I judge you based on the books you read. :-)

(This post is meant to be in fun, so no one is allowed to be offended, kapeesh?)

I think we all do something like this, to some extent.  I have a dear friend who judges people based off of their favorite Beatles songs!  My choice of “Here Comes the Sun” passed muster, but if you were to say, for example, “I Wanna Hold Your Hand,” her opinion of you would drop pretty fast.  For some people, it’s the music you listen to; for others, the movies you enjoy.

But for me, it’s books.

librarian

If you read C.S. Lewis, I like you automatically, but if you haven’t read his space trilogy, I start to doubt just how big a fan you are.  When I discover people who haven’t read Narnia, I jokingly ask them why they don’t love Jesus.  (JOKINGLY!  Calm down!)

If you read Melina Marchetta, I think you are brilliant and first-class.  If you’ve discovered Jandy Nelson’s one novel, I’m impressed and can’t wait to discuss it with you.  If you loved The Fault in Our Stars, I think you’re a deep-thinking intellectual.  Same thing if you like Yann Martel’s books.

If you read paranormal romance, I will probably automatically think you’re not serious about good books.  Probably.  Not for sure.  I rather liked The Mortal Instrumentsbut then again, I kind of judge MYSELF for liking them.  Ha!

If you’ve read Sophie’s World, I’d be blown away.  I’m not sure I’ve ever met anyone else who has.

If you refuse to read Harry Potter, I will probably joke that, Yeah, the rest of the world must have been wrong.  But yet, I won’t let that argument work on me if you try to use it for another book.

If you’re a big fan of Christian romance, I’m going to raise an eyebrow.  (You can convince me of your sound judgment if you tell me they are a guilty pleasure.  I have one friend– you know who you are!– who avoids my judgment this way.)

I’m not impressed if you read Austen or the Brontes.  I’m not saying these are bad books at all, just that I don’t care for them much (excepting Wuthering Heights).

A friend of Billy Collins is a friend of mine.  Same goes for Anne Lamott.

I respect LOTR fans though I myself am not interested.

If “cancer books” are your thing (you know, those books where kids fall in love and one of them dies, and every story is almost identical), we should talk.  I can kindly redirect you.

Now, tell me yours!  Do you produce snap judgments, and if so, based on what?  Give me some details!

Hogwarts house fashion

I don’t know why I’m intrigued by this … but I am.  I know there are other Potter nerds who read my blog.  I hope you’ll enjoy!

hogwarts fashion hogwarts fashion2 hogwarts fashion3

hogwarts fashion4

 

hogwarts fashion6 hogwarts fashion5

 

Also, check out these sites (Ravenclaw’s is the best!):

Fashion Inspired by the Hogwarts Houses – Ravenclaw

Fashion Inspired by the Hogwarts Houses – Gryffindor

Fashion Inspired by the Hogwarts Houses – Slytherin

Fashion Inspired by the Hogwarts Houses – Hufflepuff

 

I know, I know.  I’m a nerd. 🙂  I love being a nerd.

nerd girls

a bunch of v-day-related ranting

Oh, February 14th.  Seems like just last year I was thinking, Ahhh, but I won’t be alone next Valentines Day.

Ooops.  Wrong again!

Sometimes I can sound a little bitter about being single, but I actually don’t always hate it.  I can be super selfish with my time, go to Barnes & Noble whenever I want, buy whatever I want.  I can drop everything and go to California for a weekend.  I don’t have to cook for anyone.  More time for ministry over the years.  And, though this might sound strange, years of watching friends marry and be married has taught me a ton about what I want in a husband, in a marriage, even in a wedding ceremony.

But good old V-Day.  It’s never very fun to be single on Valentines Day.

I have nothing against Valentines Day.  I don’t think there’s anything wrong with choosing a day to make a big deal out of love.  I don’t really care about the commercialism even.  I think, if you’re blessed enough to have someone you love, you should celebrate your relationship every day.  But why not make a big fuss over it one day a year?  Sometimes it seems like the couples who don’t celebrate V-Day are trying to make a statement I don’t exactly understand.

