Thursday, July 25, 2013

July habits

I've spent a bit of time, at least in the past year or so, thinking about habits.  

I'm talking about physical habits, the ones I do with my body on a daily basis.  These are a different kind of habit than ones of the heart, like my tendency to label people that drive Hummers or respect Ann Coulter.  

I've been pondering the ones that I have that I wish I didn't.  Like listening to my iPod anywhere and everywhere I go or incessantly destroying my cuticles because I don't stop touching them or how I drink coffee every morning.  

These are habits of the physical nature.  

Although, I know there is no such thing.  Everything is connected, after all.  

For the sake of argument, though, I'll concede to delineate between two inseparable worlds.

July gives me a chance to lean into my habits.  In that, I get to be someone new.  In july, I don't have to conform to what is expected of me by people that I share life.  No one knows what to expect.  

We're all new to each other.

In July, all of my routines are different, forcing me out of my habits.  For good or for bad, I have to figure myself out outside of who I've convinced myself and others that I am.

In July, I realize how easy it is to be new.  I realize how my environment dictates my choices and how bendable I am to it.

In July, I can feel which habits follow me, regardless of environment, and I get to figure those out as I sense their shadows behind me.

I love July. 

It's hard as hell.  And I love it.

I love it because I get to feel bigger than my issues.  I get to see who and what I am and I get to decide who and what I want to be.

I didn't used to think this way.  I used to think that i was stuck in the stank of life that I had covered myself in.  At different moments and in different periods, I've covered myself in both the ugly and the beautiful.  And in each, it's hard to remember how I got there or how I might get out.

In the past two years, I've realized that I need people that remind me of who I am, that love me too much to lie to me, that walk the road with me.

It takes me an insane amount of time to develop these friendships.  Combine my introvertedness with a fierce sense of independence and fear of being known and you'll start to get the picture.

Despite all attempts to be a rolling stone, I do have these friends.  These people in my life where we can call each others' bluffs, sing new songs, share beautiful moments, cry together in bathroom stalls, and love intensely.  

It's intimacy.   It's beautiful.

And it's with these people that I feel safest to lay out my habits and ask for advice, for help, for clarity.  It takes a certain amount of vulnerability that is earned over time.  It happens when that vulnerability leads to open, honest conversations.

They happen on stoops in the dark of night and street corners in the early spring. 

In one such conversation, my friend suggested that change is as easy as making new habits.  

I scoffed in my heart, thinking she didn't understand.

But I was the one that didn't understand.  It took months and months to let those words in my life.  It took new experiences.  It took chances.  It took a good hard look at my life.  It took all of me.  

But she was right.  Sometimes you just need to make new habits.

I think about that conversation every time I pass the corner where we stood to talk, less than two blocks from my apartment.  I think about it when I'm in school, when I'm in Indiana, when I'm in my car, and when I'm sitting in Jerusalem with eight more hours to wander before I board my plane home.

Environments, emotions, friendships, vulnerableness, and habits.

Every July, I get to lean into all of the above.

I love July.



 

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

شكرا and תודה


Everyone is intelligent in some capacity.  I'm convinced of it.  

We all have some area that are brains are naturally inclined towards.  

Some of us find those inclinations and we spend our energy pursuing them.  Some of us push against those inclinations and we spend our energy trying to create someone that was never meant to be. 

I think about this every time I listen to a naturally gifted public speaker captivate an audience.  Verbal charisma.  

I think about it every time I witness a kid try to make a layup during basketball tryouts and throw the ball over the backboard.  Maybe they're really good at singing?  Maybe they should sign up for chess club?

I know my strengths.  And I know my not-strengths.

I'm not linguistic.  I don't pick up on languages easily.  I have to actively try.  To listen.  To practice.  To work.

Eight years in Washington Heights gave me enough of the Spanish language to understand conversations and speak some semblance thereof.  But if you are a linguistic learner and you we're me, you would hablar mucho.

One day, I will hablar mucho.  One day.

Knowing that language isn't my gift has limited my desire to add other languages to what's in my brain.  I'm not going to speak three or four languages fluently.  It's just not n the cards.  So I save all of the linguistic space that I have for Spanish.

That means that even after being in Israel for a month, I really bank on meeting an English speaker when I have to go to the bathroom or find the bus.

Without trying to brag, I did learn one word (in arabic and in hebrew) while I was here.  I learned how to say, "thank you."

شكرا and תודה

It's honestly all that I've needed.  I can express myself to the point of getting my point across to anyone.  And when I do, I simply say, شكرا or תודה, respectively.

I don't need anything else.  I just want to say, "thank you" everywhere I go and for everything I experience.

Thank you, Israel.  Thank you.

You taught me more about the world, about the Middle East, about life, about people, and about myself than I had expected.

