I'm slowly starting to embrace this new introverted side of me. This is a fairly recent development, so part of me couldn't help wondering if it's a phase, or something permanent. Being that outgoing social butterfly who goes up to strangers introducing herself is no longer comfortable. Speaking in front of people doesn't come as easily as it used to...well, depending on the subject. There are some subjects I now denote too personal for discussion with people I've just met. When it comes to my books, though, I'm like a new mom showing off all 50+ pictures on my iphone of my baby in the exact same pose, thoroughly convinced she is the most adorably original creature anyone has ever seen.
There are some situations I'll have to get used to, like the dreaded "What do you want to do with your major?" question that everyone always asks at parties. It's my own fault, I know, for choosing something that makes people feel awkward. Or maybe it's God's fault for, as seminarians like to say, "Putting this calling on my heart." Explaining that I want to work with rape victims almost always shuts down conversation. I understand why, but there's not much I can do about it. Only on rare occasions have I been asked "And what made you want to do that kind of work?" I'll say "Personal experiences," and leave it at that. You don't get more of an explanation if you're not a close friend of mine. In that circumstance, it doesn't matter whether one is an introvert or not. There's healthy curiosity, and then there's a complete lacking of tact.
But then there's this other thing...this "OOOOH you grew up Jewish?! Tell me your whole life story RIGHT NOW!" In not quite those exact words, this has happened to me dozens of times, not including the time I've spent in seminary. And when this happens, my former self and new self collide. The old self wouldn't have so much of a problem with this. I confess, I was "that girl" who loved being the center of attention, and dropping the "I was raised Jewish" bomb in a Christian setting was always the best way to make that happen.
Now, it's different. Aside from trying to be more humble, I'm realizing -- shocker -- that I don't owe everyone who asks a detailed explanation, about anything. For one thing, it's exhausting to recount the majority of my life in under five minutes or so. For another, being barraged with questions (or so it feels) is even more exhausting. My life is a literal open book -- I don't regret writing one that answers all those questions -- and that's exactly why I wrote it. To let myself off the hook for having to explain everything...just read about it instead! (Shameless plug, I know)
Moreover, there's a certain "novelty status" that comes with being different. I'm starting to get a little sick of it, honestly. As a new introvert, being the target of personal questions, especially from strangers, freaks me out. If I want to put myself out there, I'll write a book or volunteer in some other way. I like the freedom of choice. I no longer revel in turning the tide of a social gathering because my background is suddenly the most interesting subject. But then, introverted or not, wouldn't that make anyone feel uncomfortable?
The moral of this story is this: feel free to ask whatever you want. But don't be offended if I decline to answer.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
God takes crap and makes fertilizer
A timely excerpt about trials and forgiveness from Confessions of a Prodigal Daughter:
I wish I could say that
the rest of my senior year was relaxing and relatively trial-free. The
following verse from James became the theme of my last few months of college: “Consider
it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds,
because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let
perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not
lacking anything” (1:2-4). Naturally, this verse did not sit well with me the
first time I read it. Consider it joy
when facing trials? What kind of crazy logic is that? But setbacks are only
setups for God to work. He makes all things work for the good of those who love
him. The biggest trials we face are also where our calling for ministry can be
found...
As John was trying to convince me to fall back to our old ways the
next time he’d return home, I also found out he was seeing someone else. To add
further insult to an already gaping injury, the medium in which I discovered
this information was Facebook. He couldn’t even tell me himself.
That night started well enough. I had gone
out to sing karaoke with the girls in my h2o bible study, and did not return
until midnight. I now know better than to check my Facebook or email just
before going to bed. That night was, without being melodramatic, the worst night
of my life. I cried so hard I was dry-heaving and dizzy. When you find out that
the man who has been a god-like figure in your life since you were seventeen is
now in the arms of someone who isn’t you, it tends to wreck your world. Mine
shattered instantaneously, and I’m still amazed at just how easy it was.
I realized that the timing of our
inevitable downfall was actually in response to a prayer from the weekend
before. I attended a women’s retreat with h2o and listened to a speaker talk
about her struggle with a spiritually and emotionally damaging relationship in
college. I felt as if she was addressing me personally. I perfectly understood
the ugly cycle of giving in to the same old sin, even with the best of
intentions to avoid it. I also understood the feeling of hopelessness that can
lead to dangerous forms of compromise.
It was easy to stay in a relationship that
was destroying me from the inside out because I firmly believed that was the
best I’d ever have. In looking for a quick fix to my loneliness, I made a
personal god out of a fellow human being who was incapable of fulfilling me.
