntie who sees only your marvelousness and need.” -Quote from the book Victoria is reading.



I'm hitting up the four corner of the northwest this break! Walla Walla, Seattle, Portland, Spokane/Sandpoint.
For Christmas I went to see Vic in Seattle.
Earlier, she asked me what I needed for Christmas, and I answered, "Just you! I also need you to pay for my education. But really just you." Victoria is the most determined, hard-working person I know. She lives on her own, doing pre-med at UW, and drives back and forth to Tacoma a few times a week to work a 6pm to 3am charting shift at a hospital.
"That shift is the best! Everything bad happens at night. The other night, a dude came in spewing blood! It was out of control!" A Puerto Rican doctor has taken her under his wing and gave her her first pair of hemostats for Christmas, so now she practices her suturing techniques on fruit and around the power cord of her bedside lamp.
We went down and walked through Pike's Place Market, hand in hand, and laughed hysterically at funny T-shirts and made sure to stop and grab samples at all the vendors selling honey, jam, roasted walnuts, and pasta. The last time we went to the pasta vendor a couple months ago, there was a sign that read, "ASK HOW YOU CAN WIN 2 POUNDS OF FREE PASTA!"



Vic: "So how do I win the 2 pounds of free pasta?"
Pasta Man: "Go outside, catch a pigeon and bring it back to us. I can give you gloves if you want."
Vic: "...okay!"
But catching a pigeon is SO MUCH HARDER than you think it would be! We decided the best method would be to take my jacket, corner one of the poor birds, and then throw the jacket over it, wrap it up and take it to the pasta people. We were not successful and in the end, just put our names on an email list where our chances of winning 2 pounds of free pasta was 2 out of everyone living in the Northwest.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

"we can't sit by and do NOTHING."


I just read I’m Not Leaving by Carl Wilkens. I tried not to zoom through it but it was so DIFFICULT because my anxiety of what would happen next made my eyeballs skip over words, just skimming them, and then I’d have to catch myself and say "noooo, not again!!", go back and re-read paragraphs.
The book is a first-hand account of Wilkens who was the only American to stay in Rwanda during the genocide in 1994. He was in Kigali through the whole thing, 88 days of sniper and gunfire. He was doing whatever he could to deliver food and water to orphanages in need and had to cross through checkpoints on each trip out through the city where killers with machetes and assault rifles checked his ID and, each time, allowed him to pass through.
It’s rough, totally nuts. And if you read it, it’s going to drive you nuts and make you throw your empty hands around, wanting to be filled with the desire to LIVE for God. To be brave and learn what it really means to trust God with all your whole heart, soul and mind. It makes you want to put yourself out there, all vulnerable and open-hearted.
I am not simply inspired; I am ready. Ready to do something big, to get myself in gear and start running down God's trail for me. The trail that is a little fuzzy around the edges, but I know it's there!
I’m whirlwinded by the story- by how humans can be on such opposite sides of the spectrum, and yet can meet in the middle where God works things out for a good thing. People amaze me- all of them.

“Following our conscience is what it really boils down to. I believe in the end we answer to one Person and that is God. All of my security, all of my strength, all of my ability to do anything comes from God. In the years since the genocide, I’ve come to the conclusion that God supplies these three things- security, strength, and ablilty- less through miraculous interventions and more through ordinary people, the laws of nature, and simple laws of God. Laws like treat others as you would like to be treated, and love your enemies. Simple laws like those.” (52)

all these tireless, wireless connections

It’s Christmas and we’re at my Gram’s house in Auburn, Washington. My Aunt Deb always gets me funny Christmas presents; never anything I need or particularly want. She doesn’t call me on my birthday (I don’t call on hers either). I’ve never gotten a card in the mail from her. We just don’t know anything about each other! Well- she knows I like canned baby corn and I know she loves cats.
…She has a lot of cats; she can talk about how beautiful a certain cat is the way a wine…person can talk about really good wine. She just loves animals! I see her maybe twice a year.
But then tonight, my mom showed her a picture of me rock climbing. She came and sat in front of me across the dining room table, bright eyed and goes, “I love rock climbing. I am so proud of you for doing that.”
She told me when she was young, she used to climb around Palouse Falls, and one time, she rappelled off a tall bridge. I wanted to say "Yeah, you did! And guess what? I really like cats too!"
She said she used to be so scared, always, but she did it anyways! She is the coyest person I’ve ever known.
This is funny because about three weeks ago, I wrote out a list of things of who I am, what I want to do & who I want to be become down on a big piece of cardboard and stuck it up in my kitchen. One of the things I wrote down was “RECONNECT AND CONNECT WITH OTHERS!”
My funny Aunt and I have never connected before. Ever. Until today! Hallelujah!

