Saturday

Black Friday

I was driving home from work yesterday morning, Black Friday, and I saw this old man walking. He had a heavy coat and plastic bag. He may have been poor or homeless or just someone walking around at 7 am the day after Thanksgiving. I had been watching guests at the hotel where I work getting up early since 3 am to go shop. They will be standing in lines and braving large angry crowds to buy merchandise at rock bottom prices. It makes me wonder what the Millennium will really be like when there will be no rich or poor. How different it will be when we will all have what we need and no more. I have so much right now that I really don't need. Christmas is coming and we all seem to have wish lists. We don't really need most of the things we want. There is a book I love which has photos of families from all over the world outside of their homes with all of their belongings. The families in Ethiopia and Mali had so little. The house in Mali was made of dried mud. The family in Ethiopia had a two room mud house. These people represented the average income for people in their countries.

Life changes. The housing crisis has now spread and has become an economic crisis. Life is much less stable than it was a year ago or even six months ago. We are still far above most of the countries in the world, but we are not headed in a good direction. But if we are to have no rich or poor among us, then we will have much less than we have now. I myself have to become used to having less. Maybe not having a car and less clothes. I think the worst thing for me will be fewer books, dvds and no cable. We didn't have cable when I was growing up. We didn't get a dish until I was seventeen, so when I got my own job and my own place to live, we had cable. I did grow up with thousands of books. The first nursery was in a small apartment of my parents and one wall of it was covered in stacked colorful books and they somehow squeezed a crib in there. I keep thinking how hard it would be to sacrifice my books. But then I think of that old man I saw walking home. Are my books more important than food for other people or heat? No. If I miss them, I'll just have to write others. I can make up enough stories in my head to entertain myself, so I could always write them down.

Friday

Thanksgiving

My family is slowly moving to China. My father has been there less than a week. He finally got a call through last night from the international phone card information I emailed him on Tuesday. Of course he called at 1:30 am when I am at work since I work nights. But it was good to know he is surviving the culture shock so far. My father is not one of those über-social people but when he is stranded in a culture full of people he cannot understand and who do not understand him, he needs to talk to his family much more than usual. We had a very long email from him Tuesday morning (Hong Kong time which was late Monday night here), which told us everything he had done so far and told us he was unable to call us from his cell phone. We are a family you have to read between the lines to understand. I emailed him back soon to let him know I would buy an international phone card tomorrow and email him the details. He missed us and speaking to people in English since he doesn’t know Chinese. It reminded me of how lonely we can sometimes feel in this big world. What would we do without families?

I have two brothers who grew up for a long time in an orphanage after their father died. Watching them try to be normal is almost frightening to see how much influence having a family can have. They did have a family but it was very dysfunctional and then they were in an orphanage for a few years and these experiences have disrupted their lives so much that they will never be normal. The eldest of my brothers has finally spoken to my father again after not speaking to either of my parents for three or four years. He didn’t call my father when he had been shot in Iraq and was transferred to a hospital in Germany. The hurt these two boys have experienced is incredible. They don’t even want an emotional connection with people because of the possible pain it could cause. They don’t trust people.

On the other hand misery loves company and my brothers have hurt my mother in a way I didn’t think was possible. The most loving, kind and forgiving parent, she has not been able to forgive my brothers. My sister has been diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder from things she has witnessed from my brothers. My mother is also not able to forgive herself. She sees herself as partially to blame for not observing more closely what was happening and allowing them as much leeway as she did. So, despite giving us a foundation and a place of belonging in the world, families are also those who can hurt us most.

