Desire

I catch flak all the time for rambling blog posts. Buckle-up, Buttercup, this might be one of them.

I had a long conversation with someone recently about their desires. Nothing carnal, mind you, but emotional, spiritual and physical desires. For those playing along with the home version of the game, our reference today will be the Bible, John 6. That’s in the New Testament for those of you new to the game.

Jesus asks a man a very important question. What afflicted the man is unclear. Some versions say he was ill. Others say he was infirm or crippled or lame. So the condition of the man is less important than the question Jesus asks. Different people have different translations or versions of the Bible. I own eleven myself, not including the online versions available. That said, let’s review the question:
> American Standard Version and Revised Version: “Wouldest thou be made whole?”
> Bible in Basic English: “Is it your desire to get well?”
> English Standard Version: “Do you want to be healed?”
> Holman Christian Standard Bible and the International Standard Version: “Do you want to get well?”
> King James Version: “Wilt thou be made whole?”
> New Living Translation: “Would you like to get well?”

On its face it seems like a no-brainer. If I am sick or lame or whatever, do I want to be healed? Of course! What kind of question is that? But therein lies the rub: what kind of question IS it?

What is “getting well” or “being healed?” if you had lung cancer you would want to be well, right? What if, heaven forbid, that meant you had to quit smoking? Is it worth it? “Of course, dumb ass! I have cancer!” But we all know the risks of smoking well before it becomes cancerous. Do you really want to be well? Yes, but when it’s convenient for you. You won’t stop smoking today because {insert lame-ass reason here}. But I don’t want to pick on smokers alone.

How about the soda drinkers in the house? Are you willing to do what it takes to give that up? Do you want to be well? Meat eaters? Tostada gnoshers? Butter guzzlers? Do you want to be healed? Does it sound ridiculous yet? The question is not as simple as it sounds.

What if you were experiencing a crisis of faith. What if everything you thought was true had been shaken. One day you woke up and realized the voice in your head had been lying to you. In an attempt to sort out what you now think must be the new normal you scream into the night to silence the cacaphony of voices in your head telling you what to do. Each voice comes from a trusted source but not one of the voices does anything but either reinforce the lie you once believed or offers you another lie to replace it.

But then one voice softly asks, “Do you want to be healed?” Finally! Through prayer and reflection and an understanding of Christ’s character, you recognize the question as the very same that Jesus asked that man. “Do you want to be healed?” Do you?

What if healing, true healing, required you to step away from every voice telling you lies? What if in exchange for healing, wellness and emotional stability you had to lose a friend? That friend with whom you shared good times but now find yourself in a rage every day because they ever-so-sweetly remind you of all your past failures. Could you give them up?

Could you step away from a job from which you derived no satisfaction but paid very well? That job, that voice in your head, reminding you of your failed commitments, sub-par performance and disappointments; could you–would you give it up for true healing?

Healing is much more than waiting for a cut to scab over. Emotional healing, recovering from a lifetime of cuts and battering, can take years. When I answered that quiet voice in my head if I desired to be well, I started what has been the best journey of my life. Step one was culling my “friend” list.

When I was going through a very difficult period in my life a few years ago only three or four people with whom I had regular contact actually supported me. These people would laugh with me, cry with me, pray with me or some combination of these three things. If I asked them to listen and not comment, that’s exactly what they did. I very much valued their counsel but sometimes you just want to vent.

Now I have a new set of friends that know me, accept me and love me for who I am. If they judge me it is a comparison of my experiences with theirs for discussion, not holding up my past against an unrealistic ideal they can’t even match but which they use to harangue me and call me hypocrite or failure.

I broke old habits I had which kept me in a rut. Desiring to be healed and working through the process are different. I was in Tae Kwon Do for a number of years. It was full-contact (with pads) but it was serious business. The two things my instructor used to say that I took to heart are these:
Everyone wants to be Bruce Lee but no one wants to put forth the effort;
If you do not practice punching (or kicking or blocking) at full speed and with all your strength all you have done is go through the motions. When you take a blow and fall to the floor you need to get back up. If that was the best your opponent had to offer you were prepared for what might follow; the shock was gone.

Because of my arrogance and unwillingness to yield (tap out), my children more than once had to help me out of my car when I returned home but his lesson was valid. When my depression or anxiety would knock me to the floor, I knew it would not get worse. I did not need to fear that the next bout of misery would be worse; the worst had already tried to put me down. It didn’t succeed so it had lost its element of surprise. I could practice the process of emotional healing and get stronger every day.

But I went through this because I answered yes to the question, “Do you desire to be well?” True, deep healing takes time. You need to make time for the process. I truly and earnest hope my friend desires healing. Speaking from experience, the end result far exceeds the temporary pain you will have.

Confused

I had an interesting (if not lengthy) conversation recently. The subject: forgiveness. Please, don’t stop reading yet, this isn’t a sermon. I’d like to think of it as either two opposing viewpoints from the same side or an encapsulation of the differences different Christian philosophies take.

My friend, whom I shall refer to as “Alex”, was speaking to me this Sunday after already having consumed a fairly large amount of alcohol. We spoke of life, fate, destiny and a few other philosophically deep issues one only engages in on the road to being face-down drunk in the gutter. The conversation was going well until they hit upon two things which really grind my gears: I’m responsible for my own actions but no matter what, Jesus forgives me. Hold the ponies, please!

First off, I absolutely agree that every single one of us remains responsible for the consequence of our actions. I’ve blogged about this before. But to be clear, people tend to make decisions based on information, beliefs and anticipated consequences AT THE TIME of the decision. Take drunk driving, for example: Most people determine that the risk of being caught (not the risk of injury or death to oneself or someone else) is a huge factor in helping them decide if they should drive home “buzzed” or not. So they decide not to drive.

I am not a tea-toting, any-alcohol-is-evil, do-gooder. I enjoy beer, wine and hard alcohol at my discretion and very much with a self-prescribed limit. My friends know that no amount of taunting, teasing or threatening will get me to drink if I have chosen to abstain. I do not succumb to peer pressure and find those that do weak, lacking self discipline and cowardly. It’s that old line about, “If you don’t stand for something, you’ll fall for everything.” No means no, not, “ask me two more times and I’ll say yes.”

To me, the problem with alcohol remains with the person drinking. Going to a party, getting drunk, having sex and (worst case) getting pregnant or contracting an STD or (best case) having huge regrets for losing control, are not the fault of the alcohol. The alcohol didn’t get you pregnant. The alcohol didn’t make you lose your inhibitions; alcohol becomes the excuse, not the reason. YOU made the decision to drink, YOU made the decision not to stop when you’d clearly had enough, YOU remain responsible for the consequences of those actions.

After much debate, Alex and I agreed: alcohol in and of itself is neither good nor bad, virtuous nor evil, it just IS. How we interact with alcohol, our decisions and their consequences, are our responsibility. We cannot blame the alcohol.

Regardless, as it related to our conversation, Alex agreed that perhaps they had consumed too much alcohol as being “shit-faced” is not Alex’s normal condition. But then came the second part of the discussion. As far as Alex was concerned, it wasn’t cool to get drunk on Sunday but it was okay. Jesus understood that sometimes we all need to vent sometimes so Alex was already making plans to go to church either later that Sunday night or next Sunday. What?

