John Shore

Archive for March 2008

Why Death Is Like It Is

In Religion on March 31, 2008 at 8:32 am

I think about death a lot. I figure anyone alive does, but I could be wrong about. I think I’m more impatient than most people. I’m always abnormally interested in how things are going to end.

Anyway, death is horrible. It’s an unthinkable affront to everything that’s dear to us. We all know that.

So it makes me wonder: Why do we have to do it? And why is it so final? And how come people who die are sooooooo totally gone? All this time, and no one’s come back from the dead to tell us anything about it? How can it possibly be that after eight zillion years of humanhood, we still have no idea what actually happens to us after we die? We can think  we know, we can believe  we know, we can hope we know — but the bottom line is that we can’t know  know. We just can’t see from here to there.

So my question is always: Why is our system the way it is? What purpose can there be in constructing a system designed in such a way that when humans stare into the great yawning abyss at the edge of life, all  they can see is nothing? If God (or nature) is good, then why or how is that  good?

The biggest fact about life is that it ends, right? So to me it just stands to reason that that means there must be something about the fact of death that’s meant to teach us something huge about life.

And I think that something is that just like we can’t define death, we’re not supposed to define life. I think we’re supposed to take the ever-present fact that we don’t know what death is, and then turn around, and use that same not-knowing, that same mysterious wonderment, to inform and shape the way we live.

When you define something, you kill it, insofar as you rob it of its potential to ever be anything else. If I say that I utterly know you, that I know everything about you, then I have denied you the very nature of your personhood, which is to change, to respond, to grow. I’ve closed off what I should see as ever open. I’m saying there’s no more mystery to you. That denies both you and me what amounts to the very essence of life.

All of us are infinitely mysterious, and infinitely complex. And so is everything else in the world. That’s what makes the world and our experience in it so deeply, insanely fascinating. If we go through our lives acting like we already know everything there is to know about life, then we ruin the experience of it. Then all  we can be is bored and angry and restless — because then we’re telling life what it should be, instead of letting life tell us what it is. Then we’ve closed ourselves off to the only thing that makes life fascinating, which is our lack of comprehensively, or absolutely, understanding what in the heck is really going on out here.

As awful as death is, I don’t think we’d want it any other way. I think the fact that death remains such a constant and immediate mystery to us is exactly what we need in order to make sure that we never forget that every moment of life is meant to be — and is certainly most richly appreciated as — a constant and immediate mystery of the exact same sort. Just like we can’t define death, we should never be too quick to define any aspect of life. I think death is there the way it’s there to constantly remind us of this critical living tool, this ever-liberating perceptive construct that we are meant to employ.

(Okay, for the record: I’m not saying that I don’t believe in the Christian version of what happens after death. I’m saying that even though we Christians have an idea  of what that experience is, the fact remains that we have zero information about what the reality  of that experience is. And we should use that not-knowing to inform our living. Same as everyone else.)

Sunday Night. Weekend Over.

In Uncategorized on March 30, 2008 at 10:38 pm

11:37 p.m.

I wonder how many 11:37 p.m.’s I’ve experienced in my life?

Too many.

Not nearly enough.

How to Subscribe to a Blog

In HowTo on March 30, 2008 at 7:59 am

A few people have e-mailed me asking either how they can subscribe to my blog, or even what it means to subscribe to mine or any other blog.

So here’s the deal. Over in the column on the right, right beneath the lovely mug shot o’ moi, is a box that says SUBSCRIBE TO “SUDDENLY CHRISTIAN.” That text is a link. If you click on that link, you’ll see how easy it is to subscribe to this blog. ”Subscribing” to a blog means getting everything new that’s written on a blog sent directly to you as an email. This allows you to keep up on the blog without ever having to actually visit that blog’s website address, since all of its new content is already being sent to you! In the case of this blog, every time I write something new on it, you’ll get an email with the subject line “Suddenly Christian.” When you open that email, you’ll see the content of my latest post in the same place you’d expect to see the text of any email. That’s it! Subscribing to a blog is absurdly easy, free, and does NOT result in any junk mail, or anything like that: your email address is ONLY used to send you blog updates. It’s just a wonderful, hassle-free use of the web.

