The Leaky Faucet

Drip… drip… drip…

The sound finally catching her attention, she pauses her work, listening to the slow and steady flow of water from the faucet fifty feet away. Sighing, she continues to pretend she can’t hear it, but now the act is in vain: as her determination to ignore the annoyance grows, so, too, does the sound grow in the back of her mind, lurking closer and closer to the forefront, a shadow on the wall rousing suspicion to delay progress.

Drip… drip… drip…

On a normal day, she wouldn’t even be able to hear it. The office is typically quite noisy with the hustle and bustle of work, but today, she was the only person in. As a transplant from the northeast, she could handle a few inches of snow without a problem, and some deadlines made her wary of taking the day off. Her coworkers, however, all took the day to stay safe instead of testing road conditions. All of them.

Drip… drip… drip…

When she blinks, she finds her eyes straying to the top of her cubicle, hovering there, unseeing yet fighting the remarkable urge to glare at the leaky piping. Decidedly continuing to type, she can’t manage to draw her eyes away from their perch until she needs to proofread the paragraph – at which point she discovers gibberish as the result of consistently typng one character to the left of where she thought she was typing. Her fists clinch.

Drip… drip… drip…

It was an eerie experience, having the enormous floor of the even more massive office building to herself. For all she knew, she was alone in the complex; there was no guard on duty this morning in the main lobby when she swiped in. She often preferred to be alone when working on individual tasks, but it was weird to have so much space to herself. Distractingly weird, as it were, and her thoughts meandered with the droplets from the kitchenette. Such quiet was still welcome after the rush of the busiest season of the year. The solitude was generally helpful as the only interruption she needed to tune out to focus on her work was the pinging of her email… and that obnoxious leak.

Drip… drip… drip…

Forcing a strong exhale, she stands, tugging her blazer flat and buttoning the bottom button. She cracks her neck, slides her chair back under her desk, takes a deep breath, and strolls toward the kitchen, pumping her arms and lifting her knees high as though marching. As she turns the corner to face her adversary, she reaches out, gripping the wall and swinging around the corner. Foe in sight, she nods, determined to fix the problem.

Drip… drip… drip…

An inanimate object would make a worthy opponent for the simple fact that it can’t die. So, too, wouldn’t that make it an enemy not worth defeating because it doesn’t feel the sting of defeat? The saying that the sweetness of victory depends on the comprehension of escaping a bitter loss seems to correlate somewhat with schadenfreude: if the adversary cannot feel the pain of defeat or savor the taste of triumph, is the conquest itself nearly as glorious as it could be?

Drip… drip… drip…

Cranking the knobs, she discovers the problem won’t be so easily solved. Opening the underbelly, she purses her lips and crawls underneath; she knows little or less about plumbing and she isn’t interested in mucking anything up. However, she still looks, hoping for something that will pop out at her, be it a physical sign or an epiphany. Finding nothing, she traces the pipes with her fingers, hoping they might provide some direction. They offer nothing.

Drip… drip… drip…

Who wanted a kitchen on every floor, anyway? What’s the point to having a de-centralized cafeteria system? Sure, it takes a few minutes off of coffee-fetching time, but how many cups of coffee does the average person drink each day, anyway? And the food would be substantially better if it didn’t all come from a vending machine; requiring employees to go off-site to purchase a halfway decent lunch certainly had to cut into productivity. Maybe the owners of the building thought professionals all packed lunch from home. A silly assumption, but perhaps they don’t know better, or they think too highly of professionals generally to be realistic about their everyday decision making. Who knows.

Drip… drip… drip…

Sighing, she closes the cabinets and leaves the kitchenette, heading back to her desk. As she yanks out her chair, she plops into it, gliding back to her desk and drawing up an email to the office building maintenance. Careful of the wording, she ruminates on a phrase as she brings up an online radio station to stream classical music – or perhaps some jazz – to occupy the part of her brain fixated on the sounds and lack thereof of the office. As she sends off the email, she notices one hit her inbox from her supervisor with the subject line CALL ME ASAP – BEFORE 2PM. Glancing at the clock, she notices the lack of margin for error: it reads 13:52.

Drip… drip… drip…

Everything happens for a reason, right? The leaky faucet caused a bit of a commotion – departing from the cubicle to try to amend the issue then returning to request professional help – and resulted in catching an email on time that otherwise would not have been seen until too late. It’s curious the way such things sometimes work: perturbing us to action, that action resulting in an unrelated save on the day. And often we don’t even feel the gratitude that we should for such happenstances, instead just hurrying along as though nothing even happened. Minute quasi-miraculous interventions happen every day, yet we often miss these graces given to us. Perhaps we might open our eyes a little more every day to appreciate the simple gifts granted us.

Drip…

Focus on the Light

When’s the last time your wind was psychologically sucker-punched out of you? The last time you had a really rough day such that nothing was adding up and it seemed like you couldn’t see anything but the storms overhead? Maybe it felt like you couldn’t see more than a few feet in front of you, what you could see wasn’t promising, and taking even a single step forward felt like more energy than you had. Maybe you couldn’t see anything at all.