I was reminded that Jesus said He would never leave us nor forsake us. Alex, as a Christian, had accepted Jesus into their life. As of that instant, I was told, nothing Alex did, no matter how sinful, arrogant or prideful, could be held against them on Judgement Day; Jesus had already forgiven Alex of everything Alex had done or would do. This is where the day got interesting.

I reminded Alex of the woman brought before Jesus who had been caught in an affair. Jesus agreed she should be put to death and offered that whoever was without sin should cast the first stone. When all of the woman’s accusers had left, Jesus forgave her and told her to sin no more. He didn’t tell her to meet him back at the temple next week so she could be forgiven again, nor did he give he a magic decoder ring that would absolve her of that same sin whenever she did it. No. He told her to go and sin no more. No more. Not, “give it a week or two”; no more.

So the argument ensued. On the one hand, Alex told me repeatedly that Jesus would always forgive any sin of any kind because, “He would never leave us.” I reminded Alex there remains a huge difference between being intentional and unintentional when it comes to sin. Two examples: Drinking and sex.

The Bible states not to be drunk. It doesn’t say not to drink. It doesn’t say beer is evil or whiskey is the drink of the devil. It says to not be drunk. Getting drunk any day of the week, Sunday included, is no worse than any other day. If you ask Jesus to forgive your drinking today (because it’s Sunday), will He? Yes, I’m sure. But I’m also sure God doesn’t want to hear you ask for forgiveness for the same thing over and over and over again if (and here’s the kicker) you’re not trying to help yourself out of that situation.

If you’re married and you have an affair, will God forgive you if you ask? Yes. Will he continue to forgive you when you engage in sexual activity with someone other than your spouse simply because you ask? I doubt it. The excuse of, “Well, we’re separated anyway” or “we’re in the process of getting divorced” cannot sit well with a God who, although certainly capable of forgiving you, should not have to forgive you every single time you chose to dishonor Him by not seeking help (though Jesus) for your situation.

For me, an intentional sin would be drinking to excess because you believe Jesus will forgive you. You believe Jesus will forgive you when you leave your lover’s bed to return home and feel little or no remorse for your actions. But not just once, over and over and over again. Unintentional sin would be more like the result of succumbing to temptation, negligence or ignorance. Drinking a beverage you did not know was spiked, for example. Or not realizing that Kahlua and milk is far more intoxicating that Coors Light. Or getting so caught up in the moment that before you knew it, you were both naked on the floor.

If an experience causes you to feel guilty about what you’ve done so much so that you do not wish to repeat the event, you will take God’s forgiveness and use it as a foundation from which you can build recovery. Shame will not be an issue because you have taken steps to acknowledge, confront and remove the guilt you felt that created an obstacle to your relationship with God. Your intent is to not repeat that action; to sin no more.

But if the event is a badge of honor (“Yeah, I slept with them” or “Dude, this one time I was so effed up”) or a ritual (“It’s Super Bowl Sunday, of course I’m getting drunk” or “It’s my birthday, of course I’m getting laid”) or an expectation (“He invited me to spend the weekend on his yacht, of course I’ll sleep with him” or “It’s guys night out, time to par-tay”), why even bother asking for forgiveness? You have no intention of changing your lifestyle, you just want to “cover your bases”.

Alex and I agreed to disagree. Alex maintains that Jesus will always and forever forgive you of sin if you ask simply because you asked. I maintain that Jesus will forgive you of sin if you ask but will certainly expect you to change your relationship to that sin such that you wish to be free of it, not continually repeat it. I left Alex with one of my favorite New Testament passages, Matthew 7:13-23. You’ll have to look that up yourself. It’ll be too much like a sermon if I repeat it here.

Your thoughts?

Holy Cows

If you attend a Christian church, you know these people. They’re the ones that make the loud, guttural, “mmmm” when the speaker says something to which they agree. They won’t shout out a Hallelujah or an Amen, but they will sound like Peter Boyle’s voice characterization of the monster in Young Frankenstein. I call them Holy Cows. If you close your eyes, it sounds like a herd of cattle on the plain.

So I’m driving home from work today listening to Air One, my newest-favorite radio station. One of the DJs was talking about something and the other one was “mmmm-ing” through the whole thing. Only on Christian radio. You don’t hear the Holy Cows on the hard rock or alternative rock stations to which I used to listen, just Christian radio.

At what point did that become acceptable? It drives me freaking crazy. Mmmm. Not “uh huh” or “um hmm” but “mmmm”. If you agree with the statement, say so! Say, “I agree” or “Amen” or “Hallelujah” or something, but please, for goodness sake, stop mimicking the cows in the field. God gave us dominion over the beasts of the field. Stop trying to be one. Mmmm.

That’s my rant for the day.

Accountability

People oftentimes say things in the heat of the moment because of anger. Although I may not agree with this as a valid excuse I do understand it happens. But there is a significant difference between what is said in the heat of the moment and what you swear to in a written document submitted to a court.

Think about the things you say about others every day. I don’t mean the platitudes about how nice they are or how special they are, I mean what you REALLY say about others. Today your best friend might be an asshole and tomorrow they might be the light that brightens your path. Those words come and go depending on your mood. Everyone has moods. But to swear to something before a court that you know to be blatantly untrue? That takes a special kind of person; someone who must practice lies and deception so much that they have bought into their own hype. They think the false world they’ve created is, in fact, reality. Their memory of specific events or actions is incorruptible and unquestionable.

Today, as I do every day, I spent some time in self-reflection and meditation. It keeps me calm, focused, and at peace with those whom I might have encouraged confrontation previously. As I was sitting quietly reflecting on my day, a thought came to my mind: Righteousness gives life, Condemnation is death. I took that thought and asked how I could apply it to my life today. Here’s I came up with:

If you can sit for a full hour, 60 full minutes, without any distractions whatsoever, listen to what your mind is telling you. First off, if you can’t be still for an hour perhaps you have avoidance issues. You might be afraid of the truths screaming at you from your conscience. Perhaps by being constantly distracted you keep the demons at bay. Reading, listening to the radio, watching television; these all keep you from spending time with your own conscience. Perhaps you self-medicate with drugs or alcohol. Add in a social smoking habit and you set yourself up to be fully occupied and distracted from having to listen to any truth that might be trying to convict you.

When I talk about Righteousness, I don’t mean a holier-than-thou self-righteousness attitude. I simply mean being honest with yourself, with a character that exudes integrity. When you can speak with righteousness (integrity) about someone or something, you have credibility.

Condemnation, to me, is speaking ill of someone or looking for the worst in a person, situation or event. Berating, belittling, speaking ill of someone you do not know or situations you do not understand are all condemning in nature. Doing so, to me, clearly shows a lack of integrity. You might speak so poorly of another person that they sincerely ask for your forgiveness for some transgression they never recall but which must have happened because of your continued haranguing. Although you claim to forgive them and say you’ve “moved on”, in fact nothing they ever do will put them right in your eyes again. Ever. This, then, is another reason you can’t bear to be alone for an hour without distraction: you will be convicted and condemned by your own words.

