tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3410392703148143012024-03-13T01:52:45.081-04:00Let Us Love and Sing and Wonderthe imparticular thoughts of a particular poetT.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.comBlogger288125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-20879113096712873912012-04-13T23:57:00.003-04:002012-04-14T00:33:21.477-04:00Blue Like Jazz: The MovieI don't agree with Donald Miller on 100% of every issue, but I am a big fan of the way he approaches almost every thought, his unflinching yet humble honesty, and his damn good prose. That's why when I heard money was being raised to turn his book <i><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Blue-Like-Jazz-Nonreligious-Spirituality/dp/0785263705/">Blue Like Jazz</a></i> into a movie, I didn't have to think long about giving money to the cause.<div><br /></div><div>Tonight, I had a casual Asian fusion dinner date with my lovely wife, and then had myself blown away by the very movie I helped (in a very small way) to create. When we walked into the theater 2 minutes before the previews started, I was somewhat anxious that we would turn the corner to see a sparsely populated room, but that wasn't the case--we were relegated to the lower, end-of-the-row seats because of the number of people in attendance. And I can honestly say I have never sat in an audience so engrossed a movie.</div><div><br /></div><div>The last ten minutes or so of the movie is just a simple conversation between two of the man characters--Don and 'The Pope'--during which the entire audience was absolutely silent. The (what I believe to be exemplary) 1 hr 40 min build up to that scene firmly merited our attention in those closing minutes. The conflict is real, it doesn't occur overnight--it doesn't fully resolve (just like jazz) but it speaks one of the most poignant and honest professions of faith I have ever seen in film (and possibly in real life).</div><div><br /></div><div>Even though the setting of the--shall we say--<i>eccentric </i>campus of Reed may cause some to deem this film to be "unrealistic," I think for most it provides a more solid justification for such catalytic change in Don's life, and allows for an entertaining little petri dish for him to experience and ascertain in one year what many don't until their forties.</div><div><br /></div><div>The film is not flawless. But neither is life. It takes seriously the serious issues it wants to wrestle with, and has fun with what should be fun. Let me leave you with this, if you pay the 7, 10, or 15 dollars to see this movie you will:</div><div><br /></div><div>1) Not be distracted by a famous actor, but by believe characters</div><div>2) Honestly feel like you are attending Reed for a year</div><div>3) Genuinely care about Don's struggle with faith</div><div>4) Think about the movie for days--whether you loved it or hated it</div><div> and</div><div>5) Not regret the price of admission.</div><div><br /></div><div>So <a href="http://www.bluelikejazztickets.com/">go see it</a>. Wrestle with why the stars are swirling in the blue, like jazz.</div><div><br /></div><div><br /></div><object style="height: 390px; width: 640px" width="640" height="360"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/GOglQgyxYkI?version=3&feature=player_embedded"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowScriptAccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/GOglQgyxYkI?version=3&feature=player_embedded" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" width="640" height="360"></embed></object>T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-80643126966283014422011-03-08T13:00:00.000-05:002011-03-09T01:16:38.040-05:00I Am ResolvedI am resolved to not interrupt the silence, unless I can improve it.<br /><br />But I am also resolved to never stop trying to improve the silence.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-13316025557539066212011-03-03T14:00:00.002-05:002011-03-03T15:15:04.507-05:00Haters Gonna Hate, Lovers Gotta Love<span style="font-weight: bold;"><blockquote>"I know many young evangelicals barely have any stomach for controversy, let alone strong words about a serious topic. But if there is no way to be simultaneously bold and humble; if there is no way to be a gentle, caring person while still speaking in clear tones about hurtful error; if there is no way to correct those who oppose sound doctrine without being a moral monster; if there’s no way to love truth and grace at the same time, then there’s no way to be a biblical Christian. Judgmentalism is a sin and Calvinists can be jerks. But not every judgment is sinful and not every truth is cruel just because Reformed people teach it."<br />--<a href="http://thegospelcoalition.org/blogs/kevindeyoung/2011/02/28/bell-brouhaha/">Kevin DeYoung</a></blockquote></span>In the context of <a href="http://thisisthetjblog.blogspot.com/2011/03/sippin-on-dat-hater-ade.html">my last post</a>, I have found myself characterized by that first sentence: I barely have a stomach for controversy. While I will regularly debate things of theological weight, I find myself cringing and the helping hand I am lending to conflict. And there is a simple reason for my disdain: conflict sucks.<br /><br />Conflict sucks even worse among Christians, because we are supposed to exemplify love (<a href="http://www.esvonline.org/search/1+John+4/">1 John 4</a>). And this theological argumentative conflict does not appear to be helping that exemplification in any way. It literally pains me to hear the rough equivalent of theological hate-speech being tossed in either direction.<br /><br />Yet, as DeYoung points out, there must be way to do both. The example of Christ clearly demonstrated both: from caring for the widow and orphan, or even those without faith, to his explicit and almost virulent statements toward/about the Pharisees. Jesus valued truth as much as he valued love, because they complement each other.<br /><br />In my last post you can easily state Furtick is hating on haters, therefore becoming hypocritical. But I understand where he is coming from. There are people (and I think these are the types of people he is talking about) who carelessly and lovelessly criticize anyone in or out of their or <span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">the</span> church who they decide deserves it. They are not demonstrating love. Likewise, those people who are infinitely emphasizing love and attempting to prevent conflict simply for the sake of peace are not demonstrating truth.<br /><br />It comes down to a simple point: your theology. I do not mean Reformed or Liberal, Catholic or Protestant, Pre or Post Millenialist, but rather the way you view God and the way in which he has acted toward humans. If God is not a sovereign, just King, then your life could demonstrate mercy but without need, for why show mercy if there is nothing to be save from? Contrarily, if God is only a sovereign, just King with only a sliver enough of grace to save you, then your life could become focused on those who escaped that sliver.<br /><br />However, if God is both sovereign and just, but slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love (as he identifies himself: <a href="http://www.esvonline.org/search/Exodus+34%3A5-7/">Exodus 34:5-7</a>) then we will find ourselves able (though not without difficulty) to live lives following Christ's example, fulfilling both love and truth.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-4155701281266193732011-03-01T11:00:00.000-05:002011-03-02T12:12:01.798-05:00Sippin' On Dat Hater-ade<iframe title="YouTube video player" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/NCW9-MglCsw?rel=0" allowfullscreen="" width="640" frameborder="0" height="390"></iframe><br /><br />When I first watched this video, my first thought was inclined generally toward the ways in which Furtick's argument seemed a little off base, and the small miscalculations he had made through the course of what he was saying. Then I realized that I was who he was talking about. <span style="font-style:italic;">I am a hater.</span><br /><br />I don't know when exactly this happened, probably sometime around the time of my birth (you know, original sin, total depravity and all that). The thing about being a hater is, hate blinds you. Not only does it blind you to the object of your hate, but it blinds you to your own condition, it keeps you from grasping the sinfulness and the effects of your hate. Hate is subtle in your own heart but blatant in the face of others.<br /><br />So when I watch someone call out haters, and make the implicit connection to what they are saying to who I am, my hate kicks in. Now, this is not to say that I agree with everything Furtick has to say, but I at least think he has a point: as someone who is Reformed, proudly and adamantly so, I have a grave tendency to cast down small judgments on others from my throne of theological supremacy. And that is not right.<br /><br />Good theology, orthodoxy, is important. Yet, equally important, is love. When Christ came into the world, he did it to do two things: share the love of God, and provide a correct theology. He cared for, healed, and helped people, demonstrating the mercy of God on earth. But he also told them what was up. <span style="font-weight:bold;">Forcefully.</span><br /><br />Christ came from a position of infinitely more correct theology--you could argue that he was the only person on earth who had a completely 100% correct view of God. And yet, while he called out those whose views were wrong and destructive, he simultaneously showed grace and mercy. I think I could do with a little following of his example.