Saturday, November 2, 2013

Lessons Learned. . . . when the 40 year old signs up to chaperon the Middle School all nighter


  • It's really OK to sign up and see what keeps those 6th - 8th graders going all night. Even if you are old enough to be their mom (or even if a few of them call you mom).
  • What keeps them going is 40% cool activities, 20% "I'd die if anyone takes a picture of me sleeping", and 40% large amounts of caffeine, last weeks Halloween candy, and cold pizza.
  • You can gain a new appreciation for the abilities and insights of their 20 year old leaders. Stood stunned as a a very young leader stood in front of the locker rooms and loudly directed youth to the right side based on gender, because some of them think it's funny to head the wrong way, and others are already out of it enough that they are just following the person ahead of them, regardless what the picture on the door says. Old dogs can learn new tricks. Even ones who've been around the block.
  • With a little wisdom and energy conservation you can keep up with the 20 year olds. Let them go up and down all the stairs to ride water slides with the kids - you stay at the bottom and help pull extra tubes out of the lazy river, or hang out with the girls on the lounge chairs who don't want to mess up their hair by getting wet. You'll learn a lot even by doing that.
  • You do not need to change into a bathing suit. 6th - 8th grade girls (and boys too) are painfully body conscious. So are 40 year old women with spare tires. Difference is the water fun does not have to entice you the same amount.
  • Remember to bring a camera next year, so that you look like you are doing something profitable after the extra inner-tubes in the lazy river have all been co-opted, and you are wandering around in jeans and a T.


  • The best lines in the leader manual came under the instructions for the waterpark:
      • Do not let students fall asleep in the lazy river.
      • Do not fall asleep in the lazy river. 
    • Also during training, when the 20 year old leading this says that they do not want any kids getting decapitated, control your imagination. Do not let these pep talks unnerve you - remember that you'll probably only need a band aid out of the med kit - or the bodily fluids clean up kit for the kid who ate too much pizza - at most. You can handle that, and if you can't, you get to find the same 20 year old who led training to do it.
    • Take a turn in the back of the bus. You know, the spot where all of the leaders are avoiding because the kids are acting like the reputation that middle school students have. But don't take every turn there, unless you connect with some of that crowd. Allow yourself the joy of sitting with a sweet sixth grader whose goal for the night is to stay up the whole time and who will talk about favorite movies, books, and games to not nod off. And it's really super cool if they like Legos, Lord of the Rings and Star Wars just like you do.
    • When that one kid is missing, again, from their turn in the bowling line-up, it is OK to sub for them. It is also OK to roll gutter balls and have totally-awkward-rusty-I-haven't-done-this-in-20-years form. It is OK to laugh at yourself, knowing you have given some very green 6th graders hope that they aren't the worst in the room. It is not OK to re-injure the rotator cuff - choose the 6 lb pink bowling ball that the little girl who weighs 60 lbs is using - It really is the smart choice, it's going in the gutter no matter how much it weighs so do yourself a favor on this one. 
    • Be thankful for youth who are learning, even the hard way, to use spending money. Be extra thankful for vendors and cashiers who are putting up with 300+ youth who are learning to do this at 2:30 in the morning.
    • Watch for the coolness of a majority of those kids minding their Ps & Qs. Nothing is cooler than polite middle school students - especially if you are the cashier who ended up drawing the short straw on this event.
    • Remember to bring your camera next year. And pat yourself on the back for having a few tricks up your sleeves too. That kid who was deciding to channel Miley Cyrus at 3am on the table at the bowling alley - well he listened when you said you were digging for your camera, so that you could send his mom a video. You might not know his mom, but the advantage of being 40 - is that you look like you might.
    • While we are at it - other things to bring next year as a chaperon - 
      • a watch (yup, long story how you ended up out the door without one, but they do come in handy - especially because every 10 minutes a 6th grader will ask you what time it is), 
      • a pair of safety scissors. The "no weapons" rule undoes the use of the handy dandy pocket knife, but a pair of safety scissors is wonderful at trimming wristbands, opening water flats, and making snowflakes out of the game print out with that bored but craft minded young lady you had in 5th grade Sunday School class last year. 
      • home-made cookies, half price Halloween candy, or cans of Pringles - do not under estimate the power of a pod leader who has snacks for their kids (or how light your wallet could get if you look at the cost of buying for a group at a venue).
      • face paint! The kids like to match their bus color - and the bowling alley has UV - time to test out those neat rave paints that I have in the kit!!
      • a pen, because you need to write down the names of the kids in your group, your memory isn't what the 20-year olds is and it helps to refer back to that list - unfortunately if all you could grab was a highlighter lying on the floor- the only place you will be able to read said list is in the UV light at the bowling alley.
    • Activities such as this, where 350 students, 50 leaders, snacks, and clipboards have to arrive in a timely fashion at various locations throughout the night on eight different school buses. . . . well it is a great opportunity to appreciate the incredible thought, effort, and magic put forward by the unseen gurus of all things organizational and color coded - Katee you rock!
    • Cool parents tell their own offspring which bus they will be on, not so their kids can ride with them, but so their kids can choose to not ride with them.
    • However, when you've stood in line for almost an hour to ride the go-carts, get to the top of the line to discover that you've lost your wristband and cannot do go-carts, laser-tag, skills maze, or bumper cars for the remainder of your time at the arcade - a hug from you mom is actually OK. especially if she buys you donuts to soften the blow.
    • Middle school students, even the good kids, are not  prone to cleaning up the bus at 5am - this is part of your job description - you're a mom and very used to this - so help out the 20 year old bus captain who really needs a break after his turn in the back of the bus.
    • Remember to bring your camera, this all purpose tool comes in handy to capture the joy of being able to sleep under a table or in the hallway after having made it through the breakfast line.
    • Hold onto those really cool things. Sam's grandpa - I want to be like you when I grow up. While I stand here at 40 - you're here a generation ahead of me - and you were riding the waterslides like a pro and showing the kids how to play pinball at the arcade. You definitely have the "coolest chaperon" award in my book.
    • Tired 20 year old chaperons will stay an extra 30 minutes to watch the end of Monsters University, even after the kids have all gone home.  Why? 
      • well they might not have seen it, because they don't have kids, and Avengers was probably higher on their to see list,
      • but they are young enough to connect with the original Monsters Inc. movie,
      • they are tired, 
      • and it's cool having done something like this and
      • you can just enjoy hanging out with your friends for the last quiet little bit.  A very wise program director let everyone have this moment, even though I am sure that he'd seen the movie with his children and equally as sure that he wanted to get out of there. But there was something magic about the moment -  
      • and it IS a great movie.
    • It is OK when you get home and reach for a glass of milk, if you accidentally pour out the whole milk instead of the skim. You probably more than made up for those calories.
    • For all the details we are in control of - there is nothing like spending the night with a bunch of middle school students to help you realize how much is infinitely out of our control, and it gives you a certain sense that the world is not swallowed up in that out of control chaos, but that God is working all the lines together and weaving a tapestry out of which kids make it onto which bus, which kids you connect with, which kids connect with each other, and what random events happen over the course of a single night.

    Monday, September 16, 2013

    Bye bye blue and other stories from the land of lost minds

    This last Saturday I danced through the living room gleefully singing "I'm not crazy, so not crazy, not going crazy today!" in a continuous loop at the top of my singing volume (which let's be honest, isn't too terribly loud, because I've never been confident in musical matters.) It caused every one of my children to look at me like I had indeed lost my mind, and perhaps it was because the tune was from "There is a song that makes you crazy" or it could be that they have never seen me sing and dance my way through the living room. Ever. Because my dancing skills are even worse than my singing, and I probably treat life more like a sci-fi movie than a musical - just personality that's all.