One thing I have always tried to maintain is my integrity. Anyone, my wife, my kids, my friends; anyone who wants to know where I am just has to ask. I will not say I am going to work late only to duck out early to catch the ball game at the local bar. I am where I say I’m going to be. I don’t believe it’s healthy to deceive your family or your friends. It would be totally out of character for me to rack up a few thousand dollars of credit card bills and hide it from my spouse. I could not, for example, claim and over-state the cost of my child’s textbooks so I could increase the amount of my tax refund. I have a fundamental issue with lies and deception like this, especially when it comes to my family.

I had the opportunity this week to read a document wherein someone swore in a court document that someone had hidden a small fortune from their family. The same sworn document stated a few other blatant and obvious distortions to actual events it was sad to read. Why? Because I know the author of the document believes with all their heart the “facts” they presented were true. It’s not worth my time to try and correct the person’s memory. In time, sooner or later, their own conscience will convict them in their heart. They know, or at least they should know, that what they claim is true is so out of character for the other person it would be hard for anyone who knows them to believe the claimant.

So, I’ve said all of this to get to my challenge: I challenge each of you to sit for one full hour, distraction-free, by yourself, and just clear your mind. Don’t think about the work you have to do or the time you’re “wasting” by doing this exercise. Try it. Be purposeful and do it with intent.

What is your heart telling you about yourself? What lies or acts of deception have you committed for which you remain accountable and guilty? From whom should you seek forgiveness to correct your actions?

If you can be still and listen to your heart, you might learn a lot about yourself. Try it.

The Cave

I have a Facebook friend who reads this blog. I spoke with him this morning and he asked me to clarify my reference to “The Cave of Wonder”. I recognize he might not be alone in his confusion so, albeit very personal, let me put the term into perspective.

My wife and I separated a year ago. Having no where else to go but my office, I converted part of the mail processing room (with folders, sealers, labeling machine, computers, filing cabinets, etc.) into a sanctuary. In a 10′ x 14′ room I have a 5′ x 8′ space from which I contemplate life. Since most of my business is conducted via e-mail and I rarely interact face-to-face with people on any given day, the room has become my hermit cave. But it’s not a hiding place. I don’t “hang out” there to escape people, life, or day-to-day events. My hermit cave isn’t really like the guy who has given up on life and people and wants to escape everything. My cave is more like a spiritual center of stillness and quiet from which I think thoughts and ponder.

It is not the “Cave of Wonders”, plural. There’s nothing “wonderful” about it. It does not contain collections of things I’ve saved, paintings of exotic landscapes or things that make you think, “that’s cool.” When I refer to the Cave of Wonder I don’t really mean a physical place. It’s like heaven. If someone asks you where heaven is, you more than likely will point up to the sky and say, “It’s up there, somewhere.” Yes, there are “the heavens” from a cosmological perspective, but there’s also a “heaven” from a theological viewpoint. The “Cave of Wonder” is my office area (particularly my sanctum sanctorum) but more specifically, it’s the state of mind I enter into at the end of the day.

If you know me, you know I’m well beyond a Type-A personality when it comes to certain things. With other things I flat-line, I don’t care. But I really do believe that you can’t judge a book by its cover. I might appear to be laid-back and easy-going, but don’t let it fool you. I might be having a full-on, total meltdown stress attack because I’m about to miss a deadline but you’d never know it. At the end of the first part of my work day, before I change gears for the evening shift, I wonder. When my day is done, before I go to sleep, I wonder. I wonder a lot. I wonder if I wonder too much.

I wonder why God put me here. No, not in my office but here, on earth. I know I have a mission. I know He put me here for a reason. I wonder what that reason is. One of the guys I meet with on Saturday mornings told our group today that I am a real inspiration for him. He knows my situation and what I’m going through. He recently lost his job and, as a consequence, his wife left him. He told the group as he goes about his daily life now he asks himself two questions: “What does the Bible say about how he should deal with a situation” and “How would {Sparky} deal with this”. I’m certain he meant that from his heart as a compliment, but that’s an awesome amount of responsibility I didn’t know I had in someone else’s life. I wonder, is this why God has me going through the problems in my marriage and my career? So that I might minister, mentor and inspire other men? I don’t know. Am I supposed to know? Do I want other men looking to me for inspiration when, in truth, they’re the ones I respect for their candidness and faithfulness?

I wonder if other men have the same issues I have. I want my children to see my true character. I hope when they look at me they see someone driven by honesty and integrity. I have been lied to, deceived by and forsaken by people very, very close to me. I want to break the cycle of “hurt people hurt people”. I have been hurt deeply more than once. I wonder if I have ever hurt anyone as badly as I have been hurt. If so, I sincerely apologize.

I honestly pray that when my kids look at me or think back to this period of time they can see my example. “When such-and-such happened to my dad, do you know what he did? He didn’t lie, he didn’t cheat, he didn’t steal, he didn’t deceive us. He didn’t dishonor my mother or me. He didn’t give anyone any reason to think he was doing something he shouldn’t have been doing. He held his head up and said that even though it sucked right now, it wouldn’t be like this forever. He had the courage to have faith.” That’s what I want my children to think on and realize that it isn’t really me that kept that standard. God gave me (all of us, actually) that standard as basic common sense. If a lie got you into trouble, a lie won’t get you out (the truth will set you free). If your spouse cheated on you, cheating on them doesn’t make it “even” (two wrongs don’t make a right). Me having a bad day doesn’t mean I should ruin your day (I can’t think of a cute quip to throw in here).

Jacob and Job are two Old Testament men from whom I draw a lot of inspiration. Both had issues. Depending on the situation I may feel more Jacob-like than Job-like. My rule of thumb is this: If something unexpectedly bad happens and nothing good comes from it in a short period of time, it’s a Job-like test of faith. If something good does come from it, it’s a Jacob-like reward of faith. Regardless, both are tests of integrity and accountability. I can cite two examples from the same event: A long-time customer of mine hired a new buyer. Since the new buyer had the authority and the responsibility to solicit and secure new contracts on behalf of the company, they used my products and pricing to leverage other companies and obtain better pricing from them. I was never given the opportunity to bid because, according to the buyer, it would not have been fair to ask others to bid against me and not award the contract to one of them. The issue wasn’t my quality, my turn-around, my customer service or my pricing. The issue was the buyer looking to make a name for himself within the company as an aggressive go-getter. That, to me, was a Job moment. By his own admission my company had done nothing wrong at all. We had better delivery times, higher quality and better pricing than the company that replaced us. But the bottom line was that we were replaced because we *could* be replaced. I let it go.

A year went by and the owner of that company called me. Very, very unhappy, he laid into me about how I had screwed up a job so bad recently they almost lost a licensing contract. I let him vent. When he was done, I politely asked him what the heck he was talking about since it had been over a year since I had done any work with his company. Very long story short, not only did we once again take over the work we had been doing previously, I also became more integrated in that company’s production planning process in all aspects, from design to overseas production to local assembly and fulfillment. The buyer was fired. This was a Jacob moment. Rather than throw it back in my old customer’s face and tell him to pound sand, I worked with him on how to fix a problem that was never mine, how to prevent future issues related to that event and how to address and preempt long-term problems from overseas factories. I went from nothing to being a de facto production manager in the course of one phone call. Totally Jacob-like, totally God. So it makes me wonder.