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-51486934689532757782011-02-17T16:00:00.001-05:002011-02-17T22:40:29.225-05:00Winter HymnIt is a damn cold night,<br />But these nights are clear.<br /><br />The frigid wind has a way<br />Of cutting down to bone<br />And probing deeper.<br /><br />These are the evenings of my discontent.<br /><br />I am more honest in the cold:<br />Winter offers the formality<br />Of doctor-patient confidence,<br />When the weather reminds me<br />That death is not so foreign.<br /><br />This is not the end, but<br />Death is piling on dying.<br /><br />On cold, hard nights like this<br />I hear something written on my heart.<br />It whispers: “I see a new day coming,”<br />and:<br />“There is beauty in cold, desolate places.”T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-60432045651157577092011-02-15T16:00:00.002-05:002011-02-15T17:38:58.913-05:00I'm Talking About LoveI have a problem. I talk about my fiancée <a href="http://thisisthetjblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/somebody-to-love-part-1.html"><span style="font-style: italic;">all the time</span></a>. At least three conversations per day include a phrase such has "Well, my fiancée was telling me..." or "Elizabeth and I were talking, and..." or "Elizabeth said the other day..." or something similar. I mean, I do talk to her every night, for at least an hour, in addition to multiple texts and sometimes calls throughout the day. It also could be the distance: being 412 miles away from each other, I want to make her a part of my everyday life, and talking about her is just one way to do it.<br /><br />I think the real culprit, though, is love. I love my fiancée (You say: "Well I'd hope so."), and as we are 151 days away from being joined in holy matrimony, she is becoming an ever increasing part of who I am. So in one sense, I am not talking about her more, but I am compensating for her growing influence in my life.<br /><br />Now you may be wondering why this is a problem. Well, it kind of isn't. As I already mentioned, I love my fiancée, and highly enjoy talking to and about her. The problem is, because my love for her and the growing importance she has in my life constitutes more talking about her, that there is a noticeable absence of such talk about God.<br /><br />People who regularly talk to me may notice I engage in theological conversation a fair amount, readily repeating the latest blog or thought from Piper, Driscoll, etc., or how I don't agree with ----'s theology, or ----'s interpretation of the Bible, but how often do you hear me say "Well, God was telling me..." or "I was praying, and..." or "I was reading God's Word the other day and it said..."? What this says to me is that God does not have a growing influence in my life--that I do not love him--at least not to what would be a good degree.<br /><br />So talking about Elizabeth is not the problem, but not talking about God is. What's comforting, though, is that in both cases, the amount of talking I do about the other person does not affect how much they love me. Both Elizabeth and God, though I deserve neither, will love and pursue me no matter the quantity nor quality of what I say about them. <span style="font-weight: bold;"><span style="font-style: italic;">That</span></span> is a blessing.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-67989414195506166492011-02-10T13:30:00.005-05:002011-02-10T13:48:40.310-05:00Somedoby to Love, Part 2<a href="http://thisisthetjblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/somebody-to-love-part-1.html">Read Part 1 Here</a><br /><br />The one beauty of a long distance relationship is that it stands or falls on communication. If it survives, then you are able to communicate very well. If it doesn’t, well, you apparently can’t. Still, day after day it begins to wear on you, having someone so dear so very far away. Sometimes, I doubted the validity of it all. Other times, it has been more real to me than my next breath. I began to make good on my intention to love her. I did the sweet boyfriend things: texted her every night after she goes to bed, so she had a message waiting for her when she woke up; went to visit her at least once a month; and, naturally, gave her flowers every time I visited, often accompanied by dark chocolate (her favorite).<br /><br />I began to notice, the more affectionate I grew toward Elizabeth, the more affection I had, the more affection I wanted to give, and the more affection I wanted to see all people give each other. I also began to see manners of displaying that affection more and more. Even in <a href="http://thisisthetjblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/i-made-this-for-you.html">Rubik’s cubes</a>. So I sent her a picture one morning, claiming the artistic validity of a heart comprised of a <a href="http://thisisthetjblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/i-made-this-for-you.html">Rubik’s cube</a>:<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj8r-lNJ_KNa1udsYIA4a1G6HV_uIH9EhxH9p85ZP8EvFsna65D_B7wYEujMSopDLugt7FW6tSRCMrAxFMREQ7KdDZ4YFB2yNYKUFBleWF3hrspZsoC3oCUMcf8Xf3hWrMgz3khSrVB7FmJ/s1600/rubiks.JPG"><img style="display: block; margin: 0px auto 10px; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 338px; height: 255px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj8r-lNJ_KNa1udsYIA4a1G6HV_uIH9EhxH9p85ZP8EvFsna65D_B7wYEujMSopDLugt7FW6tSRCMrAxFMREQ7KdDZ4YFB2yNYKUFBleWF3hrspZsoC3oCUMcf8Xf3hWrMgz3khSrVB7FmJ/s400/rubiks.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5572131612332569634" border="0" /></a><blockquote>“We're walkin' into the fields.<br />We're walkin into the forest.<br />The moon is before us.<br />Up above<br />We're holdin' hands in the rain<br />S-sayin' words like I love you<br />D-d-d'you love me? Yeah<br /><br />My my heart like a kick drum<br />My my heart like a kick drum<br />My my heart like a kick drum<br />My my love like a voice.”<br />—The Avett Brothers “Kick Drum Heart”</blockquote>I made her a mixtape of songs that reminded me of what we had. And another. The second mix I titled “i carry your heart with me” after an E.E. Cummings poem I quite like. It goes like this:<br /><blockquote>i carry your heart with me(i carry it in<br />my heart)i am never without it(anywhere<br />i go you go,my dear; and whatever is done<br />by only me is your doing,my darling)<br />i fear<br />no fate(for you are my fate,my sweet)i want<br />no world(for beautiful you are my world,my true)<br />and it's you are whatever a moon has always meant<br />and whatever a sun will always sing is you<br /><br />here is the deepest secret nobody knows<br />(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud<br />and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows<br />higher than the soul can hope or mind can hide)<br />and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars apart<br /><br />i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)</blockquote>This made the difficulty less difficult, knowing that I carried her heart, and she carried mine. The problem was that because we had each other’s heart, our hearts were still not together. But I was okay with “fearing no fate” because “she was my fate.” Some days I literally looked up at the sky and thought that “whatever a sun will always sing” was her.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgcBnGm9LBvEjk8bjPVo-GrYiLqVf9jDrBc9AK0RLeD6u0Kt5i-JlGJfDwvYFtw9jMvsgzdl6octKvhxEPd-pchy01p2kU2l42kpjJoIhdWx1zQpRJ4lMJmqwtt7H6XtmDwJjSb_kpUx0gq/s1600/hammock.JPG"><img style="display: block; margin: 0px auto 10px; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 393px; height: 237px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgcBnGm9LBvEjk8bjPVo-GrYiLqVf9jDrBc9AK0RLeD6u0Kt5i-JlGJfDwvYFtw9jMvsgzdl6octKvhxEPd-pchy01p2kU2l42kpjJoIhdWx1zQpRJ4lMJmqwtt7H6XtmDwJjSb_kpUx0gq/s400/hammock.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5572132112086012178" border="0" /></a><br />The real predicament came when I realized that the choice I had made, to love Elizabeth, no matter what, had actually happened. You must understand, in my experience of being me, normally the things I choose to do of my own will fail relatively terribly, as my will is very weak. So when this one thing I had willed actually came to be, the logical solution is that something supplemented my own will. Does this mean that the choice was not mine? No. But was I alone in making it? I think not. And, to be honest, I am glad it was not—I would have probably chosen something a lot dumber.<br /><br />Still, I now had the dilemma of my love. I loved Elizabeth. Normally this is a prerequisite for marriage. But I wasn’t ready for marriage, was I? I had always heard about guys being scared of commitment, and scoffed at the possibility that I would fall into such a pathetic condition. No, I would be a real man, buck up, and propose when I came to such a juncture. But when I realized that I might actually be in love, it genuinely scared me. When you are in love, true love, real love, there is nothing that anyone can tell you beforehand, there is no experience you have had off of which can base your thoughts. You have no idea what to do.<br /><blockquote>“People, people, people, they make it sound so easy<br />They say just do what your heart tells you to<br />But sometimes you cannot feel it<br />Sometimes you cannot hear it<br />Sometimes it won’t talk back to you<br />And yeah I know you love me<br />And yeah I want to love you back<br />And how I know you love me<br />And how I want to love you bad.”