I was talking to a friend the other day about how I’m glad I didn’t marry young.  It’s true, even though at the time, it was all that I wanted.  I think students at Christian colleges get married way too young; the culture expects and demands it.  It’s not their fault.  They feel ready, and hey, maybe some are.  But I know I am so much wiser now, healthier now, Jackie-er now than I was ten years ago.  I have been forced to learn and do things that I probably wouldn’t have otherwise.  I know every facet of my identity in a much clearer way– heck, when I was in college, I was only starting to tiptoe into those waters!

I’m not saying college students shouldn’t get married or that it’s bad to marry young.  Well, maybe I am, a little.  Let’s be honest, there’s no formula to these things.  (Although I will say that almost every failed marriage I’ve seen has come from couples who married pretty young.)

Meh, I’m going to get myself in trouble on my blog.  On Valentines Day.  Listen, don’t yell at me too much.  Remember that I am all alone and show me grace.

I still love love.

Also,

Ahhh, but I won’t be alone next Valentines Day …

😉

v-day

 

 

Sometimes the audiobooks are better.

Just as there are people who argue the book is always better than the movie, I’m sure there are people who would argue that a paper copy of a book that you can hold in your hands is better than reading on a Kindle or a Nook or listening to an audiobook.

I personally think that it’s awesome that people are reading, no matter which way they “take” their stories.  Audiobooks have been a huge blessing in my life; they entertain me on long car rides, distract me from my OCD, help me fall asleep at night, and make mundane things (like driving, cleaning, etc.) worthwhile because I’m engaging my mind.

There are even a few books where I prefer the audio version over all others.  Here they are:

1. Saving Francesca and Jellicoe Road, both by Melina Marchetta, both read by Rebecca Macauley.  Let’s be honest: reading about Aussie schools in an Aussie accent is incredible.

2. The Piper’s Son by Melina Marchetta, read by Michael Finney.  Again, the Aussie accent.  This time a male Aussie accent.  (You have to understand that I listen to certain parts of this one over and over again, becoming more and more and more certain that it wouldn’t be quite right for me to marry any man who wasn’t Australian.)

3. A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess, read by anyone.  I found it really hard to read the paper version because Burgess writes in “Nadsat,” an Anglo-Russian slang he made up for the “droogs” in this book.  I kept tripping over the words and eventually gave up.  But I later revisited it on audio, and by the end felt practically fluent as a malenky horrorshow devotchka who wants to peet moloko.  (This alone makes me believe the Rosetta Stone curriculum works!)

4. The Book Thief by Markus Zusak, read by Alan Corduner.  Great voice, awesome German accent!  Makes Liesel, Rudy, Max, and the Hubermans come alive as real people living in Nazi Germany.

5. The Last Unicorn written AND read by Peter Beagle.  I love hearing the tone and rhythm that were originally intended.  Plus, Beagle actually sings the songs!  And you get guitar interludes in between chapters.  Brilliant.

6. Absolutely everything by David Sedaris.  I about DIE laughing when I listen to him read his stories in his own voice!  Definitely better and funnier in his voice than on paper!

[Edited 9/30/13:

7. The Scorpio Races by Maggie Stiefvater.  Absolutely breaktaking.]

I also have to throw out major props to Jim Dale, who read the whole Harry Potter series and The Night Circus.  That man is unreal.  I don’t know how he can keep track of so many voices/characters!

How about you?  Do you listen to audiobooks?  Any audiobooks you prefer over the paper version?

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OCD torture

Through my website, I can see what search terms are bringing people to my blog, and this week, the number one search term was “OCD torture.”  It breaks my heart.  But I can completely understand and relate.

