There is only one true flight from the world; it is not an escape from conflict, anguish and suffering, but the flight from disunity and separation, to unity and peace in the love of other men. — Thomas Merton

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Love You Girls

To my girls. I know you're too young to be reading this blog, but I'll miss you this week. I'll think about you constantly. Remember what I've said all of the time, all of your life?


 

I love you.

I Love you very day.

I love you all the way to the moon and back.

And I'll never stop.


 

You bring my life joy, girls. Thank you.

I love you,

Daddy

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Friday, September 05, 2008

Now Go. Be Free. Shine.

Surely this is a work that will be polished over time, but I think it's a close enough start that it can be a post. I was thinking today that before I know it the next few years will pass, and my daughters will all leave our home. What would I want to say if it was today? Something, I suppose, like this:


Words for My Daughters


Life is a great mystery. You are not alone. We are all lost, and struggling to understand.

Never believe the lie we have all told ourselves at least once; the one that says, "I don't care anymore."

We were born to care. It is the seed which gave us life.

Seek God, and you will find God—probably in a place you would have never guessed. Whatever that place may be, it is where your Joy awaits.

It is true that faith is sometimes blind. But this tells us nothing of whether our faith is right or wrong.

Being angry at God is acceptable, questioning God is constructive, blaming God is pointless.

Never love any person, including me, more than you love God. You cannot love any person well, unless you love God most.

Pride pushes God away. Humility allows God to touch you. Above all things, pray for your own humility.

If people were perfect, there would be no need for love. Such a world would be a horrible, horrible place.

Do not judge others, and pay no attention to judgments that others may cast upon you.

God created you to be you. You are not supposed to be anyone else. Don't waste your time worrying about what other people think of you.

Never let anybody tell you that you may not, cannot, shall not do some thing you believe to be a great good.

Your life, first and foremost, is between you and God. Cherish this freedom for yourself, and grant it to others.

Your life is not your own. The life you live, you live in God, and therefore you live for the good of others.

What is the good of others, and how do you work for it? The answer rests in a great mystery, between you and God.

The best way to understand evil is to understand that you never will—and leave it at that.

What matters is that God's response to evil is to build good things from the ruins it leaves behind. You can help God do this.

Everything you have, and everything you are, has been given to you for one reason, and for one reason only: to ease the suffering of other people.

The Kingdom of Heaven is not a place. It is the Heart of God. It is within you, and it is everywhere around you.

The Word of God is not a book. It is the whisperings of the Kingdom, all around us.

The Love of God is life's only Truth.


Let no one blind your eyes. Let no one harden your heart. Let no one quench your spirit.

You will fall. You will fail. You will hurt and you will be hurt. It is these things which bring you closer to God; and so they, too, are good.

And know this: that you to me will always be unspeakably beautiful—beyond what even tears will ever tell.

Know that I love you. No matter where you go, no matter what you do, no matter who or what you become, I will always love you. This I promise.

Now go. Be free. Shine.

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Monday, July 21, 2008

Weekend in Review

I tend to avoid small talk in life. That's a plus or minus, depending upon who you ask. To me, it's a plus. To those who sit with me and twiddle their thumbs thinking of things to say, it's a minus. But tonight I feel like reviewing the weekend. I didn't get to talk to my folks this weekend, so this will catch them up.

Friday was the last day of this year's Shuttle Camp for the girls, which means there were rocket launches. The older girl has moved up to two-stage creations, but unfortunately the weather scrubbed the launches for her class. So, a trip to launch the newest rocket ourselves is on the manifest. Younger girl built a nice single-stage that flew well, and it looks great sitting on the shelf with the rockets of years passed. One of the instructors attempted the launch of a modified two-stage that was too light in the forward fuselage. It spun wildly as it left the rail, and I only had time for one thought: Uh-oh. Now the second stage is gonna… Which it did, flying straight toward some of us spectators, hitting the ground between myself and a dad who was just as slow as I was, and bursting into flames (the rocket, not the dad). Which just goes to show that in the world of rockets you can plan for certain types of failures, and with others it's simply over too quick to do anything about it.