<br />—The Avett Brothers “Pretty Girl From San Diego”</blockquote>I was nowhere near ready to make that commitment, and yet, everything in my life was ready for it. My pastor friend encouraged me to press on, telling me that commitment is like a swimming pool, you can’t expect to get a feeling for it by dipping your toes in on the side. The only way you are going to get used to the temperature is by jumping in headlong. So I decided to jump.<br /><br />On the seventh of July, as we were driving from her parents’ house in Florida, to my family in South Carolina, while I was sharing parts of who I am that no one had been privy to before, I told her I loved her. This is, I have heard, a huge milestone. For Elizabeth and myself, it was inevitable. There was no other way it could have happened. The way we treated each other—loved each other—provided for no other circumstance than this. One day in February I asked a girl to go to Chick-fil-a with me, and five months later I am in love.<br /><blockquote>“I say hey I'll be gone today<br />But I'll be back all around the way<br />It seems like everywhere I go<br />The more I see<br />The less I know<br />But I know one thing:<br />I love you<br />I love you<br />I love you<br />I love you<br /><br />I've been a lot of places all around the way<br />I've seen a lot joy and I've seen a lot of pain<br />But I don't want to write a love song for the world,<br />I just want to write a song about a boy and a girl”<br />—Michael Franti “Say Hey (I Love You)”<br /></blockquote> Love has occasionally been viewed as requirement for marriage. I subscribe to such a tradition, and was immediately aware of the impending doom of my marriage. I say doom because I could see no positive ending to the matter. Having lived with myself for twenty one and one-half years at this point, I had begun to notice my tendency to be a jackass, and the consistent degradation of many relationships such a tendency causes. Naturally, a relationship as weighty as this would necessarily result in an even more weighty screw up on my part. Past experiences began to rise in my memory: every girl, every failure. It hurts some, because I wanted to share everything with her, but I didn’t want to hurt her with my semi-secret mistakes.<br /><br />At this point in our story, I fell into a twofold trap: first, I assumed that I would have been able to fully and successfully love Elizabeth for the rest of my life all on my own strength; second, I completely removed her feelings from my calculations. I seemed to have forgotten that, if I was incapable of loving her, if I did not love her, then she would have probably let me know. Love, while it is not a feeling, can always be felt. We felt it.<br /><blockquote>“I got secrets from you, you got secrets from me<br />Because you're so worried about what I'm gonna think,<br />Baby I'm worried too.<br />But if love is a game, girl, then you're gonna win.<br />I'll spend the rest of my life bringing victory in,<br />If you want me to, yeah!”<br />—The Avett Brothers “Paranoia in B-flat Major”</blockquote>The real test of love is in real life. Not in the happy, romantic, lovey-dovey moments. Even Hollywood can nail that. Love comes in when life comes in: honest, average life. I realized at some point in our relationship that Elizabeth asks “Why?” when deciding to do something, and I tend to ask “Why not?” This gives rise to serious conflicts when I decide to do something obnoxious just for obnoxiousness’ sake, and she wants to behave like a reasonable adult.<br /><br />Elizabeth eats slowly, with purpose, while I tend to inhale my meals with the speed of the latest Hoover vacuum. She likes to plan things and be organized; I prefer spontaneity—that is unless something undermines the plan I had in mind—in which case I freak out. I take what are often joking discussions and slam them into heated arguments.<br /><br />Each of these concerns has the potential to be a serious problem. Or not. The choice is ours. I could resolve every issue we ever have, I could work very hard to make sure that she never has a problem with anything I do, and she could do the same. I could buy her flowers, write her poems, massage her feet each and every day, but that wouldn’t be our love.<br /><br />Love is a funny thing in that you can’t earn it. I don’t love her because she’s done the right things to make me do so; as if love were a cause-effect equation where she could force my hand into falling in love with her. No, I love her because she is mine. Because there is an ideal world, and that world includes me in love with her, us loving each other. I love her because that is the task that God has given me: not that it is a chore, a Sisyphian struggle that I must simply undergo; rather it is a blessing and a calling that fulfills me when I do it, rather than draining my effort and resources.<br /><blockquote>“Don't care where we're goin’, just wanna be with you.<br />Put your head on my shoulder, tell me what you been through.<br />When I lose my focus, you remind me of the truth.<br />Lift us up to the heavens for a bird's eye view.<br /><br />One woman for me:<br />Other half of my soul, you are my queen.<br />One woman for me:<br />Other half of my soul, roots of my tree .”<br />—Matisyahu “Unique is My Dove”<br /></blockquote>You may be wondering what more there is to say? Just a few closing statements: our story is not extraordinary, although for us, it is both ordinary and life changing at the same time. I doubt you have been able to glean life lessons from my words—you, reader, are probably wiser than myself. I hope you are left with the impression that this story is little more than mundane, because that is where I live, and that is where you live, and if you have found love, or if you are going to find love, I all but guarantee that is where it will be—in everyday life.<br /><br />On the ninth of October, in the year of our Lord 2010, I took Elizabeth to the Smithsonian Postal Museum in Washington, D.C. A small white box in my pocket went off in the metal detector. Afterward, we had a picnic lunch at a beautiful park adjacent to the Washington Monument. After a considerable amount of wasting time and rambling conversation, I had Elizabeth stand up next to me, told her much of what you have just read, and asked her if she would marry me. When I pulled the little white box out of my pocket, I opened it upside down. She still said yes. There is not much more that I can tell you. You have arrived at the end of the story. But we haven’t.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjktFruLrAVlzwo9GY-2_qr2fX0KCaAfIZ-Ic9SefnB4ZyZaLqTCz0GHzi0EqeedReYKTykK78YOxdzG870I8nQpnoIIjlKyJsBSo-87lPI2gl_vfqcA2PhDT5ZsBryqKf4TS4aqBoHKnc5/s1600/engagement.jpg"><img style="display: block; margin: 0px auto 10px; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 299px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjktFruLrAVlzwo9GY-2_qr2fX0KCaAfIZ-Ic9SefnB4ZyZaLqTCz0GHzi0EqeedReYKTykK78YOxdzG870I8nQpnoIIjlKyJsBSo-87lPI2gl_vfqcA2PhDT5ZsBryqKf4TS4aqBoHKnc5/s400/engagement.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5572133743862424226" border="0" /></a><blockquote>“She keeps it simple<br />And I am thankful for her kind of lovin'<br />'Cause it's simple<br /><br />No longer do we wonder if we're together<br />We're way past that<br />And I've already asked her<br />So in January we're gettin' married.”<br />—The Avett Brothers “January Wedding”<br /></blockquote>T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-15854209663081034832011-02-08T16:45:00.009-05:002011-02-10T13:49:30.012-05:00Somebody to Love, Part 1<div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">“I am the least difficult of men: all I want is boundless love”</span><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;"> —Frank O’Hara</span><br /><br /></div>When I was six years old, I proposed to my friend Sarah. She and I went to church together and were definitely friends and definitely destined to be together. Sadly, she disagreed. Sarah declined my proposal on the grounds that I could not do a cartwheel. As a six year old, I had no idea that these things were so important in marriage. Here I had learned it was about unconditional love, but the real secret to a successful marriage was acrobatics. This brought about a radical change in my worldview. It also established a precedent, as every romantic relationship or pseudo-relationship I had from the age of six until my junior year of college failed because of my own inadequacy. Not that I always said something stupid or wasn’t caring, but I always looked at my relationships as a means of satisfaction.<br /><br />In high school, I really liked Katie, but I didn’t do a great job of keeping up with caring for her—for the first week of our relationship, I did little more than smile as I passed her locker at school. That’s a big win for the male gender. She was my first kiss—I don’t regret it, but it didn’t help me care for her selflessly. I do regret the next few girls I kissed. Katie, I kissed because I truly cared for her. Marie and Erin I kissed for the sake of kissing. Then came the careful flirtations and never-official-relationship crushes, each of which was a new opportunity for me to selfishly entangle lovely young women who were undeserving of such foolishness: Allison, Haley, Anna, Kathryn. Fail. Fail. Fail. Fail.