I wonder if things had not occurred as they did between my wife and me if any of this would have happened. My wife and I attended the same church for twelve or thirteen years before I was asked to move out. Had I stayed, I probably would not have been as involved with the guys on Saturday morning as I am currently. Am I really an inspiration for other people? Why would you lie about something as trivial as that? We’re a Saturday morning men-only Bible study group. No one there has a “posse”. We don’t have “people”. You don’t come with an “entourage”. We are very sensitive to cults of personality and don’t claim any one member of our congregation, our senior pastor included, has any more or less authority or divine appointment from, to, or by God than anyone else.

I was honored and humbled when someone asked me to be their accountability partner while they struggle with an addiction. I tried to turn him to someone who either has the same issues or experience with the same issues and he wouldn’t have it. He only wanted me because he felt God had sent me to him. This has been a two-way blessing. All I have to do is be me. Since I can’t be him that’s easy enough, but I do need to be sensitive to his struggles. According to him, I have helped him in more ways than he can count. Not too long ago he asked what kinds of hobbies I had when I was a kid. I told him. A week later he asked if I knew where he might find a hobby store. I told him. The next week he came to me and said he had a new hobby building and painting scale model die-cast metal cars (which, by the way, is not something I did so I’m not worried he’s becoming a Mini-Me).

I saw him today and he said the relationship between him and his wife was much, much better than it had been in years, all because of the model building. Because it’s something they can do together, his wife helps him. Because she’s with him and they’re working on projects together, they talk more. Because they’re talking more he doesn’t have the time or the desire to fall back into his addiction. Because he knows he’s an addict and he knows I care and he knows I’d answer the phone if he called, he feels strong enough to make it on his own. What did I do? Nothing. It was all God. But I wonder: Is that why I’m here?

I wonder if I’m a conceited, pompous ass. I know I’m no better than anyone else. I don’t think I have a false sense of humility. If you invite me to your house for dinner, I’ll do the dishes. I’ll clean your oven if you’d like. I don’t do it because it makes me look good. I don’t do it because I’m a kiss-ass. I do it because I can and it’s helpful. If you’ve been working to make a meal for us to enjoy and to make me feel welcome and all those other warm and fuzzy feelings, let me return the favor. If I can’t pay you for the time and money you’ve invested in the meal, let’s turn it into something more than just a host/guest scenario. Let me do something for you so that we have a shared experience of sacrifice (yours in making the meal and mine in cleaning all that crap out of the oven you’ve left there for the past two years). It really doesn’t bother me, don’t let it bother you.

I wonder how long I’ll walk in the dark valley before me. I work community outreach programs a couple of times a month. I talk to homeless people and give thanks that I have a roof over my head. I have a car. I can cook up a mean batch of rice whenever I want. But there are a couple of homeless couples I actually envy. These people have nothing except what they can fit in the two or three shopping carts they’ve roped together. They truly have next to nothing. But they have each other. One of the couples said they were married in a homeless camp by the minister of a church that did a feed-the-homeless program. The church members paid for the license, the ceremony and the food. They wanted to have the ceremony at the church but the couple wanted to do it at the camp so their friends could be there. It’s awesome. They are not the freeway off-ramp “will work for food” homeless. They are much worse off. But when you look at them and how they interact with each other, you know it’s love. I look at them in wonder: When this test is over, will my wife and I be able to have the same sparkle in our eyes? I wonder.

I wonder about all kinds of things. How my kids are doing, where I’ll be living in the next month or two, whether or not the decision I made today about something will help or hurt someone who might look up to me. But I don’t dwell on it. I don’t want to sound Yoda-ish, but dwelling on the negative leads to questioning yourself which leads to questioning your faith which leads to fear which leads to hate. When I think about the negative things happening in my life right now I just chalk it up to a temporary setback and keep moving. That’s really all you can do. I guess I could start drinking to escape reality or start smoking as a “stress relief” and blame someone for giving me the stress in the first place, but the reality is it’s on me. Run and hide or stand and fight. Sometimes I know it’s easier to run and hide, but then I wonder: Is that the example I want to set for my wife and kids? No. I wonder if I’m cut-out to be an example for other men. After all, their problems are their problems, right? Wrong. Am I my brother’s keeper? Yes, to a certain extent, I am. But I wonder if they’ll see it’s not by me alone that I choose to help but by God’s greater design.

And so you have it: The Cave of Wonder is singular, not plural. It is both a physical place and a mindset. As it has been for the past year and will be for the foreseeable future, it’s also my home. Welcome to it.

Cowards

I had a discussion today with another one of those “wouldda, shouldda, couldda” folks that drives me insane. The issue? Military service.

I was born into an Army family and lived in a number of interesting places because of it. I joined the Army at 18 and spent the next 20 years doing all kinds of fascinating things that I won’t go into here. The point? I did what I felt needed to be done. It was truly the only life I had known so it seemed natural to return to it as soon as I was able. But because that life was, by default, compartmentalized (especially people and emotions) I’ll focus on people today.

For me and my kind growing up, there were lots of different groups of people. First, of course, were the military service members. Army, then Marines, then Navy. The Air Force really served as a charter airline for the Army (just like the Navy provided cruise-liners for the Marines) and didn’t get much respect from us Army brats. The Coast Guard didn’t count as a military service (except in WWII) because they fell under the Department of Transportation (after having been moved out of the Treasury Department, by the way). I’m certain every military branch had it’s own set of standards in which their service held the number one slot but since they were all posers anyway, it didn’t matter.

After the military service members were the dependents. Spouses and children were dependents. They were significantly lower on the totem pole than the service member, but at least we could buy cool crap at the post exchange.

Back in the day, being a dependent could suck really, really bad. Since it was the Vietnam era, almost all of my friends’ fathers were the service member, so where you stood in the social hierarchy depended on a few specific factors:
1. What was your dad’s rank?
2. Was your father Regular Army or drafted?
3. Was he a “soldier” or a REMF?
4. How many tours had he done in ‘Nam?

Due to segregation, we never hung out with any officers kids. My dad was a non-commissioned officer (NCO) and very proud of it. Although the Army ensured that officers, NCOs and junior enlisted soldiers all lived in different areas of the base (with significantly different standards of living, of course), I doubt my friends and I would have chosen to hang out with Zeros anyway. For clarification, enlisted ranks in the military start with the letter “E”. Officer ranks start with the letter “O”. Because the “O” looked like the number 0, we called officers and their dependents “Zeros”. I imagine it’s changed, but “Zero” was a derogatory term.

