Monday, April 26, 2010

The people we all know and most of us love

We all have those people that we see all the time.  Maybe we know their name -- maybe we don't.  They typically have a smile on their face and are eager to make acquaintance.  Busy folks typically brush on by to something more important; a passerby on occasion will stop by to have their day brightened for just a bit.

I've been thinking a lot about this lately.  The corner of West Paces and Northside Parkway was made famous as the corner of Robert the rose guys for the better part of 20 years.  This man stood on this corner almost every night and took such pride in selling flowers.  I never had occasion to buy flowers so never stopped to chat.  I knew people that did though, and he would carefully describe the best way to cut and store the roses as if they were a rare bottle of wine.  Sadly, Robert recently passed away and Atlanta lost a piece its heart that day.

But Robert isn't the only one of these people in my life.  Others have been sprinkled throughout my experience to remind me of what life is really about.  There was Edward, the real change guy, who faithfully sold homeless newspapers for years outside the Brooklyn Safeway in Seattle.  He always told me, "Have a nice day, sir" despite never having bought a newspaper from him.  In my office building, there is Dallas the security guard although I don't think he could stop a crime if one were to occur.  This man in his 70s faithfully graces the doors every day and knows everyone's name.  He has the same phrases he always uses like "going topside" or "they're waiting on you".  If you ever stop to chat, you likely won't be leaving for 20 minutes and will feel like you're being rude when you finally leave.  This kindred old man will surprise you with the occasional profane word and endear you with stories of his wife.  There's Johnny, who is stationed by the light on the exit ramp as I drive to Church.  I have never seen anyone smile so freely -- even though he has little in the way of possessions.  He's an avid Tech fan and always gives me "the rock" during our brief 45 second conversations.  He scrapes by on the kindness of those passing by, but on Easter morning he shared with me how he was helping those less fortunate than him.

I really wish I would have stopped just once to talk to Robert and become a minor player in his legacy.  Maybe I've finally learned that hurriedness is rarely as important or as necessary as it seems at the time.  Perhaps taking a few moments to be blessed will more than compensate for arriving a little late.  And just maybe, I will learn to treat others as these have treated me.



R.I.P Robert

robert-hiestand-roberts-roses

http://www.ajc.com/news/atlanta/buckhead-mourns-robert-the-425926.html

Friday, April 23, 2010

Sometimes the losers are remembered more

I've been meaning to blog for a few weeks now, but time has a way of disappearing on me.  All that to say that I apologize if this post is a bit dated.

I am talking of course about Butler's epic near miss of winning a National Championship!  It was the perfect underdog story in the perfect city and it even had the whole Hoosiers thing going on.  But alas, real life often doesn't follow the script of reel life and a half court heave that climaxes a fairy tale script painfully misses by mere inches.

All is not lost though.  I think this is one of the rare occasions where the loser will actually be remembered more than the winner.  For whatever reason, a loser sometimes captures our imagination whether we identify with them or they have an epic collapse or they show the heart of a lion.

I think of Jean Van De Velde or Greg Norman whose names have become synonymous with gargantuan collapses.  I think of Andy Roddick at last year at Wimbledon who left everything he had on the court and remade his image in the course of a few drawn out hours.  I think of the one loser who may capture these qualities more than any other story.  I was listening to the story of Julie Moss in the 1982 Iron Man.  She was a 23 year old College Student who just did the race trying to get a degree.  Amazingly though, she found herself winning by 20 minutes in the run.  At the end of the race, her body just gave out on her in a fashion that is painful to watch on video.  After competing for 11 hours and being 30 yards from the finish, her body just gave up on her.  She was passed for the victory, but yet she was determined to finish.  In a remarkable display of courage, she crawled to the finish to win the hearts of millions.  Yes, sometimes we learn more from the losers and remember their story.  Hollywood be damned.