<br /><br />Then came Bethany. Bethany was not so much a failure, because by my junior year at Winthrop University, I had learned it was a good thing to actually take the time to state my intentions and ask her on a date. It was to Waffle House, a prime location. We stayed until 1:30am on a Sunday morning, after she had been babysitting and I had been square dancing and we both had church early the next morning. These days were fun—I liked her and she knew it. We spent time together and all intentions were open, honest, and discussable at any time. It was less than pleasant when she said we should just be friends—although I can think of precious few times it is unpleasant to have a friend—but she was right. She was a remarkable young woman, I was a less than stellar young man, and we would not have worked out. But, like that first kiss with Katie, I don’t regret it. It set the stage for a grand finale that has only just begun to start. Still, I was upset—I had done everything like I was supposed to, and it still didn’t work out!<br /><blockquote>“Each morning I get up I die a little<br />Can barely stand on my feet<br />Take a look in the mirror and cry<br />Lord what you're doing to me<br />I have spent all my years in believing you<br />But I just can't get no relief, Lord!<br />Somebody, somebody<br />Can anybody find me somebody to love? “<br />—Queen “Somebody to Love”</blockquote>I first met Elizabeth when we were both going to a summer conference in Panama City, FL. I distinctly remember thinking to myself “She is really cute. Too bad she goes to Vanderbilt, that would never work out.” When asked about this same conference, she told me “I thought you were a little weird and maybe a little rude. I thought you didn’t like me at all, even as a person. I remember having a conversation with Joel [a mutual friend], asking ‘T.J. hates me, right?’” Wrong. The two years too young T.J. in all his wisdom was very lacking in his ability to wisely interact with women.<br /><br />The first time that I really met Elizabeth was on Saturday, the sixth of February, 2010. A series of fortunately unfortunate events including a formidable snowstorm in Washington, D.C. where she was an elementary school teacher and the fear of being trapped in the apartment with her much loathed roommates sent her packing to Rock Hill, SC. Through a series of fortuitous events I can only attribute to God, but you may feel free to call luck, chance, or fate, the person whom Elizabeth went to visit, her former (my current) youth pastor Mike, now resides in Rock Hill, where I ever so auspiciously attend Winthrop University.<br /><br />When I “met her” this time I had the same thoughts as before—“she is really cute, and really nice, but she lives seven hours away, how would that ever work?” This time, however, we had a conversation. We had multiple conversations. She laughed at my jokes. There are few things more masculating for a man than a woman laughing at your jokes. Knowing that woman thinks you are funny and entertaining while still taking you seriously makes you feel like you are more than insignificant. We connected on serious matters like faith, a distaste for the mixed martial arts match everyone was watching on Pay-Per-View, the television shows Pscyh and Leverage, and the band the Avett Brothers. After our conversations at the MMA match and the Superbowl (which just so happened to be the next day), I thought of something.<br /><br />On Monday, February eighth, after several back-and-forth-decisions in my head, I came by her number from our mutual friend Joel, and called her:<br />“Hey, uh, Elizabeth, this is T.J. I got your number from Joel, I hope you don’t mind.”<br />No, that was fine (or something along those lines)<br />“I was wondering if you would like to get some lunch with me. I have a little bit of free time, and I would like to go out to lunch with you if you would like to.”<br /><br />I didn’t give her much time to react: I was very direct. (She tells me that I was not usually so serious). She said yes, and proceeded to walk out into the living room to tell Mike, “I think I am going on a date with T.J.”<br /><br />She thought correct—I took her to the pinnacle of all first date locations: Chick-fil-a. You must understand, in my mind, Chick-fil-a is a magical combination of Jesus and chicken. My roommate told me this first date venue was the clincher for our relationship. The beauty of our first date was not primarily the location, rather, it was the lack of awkward first date conversation. She expected it to be miserable, having experienced many horrible first dates. When it didn’t suck, she didn’t quite know what to do with herself.<br /><br />I felt like we could really communicate, free from the ambiguities of feelings and intentions, as it was, after all, just a date. The first date was incredibly significant for me, because I realized something that day in Chick-fil-a: I am a really fast eater, and Elizabeth is not. That is it. The sun didn’t shine brighter. The air didn’t smell likes roses. There were no unicorns or rainbows or angelic choruses to signify this fateful beginning of a new relationship. There were just a guy and a girl, talking. It was glorious.<br /><br />That first week was, I believe, quite literally a gift from God. It snowed so heavily in the D.C. area that Elizabeth was forced to stay in Rock Hill until Sunday. This provided us with plentiful opportunities to spend time together—something of a commodity in a long distance relationship. We had dinner and lunch several times, went to see the movie Valentine’s Day—both agreeing that it left something to be desired—and we even went to Mike’s wife’s play.<br /><br />That Sunday was Valentine’s Day, a fact which first—frightening, as the relationship had yet to be established and I didn’t know what that meant regarding the sharing of gifts, flowers, etc.; and second—encouraging. I felt that were few more preferable ends to a week that was shaping up to be a very promising relationship. Therefore, I did what any man would do—going with what I knew, I gave her flowers. Actually, just one flower. I only gave one, because I wanted her to be sure that I liked her, but not think I was ready to propose.<br />The truth is—I was ready to propose.<br /><br />The very next week, while talking to a pastor friend, I asked if it was too early to buy a ring. Laughing at my “joke,” he paused, shrewdly realizing I was only half joking. In all seriousness, it was quite a ridiculous conclusion on my part: one week, with a girl who lives seven hours away, and I am already seriously considering marriage? I don’t quite know what was going through my head. All I knew was that I had never thought about a woman like I thought about Elizabeth. Not felt, but thought.<br /><br />I had felt the emotional roller coaster of attraction and infatuation before, but I had always thought it was an opportunity to get the fulfillment that every relationship always promises but never delivers. I did not think this way with Elizabeth. It would have been difficult to expect fulfillment from someone who lives over 400 miles away, with whom I only talked for an hour each evening. With Elizabeth, I thought that I liked her very much, and I wanted to love her very much as well. So I did. I already knew from the recent influx of only slightly more realistic romantic films (the best source, of course, for practical knowledge) that love is not an emotion, but a choice. So I chose. I chose her. I chose to love her.<br /><blockquote>“Violent is the motion in my heart and in my body and mind<br />And silent is the feeling that I lost but I'm determined to find<br />And love is but an ocean, unrealistic notion<br />But I cling to her devotion and I let it pull me down to the floor<br />It goes on, on, on, on<br />It goes on, on, on, on<br />It goes on, on, on, on<br />It goes on, on, on.”<br />—The Avett Brothers “It Goes On and On”<br /></blockquote>These first weeks, these early forays in to what it meant to be in a long distance relationship were bitter only in the distance that separated us, but sweet in everything else. They were at best, unconventional. Not that love is ever conventional. Conventional love is made in Hollywood, and as the Avett Brothers so wisely point out, “life is more than just two hours long.” For both of us, this was the first relationship in a long time, and the first long distance relationship at all. We had no idea what we were doing. Add to that the fact that I was actually acting like a sensible, serious adult in my pursuit of this lovely young woman (somewhat of a rarity up to this point in my life), and you have a most interesting mix.<br /><br />For the first month, we didn’t call it dating, didn’t indicate we were “in a relationship” on Facebook. And yet, we were. We talked every night. She had to be in bed by ten and I had to call after nine because of the cell phone minutes, so nine to ten every single night I was in my room, on the phone. It became “our time,” as we regularly built each other into our lives. We repeatedly admitted to each other the “newness” of it all—how we didn’t know what we were doing when it came to a long distance relationship, how we had yet to have a relationship this serious. It was exciting, like Columbus’ trans-Atlantic voyage.<br /><br />“We don't know what we're doing<br />We do it again<br />We're just amateur lovers<br />With amateur friends!”<br />—Switchfoot “Amateur Lovers”<br /><br /><a href="http://thisisthetjblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/somedoby-to-love-part-2.html">Read Part 2 Here</a>T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-54902375340568121692011-01-27T08:00:00.002-05:002011-01-27T16:02:10.431-05:00The Pain of GoodbyeLet me start by <a href="http://twitter.com/#%21/tjschley/status/21673072901758976">saying</a> I would like to punch almost every goodbye in the face. I say almost, only because there are some times I am very ready to see people gone. Other than that select group of people I am going to self righteously declare deserving of my wrath, I generally want people to not leave. Separation is painful. Whether it's divorce or a physical wound, when things that were meant to be together are forced apart, it hurts.