Planting.

The week began with planting.

I.

On Monday, my husband and I got up early and drove to an elementary school west of the city. In the darkness before sunrise, we helped his coworkers unload bale upon bale (upon bale) of pine straw, platters of pansies, purple cabbages, and bags weighed down with soil. As it grew lighter, more people gathered--both Sean's colleagues and their families, along with the school community, principal and teachers and kids. Though the sun was hidden behind a cloud, we set to work unstrapping the straw and spreading the strands around the front of the school, in the courtyard, all the way back to the playground. Shaking hands and introducing ourselves, sometimes talking, sometimes working in silence, children scurrying from spot to spot to help.

Around halfway through, two of us began to plant pansies in an unbroken circle, underneath the school sign at the entrance. The small plot already held soil, though hard at the top, and was covered with older pine straw. Not giving it much thought, we began digging out small holes for the flower parcels without moving the old straw. But as we worked, it quickly became clear that the straw needed to be raked out, with some original plants dug up and replanted, before we could go any further.

It was satisfying to remove the old straw, to see the soil slowly start to appear beneath it, to see the marks of the rake that showed us it was still soft underneath. When I went back to my spade and the pansies, I started to discover old roots not far down, and would pull and tug and follow to see where the root led--often ending up quite far from its beginning. It had reached far.

I savored kneeling in the dirt, wheedling a pansy and its packed soil out of the planter, waving to people who walked by.

II.

On Tuesday, I listened to Bree Newsome speak. The woman I first saw scaling a flagpole nearly two years ago, holding the Confederate flag she had just removed from the SC state house grounds, doing what needed to be done in the face of terror and hate. What should have been done long before.

"What does it mean to be conscious?" she asked. Then she instructed us to breathe in...breathe out. Breathe in... breathe out. To be conscious, Newsome said, is to become aware of an unconscious behavior. To consider the reality that exists outside one's individual experience.

After the Mother Emanuel massacre, she told us, a small group of activists met to plan how to take down the flag. But they had to determine--who was physically able to climb, who could risk being arrested? When they narrowed it down, there were three remaining, and she was the only person of color. They agreed--how important for a woman of color to remove the flag. And how symbolic for a white man to stand at the bottom as lookout.

It wasn't that she was unafraid, she told us. But the power of this particular action, the necessity of it, outweighed the fear. She wasn't fearless; she was faithful.

You have to ask yourself, she said: What will be my contribution? Where will I jump in to help humanity lift itself up?

"Every person has within them the ability to be a changemaker," she said. "Deferred dreams will not sustain us as a society."

I hadn't realized that she isn't much older than I am.

III.

On Wednesday, I went to a forum where we could share how we think our large private university can or should engage more deeply with our city. In a place where our individual schools are so often siloed and can feel almost like solo institutions, it was fascinating and inspiring to hear voices from around campus and beyond, acknowledging that we aren't doing enough, and expressing the passion to dive in--to connect with affordable housing, public health, the business community, hospitality, the arts, our diverse immigrant population, communities of faith, and beyond. It was a dynamic back and forth on how to use what we have as an institution and as individuals to create change.

IV.

On Thursday, Woodie W. White, a retired bishop in The United Methodist Church, delivered his annual Letter to Martin Luther King Jr. in our morning chapel service. He's done this every year for decades, recounting to Dr. King the good and the bad of race relations in America over the past 12 months. This year, he began, "the letter almost did not get written." But it did, thankfully for all who were present, and for all who read it. (You can read it, but it's not the same as watching/listening--which you can do above. Bishop White's voice will be balm for your soul.) We aren't just trying to build a better nation, he said, and I imagined Dr. King nodding emphatically. "We Christians strive for a more beloved community, for what we sometimes call the reign of God. It is where love and justice prevail and where we embrace a common humanity, not just as citizens, but also as brothers and sisters."

During the prayers of the people, we prayed for Barack Obama, the day before he left office. We prayed for Donald Trump, the day before he took office.

At the end of the service, the congregation joined hands to sing "We Shall Overcome." There was no one on my left side, so I lifted that hand up in prayer. As we reached each new verse, my eyes filled more and more with tears. We shall overcome... We'll walk hand in hand... We shall live in peace... We shall all be free... God will see us through...