For those who are in the throes of such torture:

Welcome to my blog.  I know what you’re going through– I was there myself, only about 5 years ago.  And the torture was long-lasting for me– nearly 15 years of it.  It’s crazy how we can even bear up, isn’t it?  Sometimes I am amazed that I survived, was able to get through school, was able to keep my job.  Every single day, I hurt so bad.  Every single day, I had this feeling that something was wrong, something was off.  I felt frantic.  The weight of the world was on my shoulders, even from when I was young.  Personally, my OCD attacked my Christian faith and made me doubt my salvation, and that doubt is like pure agony to one who loves Christ.  So many evenings I spent weeping, almost keening, because I couldn’t handle the thoughts and doubts that were inhabiting my brain, burrowing into it as if they’d stay forever.

torture

My OCD attacked whatever was most important to me.  It made me think people were secretly against me, it made me think I shouldn’t tell my problems to my best friend, it made me think it was sinful to write (one of my life’s greatest loves), it made me think I was gay when I clearly was not, it made me think I was a sex offender, it made me think it was wrong to meet new people or to talk to anyone I didn’t know (not helpful when your job is recruiting!).  It made me feel guilty if I brought home a STAPLE from work.  It made me feel guilty and sinful all the time.  And TERRIFIED too.  It wasn’t always just a dull agony.  Quite often it ramped into a shrill, turbulent nightmare.  Overwhelming, engulfing terror would swallow me whole.  And then sometimes, to hide itself, it would make me even doubt that I had OCD (tricky bastard!!).

Notice I say it made me feel this way.  OCD, my disorder, made me feel this way.  The guilt and terror were not from God.  The thoughts and doubts weren’t my own.  They were given to me, like the ugliest of gifts, from my disorder.

I remember reading blog post about the unpardonable sin, thinking that is me.  I am in those shoes, and I will never be out of them. Guess what?  I have been delivered from that ugly hold OCD had on me.  I still have it.  But I’m the boss; it’s not.

How?  Cognitive-behavioral therapy, specifically exposure and response prevention therapy, which I’ve explained on my blog here.  Now, after twelve weeks of CBT, I have been in control of my OCD for the last four years.  It’s like another life.  When I feel guilty now, it’s because I’ve done something wrong.  When I doubt something, I don’t freak out– I seek out advice from family, friends, and the Holy Spirit.  I know my soul belongs to God.  I can look at OCD’s silly suggestions and see that they are ridiculous.  I don’t have to entertain them.  I can toss them aside like I never could before.

And my OCD knows it’s not in control anymore.  To be honest, it doesn’t even fight me as much now that it knows it loses every single time.  It knows I have the tools to toss it out the window, so it keeps pretty quiet around me.

Meanwhile, it is torturing you.  I hate that.  I want you to be free like I am.  It is going to be a rough road, but there is help.  Find a cognitive-behavioral therapist, buckle in, and do whatever you have to do to complete your therapy.  And when you want to quit, you can post a comment on this blog, and I will be your cheerleader.  Skip the traditional talk therapy.  You need someone who knows how to do ERP.

Start today.  It’s time for freedom.

Note for those without health insurance: If you can’t afford to see a cognitive-behavioral therapist, and if you’re ready to take back your life, you can try a self-guided CBT experience with an iPhone app like the one at http://www.liveOCDfree.com or by using a book like “Stop Obsessing!” by Edna Foa or “Freedom from Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder: A Personalized Recovery Program for Living with Uncertainty” by Dr. Jonathan Grayson.

Actively Waiting

I wrote this story years ago … so don’t judge it too harshly!  Also, I cut out the whole beginning and cut to the chase.  

 

This how I met Lane, the handsome Egyptian-Canadian admissions rep from the east coast, while we were both at a conference in Michigan.

I’m uncertain  how exactly the rest of this night unfolded, but I’m grateful just to use the vague word somehow and accept it like a gift.  Lane, Emily, and I made our way from the auditorium we’d been in into the hallway outside it, where they introduced me two other admission counselors from a school in Boston.  Details elude me, but I can picture the five of us visiting there as the noisy admissions crowds dwindled and disappeared around us until we finally sat down there on the hallway floor, in a more-or-less circle, talking about admissions and our goals until about 12:30am.  I didn’t care if my co-worker/conference roomie was worried or not.