We all have bad days; it’s part of the human experience. They* say the peaks wouldn’t mean anything without the valleys. Still, knowing that doesn’t tend to make the valleys any easier to traverse; it may make them crossable, but not effortlessly so. Trials and tribulations eventually come to an end; there is always hope because there is always a slope to climb to get out of the gully. That’s what makes them gullies.

I don’t use the term “always” lightly: when taking a multiple-choice test, I automatically cross out answer options using the terms “always” or “never” because of how exceptionally unlikely an “always” or a “never” qualifier is to hold true. (The sky is not always blue; the grass is not always green; water isn’t even always wet!) Here, it holds: there is always hope. There is always a way forward.

They also say we write what we need to hear.

Today, I got a few doses of sucker-punches: two rejections regarding what I considered to be my two most likely paths forward. I was grateful for not being strung along – the responses were relatively quick – but it hurt. The first I spotted this morning as I was writing follow-up emails; as I was ruminating on wording, I flipped through my email categories, discovering it in a folder I normally ignore. I physically slid my chair away from my computer to catch my breath.

And then I pulled myself back in, grimaced a makeshift smile on my face, and clung to the silver lining. Pushing on, I finished the email I was working on before diving into another task, returning after a little alternative recovery. After sending yet another message, I paused for lunch; when I returned, just as I was feeling capable of handling the day, there was another rejection in my inbox. On top of a botched attempt to help last night and a few other things that seemed to hit me out of nowhere this morning plus a near occasion of sin while I was reeling from it all… Ouch.

My silver lining from the day is a four-letter word in the above paragraph: near. Also part of the human condition, we all have things we struggle with. I keep thinking I’ve escaped a vice only to find it lurking in the corner awaiting an opportunity. Somehow, today, I managed to say no of my own volition. It was weak, a pathetic whimper against the darkness closing in, but it held fast, like the tone of a clear bell through a dense fog. That whimper got me to sit up and take a deep breath. That whimper was just enough to remind me to look for the light.

I’m still looking for it, mind you; the weather is still overcast with the night closing in, but I know the light is there. It’s always there; there is always hope. Just because we lose sight of something doesn’t mean it no longer exists. (Peek-a-boo! Say hello to object permanence!) Knowing the light is always there makes all the difference because it means the reach, the attempt, the effort isn’t in vain.

So, here’s to hope. Here’s to finding that silver thread and hanging on to it until you pull the cloud out of the sky with it. Here’s to the dark nights that help us isolate the light. Here’s to perseverance when the slopes seem too steep to climb. Here’s to holding fast to the whimper of conviction in your soul. Here’s to knowing that the fight’s not over, that the best is yet to come, and that something beautiful will blossom from the struggle. Here’s to knowing that there is always a path forward.

Cheers!

*
The infamous “they” of common knowledge whom nobody seems able to pinpoint.

Dream List Progress

Welcome to the end of the month! I hope your January was everything you hoped it would be and more.

This weekend is the perfect time for a self-evaluation because tonight closes out this month and tomorrow morning launches February. To kick off the year, we made dream lists. Our dream lists are essentially finite goals with actionable steps attached to them. We include all sorts of goals: short-term, medium-term, and long-term goals; internal and external; physical, mental, and relational – everything. Think of it as a bucket list-plus.

Having dreams doesn’t mean we’ll achieve them, though. For that, we need to actively work towards them. This is why we include action steps in our dream list: to set a logical path for us to follow to reach our goals. Once we have the paths set in place, we can follow them to the destinations – our dreams.

How are you faring keeping on track with your dream list? Looking at mine, I can see that I’ve progressed quickly with some, slowly with others, and gone backwards with a couple of them. I assess my progress at regular intervals to determine what I can do better, whether my priorities have changed (and if so, how that should be reflected in my dream list), and celebrate what has gone well. Let’s go through a few of my goals to see what this means.

Example: Journaling (Creative)

Assess

One of the habits I want to grow is a journaling habit. I kicked off the month strong, writing a (small) page every night at bedtime; it’s a good way to close out the day. However, when this week hit, I was more interested in the extra twenty minutes of sleep per night than in journal entries: many of my days are missing. And I know why: I was awake every day by 05:45 (5:45 am) and busy doing stuff (job applications, errands, blogging, phone calls, reviews of board decisions, emails, volunteering…) through until about 23:00 (11 pm) each day. (And that busyness only included one walk! Ahhh!)

Onward

I will fill in the missed days based on my calendar entries for the week. I suspect they won’t have the same flavor to them that contemporaneous entries will have, but it must suffice.

Plan

Recognizing my main problem here to be one of overscheduling resulting in a sleep deficit, I can work to fix that. Parts of my day are static (Mass at 07, for example, or work and volunteer commitments). These things aren’t going to change, so I need to look to the things that can be shifted around.

Keep: My journal and its pen hanging out next to the last light of the night to be turned off has been helpful. Every time I go to turn the light off, if I skip journaling, I have to make a conscious decision with the reminder right there.

Shift: I post on this blog daily, but it has become more of a nightly thing; I will work on getting my posts up earlier in the day so I can call it a night sooner than I previously did.

Change: I have a habit of overscheduling my days. This problem was exacerbated this week in particular because I was working on certain tasks that I didn’t know how long they would take (and I was never quite satisfied with the results), resulting on my understimating them.