<br /><br />Because my fiancée lives several hundred miles away, I regularly have to say goodbye to her. On one such occurrence when I was in a particularly poetic mood, I penned (or rather "typed on my phone") this line:<br /><blockquote>I'm convinced that the curse of human existence exists most complete in the pain of goodbyes.</blockquote>I stand by that. I do believe a general survey of your friends, or coworkers will reveal that the most painful times in their lives were at the loss of a lover, loved one, or friend.<br /><br />Relationships are a messy business, mostly because when your life rubs up against someone else's for more than a moment, your soul reacts like a scoop of ice cream: you can still separate with your core intact, but you inextricably leave some of yourself behind. The separation is only made more impossible and painful the longer you are together--like two scoops of ice cream slowly melting into homogeneity.<br /><br />I think this pain at separation is what makes redemption so beautiful. If division is the greatest human pain, then redemption, resolution should be the greatest human joy. It's why movies with reunified families or nations or friends or lovers may not get the highest critical acclaim, but they warm your heart better than a mug of hot chocolate.<br /><br />People don't often appreciate redemption in this life because, in one sense, it isn't realistic. We live in a world where redemption is not commonplace among humanity. Depravity leads us more often to disunion. But that is God's greatest gift, that when the shadows of this life are over, we'll be welcomed with into the one place that has been torn most fully from our being by the Fall--the arms of our Creator.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-5896253917837532492011-01-20T14:00:00.001-05:002011-01-20T14:51:24.532-05:00The Opposite of ApathyI have a question: What is the opposite of apathy when not talking about people? When it comes to a person, the opposite of apathy is empathy, sympathy, compassion, or love. But when talking about not being apathetic about, say, schoolwork, what word is there to use?<br /><br />Discipline, or maybe motivation? Could be, but that is a little wordy. I can't really feel compassion for my schoolwork. Maybe "being driven?" I ask for such a word because whatever that word is, I need. I have said I lack discipline, which I do, and motivation, which I need as well, but I think what I really need is just some sort of empathetic impetus.<br /><br />When it comes to schoolwork, ministry, relationships, writing (including this blog), I have no "care" to do them much of the time. I am sure that many people, maybe even you, dear reader, struggle with this, but I am also sure I am the only one who it affects. This apathy proves incredibly paralytic in my daily life, all but eliminating any constructive activities I would complete on any given day.<br /><br />Apathy represents such a formidable foe not only because of the effects it has if left unbridled, but also because it is nigh impossible to begin to fight. How do you fight apathy? Do I just need to try to care more? Isn't that exactly what I am struggling with? It seems the only way to combat apathy is to combat it. It is an incredibly redundant conundrum.<br /><br />I do not have a solution or moral imperative for this issue, as I normally conclude blog posts with, so you'll have to figure this one out on your own without my incredible insight. And if you do, let me know.<br /><br />Whatever the opposite of apathy is, I need it.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-76098744252084607732011-01-18T15:00:00.001-05:002011-01-18T15:51:20.456-05:00It's My 22nd BirthdayIt is not everyday that you turn 22. It is even fewer days that this age has much of a palpable impact on your life. Today, both of these rarities are happening to me.<br /><br />The thing about my birthday is, there is little to no reason you should care that I successfully exited my mom 22 years ago at a hospital in Orlando, FL. Truthfully, neither should I. Some people I hope will take this opportunity to declare what they've always thought, but never had the forthright decency to say: "T.J., I don't give a rip about you." I would like to say thank you to these people.<br /><br />However, I am not saying that you not care about me, or that I am alive (although I welcome such a sentiment if you are so inclined), but rather that you should not change how much you care on my birthday.<br /><br />I used to place great significance on my birthday, gathering expectations doomed to be left unfulfilled. Birthday after birthday I was disappointed when ----- didn't come to my party, or when I didn't get ----- as a gift, or that ----- didn't call me. It is a very exhausting way to live: constantly being disappointed.<br /><br />You might find it surprising that I found it surprising when January 19th rolled around, people still cared that I existed. Maybe they didn't come to my party, give me that gift, or call me, but they certainly seemed glad that I hadn't perished since the last time I saw them. This, I can only assume, is because they love me.<br /><br />It seems, then, that real love is not a hit-and-run. Jesus doesn't come to save you and then say "Peace out, see ya when ya die!" He's there constantly, and wants you to be there too. Similarly, I can show, you can show, <span style="font-weight: bold;"><span style="font-style: italic;">we</span></span> can show that we love others in the 364 very merry <span style="font-style: italic;">UN-</span>birthdays almost better than the one birthday per year we all have.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-2501465293197665762011-01-11T11:00:00.001-05:002011-01-12T01:02:10.078-05:00SnowSnow is complex. Not chemically: a couple of hydrogen and an oxygen come together below 32°F (0°C) in the atmosphere, eventually becoming too heavy to stay afloat and drift, tumble, flurry down to an oddly expectant planet.<br /><br />Snow is complex because there is such dichotomy in its existence. Perhaps this rings true for many things that I am simply overlooking, but I can think of few comparable examples that can bring such simultaneous elation and chagrin.<br /><br />Sunday night, along with a large number of my college-attending peers, I was overjoyed to learn the school administration had bowed to the weather's whim and given us a snow day. The sentiment carried over to Monday morning, when most woke up at a later than average hour due to the nonexistence of academic obligations.<br /><br />Yet, once pelted with a snowball, or after taking an unexpected dive on an inopportune sled ride, the love for snow died quickly. Complaints of the cold, and the wet, and the driving difficulty all began to drown out the adoring comments we had for the precipitation just a few hours earlier. Those comments returned Monday night, and Tuesday as well when we received two additional snow days.<br /><br />Similarly, snow has great connotations for both death and birth, innocence and degradation. Christ is said to have washed us whiter than snow--so it is a standard of cleanliness and purity. But, at the same time, snow brings desolation. There are few things as harsh and violent as cold, and as subtly destructive as ice. For many, snow spells death. Any vegetation or unsheltered wildlife is certainly doomed at the arrival of snow.<br /><br />The only things that can survive snow are those that can fight it. Humans combat it with our central heating and snowplows, but we welcome it with adulation. Snow is, like almost everything else in creation, complex. Love to life to death to doughnuts have a pro and con comparison, a good and bad connotation, especially humans. The beauty of it all, and at least one purpose of art, is sifting through the light and dark of it all.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-49836338746386104342010-12-22T16:01:00.002-05:002010-12-22T16:36:44.618-05:00Tron: Legacy<div style="text-align: center;"><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-style: italic;">"I believe positive emotion trumps negative emotion every time. We all long for redemption, for catharsis."</span><br /></div><div style="text-align: left;"> --Dom Cobb in <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1375666/">Inception</a>.<br /></div></div><br />As a writer, I find it hard to dispel this point, and its relevance lays the foundation for most of the way I evaluate entertainment. Good stories are essentially redemption stories. <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1104001/">Tron</a> is no exception.<br /><br />The movie as a whole was phenomenal (more on <a href="http://whatithoughtwhenitwasover.blogspot.com/">what I have to say</a> about it later). Stunning visuals that brought to life an environment literally out of this world. But what impressed me more was the blatant realism of the characters placed in an explicitly artificial world. One character, Quorra, talks about how Kevin Flynn has been teaching her about self-sacrifice: "removing yourself from the equation." But its not only positive characteristics that were real: the various programs also demonstrate greed and betrayal on a level comparable to humans. Which makes sense: no creation can surpass the perfection of its creator.