HOPE: a gathering place (part 3)

“When historians pick up their pens to write the story of the 21st century, let them say that it was your generation who laid down the heavy burdens of hate at last and that peace finally triumphed over violence, aggression, and war. So I say to you, walk with the wind, brothers and sisters, and let the spirit of peace and the power of everlasting love be your guide.”

John Lewis, civil rights leader and congressman, in his final essay “Together, You Can Redeem the Soul of Our Nation.”
Photo taken at the 2015 UNOSDP International Sport and Social Impact Summit, where youth leaders from 30+ countries united in a singular, hopeful cause. (Read on for Johana’s story!)

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Welcome back, friends!

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Things look different today. This morning, as I was sipping coffee, looking out into this sleepy Pittsburgh alley, and reading Discerning the Voice of God by Priscilla Shirer (shout-out to Kaliyah for the recommendation!) I was reminded of one of the most powerful prayers in the game:

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“Lord, open my eyes to see where you are working.”

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That’s the incredible gift of this project: this very opening of the eyes, this ongoing discovery of where God has worked, is working, and will work in the lives of us all, nationwide, worldwide. It is seeing, one step at a time, how we are each called to participate in that work in our own way. I know I’m not the only one continually baffled by this!

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So, as we enter week three of this exploration in HOPE, I pray we all keep our eyes WIDE open. ♡

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“Where do you find hope?”

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“I find hope in remembering.

Remembering how God has provided for me in the past. In places where I don’t feel hopeful, I look back and remember the times that He has provided people to give me that hope, who showed me in difficult situations that I can find my hope in the Lord. 

I find hope in looking back and seeing the growth from before to now, and seeing that there’s hope for change. That there will be joy and goodness amidst the struggle, or the being stuck, or whatever it might be.

I find hope in remembering my own life, in looking at the Bible, and at the stories of the saints and all who have gone before us. I find hope particularly in building relationship with young people and young leaders.” 

Olivia Frahm has worked in Catholic youth ministry for the past five years. Currently, she works at the Catholic Youth team in Christchurch, New Zealand as the mission team supervisor, leading a team of four young women as they go into colleges and run retreats, camps, and youth groups. From 2018 to 2019, Liv was a librarian, English teacher, and after-school program coordinator at the Finca del Niño in Trujillo, Honduras. Her hidden talents are soulful belting of “I Won’t Give Up,” making soup that burns your mouth but is so good you aren’t mad about it, animating a Kiwi bird puppet to appear “de verdad,” and inspiring anyone close to her to live a more deeply rooted, and authentic life. 

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“If HOPE is a belief that ‘something wanted or desired will happen,’ how does that feeling visit different communities and the individuals within? Hence it is at least a conundrum if not a complex irony to consider the question, ‘where do I find hope?’

Some find hope everywhere they look, though primarily because their ability to HOPE is an inherited ideal, one of their many unearned privileges.

Hope being something we desire happening isn’t necessarily a universal desire. I’m hoping for rain on the day you hope for sun. Perhaps if more people unpacked HOPE as an acronym, “Help Others, Provide Energy” I would feel less guilty hoping. Conversely, I unpack hope actively instead of passively. My identity as an able-bodied, cis-gendered, socio-politically situated man born without any ailments, physical and/or mental constraints in most of the pertinent categories of my identity allows me this advantage. Hence, my ability to hope and have my hopes achieve an unfettered fruition is an easy thing to miss if I’m not mindful of it. 

I don’t have to hope to one day be able to demonstrate my love publicly as opposed to having my love closeted, regimenting me to a lifetime of loving privately, clothed in shame. 

I’m able to walk unimpaired towards the possibility of hope, talk intelligently about my expectations of having hope. Seldom has anyone balked at my ability to hopefully walk and talk, though my race/my Blackness makes it more probable that I could end my life outlined in chalk. 

Someone can hope for their paychecks fatter while others must hope that eventually their lives, though they are Black, may nonetheless matter. 

Though I was fortunate enough that my family transcended poverty while I was in my childhood, serving me invaluable lessons about appreciating what was on my plate not having been an option for others, or the ‘Other,’ it is a fleeting thought that requires mindful vigilance for me to not lose it. 

Many people’s hopes are inseparable from whatever luck they have experienced, oblivious of the fact that luck is nothing if not the residue of preparation. All that said, where I find hope is in the eyes, conversation, or actions of someone who struggles with hoping only for themselves and instead invests their hope in the wellbeing of others and then works towards actualizing it.

Dr. J.W. Wiley is currently a full-time writer, with a novel published in 2019 titled, An Academic Lynching: Myth, Misandry, and Me, Too,” and an academic book published in 2013 titled, “The NIGGER in You: Challenging Dysfunctional Language, Engaging Leadership Moments,” and a consultant with his company Xamining Diversity. From 2000-2018 Dr. Wiley served as a professor of Philosophy and Interdisciplinary studies at State University of New York Plattsburgh, where he also was the Chief Diversity Officer, and the Director for the Center for Diversity, Pluralism, and Inclusion (CDPI). Dr. Wiley was co-writer/co-director of the documentary “Dissed-Respect: The Impact of Bullying,” He is also a traveling lecturer, and his talk on “Examining the Dimensions of Cool” at Notre Dame in 2016 was extremely formative in my earliest days of questioning how the notions of “haves” and “have-nots” play out in our culture—and how we can unpack these forces and work to change them. Dr. Wiley is, above all, an agent of hope, a beacon of wisdom shining away shadows of ignorance and apathy in the minds of all whom his messages reach.

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“My hope is found in God through Jesus Christ! It is through Jesus’ death on the cross for my sins and His resurrection that I no longer wander aimlessly, unsure of where my hope lies. I have assurance that whatever happens in this life, my eternity rests with God our Creator who loves and cares for us. It is the only hope that never fails and never changes. This Truth brings peace to my heart and soul through the trials and uncertainties of this life! 

‘…and hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.’ -Romans 5:5″

Dayelle Metras of Kansas City is one of the most empathetic people I have ever met, as she will meet someone exactly where they are in one moment—cry with them, pray with them, make them feel wholly heard and loved—and then will go on to make them laugh so hard they cry even harder. This makes her an incredible friend and an incredible nurse. Her dancing skills—salsa, punta, toe-tapping, she does it all!—will leave you awestruck, and her love for Jesus will leave you better than she found you. 

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“‘Where do you find hope?’

For a Christian, this response can be easier to give—as hope makes our faith make sense.

In my life I have had highs and lows, but never have I been without hope for a better tomorrow. 

I’ve known hope since I was small. I was very insecure as a child. I had speech problems. But I always sought help to work through this, and I always believed in myself. I always knew hope, that the sunshine will come out after a gray day.

When I was around 17 I began to see more attentively the problems of my country (Honduras), how many young people were breaking the law or in gangs all around me, and how this number was increasing. I knew how to help, but I knew it would be difficult work. 

Yet, I have always liked to do things that challenge me as a person. I’ve always had hope, and the confidence that I am able to give more than I am.

When I was 18, I began volunteering in a prevention center that helped these vulnerable young people in my area. I began giving classes in Basic English, computation, and crafts. For four or five years, more or less, my daily routine was to go to my own school in the morning, and teach these classes in the afternoon.

Was I tired? Yes. But truly I felt that I was doing something positive for my country, and this was gratifying. 

I was 21 when, due to my work at the center, I was selected to travel to the United States for a United Nations summit for young leaders. I never lost the faith as I was applying for this trip (As I said, I like a challenge!), and I had people surrounding me with so much support.

And there, in that place, my perspective of service work changed. I understood that God gives us a small piece of the world in which we live, and that the world is huge—and we can each do something wherever we are to make a better world. There were so many young people united there for this very cause. The love for a better world was there, concentrated in that place.

I returned to my country with a bigger heart for serving, wanting to help all those in need. I had discovered that the choice to serve, to be a volunteer, is a decision I can practice every day of my life—such as helping someone cross a street or assisting my neighbor when they need something. This type of work is a lifestyle, the hope of helping create a better world.

When I was 22 years old I decided to study law—in a country where it almost seemed like laws didn’t exist. That’s the irony of life! But hope lives on. People will say that being in a lawyer in my country will be the death of me (or crueler things than that!), but no one knows the amount of hope I find in this career. It is a noble job, as good lawyers are guardians of the earth!

I currently have a job with the government, so life is still ironic, because honestly I never thought I’d be where I am. But I like what I do, I try to go the extra mile, and hope that I can leave a positive footprint in my workplace. Doing this work  is something I am proud of. I work for my country, with the faith and the hope of giving my tiny grain of sand so that this country has a better future. 

And now, a cherry on top. In 2016, I was in a season of heartbreak and said, “One day I will know love…the love Mom and Dad have taught me for more than twenty years.” And today at age 25, more secure and authentic than I was before, I am sure that I have found the love of my life. 