Anyway, back to segregation for a moment. I’m certain any military brat can tell a different story but me and my friends didn’t have issues of race. Segregation was by rank, not by race. I don’t ever recall as a kid hearing any of our dads refer to another person by a racial slur. Staff Sergeant Hernandez was either “Sergeant Hernandez” or the SDNCO (staff duty NCO). He wasn’t a “wetback” or a “spic” or anything else. Sergeant First Class Morris wasn’t “the black guy” or a “nigger.” He was “Sergeant Morris”. I think if any of our dads heard us refer to someone by a racial slur we would have had our asses kicked first by the dad that heard it then by our own fathers. As a child of the ’60s coming into maturity in the ’70s, racism wasn’t our issue. Whether you were a Zero or not was. And yes, if you screwed up and someone else’s dad caught you, he administered the first round of corporal punishment before you got sent to your dad for round two. No questions asked.

If your dad was Regular Army, you had it going on. Back in the day before your social security number became your number, you had a service number. Almost everyone remembers the old line about the three things you have tell a captor if you’re taken as a prisoner of war: Name, Rank and Service Number. No? You remember Name, Rank and Social Security Number? Newbie. “Real” soldiers, those that volunteered to join, had service numbers that started with “RA” for Regular Army. Soldiers that either volunteered to avoid the draft or were drafted had service numbers that started with “USA”. Since my dad joined during and did time in Korea, he had an RA number. That fact put me socially above some other kid who’s dad might have had more rank but only volunteered to join because he thought he might get drafted. We still accepted those kids but we let them know their dads were weak.

If your dad was a “soldier”, we knew it by his Military Occupational Specialty (MOS). It might have been called something different back then, but if your dad was Infantry, he was a soldier. Infantry, Armor (tanks), Artillery–those guys were the top spots. On one of his tours in Vietnam my dad was in Psychological Warfare working with the Special Forces, so I got to claim that honor also. If your dad was a cook, a supply guy or anything in the Adjutant General’s Corps or Finance, they were a REMF. Just like “Zero”, “REMF” (pronounced like it reads, remf) was derogatory. It stood for Rear Echelon Mother “Effer” and meant the chances of your dad actually seeing combat time were little to none. If your dad was a REMF, you were a REMF. It would be really bad if your dad was a personnel officer of a unit because then he’d be both a Zero and a REMF and your social status would suck with us. But since we didn’t associate with Zeros, we’d never see you anyway.

Today the outdated term REMF has been replaced by FOBBIT. If you’re a FOBBIT and proud, to me you’re still a REMF, loser.

How many tours had your dad done? Ideally, at least one. The last gasp of hope you had for any type of social recognition was if your dad had “punched his ticket” in Vietnam. If your dad had never been there, did not have orders sending him there soon or planned to ETS (get out of the service) before he got sent there, you were nothing with us. We would sooner play human-target lawn darts with a bunch of Zeros than a Non-Dep (Non-Deployable, Non-Deployed) REMF-loving waste of skin like you.

Non-Deps were vile. Even Zeros hated Non-Deps. It was universal. The best I can equate it to today was during Desert Storm. A female medical officer (Army, unfortunately) was interviewed on a local (Los Angeles) television station. In uniform, crying uncontrollably, she looked at the camera and said when she joined, no one told her she would have to go to war. That image was burned into my head and will stay with me forever. On my first day of basic training, a drill sergeant stood in front of us and told us that if we weren’t told one day we might be called upon to kill someone, perhaps by running a bayonet through their chest cavity in hand-to-hand combat, we were in the wrong place. How you can be in the Army–and an officer at that–and cry because “no one told you” is an outright lie.

Okay, so that basically established the pecking order within the accepted group of military branches and dependents. Then what?

We recognized two types of civilians. One had a capital “C” and the other was lower case. A Department of Defense (or Department of the Army, etc.) Civilian (capital “C”) was a technician. Oftentimes they were separated or retired service members that scored a sweet job doing stuff for the Army and getting paid for it. My teachers were Department of the Army (DA) Civilians. The people that worked at the MWR (Morale, Welfare and Recreation) office that rented us everything from rowboats and fishing poles to horses and guitars were Civilians. Civilians (capital “C”) and their dependents were okay by us. In Germany, for example, the father of a friend of mine separated from service and returned to marry a German woman. I don’t remember what Mr. Cobb did but he was a Civilian. His son was a friend of mine and we attended the Munich American Elementary school together. However, the Cobbs lived off-post in Unterhaching. Most of the Civilian families lived off-post but that was still okay.

Then there were civilians (lower case). Nothing was worse than a civilian. Words cannot express the disdain and contempt I had for civilians. From civilians came the two most evil infections the world has ever known: The Draft Dodger and the Career Student.

I will honestly confess that it wasn’t until my early-twenties that my mindset on civilians began to change. I still to this day cannot stomach draft dodgers and career students, but I accept that civilians have a place in this world and, most importantly, a right to exist. You might think I’m joking about this but those that know me well know how little I cared for civilians. I wasn’t a round-them-up-and-put-them-in-camps kind of freak (though I knew some) but I really didn’t care. I would donate blood to help a Non-Dep before I’d shed a tear for a civilian. This may not make sense to you but anyone with my background will understand immediately what I mean. We didn’t tell blonde jokes or Polish jokes or ethnic jokes–we told civilian jokes. How many civilians does it take to change a light bulb? Who cares? Nuke ’em ’til they glow and they won’t need light bulbs. That kind of stuff. But it only applied to American civilians. We loved the Germans and the Panamanians and everyone else. Just the Americans.

Before I continue, let me make a couple of things perfectly clear. First, it wasn’t until I joined the Army that I recognized not everyone was cut out for military service. Some people can’t stand the sight of blood and some people don’t do well under stress. Some people can’t work under someone else’s authority and some people obviously lost a game of human-target lawn darts early in life. I know not everyone is capable of performing the duties required of military service. In fact, there are some people in the service that have no right to be there but that also is a different story.

Second, education is good. Even a degree from a liberal, earth-first, Vegan-loving college is better than dropping out of school because it “got hard”. Life sucks if that’s what you make it. I’ve failed plenty of times in different things but at least I tried.

So, do I think everyone should be in the military? No. I hope that’s clear. But let me tell you two things before I *FINALLY* get to the point of today’s blog.

Hate is a strong word. I understand it’s subtleties and multifaceted meanings. I hate draft dodgers, especially those that fled out of the country during Vietnam. All my friends and the Zeros hated them, too. Being drafted did not automatically mean you were handed a rifle and sent to kill Viet Cong or NVA soldiers. What it meant was that the country in which you were lucky enough to be born required your service. Could you be drafted and killed in some far-away country in a war you didn’t support? Maybe. Could you be drafted and spend your whole tour of duty sweating your ass off painting rocks and picking off leeches at Fort Polk, Louisiana? Maybe. But if you were too much of a coward to consider anything other than running away, we’re better off without you anyway. But you’re still one step above the worst-of-the-worst: The Career Student.

Many cowards who chose to avoid the draft and couldn’t afford to run across the nearest border elected instead to become full-time college students. I honestly am not up-to-speed on what all of the draft laws were of the late ’60s and early ’70s, but I know that if you were a full-time college student, especially if you had a family, you got a reprieve of some sort. Un-Effing-Believable. I disagree with that line of reasoning just as much as I disagree that the draft should only be for men. If the country needs people to serve in the military, draft men and women, not just men. But that again is for another day.