On a more personal note, I love  it when people subscribe to my blog, because it means they’re willing to make me a part of their … well, lives, basically. Which of course is an honor. So subscribe, already! If you don’t like it, you can always, with a touch, unsubscribe. So go! Do! Have me regularly invade your inbox! Thanks!

 P.S. I’m gonna make all of this text part of the “Subscribe” link, so it’ll always be there with it. Groovy.

My Advice to the Teenager In Your Life

In Family on March 28, 2008 at 8:58 pm

Hello, teen. I assume someone you know has forwarded you this — unless you came to it on your own, which seems unlikely. Either way, thanks for giving any of what I’ve written here any of your valuable time at all.

My name is John Shore. I am not a teenager — though, like all people over twenty, I feel like one. But I’m not, and haven’t been for what is bound to seem to you like an extraordinarily long time. I’m fifty. Fifty!

Yet, crazily enough, I still feel about … well, twelve.

Have you ever heard of Sigmund Freud, the “Father of Psychology”? Sigmund Freud is as famous as famous gets for figuring out more than anyone ever had before him — or for at least more explicitly explaining more than anyone ever had before him – how human beings think, feel, and experience their lives. One of the things for which SF is most known for is his assertion that people, basically, never get past about the age of twelve. At best.

We are all arrested in our adolescence, he said. By that he meant that most people – being, like, 99% of people — are stuck thinking and feeling throughout their lives pretty much exactly the same way they thought and felt when they were about twelve years old.

Like zillions of people before me, I have actually found that to be pretty dang true. The #1 reason this is true is because, as it turns out, there isn’t a whole lot about life left to learn beyond whatever you’ve learned about it by the time you were about twelve.

Oh, sure, there’s lots of details that it’s hard to really grasp until you’ve got enough raw years behind you for the sort of “Been there; done that” savoir-faire that’s so popular amongst people who know their wines. But what really matters in life is emotion. And the bottom line is that by the time you’re about twelve, you have very intensely, under very many different circumstances, experienced just about every emotion that any human ever can experience.

Grief. Joy. Sorrow. Regret. Envy. Love. Passionate dedication. Determined resolution.

The heartbreak of psoriasis.

Okay, maybe not that. But something close enough to it.

Anyway, if you’re a teenager, here’s my Quick, Extremely Solid Advice: Do. Not. Worry.

I’m telling you not to worry because — surprise! — you’re right.

You’ve been right all along.

People really are as crazy as you think they are. They always have been. And (trust me) they always will be.

You can’t escape the crazy. Crazy is to humans like air is to birds. It’s what they move in.

And what you’ve always thought was true will, in fact, always remain true, if you just let it. And that is that just because other people are crazy does not meant that you have to be.

In the end — and in every way that anywhere along the line ever matters — right always wins. Always, always, always.

People are crazy. But what’s true never is.

I’m Out in Public! Whoo-Hoo!!

In Family on March 28, 2008 at 8:48 am

I’m out here, man. I’d doin’ it. I’m Experiencing Others.

I’m at a coffee shop. I’m sitting on a round stool that goes with the tall, round, shiny, 80’s-style oak table upon which is now my laptop and my Cwasant Le’ Tasty. Lionel Richie’s “Easy Like Sunday Morning” wafts through the air like a melodious, weekendy-inspired philosophy with which I have no particular affinity.

I grew up thinking of Sunday mornings as sheer hell. That’s when both my parents — or whatever Parental Combo I was just then living with — were home. I feel terrible  saying that (and know my dad, who wouldn’t know a computer from a shoe-box, will never read it). But … there it is. What can we do with the truth, but at the very least honor the sheer weight of its integrity?