Why did I cry? Because of the energy of all who surrounded me, including the cloud of witnesses I couldn't see but felt, the history and purpose of the music and lyrics. Because I was humbled by my privilege, knowing my tears would fall harder in the midst of oppression. Because oppression is still deeply real and present, and I don't know what's coming next, and I want to be part of the change. Because I adored this First Family and I could hardly believe eight years have passed. Because the raising of voices in song always makes me feel that there is good, within and beyond.

V.

On Friday at 11:00 a.m., I bypassed my regular workout and a friend and I walked downstairs to the chapel for Holy Eucharist. I needed the sun shining through the stained glass cross, the intimacy of the small gathering (where two or more are gathered... and there were just barely two or more). I loved singing two of my favorite hymns ("Gather Us In," "The Summons"), and the piano music that accompanied the entire service. The two lessons were from the prophet Isaiah--"the people who walked in darkness have seen a great light"--and Matthew, when Jesus says he has come to fulfill the prophet Isaiah, "the people who walked in darkness have seen a great light," and calls his first disciples to him. Khalia's homily shone with peace and hopefulness, and a call to follow, as that first call came so long ago. She invited the four of us up to the table for Communion, where we recited the familiar words together and served one another the bread and cup.

I've gone to church my whole life, but I've never bowed down at an altar rail and officially given my life to Jesus, never gotten "saved." It's not my way, not something I felt moved to do, and I didn't want to do it unless I felt moved. Some may say that's because I want to have the illusion of control in my life, and sure, maybe it is. But I think it's primarily because my experiences and relationship with Jesus have come organically, as I've grown up, left home, returned home, met people and communities throughout who have nurtured both my doubt and my belief.

I've always been a God girl more than a Jesus girl, because God is easier for me to comprehend, a feeling or a being deeper and wider than myself, than the world, and for some reason that has not been difficult to sense. God encompasses all elements, and there are many ways to God. I've never been bothered by, and in fact greatly love, the truth that there are multiple faiths within our human family. It's such a joy, that diversity of paths wrapped up in the same human seeking. And so Jesus has always been tougher for me--a human not fully human, yet God completely God, in the midst of a world that holds other possibilities for divine beings, and the one you believe in is often by the luck of where you were born and raised.

But Jesus has slowly become more real to me, as I cultivate who I want to be in the world, what I want to stand for, how I want to act. To be part of the great light. I'm sensing that more and more these days.

After Eucharist, at noon, we walked in the abnormal yet lovely January sunshine, stood outside a packed reception hall--the reception hall where Sean and I had our first dance as husband and wife--and listened to the strains of a Brahms quintet, in turns both leisurely and frantic. This is where I should be in this moment, I thought looking out over the crowd, frozen into music, as the clock carries us into the unknown.

VI.

On Saturday, I left the house at eight o'clock to buy poster board and markers at CVS. I guess this means I'm doing it, I thought. The downpour started not long after, making the couch more and more appealing. But the purchase of the supplies had been the deciding point--at 10:30, I kissed Sean, got back into my car, and navigated the watery highway to church.

I'm still processing a lot from the Atlanta women's march. My primary response is that I'm so glad I went, and I'm proud that I went. I felt hopeful, empowered, part of something meaningful in this polarizing age (though there's the tension--this was polarizing, too)--to lift my heart and my voice and my sign for purposes much greater than just me. I could have easily cozied up with a blanket and a book, but I did what was, for this introvert, the tougher thing. I would have missed out on the camaraderie, the hope, the adrenaline in the midst of 60,000 strong, and then when I got home, the amazement of a Facebook feed full of march photos from all over the country and world.

I wrote on my sign, "Do Justice. Love Mercy. Walk Humbly," from the Book of Micah. And so though it wasn't specified, I walked for Korryn Gaines, Terence Crutcher, Sandra Bland, Trayvon Martin, and more. I walked to show my Muslim neighbors my support, because how would I feel if I were persecuted for the most important part of me, my faith? I walked because a white man can still spend only three months in prison after committing rape and assault on an unconscious girl. I walked because my gay and married friends are my best Christian role models. Because immigrants are what our country was built on. Because refugees have nowhere left to go, and if we truly believe in the American dream, it should include them. Because the separation of church and state is important. Because 70 degrees and tornado watches in January aren't normal.