<br /><br />Perfection, the intended goal of Flynn's Grid (where the movie takes place), stands apart as the most interesting thing to take from this movie. Flynn nails it when he says "The thing about perfection is, it's unknowable. And yet its right in front of you." While I would say that we cannot create perfection, and we cannot <span style="font-style: italic;">know</span> it, but we can experience it. We cannot <span style="font-style: italic;">know</span> God's perfection, but we can, through his grace, experience it--be <span style="font-style: italic;">in</span> it. To a lesser extent, you can experience perfection in the grace people show each other, but as all things humans touch, that grace is tainted by those less graceful actions we commit.<br /><br />From a narrative stand point, Tron hit the mark. The message was woven among the visuals and plot in a subtle but ever-present manner. While trying to escape CLU's numerous attempts to achieve perfection, Sam, Kevin, and Quorra find a little bit of their own: to sum it up in a cheesy Beatles ending: "all you need is love."T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-74642618679652008122010-12-20T09:00:00.001-05:002010-12-20T09:00:06.710-05:00Hallelujah, By and ByThe drive from south Miami to Orlando to see Grampa and Granny takes a few hours. In most of the pictures I see of me and my Grampa, I am doing something with him. We are playing with blocks: I love building things, and he is a self-taught artist, so it works out. I remember playing baseball in his backyard, and the times he lets us ride on his lawnmower or in the trailer behind it. I walk into his garage while he and my dad are working on our red Dodge Caravan. I have a vague recollection of either a child-oriented lecture on mechanics, or perhaps just eavesdropping on what they are saying. He comes down and helps my dad fix our house after Hurricane Andrew in 1992.<br /><br />He is an average sized man, especially when standing next to my six-foot-four dad. Although, when I am a young child, he seems to be the biggest man I know. Everyone speaks well of him: as a kid with everything figured out, I know my mom has to say nice things, it is her dad. But even my dad makes it seem like he is the biggest man in the family. “When you marry a woman, you marry a family,” my father tells me on more than one occasion. I can only assume he has his father-in-law in mind when he says that.<br /><br />It seems that in all my memories he looks exactly the same: He wears glasses (although he didn’t used to); His hair has always been grayish white. He is never bald, but never has a full head of hair. Even in the old pictures of him, his wife, my mom and her sister, his blonde hair, not balding, looked just like the “Grampa” I visit through the years. He laughs a deep, manly chuckle that only comes from a palpable enjoyment of life and seems to assure you whatever was just said is undoubtedly funny.<br /><br />We call him “Grampa.” Not Papa, Grandad, Grandaddy, or Granpa. No, he is very specific: he wants to be called Grampa, with an “m.” I don’t know why he wants us to call him that, but we don’t mind. He never asks us to do anything unreasonable, and so as a kid it seems natural, right. As if there is some natural way the world should be, and that way includes me calling him Grampa.<br /><br />Now that I think about it, he hardly asks us to do anything at all. There is the leaf-raking session every time we visited the house they moved to in the Northeast Georgia mountains, but even that was enforced by my parents, not him. The one request he regularly makes of us is not to fight with each other. The only time I ever see him cry or get angry is when I fight with my brother or sisters. He explains a concept I am reluctant to accept: how “He’ll always be your brother,” or “You’ll always have your sisters, and you need to be there for each other.”<br /><br />Naturally I try to listen to what he says—my Grampa is, after all, the smartest man ever. I mean, he lived through part of the Great Depression, and World War II. I remember the first time I really understood that. I was astounded that I knew someone who was alive during a time in actual history. He shows me one of his elementary class pictures, and the one thing that strikes me is the lack of shoes. There are only a handful of children with shoes, and Grampa isn’t one of them. In the picture, he doesn’t seem to mind.<br /><br />My Grampa always impresses me when I think of him, though I can’t tell you exactly what it is that impresses me. It isn’t his stint in the Army at a radio relay base in Africa during the Korean War. It isn’t the successful ownership of Professional Carpet Systems for almost a decade, during which he employed my dad between jobs. It isn’t his car phone—very prestigious to have when they pre-empted the cell phone—although as a kid this is one of the coolest things about him. He always quick adapts to new technology—the computer, internet, and e-mail—not a common feat among his peers. It’s not the multiple battles with heart issues, the quadruple bypass surgery. It isn’t even his faith: a go to church every Sunday and let God’s love show between each visit sort of faith; the kind that preachers preach about when they’re really talking about Jesus. It isn’t any of these things. It is probably all of them, and then some.<br /><br />He tells me once about how one time in church when another guy had the nerve to put his arm around my Granny before she was dating Grampa. He explains how there rose up in him an incredible urge to throttle the guy. He didn’t, naturally. It was in church. My mom tells me about how he got my Granny. She was the Baptist pastor’s daughter, and their first date was to—gasp—a drive-in movie, an act comparably abominable to dancing. Sometimes I see the old 1950s couple transported to their living room: Still with the pet names and a kiss on the cheek and the occasional clasped hand.<br /><br />I have a faint memory of his pipe but I may just be imagining that. My Grampa would never smoke. Except that he used to smoke cigarettes but switched to a pipe because my aunt was allergic. He quit the pipe and threw it into a sinkhole next to his house the day his father died of lung cancer. “It’s a three minute addiction,” he says once, “If you can withstand it for three minutes, it’ll go away.” I don’t smoke, so I doubt I’ll ever know if that’s really the case or if my Grampa just has extraordinary willpower. But I sure as hell am not going to pick up a habit that my Grampa tried and then quit. He is, after all, just about the smartest man ever.<br /><br />As religious as Grampa is, going to visit him never feels like going to church. I’m always learning things, but never being preached at. His favorite hymn is “I’ll Fly Away.” It’s an old country church hymn about going “to a home on God's celestial shore...when this life is o’er.” I never know it is his favorite until they play it at his funeral. <br /><br />My dad chokes up a little when he tells me. I don’t understand why everyone cries: he didn’t flinch in the face of death—he is escaping “like a bird from prison bars” to “a land where joy shall never end.” But they aren’t sad because it isn’t his time, or because of the tragedy of it all. They are crying because when a man as big as my Grampa passes, you mourn.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-32309882212981774002010-12-15T09:00:00.001-05:002010-12-15T09:32:33.801-05:00Are You the Walrus?There is part of me, hidden under layers, that heavily lauds any attempt at skinny white boys doing good, clean hip-hop. Enjoy this dated piece of Christian hip-hop history:<br /><br /><br /><object width="640" height="505"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/3w-b7ZkBr2I&hl=en_US&fs=1&"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/3w-b7ZkBr2I&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="640" height="505"></embed></object>T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-30917548741135890952010-12-13T09:00:00.001-05:002010-12-13T09:00:03.897-05:00Books Ruin the Movies<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj9x0tmjgFxOPCopKHTVZ2jD76v2vl2q3L80i7rdoWxgk7I23KiXxMGWdgcGcuxEgO60DVdwqTN0LhsOkmksE73axP3lziBASvJvpdxhUhZKwqVBQLI7lIkUpzplu64qFIiHhfiX4MqJXDf/s1600/movies-ruining-the-book.jpg"><img style="display: block; margin: 0px auto 10px; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 400px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj9x0tmjgFxOPCopKHTVZ2jD76v2vl2q3L80i7rdoWxgk7I23KiXxMGWdgcGcuxEgO60DVdwqTN0LhsOkmksE73axP3lziBASvJvpdxhUhZKwqVBQLI7lIkUpzplu64qFIiHhfiX4MqJXDf/s400/movies-ruining-the-book.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5549048789500698722" border="0" /></a><br /><br />For most of my thoughtful life, I have been of the opinion that this shirt is mostly correct. It seemed to me that every time a piece of literature was adapted to film, the medium proved sorely lacking. Naturally, the easiest person to blame is someone else, claiming that no creative expression can match up to the individual imagination.<br /><br />That would be the way I have always looked at it: the Lord of the Rings movies were fantastic, and it was enjoyable to see the story visual depicted. But, the battle for Helm's Deep was not as epic as the one I read. Nor was Saruman as evil. Nor Minas Morgul and the Ringwraiths as terrible. But I don't think this comes from a shortage of creativity on the director's part. I think the books are the ones to blame.