Thank you.

You showed me those that love their enemies and turn cheeks to look oppressors in the eye. I see these and want to be like them.

Thank you.

You showed me oppressors that disenfranchise the least of these in order to gain political power.  I see these and want to be the opposite.

Thank you.

You introduced me to the land, to people living here, to ancient ways, and to life woven through us all.  I want to always remember.  Always.

Thank you.

I want this to be the posture of my heart in every moment of my life.  I want to say, "thank you" for this moment, in every moment, always.

I'm glad I learned a new word.  I'm glad I learned it in two new languages.

I'll be wandering these streets for two more days.  I've got the bag on my back and the shoes on my feet.  

And I've got thanks in my heart.

I don't need more.



Saturday, July 20, 2013

Hearing and listening

I love traveling abroad for the fact that everything is new.  From ordering in coffee shops to music on the radio to casual greetings between neighbors, to public transportation.  

New.

I hate traveling abroad for the exact same reason.  

The safety of hearing the familiarity of my native language, favorite songs, and voices of  loved ones comforts me in a way that I never remember until I'm standing on foreign soil and lacking all that is intimate in my daily life.

Israel is the opposite of familiar for me.    

I don't know the arabic or hebrew alphabet.
I don't speak either language.
I don't understand either language.

Both cultures are foreign to me.

I feel a bit like an alien.  Like all that I've know about relating to others for the past 30 years is irrelevant at any given moment.  Like all social skills acquired until this moment are currency that no one uses in this new land.

It's a completely foreign experience in every sense of the word.

I was pondering this exact aspect of my journey this morning.  I was alone in the hut and had some time to sit, to read, to clean, to think.  In the middle of the my solitude, a regular guest came to visit.

Yasser.

Yasser spends more time in this hut than all of the rest of us.  He's literally here for the entirety of his day.  

And while Yasser is unique for a thousand reasons, he is most unique because of his inability to hear properly.  A kidney disease has altered his hearing to the point that you have to scream your name in his ear, over and over again, until he can get enough of the sound to call you something relatively close to what your parents put on your birth certificate.  

I'm "Kelpy" and I think that's impressive.  You should take note and be impressed, too.  I introduced him to Helga and she's now "Welter" for the rest of her time here.  

So I'm sitting with this guy who speaks no English, no Hebrew, speaks a broken variation of arabic, doesn't read, and doesn't write.  It's just the two of us.  We're sitting together while I make coffee, read, check paint colors, and carry on in daily life.

All the while, we're actively communicating.  And I realize, in that very moment, that I know Yasser as well as I know any other person on this compound, even though we have zero common ground in which to convey the thoughts in our heads.  

It astonished me.

We have complete conversations about how he put a nail through his foot as a small child, how he would prefer to sit in the shade and not in the sun, how the coffee made him more energetic, how he wants to wash his baseball hat so it would smell good again, how he likes to draw, and how he doesn't like spicy food.

These are full conversations that look more like a game of charades than a casual exchange between friends.  These interactions require full body involvement, not passive/half-assed/pretend engagement.  

Honestly, it's taxing at moments.  Sometimes I just want to be able to say that I need space, that I'm not in the mood to talk, or that I'm tired.  But neither of us have that option.  So it always has to be intense, if it is going to happen at all.

It does happen, despite the effort required.  It does happen.

Yasser has no other alternative.  He has something to say so he finds a way to say it.  The language barrier doesn't stop him, because he has a language barrier with everyone.  

I sat next to him for several hours this morning and thought about how I know him better than everyone else here, how we don't have a single word to exchange in a column language, and how he makes me slow down in everything I do.

It was a beautiful moment.  It gave me hope for every person on this planet.  It gave me reason to believe that we can find a way to connect to other people, regardless of how different we are, if we can work to make them see as we see while we work to see as they do.

Yasser has filled me with a kind of hope that I'm not sure I ever had before.  

I hope I can find a way to tell him that.








  

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

seeing things

I'm going to be blatantly honest and say that I had never heard about permaculture before I volunteered to help facilitate this course.

It took me all of 38 seconds to read an overview of the program and decide that I could commit myself and my July to these ideals.  

It felt like my urban studies program, but focused on agriculture instead of on cities.   

It felt like a month of what my mom has drilled into my head about holistic nutrition coupled with asset-based community development all wrapped around service to the oppressed. 

It just made sense.

I've been here for two weeks and it keeps making more and more sense.  Every day shows me something new in the world.  Something new in me.

The past few days I've been appreciating the diversity of vision.  

There is a certain vision that is required in permaculture.  It's a new way to see things.  It's a way that I haven't seen before.

It's the ability to look at an old door, cement blocks, and mattress...and see a bed.  