Video of her finish:
http://www.livevideo.com/video/4FE1ED0A9D254E39A0EE2405DAE105F5/julie-moss-1982-hawaii-ironma.aspx

Sunday, April 4, 2010

The Lord's Prayer

My maker
Blessed be thy name
Thy message carried out
Right here, right now
My provider
My atoner
Thou tempts me not
My deliverer
To thine be the glory

Monday, March 29, 2010

Talking to Strangers

I have an amazing Fair Trade Coffee shop in my apartment complex with an amazing view of the river.  The baristas are all really fun folks and the atmosphere is fantastic!  Given all these things, I spend quite a bit of time in the coffee shop.  I don't believe I've ever approached someone I don't know, but I've had a few people come up to me.

One day I was working from the coffee shop and a lady came up to me and complimented me about how hard I had been working.  The irony of the situation was that I had finished working for the day and I think I had been checking ESPN.com.

Another time, I brought the book "Celebration of Discipline" in with me because our small group is going through it.  I actually wasn't reading it as I was on my laptop.  A guy who was meeting there with a prayer group came up to me out of the blue and asked me, "How is God working in your life?".  It caught me by surprise (I also hadn't realized that he had saw me bring in the book).  I was thinking that was a pretty gutsy question to go up and ask a complete stranger.  It took me a few minutes to come up with an answer, but then we had a really good conversation.  He asked if he could pray for me and I ended up praying for him as well.

It got me to thinking about risk taking.  I wish I was so bold as that.  I saw a video for a local Church here where the person was traveling to Church for a service.  Along the way, they traveled on the subway and walked on the streets.  All the while, captions would pop up over the various people he passed saying things like "lonely" or "going through a divorce".  The point being that we are constantly passing people all the time who are dealing with things and we never interact with them.  I'm a decently social person, but I never approach strangers; I usually avoid talking to people on planes.  I saw that video and thought "great video" and then of course went on with living my life the same way I always had.  Perhaps I need to be a bit more open to talking to strangers.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Church across divides

I was in Seattle a little over a week ago and I got to walk the halls of UPC again.  UPC is a Church that I spent 6 years at through College and after College and is a place with many memories.  A great thing about UPC is that you can show up on any day or any night of the week and there is always so much going on.

While I was there, I noticed several posters around the Church advertising for Lenten small groups.  The campaign was very well done and consisted of various people within the Church holding signs describing characteristics of small groups.  As I walked up a stairway, one in particular caught my attention.

 "Small Groups are intergenerational"  -- Don & Cool guy

I have been involved with two very large Churches -- UPC and a Church here in Atlanta.  Large churches tend to get very segregated across age and marital status.  I know that when I first returned to Seattle from Ireland, I eagerly sought out the Young Adult group and my biggest priority was connecting with people my age.  However, during the last couple of years, I have become more and more convinced that the Church needs to cross divides.  A cool thing that use to happen at the Young Adult group is that a group of 55+ year olds called "Second Wind" would come and bring deserts every once in a while.  As a result, I developed a friendship with a man named Lee.  I had a conversation with Jon Epps (the UPC young adult leader) while I was in Seattle where his vision was very much along these lines.  It was cool to see UPC taking on these divides.  The high schoolers, college students, and young adults were all attending the same Church service.  Students do work for elderly populations with the Church.  Small groups are being formed across ages.

Martin Luther King Jr. famously said that Sunday mornings was the most segregated hour of the week.  The body of Christ is made up of people of all nations, all races, all ethnicities, all ages, all abilities, and all backgrounds.  If we are missing this in our Church experience, we our missing out on a wealth of experiences and relationships.  That is one of the reasons I am excited about my current Church.  I attend service with and know older generations, children, married couples, lawyers, teachers, students, etc  We also held a joint Ash Wednesday service with a predominantly African American Church which just felt so right.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Compassion

As some of you already know, I am an Advocate for Compassion International.  For those of you who don't know, Compassion is a Christian child sponsorship organization that provides healthcare, supplemental food, education, etc. to children in the poorest countries in the World.  My favorite promotional video is this one: http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=180351094789

Last night, Compassion put on a special event here in Atlanta that I was very fortunate to be a part of.  They began with the stories of two different teenage girls: the first one raised $40,000 for a program in Kenya and the second was raising awareness and funds for malaria in Africa.  Very inspiring stories.

However, the main speaker for the night was Ricmond Wandera, who is one of the four individuals featured in the video link above.  There are no words to describe the magnitude of his story.