I hated Sunday mornings. No use denying it.

When I was a kid, my #1 priority in life was to get out of the house as fast as I could, and stay out as long as I could. I was never home if I could possibly help it. For years, in fact, I would get up in the dead of night — one, two in the morning — climb out my bedroom window, and basically spend the next two or three hours roaming around my dark, eerily quiet neighborhood like some kind of skinny, pubescent ghost-freak. Being sure to remain in the shadows, I used to watch them making donuts at a nearby Winchell’s Donuts. Oil looked hot.

Hey! James Brown’s “Mother Popcorn” just came on!

This is the first record I ever, ever bought. I was 10 years old, at a garage sale, and I paid a dime for a 45-rpm (kids: don’t ask) for this record.

I was then, and remain to this day, a complete James Brown freak.

Anyway, I’m out here. And I pretend, a little, that it makes me uncomfortable — and, in fact, it does, a little — but the bottom line, for me, is that I’m rarely if ever more comfortable than when I’m out in the world doing Solitary Thing thing, surrounded by people I don’t know at all.

Those Wacky Koreans

In Religion on March 28, 2008 at 4:48 am

It was weird enough selling one of my books to a Korean publisher. Now a different Korean publisher (Sallim Publishing) has bought my other solo book, I’m OK — You’re Not: The Message We’re Sending Non-Christians and Why We Should Stop.

So … I’m mystified. Gratified, but mystified.

Which pretty much wraps up my whole response to life, actually.

But what’s the deal with Korean publishers wanting my books? American  publishers hardly want my books. The American publisher of “I’m OK” killed the book, because after publishing it, they decided to read it, and then decided it really “wasn’t in keeping” with their “publishing philosophy.”

Imagine my joy at learning that bit of news.

Anyway, all this recent news about how I’m sure I’m about to become the best-selling author in Korea has put me in mind of Master Hon, my Korean Tae-Kwon-Do teacher with whom I studied way past the age when someone should be spending a lot of their time warding off kicks to their head. I loved Master Hon. He was one scary, hyper-disciplined little dude. He was 50, and looked 20. And he could kick a lighbulb off the ceiling.

Anyway. I’ll let you know when I first see the covers of either of my New Korean Books.

What a life.

The Trouble With Glass

In Family, Fiction on March 27, 2008 at 5:20 pm

[If you hated my last Fun With Family Fiction thing, you're likely to loathe the story of mine below. It's called  The Trouble With Glass. Remember, friends, this is just a humble attempt to create decent art.]

Young Bennie Horton sat in the cavernous living room of a luxurious high-rise apartment on a round, backless white couch with a giant white button in its middle. It was 1959. Men wore hats. Women had big hair. People wore sunglasses and smiled a lot.

Also in the room was Bennie’s mother. She wore a long, flowing purple gown and a string of gold pearls draped about her neck. She stood gazing at the city below through the room’s great window.

“Ah, the teeming city,” she said. “It is like an organism unto itself.” She spun and regarded her son. “You understand what I’m saying, don’t you, Bennie? About the city living and breathing as a single organic unit?”

“I sure do!” piped up Bennie. “Absolutely! The many is just like one.” He laughed nervously. “I mean, it’s maybe a little bigger than your typical organism – but still! The one is made of the parts! Everything is in everything! All of life is one! Thou art that! Definitely! You bet!”

His mother looked decidedly nonplussed.

“God, you have a lot to learn,” she said, turning back to contemplate the view.

“It’s true,” said Bennie. “I really do. I know it. You’re right.”

His mother did not respond.

“Um, Mom? I was wondering. You know all those cacti you placed in my bedroom, in what I guess was the middle of last night? They’re really nice and everything. What characters! But the thing is, I don’t think –”

“No,” sighed his mother wearily, “You don’t think, Bennie. You’ve never thought. It’s simply not in you. Your opinions are, at best, amusing. You must surrender to the fact that your life will never be a cerebral one, son. The world of the physical is your realm. There is the life the Great Creative Spirit intended for you.

