Love Waits

12 Jan

 

 

A story in 420 characters

She just needed sleep.

“Mom? Is that you?”

“Please go to sleep.”

“Mom! Come up here. I waited all night for you to get home.”

“You went to bed in your clothes again? Partly-eaten mac n’ cheese again?”

“Here Mom” and she offered a page, abused from writing, erasing, more writing. In a girl-sized voice the melody rose. With nothing less than a whole heart she sang.

Everyday thru Mondays and Fridays

I wait almost more than eight hours

Just to say

I love you.

“Mom? Are you -”

“They’re happy tears. Now move over.”

Tags: , , , , ,

Getting Thin

10 Jan

Getting Thin

 

A story in 420 characters

 

“You’re losing weight”. He was complimenting her. But she wasn’t losing weight. Post-partum moms lose weight. Women who are newly divorced or about-to-be-married lose weight. They lose weight from liposuction or tummy tucks or gym memberships. She wasn’t losing weight. She was getting thin. Girls with body issues or eating disorders get thin. Widows who fall and break their hip get thin. Women with spine pain, no appetite and a small mass on their lung aren’t losing weight. They’re getting thin.

 

 

Tags: , , , , , ,

When Girls Go Missing

7 Jan

When Girls Go Missing

 

A story in 420 characters

She wanted to be loved. She just didn’t want to be a wife. Could you have one and not the other? Girls shrank when they became wives, giving away their best bits and pieces. They were unrecognizable in their own bathroom mirrors. Some went missing, like those girls in 1950′s Polaroid’s, all pony tails and tight cardigans, confidently aloof. When these girls became wives they cut their own bangs, wore rollers all day, went to the bank in slippers, took night jobs at the factory and drank gin before lunch.

 

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Apples Are Bad

5 Jan

A story in 420 characters

The sign read Apples Are Bad! The boys were very hungry for apples. They covered the apples. We won’t be hungry if we can’t see them, they reasoned. Still hungry, they tried insulting the apples, Hey wormface scumbag. They even dreamed of apples so they threw stones and stomped them into pulp, making them Bad and Ugly. The desperate boys moved to another town. The conniving apples were there too, hiding in sauce and cider and pie. So the boys cut their tongues off and wondered, Will this hunger stop?

Tags: ,

Mom and Pops

4 Jan

 

A Story in 420 Characters

 

Dr. Karne asked ‘Are your parents here, Jay?’

Jay loved his parents. Off in the corner they seemed slouched and small at this event. Pops wore his only pair of Sunday pants, shiny from years of ironing on Saturday nights, and old shoes he got when Gramps died. Jay saw a run in Mom’s hose, just below her coat hem. Gloveless hands hid under her coat sleeves. A purse hung from her thin arm. Jay silently willed them to be different. They’d never know if -

‘Jay? Are they here? Can I meet them?’

‘Yes. Over here, Sir.’

Tags: , , , ,

The Pillar on the Porch

3 Jan

The Pillar on the Porch

Another story in 420 characters

He thought they should paint the pillar on the back porch. She protested. He said that when people lose someone it’s normal that things blur. She said that may be so for some but if they’d had a porch pillar like hers then faces wouldn’t blur as quickly. He said it was a shrine and that’s not healthy. She said that given the choice people would want shrines and they’d be glad to remember the face of the one who stood with her back straight against the pillar, the one who should have lived longer, grown taller.

Tags: , , ,

So Hush Little Baby

2 Jan

Hush, little baby.

A story in 420 characters…

So hush little baby. Don’t say a word. Your mamma’s going to wipe those tears with her fingertips. Tears on a mother’s fingertips turn to gold and it’s the golden touch that tickles a Big-X on little backs and rummages for the imaginary head lice, and creates a bazillion ways to connect freckles into pictures that resemble Treasure everytime, and goosebumps are glitter. The golden tear-dipped fingertip writes magic spells so that love appears even when it really spells p-a-i-n. So hush little baby.