I talked less than I normally would that night, listened to the others, their stories and opinions and ambitions.  And though the morning haziness—draped in the shadows of the years since—has softened the images of that hallway, I remember with distinct clarity the words Lane spoke before we left: he didn’t know what was coming next in his life, but he was praying about it and seeking God’s will and waiting for that – “but not waiting in the cliché sense,” he said, “not just ‘oh, I’m just waiting to see what God wants’ … I am actively waiting for word from God on what to do next.”  Actively waiting.

In a way, the phrase blessed me.  And after the conference was over, I sent him the first email between the two of us, thanking him for saying so.

 

He told me later that it was an idea from his Henri Nouwen reader.  I looked it up: “waiting is never a movement from nothing to something.  It is always a movement from something to something more.”  I kept reading.  There it was: the concept that endeared a stranger to me.  “The secret of waiting is the faith that the seed has been planted, that something has begun.  Active waiting means to be present fully to the moment, in the conviction that something is happening where you are and that you want to be present to it.  A waiting person is someone who is present to the moment, who believes that this moment is the moment.”

The words sound lovely, but do I really believe this?  To be clear, waiting is not a movement from nothing to something?

The element of trust in Nouwen’s passage is the size of a small mountain, and the longer I reflect on Nouwen’s words the bolder they seem to me, small but obvious arrows that point directly to trust – trust in the “process,” in the “system,” trust that I am not at the start, but somewhere along the path.  And a charge – wake up!  You are not at the beginning!  Keep your eyes open because you do not know what gifts will be yours today.

However, I imagine that if we have missed the fact that we have already filled our suitcases and taken the first steps of our journey, it is rather unlikely we are looking around for the finish line – or even at the local scenery.

I want to drink moments like frothy whole milk.  I am ashamed that I gulp life without tasting, my eyes searching for the next glass.

 

I saw Lane the next summer too, this time at at another college in Kentucky.  He came up and gave me a hug and we talked a little bit, enough for him to tell me that he was going to be traveling the world for about 9 months.  Incredible.  I had images of him receiving a faithful string of my handwritten letters in a remote African village where naked children ran around in poverty; he would be so lonely there, and my letters would be like medicine, like company.  He would realize there how special I was and how we belonged together.

But then again, it was 2006, which spilled over into 2007, and in lieu of long-awaited love letters in scrawling cursive, email was king.  Email was still nice; I loved hearing from him from time to time, and he kept his blog fresh and updated, not with a log of daily activities, but his thoughts on poverty and ambition and Jesus, which acted as seeds sown casually in my chest which grew into admiration.  But it wasn’t quite the way I pictured it, as he hopped from Taiwan to Malaysia to Thailand to China to the Philippines, then – after a brief trip back to home (Canada) – on to Nigeria, Kenya, Tanzania, and Egypt, the motherland (sort of).  He crossed country borders faster than international mail could travel, and it seemed far too unnatural to request an address anyway.   I wrote zero letters.  Stupid, silly me.

While he was gone, my dear college friend Cindy convinced me it’d be a good idea to write a very important email asking his opinion on matters of great importance to me.  In short, is he really worth my time?  I took her advice but was very sneaky about it.  It was less a blatant questionnaire, more of a “I just thought of you and realized …” take, asking strategic questions about the Bible, teenagers, and the future in a non-strategic-sounding way.

I read his reply over and over, as if it were a glass of cool water that I returned to for gulps.  He wished he read more, wanted to teach or work in student development, wasn’t eager to return to Canadian winters, still wanted to travel but not with the ardent thirst he was quenching now.  In 10 years, he hoped to be married, have a “munchkin” or two, and maybe a golden retriever.  What about me, he asked.  I left his answers in the reply and put mine beneath his, for easy comparison, you know.

When he returned to North America, I got a message: He is coming to Minnesota for a wedding.  Will I be around?