    But I had genuine cause for celebration, because the week had been one of mental stress on a few points. Enough stress that I had at one point thought I was mentally loosing it. To understand my journey this week you need to understand that my thought processes are very rooted in what I see visually. I am driven by color and texture, and have that "knack" for designing things. Perhaps it's my art minor kicking in, I don't know but it plays a hefty role in the events to follow.

    On Tuesday I bought a car load of pool noodles for a youth event. 30 to be exact, 10 in each color. I know this because I drove to three different stores to find each color. (Let's be honest, pool noodles are not the typical mid-September find, the school supplies are being placed on the clearance racks, Halloween is appearing in full force. Pool noodles? Pool noodles were so June. So I considered my three store trip a huge success story.) The back of my mini van was happily filled with orange aqua and bright blue noodles.

    On Wednesday I went to a friends house with a bag full of X-acto knives, rolls of duct tape, and electrical tape with the full intent of creating 30 noodle lightsabers. You know, one of those charming Pinterest ideas that you think would be totally cool to do. And it was cool. Fun, easy, a great way to spend time talking and planning with a friend. Only one thing bugged me. We only had the orange and aqua noodles. The blue ones weren't in the van anymore.

    I wracked my mind trying to think where I had put them. I hadn't thought I had taken any out of the van. After all I knew I'd have to put them right back in. Could it be possible that someone stole them out of my van? But why take noodles and not the GPS, or the case of DVDs? And why just the blue ones? Nothing made sense, and so I figured that I must've taken an armload out of the van thinking I'd come back and get the rest later. I went home and combed my house for any space large enough to contain 10 blue pool noodles. Then I combed through it again. It bugged me, and I had a hard time letting it go (maybe because I also knew I couldn't replace them, until next June since I'd bought the last of them.Or maybe because the money wasn't mine but money from the youth group. Either way I searched my house a lot with no positive results.)

    On Thursday, I visited my husbands work for a special meal that they were having. It's one of those places where you sign in and they give you a name badge that proudly marks you as a VISITOR in bright red letters on a white adhesive backdrop. Or at least I thought that until I went to the washroom later and caught sight of the badge in the mirror. The red letters were still present, but the badge was a brilliant cobalt blue. I shook my head, I was sure it had been white. I  just kept going forward - though I briefly thought about tearing the badge to bits and jumping up and down on it's remains for causing me such anxiety. Then I remembered that I was at my husbands work and such antics would not  reflect well. Thankfully my social filter was on.

    In reality they were very small things. Dollar store pool noodles and a name badge that was a different color than I thought I saw. But those small things now had me on a mental edge. What else was I going to loose or see as different than it was. Unnerving.

    Then my first break came. One of my husbands co-workers came by and in the course of small-talk said "I see you've been outside." then at my confused look "You're badge, it's blue - they are sensitive to the light - they turn blue if you've been outside." "Oh, oh yes! I've been outside." I am positively sure that my suddenly chesire cat grin of relief was not the polite reaction that should have come from such a conversation. I am also sure that I definitely hit "socially awkward". But I didn't care. I had seen the badge right. Both times. I no longer wanted to tear my badge up and jump up and down on it. No I just wanted to do that to whatever team of scientists, PR, and security that thought that color changing badges was a good thing. I mean come on - what weighs more, the security of your complex or the mental stability of one visually oriented housewife. Sigh.

    The second break came Saturday morning when we were dividing up the pool noodles (and thus counting them) into two separate groups. 10 orange and 20 aqua. Yup that pretty much started the song and dance routine. I'm assuming the heat in my car, or the light in my car, or the aliens that took my van for a joy ride on Tuesday night, changed the color of the blue noodles to aqua. So why hadn't I counted them before? Good question and I honestly don't have an answer. I would have saved me a great deal of mental stress.

    I am sure that there is some takeaway here. Something profound about angels rejoicing over what was lost being found again. Or learning to live in a world that is not colorfast. Or, patience with those who are battling dementia. Or a little tiny bite of what loosing your mental abilities does start to feel like - like how little things make you feel so out of control so quickly. Or how to learn to let go of little things (I clearly need work there.) But for today I am content to laugh. The singing and dancing has passed, much to my children's vast relief, and I can laugh at myself. Perhaps because I'm blogging you can laugh too. A good laugh goes a long way. And I'll hit the analyze button on another day.


    This Is The Stuff 

    Francesca Battistelli




    Tuesday, August 27, 2013

    Because I needed a friend. . . .

    My compartmentalized life has started to fray a bit in this season of "back to school" transition. The to do list has spilled over into several different areas, and the frenetic excitement of change and "new" has in some areas started to wear thin.

    There's the ministry compartment which is buzzing with activity, nerves, and excitement as Todd and I set out to host a junior high home group this year with the girls. A recent training retreat was everything we could have imagined and so much more - energizing and challenging us.

    There's the home front which is still getting re-booted after a nasty virus hit the kids ( and now me). Doctor visits, check, dentist, check, ortho - well after this week, check, play dates, check, birthday parties, check, squeezing what we can into the very end of summer vacation.

    Boxes of school supplies sit in the doorway to be carted to various open houses - there isn't a night this week that isn't booked solid with some meeting or activity.

    And I'm exhausted.

    I know that some of it is just being sick. (Why is it that mom always gets it last?)

    But I also know that there is another cause lurking in the shadows. It's the one I don't talk about.

    A leader in our church that I respect a lot chats with me on our way down the hallway. "How are you doing?" he asks "I'm great!" I fire back with a conviction that has no roots in reality.

    I talk with other folks and we converse about how it can be draining to be an introvert. It's an easy topic. It has elements of truth to it and I can blame my exhaustion on it. But the real truth is that I'm more than tired, more than sick.

    There is a piece of my soul that is raw.
    So simple a problem.

    In this back to school season, I am not going back to school.

    At the beginning of the summer I agonized over my digital  resume, splitting hairs over word choices and nuances. Then the applications went out, the essays were written,  the online questions answered, the Gallup surveys taken, and the waiting started.

    Waiting for one call. Just one. An interview offered, a chance, an attempt to show that I would be a good fit for the need presented. It would just take one call, one e-mail. Just one - if it was the right one. Just one.

     I studied for that one interview. Made flashcards so that I could remember the many steps in an IEP, what IEE stands for, the types of RTI, and tables of CBMs.

    The phone never rang. No e-mails came. With a week to school I have slowly watched every position fill, holding out hope for the very last one which has remained open for applications - until yesterday. When I found out that one was no longer available.

    So I am not going back to school. At least not this year. Not yet. Not now.

    My brain totally gets that God is in control, he can see the future I can't. He has plans that are good for me. My brain knows that.

    But my emotions are raw with a feeling of rejection, raw with the sharp edges of a broken dream. A box labeled "hope" opened and found empty. Yeah, my brain has it right and eventually it will prevail. But tonight I was hurting. Behind every smile and assurance that my summer has been a good one, was a mess - a busted up sense of my own self worth.

    I met new people tonight and we talked about stuff. But you can't tell someone new about the holes inside you. You can't tell a lot of people that you would give a broad general label of "friends". I needed a friend that was more than someone whose facebook photos I hit the like button on. Just one. Just one real friend. That was all I needed. Just one.