Every Dream, Tracked

Ideally, we keep track of our dreams until they’re fulfilled. (And then maybe write a book about how awesome it was to complete a dream!) I recommend going through this process (assess, onward, and plan; keep, shift, and change) with every dream you’re serious about completing. The frequency will depend on the dream. (For example, it doesn’t make sense to assess my sailing dreams in January: the water is frozen over here.)

It may also help to include cross-dream data. Do two or more of your dreams relate to each other? Maybe you’re learning martial arts from a teacher who only speaks Japanese during sessions and becoming fluent in Japanese is another of your dreams. Even if you didn’t do much in your plan with learning the language this month, maybe you understood a certain phrase for the first time. Count that as a win, because it’s progress towards your goals.

Even if you don’t have the time to conduct a thorough assessment of each dream every month, I do recommend scanning through your list at least that often. It may help you to say each one aloud. There are three main reasons for this. First, it reminds you where you’re going and allows you to update your dreams as your priorities change. Second, you may have an epiphany on the next actionable step for one of your dreams but you haven’t written it down yet; this provides you with just such an opportunity. Third, it helps to keep you motivated to strive towards your goals because you keep them in sight.

So, how are your dreams coming along?

Team Trestle

Arriving early, she checks the clock, reaching to the passenger seat and hauling the first bag over her head, looping the shoulder sling about her. Opening the door, she snags the other bag, stepping out to hang it off of her other shoulder, and leaning in to grab the final bag. Locking the door, she steps out and closes it, advancing toward the hall.

Am I early enough?

Yanking out her keys, she opens the door and starts to set up, placing the last bag here, the second bag there, wrangling her coat off from under the first bag, and taking that bag with her to the far side of the building. So much to do… She starts with the part she’s never done before; one of her team members is out tonight, so she’s taking this part over. This has to get done first to make sure it gets done. My part isn’t as crucial and can wait.

She runs hither and thither setting things up. It isn’t until the first of her team walks in that she forgot one of the most time-consuming parts of the set-up. She blanches.

He catches her wince. Without missing a beat, he smiles. “What can I do?”

“Are you sure?”

“Absolutely. What can I do?”

She explains the chair set-up and he runs right to it. As he embarks on his quest, another team member walks in. “Let me help with that,” he insists, nodding a greeting to her as he rushes by. Within a few minutes, others are assisting as well, fetching this or moving that. What would have taken her almost an hour was completed within fifteen minutes, and everyone is ready to start the event on time.

The event begins. Again, they hit a hitch – a technical glitch.

Three jump up immediately, one going to the tech, one notifying the temporary techmaster, and one glancing between the two to see if either party needed help. Problem solved in under a minute.

Whew.

At the end of the night, she gives up trying to corral the troops for the close-out meeting and started on various tasks. One by one, the team members see what she was doing and quietly follow suit, putting this here and that there until the entire place was in order. Peering out from her weary eyes, she finds the team gathered and ready for the final meeting of the night.

Ready. That is the grandest oddity: this was the first time the entire group was ready for any of their meetings. It had been wearing her thin that getting everyone together was like herding cats: it’s fairly easy to get one, but as soon as another enters the vicinity, they both leave, turning up their noses at having to share attention. Tonight, these two meetings of respectful congregation shocked her into a stutter; she quickly regains composure, carrying through the meeting and sending everyone off.

There is one last thing she has to do… Ugh, I don’t want to bother to ask someone to stay with me! The policy was that nobody was the last person to leave: if you were going to be the last person, someone else stays with you to make sure you’re both safe. Although she understood the policy, she simultaneously thought it was a waste of someone else’s time to bother waiting for her. Typically, the person she was covering for tonight would also be staying this late with her, so they’d walk out together, neither really waiting on the other. Nobody’s gonna jump me on the way to my car…

When she looks up from shoving a book into her bag, one of her team members smiled at her. “I’m gonna walk you to your car,” he announces happily.

She chuckles. “You don’t have to do that,” she assures him. “I’m sure you’re tired and ready to get home to your wife.”

“Mmm, my wife wouldn’t like the idea of me not walking a young woman to her car this late at night. No ma’am. We could be the safest city in the state, the country, the world, and it wouldn’t matter. No, no. It’s polite to walk a lady to her vehicle late at night.”

Smiling, she nods her acquiescence. “Thank you.”

Quickly finishing her final task, she tosses on her coat. Chipper as ever, he walks her to her car on the far side of the parking lot through the blisteringly cold wind chill. “I just want to make sure the engine turns over.”

She smiles; opening the door, she inserts the key and turns. “My car never fails me.”

“You never know!” He calls to her as he walks away. “Have a great night!”

Silently, she sits in the car, turning her lights on and watching to make sure that he, too, gets in his car. With a grin, she pops her foot on the brake and shifts into drive. Good night, she thinks. “Good night indeed.”

Thoughts on Music in the Background

At choir last night, it came up that one of our musicians constantly hears music in his head. Constantly. As in, it never pauses. My first thought: that’s amazing.

My second thought: how does he get anything done like that?