If you are one of those who became a full-time college student to avoid the draft, knowing full-well what you were doing and taking this course of action with the intent simply to avoid the draft, I earnestly pray that someone else did not die because of your cowardice. You might be able to make peace with God, your pot supplier or whomever else you believe in to justify your actions, but there truly is no lower form of life. I consider you no better than a rapist or a child molester. Seriously. The contempt you have for your fellow man by causing them to pay a sacrifice on your behalf is unacceptable. You are the worst type of coward.

When we tuned in to the evening news to see what was happening in the States, what did we see? Flag burning college students complaining about the war. My friends and I hated them. Whether our dads were Regular Army, pre-draft volunteers or drafted, they were all service members who answered the call to serve their country. Did they like the war? None of us did. I can pretty much guarantee you that unless he was dead, you saw your father more in one year than I did in five. The same with my friends. Our dads weren’t there because they were called away. Sometimes one of our dads wouldn’t come home. There was no fanfare, no parade, no community event. One day Chris was at school with you and then he was gone for a few days. By the time word got back to us that Chris’ dad had died they were already on a plane back home. You never said goodbye. They just weren’t there anymore, neither Chris nor his dad. And who was responsible? As far as we were concerned, the flag-burning filth on TV.

I remember that my father returned home from Vietnam once (he served multiple tours there) and was taking a bus from Los Angeles to where we lived in Pasadena, California. Someone on the bus called him a baby killer. Why? Because that’s what all the young, hip, flag-burning, draft-dodging, pot-smoking, acid-dropping hippies did at the time. My dad beat the crap out of him and only because of the bus driver and some of the other bus riders, he didn’t kill him. Why? Today they would call it PTSD but unknown to the loser hippie, my dad had literally been in the jungles of Vietnam not 48 hours before shithead called him a baby killer. Does this matter? Not necessarily, but it will help you understand my position. I was proud of my dad for what he did. No one on TV ever stopped the flag burning. No one ever stopped the name calling. No one ever stopped the student protests (thanks for the effort at Kent State, though). “We”, the military service members and dependents, were always the villains.

One obvious group I excluded here were the conscientious objectors (COs). I respected them. They didn’t run from the draft or suddenly have the need to enroll in school. If they registered (many if not most did), they declared themselves as COs. Did that keep them from being drafted? No. In fact, I met two people when I first joined the service that had registered as COs but were drafted anyway. One was a Chaplain’s Aide and the other was a medic. Neither would carry a weapon or inflict harm to someone else but both answered when their draft number came up.

A conscientious objector is not someone that simply doesn’t want to join the military. To me, a CO is someone who either based on their religion, ethics, morality or combination of all three refuses to harm, much less kill, another. If you call yourself a CO and then punch someone in the face because they call you a coward, you’re not a CO. You’re a coward. A CO is not afraid of serving provided *service* is what’s demanded. Chaplain’s Aide, medic, dental hygienist, there are scores of job specialties where known, self-described COs can and do serve. If you were a CO during Vietnam, registered for the draft and reported to the draft board when they called your number, I have a lot of respect for you. Perhaps the military didn’t need or want you by the time you got there, but you got there. As a civilian (lower case “c”), you’re still head and shoulders above the rest because you took a stand on principles, not on fear. A true CO is not a coward. Jesus Christ was a conscientious objector and no one I know would consider Him a coward.

But on to today’s beef.

I’m certain I’m not the only person who’s heard someone say, “If I’d only stayed in I’d have my twenty by now.” That kind of bugs me. Why did you get out then? You did 12, 13 or 14 years–why did you quit? You can take an early retirement from the military at 15 years in most cases (reduced pay, of course, but you’re still eligible for retirement pay). Why did you leave? What are you not telling us? For what reason were you ineligible for promotion? What did you do that put a bar to reenlistment on your record? What happened? Just saying you “shouldda” stayed is not being honest. I’d like to know why you *didn’t* stay. If it wasn’t your choice, why not tell us what really happened? And don’t lie to me and tell me it was because you went to go work with Delta Force. Two quick questions will establish you’re a liar, so don’t even start. Just tell the truth. Why didn’t you stay?

Another favorite is, “If we were ever attacked I’d be the first one in line to volunteer.” What the frickin frack does that mean? You excuse the attack on the Marine barracks in Beirut because it wasn’t “us”. Technically, our Marines were in another country so that doesn’t count. Wow. Okay. So the first time they attacked the World Trade Center (remember that?) didn’t count? What about the USS Cole? Khobar Towers? What about our embassies? What about 9/11? At what point do you draw the line and say “we” have been attacked and now you’ll hold true to your word? Did you lie? Did you ever really intend to join or were you just lying to make yourself feel better? Oh, I know: When you said that you were in school. Now you’ve got a decent job and a family and you don’t want to give that up. What about the soldier on his fourth tour of duty that just got killed by a roadside bomb today? Are his wife and kids less important to him than yours are to you? Come on! Nut Up! If you’re afraid, say so.

There’s nothing wrong with being afraid. Fear is a basic emotion. The difference between fear and cowardice is simple: A person can have tremendous fear yet still try. A coward won’t even try. If you’re afraid to serve because it might cost you your life, let alone your family and your career, admit it. There is honor in admitting fear. But please, don’t lie to me and tell me that “we” haven’t met your conditions for being attacked (at which point you’ll run down to the recruiting station to sign up). Promote yourself up from coward. Admit your fear.

Today’s discussion was the classic, “If I could have joined, I would have” statement. I understand that if you have an emotional or physical impairment that keeps you from entering service in the military, it is what it is. I was seriously injured training with a Ranger unit at an Arctic Warfare school in Alaska. I was told if I did not accept a medical separation from service (with a healthy cash payout to boot) at that time (1985) that I would have to surrender any future medical benefits related to the injury and accept a mandatory separation date twenty years after my initial entry into the service. Unfortunately, my retirement paperwork came through in August of 2001 and we were attacked (again) in September of 2001. That, of course, is another subject.

Not everyone has a debilitating injury. The guy I was speaking with today thought he would get some respect from me by claiming an injury but that wasn’t to be.

In California, we have the California National Guard. I think just about every state has a National Guard, but that’s not important. The California National Guard (CANG) occupies and trains on CANG property. It’s state property, but designated for use by the CANG. We have armories and camps throughout the state. Have you ever thought about this? If the entire unit at your local armory gets mobilized and deployed overseas, what happens to the building? The unit won’t be gone forever. Who maintains the facility? Ah, my friend. The Great State of California has an answer for this: The California State Military Reserve (CSMR). Never heard of them? Neither had I, until I worked with them.

The CSMR has uniforms just like the CANG except the unit patches and name tapes are different. Admittedly, my experience with the CSMR is dated (1990s) but it was staffed with people who answered the call to serve in time of need. There were people of all ages, men and women alike. A guy I worked with for a short time was a captain in the CSMR who could only walk with the use of crutches as he was essentially a paraplegic. He was freakin’ awesome.