    God didn't send me a phone call, he didn't send me an interview, but he did send me that friend.

    Someone who knows right now what raw feels like; but who could set it aside for a hug - yeah that's right a hug. I don't touch people and I don't generally like to be touched. But I am learning that sometimes I need it, and this is one person that I can let do that. Because they get it. She understands that my head is in the right place and that I want to put all my emotions in a hole and go where my head is at. Yet while I can compartmentalize school and church and board meetings and projects, I cannot seem to get out of the same hole that I want to stow my feelings in. She gets it.

    It makes me breathe easier. It helps remind me that there are hopes that are unseen that fit into the box I thought was empty. A simple hug. Just one. Just one true friend. Thank you God, because tonight I needed a friend. Just one.

    Wednesday, July 24, 2013

    Freedom

    I am working on several themed duct tape book satchels today. My most challenging one is for Exploint No More and is supposed to be on the topic of freedom.

    The term freedom in this case means freedom from human trafficking, sexual exploitation, and on a deeper level, spiritual freedom from those dark places.

    It's hard to find an image that I want to use. I can immediately bypass the images of the American flag, Lady Liberty, bald eagles - even one of an upended M-16 with a soldiers helmet reminding me of the cost that we pay. But this is a different cost and a different war.

    I can't seem to bond with images of birds or butterflies being set free, while some are very beautiful - I feel they speak to the animals freedom and today I don't feel very much like a bird. Though I would love the freedom of flight. Broken shackles and chains reminds me of different types of prison, and I realize that today I am locked into a very literal mood on a concept that can't be so literally defined.

    There are themes - humans jumping for joy - arms outstretched with abandon. Jumping into the surf, jumping in a field of flowers, jumping off cliffs. . . .  that last one chimes.

    Why this one? After all jumping off a cliff has a good chance of a messy ending. Casts, traction, years of therapy, metal implants, and coffins are decidedly not images of freedom. From someone who at one point contemplated suicide as a form of freedom - I guess I could see it from that angle. But I don't think that these images are speaking to the dark thoughts I had in that stage of my life.

    These jumps are about letting go - for me - of fears that hold  back. I am deeply acrophobic, and a slew of other unreasonable fears have started to creep in at various points in my life. Try explaining "fear of waterparks" to your teenager. I detest social conflict so much that I become unsociable. Solitude suits me well, even though I know it is unhealthy. I would love to jump away from these fears, and maybe even away from the boundaries of the "common sense" logic that often drives my decision making.

    I would love to jump away from unspoken social rules that dictate who I am and what I can do, housework, squabbling kids, mommy guilt, the need to decide what is for supper.

    And with that statement I realize if I take that jump I will find rocks at the bottom of my cliff. Somethings we do need to try and escape - we should be looking for ways to end injustice and suffering. And God doesn't want his children bound by fear. There are things we should desire freedom from.

    Other times, while a break from the "mom job" might be quite healthy, dropping the role altogether isn't real freedom. Freedom from social interaction is another one of those areas, though I have less success in stating reasons why - call it a gut instinct. Maybe it is the fact that we need to be cautious about desiring a freedom from responsibility - in any of it's forms. Whether that is deciding on tonight's menu or recognizing that human trafficking is right outside my door and that I need to do what I can to help.

    So my mind circles this morning, picking at the concept of freedom. Time to stop mulling it over and get out my duct tape.

    Monday, July 22, 2013

    Confidence

    I  did something last week that a few years ago I never would have thought possible. I stepped in as a last minute driver for a youth group work team. Doesn't sound so big, but for me it was. I grew up in a tiny town with one stop light. As a teen driver I drove blocks out of my way to avoid the light on Main and Center, and that pattern continued into adult life. As a young married, I walked everywhere I could trying to avoid driving. Finally as a young mom, I got used to a minivan, but only on roads and paths that I knew. Google Maps made a cross country vacation an option. You would laugh to see the printed out collection of maps and the time I spent on "street view" methodically making sure I knew how to get from the highway exit to the hotel parking lot. But even with Google, I wouldn't have tackled last weeks driving opportunity.

    Rush hour traffic, downtown congestion, parallel parking, one way streets, road construction. . . . combined with a van full of junior high students and destinations that I was totally unfamiliar with. Yet it happened. In large due to GPS. Probably the best $100 investment we have made in the last few years. It satisfies my visual nature giving me a nice pink line to follow. Even more important, if I miss a turn, run into construction, or veer off the path it calculates a route to the destination based on my new coordinates. I don't have to worry about getting lost, or navigating a map. Instead I can concentrate on traffic and driving. And that is just enough to make me a much more confident driver.

    I've been mulling over this concept of confidence a lot the last week or two. I'm not a highly confident person. I'm riddled with insecurity and self doubt. I feel socially inept, prone to saying the wrong thing and wondering when, if ever, I will have the confidence to tackle this squirelly moving entity called "life."

    I think one of my biggest problems is that I have been looking for that confidence to come from within. And to be honest chances of that happening are slimmer than me being able to get through a metro area in a bus full of preschoolers. cats, and frogs without electronic navigation.

    Because I am so broken.
    I am self-centered, selfish even when I appear to be giving. Motives are so often focused inwards.
    I carry my emotional baggage around hoping someone will notice how much I'm struggling, and get upset when there isn't any comfort. Then I get mad at myself for my inability to let go of that tattered baggage. I add a brand new set of luggage and bury myself in busyness. Trying to anesthetize my sense of brokeness. And then I try to do what many in the church have done, and I try to rejoice in my brokeness.

    It's a catch phrase to be certain. But think about it. When was the last time you saw a child thrilled that a favorite toy was broken? No, being broken isn't a cause for rejoicing, but grieving. So I am going to allow my self some space for grief. And then I am going to move on and look for a source of confidence outside of myself.
    But God showed his great love for us by sending Christ to die for us while we were still sinners. Romans 5:8 NLT
    But you, LORD, are a shield around me, my glory, the One who lifts my head high. Psalm 3:3 NIV

    I've come to the easy conclusion that my GPS is not an internal part of me. I don't have a satellite up-link in my brain (thank goodness and cue Dr. Who). Yet I've gained considerable confidence in having it sitting on the dash of my car.


    And now I need to focus on a God who loves me, even a broken me. I can gain confidence in that external source. I need a little practice, because focusing on God has gotten rusty as I've turned most of my thinking inwards. We are taught to be reflective, and at times I could say that is a strength. Yet I'm finding that constant internal evaluation can also be a symptom of self-absorption. And yeah, I've been walking that dusty road far too much lately.

    Time to lift up my head.
    No, scratch that. . .
    Time to look at God and let him do the lifting.

    Tuesday, June 18, 2013

    New familiar territory

    It doesn't seem like clicking a little button on a computer screen should mean so much to me. But it does.

    Wednesday, April 17, 2013

    Elven Plate Mail Project - Day 2


    Day 2


    Pattern-making is something that I really enjoy. Unlike a lot of the things I do, I find it is something that I can't really explain or teach. I do know that it involves a lot of "thinking through" the entire construction process. My poor client will receive a lot of questions today as I work on creating a template.

    On this particular project I start with the outer lines of the pattern pieces, then detail the interior. Since the larger pieces are made of smaller overlapping pieces I draw in the overlap with a different color ink and I place the rivet and grommet positions in.

     Then the 1st pattern gets cut apart traced onto green pattern paper and then taped back together  (to deal with the overlap) then traced for the next piece, taped back together, etc.

