Archive for February, 2015

Articles

I’m all about that GROWTH

In art,Bible,blogging,Books,business,journal,PCA,Presbyterian Church in America,prophet,sermon,writing on February 12, 2015 by mstevensrev

As I’ve reflected on my life as a whole trying to find a unified theme that connects all the seemingly random events and achievements, that one piece of yarn that is the thread through the entire story, providing some sense of unity, I have often come to the theme of relationships. In addition to being an extreme extravert, I also find the deepest joy (and pain) while looking into the face of others. The principles I use to guide my life contains one principle dedicated to this, “Relationships are what matter in life, so value them.” So for years this I thought that this was my theme and my motivating factor.

Then I was writing this week in an attempt to help me focus with my work, and something kept popping up. Then this morning I realized that I had stumbled onto something significant to understanding myself. I value relationships, yet I clearly have let many fade away or have had to break relationship with people. Why? Because (for the most part) these were not healthy growing relationships, not moving toward life. Therefore relationships are part of what brings my life meaning, yet only from the perspective of growth.

Note: For anyone reading this that believes I am only referring to positive growth in a constant directions for good at every moment, that is not what I mean. Often the hardest circumstances and relationships provide the opportunity for the most growth. Growing a baby is an incredibly positive thing in pregnacy but any mother would say that it is not all “positive”, “easy” or in a “constant direction”.

So hear are a few items broadly where I have identified this GROWTH in my life:

Professionally: My career has taken the eclectic experiences I have had and put me in a place to use my talents and continue to evolve to be more of a person then I ever imagine. Throughout life I have sold, but now I am growing in international business, technology, management, and client delivery.

Relationally: Growing up in Baltimore it was common to see neighbors in the front lawn fighting to settle a disagreement, my instinct toward aggression has lessen and a world of non-violent communication has opened up to me. Thankfully this is the case because the most important relationship in the world to me, my wife, would not tolerate the primal dualistic ape that roamed my psyche.

Spiritually: God reached out to me very young. Most of my spiritual development took place in a fundamentalist power driven women hating sect of Christian spirituality, and I was a professional with them. This is the place where I can see how much growth has been the theme in my life. Thankfully as the feminist father of three daughters I can know stand open minded filled with love as I engage the world.

All of this reminds me of a passage from The Books of Bebb, by Frederick Buechner. Bebb a wild evangelist has a man in his office who points to a Bible and essential asks how can this thing make my life Bebb.  And Bebb knowing that there is no magic answer that he can provide by pulling out this book then goes on to share with him. (please mind this is my paraphrase, not a direct quote)

growth-chart1-handmade-charlotte-notonthehighstreetSo Bebb asks, “Do you know the passage John 3:16?” The guy nods as just about everyone does. “For God so love the world that he gave his only Son..” pausing “you know the rest. The thing is that passage talks about sin and most people these days don’t even know what sin is. So instead of sin I like to talk about shit. For God so love the world that He sent His only Son down here into the shit with us. You see people can understand that, it something that we all relate to. And God did this, sent his Son into this because shit can be deadly. If it piles up too much in one place it will kill everything. And yet if you take it and spread it out something happens. You see God sent his Son down here with us, so maybe a little green can GROW.”

Articles

Quick Review: So This is Where I Leave You

In Uncategorized on February 1, 2015 by mstevensrev

Any watching of movies on planes for me is dangerous.  This American Life actually has a story about it, and my personal experience supports it.  Watching the Social Network I immediately arrived home and made Karin watch it with me because I thought it could be the best movie of all time.  Needless to say on land it did not measure up.  There is something about floating near heaven that makes one release and embrace in a way we must learn and struggle through to on the ground.  To the Social Networks credit I also rarely watch movies through headphones except on planes and the soundtrack that Trent Reznor created I do believe could be one of the best of all time.
This is Where I Leave You, with all of the subplot is a story of a midlife crisis and to me points out how the midlife crisis today is very different then that experienced by men previously.  Yes the disconnected marriage that leads to an affair, the romance with the high school flame…even the sports car is in common, but there are two things that jumped out at me…one more then other.
The lesbian themTIWILY-Quade was silly and underdeveloped to me, if anything it made is seem that old women who lose their husband choose that, which I think could lessen a lesbian cause for some one has been born that way.  This is only highlighted by the statement when the brother says, “What one morning mom woke up and decided she was a lesbian.”  Now there could have been a larger backstory as there often is with folks who have been closeted when they were younger, but the movie did not even attempt to develop that and made it cheap.
The theme that actually stuck out more to me was the midlife crisis tied with the timing of having a baby.  Perhaps it is because of my personal experience that I am struck by this but it is strange.  This theme of the forever boy, which a lot of Wes Anderson movies have been accused of exploring is tied along side with fatherhood.  You have children as a symbol of adulthood, you have them and you are an adult, you don’t and you are a child. This does not seem accurate to me. But I do appreciate that there is a theme of children need not be a hindrance to love, in and out of marriage, with or without them, if you have love that is a lot.