I walked because he may not be the president that I wanted, but he is the president... And I know my privilege as a white straight female shows up even in that statement, in accepting that, but I hated when some on the other side did this to President Obama, did not claim him for deeper, uglier reasons than policy, and so I'm trying, just the slightest bit, by at least acknowledging that current reality. I walked because in the midst of that current reality, I want to do all I can to be part of the great light.

To me, this is where Jesus comes in. "I do not deny that we have a new president, but I do not have to follow his example," I wrote on Instagram. (A woman on MARTA said she saw a sign that read, "He's the president, but he's not my leader.") "I'm sure not great at it, but I'm trying to keep up with this dude from Nazareth, who I believe would have marched--was marching--alongside us today." Jesus (who was not white, by the way) loves us all, but he walked with those on the outskirts, with the oppressed, with those whose rights are threatened, with those who need their voices heard. My prayer is that the new president ends up doing the same. But whether or not he does, my prayer is that I end up doing the same.

Another response that I've had after reading the thoughts of both strangers and people I look up to on social media (oh that oxymoronic space, blessing and curse, isolator and community-builder), is realizing that I need to be more humble, and recognize that I simply overcame my introvert-ism and rain clouds for five hours on one Saturday, when women and men of color and all personality types have been marching for decades in all kinds of weather, waiting for the majority of whites to join in.

No alternative facts here; just a convicting and true truth.

I think about Bree Newsome, leading us to breathe, in and out, in and out... Becoming aware of an unconscious behavior.

Because I'm not a march person, or I haven't been in the past. And I know I wouldn't have gone on Saturday if a group from church hadn't proactively gotten together and made it relatively easy for me to get there. I believe Black Lives Matter, but do I really if I haven't been to a march or a rally? I waved to the cops in their raincoats, said thank you, they smiled and waved cheerfully back, but if I were at a Black Lives Matter march, would they be as open, as smiling under riot gear?

And there's also the matter of intersectionality, which Facebook friends have brought up and educated me about as well--the truth that white feminism and the lives and rights of black women have not typically gone hand in hand. As one sign on Saturday read, "Feminism without intersectionality is just white supremacy." And the reminder on multiple other signs that while 94% of black women voted for Hillary Clinton, 53% of white women voted for Donald Trump. So I'm asking myself: What is my role, as a white woman who voted for Hillary Clinton, who can barely comprehend why a woman of any race would vote for Trump (and I know that there are also women who can barely comprehend why a woman of any color would vote for Clinton) in starting conversations with my fellow white women who are Trump supporters? I hardly know any in the first place, and those I do are family members who I don't know that well and don't want to be completely ostracized from. How can I use my privilege to listen and speak to others of privilege who I don't understand (and then share my own side)? 

Breathe in, breathe out... "Every person has within them the ability to be a changemaker."

I saw a Facebook post yesterday by Leah Peterson addressed to white women (she's white too), and I feel like I'm doing what she says not to do: "I see you out there, marching and trying to be better than you were last year, last month, last week, yesterday. I see you trying to figure out how to be an ally to the Black community and to other marginalized groups. I am too...And then I see you read something from a person who is expressing their hurt and anger, one of our Black sisters, and your old programming comes right back up *bloop* and it's hard to not just grab those old feelings and put them right back on...Stop. Just stop. Our Black sisters and other marginalized friends have every right to be angry and frustrated and impatient and sarcastic or anything else they want to be. Because they are expressing THEIR LIVED EXPERIENCE." 

She's so very right. As a writer of real life, I can attest to the value of expressing your lived experience--most especially, the value and gift of others sitting with you in it without judgment, and even better, in support and understanding.

Peterson goes on, "The best thing you can do is take in all those feelings coming from our sisters who are hurting and angry and OWN IT. Remind yourself that yes, you're trying because THIS is how they feel. You're doing what you're doing because it's RIGHT and it's how humans with empathy and sympathy and a working heart should live their lives once they figure it out."