    I only pattern one side of the breast plate. The pattern pieces will get turned over and traced for the other side. In the process of patterning an interesting decision comes up. I bought a yard of brown vinyl, and that will be enough if I expose the rivets - riveting one plate to the next. However, I like the idea of hiding the rivets under the edge of each other - riveting them to another layer of vinyl underneath the plates. I think that it has a cleaner aesthetic, yet it will increase the cost (I'll need more vinyl) and the weight. So I need to communicate and get my client's preference on this decision before continuing.


    The client leans toward the aesthetic solution, so after procuring more vinyl it comes down to laying the pattern pieces out. There is more to this than simply trying to get the most out of your fabric. Vinyl is essentially a textured plastic coating adhered to a fabric background usually a knit. Knits are known as self-hemming. Meaning that you can cut them and they do not fray.

    The knit portion of the vinyl does have a direction.  That means it has something called bias. Bias means that the fabric stretches differently on horizontal, vertical, and diagonal axes. Often in sewing, pieces that are meant to drape or curve they are placed diagonally on the grain of the fabric. Examples could be skirt pieces and collars. With the vinyl much of the bias will be mitigated by the plastic side, however it is there a little bit in the knit portion of the fabric.

    So I cut the front of the breastplate pieces on a gradiated bias, because I want more curvature on the front than I want in the back - which is cut on a straight bias.

    One of the other things that became visually apparent as I worked on this was amount of material used in the construction. You can get a simple vest out of a half yard of fabric, but this is not a simple vest. All of those overlaps add up, both in material and time. I am working with 60" wide vinyl and have used almost 2 yards of it in cutting the pieces out. That is 30 square feet - which is a whole lot of leather. Leather costs for an abbreviated  breastplate (it doesn't cover the midsection of the torso) and rerebraces (cover the upper arm) would run me around $240, if I could get the right weight of leather on sale. (7.99/sqft of 5-6oz.) Start adding in the cost of rivets and buckles stains and finishes and a real leather set of armor is going to get out of the budget I have in no time. The vinyl I have to say usually runs $16.00 a yard and I got it for better than that. So the difference is about $200.

    That isn't to say that leather isn't worth it. If you can afford it, it is so worth the cost. But in many cases folks are looking at a costume that they cannot budget that much for.

    So end of day 2 and I have the pattern cut. On Day three I will be tracing it onto the vinyl and cutting it out. I wanted to have all of that done today, but there are 42 pieces in this pattern. That's a lot of cutting and taping today alone. Good thing I find this work enjoyable!

    Elven Plate Mail Project - Day 1


     Ok - trying something new here. This is a project blog for some elven armor that I am experimenting with. It's experimental because the only armor I've made is of the Stormtrooper variety and a few pairs of leather bracers. The purpose behind this blog will be to help others either make their own, decide against making their own, understand cost and time, and hopefully learn from my mistakes - since this is a first time jump.

    Day 1

    Electronic communications and face to face meeting with my client to determine a direction. My client combed through a lot of photos and sent some to me along with a wish list of what they wanted. Their initial best like was the following photo:
    This came along with a list of wants - They wanted the armor to read as metal - not leather. In other words banded plate mail, not leather. It needed to be fairly durable for active use outside. And initially they also wanted a way to change it up to something they could sneak around in. They need it in two weeks. Oh and the budget was $150.

    This might actually be a feasible list if I had a lot more experience, a full shop equipped with a die cut machine, digital laser etcher, a vac former, experience sculpting and making molds etc. Unfortunately for my client - I am a more of a person with a sewing machine and a few leather tools in the craft room. The good news for them is that with my inexperience they get my time free on this one, because I want to gain experience in this field. It is a win/win for us. They get hours of free work, I get paid supplies to experiment with.

    Granted, I always get a little nervous, because I want something that we will all love at the end of this experimental jaunt, and there is a degree of gambling inherent in this. It could come out as a critical failure, in which case we would all be fairly disappointed.

    And when someone sends me a photo of a thousand dollar suit of leather armor wanting me to get something like that in two weeks, for under $150. I have to take a moment and breathe for a bit. I like a challenge, but I also have to be honest with my clients. Some things can't be done - or at least not within the reality that is my basement craft room, my calendar, and their budget.

    So our first day has a lot of conversations about materials and what we think might be feasible and what might not be. I am glad the client had time for a face to face meeting because it can be very hard to get visuals out of my head without drawing and showing materials. One of the things I really wanted to show my client was the tin duct tape that I have. It is an actual thin sheet of foil with an adhesive back. Think very thick aluminum foil combined with scotch tape backing and you've got it. Good news is that it is a type of metal that I can work with, it is inexpensive, and will read as metal. The bad news is that I fear if not done right that it could easily come off looking like aluminum foil armor - and that concerns me a great deal - it will continue to be my number one concern through this whole process.

    I am also thankful that my client gets the idea that plate mail just isn't built for stealth. Or at least not in a case where you are trying to convince a panel of judges that duct tape is really metal plates. With real plate mail, the first steps I'd take to make it stealthy would be to sandblast it, paint it with dark matte colors in a broken camouflage pattern, and trim the plates down to the smallest sizes possible to allow for the greatest freedom of movement and the least carried weight. It is a hard balance to find if you want the armor to have the visual appearance of historic or fantasy shiny plate mail.

    So what are the take away thoughts with Day 1.
    (1) Well, if you are thinking of making armor for yourself, really think through what you need. Real plate mail is expensive and heavy if you are looking for something like LARPing. There are a lot of tutorials on foam armor out there and how to make it look like metal. This is realistic because of the light weight and the idea that you can mold foam a little with a hairdryer or a heat gun. Draw backs to that are that it isn't highly durable if you are running through brush, and Rub N Buff compounds used to make foam look like metal are really good for one time photo shoots. They will rub right off of the foam onto any nearby fabric - so get used to cloaks and sleeves that have gold and silver splotches if you are active in your costume.

    (2) Realize you can't have it all. Even if someone paid me $3,000 to make the leather armor in that second photo. Even though I am fairly comfortable with leather work. I would have to say no. Because that particular bit of work would never happen in my shop in two weeks. Give me a month and yes you'd have it.

    (3) If you are doing this for someone else, find folks who are OK with a bit of a gamble. I am very lucky to have clients who get the idea that they are risking some of their money here for me to learn what works and what doesn't. Yeah, if it turns out, they get a good deal, but there is always that unlucky chance that I'll roll a one.

    (4) If you run a small shop or are thinking of doing this as a hobby business, have straightforward conversations about what's going on. I can't promise the moon and my client knows it. Yet it still helps to go over what I know about the materials and their limitations. This helps him make the decisions he needs to make.

    Sunday, April 14, 2013

    Flavors of life. . . .

    I saw it the other day on Facebook. "My curfew was the street lights, and my mom didn't call my cell, she yelled "time to come in". I played outside with friends, not online. If I didn't eat what my mom made me, then I didn't eat. Hand sanitizer didn't exist, but you COULD get your mouth washed out with soap. I rode a bike without a helmet. And getting dirty was OK. Click "Like" if you drank water from the garden hose and survived."

    It's not the first time I've seen it, and I am sure it will not be the last time either. Though I often find myself in a mental resting spot where I would be glad not to see it again. And today I'm in a contemplative state and trying to pinpoint why I have a mild dislike for this type of statement. Maybe because I understand some of it. Taken apart, I fit the person who is stating this in so many ways.