This guy is a prodigy. He’s been playing instruments well since he was eight, and composed a gorgeous original piece for the group to sing on Mother’s Day a few years ago when he was in high school. (It begs the question of what I did with my sophomore year of high school.) He spends most of his time practicing his musical talent in all of its various forms, including professional performances. Amidst all of this playing, singing, and composing, he also has a background of music playing in his head.

How does he do it? I would be so distracted!

At the same time, I wonder how unusual it is for people to “hear” music that isn’t playing. Most of us have experienced getting a song stuck in our heads at some point; I’d be impressed to find someone who said they never experienced this phenomenon. In contrast, this gent is the first I’ve heard of anyone constantly having music playing in his brain. (HowStuffWorks has an article about earworms that mentions endomusia, meaning it has happened before, but I found no numbers, suggesting rarity.)

Luckily for me, I tend to fall somewhere between these two. I have no idea how he can work on musical projects (especially composition!) with another tune playing in the background. Simultaneously, I find myself agitated by silence. Look this adjective up in a thesaurus to find a variety of words of distress which have plagued me at times due to an extended period of time without music. (When I was little, I even slept with the radio on.) Instead of giving in to the anxiety of silence, my brain often fills in the gaps with medleys of familiar tunes. I can direct the music to kinds permitting me to focus on the task at hand by redirecting it to audible music.

With music consistently filling many of our noggins, where does prayer fit in?

School of Silence

Just writing that made my pulse accelerate. However, many people have written about or otherwise explained to me the necessity of silence. Several have attempted to win me over to the following of silence. This is generally how our conversations tend to go:

Friend: I look forward to my moments of silence.
Me: Cool. You can have all of mine.
Friend: How do you listen to God if you don’t sit in silence?
Me: Oddly enough, I’ve never heard the audible voice of God speaking to me. I think that might scare me more than the silence itself.
Friend: But I need silence to properly pray. How do you pray without silence?
Me: With music.
Friend: That makes no sense.
Me: We probably listen to different music, then.
Friend: No music is as sweet as the voice of God.
Me: Again, never heard that audible voice; I’m kinda fine with that. It also means I can’t compare the two, so I’ll take your word for it.
Friend: You should try silence sometime. It’s great for personal growth.
Me: God may speak to everyone else through silence, but silence gives me no peace and God is capable of speaking to me through music, and He’ll meet me where I’m at.
Friend, dismissively: Kids these days – addicted to distractions.
Me: … Thanks.

I absolutely, positively believe that silence is helpful for a good relationship with God for most people. It may even be helpful for all of us, but I haven’t gotten to that point yet. It’s kinder on my brain to have white noise in the background – nature sounds, instrumentals, traffic and car noises, pop praise songs on the radio, anything – than to sit in silence.

We have to turn off the smartphone, find a quiet place and a recollected posture, and let our minds settle. If we don’t, there is no way we will be able to hear what God wants to tell us.

– Father John Bartunek, A Quiet Place

I disagree. (I concede the point about the phone; I leave mine on DND/silent mode when I need to focus. Mind settling is probably also helpful. What I contest is the quiet requirement.) Still, I find the book incredibly helpful and believe it works for Father Bartunek and the many others who have encouraged me to try silence. Maybe I’ll try it again tomorrow for five minutes, just sitting in silence and not letting my thoughts run away from me. (That’s the trick, isn’t it – not letting the thought train get away?) Currently, though, I disagree.

The Case for Prayer Music

Argument one: music can assist in focus. There is plenty of music that is uplifting, encouraging, and thought-provoking. Yes, some music is distracting, but not all of it. (The music I’m currently listening to is somewhat distracting, but there is reason for it.) I trust I’m not alone in having a mind that needs a treadmill to run on to keep it from running away, even if it’s merely simple chords.

It’s like having an extremely active child and either opting for a simple play area or tethering the kiddo to the parent: one option allows the kid to run around safely with generally just the need for a watchful eye whereas the other requires constant tugging in the proper direction.

This kind of music helps me when I can fully focus on the connecting with God. (Perfect counter example, I’m not concurrently concerned with driving; I often pray in the car.) There are a plethora of meditative playlists designed specifically to help one’s mind focus on prayer or in meditation. I’m a fan of instrumental, particularly instrumental classical or soft jazz. (Instrumental covers often find me adding the lyrics.) On the whole, the gentler the music, the better it is for assisting with focus.

Argument two: God can use music to speak to us. Have you ever had a time when just the right song came on the radio at just the right time? How did that song speak to your heart? What was it telling you? Where do you think that came from?

[Part of prayer is] searching for what God wants to say to you.

– Father John Bartunek, A Quiet Place

This tends to be where I find myself: sitting with the radio on, paying it no mind, when a song comes on that strikes me. Beyond reminding me that the radio is on, it speaks a message I’ve been needing to hear, and somehow, I know it’s for me. Sometimes, it’s joyous and I sing along; other times, it solemnly forces me to pause; still other times, I grin weakly and mull over a particular line for the rest of the day.

Argument three: music is a form of prayer. There is literally a genre of music known as praise and worship. Sometimes songs that lift my soul to the Lord enter my heart during relatively quiet moments. These pieces encourage me to sing with them, meaning every word, causing me to connect more fully with God than any words I could think to speak. When music brings us closer to God, the music itself is a form of prayer.

What is Your Experience?