“Tell me, my child. Have you ever had an erection?”

“Jeez, Mom. I hardly feel –”

“No, no you don’t, Bennie. You feel nothing. You are like those cacti I placed in your room as a subtle reminder that the world is full of pricks. The symbolism of this gesture escaped you, of course. Metaphor is, after all, a subtle, delicate thing, not handled well by strictly linear thinkers like you. Now - I’ve asked you once, and I’m asking you again. Have you ever –?”

Just then someone rapped on the apartment door.

“Oh, God,” breathed Bennie’s mother. “It’s ice cream. I know it.”

She crossed to the door, her gown flowing behind her, and swung it open to reveal a white-uniformed Good Humor man holding a small paper bag.

“Ice cream delivery!” said the Good Humor Man. “Did somebody order a half-gallon of Double-Double Triple Quadruple Heart Attack Chocolate?”

Bennie’s mother leaned on the door and ran her hand up along its edge. Feeling the power of her lyre-like hips, she said, “You bring delectable gifts from the fields of Krishna, don’t you, you delightful thing?”

The Good Humor Man looked down into his sack, smiled, and said, “I guess I do!” Then he looked past her to Bennie.

“Hi, ya Bennie!” he said, waving. “How’s it going?”

“Pretty good!” said Bennie, hoping to use this opportunity to further develop his social skills. “But I’m trapped here with my insane mother! Please help me!”

“I hear ya!” rejoined the Good Humor Man. Then he dropped his voice and confided to Bennie’s mother, “He really needs to work on his social skills.”

“I know,” she whispered back. “We’re thinking of having him committed.”

“Don’t do it. I had a cousin who got committed. Those places are hellholes. Better to take him to a vacant lot and shoot him if you have to.”

Bennie’s mom grabbed the Good Humor man by his collar and pulled him forward until their noses almost touched.

“You don’t know what you’re talking about,” she hissed. “It would be good for him. Psychologists are our friends. Are you trying to tell me what’s best for my son, you obviously repressed homosexual neurotic?”

“No ma’am,” said the Good Humor Man, suddenly feeling very sorry for Bennie.

“Not at all. My mistake. Sorry.” He handed her a clipboard. “Sign here, please.”

Bennie’s mom released the man. “What am I signing for?” she asked sweetly, taking the clipboard.

“Ice cream.”

Bennie’s mother penned her name. She handed back the clipboard as if in a daze.

“Suddenly I feel paralyzed,” she said.

“I don’t!” said the man, snatching his clipboard and dashing down the hallway.

“Enjoy your ice cream! Bye! Good luck!”

Bennie’s mom waved feebly. Staring down at the carpet, she did not move. She began to dream about when she was a little girl living in a poor country orphanage. She remembered herself barefoot and crying. She remembered her hair caked with dirt. She remembered insects crawling through a half-eaten pan of cornbread on the floor.

She let the ice cream fall from her hand, though not before noting it was not chocolate at all, but its God damn opposite: strawberry sherbet. Barely aware of her own movement, she walked off down the hallway toward the elevators. She felt like she was gliding, her feet inches off the ground.

Bennie crossed to the door and looked down the hallway.

“Going out to lunch?” he called.

Without turning around she flitted her hand around in the air behind her head. He had been dismissed.

“I said, Are you going to dinner? — you life-sucking monster bitch from hell!” Bennie screamed uncontrollably. His mother stopped in her tracks. She turned, slowly, and faced him. She raised both of her hands.

“Can you see the blood coming from my palms?” she asked.

“No,” said Benny sadly. “No, I can’t. I’m sorry, Mom. I can’t.”