So, hope has been in every stage of my life. I am a very happy young woman because I understand that everything God does is good, and everything that God allows is necessary. God gives us hope, in sickness and tribulations. He promised the rainbow after the rain. He promised us hope. 

Hope lives in every step we take. Despite the situation, hope always must be our best ally.

Hope is a reason to keep going forward.

Hope is for the living.

Hope is you.”

(translated)

Johana Cortes is currently studying Law in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, alongside her fiancé Gabriel. I had the honor of befriending her in 2015 for the UN camp in Florida (when my Spanish/Honduras knowledge was very minimal!) and reconnecting with her four years later in her hometown in Honduras, when I could thankfully talk about more than her favorite animal and the weather, and thus hear more of her story. Love for God and for others emanates from Johana, and her testimony of hope can remind us all of our little missions to tend to our small plot of the world. 

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Going forward, may our eyes stay open to the work of God, may we walk with the wind toward building a better world in our pedacito of the world, and may “the spirit of peace and the power of everlasting love be your guide.” Have a hope-fueled week, everyone.

HOPE: a gathering place (part 2)

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“See, I am doing a new thing!

Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?

I am making a way in the wilderness

and streams in the wasteland.”

Isaiah 43:18-19

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Hey friends! Thank you for returning to, or joining, this conversation.

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This week, I pose the question: What do hope and listening to new perspectives have in common?

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I propose this answer: They both expand our imaginations.

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While there is certainly a time to go inward and wholly accept a current reality (a hope that bypasses this is counterfeit), there comes a time to go outside of ourselves and imagine that there’s a better way–or maybe simply imagine the possibility that we don’t know everything–which is a relief, isn’t it? Especially when our thoughts stray toward something like, “This is just the way it is,” “This is a dead end,” “They are hopeless,” “I’m hopeless,” “This is hopeless,” etc.?

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An expanded imagination gives space for productive accountability, surrender, learning, community, and compassionate transformation to occur. So, we hope in some greater Good. We listen. And we act (or, in select cases, don’t act) from there, even when it feels like the biggest mess in the world.

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“See, I am doing a new thing!” God said through Isaiah, to both the exiles in Babylon and to us today. I’ve always read this in the tone of a very wholesome Picasso-type figure giddy to reveal the masterpiece he’s working on, one we never could’ve predicted. That seems fitting. God, the ultimate Creator, the genius Artist behind it all, is of course always creating things, transforming things, expanding things, progressing things for Good in new ways–and wanting us to share in that. We each were a new thing too, after all, and continue to be if we dare let Him work in and through us. (Say it louder for the stubbornness-prone *me* in the back!)

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“Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?”

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So, this week, in this place and beyond, I invite us to:

  • dare to listen to new perspectives (starting with the powerful ones below)
  • dare to imagine new possibilities
  • dare to hope… and watch God work.

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“Where do you find hope?”

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“’Hope’ is the thing with feathers-/ that perches in the soul-/ and sings the tune without the words-/ and never stops- at all-”

So begins Emily Dickinson’s famous poem on Hope, beloved (or perhaps begrudged) by many students as an example of extended metaphor. It’s a poem I taught to my students, a poem that I myself was taught when I was in their shoes. It’s a poem that, all those years ago in the dusty basement English classroom, seized my heart and mind with its beauty and vividness. Hope is a bird, hope sings: hope is my soul, my soul is a bird, my soul sings, even in the midst of a gale. It is one of the first poems I volitionally memorized, not because a teacher told me to but because I recognized in it words better than my own, words that I wanted to save so that they could spring forth unbidden when my own failed me.

Poetry—and really literature and art, as well—is a source of hope for me. It is a reminder of the constancy of human experience, of human suffering, and the ability of humans to triumph. It is the great border-flattener, removing not only barriers across time and space but also across mind and heart to let me glimpse the experiences of others and lead lives other than my own. And, it reminds me that despite all the pain and difficulties of the world, there is beauty and goodness and truth out there waiting to be encountered.” 

Tracey Schirra is a current education policy research assistant in Washington, DC, former high school English teacher, and perpetual lover of learning. She dabbles in creative writing, various artistic mediums, and political theory. She is sunshine personified. 
The core members of Skupnost Barka (Slavko, Marinka, Stane, Ado, and Marianca) and I painted this mural in the community’s new shed to inspire each workday. The scene depicts the gorgeous Slovenian landscape, and the verse, Psalm 33:5: “The earth is full of God’s unfailing love.”

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“I find Hope in every smile and lovely face of all our core members, as this means that they feel okay. Also in every vegetable in our garden, as this means we have food, we are not hungry, and we respect nature. I find Hope in every kind word. I know more and more we are people who dream and work for better relations – in our small community and wider. I hope and believe in a world of respect and love.”

Brigita Perdih is the volunteer coordinator and an assistant in the Skupnost Barka (L’Arche) Community in Medvode, Slovenia. This is a community of people with developmental disabilities (core members) and people without disabilities who live together, work together, sing together, cook together, garden together, dance together, and take care of one another. Brigita is an incredibly kind, fiery, adventurous (she once did rescue work in the Alps!), open-hearted woman who mentored me and many others during my summer with the community in 2017.

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“When I look at the world today I see despair. When I watch the news or walk down the streets of social media, hopelessness is looming in our posts and souls. However, when I look at Jesus Christ and his love for you and me fully demonstrated at His cross, I become optimistic, even in the face of death or poverty. If God has done so much for me already, what won’t he do to bring me through this too? I find hope in the person of Christ and what he’s offering to all humanity.” 

Sive “Sylvester” Nogada is a follower of Jesus Christ, loving husband to Linku, and the executive Pastor of New Creation church. He was born and raised in Cape Town, South Africa, where his career thrived in church leadership, sports ministry, and sport for development and peace. His vibrant passion for community transformation, and success in carrying it out, led to him becoming a global trainer to church and parachurch leaders across Africa, London, and in the U.S. His ambition for sustainability in African missions has led him to pursue a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration at William Jessup University, CA. He hopes to use his education for holistic-socioeconomic transformation when he returns to South Africa–to set the captives free, give sight to the blind, and declare freedom. His joy will inspire yours. 

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Artist: Adelina, age 6

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“I find hope reading the Bible…. also, I usually find hope when I’m snuggling with you, Mama.”

Adelina Wooldridge, age 6, in response to her mom, Nicole Wooldridge, posing the hope question.  Adelina is an artist in every sense of the word (her striking sailboat painting is featured above!) a generous free spirit, and an effortless master of the one-liner. 

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“I find hope in the mountains, with my calves achy, my breath heavy, and my soul singing the glory of God’s creation.”

Nicole Wooldridge led an initiative to install an entire new water filtration system for the Finca del Niño, and is currently pursuing a degree in Nursing near Seattle, Washington. She’s the mother of Kiara and Adelina, wife of Eric, a former “professional welcomer” to international university students, a lover of learning, a transformative communicator of peace and grace. Nicole lives out the deep authentic love of the Lord through all that life presents her.

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Photographer: Nicole Wooldridge, July 2020

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“I think hope is really when we experience [how God is working in all times of our lives]. Sometimes it is easy to be positive and have optimistic thoughts, no? But when we enter difficult situations—such as the sickness of a relative, financial difficulties, distance, circumstances like this—our faith gets tested and we must take a big step of faith to have hope in these times. Our priest Father Gregorio said once, ‘My hope begins where my optimism ends.” I agree with this. I have had months where it is difficult to be positive, but this is when God allows me to really experience hope. It allows me time to say okay, how am I living? How is my relationship with Jesus, really? And I realize I can continue with my life because I am truly entrusting everything to Him.” (translated)

Nely Herrera is a remarkably warm-hearted missionary with Missioners of Christ in Comayagua, Honduras, where she leads retreats for young adults through the organization Corazon Puro. Born in Nicaragua, Nely is dedicated to using her own experiences of hardship and faith to help young people establish healthy, loving relationships in their lives. She is a former missionary at the Finca del Niño and visits regularly to support the teenage residents. 

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“When first asked “Where do you find hope?”, I thought to myself…well, that seems easy enough. But the more I thought about it, the harder it was for me to convey. I realized this difficulty was because, for me, hope rose out of some of the darkest times in my life. In past years, I battled with my mental health so much so that hope was truly all I was holding on to get through the day. Thinking back on these darker times in my life, I realized the true beauty of the word “hope”. It is something that I have held onto as a means to climb out of dark times and lean into God and my own light.

I believe that hope is found deep within our souls. I have found hope within myself many times before. It is wanting to give up but waking up every morning because the possibility of tomorrow is too good to miss. And honestly, I would not be answering this question if I did not choose hope on every single dark day. Back then, I could not see the light, but I found hope in myself and other people who have battled with their mental health and triumphed over their struggle. 