Do you focus better with or without music? I find it to be personal preference; I am better with music, but my mother can’t process her thoughts well with any noise. Which way do you prefer? What is your experience with listening to music during prayer? Are you (or do you have any friends who are) naturally gifted musically with tunes ever-present in their minds? What do you think of having your own soundtrack to life? Let us know in the comments!

Daunting Tasks are Rewarding Tasks

I have been working on an application for a couple of weeks now. The position requires replying to several essay questions and totally revamping my resume. My tactic for getting this application done was a cross between researching the company and its people, writing answers to the essay questions, re-writing my answers because my initial response went in a non-preferred direction, procrastinating due to doubt, and balking at figuring out how to change my resume.

After spending so long perfecting my resume, I am quite attached to the current product: the format, the phrasing, the terminology, the selected experience. Given the task at hand, the only one of these things I can keep is my formatting. I’m even debating changing my title line. It’s rough. The process isn’t just daunting, it’s emotionally draining: I have to rebuild myself from scratch.

I’m not sure I even know how to do that anymore.

This was the task I’ve been delaying the longest. Today, I decided I was done with such nonsense and was going to at least try. (Well, after re-checking to make sure the position was still listed online, I decided to try; I was not about to waste my efforts on an opportunity that had already closed. #FinalDelayTactic.) After all, the options seemed to be try and possibly fail, or fail to try at all. I gritted my teeth (literally) and started tearing apart my resume (metaphorically). After struggling for several minutes, I paused: if I were writing my resume from scratch, what would I do?

Google it.

Looking up resumes for a how to include a blog on a resume led to my search for resume examples for similar job titles. Was my research another delay tactic? At first brush against this question, I was concerned, but I quickly found myself actively engaged in the product much more than the process. I wanted to get this done and done right.

Just as I started to implement the meat-and-potatoes into my resume, I get a phone call that I really shouldn’t ignore. I bit my lip, exhaled hard, and answered. It was a good conversation, but mercifully not a particularly long one because my mind was on the task at hand. I was focused. I was going to get this done. However, our conversation reminded me that I had other things to prepare for first, so I jumped on my other tasks with such fervor that I completed them faster than I’d ever done before and swiveled back to the resume.

A little rip here, a little tug there, a little deletion of this irrelevant experience and some addition of that parallel work. When I first looked at my resume and thought about the changes I needed to make, I despaired that I wouldn’t even have a page to fill and increased the font sizes to make the content look longer. By the end of the session, I had to decrease the font size and play with spacing to make it fit on one page. All totalled, I spent five hours of intense hands-on re-drafting of this puppy – and I had to tear myself away to attend an event tonight.

By the time my alarm went off to get ready to leave, the resume was in workable condition. Not done – certainly not – but it looked like a resume that could plausibly be submitted for this position. I sent it to a friend basically saying, “Look how far I’ve come!” I was ecstatic, and I wanted to share my joy with her.

(She has already shared her suggestions back with me. Bless her – it wasn’t ready for a review yet, but she took the time to help anyway.)

Tomorrow will be the post-hack-and-slash day. There will be cleaning, and tweaking, and distilling, and clarifying, and oh so much polishing. But that’s for tomorrow. Tonight, I am satisfied. I saw what I did, and it was good. And I’m so excited about what I got done today that I’m thrilled to be able to jump up and continue the work tomorrow. It’s going to be awesome.

When have you put something off only to discover later the joy in doing it? How do you feel when you get around to checking things off on your to-do list that have been sitting there for a little too long? Are there any tasks you’ve been putting off that you found yourself thinking about while reading this post? If so, what are you going to do to get it done?

Well-Made Plans

In the State of New Hampshire, every proposed bill is presented with the opportunity for the public to weigh in. Today, there was an exceptionally charged bill which went to committee in the State House of Representatives: CACR 14 of 2020. It drew such a crowd that it was migrated from its original room to the House of Representatives chamber in the building across the road to fill a little more than half of the four hundred member seats there.

Why all the interest? Here’s the language CACR 14 seeks to add into the New Hampshire State constitution:

The right to make personal reproductive medical decisions is inviolate and fundamental to the human condition. Neither the State nor any political subdivision shall infringe upon or unduly inconvenience this right.

– CACR 14, New Hampshire
(introduced 22 January 2020)

For anyone not steeped in the history of the legalese used in this bill, a quick run-down of the landscape is helpful.

A Brief History of United States Abortion Law

This wording is based on various case law which was decided by the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS). Roe v. Wade (Roe) may have been the first landmark abortion case, but it is not the current law of the land; in 1992, SCOTUS decided in Planned Parenthood v. Casey (Casey) that changed the standard, re-iterating (and somewhat fudging) that standard in Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt (Hellerstedt). (I’ve linked both the SCOTUS decisions as well as the Wikipedia articles for each case. I’m also summarizing below.)

The Roe ruling resulted in strict scrutiny and the trimester system: the government had to have a compelling reason to get involved, the first trimester was unregulatable, and the second and third trimesters were increasingly regulatable so long as there were exceptions for the mother’s health. Basically, the farther along in the pregnancy a mother was, the more the government could regulate. Casey invented a new standard – “undue burden” – and shifted to a viability standard: if the child could survive outside the womb, it had rights. Hellerstedt kept the undue burden standard and applied a balancing test to the imposed burdens. This is the current state of the law: undue burden via balancing tests and viability.