His father was murdered in Uganda when he was 8.  Richmond, his mother, and his six siblings were forced to moved to the slums because they couldn't pay the rent.  During that time, many of his friends died of malaria, diarrhea, and other preventable deaths.   Fortunately for him, he was enrolled in a Compassion project in Uganda where he was sponsored by a 15 year old girl.

After being sponsored, he was singled out for his leadership qualities and became a part of the Leadership Development Program (LDP) where he was able to get a Bachelor's degree in Accounting while being mentored.  He graduated first in his class.  He became the youth leader at the Church that he use to be a sponsored child at.  He is currently one of four LDP graduates who was selected for a special scholarship for a Master's degree at Moody Bible Institute in Chicago.  He currently promotes Compassion and plans to return back to Uganda to be a leader.

He shared that sponsorship changes 3 groups
1.  The sponsored child
2.  The sponsor
3.  The Body of Christ -- he shared how his mother and all 6 of his siblings became a Christian as a result of the act of this one 15 year old girl

I get to do concerts and events from time to time.  Last year I heard the musician Shaun Groves speak on Compassion.  He talked about how his family had decided to move to a smaller house and move from two cars to one car and lived simpler.  It was incredibly convicting to me.  I knew that I should give up my monthly cable bill.  I loved watching Mike and Mike in the morning on ESPN, but that was money being spent that could be going for something way better.  When I thought about it rationally, I knew what the right thing to do was, but I still wanted to hang on to a comfort.  So it took me a couple of months, but I ended up doing it.  It's easy to pretend like it's some great sacrifice, but hearing stories like Richmond's only emphasizes how little I know about sacrifice.

As an advocate, I have an amazing opportunity to present to different groups on what is Compassion is about.  If you know of any group at all that would be open to having a presenter, I would love to come and talk about Compassion.  If you're in another city from me, I can find someone who will be able to come.  And even if only 1 child becomes sponsored as a result, that is at least 1 more life that is saved.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Playing in the snow...

I get excited by snow -- maybe not as excited as I use to when I would drop anything for the nearest snowball fight (I did grow up in Florida after all).  While work and other sorts of grown up obligations make it more difficult, I still make a point to enjoy the few snowfalls I get in some manner.

Today, I decided to go down to Piedmont Park to enjoy the snow.  The wind chill was brutal, but I bundled up and went for a stroll; there is something so beautiful about a new snowfall.  After I had wandered around for a bit, I came across a hill that several people were sledding down.  I stayed and watched for a while.  I thought about how much fun it would be to enjoy something like this with someone else.  It is so much more fun to let out that inner child when you have someone else to enjoy it with.  Given that I was by myself (and that I also didn't have a sled), I just watched.

There were two groups that caught my attention.  The first was two young girls, who I assumed to be sisters, who were sliding down together sitting up on the same sled.  They were laughing and having so much fun.  The second group was a father and his young daughter sliding down together.  He was face first on the bottom of his sled while she rode on his back.  These two groups made me think about being a father.  I want to be the father who doesn't get upset about icy roads, but seizes the opportunity to go out and have a fun afternoon with his daughter.  Those are the memories that you don't forget.  The two girls just seemed to capture childhood so well.  Sometimes life is just about having fun and laughing and nothing more.

Well, I didn't come to the park to just muse about life and fatherhood and whatever else; I came to enjoy the snow!!  I continued walking and started throwing snowballs at inanimate objects.  I marched onto the fields at the park that were already speckled with snowmen.  I got on my knees and started making a snowman.  It then occurred to me that he needed arms.  And then I thought it would be pretty fun to put my beanie, scarf, and sunglasses on him.  I hate to brag, but it was a pretty sweet looking snowman!

I don't ever want to forget to make these moments a part of my life.  In fact, these moments are usually the only things I remember later on.  I barely remember any of my classes, but I do remember flapping my arms and squawking loudly like a hawk in Red Square.

"In the short term it would make me happy to go play outside. In the long term, it would make me happier to do well at school and become successful. but in the very long term, i know which will make better memories." -- Calvin and Hobbes.