More and more, I am learning that hope is in the little things. It is hearing someone say you did a good job. It is a teenager helping the elderly. It is allyship during times of civil unrest. It is simply waking up each morning ready to tackle a new day. For me, hope stems from these small, seemingly insignificant actions. It is seeing people work together, be kind, and be loved. Hope also comes from within, as mentioned before. It is the whisper on your bad days, telling you to stay. It is the last line of defense. Hope is the feeling, the aching desire that this life is still worth living, that the world is still beautiful, and that you can still find your light. Seek hope, feel hope…

…it will carry you.”    

Taylor McCorkle is a Neuroscience PhD candidate at Drexel University College of Medicine, a former track athlete at the University of Pennsylvania, a champion of love, an inspiring mental health advocate, and just a really genuine friend. She co-founded the Neuroscience Graduate Students for Diversity Group (NGSD), an organization fostering a safe and inclusive environment in the Drexel College of Medicine community. She leads with love in way that makes all around her eager to join in (present company very much included).

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Thank you once again for being here. Now let us go forth, daring to listen to new perspectives, daring to imagine new possibilities, and daring to hope

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…and watch God work.

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See you next week! 🙂

HOPE: a gathering place (part I)

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Hi! I’m so glad you’re here. Not just here on this blog post, but here in the world in this moment in time. Trust me, that is no accident.

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I’ve called this gathering because I see you out there, doing good work of transformation.

I know it isn’t always easy, this whole messy business, and the footing feels shakier than you wish it did at times–and yet even still you have the deep ineffable sense that this is the fullest way to live, a gift and not a burden, so you continue. In your unique way, you continue to choose a life of action over passivity, truth-telling over silence, listening over silencing, curiosity over judgment, healing over resenting, encouraging over shaming, caring over numbing, daring over hiding, giving over accumulating, creating over dwelling, dreaming over despairing… loving, over any reason the world says not to do so.

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You don’t do this work to prove yourself to anyone, including God–that battle is won –but just to love Him, and allow Him to newly love the world in and through you. You do this to RSVP “yes” to His invitation to participate in His agenda for Good… in this moment… and this one….and this one too…trusting that whether the impact of your work shows up tomorrow, in fifteen years, or never to your knowledge or during your lifetime, this work is valuable because it was never yours to begin with. I see you, I thank you, and, friend, I believe in you.

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And yet in it all, how crucial to remember that we are of course human. No one is always leading, no one is always inspired, no one has every clear-cut answer. Sometimes we are riding a wave of inspiration and letting it overflow into the lives of others– yet other times we are resting, on the receiving end of some support, or inevitably messing up a bit. Always we are learning.

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This is good. This is what keeps us open to God, and to each other. This is the only way we can see what we weren’t seeing, walk each other home.

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I know there’s a lot I’m not seeing. So what would happen, I wondered, if we all paused a moment from the good work of transformation we each feel called to in our lives, to look not forward to the long way to go–or inward to our own human limitation– but right here to one another for some deeper inspiration? Some communal confirmation that we aren’t the only one? I imagined flickering candles coming together from all over, a brief moment in time, creating a bonfire, and then going forth each more blazing than before… to pass it on.

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So, I reached out to about 587 people (okay, 32 so far, but believe me, I can keep going) (so no, dear reader, you aren’t safe 0:) ) whose examples inspire me every day, told them so, and asked them one question.

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Each person who responded–I find it helpful to imagine a mic being passed–revealed in his or her own way that yes, among all of the uncertainty, injustice, fear, pain, guilt, division, and fatigue yelling “Defeat is inevitable! Defeat is inevitable!” in our face, there’s a still stronger force infinitely anchored there for our discovery: hope.

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Hope smiles and replies, “Oh hush” because we all knows who gets the last laugh.

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So, welcome to the HOPE: a gathering place series. Thank you for being here. May the words of my friends in this place for the next few weeks help us all see the hope we aren’t seeing. May we remember again and again why we bother to keep doing good work of transformation, in faith, together (even if we are very much physically scattered). May we remember that hope inspires hope. And today, may we be renewed in that hope— because Lord knows we do in fact have a lot of good work left to do. ♡

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“Hi! Where do you find hope?”

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“I find hope when I have conversations with God in my imagination. Also when I’m with a dog.”

Kiara Wooldridge, age 8. Kiara is an avid reader, writer, agent of kindness, and adventurer who once joined forces with her sister to lead me on a tour around the world—all without leaving their yard. 

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“I find hope in the future of nursing. As nursing education continues to advance and higher nursing degrees are recommended, we continue to see young, new nurses that are very eager to learn and help others. That eagerness and compassion makes me optimistic that the future of nursing is in good hands.

[As an oncology nurse] I’m able to build ongoing relationships with patients and their families during the hardest times of their lives. It gives me perspective about what’s important in life and allows me to help patients make the most out of the life they have.”

Courtney Ebaugh, BSN, RN, is an oncology nurse in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She has a deeply caring heart, a cat named Merlot, and an annual “mud run” tradition with her family.
Painted by a teenager at the Finca del Niño in Trujillo, Honduras.

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“As a kid I went to a Catholic school where we were taught strong Christian values. I vividly remember singing the hymn, “Give me hope, Jehovah, ‘til the morning comes.” The night resembled the troubled times where hope was the only thing that kept you sane from all the evil thoughts at the night. Though I am Buddhist by birth and follow the Buddhist teachings, the words in the hymn stuck with me till now. 

For me, hope is something that keeps you dreaming for a better tomorrow and gives you the strength to carry on even in the darkest times. Sometimes you hurt and fall to the deepest of abyss and fear–it’s hope that makes us believe in ourselves and everything around us.”

Prateek Syangden is the program coordinator for Childreach Nepal, where he runs sports for development projects for children/youth in rural Nepal that focus on child protection, education, and gender-related issues. He is a prime example of how the wisest among us also tend to be the goofiest.

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“I find hope in every breath I take. In every time I see someone being kind. In every gentle breeze that cools me down during the summer. In every book that takes me on a journey, that connects me to all the people who have read that same book. I find hope in new life because it teaches me how fragile we all are but also how much kindness we all are capable of. These are trying times and although despair might be in the frontline, hope is what helps us keep moving forward and striving for a better tomorrow.”

Daniel Moreno was formerly a teacher at The Bridgeway School–a high school for youth recovering from substance abuse–in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and now works in graphic design. He immigrated from Venezuela at age 10, and shares his story to lift up and advocate for fellow Dreamers in our nation. I am very indebted to his encouragement as I stumbled through Spanish language school.
“Hutchman 10” by Jacob Brown.

“God. Jesus.”

Jacob Brown is an artist from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania whose gorgeous art narrates in vivid color and texture his experience with cerebral palsy. He works at Target, loves his friends from Best Buddies, and enjoys skiing, rowing, and wholeheartedly engaging in the creative process. (More of his work here!)

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“Hope is found in Jesus Christ, who is always with us, who loves us and forgives us every day, who teaches us how to be better. I found my hope when I believed I had lost everything with the death of my baby… but God taught me that life continues and that there is no one more important than Jesus, that we will die, but we will live in Christ Jesus. God is good and is on our side always!” (translated)

Maria Ofelia Gutierrez is the absolutely luminous director of the Finca del Niño children’s home in Trujillo, Honduras–and one of my biggest role models. Her faith in God through the loss of her child inspires her work with the children of the Finca each day. 

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“I find hope in the little things… in the many, small ways we can show care for one another each and every day. I find hope in the people I’ve been blessed to be around, and the ways they actively and intentionally seek to make this world better for us all.

I find hope in the realization that change is always possible and the goodness of God can and is often reflected in the goodness of people, especially in those you least expect.

I recall when I was much younger, my father and I were having car troubles. Someone actually stopped to help us (a rarity when you’re a black man in America). That someone was a burly man covered in tattoos, some of the Nazi variety. At first, we were apprehensive, but needed the help he so graciously offered. While pushing the car to the roadside, we all got to talking. He had recently got out of prison, and was seeking to make amends for his past. I find hope in knowing that at any point in time, we all have the capability to be like this man.

When we are born, our lives stream us into certain directions, some much more positive than others. When you face a stream of negativity, even though it can be extremely difficult, there is hope to change for the better. I find hope in knowing that I come from a long line of survivors. Those who came before me swam upstream. They fought tooth and nail to survive in a world that actively excluded and terrorized them while simultaneously fighting for liberties that we take for granted today. My ancestors, both far and near, faced adversity that I could never begin to imagine. It is because of them and their unwillingness to let life’s current sweep them away, here I am: hopefully passing the torch of a better life to my future children. I find hope in knowing that I too can overcome the circumstances of my birth and provide my posterity with better.”