The Crux of the Issue

Here’s the obvious question question: what is an undue burden?

Whether or not you’re a member of the legal community, there isn’t a clear answer. Various provisions have been struck down since Casey, but even Hellerstedt struck down regulation based on the perceived motives of the legislators who wrote the law, meaning the provisions themselves were not unconstitutional. If the provisions had been struck down based on the law itself, I would hope for outrage: it’s literally a collection of rules to prevent women from dying in an abortion gone wrong. Based on this ruling, women are expected to settle for much lower quality (thus, much more dangerous) healthcare than men. (What’s new, right?)

Regardless, this is the present state of affairs. Couple this with the perception that the sitting SCOTUS bench will overturn Roe (and, presumably, Casey and Hellerstedt) to find panic boiling. Some people are pushing to codify the way things are: they want to turn the case rulings into bills and pass those bills into laws.

I’m all for the legislative process, but I want to know what the law means before it goes into effect.

A Metaphor

Let’s say the people who decide such things got together and decided to change the speed limit on a certain stretch of road. Perhaps there are too many accidents, or maybe they want to optimize gase mileage – pick your reason, but they opt to drop the speed limit. That change is well within their rights. Also suppose that new speed limit signs are too expensive, so they will still ticket offenders, but they’re not going to put the signs up to let them know where the speed limit has changed.

Two Parallels

I like the terms of patent law: “metes and bounds” determine rights. When someone submits an application for a patent, and the claims indicate something unknown, they are rejected as being indefinite. That means that because reasonable people wouldn’t know when they’re infringing on the patent, it can’t stick; the applicant has to revise the language so others know what they’re claiming with certainty.

Patents not your fancy? Let’s try sales instead.

Let’s say you’re in the market for a piece of land. I come up to you and I offer to sell you a piece of land. I went over your requirements and preferences, and I promise you it’s just what you’re looking for, and costs half what you were expecting to spend. So, interested, you ask to see it. My reply: not until I’ve got cash in hand from the purchase.

Would you jump? I’d advise against it: you don’t know what you’re getting. Sure, I’m trustworthy, but a number of things are likely to go wrong. For example, I might misunderstand one of your necessary stipulations: you said you wanted to be in Springfield, and I heard “Hampton” in the discussion; I took that to mean your interest was in Springfield, New York, but you were talking about Wolverhampton in England. That’s a pretty big difference.

Confused State of Affairs

This is effectively what’s happening here: we’re making laws that may (or may not) change the landscape, but nobody knows. Not even the legislators know what this law means. In the committee hearing today, one of the co-sponsors was asked a question as to how it would impact the rights of men, specifically men with children in utero but also how it might affect others. She stated that she didn’t know because it wasn’t her area of expertise. If the sponsors of the bill don’t know how it will impact citizens, how are the rest of the citizens supposed to figure it out?

And that’s the problem: where do you know what is okay and what isn’t based on a standard that means virtually nothing? It’s so vague that it doesn’t even necessarily enshrine the rights that it purports to: one pro-choice woman got up and opposed the legislation because it decreases the freedom of women. It’s also frightening because, based on the testimony of all three co-sponsors, it’s intended to embed a fundamental right to abortion into the state constitution: many pro-life advocates testified to the dangers of the proposed legislation from a variety of angles.

Testify!

Upon reading the bill, I researched to see if any of the wording from Roe and Casey and Hellerstedt had been clarified yet. Negative. Next, I cobbled together what I thought the legislators were likely to need to hear, and, knowing I don’t do well in front of crowds for more than thirty seconds, I distilled the statement until I could regurgitate it in half a breath.

Many stood up to speak their respective pieces. I signed up to speak, but I hedged: would there be anything more for me to say so far into the program? I was making excuses and I knew it; I get nervous in front of crowds. As the co-sponsors presented the bill and as others testified, I refined my speech; the opportunities were evident for me to use the words of the sponsors firmly against their bill, and I re-phrased it until it was golden eloquence.

Then it was my turn to speak.

When I went up to the microphone, I cracked a joke based on a funny little issue that had sprung up a few minutes prior (which, surprisingly, most people laughed at) and felt the space between my ears freeze with heat: stage fright had set in. Ears burning, I spit out the case names and that, due to the vagueness of the wording, “it doesn’t even mean anything.” Then I retreated. Including my intro, I might have made it to twenty seconds. I didn’t waste time stating my political identity or my background or anything else; I didn’t even thank them for granting me the space to speak while at the mic.

Afterward, some people reached out to me to tell me what I said was great. (I doubt that.) One in particular mentioned that I’m “such a powerful speaker.” Given that I couldn’t even remember what I said, I don’t understand how that was the case. I greeted another, a legal colleague, who promptly pointed out that I was the only person to reference the current case law; he was clearly happy about how things went. I went down to thank the committee chair for their time and specifically her efforts in maintaining a civil discourse (she intervened where appropriate). Day accomplished.