The holiday season has begun and families gather. My family will not be gathering this year. We have not been entirely together for many years and with my father in China we will not even have both parents together this season. I have been telling some pretty sorry stories about my family, but the truth is that despite their problems and separation, my family will always by very important to me. How important I don’t realize until I see my brothers trying to cope with a world they cannot entirely deal with. The family is divinely instituted and my family, as crazy and as messed up as they are will be together after we die. We have been sealed together and will be together forever. I’m not sure how that will work, but I’m hoping divine help will be given. I have faith and hope that Heavenly Father knew what he was doing when he told my parents to adopt my brothers and we will be able to see the importance one day as well. Until then I am just grateful that some of my family supports me and are faithful members of the church. I am also grateful that living with such a challenging family has made me much stronger than I ever wanted to be.

Sunday

gaze

Bereft of looks
Mirrored gaze
I thought it meaning
Something more than
Melon colored mornings
and musky chocolate dusk
Into eyes staring deep
deeper than eyes bore
Drilling under skin to heart
To find the soul misplaced
out of body, gaze set free
Taking to the air
Flying far from here
to youthful leafy trees
swaying hammock
Sailing in pure breeze
Now lost to age's looters
pure joy no longer a friend
now enamored of passing fancy
Passing preferred
No lingering, no staid
permanence, but a flight
breathless over my body
looking up again, eyes still
stare, but then away
as mirrored eyes finish
.And return I to flesh
farther from which I went
Knowing nothing more than
the dream my soul sees in
eyes
looking.
Aching for permanence.

Saturday

Finger Bowls

I remember one time in the Minneapolis Museum of Art I was looking at one of Monet's Haystacks. I love impressionists and just looking at the paint strokes, oil paint so thick it was probably still drying, made me tear up a bit. Just seeing that beauty and realism captured in paint moves me in a very strange way. Religious art has never touched me as much as impressionists. We are told to seek after everything lovely. Monet is beautiful to me. Of course Kandinsky is too beautiful to me too, but not in the same moving and tearing way that touches my soul. Going to the exhibit of religious artwork in the Museum of Art was nice but having studied art for a while in a non-religious institution I am influenced too much by historical contexts and painting styles. I thought one of the pieces of art was very reminiscent of paintings of Arthurian legends from the same time period. The piece of art in the entire exhibit that moved me the most was the painting of the three bowls containing blood, water and spirit entitled The Third Triptych. These bowls at once reminded me of finger bowls we used in my family for hand washing at various Jewish celebrations. They were passed around the table for ritual hand washings. My parents had to explain the symbolism of cleansing ourselves before God. Like every child, symbolism had to be learned. My mother explained Catholic beliefs and symbols and my father took Jewish. The hand washing always seemed a little excessive to me as a child, but when we occasionally skipped it after I was older and we had many more kids and less time, I felt that something was missing. We may be taught symbols, but growing up we have our own symbols we have gained from learning and our families. I was taught different symbols from people who were born and raised only Mormon, but Mormons are taught different symbols from other religions. This painting did not make me cry over the technical details such as Monet did. This painting moved me because of the symbolism and how I connected with those symbols. One of the paintings had a prayer shawl hanging in the background. It also had lilies and other symbols, but I connected with the prayer shawl. Prayer shawls means sabbath to me and going to synagogue on some holiday or something.

Anyway, back to the painting I really liked. The water, blood and spirit all portrayed as being in finger bowls, which we use to cleanse ourselves and bring ourselves nearer to God, was simple in a way but very meaningful. In the New Testament times, they did not wash as frequently as we do, so hand washing was probably much more needed. Foot washing was probably the same. Peter asked when Jesus was cleaning his feet if he could clean every part of him, but Jesus replied that only the feet were needed. Now we still symbolically wash our hands, but because of our knowledge of Christ, washing our hands in the finger bowls has changed to not just being a symbol of cleansing ourselves so we can be nearer to God, but also symbolizes the Atonement and how Christ cleansed us all. The symbol of washing our hands is the same, but the meaning behind it has expanded to encompass more that it used to. So now the body of Christ is displayed in the three bowls, the same type of bowls we use to symbolize the cleansing power of the Atonement. His body cleansed us and saved us from sin.