Thursday, July 21, 2011

Childhood Scenes


“Childhood scenes rushed back at me out of the night, strangely close and urgent. Today I know that such memories are the key not to the past, but to the future.  I know that the experiences of our lives, when we let God use them, become the mysterious and perfect preparation for the work He will give us to do.” – Corrie Ten Boom, The Hiding Place

It’s Wednesday night, and I am leaving home on Saturday morning.  I planned a big farewell party for myself so this week would lead up to a celebration instead of a loss.  It is working. 

I am sitting alone in the dining room of my sleeping house.  All of the belongings coming with me to Connecticut are piled high all around me.  Although I have ruthlessly pared down to the bare necessities, the amount of material I must haul across the country is daunting.  How will it furnish an entire new life on an opposite shore?

This week I believe I gave away a solid third of my clothes.  As I started packing, there were relics from a past life that didn’t seem to have a place in the new chapter.  I found the white linen shirt I wore on my first real date.  I was fifteen, and my beau took me downtown LA to the California Club for dinner.  The shirt had bows on the shoulders; I had purchased it because of the photos I’d seen of my mother on her honeymoon wearing a white shirt with bows on the shoulders.  I tried it on.  I remembered the intensity of that evening, so in love with my date I could barely breathe as we sat on a terrace shadowed by the beautiful Los Angeles Public Library.  There were potted palms around our table and a classical guitarist played in the corner.  The memory filled me with remembered love, and I gave the linen shirt away. 

Likewise with a white cotton skirt I purchased at age sixteen in an open-air market in the south of France.  I was with my dear friend Margaux.  The trip came at the end of a painful and miserable academic year I spent in northwestern France, and the purchase marked the return of sunshine and laughter to my life.  It also commemorated the advent of my independence – I could travel across foreign countries alone, speak the local language, transact with currency I had earned myself, and make decisions about my wardrobe without consulting anyone.  I wore the skirt on walks through Provencal towns and while I read Somerset Maugham on the Mediterranean shore at L’Hôtel Belles Rives on the Cap D’Antibes.  F. Scott Fitzgerald lived in that hotel while he wrote Tender is the Night.  I remember sitting at the end of the dock alone with a glass of sherry I’d charged to my room while an enormous moon filled the black bay with scintillating light.  The water was luminous with pale, cool wonder, and I gazed upon it as if it was all a giant platter being offered to me so I could pick my adventure.  The whole world flashed and danced before me on that Mediterranean bay and every inch of it seemed utterly available to me.

Next went a thick wooly grey skirt I’d purchased in a little shop in Vienna at age nineteen.  I badly wanted to see Vienna at Christmastime, so during my year abroad in Italy I stopped there for a few days before flying home to spend the holidays with my family in California.  The weather was absolutely terrible and freezing – but oh what a pleasure to keep warm in a city designed to let one do so in such gilded luxury.  With my friend Lauren I raced over a mile through a slushy blizzard to see Sigmund Freud’s apartment before it closed, wet snow driven sideways into my inadequate clothing as we got lost and more lost.  We made it at last, and after the odd tour through the odd doctor’s dwelling decided to spend our evening at the Sacher Hotel sipping muddy coffee and indulging in the famous chocolate torte.  I decided the days of a student’s standard for travel attire were over.  I saw the skirt in a window, bought it, and contemplated the importance of my life’s aesthetic while I ate my torte.  If I desired beauty, then for beauty I would labor. 

I also discarded a red and blue skirt I wore on a tour of Morocco with my brother at age twenty-one, my first real rough-and-tumble jaunt through a really foreign land.  I wore it while the locals gawked and snickered at us when we were served sheep’s brains and when a monkey climbed up my body while I was buying spices for my mother.  I discarded some kakhis I pulled out of the end-of-the-term Goodwill box in my boarding school dormitory, an old boyfriend’s lacrosse shorts, the first designer dress I bought in Paris.

I have continued to dig and pack and give away.  In the course of this personal archaeology, this move seems to be as much about the past as it is about the future.  These items are monuments to the instances of great change in my life, and they have had their time.  As I sort my things, I am breathless to find over and over again the same thing: I have gotten what I wanted.  I sought adventure and romance and I have gotten it.  I have ached for understanding and scraped away at hard fact to find real Truth.  I have left and I have returned, I have gotten together and broken up. 