“Well, it’s there,” said his mother. “You know it’s there.” She turned and walked away again, disappearing around a corner. Bennie soon heard the familiar sound of the elevator bell. His mother was going down. He heard the elevator arrive, open, and close.

It was quiet then. Nobody seemed to be home in any of the apartments on his floor. It was hard to be sure, of course. All those doors.

Bennie looked down at his hands, which were hurting. He saw blood there, coming from each palm. He pushed his hands against the front door and moved them around, leaving behind red streaks. He went inside, closed and locked the door behind him, and cleaned his hands. The cuts there were small after all, received most likely from the cacti. He sat down upon the round backless couch. He heard a helicopter flying right outside his building. It went, Whap, whap, whap, whap.

Next he heard a “ffunk!” at the big window. He got up, looked, and saw that a pigeon had flown hard into the pane and was now lying with its neck broken on the ledge just outside the window. The smoke-gray bird closed its eyes. Bennie tried to open the window, but discovered it was painted shut.

Bennie went into his bedroom, lifted a small potted cactus from the floor near his bed, and carried it back into the living room. He placed the plant on the inside ledge of the window, inches from the bird. He got down on his knees, and rested his hands, about chest level, on the sill. He stared at the bird. He would never be able to say positively, but for the rest of his life, Bennie would believe that one of the bird’s eyes had suddenly opened, and that the animal had winked at him.

Hell, it may have even smiled.

Not Involved

In Family, Fiction on March 26, 2008 at 10:11 pm

[Family life. Fiction. It's all part of the same pot, isn't it?]

David looked up from the letter informing him of his mother’s death–and the next thing he knew he was nine years old, floating inches off the ceiling of the dining room in the house in which he grew up.

Directly below him, yellow with layered dust and glowing white hot, were the six flame-shaped bulbs of the room’s faux-brass candelabra, hanging from its faux-brass chain above the family’s sleek faux-walnut dining room table.

Sitting alone at that table was his 12-year-old sister, Carol. She was a plump girl — not obese, not fat, not slovenly: just early-teenager plump.

In front of Carol on the otherwise empty table was a large cereal bowl piled high with shiny malted milk balls. The only other person in the room was David and Carol’s mother. She was screaming at Carol to eat all the malted milk balls.

“Finish them, hog!” she screamed. “Do you hear me? You’re not getting up out of that seat until you finish the whole bowl, you disgusting pig!”

David, quietly floating above it all, felt a pain in his left hand. He looked down, and saw that a little boy who had appeared from nowhere was now standing beside his mother. With her right hand his mother was tightly gripping this boy’s left hand. Oddly, this new little boy looked exactly like him. The boy on the ground was silently watching Carol. He looked sad and anxious.

“Eat them!” Ruth said to her daughter. “Finish them all, fatso!” She looked down at the boy whose hand she was clutching.

“Isn’t that right, honey? Isn’t Carol a little piggy girl? I found her sneaking into the candy, didn’t I? And she’s such a fat little piggy, I’m sure she would have eaten the whole bag if I hadn’t caught her.”

And then, from his position above the faux-candelabra, David cried out, “I know I would have! Who wouldn’t want to eat all the malted milk balls?”

His mom continued talking to the boy at her side, though. “So now she needs to eat the whole bag, just like the hog she is. Isn’t that right?”

Well, screw this noise, thought David: Enough was enough. Turning on his Super Flying Will Power, he swept down from the ceiling like an avenging eagle, landing beside his sister’s chair. He threw his arm around her and pointed at his mother.