<br /><br />A <a href="http://www.curatormagazine.com/yvonneyu/a-valediction-to-the-harry-potter-film-franchise-part-1-or-how-the-books-are-really-to-blame/">recent Curator article</a> spoke to this--the author essentially saying that no one who dove headlong into the books will ever be able to fully enjoy a film adaption, because it will always be the second time he or she has seen it. This has been my experience--I have only recently been able to get caught up in the emotion of book-to-film adaptions that I have read, because I already knew what was coming. I didn't even frown when Dumbledore died, I was too busy critiquing the differences they had made in the plot that lead up to it.<br /><br />The solution, obviously, is to stop reading books. Or, and this is just a thought, we could try really really really hard to treat the movies as their own story. Certainly, you won't be surprised when Mr. Male Supporting Role dies tragically, or when Ms. Protagonist admits to that love affair, but you can enjoy the d*mn movie--which you probably paid $10+ to go see--without musing about your superior creative direction for the film.<br /><br />I should say, my two favorite movies--<a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0796366/">Star Trek</a> and <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0414387/">Pride and Prejudice</a>--represent both sides of this issue. Granted, I have never read the Jane Austen classic, but I know the story so well that it never surprises me. Yet, each and every time I am pissed at Darcy's arrogance and surprised by Elizabeth's ironic pride. I cry every time I watch Star Trek, and fist pump multiple times in celebration of a certain explosion or stellar cinematography. So read the book, then forget about it. Go enjoy a movie.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-56645822175110517952010-09-22T12:16:00.003-04:002010-09-22T12:20:45.496-04:00Deconstructing Childhood ConstructionWhen your dad works for the church, your family doesn’t have much disposable income. As a kid, I rarely picked up on this—I didn’t mind eating the store brand cereals or wearing Wal-Mart clothes. What I was aware of, though, was the fact that my family didn’t get as many new toys as my friends’ families. This wasn’t a problem, but it did result in one necessity: recyclable entertainment. My personal venue for such reusable fun was my substantial collection of Legos.<br /><br />The infinite combination of seemingly endless plastic blocks occupied a significant portion of my childhood. The spaceship of today was tomorrow’s race car, the next day’s superhero base, and the next week’s medieval fortress. For me, the joy was not in the imaginative battles and adventures the finally constructed sets could engage in, but in the creative process itself. I would rather have the opportunity to build one set than play with three. My brother would hastily construct a not-to-poorly designed car and then immediately begin to ask if I would play some variation of a race or demolition derby. For me, this was unthinkable! How dare he suggest I risk destroying that which I had spent such a lengthy and tedious amount of time constructing!?<br /><br />The constructs I was most proud of were perfectly coordinated in structure and color; not a single Lego brick was unnecessary or out of place. I would naturally build any brand new set exactly as the instructions indicated. The longer the pieces were in my possession, however, the more likely they were to be shuffled and recycled into a new, inventive piece of sci-fi machinery, the specific engineering of which only I could explain. These prized productions would then proceed to occupy a special location on top of my dresser or bookshelf, safe from the war-mongering grip of my “less scrupulous” fellow creator.<br /><br />Yet, even my carefully conceived and composed creations were eventually destroyed, if only to make way for the next great endeavor of my early engineering career. Sometimes, I wonder if I missed out a little bit. Not that I would trade the care I put into making each and every set. I have merely found myself pondering my brother’s consistent, endearing urge to just play, and mine to think and create. Maybe my 10-year-old self could construct a happy-medium bridge between the creative process and simply enjoying the participation.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-47759280048361211512010-09-20T12:50:00.004-04:002010-09-20T12:55:15.709-04:00Are Pennies Useful?What follows is an incredibly insightful yet entertaining rant against the penny (and the nickel). He makes a compelling argument against the production of pennies and nickels, and also points out that it is a non-political issue, which could help facilitate bi-partisan communication:<br /><br /><object width="640" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/77C47XYm_3c?fs=1&hl=en_US&color1=0x2b405b&color2=0x6b8ab6"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/77C47XYm_3c?fs=1&hl=en_US&color1=0x2b405b&color2=0x6b8ab6" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="640" height="385"></embed></object><br /><br />As I see it, pennies are all but useless. The only thing I use them for are putting in the "give a penny, take a penny" plate at registers, the Salvation Army red buckets during the Christmas season, and for throwing at people.<br /><br />So I ask: Do you think the penny is a good thing to keep around? What are some reasons for keeping it?T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-6859504659711038852010-09-13T11:17:00.002-04:002010-09-13T12:55:24.676-04:00Video Games as ArtWhen it comes to "art," I tend to be very inclusive yet critical at the same time. That is to say, I am willing to accept most everything as "artistic," but once I have, I will be very critical of its quality.<br /><br />Video Games: It would seem very apparent that video games are art: they possess a story, with an often well developed plot and characters, and there is very obviously a significant amount of visual artistry that goes into developing them. Why then would Roger Ebert, the renowned movie critic, declare that "<a href="http://blogs.suntimes.com/ebert/2010/04/video_games_can_never_be_art.html">video games can never be art</a>?"<br /><br />Ebert's argument is that video games are an activity, as their name suggests, a <span style="font-weight: bold;">game</span>. And that as such, they are automatically removed from contention as being art. Citing the examples of Bobby Fischer and Michael Jordan, he states that those players never sought to have their activities deemed as "art."<br /><br />First, do we not often look at sports stars or participants in various hobbies and activities and say "they make it an art?" Second, Ebert is arguing against the players of the video games as artists, where it seems the creators of the video games are the obvious artists. While Fischer or Jordan may not be "artists," someone had to design and create the chessboard and basketball equipment, and it would be either naive or elitist to say that their work is not art.<br /><br />While I would agree with Ebert in that "No one in or out of the field has ever been able to cite a game worthy of comparison with the great poets, filmmakers, novelists and poets." And a great number of video games, while still acceptable as "art," are, to put it plainly, very crappy pieces of art. But anyone who has seen something like the video below must agree that in the very least, video games are creative and inspire creativity, which is, in my belief, a core part of what "art" is.<br /><br /><object width="640" height="505"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/M3D0JvYJkGc?fs=1&hl=en_US"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/M3D0JvYJkGc?fs=1&hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="640" height="505"></embed></object>T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-65764285243267383842010-09-08T11:26:00.002-04:002010-09-08T11:29:35.281-04:00Swept Me AwayI know a couple who had the Avett Brothers' song "Swept Me Away" as their first dance. I think it is a novel idea. What are the criteria for deciding what your first dance song should be?<br /><br />It seems to me that it should be one that both of you like, but also one that is not just popular, but endearing and long lasting. Not that it has to be "timeless," but it ought to be one that you will always have around and will, say, teach to your children:<br /><br /><object width="640" height="505"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/2o6SH2lmPNw?fs=1&hl=en_US"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/2o6SH2lmPNw?fs=1&hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="640" height="505"></embed></object><br /><br />Your thoughts?T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-17866967363056843562010-09-07T12:11:00.002-04:002010-09-07T12:17:36.685-04:00Francis Chan FTWHere's an excellent video of a conversation between Mark Driscoll, Joshua Harris, and Francis Chan, on Chan's recent decision to leave his head pastor position at Cornerstone.<br /><br />Check out Driscoll's question at 8:30...and Chan's response to it. So good:<br /><br /><br /><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/14452343" width="400" height="225" frameborder="0"></iframe><p><a href="http://vimeo.com/14452343">What's Next for Francis Chan? A Conversation with Mark Driscoll and Joshua Harris</a> from <a href="http://vimeo.com/user819899">Ben Peays</a> on <a href="http://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-37565823232535769562010-06-24T14:00:00.001-04:002010-06-24T15:09:24.188-04:00Action: Figure It OutI am a big fan of "looking before I leap," that is, thinking and analyzing the hell out of things before I get to doing them. Unfortunately, just because I am a fan of something doesn't mean it's the right way to go. Otherwise there would be a lot more Mt. Dew, bacon, people wearing superhero outfits, and babies.