Breathe in, breathe out... What will be my contribution? Where will I jump in to help humanity lift itself up? To lift my fellow women of all backgrounds up, especially those who have been without my encouragement?

I'm grateful that Peterson wrote those words and shared them. I hope and pray I'm owning it, hope and pray that I can hold both of those responses--my pride and gratitude in participating, my humility and knowledge of much more to be done--in tension with one another, respecting myself, those I marched with, and those who have been marching long before me.

The one thing I wish I had done more of in the midst of the energetic, jazz band, cheering and chanting 1.7 miles: Talk to people I didn't know. At one point, I turned my phone around to take a selfie in the midst of the throng. I put it back in my pocket immediately, didn't look at the resulting photo. But when I got home, I noticed the woman just over my right shoulder. Beautiful, African-American, smiling underneath her baseball cap. Her eyes also reaching my camera.

I wish, so badly, that I had sensed her presence, turned around, and introduced myself. Or just turned around in the first place to do more than snap photos.

Next time. Because for me--for all of us, especially those of us who are growing in this knowledge--there needs to be a next time.

This piece of writing doesn't really have an end. I don't feel like it can, because here we are, still working. Still grappling. Here I am, still trying to explore myself and the systematic elements of privilege that have deep roots. None of it completely hits the nail on the head, all of it is imperfect. What I say in this moment is not the end all be all. It's just a start. But, being me, I had to write it down. 

And though this piece can't really have an ending, I do believe that the the week itself ended with planting. Clearing the old pine straw out of a circle of soil, and finding soft, fresh dirt underneath the hard surface. Fashioning space for new roots to grow out from where they began, watering so that color will blossom. So that, planted side by side in an unbroken circle, we can learn and work together to be the great light.

My word for 2017:

Grounded. That's what I want my 2017 to feel like.

No, I'm not talking teenagers in timeout.

For me, grounded means keeping in mind always who I am and whose I am.

Feeling glad and grateful for my personality, my extroverted introvert self, my loud laughter, my low maintenance beauty regimen, and even my foibles, the lessons I have to keep learning.

Taking comfort in who I belong to--God, family, friends.

Holding fast to the communities and relationships that embrace me with love and accountability--my marriage, my church, my coworkers, loved ones and kin who know me best.

When I think of living out 2017 in a grounded way, I also think about being present.

Not turning to my phone when I have a free moment, or a bored one.

Looking someone in the eye when I pass them rather than looking down. Or, gazing up at the sky and trees instead of at my feet.

Concentrating more on relationships built and grown face-to-face, or ear-to-ear, or pen-to-paper. Starting a conversation with a stranger.

Keeping "good secrets," as Rachel Held Evans says (#13 over here), and getting over the Fear Of Missing Out that our screen-oriented world has begun to ingrain.

Completing one task without a dozen other tabs open.

I mulled many other words for the year this weekend during my brainstorming.

Fearless, open, ally.

Seeking, listening, still.

Gospel ("Good News"), simple, light.

Centered, steadfast, stalwart.

And as I began to notice a pattern (see those last three), I finally settled on grounded.

Because in my mind, being grounded in who I am and whose I am will pave the way for me to strengthen the other words and concepts that I believe in.

My word for the year starts with me, but doesn't end with me. It's about centering myself, grounding myself, so that I can learn to better live with and serve others. I feel that "grounded," in one word, combines the concepts of presence and community. And that's what I want to convey, to myself and to the world.

By living an intentionally grounded year, I aim for my knowledge and love of myself and my communities to provide a strong foundation so that my courage, openness, compassion, and action toward others can grow. If I start from a point of grounding, of calm, then I hope I can respond strongly and positively to the unknown challenges and opportunities that will come through in 2017.

Grounded in who I am and whose I am, so that I may reach out to others. This year, that's always where I want to begin.

Haven't done this practice before? Head over to my friend Rosie's site, where I first learned about it, to hear what she has to say. And I'd love to know: What word are you claiming for 2017?

Happy New Year!

November Joys

Oh, friends, if you couldn't tell from my blogging nonexistence over here, November took it out of me. And yet, there were so many good moments in those 30 days!