Tags: , , , , ,

Who Wouldn’t Like Joel: Part 2 Coming Out To Mom

3 Dec

(This is part 2 of a 3-part story…my story and Joel’s story. Joel gave me permission to tell this story. I interviewed him and he has proof-read it and has given his go-ahead. I have worked hard to stay true to his descriptions and his own words. I wanted to write it as a narrative instead of as an interview. If you are new to this blog, you can go here to  read Part 1 of Who Wouldn’t Like Joel?)

His heart was banging on his ribs, ordering him ‘Let me out! Let me out!‘  But instead he knew it was really saying  ”Tell her! Tell her!” Just say it. Rip the band-aid off. No amount of time or waiting or rehearsing could ever make it easy. It felt like the day he stood on the stoop 500 meters in the air, staring down at the pond, with the bungee chord attached to his ankles. Up until this moment bungee jumping was the most frightening thing he’d ever done. But now this, this was the most frightening thing he would ever have to do. Going into her room he plopped onto the window ledge and took a seat in his usual spot.

He hadn’t wanted to tell her like this. More preparation would have been good. But his friend gave him no choice.

At the time he’d been attending a conservative Christian school. Feeling that he needed to be honest, and believing he could trust them, he confided in his closest friends. L was one of them. L told her grandma. He never knew why L broke her confidence, and looking back he wanted to believe she went to her grandma because  it was just a bit too heavy for a fifteen-year-old to process on her own.  And he wanted to believe that L was just as perplexed when Grandma betrayed her trust. Grandma was the one who threw down the gauntlet, “If you don’t tell your parents right away then I will.”

That was that.

Such an ultimatum made him extremely nervous. He knew it would be better if he told his parents. He sure didn’t want them finding out from someone else. It made him quite angry, however, that the grandma had control of this. It created so much pressure. He wasn’t ready. He wanted to keep it a secret a little longer. He knew the timing was all wrong. But then again, what exactly made any moment a perfect moment to tell your mom that you’re gay?

“Mom?”

“Ya?” She was already in bed, reading, like she did every night.

Silence. She looked up.

He said, ”I don’t like girls.”

“What do you mean you don’t like girls?”

“I don’t like girls.”

“What do you mean?”

“I like guys.” More silence. Then, “Please… don’t tell Dad.”

It was back in grade nine or ten when he started to realize there was something different about they way he saw things. First it was advertisements. He’d wonder why his attention was drawn to the good-looking guy and not the hot girl. As time went by he knew these feelings contradicted everything he’d been taught to believe. You see, he found himself smack dab in the middle of a conservative evangelical family with two very straight older brothers and two very adoring younger sisters. They were all the beloved offspring of Pentecostal missionary parents. In his family you paid attention to God. You really, really paid attention to God. He was well aware that Conservative evangelicals, and therefore God, are known for their black-and-white stance against homosexuality. They quote the Bible and it seems to make perfect sense to them, that homosexuality is an abomination, that same-sex attraction, if acted upon, leads you directly to hell. Do not pass go. Hell. Plain and clear. God loves the sinner. God hates the sin.

Yet, strangely, he was excited about this growing awareness, about this sort of coming together of the puzzle pieces. There was still a heavy personal conflict, with two sides banging around his head like ball-bearings in the dryer; he warred against himself, on one side the Stoic Soldier of Underground Resistance fighting to keep this hidden, and on the other side was the Courageous Crusader of Admission wanting to be free to live as himself. Somewhere in the battle he lost energy. He lost his appetite, excusing himself from meals saying, ‘I’m fasting.’ Nothing was enjoyable anymore. Nothing held any sense of anticipation. He could not even allow himself to daydream about the object of his first crush, a boy in a grade above him.