<br /><br />Back to the question at hand: should we think things through beforehand? The answer is a definitely, but not. Let me explain. Most often when I think things through, I do so in order that I won't make a mistake in whatever action I choose to take. This is legitimate. That being said, because 97.65% of the time (exact statistic), the answer is not black-and-white obvious, and even if it is, the "thinking before acting" is just an excuse to come up with justification for choosing the wrong choice. Agreed? Agreed. Good then.<br /><br />In my own life, (and I don't think I'm alone in this), the "thinking" process lands me in a place where I struggle with choosing how to act for an indefinite amount of time, leaving me doing nothing about the issue at hand. I wrote this line a while back, and have yet to formulate some poetry to surround it: "My inaction's action enacts the law of my heart." Again, let me explain. When we do not act, that, in and of itself, is an action. That's right, you heard me: Inaction is <span style="font-style: italic;">an</span> action. And when we don't act, we are making a choice without the control of actually making a choice.<br /><br />Many times, this seems like a very freeing experience: essentially I don't have to deal with the stress of making a choice because if I don't choose then the choice will be made for me. But in the end, this is everything but freeing, because I am thenceforth (heck yeah I used that word) bound to the choice my lack of choice choose. Make sense? Awesome.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-44093553075684339292010-06-09T13:00:00.000-04:002010-06-09T15:03:10.237-04:00Oh Potter, You RotterI have been prompted to write this because of the literal threat of a slow and painful death by <a href="http://katelynenver.blogspot.com/">a friend of mine</a>. I was quite terrified. Almost as terrified as the time that basilisk attacked me at the urging of the memory of a dark lord who was contained in a diary.<div><br /><div>Speaking of dark-lord-memory-induced-basilisk-attacks, I just finished the second book of the Harry Potter series: <i>The Chamber of Secrets</i>. You must understand: I am someone who all but swore to never read them, or in the very least decided to put every other book ever written in</div><div> front of Harry Potter on the "list of books to read." That's right, that includes Twilight and Joel Osteen's <i><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Become-Better-You-Improving-Every/dp/0743296885">Become a Better You</a></i>.</div><div><br /></div><div>And yet, I took <i>The Sorcerer's Stone </i>with me to Summer Conference and then followed it up with <i>The Chamber of Secrets</i>, which I finished last night. I must say I have thoroughly enjoyed both of them. As a writer, I can appreciate the overall storyline, the epic and destiny-driven plot that does not overshadow the everyday experiences of Potter and his friends. The one bit of criticism I do have is that it is reminiscent of the TV show 24 in that there is a single major conflict each and every book. It may get repetitive. It hasn't yet, just the prospect of it is not great.</div><div style="text-align: center;"><br /></div><div>Other than that, I have highly enjoyed a thorough romp through Ms. Rowling's created world. I am not and have never been opposed to the concept of magic, wizards and witchcraft. At least, that was never my reason for not reading them...because it is fiction, after all. About 45% of the reason I never desired to read them was the fans. They tended to annoy me on a Twilight and Jonas Brothers level. Oh, yeah. The other 55% was that I had always disliked the prospect of witnessing the plight of an angsty teenager and his magical world. I wasn't wrong, per sé, but we'll just leave it at this: that which kept me away has drawn me in.</div><div><br /></div><img src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg-oq0rkpt6qF1ACVpR8Z0ZIOAm53ZbRNVNN-Mu86HP61WXhCggHsk1zgTi8cNdeXwXox7TjUZ3pSpNOFwOA6VLg7uZIKFSLwYqZnbDD_BKgvdOlkUQmenGa_MttqIm6Yet9m82LQFBfciT/s400/HarryPotter.jpg" style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" border="0" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5480851139056871314" /></div>T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-27380051648416226132010-05-25T14:00:00.001-04:002010-05-26T15:03:01.223-04:00Being Right Isn't Always RightLately on his blog, Donald Miller has talked about <a href="http://donmilleris.com/2010/05/03/five-principles-of-civil-dialogue/">civil dialogue</a>, how <a href="http://donmilleris.com/2010/05/20/having-right-theology-does-not-mean-you-know-god/">having the right theology doesn't make you a Christian</a>, and why <a href="http://donmilleris.com/2010/04/26/why-doctrine-is-only-half-the-message/">correct doctrine is only half of what's important</a>. This is something that has weighed heavily on me for quite a while.<br /><br />As someone who is heavily reformed, I tend to take the arrogant Calvinistic approach to theology, constantly critiquing people's views and pointing out the errors in the way the think about God. That being said, I have also found it in myself to really appreciate groups or individuals who effectively communicate the Kingdom to the world.<br /><br />In one of his posts, Donald Miller says "We commonly believe that the Evil One wants us to teach bad theology, and I suppose he does. But what he wants to do more is to have us teach right theology in a way that devalues human beings, insults and belittles them, and so sets them against the loving message of God." That sounds like someone straight from <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Screwtape-Letters-Proposes-Toast/dp/0060652896/">The Screwtape Letters</a> (which I am reading by the way).<br /><br />In my experience, I cannot deny the absolute validity of this idea. But what to do with it--do we abandon correct doctrine for the nuanced idea of "just loving people?" I think not. But I do think there is room for some preliminary bending of our of steadfastly stubborn grasping to it.<br /><br />You see, when Christ came to earth, the two things he did was love/serve people, and spread the truth/correct their view of God and how they should relate to him. Some denominations nail the loving and serving half, but are weak on the theology (in my opinion). Many reformed believers, on the other hand, nail the theology (and don't we know it) but fall horribly short from our brothers and sisters in the "<a href="http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=James+1%3A27&version=NIV">to look after orphans and widows in their distress</a>" part.<br /><br />I think what it really boils down to is that we really need to realize that methodology is part of the message (something Miller gets at in <a href="http://donmilleris.com/2010/05/03/five-principles-of-civil-dialogue/">this</a> post), if not most of the message. Because no matter how true something is, the methodology is what people more often pay attention to. If we present the right truth in a way that affirms rather than detracts, and honestly and humbly attempt to consider other points of view, I think it will make Jesus smile a little more, and maybe even chuckle.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-341039270314814301.post-49984310380398091452010-05-24T13:00:00.002-04:002010-05-24T14:02:41.578-04:00...and Found?If you didn't know that the series finale of LOST was last night, then please inform me where the the rock you have been living under is located, because is sounds like a wonderfully secluded place.<br /><br />I don't frequently discuss <a href="http://thisisthetjblog.blogspot.com/search/label/Television">television</a> on this blog, but I am going to start. I started watching the show in the first season but got disenchanted with it in the third, because there was no foreseeable end to the maddening questions and plot twists. But I ended up picking it back up in season 5. So I missed an entire season, who cares?<br /><br />If <a href="http://www.pastemagazine.com/action/paste_station?station_track=track_17828_3530&mode=normal">you have no idea what is going on</a>, I won't be a narciLOSTssist and tell you that you MUST watch it, that your condition as a functioning member of culture is dependent upon it. But it is good stuff.<br /><br />As for the finale, I was pretty satisfied. While they didn't answer a lot of questions I was hoping they would, that's not their purpose and they've set no precedent for it. Their job is to present a complete story, and they did just that.<br /><br />The two concessions of my overall approval of the show are this:<br /><ol><li>There are some things that seem a little sloppily done. For example:</li><ul><li>Michael/Walt all but disappearing after season 2.</li><li>Some of the early series statements: Aaron being important/foreboding, Jack's tatoos, etc.</li><br /></ul><li>While they didn't necessarily answer all of your questions, and that's fine, they did leave out some info that wouldn't have necessarily <span style="font-style: italic;">answered</span> our questions, but would have left the viewers with the ability to come to their own conclusions. I'm talking about the real importance of the island (if the smoke monster is dead, who cares about the island? [unless you give us another reason to]) and what the smoke monster <span style="font-style: italic;">really was</span>.</li></ol>Other than that, I think that as a whole, LOST was an unparalleled television event.T.J.http://www.blogger.com/profile/12951070159738062619noreply@blogger.com0