Sunday, December 25, 2011

"you’re still you, remember, you rosy child, strong and wild!"

I’m always tapping my foot.
I am never satisfied with where I am standing!
And just the fact that I know this about myself is so irritating!
So very two-sided-- like a coin getting flipped up into the air
Freedom in dreaming, prison in mental absence
I am like a little child that, when her mother is trying to dress her, squirms and writhes and makes funny noises in order to distract mom from the task at hand
So she can ESCAPE!
& run through the house half naked and wholly happy.

Saturday, December 24, 2011

oh brother!


I pull on a dread lock
‘lemme go, Becka! BECKAAAA!’
Nuh-uh kid!
I won’t stop pinning you down if
You don’t stop pinching my nose and
Yanking on my ear lobes!
-until mom finally rolls
Her eyes like ‘you guys are in your 20s!
Stop wrestling in your Sabbath clothes.’

gettin funky on da scene!


Christmas eve. My momma tip toes on the tightrope with Janelle Monae.

Friday, December 23, 2011

my bosnian babysitters.

My mom has been decorating the house for Christmas. We have a plethora of Christmas decorations. It’s almost embarrassing. But just today, my mother replaced the batteries in one of her favourite Christmas commodities- a miniature dancing Santa Claus that shakes its hips and sings “Santa Claus Is Coming to Town.” Now my mother is not a romantic at all- but the way she talks about her friends Ozren and Snezjna, who gifted the little dancing man to her many years ago, always makes her eyes well up just a wee bit and make her voice get all gentle and smooth as she tells little bits and pieces of their story. Tonight, I asked my parents who they really were:

Ozren and Snezjna lived in Sarajevo in the early 90s. They were trapped in the city when it was bombed. Sarajevo was a thriving city before this happened- the 1984 Olympic Games had been held there. It would have been like New York or Chicago getting bombed and becoming a hostile, desolate world. This was a time of ethnic cleansing, mass murder, genocide. The groups hated each other- not unlike groups in Africa today. (If you’ve ever seen the movie Behind Enemy Lines, it is based on American involvement in the conflict). It became a religious war between Christians and Muslims, and my future babysitters were in the very middle of it. Ozren was a Muslim; Snezjna was Catholic, and thus were not permitted to be together. The country was collapsing in on itself and both sides wanted them dead.

Before the conflict, Snezjna had high ranking in the administration of the national telephone company and Ozren was an electrical engineer. But their positions fell through when the conflict arose and uprisings began. Their daughter, Nina, was seven years old when they sent her to Switzerland for sanctuary in a UN convoy of buses. On the way, the convoy was fired upon by Serbian rebels, and many of the children were killed. They didn’t know if Nina was alive or not for years. They knew where she had been taken, but there was no way of contacting her while they were essentially barricaded in the collapsed city of Sarajevo. But they knew that if she was alive, she would be somewhere in Switzerland. Ozren and Snezjna didn’t know where their daughter was for a long, long time and my dad is unsure of the details of how they were reunited, but thankfully they were.

In the city, they no jobs, no money, no electricity, no running water, they couldn’t wash their clothes for a year. In order to get drinking water, they had to walk to collect it in a bucket and bring it back. Sarajevo had been a modern city, but it completely disintegrated into absolute chaos with no services or government. My dad remembers Ozren telling him, “You’d sit there behind the curtain with your gun and cigarette and you’d watch for snipers. There was nothing else we could do.”

They signed up with a relief agency to be brought to the US as political refugees and because of him being Muslim, she being Catholic, and the fact that they were married to each other, they were bumped to the top of the list and brought to the US by military transport in 1994. They landed in Aberdeen, Washington of all places (Aberdeen’s only claim to fame is Kurt Cobain). My mother was their ELS teacher.

