23 October 2006

more thoughts (no bills!)

Hmmmm....

Watched "Failure to Launch" last night. It's ridiculously awesome if you re-watch portions with the French language overdubs. Especially the "Nekkid Room." My house is totally going to have a naked/library room. With a reading hammock. And a minibar. Terry Bradshaw's in pretty good shape for an old man...good call, Jeff. I'd move downstreet in a heartbeat. Find me a job.

As for dragons, I'm all for slaying them, and I'm all for the Shire. I think I'm game for going out and slaying them in groups. Not groups of dragons--groups of dragon slayers. In other dragon-slaying news, I'm nine pages into the uber-project. Maybe another seven to go. It's lookin' good. The secret, I've found, is Oreos and good Pollywogg Holler berry wine. And late nights.

I had a good discussion with a beautiful woman yesterday. Is sin action, or an attitude of the heart? The seven deadlies are all attitudes of the heart--Rage, Lust, Sloth, Gluttony, Pride, Envy, Greed. (thanks to little Wetherby for the help on the last three...not my specialties :) If the sin comes out, it evidences the heart infested with death--and in need of salvation. Following that line, sometimes a little active sin is a good thing. Like a nasty case of stomach cramps, it evidences the need for healing--salvation. Our salvation is not gained or lost--it is a series of losses and gains. We lose our lives, we get them back.

"As a man dies many times before he's dead, so does he wend from birth to birth until, by grace, he comes alive at last." -Godric

And I wasn't cutting a line between my friends in the world captivated by lies, and myself outside and redeemed. I am struggling not with necessarily straight-out lies, but influences, values, the ideas that drive my generation. They're mine as much as they are theirs, and they are my cultural context--both struggle and joy. I like being a twenty-first century American twenty-something...but like any other place or time, it's got questions to be answered and difficulties to be overcome. Got a need for the wind and wisdom of God, just like every generation.

Well said, Katrina. Reminds me of a few shiningly great of examples of artists who escape the status quo and give a little time to those not single teens or twentysomethings, who I shall celebrate here.

Cheers go out to the artists of Iron & Wine, for love songs like "Naked As We Came" celebrating the romance of those married with children. And the writers of Firefly and Serenity for integrating Zoe and Wash and the various and sundry stresses of married life into the tale of life on a starfaring freighter. And, of course, The Flaming Lips and Death Cab For Cutie for making the theme of love in the face of death O-So-Trendy right now with "What Sarah Said" ("Love is watching someone die/Who's gonna watch you die?") and "Do You Realize" ("we're floating in space...that happiness/makes you cry...that everyone you know/one day/will die?")

And, right back atcha Jeff, you should watch "Friends with Money," a really awesome and very NPR (so trendy right now) film about the lives of three married well-to-do couples and their unmarried and not-so-well-to-do friend. Which includes the coolest married couple I can remember being portrayed on film, with the chipper husband blissfully unaware that all of his friends thinks he's gay. Good flick.

So. Dr. Tawfiq Hamid is here, advocating peaceful Islam, and I am off to pretend to be a prospective student in class because it's too cold and wet to cut lawns today. I think it's becoming a trend. I shall call it, "winter." Just signed up for a few shifts driving the old ambulance. Good bye, lawnmowing, I shall miss the paychecks.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I was merely drawing a comparison between the mindsets and influences that are prevalent and some lies which are also prevalent. After all sharing experiences is what brings people together . . .

I remember hearing a really neat message recently at Crusade. The speaker talked about one of the times Jesus healed a leper.

He first talked about what it was like to be a leper, isolated, alone . . . totally cut off from any human contact, . . . no one would touch you . . . people would run and hide when they saw you coming . . . mothers would hide their children as you passed by.

He described how when Jesus touched the leper to heal him there must have been an audible gasp from the frightened and cautious crowd. That touch was probably a piece of joy itself . . . and then the leper coudl actually feel Jesus hand when his body was healed . . .

The the speaker said that really, we're all lepers. We're all dirty . . lonely, dressed in rags . . . untouchables . . . sinful. And God reached out to touch us anyway. It's was a very good reminder. It's a lot different learning to love people like the ones around me. Outside the safety of my door there's no telling what one might meet.

Anyhow . . . call me sometime . . . love you man!

David

t4stywh34t said...

Holcomb,

Do you work for the maintenance crew at Houghton? I think I missed that memo.

Peace,
Chuck