Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts

Saturday, June 2, 2012

My Own Personal Time Machine

My family is on a bit of a quest to try to get our house in order.  Will we ever succeed?  Hard to tell.  Am I one of the biggest culprits in terms of non-neatness of the house?  You bet.  Why?  I love to hang on to things.  One thing that had been buried deep in a closet that is now being cleaned out--my high school and college journals.

What I'm finding now is that I am finally ready to part with them.  But not before one final read.  One final read that will give me an opportunity to look back more than 2 decades (in some cases almost 2 1/2 decades) to see what I was thinking and to think aout how it led me to where I am today.  Just in skimming a bit I have reached a few conclusions.

(1) My search for meaning in life is nothing new.  I over-analyzed everything even when I was not yet 20.  Different sets of questions. Different sets of concerns.  But a lot about how people around me related to me, related to each other, and viewed the world.  And how I viewed he world.  And, at the end of the day, I'm still writing about such things.

(2) My fascination with numbers is nothing new.  I picked up a journal that spanned much but not all of my sophomore year at Penn State.  I was counting how many days in a row I'd written.  I recorded the ages of many friends.  I noted my parents 20th anniversary.  I didn't try to find meanings in those numbers as I do with bib numbers and race times now, but the numbers were a critical part of what I wrote.

(3) An entry from January 3, 1989 is quite telling.  That was between semesters and I was home with my sister who apparently had been running a fever the night before.  With both parents working and with the convenience of having me around, I could take care of her.  In the entry, I noted that a close friend at Penn State had characterized my journal as "containing my world". I had talked quite a bit about it.  I wrote that my world was "extended" by "telling people aout it and not trying to hide things."  My personal blogs allow me to do just that in so many ways. It is essentially my journal of things that I am willing to share and of things that I hope others might ponder and comment on.

(4) Even back then, I was thinking about family, friends, religion, music, and running.  Do themes in life ever change?

I don't know if I am the only one who finds it fascinating to think about and ask, "Have I really changed that much or is it just a change in scenery with all the same questions and issues when all is said and done?"  If nothing else, I hope that while my life may be centered around similar issues I have at least learned enough not to repeat similar mistakes.

After taking a trip in "my own personal time machine" by reviewing my journals before I chuck stuff, I will be better able to answer the question of whether I have learned any life lessons or just a lot of facts in the past two decades and some.

I won't bore you with entries of "who liked who and what were they thinking?" but if I come across any particularly insightful entries as I review before chucking, I may comment on the theme I see from my old work.  

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Living the Word

Short entry tonight--I think.  At mass today, our priest commented that many Catholics in America listen to the word at mass and process it a bit but don't get excited about it and don't necessarily work that hard to live it.  He made reference to the reading about the stone that the builders rejected is now the cornerstone.  Having Jesus as the cornerstone of our lives--with the opportunity for resurrection--should be something exciting.  It is a wonderful thing that should move us.

While I won't judge my fellow Catholics, I do want to comment on one thing.  My blog is my way of getting excited about my faith and living the word.  My blog brings me to Word in the Bible in ways that nothing else in my life has.  My desire to put together my fitness, my religion, my service, and my community has been a blessing beyond anything I ever could have imagined.

We can debate whether I send too much time on it.  Some may say so.  But I read on someone's Facebook page just today--those things we really want to do we will find time for.  Those we really don't--we'll find excuses for.  I think my actions show me the importance I have found in finding ways to link to my faith that make it real.  That make is something that is alive for me.  That make it something I live with and grow with and hope to grow even more with over time.   

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Straight and Narrow


Yesterday, I ran on the small onboard track and wrote about going round and round.  Today, my inspiration for the title also comes from my run, and readers can probably guess where I ran—on the treadmill.

The treadmills in the cruise ship gym are Life Fitness.  They should a picture of a track making it look like you are going round and round, but there is definitely not the feeling—or the differential pressure on the legs/hips that comes from running around in a circle.  The treadmill can provide an up and down experience, but today’s desire was to simulate a flat track anyway.  So, what can I say other than—I planned to and succeeded in running the straight and narrow.

When I think about the rest of my life, I struggle with what straight and narrow means.  Some may think that religion usually implies something relatively straight and narrow for a person’s life. Ten Commandment.  Eight Beatitudes.  And yet, it is not really, despite many people’s impressions. Within most sets of religious beliefs there is plenty of room for creativity.  And there is room for free choice.  Room to fail.  Room for making mistakes.  Room to grow from correcting our errors.  Even in Christianity while there are the Ten Commandments in the Old Testament and the eight Beatitudes in the New Testament, Jesus ultimately said, “Love God and love your neighbor.”  Simple and direct  with lots of room for finding interesting, novel, and useful ways to show that love for our neighbors and to help everyone live up to the potential of the gifts they have been given. 

My career path has never been straight and narrow and yet I have been relatively successful so far.

My kids lives (as a result of my parenting or not) have not been straight and narrow, although the oldest is certainly focused.

So, I use straight and narrow as a guide for individual projects and individual goals.  I set a goal of getting to full professor and reached it.  I set a goal of qualifying to apply for the Boston Marathon and reached it.  For individual projects I set goals and usually (although not always) reach them.  All that is good.

But I tend not to use straight and narrow for other things.  So many projects.  So many ideas.  So many things I’ve dabbled with. 

Will I ever live completely straight and narrow—probably not, but it is a great way to guide at least a part of my life.