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For No and Every Good Reason

On a good, random Tuesday in the middle of a holiday-less season, I’m not the type of person who has the energy for cuteness. I don’t cut crusts from my children’s sandwiches (nay, I rarely feed them sandwiches, so bread alone is a cause for celebration around here, #aimlowparenting), let alone cookie-cutter them into fun shapes.

My driving force has always been utility. Functionality. Efficiency. Be it from wiring or training, I love a well-oiled machine, a process that works. When all children’s coats get hung on the correct coat hanger, you shall see this woman dance mightily. Sheer happiness.

But let me tell you about a few other people. My friend Brownwyn is killing it with that shelf-sitting elf. Ingenuity! Hilarity! Bronwyn is also not much for crust-cutting, but this time of year she breaks out all the props. Why? Because her daughter loves it and because it is fun.

Another friend, Kristen, has regularly engaged in 25 Days of Christmas, activities for her 2 little ones as simple as reading a story or putting glow sticks in a bath tub or as elaborate as decorating one another as a Christmas tree. Her kids love it – and she loves it.  (She shares her pro-tip: gather all supplies early, put them in a tub and store in the basement. Reuse each year, altering just a few. Then you’re not daily trying to make sure you have all the necessary supplies. She really is a genius.)

And then there’s my friend, Jill and her sidekick Teagan. They just took 75 wiley little girls, covered them in glitter, and taught them how to shahsay across the stage to extremely old classical music. They had to manage ticket sales and disappointed parents who couldn’t get enough seats. They had to carry couches and recruit husbands and big brothers. They had to pin hats onto toy soldiers and at one point I saw Miss Jill collecting tickets herself.

The entire production made no money for either woman – based on the level of gorgeousness of the costumes, it probably took a bit of personal financial investment beyond what they gave to hours of choreographing, hemming, steaming, marking the stage, and reminding our little princesses to smile.

And why in the world would anyone embark on such an endeavor, completely devoid of functionality or efficiency? Sure, we can make a list of soft skills these girls come away with – confidence, getting over stage fright, the work ethic of learning the parts – but are those the things behind the 87 pounds of sequins? I can hardly imagine it so.

Miss Jill remarked more than once that this was a dream of hers, a favorite show, and to create her own rendition – specifically using 3- and 4-year-old Snowflakes – is a feat of strength. It brought joy to the girls in the production and it lit up her own joy to see it play out on a stage.

Joy is a concept I keep returning to, because it’s something that doesn’t make sense yet is completely necessary for a fulfilling life. Joy doesn’t work itself into a spreadsheet; it cannot be counted. None of the women I’ve been watching are attempting any awards or seeking admiration for their efforts. They simply love something, they love doing it, they love the response from those who are engaged – namely, children, who still have space for magic in their lives.

Our response to watching such joy can go a few directions. We can compare and compete, putting ourselves as the “less than loosers” who simply cannot live up to such high standards. All the nay-saying folk on the sidelines tend to feel like my good-hearted and holiday-energized friends are out to prove something to others. But, psssst…. I have a secret. They’re not.

Their joy has nothing to do with us.

Unless we want to share in it with them.

And in that case, all of these women would say the same thing: the more, the merrier.

Joy is something that enlivens and warms and welcomes and there’s really no stopping it unless it’s our own personal pride and sense of worth. But if you can get around those things, you can join me in a seat at the Star theater, dripping with tears to know that someone believed something to be beautiful enough to be worth so much time, money, and energy, and she even invited my girls to join alongside.

Joy isn’t competitive and there is no bottom line to joy. We won’t max out. Someone’s joy at placing an elf in yet another comical position will not – I repeat, will not – suck all the joy out of your little joy-pocketbook. They’re not frivolously spending the world’s joy, leaving less for you and me. In fact, their efforts at merriment are multiplying the joy in the world, or at least in my home.

Because even if I don’t get an elf or glow sticks or spend 927 hours creating a ballet, I am reminded that joy is right here, present to me, if I reach for it. No one is keeping it from me, unless it’s me. In fact, each of these joyful endeavors feel like a personal invitation – not to do everything they do, but to feel inspired to make more space for joy in my own life, but my own version.