    My curfew was the street lights
    I lived out of the city limits for much of my childhood, so "streetlight curfew" wasn't really a part of things. Though I was free to take the dog and my .22 rifle and go on a hike in any direction I chose as long as I was back home by sunset.

    my mom didn't call my cell, she yelled "time to come in"
    No cell phones growing up and I do fight a dislike for that particular piece of technology - a combination of not wanting to be highly available and a dislike for its rude intrusion into many social settings.

     I played outside with friends, not online
    Well, I can shorten this to "I played outside."  Shortcomings of my own and my life circumstances made friends scarce. And yet this is one that I am a split mind on. I loved the out doors, and I still find that I can grab peace there quicker than anywhere else. Yet even as a child I understood the draw of computers and technology. I spent countless hours typing programs into an ancient Atari PC just to do something simple like change the screen from blue to green. And yes mom, when we upgraded to the Commodore 64 - I was the one who took the keyboard apart to see how it worked. Had "online" existed when I was that age, I know that my own outdoor time would have dwindled drastically.

    If I didn't eat what my mom made me, then I didn't eat
    This was quite true of my formative years. It has also been true in my household up until recently. I understand disliking a household where children will "only eat" a narrow menu of PB&J, chicken nuggets and cheese sandwiches. I have cringed at young guests who, when I go out of the way to plan kid friendly meals decide that the fare is unpalatable because the macaroni and cheese was not the right shape.

    Hand sanitizer didn't exist
    No, it didn't. And my mom fought a constant battle of trying to keep us all clean, and to help us become aware of personal hygiene. Now I'm the mom and I'm the broken record. At the same time I didn't freak out when my toddler ate dirt, and I expected that my children would jump in mud puddles on the way home from the bus. I have more "play clothes" than dress clothes for the girls, and I expect that they will get stained, torn, cut, or painted on.

    you COULD get your mouth washed out with soap
    I could be one of the few hold-outs in my generation that went to a public school that practiced this. It was in the inter-mountain west, which ran years behind the rest of the US when I was a youth and we had an older (ancient to my 6 year old perception) principal who was a die hard on swearing. Yup, it did happen when I was a kid, although it did not happen a lot. We probably had one of the cleanest vocabularies of any public school at that time.

    I rode a bike without a helmet
    Quite true.

    getting dirty was OK
    Hmm, not so much OK, as expected. Whether it was from hard work or rough play - we got dirty. But with my mom around we were absolutely not allowed to STAY that way.

    "Like" if you drank water from the garden hose and survived
    We didn't just drink from the garden hose, we found many creative uses for it - launching 2 liter bottle rockets comes to mind.


    These statements are nostalgic. It does make me smile to remember the rockets and the hikes up the mountain with the dog. They bring people together, people from a generation before hand sanitizer, the internet,and cell phones. Even with all of the quircky unique-ness of my own upbringing I can relate to others who lived at the time. So why does it bug me?

    Because the statement is also critical. It unveils my own critical spirit, and I am not certain that the direction this type of statement is headed is where I ultimately want to go. I'm not sure that it is a bad thing that my children don't roam the streets without my knowledge of their where-abouts. Do I really want to paint the internet, cell phones, and hand sanitizer as "changes that aren't good".

    There are so many flavors to life. Thankfully I have been blessed by three adventurous eaters, and I have never faced the dilemma that some parents have at meal time. In a day and age where frozen food has opened the door to having different items for meal time, the request of a child to have something different than what the adults are eating is much more easily met than it used to be. Yes, there are still questions of balanced meals, and even more importantly the line where requests end and at the point the child ends up in control of the parent, yet there is a degree of flexibility that there wasn't thirty years ago.

    I've learned this as my youngest has been diagnosed with an intolerance to lactose. We have made changes and try to be mindful of this, but on frozen pizza night she gets to make Whitecastle hamburgers. We've diverged from the path of a one meal fits all. And there are so many other reasons to have diverse meals. Families that don't have the same schedules, families whose children are older and capable in the kitchen,  why would I target this issue as something bad. I could understand it  if I were a nutritionist or a professional meal planner - but I'm not.

    It gets targeted because it makes me feel superior with my "sit-down, home-cooked meal,s 2 x's a week" menu. Oh yes, there is a grain of truth to this that lends credence to my feelings of superiority. It makes them stronger, and more dangerous because I can easily justify it, shaking my head about picky eaters and parents without the ability to say no.

    Do I really want to paint my degree of "cleanliness" as the right one and put others who use more sanitizer on a plane labeled "germ-a-phobe". Why not allow for differing views - a broad spectrum of those who clean throughly, those who struggle with clutter, and those who accept it. Yes, there is that grain of truth - the far ends of the bell curve. Those who use sanitizer to the point that they have damaged their own immune systems, and those who hoard clutter to the point where it causes them injury. But can those ends of the spectrum really hold up such a view on hand-sanitizer? Not unless it is supported by my own desire for superiority and self-satisfaction.

    The above statement connects with my feeling of superiority, but it also connects with my resistance to change. And change is happening ever so much faster than it used to. The period of time between the 8-track and the cassette tape could be a geologic era compared to the time one handheld device in our current society is replaced with a successor.

    The digital revolution is here to stay, as were automobiles a generation ago. The automobile swept in and changed our lives. Cities grew and developed suburbs of extraordinary sizes, tourism started, grocery stores  offered produce from different climates. It started slowly with the wealthy owning an automobile as a novelty. Now we live in a society where two vehicles per household is normative. Take one of those away for a week at the local mechanics and we go into a tailspin.

    Our children will have a world that is defined by all that is digital. Take it away and yes the tailspin ensues. It is scary at times. I have a deep and abiding fear of what this is going to do to my children. I wonder if anyone felt that way about societies growing dependence on automobiles. And I fight to accept the changes that come so fast and furiously. Because my children will live in this new world, this uncharted digital world that lives and changes at a breathtaking pace.

    As a product of attempts to use isolation from society as a way of dealing with change, I know that is not the answer. And something deep inside me tells me that I need to tread a line of discernment with technology and change, not a line of criticism.

    Discernment tells us that too much of a good thing (hand sanitizer?) can be a bad thing. Discernment tells us that the internet is a tool that has potential for great good and great evil. Discernment helps me find balance in this new land that is the lifestyle that my children will lead. Criticism, on the other hand, supports my sense that what I experienced was right. It draws lines and divides. Criticism fractures relationships over silly things like whether a child spends their free time on a playground, reading a book, or on survival mode in Minecraft. Criticism blurs the line of what is really wrong, by placing an unimaginable number of things in that arena to muddy reality and make the things that we truly should be on guard against difficult to find in the mess.

    Discernment will allow me my nostalgia without finding fault in a changing world just because it has changed. I need more discernment, more wisdom, more of God's view on this changing scary life where I feel the need to put down others in minor areas to make myself more comfortable in my own choices. A world of critiques where I feel the need to justify choices which are just one of a range of flavors. I hope that I can learn that God created us different, and that different alone is not bad. I hope that I can grow more tolerant of others and yet still hold to the lines set up as Biblical boundaries. Not an easy balance to keep in this world.



    Saturday, March 9, 2013

    Sandbagged by Prayer

    Prayer brings up a lot of life images for me. I remember clearly Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting growing up in a small, very small, country church. There prayer was defined by who you prayed with. The men prayed with the men, the women with the women, and us kids - well, we went to the basement, were asked to pray by a tired adult. We did. And the prayers were sincere, and very very short - because then we played tag outside while the adult petitions were made in greater length.