- Heard author and food pantry founder Sara Miles speak in person. I first read her memoir Take This Bread: A Radical Conversion seven years ago during my ministry internship, and led a book discussion on it that same summer. She shared many good words on this night, including: "The healing of our communities requires faith to sit down and eat with others, especially strangers, especially the 'wrong' people."

- Ran my first 5K! Sean and I joined his colleagues in the annual Strong Legs Run benefiting Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, and we literally ran the whole thing, which I wasn't sure I'd be able to do, either physically or mentally. But thanks to my pace setter husband, the strength training I've been doing, and the refreshing early-morning air, we jogged through a quiet downtown ATL in less than 30 minutes. Needless to say, I was very proud, and we then enjoyed a delicious brunch with friends at Six Feet Under. Fun to explore more of our home city this way!

- Well, November 9 dawned, and let's be honest, I wasn't in the greatest of emotional states. I haven't written about it much at all, because I felt like a lot of people were writing about it, and I don't know that I would have added much to the noise on either side. But I was grateful to be able to go into a workplace where I could talk, exchange stunned looks, shed a few tears, eat doughnuts, and process what had happened and what to do next. Two things that struck me right away were that I

1) need to pay attention to others when I'm in public places, not look at my phone, but instead see where I can break down walls and connect with strangers

2) need to be more proactive in getting to know our actual neighbors, those who live on our street

Not to mention needing to listen more in general.  

- I'm grateful that I belong to communities that open doors for these thoughts to be put into actions. That very evening, less than 24 hours after the election, I attended a Round Table dinner, a setting meant to foster intentional conversations between people of all sorts. It was so very refreshing to sit and get to know the women at my table, beautiful inside and out, and to share pieces of my own story--but mostly, the gift was to listen. The questions we discussed were:

1) Think of a time in your life when a neighbor has become a stranger.

2) Think of a time when a stranger has become a neighbor.

3) How can we find common ground during this time in our nation and world?

If you are in the Atlanta area, I encourage you to check back on the website above to learn more, and if you're in a different place, I encourage you to find something similar to this in your own community.

- My writing group has been going strong this semester, and I've felt extra grateful for these folks, for their words, and for our ability to share, because I do believe that one of the only ways to untangle from the web of divisiveness is to share our stories with one another. This also was the case just last week, when I was able to facilitate a series of personal writing prompts with a group of coworkers; sharing our life experiences is truly one of the most sacred practices I can think of.

- We celebrated my sweet sister-in-law kicking off a new decade, and simultaneously learned that we're going to be an aunt and uncle this summer! So very excited.

- I've gotten to spend time with a lot of good friends in November--from lunches and ice cream dates with coworkers to breakfast with college friends, plus a long crisp walk and dinner with girls I've known since birth, it's been important for my well-being to catch up with these lovely souls.

- And, on the other end of the spectrum (but equally important), we have actually gotten a chance to meet several of our neighbors over the past few weeks, which has been a gift, and has made me mindful of creating opportunities to meet more soon (holiday baked goods, anyone?). 

- The Thanksgiving holiday was relaxing and delicious, and once again made me grateful for the collection of family I've been given, by blood and spirit.

- RAIN! Praise Jesus, enough said.

- Finally, Sean and I enjoyed our annual Harry Potter movie marathon over the span of the month. This year, it meant something deeper to me, and I've started rereading the books to pin it down even further; because this year, I've been especially mindful of the bravery and courage that my favorite fictional teenagers showed at every turn, as their world turned more and more dangerous. At the start, they were often courageous because they were young and naive and didn't know any better (or accidentally ran into the third-floor corridor and came face to face with a three-headed dog). But as they grew, with each new encounter with evil and fear--and perhaps more importantly, with each new encounter with good, with friendship, with loyalty--their bravery and determination to defend the oppressed, whether they knew them well or not, transformed into something purposeful and driven. They realized they were fighting for something bigger than themselves, and yet it was because of the small moments with one another, because of relationships they had forged, that they were spurred to fight in the first place (along with a prophecy or two). And even in the midst of the dark moments, they were always able to find gratitude, humor, and encouragement.

What about you? What gave you joy this November, and what are you looking forward to in December?