It's the gift of seeing the need for a shelf in the shower and then looking around to figure out how we can make one out of what we already have.

It's the foresight to understand that we don't throw things "away" because there is no "away." 


It's a different vision than an interior designer would have for a space.
It's a different vision than an investor would have for a space.
It's a different vision than an architect would have for a space.

It's a unique niche.  and it's not always pretty.

You won't find anyone selling a soup strainer taped to a broken stick the next time  you're looking to mix cement.  But guess what?  It worked perfectly when we made our cob oven today.

Sometimes I walk through the streets of New York and i can't imagine the detail it took to plan even one of those buildings.  Nor can I fathom the way the brain works for a musician.

And then you give me a piece of blank paper, a white wall, or a mound of clay...and I can transform it into the emotions that are wound within me.  

That's my vision.

Different than yours.  
Different than theirs.

All equally needed.

Sometimes I love that about humanity.  It lets me live in a world where I get to interact with systems that I are beyond my mind's capacity to comprehend.

It lets me sit around a table and make beautiful things with beautiful people that love the same things as I do.

Sometimes I hate that about humanity.  It means that even though you really annoy me, you might see things in a way that the world needs, that I need.

I don't want to need your vision, especially if I don't particularly like your personality or agree with your worldview.  

But I can't have the ideas, insight, or direction that you have.  So I do need you.

Opposite pieces of a complete circle.

One.

The doctor, the artist, the banker, the poet, the gardener, the mathematician.

All of us.

Different visions. Different brains.  Different functions.

One whole. 
One people.

One.


 

Saturday, July 13, 2013

culture, songs, and presents.

Every community has a culture.  Every place has a culture.  Every environment has a culture.

We breathe it like air, without understanding.

It's the way we interact with our friends, our coworkers, our bosses, our teachers, our enemies, and our neighbors.

Most times, the quality of the air is dependent on the people that we stand next to.  We interact with culture based on the norms that have been decided by those people.  

I understand that.  I respect that.  I live in that.

But, if the culture is decided by the people standing next to me, then I can help to decide it, too.  

I am, in the end, standing next to someone else...

Being in Israel, in this hut, with these people, has given me the gift of presence.  I've been reminded that slow, whole, intentional life is a practice that takes deliberate concentration. 

Every. Single. Moment. Of. The. Day. 

And that presence, that authenticity of that moment, gives me the freedom to be whole.  To be fully present.

There's a safety when you can look into someone's eyes and know that they are with you, that they get you.  That they aren't waiting for the next thing, the next moment, the next anything, but that just being where they are is enough.  

That kind of presence is rare.  It opens the door for everyone to be in the moment.

Most of the time, I usually see people's eyes in the reflections of their phones.  I'm sure mine have been reflected from my own, as well.

I don't like that.  I don't like that at all.

I don't want to be that person.

It's easy here.  We all have the same conceptual framework.  We have a common language.  A shared culture.  

We have presence.

I'm more a part of that than I have ever been before.

It's the song of my heart and I found some people in a desert that were already singing it.  It was easy to join that song.

What scares me, though, is that my heart should be singing the same tune wherever my feet take me.  I don't know that it does.

I think it sings the cultural melody with the people I stand next to, instead of singing its own song.

I don't like that.  I don't like that at all.

I don't want to be that person.

I want to be the one that determines the culture.  I want to invite people to sing a better song.

I don't want it to be present when the people around me are present.  I want to establish presence as my own cultural norm, everywhere I go.

I can't do that if my heart is not in tune.  

I can't do that if I'm not present with myself.

It starts with me.  It starts with a properly ordered life.   

I want that.  I want to be that person.

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

nothing about felt boards

You know that kid that has an answer for everything?  

The one that knows anything you could possibly tell her before you could possibly have a chance to tell her?  
The one that knows a person with the same name as the person you just mentioned and then tells a story about that person and hints that it relates to the person you were talking about?  
The one immediately has her hand in the air to answer whatever question you ask and then doesn't answer the question, but talks about how what you just said relates to her life?

I know that kid.

I used to be that kid.

I was so annoying.

Somewhere during college I woke up to the fact that there was an entire world outside of my own.  I woke up to the fact that I knew nothing about said world.

This process began a shift in my consciousness where I stopped having to have the right answers and began to ask the right questions.

Asking questions disrupted my entire life.  It pushed me from the world that I had known to be true for so long and into a world that was unknown.

Asking questions forced me to observe my surroundings, study the history of the place where I stand, learn the systems that govern the given areas, and collect data to see patterns in all of theses areas.

This new mode of operation transfers to every aspect of my life.  

My community.
My education.
My environment.
My neighborhood.
My vocation.

My life.

Questions led me to this place.  To this land.  To this desert.