A new activity this year for one of the classes was the challenge of using a raw egg as the cargo of a craft that was dropped from sixty feet above the concrete. It was kind of a Mars rover landing type of challenge, and my daughter's team used cotton batting, wings and balloons. Their egg survived intact, so score one for the home team.

We arrived home late Friday night and all three kids went to sleep easily, so the tired mom and dad stayed up to watch the movie The Bucket List. It's a good film; worth watching. The combination of camp, rockets, getting to see the girls again after their week of absence, the movie, and probably a bit of being tired all combined to leave me with a tear of weary joy in each eye as a lay down to go to sleep. "I had a good day," I whispered between myself and God. "Thank you for my life."

I'm steeped in a battle of wits with one of the puppies. A while back she figured out how to climb our rock wall and get into the neighbor's yard. Finally I resorted to running a dog-rated electric fence along the top of that wall, which did little to deter her. So I ran another line lower, back from the fence, which did the trick. But it only took her a couple of days to figure out that she can climb the metal gate on the other side of the house and get into the front yard, scale the wall into the front courtyard, and sleep on the front porch. So I ran the electric wire all the way around the fence in the back, and stretched it across the path to the metal gate. She came around to see what I was doing as I finished my work, stopped dead in her tracks, ducked her head, and backed off. War over, I figured. Until this past week, when I found her on the front porch and the wire by the gate torn down. So on Saturday I fortified the defenses with a bit more engineering, to find her tonight on the front porch again. She broke only a small portion of the wire, leaving the rest of the improved design functional with its secondary skirmish line, which she would have had to have engaged to scale the gate, intact. Yet she obviously defeated this perimeter. She would have felt the shock, I'm sure, and in fact there are claw marks up the side of the house (!!) where she climbed up by the corner of the gate. Hmph; War just beginning, I guess. She is one stubborn, determined foe, and I am now back to the drawing board. Perhaps something with cotton batting, wings and balloons...

Today was a party and ongoing sleepover for the two-stage rocket girl's birthday. Nine little girls in the house today and tonight. We'll see how the "sleep" part of sleepover pans out. It's almost midnight at the moment, and they just started a movie not long ago. I can tell I'm distracted; I posted Merton Monday before the clock rolled over. And with that, the weekend is officially over. Work tomorrow, and I don't want to go. But then again, I never do.

One more story to tell, but it stands well enough alone that I'll save it for a separate post. Besides, it's not a small talk story, so will get me back to my normal posting self. Have a good week, all.

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Sunday, May 11, 2008

We Gotta Water My Piggy

I was in the shower Friday morning, with my head in the stream, trying to recover from sleep deprivation, when I heard the almost intelligible voice of my youngest daughter.

"Whaaat?" I asked loudly, not unkindly, as I stood upright, wiping my eyes harder than any doctor would approve of.

"We blah-ta water bluh blah-blee" was all I could make out, but it sounded important; urgent, even. I could see the vague form of a child through the mist and condensation on the shower door.

"WHAAT?" I yelled more loudly, but still not unkindly. A genuine request for retransmission.

"WE BL-OTTA WATER BLEH BLIH-BLEE!" she yelled back, not unkindly. A genuine retransmission.

It's interesting how we tend to interpret things according to the way our minds work. Uh-oh, I thought. I opened the door a few inches. She knows the drill. She sidestepped and poked her head half-way in.

"We gotta lotta water where?" I asked, imagining my wife battling a gushing, broken pipe somewhere—muttering something, not unkindly of course, about hoping I'm enjoying my shower…

"No." My daughter said clearly. "We gotta water my piggy."

I blinked. I smiled, relieved, and was struck by how cute she looked in the moment. "Okay." I said. "We will. In a minute." She nodded once, as if to say to herself "Mission accomplished," and padded off.

"We gotta water my piggy." Now that's a blog post if I've ever heard one, I thought to myself.