Plans Dashed, Succeeded

I had planned to make a short yet eloquent speech, drawing from the words of the co-sponsors and explaining the importance of knowing what a proposed bill means. I expected to point out that I was making a bipartisan case against the bill: regardless of affiliation, we should all want to know what a law means. I anticipated explaining that the legislature was in the perfect position to define the indefinite terms in the proposed bill itself so that we would all understand precisely what was meant so as to not have it construed in a way the citizenry wouldn’t expect. I wanted to point out the ironic stupidity of one of the included throw-away words. I wanted to make a case as an average citizen wanting to know what to expect of the law if it were to be enacted.

Well made plans don’t always happen the way they’re planned. That doesn’t mean they didn’t go the way they were supposed to. I made a stand against the bill, and I didn’t have to upset either side to do so. Finally, I made a point that nobody else had made in dual fashion: first, for citing the case law, and second, for pointing out the ridiculous ambiguity the case law has thrown us in.

Now that it’s all said and done, I’m glad I did it, and I’m more excited to keep trying until I can at least better manage my emotional reaction. I’m confident the hurdle is doable. Maybe I’ll even learn how to inspire others while I continue to grow.

Go For It

Have you recently tried anything that scared you or made you nervous? If you haven’t, I highly recommend adding it to your to-do list. It’s a great way to grow!

Have you ever stood up in a public setting for what you believe in? Have you done that in a congressional group? Today was my first time; it was exhilarating participating in the lawmaking process, but for me, it was simultaneously frightening. Do you have any tips for me in case I face the experience again? Are you planning to attend a hearing after reading about my experience? (I hope so!)

Going With(out) Destination

I’m (seemingly perpetually) at a crossroads: I want things that (seem to) conflict. This issue reached a local climax recently – I want this which is only possible if I stay here, but I also want that which I need to relocate for. The tug of war was rather rough, but I planned (and scheduled and worked) as though the this was going to work out, most of my efforts going toward this while I siphoned off trickles for the exceptionally exciting that I put off because of the this.

Today, I got an email all but eliminating this as an option: affirmatively no offer on the job I applied for locally.

Unlike several other “no”s I’ve gotten, I wasn’t crushed. Disheartened, sure, but simultaneously reinvigorated. It was quite an odd experience. I wanted the position – it worked out perfectly with so many long-term plans I’d planned – but there was a feeling of relief that came with that email. Why?

Because I’ve been praying wholeheartedly for God’s guidance. The this and that situation had me deeply frustrated, torn to the point of raw, gross tears. I didn’t know what I was supposed to do. I asked God for direction, and I specifically asked Him to quickly close the doors better for me to pass over than enter. Part of me knew what I was asking for, and that’s the part that felt relief when I received the news.

I even said “thank you,” despite the pain.

Then, I got up to seek a friend (it still hurt) and leave for an event. I tossed on my coat… and realized I didn’t know where I was going. (The event rotates locations.) Though my heart was hopeful, my head was still grieving, so I didn’t think to check until I was on my way out the door. Next! (Even writing this, I have a headache. Pull… on… happy… face…)

So, now I’m a little late. I’m also a mixture of injured, relieved, light-headed, hopeful, and rejuvenated. Most importantly, I now know where I’m going.

Parking Lot Kindness: Holy Moment

I ventured out to pick up a friend from work this morning. Upon arrival, I selected a parking space and started to back into it. Feeling unnecessary urgency, I didn’t give myself as much room as normal and I didn’t crank my wheel as quickly as normal. But it was close. As I eyed the bumper guarding the next space, I squinted. Too close for comfort. With a sigh, I pivoted my head.

The man in front of my vehicle was waving his arms and shaking his head. “No,” he mouthed as big as his mouth could mouth it. I smiled, nodded, and waved my thank-you. He smiled and nodded back, waving back and continuing on.

I appreciated the second opinion from a better vantage point, particularly because of how close of a call it was. Moreso, I appreciated that the decision I had already made was validated by a disinterested observer: with all the dead ends I’ve hit and all the unsolicited, contrarian, and unhelpful advice I’ve been given of late, I found the validation refreshing. Just every so often, I need a little reminder that I’m doing something right.

Plus, I had to smile because a stranger took the time to pause – in the middle of his exercise routine – to help me out. It took him all of maybe ten seconds to catch my attention, but that’s ten seconds many people would not have thought to give let alone paused after thinking of it to give. Many of us are so embroiled in our own lives that we can’t see the issues affecting others. Sometimes are better than others – it’s not an all-or-nothing question: we sometimes pounce on opportunities to serve others whereas other times we serve reluctantly, or decide against it, or default on any decision by missing the chance.

This post isn’t about saying yes more than you can handle. I’m learning more daily about how over-piling tasks on my to-do list weakens my ability to properly say yes to anything at all. (Sunday afternoon, for example, the only thing I could say yes to was sleep. I squeaked out a short drive, but I had to blast cold air in my face for safety reasons; it wasn’t comfortable. Not to mention the delay in some recent applications I’ve been working on…)

My question today is this: do we pause to lift up others in small ways? Do we hold the door for the person behind us, or open the gate for someone intent on exiting it who can’t spare a hand? Do we wave at cars traveling the wrong way down a one-way street? (Safety reminder: always look both ways when crossing the road!) Do we pause to say thank you to parents showing great patience with their children, or to children showing parents respect in public places?