I was a Military Intelligence officer with an emphasis on electronic warfare (jamming, direction finding, communications deception, etc.). I was detailed at one point to work as a liaison officer to the CANG’s 40th Infantry Division when they went to the field for their annual two week training exercise. I had a senior NCO with me and together we comprised what was known as an IEWSE (Intelligence and Electronic Warfare Staff Element). We rolled up to the designated rally point for our initial contact as planned.

When the back ramp of the M577 Command Track came down, I was surprised to see a guy with two silver crutches coming down the ramp. Having had the experience of both legs in full casts at the same time myself, I figured this guy had been injured recently. He and I were both captains so we introduced ourselves by first name (though I couldn’t tell you his name if I had to right now). It was obvious by the way he moved that he had not been injured per se, but had a disability. Namely, he couldn’t walk without his crutches.

Yes, we spoke about the mission and what I was there to do and all that crap, which isn’t the point here. I got to speaking with him about how he got to be in the middle of Camp Roberts, California in the back of an armored personnel carrier when he clearly didn’t meet the physical requirements for military service. He told me about the CSMR, what they did and how they functioned. I was fascinated. This guy was a freakin’ genius who didn’t have a disability at all–he just couldn’t walk. To him it was more of an annoyance than anything else, but it really forced me to wrap my head around the concept of being disabled versus having an impairment. This guy couldn’t walk but it didn’t keep him from thinking. It may seem incredibly ignorant now, but I don’t know that the point had ever been made as clearly as it was working with him. He was a great guy to work with and it was obvious the other people in the command respected him very much.

We spoke at length about the CSMR. Basically, if a unit gets deployed, the CSMR will occupy the armory until the unit returns. There’s more to it than that of course, but my point is this: The guy today said his hearing in one ear was too bad to join the Army. If he “couldda”, he “wouldda” but he couldn’t so he didn’t. When I told him about the CSMR and the fact that he could still serve in uniform, the conversation went from motivation to something along the lines of not having the time to be able to do it right now. Very weak.

It really bothers me to speak with someone about military service they didn’t perform. Why waste my time? Honestly, now that I’m older and hopefully more mature, I respect you just for serving in the first place. I don’t care if you painted handrails deep in the bowels of a Navy ship or chocked wheels on an airfield in the middle of nowhere for the Air Force. You don’t have to be a Force Recon Marine or a Ranger. Your willingness to serve puts you in a select group. Your motivation and dedication might define what you do and how well you do it, but it doesn’t define *you*.

I know I will have to endure more shouldda, wouldda, couldda conversations in the future. I enjoy speaking with other people about their specific military experiences. The stuff I did and for which I was trained was fairly unique, highly specialized and not well known. My world was one acronym after another, all of which had specific references to either capabilities, platforms, performance, personnel or missions. If you know the difference between Trailblazer, Teammate, Quick Fix, Rivet Joint or Mohawk, let’s talk. Otherwise, I’d be more than happy to listen you. Everyone who’s served has a different experience, some good, some bad. But please, if you didn’t even try, don’t ask me to talk about my service. You wouldn’t understand.

I have some pretty simple ground rules regarding military service.

  1. If you served, don’t lie about what you did. A liar is a liar. You’re not a Ranger because you bought the tab at the PX, you’ve never served in Delta Force and your sniper team was never sent to assassinate someone. Don’t lie.
  2. If you want to serve, look into it first. Don’t join because Call of Duty is a bad-ass video game and you kick ass and take names like no one else. Serving is not a video game. It’s not a joke. You might have to kill someone. You might die. Worse, you might suffer horrible, disfiguring injuries. Know the risks. Don’t do it because you broke up with your high school sweetheart or because you think it’s your best-bet for a job. Do it because it’s right and you and your family know the risks.
  3. If you don’t want to serve, don’t. But don’t lie about it. Don’t pull the conscientious objector card and then wish death or injury to someone else. Don’t say it’s because we’re not really at war. Don’t say it’s because you’re not able to serve. Tell me you’re a CO and prove it by joining as a Chaplain’s Aide. Tell me you’re afraid and earn a little respect. Don’t lie and make up some reason why you can’t serve. Don’t be a coward.
  4. If you didn’t register for the draft, do so. It’s still the law.
  5. If you’re currently serving and need to speak with someone about what you’ve seen, done, heard or read about, talk to your Chaplain. You don’t have to be ‘religious’ to talk to a Chaplain. For what it’s worth, if you think you might have something like Combat Stress or PTSD, a conversation with the Chaplain could help clarify the issue confidentially. If you go to the TMC, an Aid station or hospital for consultation, that gets put in your record. See the Chaplain first.
  6. If you’re currently serving and want to re-up or separate from service, don’t make a decision without including your family. You need their support either way.
  7. If you’re a civilian and you read this whole thing, thank you. I’m almost fifty now and it’s taken my whole life to accept you as an equal. I wasn’t better than you, it’s just that you didn’t deserve the company of service members and dependants. I’m almost over all of that. Unless, of course…
  8. If you’re a draft dodger or a career student (as defined above), pray. Pray daily. Pray that God will remove the guilt I hope you feel as a result of your selfish, cowardly acts of betrayal to true Americans. When you see the names on the Vietnam War Memorial, I hope you say a prayer that your petty act of self preservation did not result in one single person’s death. Pray that God will forgive you when Jesus reminds you of John 15:13.

Sparky’s Office

 

Today we take a fascinating trip into Sparky’s office and delve deep into my twisted mind.

This is the house in which I now live. However, since this is the Internet age and there are as many browsers as there are electronic devices connected to the web at any given time, your viewing results may vary. If the picture is too small to discern any real detail, image a small two-story “starter” home with a small yard and a short driveway. It probably looks similar to houses in your neighborhood but mine’s a little older. Again, your browser may tweak the settings slightly but that’s where I live and, at least on my browser, that’s what it looks like.

I used to be one of the most anti-social, confrontational, in-your-face people you’d ever met. I was willing to back up anything at any time with aggressive action, not weak reaction. I was told under no uncertain terms by my spouse that if things didn’t change I would no longer be welcome at home. For those reasons among others, I was asked to leave*.

Knowing things weren’t good, I took an anger management class and really embraced the concepts and tools given during the course of instruction. I changed, but it either wasn’t enough or it was too late to reconcile and return home so I had to find a new home on a very limited budget. I found this place and I really, really like it.

The homeowner lives here also but he put me in charge as the caretaker for the house and its surrounding property. It’s not a bad gig most of the time. The house has multiple rooms and, because we’re on a hill, the homeowner likes me to keep all the lights on for any unoccupied rooms. Why? Although he doesn’t run a boarding house or a licensed hotel/motel (or even a B&B, for that matter) he thinks keeping the lights on encourages people who are tired, lost or hungry to stop by. Which, by the way, is exactly how I found him.

I used to have a lot of issues with that philosophy. It costs a lot of money to keep all the lights on. Moreover, keeping the lights on means you have to keep the rooms clean. It’s much easier to clean a room really, really clean once, turn off the light and shut the door. It’ll stay clean, right? Wrong. If the light’s on I can’t shut the door. Why? Those are the rules. As long as the homeowner is in his house all the rooms are his–even mine. If he wants to keep all the lights on all the time and he’s willing to pay for it, the lights stay on as long as he wants.