I've been asking questions about Israel and her place in the world, and her place in my world, for many years.  

I learned about Israel on a felt board where stories of genocide and war and adultery were made palatable to preschoolers with songs and dances.  

I learned "right" and I learned "wrong."

I learned "us" and I learned "them."

My college years (and several afterwards) were spent with my back to felt boards, questioning all of those "rights" and "wrongs."

Studying the history of this land, in context of the time periods, showed me that my journey, truth, and my questions are not mutually exclusive.

Perhaps that's why I wanted to come here in the first place.  Perhaps I wanted to journey to this land so that could see it with my own eyes and form my own opinions.

Then.......I got here.

And all of my study, my pursuit of knowledge, and my pure intentions were as ignorant as a man trying to understand what it means to give birth.  

He knows nothing.  

He can read books, empathize, watch documentaries, or deliver a baby.

He knows nothing.

That's me.  I'm that person.  I'm that "nothing-knower" in this place.

All of my study and my research and my understanding don't mean a thing.

I'm living in a village in the middle of a land where the conflict is complicated in a way that I could never have imagined.  It's complicated in a way that you would walk out of a movie about it because you would say it was too far from anything that would ever happen in real life.

But it is real life.  It's as real as the Mosquitos that feast on my ankles and swarm around my ears at three in the morning.

It's real.

All that I read and studied about this conflict helped me not be an ignoramus in a globalized world.

All that I read and studied about this conflict meant nothing the moment my feet hit the ground.

I was a man trying to understand childbirth in the first person.

This isn't a felt board.  This isn't a history lesson.  This isn't an article.  This isn't a news report.

And I know nothing.

When I think about this in the context of my daily life, or in any community I will ever find myself, I think the same lessons are applicable.

I want to be fully present, fully awake, admit that I know nothing but want to learn everything, inhabit every space with open hands that are willing to extend to any other human that has any type of need, and live without an ounce of judgment.

Dr. Boyd used to say that we should ask ourselves, in the midst of any circumstance, "where do I fit in all of this?"  

That's a good question.

Sometimes it's ok to say, "I don't have the slightest idea where I fit, but I do have two hands that I can use while I try to figure it out."

All the while, I'll keep asking questions...

   

Friday, July 5, 2013

Connectedness


I spent a few minutes staring at the night sky and the stars that filled it.

I stood in the middle of the desert and saw the same constellations that I saw as a kid from my backyard in Ohio, the same ones I see from my sister's front porch in Indiana, and the same ones I imagine are there from my light polluted fire escape in Washington Heights.

While I know, and have always known, that there is one sky above all of us, it was an especially strong realization tonight.

It reminded me that everything is connected.  Every person I've ever had contact with, ever seen, ever read about, ever listened to their music or seen their art, ever been inspired by, ever sat on a train with, or ever just walked past.





Connected.

I see and feel those connections so strongly every single day of my life.

It helps me to see my world as one whole entity and not compartmentalized aspects, where I pick and choose where to give wholeheartedly.

If I see my classroom as a reflection of me, then it truly is my job to make sure to plan, arrange, clean, and invest in a way that reflects who I want to be.

If I see my belongings as an extension of myself, then I am make damned sure to lend/give/share them with anyone that might need them.

If I see my time as asset that I can use to make every place I go more like it should be and less Ike it shouldn't, then I have to be intentional about where I spend the minutes of my day.

If I see my streets as part of myself, then I pick up the trash when I walk down them.

And this is only the beginning.

There is energy, thoughts, relationships, and beliefs.  All of it.  Connected.  In ways we cannot begin to fathom.

Everything is connected.

I think it helps me feel like I'm not alone, even in the middle of this desert.

I am here because my mom raised me to be confident enough to go....anywhere.  And she is with me.

I am here because my sister believes the best in me and pushes me to be that person.  And she is with me.

I am here because I garden with Joy and she helps me plant good seeds and pull the weeds.  And she is here with me.

I am here because of my friends, the ones I work with and the ones I live in community with.  And they are here with me.

I am here because of my professor, who literally set this trip up and made it possible for me to be here.  And he is here with me.

I am here because of my niece and nephew.  Because I want to have shoulders worthy of standing on.

Everything is connected.

I think that's as beautiful as it is terrifying.  If you're connected to me, then I'm connected to you.  That makes me responsible for my actions, even when I'm tired or cold or in the winter.  That's scary.

It's the kind of scary that makes me a better person.  It helps me say "I'm sorry" when I've wronged you and "thank you" when you've been gracious to me.  It helps me remember that you are a product of a story, the same as I am.  It helps me want to write a better story than the ones we've been handed, regardless of how great they are right now.

Everything is connected.  In that, there is comfort and there is responsibility.

I saw both when I stared at the stars this evening.