William Dean Merriweather is a poet, a University of Notre Dame graduate, and the founder of Monarch Fashion Co. who will be attending New England Law School this fall. He is an encourager and peace-builder, and while at Notre Dame, dedicated time to helping me and many others register to vote.

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“Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.”

Hebrews 11:1

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Go forth, brave friends. I’ll see you next week 🙂

We the living

Truth be told, I was waiting to write this until I was some untouchable expert on the subject. I wanted a presentation so polished that no one could point to any part of it and say, “Actually, Ally, a better way to look at this might be…” but I’ve realized that that day will not come, and the growth I seek for myself and for everyone will come from open, honest, and deeply humbling conversation. Something ultimately unfinished, hopefully ongoing. All I really know for sure is that passive silence isn’t an option.

I would love nothing more than for this post to become a correspondence, so please feel very welcome to join in.

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I write this because my soul is so tired of dehumanization.

Let me confess something to hold myself accountable. It was barely a week ago when I sat among a group of people I love, and a reference came up in a humorous tone about the KKK: Someone in California had used the pointed white mask as their protective equipment for the grocery store. The story received some chuckles around the porch, and I sat, sucked in my fumes… and said absolutely nothing. I averted my eyes. Forced some nervous laugh. Waited for the subject to change. 

There are so many more subtle jokes like this that need correcting and yet when presented with one of the most extreme and horrific cases there can be, I sat there, silent. 

I am so sorry. I have been replaying this in my head on a loop, appalled at myself, and even so (even so!) I can get away with not thinking about it for a while. There are, frankly, a plethora of distractions available to the white upper-middle-class girl. It’s a real temptation. But I seek the stubborn discipline to actively remember it, and I’m hopeful that next time I won’t be such a coward. 

Now, I’m glad I didn’t full-on berate the people I love, who likely learned so much of this dehumanizing narrative from upbringing, education even[1], and limited exposure. To berate isn’t to humanize, and I am certainly no better than they are—this narrative gets tangled up in my conditionings all the same. But why didn’t I look them in the eye, and say with all the love I could muster for both them and for my black friends, “Don’t you guys think we can do better than to laugh at that? Can we talk about how this isn’t okay?”

So often these underlying forces of de-humanizing, of racism in particular, remain hidden. I implore us to see events like this one, in which the ugly truth of our conditioning peeks out above the surface, as opportunities to name it and work through it together in the name of a long-needed re-humanization. No more silence.

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Humanization, naturally, is what we as, well, humans, are wired for. It looks like leaning in very close to the lives of others, recognizing ourselves in them, and letting injustice against them full-force break our hearts—even though keeping our distance feels a lot more comfortable, a lot less vulnerable, or is straight-up habitual. 

I received a text from a dear friend (who I love and who is black) last night that graciously rattled me to this keyboard: “Hi, I love you, but your silence on racism is really hurtful to me.”

It’s disturbing how much I needed that text. Why did I need that text? Why was this not more obvious and urgent to me? Of course I have heard about the cases of police brutality against George Floyd and so many others—who I, tellingly, at the moment cannot name without a Google search—but a recent Washington Post headline sums it up perfectly: “White people can compartmentalize police brutality. Black people don’t have the luxury.”[2]

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Speaking of luxury: I like to run. When I’m running in the park, I like to smile and say “hi” to everyone I pass on the path. This seems far more natural than ducking my head and bouncing past, and really feeds the soul and the tired legs. 

In the day after Ahmaud Arbery’s murder, when it was still too fresh to be forgotten by the easily distracted me, one of these passerby on my run was a black man around my age (this anecdote also stands expose to the “I don’t see race” fallacy). We shared a brief and genuine exchange of smiling eye contact and “hello’s,” and as I trotted away, tears welled up in my eyes. How could anything be more natural than that encounter? I wondered. How did that kind of encounter, in merely a different setting, lead to violence? How could going for a run, had I been born in a black body, put me in a position for someone to justify ending my life?

And yet… the crossroad remains: I can lean into my humanity and let that heartbreak affect my life, or I can get stuck believing that that one transcendent moment was enough, some *poof* enlightenment! and go on my merry way.

Robin DiAngelo writes in White Fragility[3],

To continue reproducing racial inequality, the system only needs for white people to be really nice and carry on – to smile at people of color, to go to lunch with them on occasion. To be clear, being nice is generally a better policy than being mean. But niceness does not bring racism to the table and will not keep it on the table when so many of us who are white want it off. Niceness does not break with white solidarity and white silence. In fact, naming racism is often seen as not nice, triggering white fragility.” 

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It is natural to deeply value the life, the divinity, of another human being. It is unnatural to keep a distance that allows for “other”-ing and justifies violence. Something insane is clearly at play when it feels necessary to restate these truths. Humanization isn’t politics—it’s part of the story we are born to tell. Here is a piece of that story: 

My brother Nick, whom I love, is a police officer. Once, at the end of a long double shift, he heard grotesque shouting echoing from a few blocks over from the station, and ran toward its source. The shouts came from a teenager who had covered himself in hand sanitizer, tied himself to a pole, lit himself on fire, and then regretted it—and Nick arrived in time to calmly talk this kid through it, helping him free himself. Together, they extinguished the flames and allowed that precious life to continue. 

I followed up with Nick today about it, and he told me that de-escalation—the approach of calmly communicating with the human in front of you and bringing a situation to a more communicative, peaceful place—was a significant part of his police academy training.

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******************

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Racism isn’t an issue of “their liberation”—it’s all of our liberation, tangled in the specific liberation of black people. Whatever your race may be, let this be radically personal. If we are normalizing current racism, we are also normalizing the unprecedented rates of depression, addiction, and suicide in this country. Something is very off in a world disconnected from our natural belonging to one another.

Absolutely none of this violence is our normal, natural state. Absolutely none of this numb, quiet misery is our natural state. We are all meant for so much better.

So friends, I lay my heart before you, broken and exposed, with hope. If it needs to be my conscious discipline to keep it broken (independent on how many recent big-headline tragedies there are), something I need to bring back to the forefront of my attention again and again until it’s natural again to recognize the suffering of others and my connection to it, then so be it.

I’m sorry I have been silent. Please, let’s talk.

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******************

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And please, before you go, let’s pause a sacred moment.

Let’s put our hands where we can see them.

Now put them on your heart. 

Do you feel that?

Do you ever stop to think about the miracle of your life? Do you know that that is the Divine drumbeat of this whole universe, animating your being? Do you know how very good this is?

Now imagine every single person on this planet doing the same. Eyes closed, hands on their heart, remembering that they are alive. The old couple feeding ducks on the bench. The man talking to himself on the subway. The gas station clerk. Your mother. A protestor. An infant. A man who cannot speak but he paints your heart on a canvas. The immigrant worker who just wants his kid to get through school. His kid, three countries away, learning to tie his shoes in Kindergarten. A man lying sick in a bed with three others.The street corner preacher. The most in-love couple you’ve ever seen, both men. Your boss. Your co-worker. A twenty something whose parents don’t support his dream.The saxophonist outside of the hockey arena. The man with a cardboard sign at the intersection. Donald Trump. Joe Biden. Your favorite teacher. Your least favorite teacher. Your dad. Your uncle. A doctor, sleep deprived. A priest. A mailman. A person who could’ve helped you, but didn’t. A 50 year-old man with Down Syndrome dancing to the beat of a musical pop-up card. A 60 year-old man who has forgotten the love story completely. The black man clapping at his son’s graduation. The black woman publishing her first book. The black girl with a girlfriend she’s nervous to introduce to her friends. The black teenager who dreams of starting a meaningful business. The black husband behind bars for far too long.The black mother whose son was only out for a jog. The black student at a high school grossly underfunded, applying to college. The black champion, kissing her medal and praising God. The black grandmother, baking her specialty. The black choir members touching heaven with their voices. The black newborn. The black newborn. The black newborn.

Let this scene stir the warmest flood in your heart, and recognize this as our natural state.

So, we walk forward, armor and weapons down, eyes met with those of the humans before us, and we finally talk about it. And may we all be too close for violence now. May we all simply be too close. 

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Footnotes:


[1]It felt like a sci-fi movie when I learned about the mass genocides that accompanied colonization of the Americas–for the first time–when I was all the way in college.

[2]https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/05/29/heres-why-we-dont-see-protests-when-police-unjustly-kill-white-people/

[3]White Fragility has been on my to-read list for nearly two years now. What is telling here is that it has only recently moved its way to the top of that list. 

thank you!

“Art is the highest form of hope.”