    It was a rite of passage to join the adults, to try not to fidget during the long litany of requests. But we grew older, stopped fidgeting and added our own voice and requests to the list. It was a community and we felt the sense of a group of people coming before God to ask for each other in catch phrases that outsiders might or might not understand.

    Then there was college, which gave me a two-faced look at prayer. There were the Missionary prayer bands - the called Prayer Meetings. Often platforms for those who had speaking skills and leadership savvy to spread their wings. While I know there was some sincerity there, I also know what happened the night I shared deep, real feelings of doubt in that context and deep reality met hardened cliche.

    But the other side of college prayer was the bonding I felt when praying with a friend, a real friend. When the two of you couldn't see the answers and decided to bring God into the picture, to plead for help, comfort, or a direction to take. It was grounding - those conversations. The unexpected night on a bus coming back from a ball game, when we learned we were at war. We all stood up and sang the national anthem and then we prayed. Real prayers with halting words and uncertain feelings with young men who would soon see the desert sun in Iraq. I saw both the fake and real of prayer in college.

    In later life I would run into yet another form of prayer. I call it the escape prayer. It is used in certain scenarios - let me set a few up for you:

    A young mother is struggling with sleep deprivation, baby blues, and two toddlers. Her Bible study leader, a woman ten years younger with no family, but a paid position in the church hierarchy sees the mother breaking down in a corner. She immediately goes to the rescue, going to the woman and saying "let me pray for you." It is an impassioned prayer for God to come and solve the mothers problems, to be the all powerful God that he can be. Upon a final emotionally laden amen, from the leader, she departs and moves on to her next responsibility. The mother is not uplifted at all by the prayer and feels even more depressed and lonely afterward.

    A church leader has had a lot of ups and downs with the new pastor in their ministry. Personality conflicts have abounded, and multiple attempts have been made for understanding and reconciliation. The leader thought the last attempt was somewhat successful, the scene has been relatively calm and quiet, for months. And slowly the leader has come back to focus on the ministry rather than the conflict. And then his superior comes into his office, with a pink slip. After explaining that it was God's will that they part company the pastor asks to pray with the leader. In shock and loss the man listens to another who doesn't understand, who has caused the loss of a loved ministry, petition God for peace in his life.

    A church member sincerely trying to look into serious allegations in his church goes through a shunning by church leadership, after a week of failed meetings, deleted social media comments, unreturned e-mails, and being asked to leave the church property by security guards, he is finally contacted by a church leader. This church leader answers none of his questions, simply stating that he trusts the leadership above him in the matter. He then asks if he can pray with the man. The man refuses feeling rejected.


    It is a prayer offered by those who feel spiritually superior, by means of either position or a self-concept. When given, it allows them to walk away from an uncomfortable situation, or a situation beyond their own capability without a loss of  Christian veneer. They get to continue to think of themselves as spiritually superior, while the person that they are praying for really receives nothing - nothing good anyways. Are they really invoking God in these one sided conversations - I don't honestly know. To me it seems so decidedly one sided that it is hard to imagine his presence.

    I have come to be very wary of this escape prayer. It feels false. It doesn't come from a place of friendship or understanding. It doesn't come when both parties are facing circumstances so large that regardless of their relationship they can join in petition to the Holy one. It isn't the true desire of a stranger to offer comfort to another who is struggling to a point of wordlessness at an alter call. It is an escape, an ending of a conversation or an evading of one.

    It is my belief that the churches greatest enemy is not outside its walls. And the greatest weapons on the field are not the worlds, but the ones that Christ has given us when they are twisted to purposes they were never meant for. The Bible asks us to put on the armor of God with prayer. Prayer can be powerful, healing, helping. Yet when used insincerely, falsely, as a weapon, or an escape it is capable of unleashing spiritual destruction.

    Wednesday, January 23, 2013

    Sundial Syndrome

    I spent the afternoon with some 2nd graders who are struggling with some math concepts. We spent our time working with Judy clocks. Some of you may remember theses wooden geared clocks where the movement of the minute hand automatically shifts the movement of the hour hand and vice versa. Among the half a dozen students who are pulled out for special help in this area are ones who cannot concentrate, ones who are confused, children who struggle in this specific area of academia, students who struggle in all areas of learning, and ones who disrupt the larger class.

    As I work  with the children and the clock I keep thinking of something that the teacher mentioned. None of them can practice this skill at home because there are no analog clocks in their homes. It makes sense, as I take stock of the clocks in our own home: 
    • Three digital alarm clocks, 
    • several digital watches,
    •  various digital readouts on appliances, thermostats, and computers, 
    • oh yes, a binary clock on display in the living room. 
    • The only thing that comes close to an analog clock is an art piece I have in the basement shop. It is a clock,  but there are no hands, instead a large marked gear rotates under a pointer allowing time to be read. 
    My house would not come close to helping these students read a classroom clock. Analog clocks are disappearing from our world slowly. There are still mantelpiece clocks, decorative wall clocks, grandfather clocks and such, but they are often more decorative than functional. Put a grown man, or woman in a room with an analog clock and there is a high probability that they will consult their digital wristwatch for the time. Put a child in their place and there is no hesitation.

    I really do understand why analog time is still taught. Mathematically it strengthens concepts of time, skip counting, rounding (almost 7 o'clock), etc. And it will be many years until analog clocks go the way of the  sundial. I totally understand reasons to teach analog time. 

    But I also find myself in a situation where I am questioning it. Many of the students I am sitting with are still struggling with basic addition. A few cannot count past 100. These students might benefit from dropping analog time for the moment and concentrating on skills where there aren't other options in later life. 

    I fully realize that this is not the teacher's fault - they have little choice in what gets taught when and for how long. I also realize that many adults would fight against the removal of any skill that has become a traditional part of the grade-school curriculum. Many would fight even though they now use a calculator to figure out 6 x 7 and they never in their adult life have experienced a situation where they have to get 100 math facts correct in 60 seconds.

    In a world where there is more and more knowledge to obtain and skills to acquire, there is a lot of pressure to stuff all of it into young minds. It is not uncommon to see terms like median and mean being introduced as early as 2nd and 3rd grade - terms that I didn't encounter until college statistics. I passed a kindergarten classroom singing "Head, Shoulders, Knees and Toes" but instead it was "Head, Thorax, Abdomen". Apparently the standardized tests expect them to know those terms, even though the word "thorax" will likely only be used by those who head into the field of entymology. Let's remember kindergartners have a little while before they have to make those type of career path choices. 

    Our world is changing. A recent survey of the youth in our church asked what children and teens wished their parents knew. The top two things:
    • That I feel a lot of pressure
    • That my life is scary/hard
    I don't remember feeling that about my childhood. Maybe I am forgetting, but I don't remember the same pressure that I see in my own children's lives.

    Doing what we've always done is not always the right thing. Doing what we've always done and adding to it with new areas is also not always the right thing to do. You can only add so much before one reaches the markers of pressure and stress. And as much as I don't want to acknowledge that, our children live there.

    I think for many, analog time is a non-issue. Perhaps because it is outside their "struggle zone". Academics came easy for me and had you asked me in my 20's I would have a totally different answer than I have now that I have two dyslexic children. If something comes easy, it is easy to not ask if it is necessary. Only when it is a struggle do we seem to stop and ask if we really have to do it.