Thursday was a long day. Well, Wednesday and Thursday were long. My schedule was all jacked up because between finishing my final paper for class and going to my eldest daughter's track meet, I was left Thursday afternoon running on two hours of sleep since Tuesday. But, in the process, I got to pick up the little shower girl at her twice-a-week preschool and this was a great serendipitous event, because she had made a Mother's Day surprise and needed to smuggle it home. It's really cute. It's a grape juice bottle turned into a flower planter and all dolled up to look like a pig. Little pink felt ears, big flat round nose, corkscrew tail, the whole nine yards. Really. it's cute. And apparently the children were given strict instructions to water the piggy every day or matters of great and dire consequence would arise.

So, you would have had to have been there, and it's a parent thing, but try to imagine a little girl in her jammies, hair all a muss, eyes bleary, looking like she's been asleep for about a week, with this simple but terribly important responsibility to meet. It's cute, it's loving, and it's a glimmer of staying on task and meeting that responsibility. It was a great moment.

I enjoyed a few minutes more relaxation in the shower. I smiled. School was finished. I had gotten some sleep. My little girl was growing up. Mother's Day was coming. We didn't have a lotta water someplace. And if I totally messed up and no other Mother's Day gifts worked out, well, at least we had a piggy.

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Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Of Guesses, Gambles and Dreams

There is a line of reasoning—one I find quite compelling—in some Christian theologies, and it is summarized by this very simple statement: Love must be chosen. To elaborate a little bit, this reasoning is typically employed in the construction of a theodicy, a defense of God vis-à-vis the existence of evil. One version of it would be something along the following brief presentation.

The foundational motivation behind all of creation is for love to exist outside (so to speak) of God, that love may be shared with God. In order for love to be love in any real sense, love must be choose-able. A creature must choose love; not have love forced upon it. The down to earth example would be that if you could create and program a robot to be your life partner, you could program it to act just like it loves you, but this would be different from it actually loving you. Love has to be chosen, and this is what makes it love. Think about it, and I think most of you would agree. It's pretty straight forward. And so, the idea goes, for this reason God had to give his creatures the ability to choose love or not. Hence, free will. Some people choose (chronically and/or acutely) not to love. Hence there is evil. And so on.

Now, what is fairly, but not plainly, obvious about this view is something very, very profound and beautiful. No matter how unsettling, detestable, tragic and horrifying evil can be, we can trust that in the end of all things, we will find God's Love to be in goodness far greater. In other words, no matter how horrible life appears, in the end, the horror is worth the beauty. This is very powerful. It also happens to be what I'm not going to talk about here, but there is another implication when the theory is taken a bit further, as some do. If you really believe there is true free will, you believe that God does not exercise absolute, minute control over the universe. Furthermore, if you're an open theist, as I tend to be, you believe that creation is unfolding, as is God with it. God doesn't have a detailed master plan carried out in each moment of life. God always wins overall here and there as necessary, but things aren't set in stone. I believe that an honest reading of the Bible reveals that biblical writers believed this as well. But overall, this means that creation, and being a part of it, is a bit of a gamble. For a born existentialist like myself, this not only makes sense; it is completely intuitive. Few or no things are ever known for sure. We do the best we can. Along the way, things are sometimes pleasant, and sometimes not. In the end, everything will work out (this is held in faith). But for now, life on a cosmic scale is about odds versus cost and payoffs. It works this way from the foundation of Creation all the way down to the tiniest of things. I say all this simply to note that although my thinking in those areas is much more expanded, it's briefly presented here so that it is understood as a backdrop for posts such as my early post on Spadefoot frogs, and posts such as the one that follows presently…


Flooded with thoughts today, thoughts all swirled together in a soft, hazy spiral. Who knows from whence these come; why, unbidden, they come to mind in the multihued tapestries they do. And who knows what to do with them, but to watch them, as if from the outside, and to feel them—feel them with an odd and awe-like curiosity. Life. Living. A life. One life. A single perception of living. Unique in all of history. The only thing that is mine and mine alone. Existing because and only because so many people, so many places and so many things, are a part of it; having formed it, shaped it, colored it and given it meaning. But the whole is greater than the sum. It is a life of shared parts, but its whole is only mine. Nobody else will ever know it. This is the meaning of tragedy, in all of its most glorious, most poignant, forms. It is our majestic connection to all of life, and it is our great loneliness.