Gerhard Richter

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I want to take a moment to thank everyone– from the bottom, top, sides, center, ventricles, atriums, and vena cavas of my heart–for making it possible to a) send art of hope to your homes, and b) send support to the families of Daily Rubi, Francisco, Michel, Gabriela, Madelin, Felipe, Jeyson, Fernando, and Sofia in times of heightened financial uncertainty. At the moment I genuinely cannot think of a gesture that is more meaningful to me.

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The idea for Art & the Heart did not come from me, but I’m so grateful it came to me and that I’ve been able to witness the ways it has just proclaimed our connectedness across social distances. You sent art, purchased art, received art, shared art. Proceeds have nearly tripled the original goal, meaning that over time the Finca and each of the former Kindergarten families will be receiving 55 dollars–around 1400 Lempiras–and counting.

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After the first set of MoneyGrams were sent to Honduras, many students’ parents asked that I relay their deep thanks to everyone who contributed, and they praised a God of constant, creative providence. Many also responded with picture messages of the now-first graders: writing in notebooks, reading textbooks, splashing in a nearby natural spring with their siblings, making their own art during this time at home…..melting Profa Ally into a happy little puddle….

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In the beginning of COVID-19 shutdowns, when things started to feel a little bit eerie and overwhelming, I wrote this down: “These are the times when artists rise up and generous hearts overflow.” Art & the Heart is one tiny example of these surprising enterprises of hope, and while we’re on this hopeful roll I think I’ll just go ahead and share some other incredible ones I’ve come across:

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  1. My Dear New Friend (mydearnewfriend.org) is an initiative for children home from school to write letters to a resident of a local assisted living community, and begin ongoing correspondence with this “dear new friend.” An adorable example:

2. Vagabonds Missions is hosting Meals and Hope this Wednesday, May 6 at 7PM EST. I adore how this flips the typical nice-gala-for-donors fundraising event on its head: While donors tune in to a virtual event of uplifting talks, testimonials, and worship music (including live performances by Matt Maher!), Vagabonds missionaries will be serving over 1,000 meals to lower income families in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Learn more and snag a ticket here: https://www.vagabondmissions.com/meals-and-hope.

3. Last week a woman named Linda paid for her meal at the Panera drive-thru window, and as I went to pass her debit card back she said, “Before I pull away, please go ahead and use that to pay for the next person’s order.” The next person was an elderly man whose entire face lit up when I told him his bagels and coffee were already covered.

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We see it again and again: Hope is a creative act. Thank you to everyone out there for your witness to hope in the artful, generous way you live your life! I am so very inspired by you.

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Love,

Ally

walking after Walden

In the Woods, Paul Cezanne, 1898

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From 1845 to 1847, Henry David Thoreau lived in a small cabin he built himself in the quiet woods of Massachusetts. He built his house for $28.12 (still less than $1,000 today) on some pretty prime lakefront real estate. It contained necessities, and no more. He mainly ate bread and the berries and legumes he could grow. His social circle was reduced to a few neighbors and visitors.

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I was assigned to read Walden, Thoreau’s account of this escapade, in high school English class, and got around to actually reading it about eight years later (Sorry, Mr. Farina). Yet, as any fellow spiritual bookworm knows, these things resurface when you are ready to listen, to receive them a little more, and only in the recent weeks have I so needed Thoreau’s thoughts to sit with my own:

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“I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when it came to die, discover that I had not lived.” 

Walden, 74.

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And not, when it came to die, discover that I had not lived. That. That’s my constant nudge toward a personal Walden: catching myself red-handed in the act of this nonliving… as in, wasting a lot of time in this expensive, exhausting chase/race/rush toward…. wait, what exactly?

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So. From 2018 to 2019, I moved to rural coastal Honduras.

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Life was slow, internet was slower, and some afternoons involved nothing more than sitting by the boiling pot of beans, searching the yard for little sticks, feeding the fogón fire for three and a half hours, at least. After a while, I forgot that in some parts of the globe it was actually possible for a single human to wash a load of clothes, wash a load of dishes, get in some cardio, watch a documentary series, and heat up an already-made rotisserie chicken all at the same time.

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“I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life… to drive life into a corner, and reduce it to its lowest terms, and if it proved to be mean, why then get the whole genuine meanness of it, and publish its meanness to the world…” 

Walden, 74.

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Was it awful, wholly and genuinely mean, to go down to Central America and live like that, especially when there are fancy air-conditioned places with running warm water right here and a surplus of good entertainment and higher-paying jobs for a degree like that one? Nope.

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Of course there are objectively comfier situations out there, without the bug bites and the mattresses that could very well be hand-me-downs from WWI submarines. And I could never ever say a bad thing about a dependable hot shower.

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But we had a group of humans, some guitars, Bananagrams, the ocean, the mountains, the dear quiet, and too many mangoes. I watched far more sunrises and sunsets than I missed. We had countless heart-to-hearts while frying plantains.

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And while I initially found much to buy with the one “income” we ever received for our day jobs, my more generous housemates recognized that our monthly living stipend was more than we truly needed… and that there was plenty to share with neighbors who couldn’t buy their infant’s medication, or just some corn flour. Before even that, said neighbors welcomed our pale awkwardness into the heart of their community, invited us to lunches and weddings, on walks down the beach. In that stripped-down little life, the living abounded.

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Once last year, I was walking around the sand road toward our house’s back entrance, when I found my friend Adam standing in the middle of the yard and staring intently at a tree.

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“All good there, friend?”

“Yep. Just watching the ants.”

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Maybe that sounds concerning. Yet when I stopped and also watched that highway of a trillion ants carry leaves from thirty feet up in the sky down to their community hill, I understood, and I think if you leaned forward and listened very carefully to that scene you might hear a still, small voice from the Heavens say something along the lines of: “Finally someone notices these flippin’ ants! I’ve always thought it was one of my coolest projects!”

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“…or if it were sublime, to know it by experience, and be able to give a true account of it in my next excursion.”

Walden, 74

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The Walking Man by Shanna Bruschi

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I suppose now is that next excursion.

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And what to make of that? What does that look like? asks the bean-boiling girl now back in the washing machine + Netflix world. If I’m not supposed to live in rural coastal Honduras for forever, how do I give a true account of it in this next excursion that seemingly could not be a starker contrast?

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I don’t get to know all of the answers, but I once had this nagging hunch that “walking” is a good one.

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In an ironic turn it was Amazon Prime who, based on my recent purchase of Walden, recommended that I check out another book by this wild Henry guy, the transcript of a lecture he gave nearly a dozen times in the years upon his return from Walden Pond, titled, Walking. He says:

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“I think I cannot preserve my health and spirits, unless I spend four hours a day at least–and it is commonly more than that—sauntering through the woods and over the hills and fields, absolutely free from all worldly engagements.”

Walking, 3

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And that escapade cost him $0.00…. still $0.00 today!

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Oh, to walk. In a new town. In your hometown, better yet. On the lunch break. With a friend, a dog, one’s own stormy brain. The decision to walk is very rarely a bad one.

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Thoreau notes in his lecture that the word “sauntering” originates from the Middle Ages with the people who “roved about the country” headed toward “Sainte Terre,” or “Holy Land.” Children would yell out, “‘There goes a Sainte-Terrer!’ a Saunterer, a Holy-Lander” when they saw them pass by (1). Recently my dad and I have committed to hiking at least two hours every Sunday, and I can attest it is a prayerful and sacred ritual as any.

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As I write this, I am mid-hike on a late Thursday afternoon, perched in an abandoned gazebo in the middle of a Western Pennsylvania forest. A middle-aged man walks by with his wife and kid (I love to see it!), looks at my notebook, the sprawled out copies of Walden and Walking, and the Notre Dame coat, and tries to figure it out.

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“Home from school?” he calls out. He thinks I’m a student, studying hard toward something bigger, home for Spring Break or the quarantine. That makes my circumstance make sense.

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“Already graduated!” I call back. “Just getting some writing in.”

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“Oh,” he says, and keeps walking by, perhaps ever so slightly faster so as to move his impressionable child out of the enigmatic gazebo hippie’s vicinity.

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I tend to forget that a solo hike to no destination in particular, and writing, just for kicks, about loving your life exactly as it is, is not normal here. Because I now understand it’s natural. Like watching ants move a trillion leaves.

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Thankfully, Thoreau’s Walking addresses this too.

“I wish to speak a word for Nature, for absolute freedom and wildness, as contrasted with a freedom and culture merely civil–to regard man as an inhabitant, or a part and parcel of Nature, rather than a member of society.”

Walking, 1

And no, he doesn’t care if that’s a bit out there.

“I wish to make an extreme statement, if so I may make an emphatic one.”

Walking, 1

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If Thoreau’s Walking was countercultural in 1851, it is more so today, but maybe all the more needed. If we can neither live nor walk in the woods forever, what does it otherwise look like to move as a parcel of Nature rather than a piece of society? To saunter in a deep sense to a Heavenly rhythm when the worldly one is chasing, racing, rushing toward…. wait, what again, exactly?