    Yet maybe we should be asking it, even if there aren't struggling students. With so many feeling pressured maybe we need to look at what we can get by with not doing instead of charging ahead and adding to an already overstuffed curriculum.

    Is analog time really that big of a deal?  Maybe the bigger deal is that we don't always stop to think about whether the things we grew up learning are still relevant to our children. Or maybe we don't stop to think about the stressful effect of the information revolution on our students. Whether or not to teach analog time is really not the big deal.

    Unless math already is really hard for you

    and you are in second grade

    and you still don't know your addition basics

    and the only place you'll ever see an analog clock is in school

    and you have a Spiderman digital wristwatch that works just fine.


    Monday, January 14, 2013

    Vigilance or paranoia?

    I had just stopped by my 10 year old's Sunday School class to help her pin her hair up and then pick up some notepaper at the coat rack where my family congregates after services when it happened. The halls were thinning out to very little traffic. Sunday School teachers could be heard getting their students attention and getting class going. The hum of the normal Sunday at church was underway and then I saw him. Average height, sandy blond hair, a struggling beard, young, a forest green backpack with odd bulges, black turtleneck under a parka, a hesitant step, twitching hands, a face that wouldn't meet my own, a man looking at everything except the people around him.

    It didn't feel right, so I paused my course and watched for a minute, thinking that my feelings would abate in observation. He would look into a classroom scanning it. Was he looking for a child? His child? My gut said no - he couldn't possibly be old enough to have a 10 year old. Maybe a baby, not a child this old. Maybe a younger sibling? Still the nervous hands, the shuffling gait as he moved to another room to scope it out. And a chill ran through my own mind. What was in the back pack? Why was this man so nervous? why would he not meet the eyes of others? What was he doing at the beginning of a class period looking around at the classrooms?

    He rounded the far corner of the hall, and I squashed an urge to follow. Suddenly mad at myself for thinking the worst. Mad that my mind automatically turned towards Sandy Hook and Columbine. Mad that I think that way. That I walk through the halls assessing the "danger factor" of common strangers. I went back to my seat in the sanctuary and the anger faded but my unease didn't. My husband noticed. Asked twice what was wrong before I finally answered that I wished I didn't see people and think the worst. He asked what I saw and then told me if I had red flags going off that I needed to trust my instincts. I needed to go tell someone.

    There are few people in life that I listen to as much as I listen to my husband. I didn't trust my own instincts, fearing paranoia - but if he trusted them I needed to act. I circled back through the classrooms hoping to see something to invalidate my unease, but the man was gone. I wondered about the other levels of classrooms. Was he looking there? Was he by the children's amphitheater? My heart sunk to even think of that scenario. The amphitheater is one of the neatest, most kid friendly spaces in the church, and it would be jam packed with children. A fishbowl for a shooter.

    With that grisly idea in mind I went to one of the leaders I knew. I didn't know how to start the conversation. 99.999% chance that this was all in my head. I briefly thought of what they would think of me - a paranoid parent, more so now than when I camped by the one way mirror in the nursery area to see if my babies would stop crying.

    Since my children were that age so many things have changed my world. I am a parent of 911. My husband and I worked closely alongside a man we trusted in youth ministry, only to find that he had groomed a young teen and continued an abusive relationship with her for years. The damage done in that former church still echoes through my life. I don't trust people anymore. I don't trust my instincts about them. I don't trust that church is a safe place for my children.

    Before that there was my own upbringing. My father was an OPFOR leader (opposing forces) . He was in charge of being the enemy for military training sessions. He regularly spoke on the topic of home defense. He testified in court as a weapon specialist. He was a gunsmith and had a class three firearms license. We grew up shooting pretty much any weapon that you can imagine in our front yard on a plot outside the city limits of a small mountain town. After Columbine, he was one of those who helped train teachers, first response teams, SWAT teams and counter-terrorism forces.

    It's hard to imagine that didn't effect my grown-up outlook today. A former pastor used to come to me after heated words had been stated in business meetings, or overheard in the church parking-lot. My mind was a recorder. I remembered the exact wording of statements. I was hyper-vigilant and would assess the reactions to events in a room full of people. I was crowd conscious. When I was tired, I was easily overwhelmed as I had no way to filter visual and auditory information out.

    My mind has dulled since then. I no longer notice everything. I can't tell you the order of sentences in a debate. But I still find myself assessing things. The closest way out of a building. The tenor of a group of people chatting in the lobby. The body language of a stranger in the halls. . .

    "I'm jumping at shadows." I told my friend behind the counter. "It's probably nothing, but there was a guy scouting out the classrooms in the B200s." To her immense credit she handled everything exactly right. Calm and cool she took down the description I gave her. I knew that it would get radioed to key leaders in different areas of the building to be on the look-out. Later another one of those leaders would thank me for my vigilance. By that time I would be even more convinced that it wasn't vigilance, but paranoia.

    I returned to the worship service in the sanctuary. My husband looked at me. "You did what you needed to. Two weeks ago we had training on this. They said the number one thing is to trust your instincts." My husband works at a place that is a potential terrorist target. It didn't surprise me that they had that type of training there. "I just want to go back and camp in her Sunday School class." I shakily replied. He squeezed my hand. "There's a place where you have to trust God too, you can't be with them all of the time."

    I smile as I write this, wondering how I got so lucky as to have a man like that in my life. He definitely keeps me grounded. A sermon on marriage was good. Not a full distraction, but a comforting one. I turned my crowd assessment inward looking for areas to improve in my life, things I could do to be more supportive for my husband. A definition of the word "submit"  that was far outside of the doormat style obedience that I had been taught as a child fascinated me and I found encouragement there.

    The service ended and we split up, my husband and I, and "Uncle" Steve; they to retrieve my children from various parts of the building and me to a teachers meeting in preparation for the next worship hour. The teachers meeting had not started, and I found my footsteps wandering through the building back to my daughters classroom. The halls had heavy traffic. Parents picking up children. People making their way to the coffee dispensers. People leaving one service, people coming to another. And in the mass of bodies I saw him again.

    No parka, no backpack now, just a simple black turtleneck, but the same shuffle, the same twitch to the hands. This time I followed. As I did so I noticed the rhythm to the twitches in the hands. I began to suspect a medical condition instead of stress. The black shoes had thick heavy soles, not combat boots, but corrective soles. He ducked down into one of the alcoves in the hall, and pulled out the green bulging backpack. I continued following and watching. The body language was bugging me less, but the pack still bothered me. Who carries a backpack to church? Well, I do - I reasoned with myself. I carry a pack with my laptop in it many Sundays. That doesn't look like a laptop in that pack though. It hangs oddly, like there is something too long in it.

    I argue with myself, remembering some of the sniper rifles that my father had. Ones that came in pieces. But those are rarely used in shootings. It is the assault rifles and handguns that are the usual culprits. It is hard to hide an assault rifle in a backpack. The man goes into another classroom. He sets the pack down and begins to open it. I watch through the open door from a vantage point down the hall. The man pulls out the pieces to a music stand and begins to set up. The red flags are gone, and in their place warring for the top feeling are both a sense of profound relief that what I had feared was not the case and a sense of embarrassment that I had so misread the situation.

    Today as I write this down. I am looking at the events and still uncertain if the path that I walk is one of vigilance or one of paranoia. I laugh as I imagine someone else coming to the nursery counter reporting a tall odd looking woman with a backpack wearing a vintage military jacket stalking down strangers in the hallways.