Finally, thin and tired, one warrior won the battle; the Courageous Crusader of Admission. First of all he admitted to himself, “I’m gay.” This, surprisingly, was like a liberation. Not the kind that says ‘oh good, now I can do what ever I want’ but more like ‘okay, now I can be who I really am.’  Then he admitted it to God. Years later his mom would ask him some questions, trying to understand how he worked this out with God and found his sense of liberation at that time.

He told her that telling L was a result of his liberation, that the liberation came after his epiphany, “Remember the year I went to the school retreat? Well, during one of the worship times they were telling us to talk to God, to ask Him questions. It was an intimate moment. People were crying. Worshiping. I prayed. I said, ‘God, this is the moment where only you can decide if my being gay is wrong, where you decide if you can’t take me like this.’ In that moment I knew God was telling me ‘ Son, I love you. No matter what, I love you.’ And that was the thing that helped me through all of everyone’s view of me, my friends, you and Dad, our relatives, the other missionaries… the view that being gay is wrong, that I was wrong. Knowing that God loved me got me through.”

He was braced for what he knew was coming. A voice told him ‘fasten your seat belt, danger ahead, beware! You’re about to drive through un-mapped terrain.’

So with this clear conviction of God’s unconditional love he did buckle-up and he was able to come out to his mom, and later to his dad. At the time he had no idea to what extent that conviction would be tested, but in the years to come he would stand on those words, he would stubbornly trust that although other voices told him he was ‘going to hell‘ he held to the Voice that told him so clearly that he was loved.

(To be continued)

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The Great Thai Flood of 2011: New Perspectives in Hard Times

14 Nov

There was a really profound editorial in the Bangkok post this weekend, about how hardships can make us stronger. I truly believe that. It’s not a new idea, and many world religions subscribe to this thought as well. But I have seen proof of it in the beautiful Thai people as they have faced enormous challenges over the last two months of the country’s worst floods in 50 years. Without fail, the flood victims I talk to respond with “There are many more people who are suffering greater losses and facing far more difficulties than myself.”

Wow.

And sniff.

And shame on me for ever complaining.

With strong affection and great respect I dedicate this blog post to my พี่น้องชาวไทย, my Thai family, and to กรุงเทพมหานคร, the city of Bangkok, that has welcomed our family for the last 20 years and helped us raise global-minded children.

This is a collection of photos that I received in an email. I have translated their captions. I pray I will do justice in representing.

“New Perspectives In Hard Times”

We see… housing projects that promote the cozy atmosphere of a lakeside villa

We see… the beauty of our ancient heritage sights from a brand new perspective

We see… people helping each other where ‘we deliver’ is quite a promise!

We see…how to wrap things: apply generous amounts of tape

We see…a new kind of flood spectator (who packs a gun too)

We see…love without favortism

We see…those who will not be deterred

We see…advertising that really means what they say (‘washing stock’ is a Thai expression for ‘all stock must go’)

We see…those who are ready to make necessary sacrifices and move under the raft so the dog will be safe

We see…that we don’t have to go to the beach to get a tan

We see…stubborn perseverance, and good karma (no one got electrocuted)

We see…new guests taking a peek “Honey, I’m home!”

We see…national animals that do the job better than machines

We see…fashionistas posing in sand “Someone has to keep an eye on things”

We see…sea monsters in the middle of the city. No need to make a trip to the Mekhong.

We see…control-freak home-owners “No water allowed on premises…without permission”

We see… only in Thailand

We see…everyone ready to lend a hand.

We see…how we are undaunted even in the scary conditions

We see…our duty as Buddhists

We see…business as usual

We see…brand new customs

We see…how these (not-so)little piggies get to market

We see…how ‘going to the gym’ takes on a whole different purpose

We see…how frugal we can be. Who needs to waste money driving down to the beach?