In this present moment, there's an area of the swirling cloud, right around me, within me, over here where I pause to turn my mind's eye. It began recently when I spent the day with my daughter at a space exploration expo. It's a wonderful thing to watch her at such events; her most genuine grins and laughter always appear when she is in the middle of such things. From all appearances, she loves space engineering, geek-like activities. Days and sometimes a week of space-related stickers and patches, NASA badges, model rockets and Mars missions inspired by coneheads and nerd-gods; those who care not about bad hair days and who are more needed, more at home, in unearthly places. I share with her these feelings, as though there is always someplace else we should be—a place not here, a place always undefined. Perhaps we dream that rockets will someday take us to wherever it is, but at my age now I tend to think they will never expend fuel for my sake. I tend to think instead that the places we seek, she and I, are somewhere more in the vicinity of the simple and shared joy of the flight of a model rocket, than any place an Ares and Orion will ever take us. I always grin when a model rocket flight is true; no roll, no oscillations of any kind. Straight. Perfect. Joyous. And I always ask myself, what is it in those fractions of a second when a model you've made leaves the pad, and soars upwards out of site, that brings a moment of unspoiled happiness? I ask every time, and I can never answer for sure, except that maybe its modest flight is a metaphor, intuitively grasped, for our human dreams. You hope they fly straight. You hope they are perfect, and joyous. You hope they someday reach their mark. You hope that in the end they take you someplace just far enough away, and that you arrive there safely, locatable by those you love, unbroken or at least reparable. Most of all, you know dreams are for dreaming. All that matters is that they are given a chance—just a chance—to take off and climb sunward.

My big brother once told me, not many years ago, that he's proud of me. That means more to me than I can say. He said he's proud because he remembers long ago, when I was a "little bitty guy," that I would talk about working for NASA. "That's all you ever wanted," he said. "And now look at you." I guess that's something. Maybe it is simply fate; a fate shared with my daughter, and one I had no more chance of avoiding than she does. Or maybe it's simply something I made for myself, a thing my daughter may or may not care, in the long run, to create for herself. Come whatever may, I hope only that she finds happiness—joy in whatever she does and becomes.

However it has happened, I have been working in the space program for over half of my life now. I am good at what I do, although I must admit that I say so with the same energy and emotion that I can say, "In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue." I say it because other people have said it is so, not because I know or feel it to be so. Nor do I really care anymore. It's what I do, I try to do it with devotion and honesty and grace, but at this point in my life, its meaning to me is that it provides for my family, that maybe by chance it will have some good use and influence in the course of humanity, and that my children derive enjoyment from it. "Do you get to talk to astronauts?" they ask from time to time. "Sometimes. Once in a while," I tell them. "But my job is to help them talk to other people, when they're flying around in orbit," I try to explain. "That's so cool," my kids will say, and I do my best to share their excitement. Yeah, it's cool, I think, but the cooler part is that you think it's cool.

Part of the swirl is smiling, laughing at a joke only it and I understand. It is not a cruel, not a mean-spirited or arrogant, joke. It brings the same type of laughter as seeing the emperor with no clothes. It is not his nakedness, but his obliviousness that is comical. The joke is, we refer to science and engineering as if they're the most exacting things on earth, and people say I'm good at it, but… (do you get it?) I just GUESS. It's all I've ever done, since I was a kid. I've stumbled and bumbled along in life just… guessing at it. There are so few sure things in life; so few guarantees. There is so little knowing in life, so few givens. But for some of us, there is a knack for interpolations, propagations and probabilities—a gift we never asked for nor try to understand, or even use on purpose. It's an intuitive propensity for weighing things that most people never recognize as having mass. It is not a superior thing. It is not an inferior thing. It is simply about playing cards with the hand one is dealt. It is about guessing, about gambling, and daring to dream in the vague and frightening midst of an overwhelming lack of surety.