Serving others – in small ways, in big ways, in quick ways, in slow ways, in any way consistent with God’s plan – brings us closer to God. It also brings us closer to our fellow human beings, whether or not they believe in Christ, because serving each other necessarily brings us together. Small holy moments are holy moments, and lifting others up qualifies.

Pause. What’s a holy moment?

A Holy Moment is a moment when you are being the person God created you to be, and you are doing what God is calling you to do in that moment.

Matthew Kelly, The Biggest Lie in the History of Christianity
(also available on Amazon)

The man in the parking lot today gifted me one of his holy moments. When you held the door open for the person behind you: holy moment. When we pause to check on a friend: holy moment. When we help another de-stress: holy moment. When we volunteer, whether it be for an event or a specific chore: holy moment. When we wait patiently for pedestrians in the crosswalk: holy moment. When we smile warmly in passing at a stranger: holy moment. When we put spare change in a donation jar: holy moment.

Follow-up questions: would you do it again? When you last paused for a holy moment, how did you feel in that moment? (Notice that this is a when question, not an if question. We’ve all had holy moments!) Did your perspective shift on anything that day (perhaps via less stress about a decision or more hope in a situation)?

Are you allowing more holy moments to happen through you?

Daddy’s Li’l Girl

Let it never be said that I don’t need my Dad, no matter how old or (seemingly) independent I get.

I visited a friend this evening to help her pick out an interview outfit. There was laundry, there was an amazing dinner (with a delicious despite incredibly salty homemade au jus), there was trying on outfits, there was laughter, there were serious discussions, there were simply good times. We had a grand night. (I’ll be hurting tomorrow due to lack of sleep because I repeatedly lost track of the time, but tonight was fabulous.)

We were wrapping up the evening, and we made a run to my vehicle to drop off the non-selected interview-potential outfits. We toss everything in when I realize I don’t have my phone. No big deal – we’ll go inside and do a quick sweep. … It’s nowhere to be found.

The escalation is easy – my friend tries to call it. It’s when she holds her phone up to her ear and says to me, “It’s ringing,” that I realize that it isn’t: my phone automatically goes into Do Not Disturb (DND) mode each night. Okay…

Next stop is also fairly standard – I log into my Google account from her phone and tell my phone to ring. And I tried to. The problem with this method is that Google didn’t recognize her phone, and to verify my identity, I had to input a code it was sending to my phone which I didn’t have and was trying to use Google to locate. Ahhh!

I explain to my friend that DND mode means my phone won’t ring or notify me of any texts or other messages via sound or vibration; to know I’m receiving a message, I need to be looking at my phone. Unless… I shake my head. I set my phone to bypass DND mode for my parents: if either of them called from their cell phones, my phone would ring. … But that’d be kinda (or totally) rude to wake up my parents this late (after 10 pm) to ask them to call my lost phone. And they might not even answer because my friend’s phone was unknown to them.

I purse my lips, but they form a smile anyway. Dad wouldn’t mind…

My friend is surprised I know his phone number by heart. (Everything is programmed these days, she points out.) My father has had the same number for as long as I remember – probably since cell phones had become a common thing sometime in the ’90s. So, I called my Dad to ask him to help me find my phone and save the day.

One ring… Two rings… Three rings… Oh, no: I’ve never known him to wait this long to answer. Four rings… What if he’s not answering because he doesn’t recognize the number? Five rings…

“Hello?” A very confused and somewhat skeptical voice filters through the speaker.

“Dad?”

“Hello?” His tone changes as he recognizes me with the first syllable even though he clearly didn’t hear what I said.

“Dad, can you hear me?”

“Yeah. Yeah.”

I explain the situation to him, my friend watching my facial expressions as I talk to my Dad. Her face curls into an awkward smirk as though she discovered a secret of mine. I give her a look, but it only grows the expression. Am I acting funny? Doesn’t every princess love her father?

He’s happy to help (that’s my Dad!); we hang up and he immediately starts calling my phone. My friend and I search for several minutes longer to no avail; I give up hope for the night and text him a thank you for trying, but I was going to have to try again after getting some sleep. I hug my friend bye, we chat a minute longer, and then I go out to the car. I hop in, and just as I was about to turn the key, I hear it ring from the trunk.

He kept calling.

I quickly retrieved it and answered. “You finally found it,” he responds to my greeting.

I was so ecstatic that he kept trying to help me even after I’d given up. I felt guilty intruding on his sleep time, but he was perfectly happy to wake up to help his little girl. I am so blessed to have a father so good to me. (And this doesn’t even compare to the Suburban rollover incident!) I am so grateful for having such an amazing Dad.

Ask, and it will be given you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For every one who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened.

Luke 11:9-10

I sought, and I found! My Dad helped me to find my phone, and all I had to do was ask. What a reminder to ask our Heavenly Father for help as well!

If you then… know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!

Luke 11:13

Whom do you turn to when something goes awry? Is there anyone who can call your phone when it’s on do not disturb who will ring through? What are you grateful for today?

This post is a shout out to all the marvelous fathers. Thank you for loving your children fully and wholeheartedly. You are more important than you know, so thank you again for all that you do to help your children grow … and find their missing cell phones.