    I tend to look at my husbands words as wise, his training as something that God had given the timing for. I am thankful for the leaders in our Children's ministry who are the solid type of people that take everything, including suspicious stranger alerts, in stride and calmly. If I am indeed paranoid, which is something I suspect I lean towards, I am praying that it is a weakness that God can use to show his strength through and not one that the devil can exploit.


    Sunday, January 6, 2013

    Thinking about Lydia (Part 1 - Backstory)

    Not the tattooed lady, but the Lydia of Acts 16.

    It is a very interesting story, but best when viewed with a little context. In Acts 15, Paul and Barnabas start facing a very divisive argument within the early church. Or maybe I should say the toddler church. It had been birthed in Jerusalem and grown to Antioch through persecution and now it is starting to take those first wobbly steps on it's own. And those wobbly steps lead it to an immediate impasse.

    Funny how I often find that I'll go a chapter or two back to get context and I really need to keep going back further and further to make the story make sense. Back in Acts 10 the apostle Simon Peter, a close follower of Jesus, and one of the key leaders in the fledgling church had a vision. Through this vision he came to understand that God was breaking down some major cultural barriers and offering salvation from sins to the Gentile (non-Jewish) population.

    Peter acts upon direction from the Lord and goes to the house of Cornelius, a Roman centurion in the Italian division. I always laugh at this. God wanted to make sure that the first Gentile Christian could be marked as nothing close to Jewish. Part of the occupying Roman army, Cornelius was further an Italian. A foreigner who could not possibly be one ounce Jewish.

    In the following months Peter defends the work that God has done, and like so many things that God touches it flourishes and the good news of Jesus is soon reaching Gentiles everywhere, but especially in Antioch. Antioch was so different than Jerusalem. A seaport town full of merchants and traders from the four corners of the known world, it had a highly diverse (and highly Gentile) population compared to the Jewish cultural center that Jerusalem was.

    The early church took it's first steps into Antioch under the persecution of Saul. They fled there looking for refuge from those trying to stamp out the movement by imprisoning and killing the followers of Jesus. The news that God had opened the door for Gentiles to grasp a hold of this new faith in Jesus as the Messiah must have been particularly potent in Antioch.

    So it isn't too surprising that when some people from Judea came to Antioch and started saying that the Gentiles needed to be circumcised in order to be saved that it caused a ruckus. On the surface this seems an almost inevitable thing to happen in the "culture wars" surrounding the early church. However the ramifications were pretty insidious. On the surface it looked like a faction merely declaring that in order to be saved that one must convert to Judiasm. But the argument bit deeply at the roots of a faith claiming that there wasn't anything one could do to be saved.

    Paul, and Barnabas and other Christians were sent with this argument back to Jerusalem to James and the other apostolic leaders to sort out an official standing from the church leadership. I imagine it was a rough time for Paul and Barnabas. We aren't told, but I surmise that their travelling companions were opposing their opinion on the matter. That would make it a long trip to Jerusalem. Especially since these two men, Paul and Barnabas, were fully aware of how deeply the argument impacted the churches basic point of faith.

    God continued to work and once the group got to Jerusalem the matter was settled decisively. Gentiles were recognized to be Christians by simply having faith in Jesus the Messiah. They were encouraged to follow some Jewish customs but they did not need to become Jews in order to have the doors of absolution opened to them. I wonder if Paul and Barnabas felt a rush of relief at that decision.

    They return to Antioch with the news but shortly thereafter fall into disagreement about who their travelling companions for the next journey should be. I wonder if after the trip to Jerusalem, Paul was only willing to take those he knew would be steadfastly on his side. John Mark is noted to have deserted him in previous travels and Paul isn't willing to give the young man a second chance. Barnabas, the man known for his encouragement is less judgmental about John Mark and the rift that is caused between these two friends on this issue is a sharp one. It tears their partnership apart and sends them in different directions.

    The Bible is so good at giving us the framework of a story and leaving other things to our imagination. In my imagination I can almost hear the sharp angry words between these two men. In my imagination I think that the separation had to have had an effect on them both, but especially Paul who had been mentored and encouraged by Barnabas in his first days as a believer. Those first days must have seemed pretty miraculous as men like Ananias and Barnabas accepted him - the guy who had been hunting them down and sending them to jail and death. (Yes, Paul was his new name - he was formerly called Saul, the man who was violently instrumental in the dispersion of the Jerusalem community of believers.) So it is, I imagine, that Paul comes into chapter 16 of Acts reeling a bit from recent events.

    I cannot say that he was discouraged, though I imagine it to be a possibility. I cannot say that the start of this new venture had to be soured a bit by the argument he and Barnabas had, but I imagine that too, to be a possibility. And into this I see God continuing to work. Paul had great plans as to where he would go and what he would do on this journey. He comes to Derbe and snatches up Timothy as a young man to mentor, and then he tries to go to Asia.

    Twice in the next few verses it mentions that God prevents Paul from going where he wants to go. Yet after that he has a vision of a Macedonian man pleading for his aid. It is a different direction than he had intended and I wonder where Paul is mentally and emotionally.I wonder exactly how the Holy Spirit kept Paul and his company from going forward with their own plans. It seems in early church history that miracles were far more prevalent and public then they are today and I wonder if it was a miraculous happenstance, or if like today, God led in the mundane closings and openings of circumstances.

    I wonder what the "take away" thoughts should be on this passage and the ones preceding it. I sometimes get wrapped up in how I should teach the leading of the Spirit to room full of impressionable 5th graders. After all, I have had no visions or dreams of import. I have not spoken in languages that I didn't learn nor have I heard someone speaking like that to me. I haven't seen the Spirit of God descend in flames of fire upon the heads of those who believe or felt the rush of wind indoors described on the day of Pentecost.

    So sometimes I wonder, briefly if I have the right to tell them that the Holy Spirit can lead them if they are open to his promptings. Upon contemplation of my own life though, I find that in looking back I can see the hand of God. It isn't as dramatic as it was in Paul's life or as frequent to my perception, but at critical junctures I see His influence and direction. I see the peace he gave me when dating the man who would become my husband. I see his direction out of full-time ministry in the church; a choice I  know that we would not have had the strength to make on our own. Currently I see my own Asia - two attempts to take up the mantle of an educator, one ended completely, the other possibly ended and at the very least on hold.

    And I think that the "take away" for me may only be partially the concept that God leads. I think for me it goes beyond this to "God has a plan" and maybe that Gods plan cannot be driven astray by our own shortcomings - a comforting thought.

     In looking at the whole of Acts and even beyond it we see that Paul eventually asks for the companionship of John Mark when he is imprisoned. We see that the sharp conflict driving two men of God apart is still used to reach people who had not heard the news of Jesus. We see that Gods plan is often bigger than our own horizons. Some in the early church were locked into cultural boundaries. Very few would have seen Christianity reaching arcoss the world via the hands of the Gentile population, and yet that is exactly what happens.

    I wonder about what happens to Cornelius the Italian Roman. Or the other minor characters that we meet in Acts. Their stories just give us a short glimpse into their lives. The travelling man from Ethiopia whom Phillip was miraculously transported to (yes, "beam me up, Scotty." starts in Acts) to explain the scripture he was reading. I wonder what happened to him after his conversion.  I wonder about Lydia who will be soon coming into this story as yet another cultural hurdle to be crumbled by the spread of a faith in God. These were real people who had real personalities and problems. Who had friends and families that they talked to. People that they told the most important news that they had heard - a message that God has a plan and that his plan was to save the broken and the bad and bring them back to himself.