The point of all this is that the joy and dream of a little bitty guy, a little Professor Peabody (or was it Sherman they called me?) about eight years old, holding an Apollo helmet in his hands and staring, enraptured, at his reflection in its golden visor, was for nothing more, and nothing less, than to be able today to give my family members the chance to have their own dreams. The truth is, I would have it no other way; it would be meaningless otherwise. The dream is still the dream all these decades later, but at the age of eight I could never have guessed the dream's true nature. The swirl is closing. It will come again and open itself to me, unbidden and gentle in its imagery, but I cannot know when. So for now I smile and wave goodbye to an enigmatic little boy who thirty-five years ago grinned, and laughed, and cherished his own little geeky dreams. My God—that was so many guesses ago. So many tiny, so many monumental guesses ago. So many of them right, and so many of them wrong. Time has changed the weight of the mathematics, so much more complex now than they once were. Thirty-five years make the interpolations grow more difficult, and the propagations more frightening. The depth of the dream has changed immeasurably, and so very much for the better. It is no longer a dream of what I can do, but a dream of what I can give. It is a dream no longer for me, but for everyone I love. What that boy could never have guessed, could never have imagined, was that the dream was never truly his, would never be fully his own. It would always belong to someone else, and he was part of the dream, not the dreamer of it. He could not see that the dream was simply a brilliant guess, cradled in the mind of God.


—Prologue—

I wrote about dreaming of things where an Ares and Orion could never take us. Thinking of that, I remember holding my daughter in my arms, when she was only a few months old. Whenever the moon was out, I would carry her outside, and hold her body just so, and point, and say, "See that? That's the moon. You could go there someday, maybe, if you want to." We were at a church party one night, and somebody remarked how pretty the moon looked that evening. A lady was holding my daughter, and I asked my daughter, "Where's the moon?" The lady holding her said, "Oh, come on. She's a baby. She doesn't know what the moon is." With that, my daughter turned her head in every direction she could, until she saw the moon, and stared right at it, crinkling her brows as if to focus clearly upon its surface. The person holding her just stared at me, as in, "What the heck was that?" I simply grinned, and said, "She knows what the moon is."

I pray incessantly that each of my children will accomplish exactly what they and God want in life; not what I nor any other person want. I hope I will force nothing upon them, and I pray I never take anything from them. But, between you and me, if my daughter dreams such a thing, and if on some day she rides a rocket to the Moon, or to Mars, or to some other faraway place, at the moment of that vehicle's straight, perfect and true climb heavenward, I will think back to a baby who found the moon. I will remember a little girl with a giant grin, holding her model rocket at shuttle camp, posed for a picture taken by her daddy. I will think of all her smiles and laughter. I will marvel at the glorious mystery of dreams and guesses and gambles, the swirl will overtake me, and I will weep the joyous tears of a thousand distant suns.

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Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Had any fun lately?

I probably shouldn't admit this, but the word "fun" signifies something that I'm not sure I understand. I have a personal—issue, I guess you'd say, with words like "happy" and "fun." I understand joy, I understand contentment, and the opposite of the two. But fun and happy? I honestly don't know a lot about what people mean by those. Usually when I talk to my big brother on the phone, he'll ask me if I've done anything for fun lately. I think I mutter something like, "Well, I'm still going to school, and class is fun, I guess, sort of." I've about decided, and I don't mean this in a negative way, that somewhere in my past I gave up on fun and happy and traded them for joy, contentment and meaning.

But, I will say that "fun" seems to be the best word to describe playing with the kids yesterday. Santa brought a Wii to our house Christmas morning, and I have to tell you that if you haven't played a Wii before, you need to. I'm not much on endorsing products, or promoting the spending of money on frivolities, but the Wii works far better than I presumed it would, and it makes for great family time. And, it gives you a workout. Laughing, yelling, screaming, and working up a sweat in the comfort of your own living room with the whole family. Yep. That's fun. And meaningful. So maybe it's not so frivolous, either.

If you can find one, get a Wii.

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