We see…what it means to ”be prepared” and how best to analyse the situation

We see…the irony of helmets in a boat even though we don’t wear one when we ride a motorcycle

We see…a sea-side mini mart

We see…that even the smallest space will do

We see…even the tourists can just go with the flow

We see…where we have to take the boat to get the bus, take the bus to get the boat

We see…how much love and concern we have for our King, as we work to keep water away from the Sirirat Hospital (where HM resides)

And finally we see…how much love and concern our King has for us that instead of getting someone else to purchase it and put his name on it, he purchased it on his own, and look at what generous amounts he gives too!

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Dam Sand

3 Nov

 

Peter and I had been walking through this area near the Prakanaong dam for the last few days. I had to see for myself that the walls were holding the water back. The government had been ‘munjai’ (confident) too many times about other water barriers throughout Bangkok that had since broken under the pressure of an unstoppable flood. This flood was outsmarting everyone and even the designated safety zone for evacuees was lost under almost two meters of water.

We found that there was a community of people living in the low-lying area beside the canal. Shanties that looked like slave’s quarters had been home to these people for a generation, a place where children share play space with the chickens, where the old men drink beer in the morning and clothes-lines hang between rubbish heaps.

We kept meeting the same folk along our path, kept asking the same questions, “Are you worried about the flooding? Do you think the dam will hold?” Each day they answered “No problem, it won’t flood here. The dam will hold”. We drilled every official we saw at the dam, every worker, every sweeper, every fisherman “Are you afraid the walls will break?” Every time we got the same answer,

“No.”

And then Friday happened. It was a normal morning until Peter got a phone call from a friend telling us that the dam had broken. The flood was coming our way. Peter grabbed the car keys; I had to run back upstairs to get my red plaid rubber boots and socks. We took off in the car but stopped a short way from home. Our neighbour’s house was filling with water. “Can we help?”

“No, we’re okay, thanks. All our things are on the second floor. We’ll just pump the water out as it comes in.” These guys were prepared. They’d been watching the news.

I had to move fast and started running up the road, stopping from house to house, asking if they needed help. Once I was sure they were okay I knew I had to get to the homes beside the canal, beside the dam. The main street was filling rapidly with water. I kept running and splashing filthy water onto myself, hearing the Thai people calling out ‘farang glua’ meaning ‘the foreigner’s afraid.’ I wanted to shout ‘I’m not afraid for me, I’m afraid for the people living near the dam!’

Farang glua!

As I approached the homes near the dam I was shocked to find everyone going about business as usual, drying chilies in the sun, rolling cigarettes, and my new friend, Prem, was fishing behind his house. Fishing! Then I saw one lady whom I was sure was aware of what was happening right that minute out on the main street. She was hammering boards together. She’s building a boat, I thought, not unlike the make-shift boats we’d seen in the already flooded streets. Finally, I thought, someone was getting ready for the flood. She smiled at me as she looked up from her work, ’I’m building a table. I have too much stuff on the ground over there.’

Not wanting to start a panic as I passed through, I calmly explained that the dam had broken, that the streets nearby were flooding, all the while still walking toward the dam, looking for some sort of rushing water coming toward us, silently wondering ‘Am I in danger? Could I swim with these boots on much less rescue anyone?’

Then, sweat dripping, heart beating, boots sloshing, I saw it with my own eyes. The people were right to be ‘munjai’. It wasn’t the cement dam beside their community that had broken, as I had feared.

No broken walls here

It was a sand barrier that is situated a little further down the  road, a little farther down the canal from where they live.

Sand.

I should have known.

That same sand barrier was repaired that day, only to break again every day after. The water still rises, and then subsides. The lady on the corner still sells noodles while she is standing in eight inches of water. I still go out to the streets everyday, asking if everyone is okay, trying to encourage them to ‘suu suu’, hang in there. And then something beautiful and divine and supernatural happens. They encourage me, saying ‘Don’t be afraid. It’s actually kind of fun. Here, sit down with us and have a coffee while we see how deep the water rises today. By the way, where did you get those boots?’

Thai boys have fun even during the worst floods in 50 years

Tags: , , , ,

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 53 other followers