It was just a few short days post 9/11 and an overly exuberant college-age girl found herself standing on her chair in freshman orientation engaging in a yelling match with a pacifist. She, clearly, was not. (a pacifist). I still share many of the same opinions that young woman had but my forms of expression have matured (i hope) since then.
Of course,there are a number of things that have changed since then and I don’t see the world in quite the same way. For one thing, I don’t see in black and white anymore. There’s a whole lot of color thrown in the mix (some call it gray). Now I’ll be the first to admit that living in black and white felt a lot simpler than where I am today. I could be so sure. So confident. So willing to pick a fight. I like to believe that it takes some amount of courage to admit that I’m not so sure anymore. But I know that there are others who take this uncertainty and worry over it. Maybe I don’t know what is right. Maybe I’ve lost my way. Perhaps….(again with the not-so-sure thing).
I have been fairly silent for a long time on this blog about my opinions. Somewhere over the last six or seven years I went from being overly verbose in my sharing to almost silent. Mostly I have been thinking. Inside. Quietly. And observing. I have done some growing, some changing, some maturing, some staying-the-same. But I think the time to break the silence has come. I miss my writing. I miss free expression on the page, using words and sculpting thoughts out of verbs and nouns. As much as I love face-to-face chats (and trust me I am up for a coffee or tea date any day) there’s something magical, thrilling and downright scary about the written word. It’s so permanent. Orality has a history of eventually being lost. What is spoken into the space between two or more people is eventually gathered up and translated to mean something a little different and then eventually dissipates like the mist that rises off the Oregon coast on a summer morning and vanishes by lunch. I like that about conversation. It doesn’t have to last forever. Words on a page, however, stick around. In the age of the internet they have a permanence that terrifies me. They come back and haunt you. It seems far easier and much less risky to write/say nothing at all.
My last post on pregnancy and reading generated some great dialogue…and lets be honest at least one or two remarks that made me shake my head in disagreement. But that’s why I posted it. To share an opinion and get feedback. Then it turns out that a seemingly innocent Facebook post about eating sushi also brought out a whole lot of comments. Intentionally or unintentionally, sharing personal opinions in a public space invites response. Why else would any one put something out there on the web? Why not just keep it to yourself if you’re not prepared for someone to say something?
So all this rambling to say, you’ll probably be hearing from me a little more frequently. And it won’t just be nice pictures of family outings or video footage of the last futball match. I am not the same girl who practically begged to put on the boxing gloves and get into the opinion-flinging boxing ring that I was at 18…and yes, somehow I am. And to continue in the spirit of honesty, I know that I risk getting my feelings a little bruised. Maybe ruffling the feathers of friends and strangers alike and heaven-forbid making an enemy or two. That’s ok. I am not saying I am fully prepared for that but I do intend to share with sincerity, with heart and with a desire and openness to listen thoughtfully to the responses. Pull up a chair. (I’d say “hit me with your best shot” but I am not that confrontational anymore). Share your own story. Engage. Let the space we’ve been provided with here on the great big world wide web be a space to dialogue.
I do have one request. Lets play nicely with each other ok? (to put it bluntly, no poo-flinging allowed).

Forgiveness
Forgiveness.
Such an easy word to roll off the tongue.
Such a hard word to practice on a daily basis.
Forgiving, I have learned, is not about being someone’s doormat. It is not about sweeping all the pain and hurt another caused you under a figurative carpet and pretending nothing ever went wrong. Forgiveness doesn’t automatically mean you trust again or that you will even put yourself in the same situation or be around that person any more. Forgiveness doesn’t mean you sacrifice yourself on some alter and subject yourself again (and again) to more of the same hurt.
Forgiving is healing more for the one offering it than perhaps it is for the one on the receiving end. Forgiveness is a letting go of the past and embracing the future. Forgiveness means harboring no ill-will or bitterness. Forgiveness cleanses the soul and banishes the toxic poison that anger can become. Anger most certainly has its place but left too long wallowing in it and one day you find that it has morphed into something that is choking out joy in your life. Forgiveness, once given, provides the giver with fresh eyes and a new perspective towards the situation and person you’ve forgiven. Often times, I find that forgiving releases me to love someone deeper, to see their brokenness and to hope for change and growth in them. The act of forgiving forces me to stop being so selfish. And usually it drives me to my knees in prayer, in tears, with a broken and contrite heart because
forgiving is so hard.
And what I find so crazy is that forgiveness is not a one time act that solves everything. In fact, in most cases forgiveness has to happen multiple times. For the same situation. What’s up with that? And when is it finally over? When does “The End” happen? When is that chapter closed? That’s what I really want to know. Because sometimes things and persons that have been forgiven and I figure are “non-issues” just show up, unannounced on my doorstep, and take me by complete surprise and I am thrown into a tailspin, forced to confront the wound that has scabbed over a bit but now appears to be oozing again. And then sometimes I lose my cool in those moments.
The truth is, forgiveness does not make everything disappear. Healing does not mean that there aren’t scars. Since when did any one expect a large and nasty gash, when healed, to not leave some small mark? So why do I assume then that healing on a relational or emotional or spiritual level means that I should be whole, perfect and unblemished? Forgiving is not plastic surgery. I still bear the marks of past wounds. The difference is that, for the most part, they’re not open and raw anymore.
I find that in recent years I am much quicker to forgive, and forgive again, than when I was younger. This is good. It speeds up the repair process and I don’t wake up weeks, months, years later and realize that I am still harboring bad feelings for someone or some situation. So forgiveness is something that we learn to practice and take it from me, I don’t think it comes naturally to many of us. Still, I can feel the warmth that seeps into the marrow of my bones when I have offered forgiveness and I can feel the light piercing places of darkness so I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that this is a practice I want to continue to learn.
Oh sweet balm of forgiveness, heal the wounds. Bring about restoration and wholeness. And I ask for the courage to turn again (and again and again and again) to face the pain and offer this olive branch of peace to others.
Personal
emotion
life