My mom befriended them fast, and they spent their first Christmas in America with us. Ozren apologized profusely for smelling of cigarettes, saying nervously in his broken English, “I smoke…I-I-I smoke.” My mom made Nina’s 16th birthday cake and they were present at Sabbath lunches, birthday parties and outings to Lake Silvia. I remember getting dropped off at their apartment and playing in the little front yard with dolls while Snezjna fixed snacks. Their house smelled like tobacco and wonder, and they were always smiling. Probably because they didn’t speak very good English and smiling would have been the easiest way to tell people they were happy.

I feel like I loved them more than I loved most people back then I guess. And I know they loved each other more than I’ve seen a lot of couples love each other. Happiness just flowed out of them. They stand out in my memory like a bright porch light in the middle of the night.

Snezjna’s sister had come over about 3 years after they did. Her husband had been shot in the head and had limited mobility. My grandfather refurbished an exercise bike for him to use to strengthen his legs, which were in bad shape. They had two kids, Ana and Danny. I remember lying in a tent with Ana at Auburn camp meeting when I was probably 8 or 9 (not long after they had relocated to Seattle) with the tent flap open and our heads hanging out pointing at different things- trees, cars, grass- and saying their names out loud. Me speaking English and her in Yugoslavian.

Snezjna got pancreatic cancer and died when I was 17. Missing her stressed Ozren so much that he developed heart problems and passed away a year later. My mother, who is not a romantic, swears he died of a broken heart. We went to see him in the hospital in Seattle when Nina called and told us he was going to die. He was hooked up to machines and didn’t know we were there, but I remember his swarthy, warm skin and his gangly feet sticking out from underneath the blanket.

I think of Ozren and Snezjna now, and of how BIG their love was for each other. I think of them when they were in Sarajevo, huddling together under the threat of gunfire and bombings, not knowing where their only child was, and probably crying out desperately to God for a miracle. I think of how terrifying and stressful going from being educated, holding degrees and status in their native country to suddenly not speaking a word of English would have been. And I think of how happy they were, living in their tiny apartment and how they held onto each other and supported and loved each other through death and tragedy, never losing their joy of being alive and together.

BIG love. Maybe I’m a romantic, but their story gives me hope for the same thing.

night time, light time.




Becky Perdew and I have been getting our chill on every day since break began. For the past 4 weeks, we’ve been sharing sleep time and pillow talk between our two apartments- all that stands between us is a 30 second walk! She’ll carry all her blankets over to my place or I’ll go crawl into her GIANT plushy bed.

Last Saturday, we were up at 4am to drive to Tri-Cities to pick up Canda. Turns out the cheapest train ride you can get from Spokane leaves at 2am. And 4am isn’t a good time for Becky and I, cause we have developed a satisfying habit of staying up late into the night talking, reminiscing, eating Nutter Butters, and liberally spilling our guts to each other (how wonderful are good friends!). But we dragged ourselves out of bed, pulled on sweaters and got into the absolutely frozen car to pick up our other friend Chris Robison, who had cheerily agreed to come with us.

In case we forgot about him, he had texted us both at about 3:45 saying “SEE YOU IN TEN MITTENS!” Chris is always prepared. He hopped into the car, fully equipped with a water bottle, two different kinds of homemade bread, apples, CDs, and a book to read out loud from. All Becky and I had was gunk in our eyes.

But we got to the Amtrak station in Pasco just in time to walk in and find Canda’s smiling face as she jumped up to greet us! I don’t remember the trip back because I completely knocked out into a deep sleep, but crawling back into bed with two of the most wonderful women I know at 6:30am to get three more hours of sleep is the most peaceful feeling I’ve had in a long while.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

cake face, i am not!

Society keeps trying to tell me I’m not pretty!
“You need to smell like a daisy!”
“Your hair is lacking some shine!”
“Your eyes will pop with this triple-max volume mascara!”
I need to lie down
I fear looking like a frosted birthday cake.
I fear not being real and true
I fear losing sight of how I am only earth
Walking with wide eyes through the drug store
The weight of a case of eyeliner in my hand
Is equal to that of a mountain
That I have to fight my way up,
Through blizzards of expectations
As I repeat ‘you are pretty without make up’
You are beautiful without make up
You are everything without make up
And I re-shelf the paint
I do not desire to be a piece of art on canvas
I do not desire to be smooth and flawless
Like a marble statue of Venus
All I really want
Is to have wrinkles like the rings of a tree

Saturday, December 17, 2011

mmmmmmorning.