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I have a case for his extreme statement, and it starts with a sitcom pitch: Take the girl who only just became accustomed to spending an entire afternoon feeding tiny sticks to the fire while watching the trees sway in a salty breeze… give that girl a loud, blinking headset….and place her behind the window of an American fast food restaurant drive-thru at peak lunch hour.

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In other words, me, a mere few hours ago.

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In January, I genuinely wanted nothing more than to find part-time people-oriented work in a cafe or diner. Now I wear a black and white “8.99 Coffee Subscription” baseball cap while standing behind the cash register at the busiest Panera Bread on the East Coast.

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Now, we humans are an adaptable species. I saw the rapid-paced madness, I saw the old woman who tapped her watch (her watch!) on the credit card screen to pay for her pecan braid and witnessed it work (it worked!?) when I had assumed that maybe it was just a cute senior moment. I saw the chance to dive in and give the mechanic performance being asked of me. I knew I could.

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But, back to that sitcom, and the case I’m making. If I brag here–and knowing my vain lil arse I probably will–know that I only intend to brag on behalf of God, of Nature, and not of me, who does not do this perfectly.

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I decided, in this job position, to stay committed to my Walden. I decided that I would never run, and if I caught myself running or feeling rushed, to breathe and remind myself that we are not made for that. When I started in the front bakery, I decided that I wanted to walk, and be happy, and slice those bagels with the grace and love of a Swedish ballerina. I wanted to take the time to genuinely delight in seeing every morning commuter, to laugh really hard with the young son when a bagel actually caught fire in the toaster and his father said, completely deadpan, “Yep, that’s perfect” as I patted down the flame.

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When I’m choosing to walk through it, I can really listen to this man’s specific need for four butter packs, I can come out from behind the register to bearhug my great aunt Aggie even though there’s a line, I can obsess over the older woman’s purple pixie haircut she just rocks (and watch her try not giggle because she knows she rocks it too), hear my coworker talk about how her genius twelve year-old makes her better, listen to Lacy the barista tell me how I must always have a job like this one and be a writer because like her Vietnamese mother said, “Life is like the cooking. If you have the right amount of all the spices, it’s a good dish. If you have too much of one spice and not enough another… not so good.” When I walk, I don’t just work there. I…live.

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And then this morning the managers decided that it would be a good idea to temporarily take me out of the front bakery and place me in… yes… drive-thru. At the drive-thru, this happened three times today: I put someone’s order in the system, sauntered about doing my part in filling up the cup of hibiscus iced tea or something, and subconsciously began loudly humming some show tune, only to look down and see the bright green light indicating the microphone was still on at the order station outside. Perfect.

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Ultimately, if you timed it, this walking method does not actually take much longer than if I were to just be a mechanical, stressed out maniac. I know this, because sometimes I slip, see an impatient face or a long line and get very overwhelmed and become a mechanical, stressed out maniac.

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Here’s the part where I’ll probably brag.

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When I am committed to it— to walking, to smiling into the eyes of the person in front of me, to singing and finding humor— you can give me the most in-a-rush, grumpy, rapidly-telling-me-the-complicated-order-you-can’t-possibly-expect-me-to-find-the-buttons-fast-enough-for-and-then-staring-all-of-us-down-as-it-takes-slightly-longer-than-twelve-seconds-to-fill-said-order person… and still… all of that tension just evaporates. I’m telling you, if I am just walking through it and wholly there, God scoots in, and this person and I will be genuinely smiling at one another by the end when that food is in their hands, sharing a mutual, “Hey, we’re okay” moment, probably with a laugh and sending one another back out on their day, recipients of some contagious joy. It’s a full-on transformation–I’d venture to say probably worth having the bread bowl forty seconds later than you would have otherwise.

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It’s the classic Tortoise-and-Hare scenario: Put the pace of Nature and the pace of the World in a race, and against all odds Nature wins every time.

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“So we saunter toward the Holy Land, till one day the sun shall shine more brightly… into our minds and hearts, and light up our whole lives with a great awakening light, as warm and serene and golden as on a bankside in autumn.”

Henry David Thoreau, Walking, 36

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Anyone up for a walk today?

this space right here.

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John the Baptist said if you have two coats, give one away. For some historical reason or another, I’m conditioned to read this and think, “That’s because that one extra coat can help a poor, cold person!”

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That’s simple enough, good, and not wrong. But there’s another side to that.

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I returned to my childhood home after my 14-month Third World tropical camping trip, and all the spiritual richness I felt on that trip got flattened under the weight of my First World suburban candyland closet. (see also: overpacked schedule, social media accounts to keep pretty, 500 acquaintances to catch up with, pressures to comfort the well-meaning “What’s next?” askers with instant plans of grad school, careers, marriage…)

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Yes, there are certainly some people who could benefit from a secondhand coat on a very standard level. But the truest help, should they allow it, comes to the one getting rid of it. And I’m not talking about having extra closet space. I’m talking about the mental space that for some reason decided that we need multiple coats to be happy. The belief that we need multiple coats to be happy is very, very distracting.

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Maybe you are strong and can keep all your coats to believe this. I, however, am weak, so I need to have one coat. And ban myself from shopping, which makes me feel like my own mean parent in moments I feel restless, or sad.

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John the Baptist said if you have two coats, give one away. I had approximately 5 coats and 87 sweatshirts, so you can do the math. If the under-bridge communities of Pittsburgh now resemble some ragtag gaggle of Notre Dame athletes awaiting their steeplechase race at a track meet, or a clique of high school kids who went to every AAU tournament and college visit that ever offered its immortalization in hoodie form, you know the redhead to blame.

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But: I can breathe in my room again. I never remembered to pray there before, but praying bookends the days better than storage bins ever did. Especially in moments I feel restless, or sad.

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this space right here.

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I was in the Heinz History Center gift shop with my cousin last June when Mr. Rogers called me out.

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I picked up a book with his name on it, thinking it would be a comforting collection of quotes such as “I like you just the way you are,” which it was, but I happened to open it directly to a page that said:

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“It’s important to be mindful of the humble and deep rather than the flashy and superficial”

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and that felt like someone slapping me in the chest, through all my coats, which takes a lot of celestial force.

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Fred would never do that. But I think he would approve of the direction that force is trying, should I keep allowing it, to send me down.

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this space right here.

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“So…what’s next?”

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That’s a natural thing to ask. I get it. I ask it a lot too. Conversation is tough.

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Before (and now, when I’m a wee bit un-centered, which is often), I would rush to respond to the query with a plan to make us all feel very comfortable. Well, Terry, I think I’ll apply to this, buy this, do this, go there, do this! Don’t worry, haha! I got this! But this time I don’t have a long-term program to throw in the air, distract the asker for a year or four, while I go run behind the curtain and let her think I’ve figured it all out.

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This time I’m hanging out in a new space. Center stage, spotlights on, just one coat.

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On my second day back, my family lingers after church with a few other middle age suburban couples, and one of the very kind and well-meaning women asks me what’s next. Well shoot, her kid’s already engaged and is becoming a bio-enginerical doctor or something, so I better make this good…

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But, grace lets me pause. What a holy tool, that pause. And so when I speak, it isn’t superficial scaredy-cat me.

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“Uh…well…God only knows. Like… literally.”

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Maybe it’s because we’re in a church. Maybe it’s because no one saw it coming, so our polished guards come down. But would you believe me if I said that everyone laughs together, and something weighty leaves the air?

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this space right here.

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One of the Finca’s more spiritual kids, Dalia, once saw something horribly ugly and painful, and remarked, “Que rrrico,” as in, “How rich!!”

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The horribly ugly and painful thing was my infected right big toe, and I was a bit thrown by the reaction I would normally reserve for chocolate cake.

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(An exchange on the same topic, mid-Mass, with a slightly less spiritual Finca kid:  “Ingrown toenail, huh?” “Yeah.” “It hurts, huh?” “Yeah.” “It smells real bad, too, huh? “Yeah.” He looks at me and I realize the last one wasn’t a question. “Go to the doctor.” “Okay.”)

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Mm, que rrrico. I understand her a little better now. Imagine if your block tower never got knocked down, your favorite singer never got their heart broken, your favorite comedian never had his day go haywire, your egotistical relationship never blew up in your face, or I never fell through the flashy and superficial ice I’d built and into this space that is unknown.

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Enter creation. Enter laughter. Enter stories. Enter forgiveness. Enter friendship. Enter growth. Enter hope. Enter humility. Enter depth. Enter God.

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We haven’t arrived yet, fellow earthlings, and I hate to admit it but we need these things, these rrrico shake-ups that make us shiver, cry, and pray again.