Even when I felt disrespected and worthless, I believed I could fix him when I
couldn’t even fix myself. I remained convinced, despite warnings from Bethany
and Anne, that the man I’d originally fallen in love with still lived somewhere
inside him.
I knew there was no way I could spend the
night alone. Kaitlin was the first person I could think of to call, even though
it was after midnight. The night I spent sobbing
my guts out on her couch was the first time since accepting Christ that I felt
so completely worthless. Even before my family found out about my faith, I
don’t think I’d ever felt grief this big. This was a man I had known for half a
decade, someone I loved with the depth of life itself, even if I was not being
respected by him as a daughter of God should be.
What should have been only a five-minute
walk from my dorm to her apartment took nearly half an hour because of all the
snow I had to trudge through. By the time I made it to her place, I was a wreck
and could barely stand up. We stayed up nearly all night, and I could not
believe her when she told me how God would use this pain for glory someday. I
could not believe her when she told me I deserved so, so much more than what I
had settled for in a man. I felt that my self-worth was permanently shot to
pieces, and no godly man would ever desire me as a girlfriend, much less a
wife.
I needed to do a spring cleaning of my life
more than ever, but even that could not be done completely on my own. I hardly
ate, slept, or showered within the first week of my newfound “freedom” as an
officially single woman. I thought that with enough prayer and support from close
friends I could get through this, but I couldn’t. My mind was a broken record
of all the things I should have done sooner, things I wish I’d said.
Eventually, I decided to get counseling so
I could at least finish my senior year on a strong, healthy note. Sometimes I
think it will be easier to forgive him than it will be to forgive myself. But I
know there is no point in continually beating myself up. I know that the past
cannot be changed or undone.
Jesus’ attitude toward forgiveness never
struck me as borderline insane until this moment. I had been hurt before,
certainly, but never enough where the thought of forgiveness seemed completely impossible
and ludicrous. To forgive someone who hurt me this deeply felt ridiculous and
unnatural. It contradicted everything I know that is true about human nature.
But then, by sheer grace alone, I
remembered how I became a Christian because
of the fact that it is unnatural. Christianity calls its followers to rise
above their natural condition, to be more than they could ever become on their
own. It is completely counter-cultural, and the standards set by Jesus are often
perceived as unrealistically high. His words about forgiving those who mistreat
you have caused him to be labeled as crazy by many of his critics. But turning
the other cheek is anything but a passive response.
Forgiving those that the world considers
unredeemable is just one of many examples of embracing God’s vision for our
lives. It is by no means a light and easy task, but it is necessary for
healing. Many people equate forgiveness with
excusing poor behavior, but the reality is that holding on to anger is
emotionally crippling. It robs you of the chance to heal from tragedy. That’s
not to say that it isn’t natural to grieve, but even now, while still grieving,
I know that holding onto it for a lifetime and still hoping to heal is like
gorging on cupcakes daily and still expecting to lose weight. Refusing to
forgive someone who has wronged you only gives them permission to dominate your
life.
Still, I continue to struggle with it
every day. Some days are better than others, and then there are days I feel
like I have fallen back to the hopeless pit I was stuck in before. Some days I have
to force myself to pray even harder for the ability to choose life again. Hell
hath no fury like the prayers of a broken-hearted woman.
A song that is commonly sung in h2o
services contains a verse that says “You make all things work together for our
good.” That is another one of my favorite things about Christianity: the fact
that no experience, good or bad, is ever wasted. As a friend of mine likes to
say, God takes crap and makes fertilizer.
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Off-the-market author on developing single characters
I've arrived at that strange turning point between perpetual adolescence and adulthood: my high school friends are getting engaged, some are having kids (or getting engaged after having kids). Since I myself am not there yet, it will be a while before I start writing any stories about women who are married or have kids. Imagination notwithstanding, I'm a fan of writing only what I know, for now. Never mind that "what I know" is constantly changing.
I've longed for a book that chronicles the life of a single twenty-something that doesn't make her a modern Cinderella, or a Sex and the City character. If such a book exists (and I'm sure it does somewhere), I've never read it, hence why I'm writing one. The idea of a 21st-century single woman evokes an image of Bridget Jones awkwardness, Zooey Deschanel adorable-ness, and Carrie Bradshaw promiscuity in my mind. I want a character who has fallen in love with the wrong person, made some mistakes, but doesn't want to be defined by them, or be consumed with molding herself into someone who's perfect for a man she hasn't met yet.