At age twenty-five, I feel I am just reaching a critical mass of memories to begin proving that God’s promises are, in fact, true.  As memories continue to race through my mind, I understand that they are not being sent to me by mere Nostalgia, but by Hope itself – that I might be buoyed up into a more stately mansion by the goodness they prove.  

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

"How poor they are that have not patience?  What wound did ever heal but by degrees?" - Shakespeare

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Maid and Mother



I am amused tonight to look back over my old posts on this blog.  I established this little space to use as a storyboard, I suppose.  If I could throw my hopes and ideas and worries upon this black square maybe I’d be able to stand back, observe them, understand them, and in a flurry move all the index cards this way and that until the story included the three acts, the joys and sorrows, the character development, the action, the intensity, the romance that I wanted. 

Many of my last posts were about the “blank slate” I was facing after I left my job at the Pepperdine law school to live at home and “take my time about things” for the duration of one year.  I entered the time with very few actual goals.  I wanted to apply for and be admitted to a graduate program, both of which, praise the Lord, have come to pass.  But other than that, I think my aim was to make peace with two of my “selves” who seemed to constantly push against one another – the one that aches to sit, observe, pray, and listen, and the one that never stops striving to win, achieve, see, do, and dominate. 

Shortly before his conversion to Christianity, C. S. Lewis wrote a poem called “Reason.”  I’ve copied the first fourteen lines here:

Set on the soul’s acropolis the reason stands
A virgin arm’d, commercing with celestial light,
And he who sins against her has defiled his own
Virginity; no cleansing makes his garment white;
So clear is reason.  But how dark, imagining,
Warm, dark, obscure and infinite, daughter of Night:
Dark is her brow, the beauty of her eyes with sleep
Is loaded, and her pains are long, and her delight.
Tempt not Athene.  Wound not in her fertile pains
Demeter, not rebel against her mother-right. 
Oh who will reconcile in me both maid and mother,
Who will make in me a concord of the depth and height?
Who make imagination’s dim exploring touch
Ever report the same as intellectual sight?

(Before I continue, I must give credit to Malcolm Guite for first drawing my attention to this poem and explaining the meaning of the “maid and mother” paradox I will discuss below.  His excellent essay about which is in the Cambridge Companion to C.S. Lewis.)

Lewis begins by discussing the stark world of “reason” – the Athens of the soul.  The part that looks logically upon all things.  The part that looks upon the defiled and determines that “no cleansing can make his garment white.”  The “maid.”

Lewis then uses a delicious succession of adjectives to describe the alternative: “warm, dark, obscure and infinite…/her pains are long, and her delight.”  The “mother.”  The part that imagines and hopes for the unreasonable.  The foggy part that seems to constantly be in a state of vague yet formidable longing. 

However shall these warring components of our souls make peace?  This particular wording is essential – the Virgin Mary, of course, was both maid and mother when Christ was born.  In Him, through her, cold logic and warm imagination not only coexist but are dependent on one another.  Let us here feel the weight of the word “reconciliation.”  In the name of Love, our faults are reconciled against the debt we owe.  In the name of love, our contradictory desires in life no longer battle but pull one another ever higher and higher.  In the name of Love, two truths that disagree meet in Truth. 

During my “year off,” I did not take a road trip across the United States.  I did not backpack Southeast Asia.  I did not write a novel.  What did I do?  I fasted. 

Technically my fasting lasted from Ash Wednesday until Easter (I did the Daniel Fast for the duration of Lent), but truly this entire year has been a fast from the lifestyle I have lead for as long as I can remember.  Except for my grad school applications, I competed for absolutely nothing and had no practical responsibilities whatsoever. 

Donald S. Whitney says fasting "hoists the sails of the soul in hopes of catching the gracious winds of God's spirit."  And oh, have I.  This year my sails have learned to undulate with billowing gusts of grace upon grace as they slice through the wild and untamed winds of God’s spirit.  My spirit is unburdened and trusting, and I have never felt more humble or more empowered at the same time.  I have never felt more free yet more controlled.  See?  Paradox. 

I once read about a Sufi master who taught, "One has achieved wisdom when he experiences immediate joy when sudden disappointment hits."  I'm still working on the "immediate" part, but I learned this year that sorrow is, in the long run, an occasion for greater joy.  Anxiety is an opportunity for reconciliation, and conviction of wrongs only the arrival of hope that all paths will be made straight.  This year my restless heart has found its true rest.  As I jump back into busy life, I pray this peace will endure.  But if not, I will speak praise for the more stately chambers my God will urge my soul to one day inhabit.