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I am in this space right here, one coat to my name and one wobbly Bambi-legged step in front of the other, one pretty tower of blocks knocked down for the best. I’m not stuck. This fragile train wants to roll in the direction it was created for, and this time I must keep fighting every enticing tug to stuff it with the flashy and superficial, the impressive and safe 5-year plan I’m not called to, the thoughtless busyness that knocks it off track. Instead, I will sit still and wait for each gentle whisper.

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God’s not too big on instant gratification, it turns out. There’s some silence involved. I get squirmy. I slip and order something on Amazon because 2-day shipping is awesome and controllable. But mostly, if I breathe, I’m gently led back to the window seat.

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This space right here is the space before a miracle, should we have the faith to let it be. God only knows. Like… literally. Que rrrico.

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this technically should not have happened

Let me tell you about the glitch in the system.

When I arrived here and heard there was an opening for a Kindergaren teacher, my heart danced a little happy Macarena and I decided to interview for it. It was irrational, you should know, because I am absurdly unqualified to be a Kínder teacher in rural Hondruas. I have zero teaching certifications. I have very limited group-management skills. I only got a real hang of this whole Spanish thing a few months ago. And yet, there was an opening (maybe more realistically a need), and I got the job. A group of tiny persons called me Profa this year, I called them beloved as often as I could remember, and yesterday my whole class graduated.

If you think that is possible because of my doing, you clearly didn’t adequately process the words “absurdly” and “unqualified.” And you didn’t see how often my stress outweighed my faith, or witness the days when I was more tired than human, or hear the many people who looked on our class and either directly or indirectly said, “Ooh, what a disastrous operation you run here, my dear.”

You also didn’t see this, but I wish you had: On one of their more particularly rebellious days, the eight little nuggets decided to run and hide under the library chairs instead of forming the pretty line outside the classroom like I’d asked. That is frankly annoying and embarrassing in the middle of what is supposed to be a very high-caliber educative center. But by some grace I decided to laugh instead. I play-ugly-cried over losing my class, whimsically despaired that the end had come. And then they emerged, one-by-one, tiny faces bright and toothy. So I knelt down, and the little rascals ran into my arms.

Oh honey, that is none of my doing.

So we had a real graduation yesterday. Because I wanted everyone to see these beloved truth-seekers, these rule-breaking artists, these strange and rascally healers and celebrate this impossible race we ran anyway. I wanted to talk about how this year I got on their level and so God lifted us up to His, and that is the glitch in the system.

like black pearls

In the Water, 2015

And we are put on earth a little space,
That we may learn to bear the beams of love
.

William Blake

…………..

       

           “Okay, Ally.”

            “¿Ya?”

            “Sí.”

            “Wow… y entonces,” I pause theatrically, “…el tercer dia está cumplido.” And so, the third day is completed.

            “Okay,” he says, not one for theatrics. The Honduran accent makes “okay” sound like a singsongy “o-kie,” universally, not just with Ever, and I still never know how to read it. But it seems an anticlimactic end given the reams of hype and testimonies.

           Until he continues, “Y ahora, puede caminar sin esas.” And now you can walk without those.

            Okay, now that’s too climactic. “¿En serio?”  

            “Sí.” He remembers who he’s talking to. “Pero… despacio, Ally.” But…slowly.

           After two weeks of crutches in the tropics, my instinct is to bound up the closest palmed monte. But I resist now.

…………..

     

            The fateful fall was a Saturday morning, during my usual running laps around the perimeter of the Finca property. The fourth stretch of every lap is my favorite one, where the ocean is steady beside you the whole time. When it’s early like this, its amazonite water is served gently on one infinite platter, hushing onto sand and horizontal tree trunks.

            I should be honest about how I know that.Though I say the fourth stretch is my favorite—and it’s true, I’m quite certain something Caribbean runs through these veins despite my pasty appearance—I’m often running right past it, headphones blaring, thinking too seriously about something temporary, or, more immediately, trying to drown out the desire to stop running so fast. Sometimes the sunrise makes me notice. But truly I can only describe the stretch in poetry because of the fact that recently I’ve done a lot of sitting, crutching, and now, thank God, walking.

            It had been a misstep in some loose sand. The force of a stride only the ball of the foot is equipped to receive was suddenly lumbered onto the outer ankle. And, down goes Profa. If you must know, there had been Michael Bublé Christmas music playing in the headphones—in September, into the ear of a volunteer who’s heading back to her home country in December.

…………..

          Back in July I started to walk a long lap in between my Kindergarten day and my first grade English class, instead of heading directly back to the classroom and drilling out as much prepwork as possible. It had been the natural routine of Amanda, a summer volunteer, unfazed by the fact that no other teacher did so during their free period. The rhythm made sense to me, my brain and limbs begged for it like restless puppy paws scratching the front door. And so I was emboldened to follow suit.

            During one of my first prep-period caminatas, I saw Yoselin again. I had met Yoselin before when I had lunch with a student’s family, Yoselin being said student’s neighbor and aunt. Now she was sitting on a bench outside of our clinic.

            My first inclination is a polite ‘Hola – ¿Cómo está? ¡Que vaya bien! ‘type of exchange, that I may keep going to some abstract destination that suddenly felt particularly urgent.

         It starts that way. She smiles, tells me she’s doing well. Just waiting for her twin sister. Yoselin’s a sixteen year-old girl radically gentle and free of pretense, which allows a Force beyond herself to place a firm-but-loving “complete and total BS” label on my urgency.

         So I pause, go against my uglier impulses and invite the ringleted guru to join me on my walk in between classes. She nods and smiles and walks beside me. I ask questions. I hear in few details about how three of her brothers are now in South Carolina, Michigan, and Texas. I hear that her favorite class is science. I hear birds during natural pauses I’m always tempted to stuff or remove myself from but can’t this time, because we’re walking together, and because Yoselin is poor and that means there are less superficial buffers to ‘connect’ on, and I hear about how she too, above all else, loves the beach.

…………..

“Intenté seguir corriendo, pero me callí.

Casí lloré, pero no lloré.

Y yo saltaba y saltaba y saltaba a mi casa en solo un pie…”

         I tried to keep running, but I fell. I almost cried, but I did not cry. And I hopped and hopped and hopped home on one foot

            These three lines of the story were the class favorites when I explained to the Kínder nuggets what happened, why my ankle was fat and purple and wrapped. Why I needed to use my “extra legs” to walk around now.

            “Profa … se calló… y casí lloró,” (Profa… fell... and almost cried) Felipe reminds no one in particular as he sits on the step during recess, eating his way to probable future discomfort via a bag of spicy fried corn puffs. He isn’t laughing about my fall, like he’s done to his classmates who have bitten the dust, and not pitying of it, but moreso processing the whole happening rather reverently. Nothing will be cuter than the cool kid mask abandoned as he sees Profa a bit more clearly.

            “Have you ever fallen, Felipe?” I ask him.

            “…sí.” He looks at the ankle once more, and says, “¡Bueno, me voy!” and runs to the playground. Ah, youth. Eventually I crutch over as well.

           Carla visits recess soon after with her infant daughter. The mother of my student Francisco, Carla is one of those people so sure of herself you can’t help but feel validated and pleasantly surprised every time she says your name, moreso if she says “Profa.” You almost forget you’re a flailing foreigner who has the togetherness of one of the five year-olds. After we chat a bit, Carla heads off to talk with the sixth grade teacher about something to do with hamburgers.

          Meanwhile, the infant, Alexandra, remains in the playground–in the arms of brother Francisco, the 5 year-old personification of Curious George. Lil Georgie quickly tells me to take the her, praise the good Lord, as the tiny lifeform is already eating sand as her head hangs at a concerning distance from the soon-to-be-loaded seesaw. We do a wobbly handoff, the weight being mostly on my one foot, my crutches leaning against a nearby tree if I need them.

           Correction: my crutches now helping Francisco pole vault to the swingset.

           Leaving us here, the baby and the invalid me. Together planted in the middle of this crazy playground we won’t be leaving anytime soon.

         And from here she looks at me, late morning skimming deep dark eyes as she just keeps looking at me. She’s beautiful. She doesn’t know what an ankle is or think that I am any less behold-able for it. I don’t feel repulsed by her inability to hold up her own head or control her bowels. “Today love smiled on me,” as the Chili Peppers song goes, and we’re complete, Alexandra and me. If this playground is a place subject to consequences of time and bodily woes, we are somewhere else right now now. Somewhere with beams for the bearing.

…………..

           I have seen Yoselin a number of times since that July prep-period caminata, and I have unsuccessfully cancelled plans to hang out at the beach with her twice.

           It’s a fascinating phenomenon. We decide on a time, I put it in my planner and everything, and then the day arrives and I suddenly am very overwhelmed and busy and ill and really clearly it’s the first thing that needs to go. So I walk over to the office, send her a message on WhatsApp apologizing for the last minuteness, but lamentablemente I’m not going to be able to go to the beach today after all.