I was in a panic.  NO, I WILL NOT BE AROUND.  I WILL BE UP AT CAMP AND THEN OFF TO WISCONSIN FOR A WEDDING RECEPTION.  Since both of these activities were non-negotiable to me, this twist seemed like an ironic and cruel joke.  My darling friend Cindy was actually more determined that I see him than I was: “When will he be there?  How long?  Could you fly back from Wisconsin to save time?  Can you afford it?  I could help.  I’m looking up ticket prices right now ….”  I thought I’d be the happiest girl if I could only get coffee with him for a little bit in the Twin Cities.  I emailed, but he replied that he wasn’t sure where exactly the wedding would be taking place.  But Minnesota can’t be that big, can it?

Um.  Yes, it can.  Boys.

 

I was mid-week through camp when I received the answer: he’s in the “rinky-dink” town of Wadena.  WADENA?!  That is 30 minutes from the camp where I sat at the computer in the “Staff Only” room I shouldn’t have been in.  Will he come up and visit?

But I didn’t hear back.

And so now, picture me, apprehensive as I pass the city sign: “Wadena, pop. 4,107.”  Entering the town feels significant and peculiar, like entering a sound-proof booth or diving underwater.

I want to slow waaaay down as I drive through the town.  He could be in that Burger King or McDonalds … an AmericInn!  He’s probably got a reservation there.  That could be him poolside, I think as I drive by the large windows that allow me to glance in.  I stop to get gas and to prolong my time in this place where I could be breathing his same air.  I am giving God the perfect opportunity for a miracle.

The pump is filling up my car, and I decide to wash the windshield.  Slowly, slowly … what if a group of wedding party crazies stops by the station for Combos and Diet Coke?  Better get the drivers-side window too.

Wadena is quiet, and warm but comfortable.  I am on edge already because I just said an early goodbye to a campground of people I love.  The street seems important; anything could happen here in just 5 minutes.  My tank is full, but I decide to finish all the windows.  Just a little more time.

Desperation has definitely kicked in, but also a funky lethargy and irritation.  I wash every window of my 2003 Dodge Stratus there in Wadena, waiting for God to “show up,” then finally put the squeegee wand back into the washer fluid, climb back into my car, turn the key in the ignition, pull out of gas station, and make the turn to leave town.

I cry – and belt out Phil Collins’ “Against All Odds,” for terrific effect.  I consider Eir’s disapproval but also how she’d laugh if she knew.  So dramatic.  I don’t even know how else to deal with this warm Wadena air and the knowledge that he is here.

                How can I just let you walk away, just let you leave without a trace/When I stand here taking every breath with you … oo-ooh.  Kamikaze bugs schmuck into my windshield, destroying my work.  Insult to injury.

 

Did I really think he’d show up?  Surprise me at the pump as he stepped out of Casey’s, unwrapping a Snickers?  Even now, I’m not sure what I was hoping for that evening.  I certainly don’t understand why Lane’s visit to Minnesota and my drive back to St. Paul were like two orbiting moons coming close enough to touch … but not doing so.  But continued absence has made my heart resilient.  I cried and sang, and then listened to the audiobook I had in the CD player while I drove the rest of the way to the Twin Cities.  The next morning, I woke up and drove 6 more hours to Two Rivers, Wisconsin.

Minnesota can’t be that big, Lane thinks.  But oh it can, it can!  The 34.5 miles between Wadena and camp itself seemed to span the continent.  He may have just as well been in Toronto.  Or back in the Philippines.

Today I talked to a college girlfriend named Jamie whom I haven’t seen in years.  She’s in love with her boyfriend Andy, the same boy she was talking about during her second year of college.  I asked, “How long did you like him before you finally started dating?”

“Four years,” she said.  “For four years, I just prayed.”  Since I’m an emotional train wreck I almost started crying right there at the homecoming football game.  Jamie spoke of not even pursuing God’s will, but God Himself.  Active.  But waiting.

Actively waiting, hmm, Lane?  I loved hearing the words drip off your tongue years ago; they seemed so important, so significant and weighty as they dropped to the floor and followed me outside into Michigan air.  Actively waiting is exactly what I want to do with my life while you head off once again, this time to Honduras.