“What in God’s name is the matter with you?” he cried. “You need to stop this nonsense! You are seriously in the running for the Absolute Worst Mom Ever award! What you’re doing is wrong! Ever since Dad moved out, everything Carol does is revolting, and everything I do is the greatest thing that’s ever happened! Do you have any idea how wacko that is, Mom? Do you? Do you ever notice the looks the other moms at the PTA meetings give you when you say things like, ‘Well, today my miraculous wonder of a son controlled the weather over Africa and parts of Australia, while my devilish pig-daughter sucked all the goodness out of the universe just by being alive’? Huh, Mom? Ever notice people giving you that panicked, ‘Oh my God, this woman’s a loon’ look, Mom? Do you? Ever notice the people at the store baggin’ your groceries a lotfaster than they do anybody else’s? Notice waiters dropping your food off as they practically run past your table — never, ever to return? Did’ya think it was just bad service, Mom? Did’ya? Cuz I got news for you, you snap-dragon. It wasn’t! It was service for the insane!

“We’re just normal kids, Mom! All kids like malted milk balls, you vain, petty, messed-up, mean-spirited, rotten-to-the-core nightmare!

David said those things to his mother.

With his arm around his sister, whom he loved with a dedication canine in its intensity, he looked straight at his mother, and said those things to her.

He saved his sister Carol.

He saved her! He saved her! He saved her!

Except he didn’t. Throughout his speech and afterwards his mom continued glaring at his sister. His sister, seemingly unaware of the hero at her side, continued staring down at the bowl of malted milk balls, her mouth a flat smear of wretchedness.

David felt another pang in his left hand, the one around Carol’s shoulder.

He looked at his mom. He looked at Carol. He looked at the kid who looked so much like him, the kid whose hand was hurting him because of how much his mom was squeezing it.

It was like none of them had seen or heard him at all. It was like David had done nothing whatsoever to defend his sister against their mother. It’s like he had just stood there, with that kid, and watched her suffer.

Hollywood: 10,000 Exhibitionists, and No One Watching

In Religion, Travel on March 25, 2008 at 7:44 am

First of all, if you left me a “Happy 50th Birthday!” message, I want to sincerely thank you. If you didn’t leave me such a message, I want to sincerly ask you what your problem is. How often does someone turn 50?

Luckily for you, part of being so old you begin forgetting to chew before you swallow is that you learn the graceful, benevolent art of living and letting live. So I’m going to let you live. But don’t let it happen again. And you know who you are, too. And you know that I know who you are. And I know that you know that I know that you know that I know who’s on first?

Um. So don’t fail to let that be a lesson to you.

Hollywood! We were there for my Big Fat 50th Birthday, staying in the so-chic-it’s-basically-functionless Roosevelt Hotel, which is right across the street from Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, which is famous throughout the world for being the place exploited Chinese of 1920’s Los Angeles figured out how to make fun of big-time Hollywood stars by somehow convincing them it was cool to jam their hands and feet into wet cement.

Ahh, Hollywood. Is anyone there not addled by the conviction that they’re only one Power Lunch away from starring in a TV show based upon how cool they look? It’s an entire culture convulsing on the conviction that acting like a star and being a star are the same thing.

Hollywood is 10,000 media-addled exhibitionists struggling to keep themselves deluded that somehow, somewhere, they’re on camera. Everyone’s blinded by the spotlight they’re crazed to get in. Everyone’s got a project in development, a script they’re reading, a friend or a relative who’s a producer who’s putting together a package with these guys who used to be with The WB.

Anyway. If you’ve ever been to Hollywood, you know. If not, then … then next time you’re alone, put your favorite song on the stereo, turn off all the lights, place a flashlight so it shines in your face, and sing that song like you’re on stage in front of an auditorium packed with screaming fans delirious to be so near you. If anytime during the course of performing that song you slip into that deliriously heady moment when you think you really are the focus of all the world’s most rabid adulation and love, stop. Now imagine an entire culture  based on the idea that it’s wrong to ever let that feeling fade.

And there’s Hollywood!

Now that I’ve done the Grumpy Rant, do let me say that I madly love (and in fact was raised around) theater. I’ve got good friends knee-deep in Hollywood show business. I think I love actors and the whole Theater Universe more than I do any other … Group o’ Humans doing stuff.

I myself am about halfway through a play I’m writing. I’m hoping to get said play produced in Los Angeles.