           Perhaps you’re a merciful reader. Plans can change! You’re human! You’re allowed to change your mind sometimes! Thank you, merciful reader. These truths certainly have their place. But in these instances I had made the right decision when I made the plans. Not from a place of pity or pride or obligation, but from the Place beyond me that knows what’s pointed toward our untouchable happiness. It’s beyond me, so me likes to convince me to run from it. Run for me life. No no, merciful reader, trust me when was I say I was just fine.

           Yoselin lives from that Place, way more often that I do. I see meself validly running for me life, and she sees nothingness. Nothing to react to, nothing to hold against me. Pure nothing. Exhibit A: Both times that I cancelled the beach plans, someone knocked on my closed door thirty minutes later.

           “Uh, Ally? Melvin just stopped by. He said Yoselin is waiting for you by the portón (front gate).”

…………..

       

              Two weeks after the great fall of Profa, an hour after a baby enlightened me, I am sitting by the front gate with some of the Finca’s maintenance crew, waiting for the straggler parents to retrieve the Kínders. Since the fall, I had crutched up church aisles, through the streets and markets of Trujillo, around a remote mountain village clinic to translate for a medical brigade from Houston, around the kitchen to pat tortillas and fry plantains. I was transported from our house to our chapel two times in a wheelbarrow, one with the entire audience of a soccer game watching me instead, and the other with an entire Garifuna choir cheering me on.

               And in every context, without fail, I was asked if someone had sobar-ed me yet. Having received the question approximately eighty times–and also after reading a few too many children’s books–I feel fit to state that “If you give a Honduran a girl on crutches, they will insist she be sobared” as anthropological truth.

              Similar to massage therapy, sobar-ing involves any knowledgable someone rubbing, pushing, bending, kneading, pulling an injured area to stimulate healing. It’s also used for stomach issues to unblock sickly buildups. Our nurse told me she thought it could be dangerous, so I kindly sidestepped the question the first seventy-six times. Biomedicine, as you know, is contrary: Stabilize.Take ibuprofen. Ice the hot blood.

              But the maintenance crew was tired of seeing the redhead still on crutches on account of her own stubborn head. You’d be already off of those by now! says the eighteen year-old José. Mario–who, since discovering my fascination with his fishing stories and with his willingness to scale enormous fruit trees for the sake of good juice, has become a trusted comrade–proves that his perpetual good-natured face is in fact freely chosen and not muscularly inevitable, as he frowns and says: Ally, I’m not joking with you this time. And Carlo, a mere handful of sentences between us in all of our days before, testifies, with the charisma of Obama, to the way his friend sobared his soccer-casualtied ankle back to normal in a matter of a few days. Security guard Melvin mentions that Hey Carlo, isn’t your friend Ever, the guys who’s coming to pick up this straggler Kínder kid?

              A man named Ever walks forty minutes in the sun to pick up his five year-old from school, only to be bombarded by four Honduran men telling him he ought to massage the dirty mass of my ankle. And he says sure, why not.

        Professional, careful, scared me says, “Thank you, but I need to think about this some more.” I pray on it. I call the next morning.

             

           

…………..

        The next morning a man named Ever walks forty minutes in the sun to pick up his five year-old from school and sobar the dirty mass of my ankle. Kínder ends halfway through the normal schoolday, meaning the majority of schoolchildren are still in session, many pooling all around our stump-legged bench to see the grand show. I offer sheepish waves, and silent prayers the little urchins promptly skedaddle. A lot of people scream during sobaring sessions, I’ve been told, and I don’t want to lose any semblance of professional credibility I might’ve managed to keep despite everything. You see, I’m very professional.

        Profa Daniela, the school principal, shoos away the urchins with a gust of authority, leaving us with our little gang of: Tomas the security guard who has a kid in my class, Lina who lives just around the corner who has a kid in my class, Ever the sobador who of course has a kid in my class, and Daniela, my boss. As I said, very professional.

        Ever sits down in a chair across from me, has me put my foot (which I’ve just scrubbed down with a WetWipe with about 40% success) on his knee. And now I’m very uncomfortable, but I can hardly bail now.

        So scar tissue meets unafraid, attentive hands. My ankle’s like yeast and flour and water, kneaded by some instinctual dance into its vocation. I look up at the cell phone towers on top of the mountain, hours away from this bench, the ones we climbed to on the day Ruthie’s friends became people I knew. I scan the horizon of the bay and distant ports, concentrate enough to actually hear the waves, ask a question when I think of one.

        “Cómo aprendió como sobar?” How did you learn how to sobar?

        “Pues, por mirando.” Well, by watching.

         I watch, too. Lina and Daniela express incredulity that I’m barely flinching. Truthfully, somewhere along the way I forgot that it was supposed to be uncomfortable at all. The caffeinated hamster in my head stepped off the wheel and discovered mediation, or therapy, or God.  

         At the end of the session, I try to pass Ever some payment for this grand service, but he chuckles and shakes his head in resolute refusal. I don’t like this. I realize this is how Grandma feels each time she discovers my dad once again has stealthily covered her check at Olive Garden, the simultaneous gratitude and “But… but…What deceit! How dare you!” when being taken care of feels too squirmy to surrender to. Later upon giving a temple massage to one of the Finca’s migrained housemothers I’ll understand the mutual healing of these things, but right now I resignedly thank Ever, and scheme to bring a Coca Cola next time instead of cash.

        We decide on a time when he’ll come back the next morning, as the process must be three days long, like any good archetypal storyline. In the meantime, he adds, I ought to keep walking with crutches.

         And two days later, he tells me to walk without them.

        Two weeks later, Ever walks forty minutes in the sun to bring his entire family to my birthday party on the beach. I cut him an extra large chunk of chocolate cake and pour an extra large vaso of Coca Cola and still silently marvel at whatever Goodness moved him to get his hands all foot-dirty for my sake.

         There’s a Garifuna man in Trujillo who’s legendary for his sobaring mastery, who has a nearly impeccable history of recoveries. His secret, they say, is that he sobars the opposite ankle, shoulder, cheek, intestine, brain, political party, etc. in order to heal the sick one. And it works. Now I had been trying in various ways to scientifically explain this whole sobar-ing business, in terms of circulation or mobility or something, until I heard this particular nonsense and remembered science was never my forte anyway.

        Thus, I stick with my initial suspicion: that sobaring heals by the “we’re okay”-ness of pure human touch, and by the helpful constraint of not being able to run away for once.

………

         Both times I cancelled beach plans with Yoselin and she showed up anyways, I have been immediately, ungracefully, rattled– “Wait…what… I don’t understand…”–and then I have been driven to prayer. And the soft still voice from the Place beyond me responded, more or less: Go to the damn beach, Ally.

         In the most recent instance of said phenomenon, I meet Yoselin at the portón and we hug as if the WhatsApp message never happened. We walk in steady rhythm along dirt roads to Mojagway’s tiny oceanfront swingset, swing a bit and talk about boys and motorcycles, then meander toward the more rugged and open part of the beach I’d always wanted to explore but didn’t.

        As usual, I’m transfixed by the water. This turquoise expanse always looks happy to meet me, like Captain Von Tripp’s edelweiss. I watch it, and breathe with it. And I’m struck that right now I cannot imagine a more glorious circumstance: two feet in the ocean with the easy company of a true friend. A friend who could’ve certainly justified judging me an asshole by now, but didn’t, and showed up anyways. And I remember how hard I tried to run away from this.

         Meanwhile Yoselin searches among the litter piles left behind by higher tides.

         She comes up with a complete oyster shell and hands it to me.

         “¿Piensa que hay una perla?” I ask. You think there’s a pearl?

         “A ver.” We see. There isn’t.

         We wander over to a freshwater pond not far from the shore, and find within it hundreds of tadpoles leaping around each other in some tranquil mayhem. We put our toes in, and I watch the half-baked froggies, wondering what they look like up close.

         “Quiero poner uno…en la concha,” I voice after a bit. I want to put one… in the shell. “¿Como una perla negra, verdad?” Like a black pearl, am I right?

         Yoselin nods, laughs in amusement. (She’s growing accustomed to the strange poetic antics of this giant Gringa, you see.) I give it a go, and all the targeted tadpoles very promptly dart away, sensing some danger instead of someone who is simply moved to appreciate them.

         “¿Puedo?” chimes Yoselin. May I? I hand her the shell.

         Almost immediately, one tadpole swims too far into the shallows. Stuck in the sand, physically unable to dart, lil homie’s embraced by the marble throne of an oyster shell and passed to my care, held closely to my eyes to behold.

         In this oyster shell, this dark living pearl becomes a pocket mirror. And I laugh, caught in this beam I’m learning to bear.