Between my revised post-anger-management attitude and the fact that I accept I’m living in someone else’s house where they make the rules, things have changed for the better. People recognize me and come up to embrace me and speak with me in the strangest places. Target, the UPS Store, Subway, a high school play, and even today at Kinko’s. Lots of people recognize me as that guy on the hill with all his lights on, which isn’t a bad thing at all.

If you live in a house with multiple rooms, try this: Open every door in every room and turn on every light in every room or closet. When you get up in the morning, mentally inventory everything in the house. When you’re ready, start walking around. Stop at every room and check that everything’s where it should be and that everything in the room is clean and presentable. If the homeowner walked in with you, would you be proud of the work he charged you with (i.e. keeping his house clean and organized)? If you do that every day for a few days you’ll see it’s not as tough or weird as it sounds.

If someone comes to the house in the middle of the night drawn by all the lights, I’m more than happy to speak with them and try to help them. Do I want them living there? Not necessarily, but if I can help point them in the direction of help I’ll do so.

Have you grown tired of this yet, having figured it out a long time ago? If not, here’s the spoiler: I’m talking about my spiritual beliefs, of course.

God, Creator of all things, gave me a spiritual house. Once I accepted, confessed and believed that He alone was God, He sent the Holy Spirit to dwell in my heart as the owner-in-fact of my mind, body and soul. I am the caretaker. However, that has a tremendous amount of responsibility. I decide who (or what) will cohabit with me in the house. If my thoughts and deeds (rooms in the house) are good and honorable, I have no problem keeping the door open for review and the light on so others can see what I’ve done and take note.

If my thoughts and deeds are not honest, wholesome or life-giving, I will probably want to shut the door, turn off the light and pretend it didn’t happen. That’s not setting a good example for me as a caretaker or as a parent.

So, what does this have to do with anything? I had to go to Kinko’s today to buy a hole punch. I got involved in a conversation with someone who recognized me from my church and wanted me to help them with some issues they’ve been having. I am not a pastor, a minister, someone with special healing powers or anything other than who I am. Regardless, this person wanted to talk about an issue with which they’re struggling and “felt in their heart” that I was approachable and could help them if by doing nothing else but praying for them.

A year ago I would have immediately assessed how to drop and incapacitate this stranger who approached me in the parking lot of Kinko’s. Today I held and comforted someone in need who sought my advice and prayer.

Our God is an awesome God.

 

*For the record, I never–not even once for pretend–yelled at, hit, threatened, belittled, called names or intimidated my spouse. My ignorance made me a stay-at-home, do-nothing jerk. All you He-Man, bad-ass, wannabes out there, I’ve got a plethora of reformed hard core gang members at my disposal who will tell you the same thing: Don’t be like we were. It’s a waste of time.

It Took Guts

At about 7:30 this morning I was engaged in a rather unusual discussion as a group of us met for coffee. An acquaintance of mine admitted an addiction to something they had been introduced to at a young age. The addiction grew over the years and although the family and the first spouse were aware of the issue, it was dismissed. Now on a second marriage, the individual had hidden the addiction from the current spouse out of fear and embarrassment. Until late last week.

Not wanting to hide the issue any longer, my acquaintance admitted the addiction to their spouse. Fast forward past the embarrassment, hurt and crying period they described, we come to today. It did not end as I thought.

My acquaintance told a small group of us everything that had happened from the initial contact to the most-recent event regarding the addiction. We were told of the attempts to self-heal and the subsequent failures. We were told of the life-long hurt and humiliation they experienced. Crying, one of my group came forward and admitted to exactly the same issue.

As we discussed and comforted those two, it became apparent that the addiction they had was no different than many other addictions: drugs, alcohol, pornography, anger, abuse. The key today, though, was this individual having the courage to come forward and admit the issue and ask for help.

As we were breaking to leave, a friend of mine came to me and asked what I thought about what had happened this morning. I related my thoughts and asked if we should have done anything different than what we did. No, I was told, we did everything this person would have hoped to have happen. In fact, how we reacted gave my friend the courage to admit an addiction to me.

Not to make light of it, but I thought I was done with the “Day of Confession” and was taken aback by this new admission. But it got more interesting. My friend not only wanted me to support them while they sought help, I was specifically asked to be this person’s accountability partner. I freely admit I have no idea what an accountability partner is, what they do, or how they establish accountability. All I know is that my friend asked for help and I, as I’m certain you would, freely gave it.

The first thing I was asked to do was read a passage from the bible out loud with my friend, which we did. I was then told that as far as my friend was concerned, they considered me “faithful” and “beyond reproach”. In fact, they felt I was perhaps the only person they could put into those categories. Wow.

Simultaneously, I had a huge feeling of honor that someone would think that highly of me while also feeling a huge weight of responsibility placed on a yoke around my neck. So, if something like this happens to you, do what we did:

First, we discussed the fact that I am no more or less human than my friend. Just because they honored me with very kind and blessing-filled words doesn’t mean I walk the straight-and-narrow path 24/7. I trip and fall just like the next person and, like most of my friends, I choose to get up and keep walking.

Second, I am not responsible for my friend’s behavior. If they back-slide, it is due to a conscious choice on their part and not because I did or failed to do something for them.

Finally, we established that an “accountability partner” is someone who can be called at any time to offer either words of encouragement, support, or meeting for coffee at all hours of the night. For us, an “accountability partner” is not a babysitter, an au pair or a scapegoat. If my friend is in a moment of weakness and needs strength and encouragement, I’ll be there. If they fall prey to their weakness, I’ll be there to lift them up and help them keep on the path they *want* to be on, not the path to which they briefly returned.

So, all this said, by the time 10:00AM rolled around, I learned a lot from and about a group of friends and acquaintances I see quite regularly. I also took on a role to which I personally felt unprepared but to which a friend of mine felt I was solely able to execute. Although I have a lot of mixed emotions about it, I feel confident that will succeed in my duties. Why? Not because I think I can do it myself but because my friend thinks I can do it and has asked for my help.

It goes without saying (to me, at least) that God played a huge roll in the lives of the people I associated with this morning. It took guts for the first person to admit their addiction. It took guts for the second person to join with the first. It took guts for my friend to ask me for help. It didn’t take guts for me to agree. I did what you would have done–helped a friend in need. At least that’s what I hope you would do…

Because I know my friend will read this post, I felt it appropriate to include the bible verse we read today that gave them the courage to approach me and ask for help:

Psalm 101 (NLT)

A psalm of David.

1  I will sing of your love and justice, Lord.

I will praise you with songs.

2  I will be careful to live a blameless life—

when will you come to help me?

I will lead a life of integrity in my own home.

3  I will refuse to look at anything vile and vulgar.

I hate all who deal crookedly; I will have nothing to do with them.

4  I will reject perverse ideas and stay away from every evil.

5  I will not tolerate people who slander their neighbors.

I will not endure conceit and pride.

6  I will search for faithful people to be my companions.

Only those who are above reproach will be allowed to serve me.

7  I will not allow deceivers to serve in my house,

and liars will not stay in my presence.

8  My daily task will be to ferret out the wicked

and free the city of the Lord from their grip.