On mornings that I come home to my parent's house in Tri-Cities, my dad usually gets up early, goes to the grocery store and buys coffee and doughnuts for all of us. I woke up late, long after my dad returned and walked into the kitchen to pick out a doughnut. Maple bars and apple fritters. I like to give my brother David first choice (cause he's my older brother- and thus "deserves respect!" as he puts it. But maybe only some of the time when he's not being a turkey).

Mom: "David, did you get a doughnut yet?"
David: "How can I put this?"
Mom: "It's a simple question."
David: "This is the animal world and I am a lion! If you want food, you run and hunt it down like a predator!"
Mom: "...so you got one?"
David: "Yeah, I did."

Monday, December 12, 2011

accounting for friendship.

Katie: "We finish each other's-"
Ian: "Sentences."

These two goofs have been a couple of my best friends since high school. I met them in Ms. Whidden's AP Language class our junior year at WWVA. And ever since then, I have been constantly entertained by their banter and LOUD sarcastic verbal outbursts about everything from professors, their honor classes, politics, to music and to what they wear (if Katie wears an argyle sweater vest over a dress shirt with jeans and boots, there's a high chance that Ian is wearing the same thing simply by coincidence). They are also some of the most genuine and kind people you could ever meet; especially to each other. I have watched them interact for 5 years now, and I am always reminded of how precious good friends are by how they never miss chances to care for each other or their friends around them, how they respect each other's opinions, how they remind each other of who they are and give each other value. I am overcome by thankfulness and joy watching them study for Accounting from across the living room in Katie's apartment as they talk about depletion, units of production, and allowance, and also how many days are in each month- which has nothing to do with accounting.

Ian: "30 days hath September, April, June, and November! All the rest-"
Katie: "Have 31, except for-"
Ian: "February."

Sunday, December 11, 2011

poetry night at the atlas.


Me: We’ll probably be here for the rest of the night.

Chad: And eventually we’ll start doing our homework.

Greg: That’s okay; it’s about the journey right?

Me: I’m not so sure about that.

Greg: Yeah. Journeys don’t get A’s!

My friend Chad and I have been in The Atlas for 2 hours now going over poems that he has been required to write for his poetry class this quarter. I don’t know how well I would do in a poetry class- with all the structure and rules! Chad is probably the most modern poetry-savvy person I’ve ever met (he has committed to memory a whole truck load of Buddy Wakefield), but still he continues to make statements like, “There’s an old lady in my class that’s better at this than me. That’s how bad it is.” But Chad’s poetry is not bad at all- and will be proven NOW.

Mirror- by Chad Aufderhar

I can only imagine what she whispers in your ear

Leaving the air thick with doubt

Leaving holes you believe

I thought I might find a way to explain what I see in you

I fall asleep most nights hoping you are sleeping too

Instead of trying to carve forgiveness

Or pound out the last letter of the word mercy

I want you to be whole

What if happiness caught you by surprise

That last warm afternoon spent with you

Throwing glass into dumpsters

To hear the echoing clatter

Their full release shatter

Our ejection seat rip cords

Pulling us up and away

It’s okay to let go

There is Freedom like victory

Not in the wake of medieval dragon slayers

Victory in line with the underdog crossing the photo finish

She is the only thing keeping you

Convinced reflections are all you deserve

No matter what lies behind—look forward

Your kindness pulled me through

Those days you laughed with my limericks

As we ate lunch against the lockers

Your simple gestures gave me value

A priceless gift I see now

I wish I could give you something

I would give anything

One more afternoon

With that old green dumpster

Leave her there

For garbage trucks to claim

With the rest of the broken glass

If any doubt remain

technically.



The week before we take our finals is called Dead Week. People are stressin' and you can see it in the deepening lines in everybody's faces. We gots STUFF to DO! Teachers aren't technically allowed to give homework and aren't technically supposed to give you quizzes. Dead Week is kind of like a gift from the faculty that means "here's some free time, use it wisely. " So we really aren't technically supposed to drive 4 hours to Portland for a Mumford & Sons concert and 4 hours back afterwards during Dead Week...