Not surprisingly, I'm writing about what my own life was like for most of college. But once I got the idea for this novel (the working title is "Public Displays of Convention"), I couldn't help but wonder: who will believe this story? I wonder this because the author has been in a relationship for the last year and a half. Still, I can't help but remember the countless times when older women reached out to me at the lowest points of my singlehood, when I'd hit rock bottom and felt like I'd be alone forever. They tried to encourage me, and I'd think bitterly to myself, You can't help me. You're happily married; you can't possibly remember what it was like to be where I am now.
Well, I still remember very well. It wasn't too long ago -- barely two years, actually -- when I sincerely believed I'd be single for the rest of my life. Not because God told me so, but because I didn't think anyone would want me. Now I know I was wrong, but that doesn't mean I can't empathize with the pain of not knowing if it's meant to happen.
I don't want to create a character who gets a happy ending, though. I've read plenty of novels that do have happy endings, and enjoyed them immensely, but for the purpose of this book I think such an ending would be irresponsible. Why? Because I've learned that relationships are not a cure for whatever self-esteem issues exist before a relationship starts. The habits formed as a single person won't disappear the moment you meet the love of your life. I don't want to perpetuate the lie that true happiness and fulfillment can only be found if you're in a romantic relationship, a message that's not-so-subtly implied by 99% of all chick flicks. It's simply untrue.
Not to mention, the expression "work on becoming the kind of person you want to end up with" is misleading. You don't want to fall into the trap of becoming the best person you can be for the sole purpose of attracting a significant other. No, you should focus on becoming your best self, FOR yourself!
So while I'm still a full-time grad student, and have a lot of responsibilities on my plate without taking on the task of writing a new novel, I'm doing it anyway, while the memories of trying to live "productively single" are still fresh in my mind. It saddens me how so many people essentially waste themselves on the myth of "you complete me." Without being preachy, I want this book to drive home the point that worth is something we're already born with, not something to wear on a ring finger.
I've longed for a book that chronicles the life of a single twenty-something that doesn't make her a modern Cinderella, or a Sex and the City character. If such a book exists (and I'm sure it does somewhere), I've never read it, hence why I'm writing one. The idea of a 21st-century single woman evokes an image of Bridget Jones awkwardness, Zooey Deschanel adorable-ness, and Carrie Bradshaw promiscuity in my mind. I want a character who has fallen in love with the wrong person, made some mistakes, but doesn't want to be defined by them, or be consumed with molding herself into someone who's perfect for a man she hasn't met yet.
Not surprisingly, I'm writing about what my own life was like for most of college. But once I got the idea for this novel (the working title is "Public Displays of Convention"), I couldn't help but wonder: who will believe this story? I wonder this because the author has been in a relationship for the last year and a half. Still, I can't help but remember the countless times when older women reached out to me at the lowest points of my singlehood, when I'd hit rock bottom and felt like I'd be alone forever. They tried to encourage me, and I'd think bitterly to myself, You can't help me. You're happily married; you can't possibly remember what it was like to be where I am now.
Well, I still remember very well. It wasn't too long ago -- barely two years, actually -- when I sincerely believed I'd be single for the rest of my life. Not because God told me so, but because I didn't think anyone would want me. Now I know I was wrong, but that doesn't mean I can't empathize with the pain of not knowing if it's meant to happen.
I don't want to create a character who gets a happy ending, though. I've read plenty of novels that do have happy endings, and enjoyed them immensely, but for the purpose of this book I think such an ending would be irresponsible. Why? Because I've learned that relationships are not a cure for whatever self-esteem issues exist before a relationship starts. The habits formed as a single person won't disappear the moment you meet the love of your life. I don't want to perpetuate the lie that true happiness and fulfillment can only be found if you're in a romantic relationship, a message that's not-so-subtly implied by 99% of all chick flicks. It's simply untrue.
Not to mention, the expression "work on becoming the kind of person you want to end up with" is misleading. You don't want to fall into the trap of becoming the best person you can be for the sole purpose of attracting a significant other. No, you should focus on becoming your best self, FOR yourself!
So while I'm still a full-time grad student, and have a lot of responsibilities on my plate without taking on the task of writing a new novel, I'm doing it anyway, while the memories of trying to live "productively single" are still fresh in my mind. It saddens me how so many people essentially waste themselves on the myth of "you complete me." Without being preachy, I want this book to drive home the point that worth is something we're already born with, not something to wear on a ring finger.
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