I’m struck again with thinking of Nouwen’s definition: “never a movement from nothing to something.”  That seems very nearly what I’m doing right now.  I find it hard to understand unless I couple it with the next line: “The secret of waiting is the faith that the seed has been planted, that something has begun.”  I don’t want to be naïve and think that sentence has to do with a romantic spark.  Rather, I imagine that “the faith that the seed has been planted” is referring to the way that I trust that the events of my life have long ago been set into motion, that they each come in and go out, occur, excite, disappoint under a canopy of sovereignty.

If there is no canopy, the value of waiting plummets; if there is no canopy, we live aimlessly, like waiting is a movement from nothing to something.  I trust the canopy is there, and that the seed is planted under a watchful eye, a deposit.  As Victor Hugo put it, “Have courage for the great sorrows of life and patience for the small ones; and when you have laboriously accomplished your daily task, go to sleep in peace. God is awake.”

Dr. Seuss has a book called Oh, the Places You’ll Go! with advice packed into the doggerel.  The book/poem is kind of a rollercoaster, and at one of the lows, Seuss talks about “a most useless place”:

The Waiting Place…

NO!

That’s not for you!

Somehow you’ll escape
all that waiting and staying.
You’ll find the bright places
where Boom Bands are playing.

This made sense to me when I was in high school and first discovered this book.  The words were like a battle cry for the young and ambitious.  But now that I’m older, I don’t think that waiting and Boom Bands are allocated to separate towns.  Can’t you dance while you wait, while you pray?  Isn’t prayer itself sometimes a kind of dance?  Conversation, often breathtaking.

Last week was a big step for me.  I finally mailed a letter to Lane, to his provided address in Honduras; actually, it was less like a letter and more like a note, but on any scale, weightier than email.  And this week, I sent another. 

I wonder what Lane will think when he gets the bright blue envelope from the States, with my name and address scribbled in the upper left.  Will he be encouraged, or will he raise an eyebrow as though he’s caught me?  How many colored envelopes will need to grace his PO Box before the truth begins to settle on his chest like a slow realization?  And when it does, will it be a familiar weight like home and baked potato soup, or will there be a dread, an unsolicited discovery that makes him avoid the Siguatepeque post office?

Active waiting: an unrecognizable blend, a homogenous collection, of trust and activity and lingering.  Advent full of aspirations.

So then maybe that dance of prayer and trust is not a slow and graceful waltz, but something wild and unruly, enabled with abandon.

I picture myself in a forest, dressed in rich red, with music pounding, and me, dancing breathlessly and pausing every so often to glance up at the canopy and laugh.

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a literary life

What is your favorite thing about reading and/or writing?

It’s hard for me to choose just one thing!  I love that I get to create new worlds, love that it’s my responsibility to make people think about God and ideas.  But I think my very favorite thing is that I know that, when I write, I am sitting in the very seat of God’s will for my life … I am doing what I was created to do.  How many 31-year-olds are that clear on their calling (and are able to respond)?!  I love my literary life.

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my recurring dreams

These are the dreams I seem to have most often:

1) I am friends with the VlogBrothers, and both John and Hank think I am awesome.

2) There is another Harry Potter book/movie, and I am either reading it, watching it, or in it.  (Sometimes I’m even Harry.  My roommate has these dreams too.  Are we weird, or are there others?)

3) To the best of my knowledge, I have had only one truly recurring dream.  It is the same each time.  Every single detail.  Only each time, the dream is a little longer.  To set the scene: in it, my family lives on a lake in a small town, and someone new shows up in town.  My family welcomes this person and takes him home.  He turns out to be a murderer.  I hide in the closet (where he looks for me but somehow never sees me), and then I take my brother and sister and we start making our slow, scary way around the lake to a friend’s house.  In each dream, we get closer to that house.  I haven’t had the dream in a while and am wondering if I will again and if we will make it to that house.

sleeping