Proving, yet again, that more often than not God arranges it so that, one way or another, we end up wanting, loving and needing at least some aspect of the very thing about which we are convinced we feel the most disdain. 

Good Friday; My 50th Birthday Today; Why White People Can Relax

In Politics, Religion on March 21, 2008 at 7:52 am

Today I turn 50. Yay. It’s also Good Friday, the saddest day in the Christian year. Not yay.

My wife’s taking me to Los Angeles over the weekend to see some Big Time Theater Plays (The Last Days of Judas Iscariot and Wicked ). Yay.

I got an email yesterday from a friend of some 30 years who’s a member of Trinity Church, home of the suddenly very famous Rev. Jeremiah Wright. She’s a tad freaked out by all the hoopla. She loves her pastor, of course. She knows him to be a deep, vital, loving man of God whose life and ministry are defined by compassion.

Which reminds me: I’d like to suggest that one of the reasons white people (and yeah, I know I’m white) get so upset about Rev. Wright’s, shall we say, more vigorous assertions, is that they imagine what their white pastor would have to feel in order to say the same things Rev. Wright is now being so roundly condemned for saying. But what I think we’d all do well to remember is that communication is a matter of style, and style is a matter of culture. In the black community, the style in which people very often talk is big. Big voices. Big gestures. Big language. Big effects.

Rev. Wright wasn’t literally calling for God’s wrath to be visited upon on America. He was just talking in the flamboyently oratorical way that’s common in African-American culture — and that’s very traditionally used by black preachers in black churches. There are all kinds of visual and tonal cues that tell you when that’s the kind of talk you’re hearing. But if you’re not used to those cues — if you don’t really have any experience in black culture — you might end up thinking that, in Rev. Wright’s case, he means what he says, in the same way a white preacher would if he or she said the same things. But that’s just a category mistake.

Trust me: If my straightlaced, hyper-intellectual white pastor ever hollered from his pulpit, “God damn America!”,  I would have no doubt that he’d gone insane and constructed an atom bomb in his garage. When I hear Rev. Wright say it, though, I know that he’s just dramatically making a point to an audience keenly attuned to his flamboyent style of communication — to what, contrary to what it might seem to outsiders, are the subtleties of his message.

White people can relax. Rev. Wright doesn’t think everyone in the United States belongs to the K.K.K. He doesn’t want God to destroy America. And his audience doesn’t hear it that way, either.

I got another email yesterday from another black female friend of mine, someone who, way back when I was a teenager, basically saved my life by inviting me into her home and making me part of her family. Here’s some of what this good woman wrote to me:

“When you grow up the way I did (in a white world, denying the truth of who and what you are) you are privy to racism in a way that many aren’t. People actually get so comfortable with you, that they let little statements start to “slip” in your presence. They start to finish nasty little comments with, ‘Oh, but not you,’ or ‘But you’re different.’ It was after that started happening that I knew I didn’t want to be different from my own people. That I didn’t want to be separated out. It is a truly painful thing to realize that you have had to learn to embrace your own skin and your own people — when you learn that you have been taught to hate yourself and all the beautiful things about yourself that are unique to your specific ethnic group. From the kink of your hair, to the curve of your hips, to the tone of your voice — you hate yourself. And for me, that is the saddest thing and the cruelest pain that racism can inflict: it can cause a human being to hate the beautiful creature that God has created in them. …. If everyone could see each other as an extension of God, these types of conversations would be unnecessary, and slavery would have never occurred. Slavery has always been economically based, and it didn’t begin in this country. But historically it had always been perpetrated by one group of color against another group of the same color. Ethnically different, yes, but of the same people. It was only in the western world that, finally, it became about color. The entire concept of one race hating another and thinking in terms of inherent superiority or inferiority denies the basic intelligence of God in his creation of humans.”

And there you have it.

Happy Good Friday, everyone. And God bless us all.