Perhaps joy is a bit like the big man in red we’re still praying the oldest can find belief in: you only receive if you believe.

Why Browns fans are my favorite people

Growing up, my family was NFL-unitarian. We had strong beliefs as it pertained to college football, but on Sunday afternoons, we were pretty welcoming of all traditions. My dad would watch whatever was on without deciding that one team was better than another. Because it’s human nature, the teams with proximity to us took precedent, so we would elevate those, and when we were forced to choose each December, we qualified as a Bengal household. (It is my belief that we defaulted to Cincinnati allegiance because my grandfather was an avid fan of the Reds).

As an adult, I married into a similar football religiosity in that my husband cared deeply for the non-professional football games, but enjoyment of the NFL came through participation in a fantasy league. My kids ask when games are on, “who do we want to win?” and it changes from week to week. Because nothing unites like a common enemy, we sometimes say, “not the Patriots.”

But I have friends who love the pro football. They have jerseys and belief systems and they schedule their Sundays around such things. I like all my friends, but I have to tell you that I have a secret favorite: the Browns fans.

The Browns don’t win. Because afternoon football needs more than the game to make it interesting, one broadcast ran the stats on the loosingest team on the road. The Browns were second, behind the Lions. “Good heavens,” I thought. “The Browns can’t even win at loosing.”

The other pro teams in the CLE have redeemed their loosing years either through breeding talent like LeBron or by a major motion picture with Charlie Sheen that can be quoted ad nauseum. But the Browns have none of that, and they have to wear orange.

Yet the fans show up. They complain, they declare they should have found a new team decades ago, but they cannot let go. Why?

I call it hope.

Rob Bell defines hope as the belief that tomorrow will be different than today. (Despair, it’s contrasting belief, is the belief that the future will be the same as the past.) So those Browns fans tune in, not with optimism blinding them to the lack of particular talent; they’re depressingly aware of their deficits. But somehow, they believe that the deficits don’t define the team.

If I need someone to put me right again, I turn to my Browns fan friends because if they can believe that about a bunch of 300 pound strangers, they can believe it about me.

I don’t need more people who can be faithful when all is right; I need people who are comfortable and familiar when things don’t pan out the way we dreamed. I don’t need more friends who can win, and gloat, and make insta-perfect lives with the impeccable taste in draft choices; I need people in my life who live honestly in the everyday realities but with a sense of hope that can drown out the negativity. I need people who make the active effort to believe that the next day, the next game, the next season, will be different from today.

I cannot name who is first in the AFC or any of the other facts and letters that float about on a Sunday. I don’t have flags to wave or even a fantasy running back in which I can rest my hope. Instead, I’ll take the fans that defy the popular claim that if you’re not winning, you might as well quit. Nope, I’ll find a seat by those who keep showing up.

Against the grain

To say I’ve been buried in home renovations for the summer is a slight understatement. We took on what is not a little weekend DIY – it involved contractors, HVAC, plumbing. It will someday be beautiful. At the moment, however, it is a blend between drywall-gray and primer-white, accented with the earthy tones of plywood and subflooring. (Please, don’t be so jealous of my glamorous life.)

I simultaneously refinished our dining room table so that it will be ready when we have a dining room again. Originally I had simply spray painted the 70’s table and 8 chairs, but time and children had its way, and now I have to do a real version of painting it. Sanding, primer, primer, paint, paint, touchup, and then a good lacquer to prevent the process from needing a repeat.

Day after day as I dipped my brush in yet another can of pigment, I noticed patterns and, of course, noted the lessons. Namely, if you want the paint to cover the surface well, you need to take it across all angles. I noticed this especially in working with wood, but my ceilings and walls were no different. If you worked in only one direction, yet didn’t get good coverage, you essentially just kept adding paint and then watched it leave drip marks on your hard work. But if you applied horizontally, vertically and with a few angled strokes, the paint would blend into the entire area.

When painting my furniture and walls, my goal is not to get as much paint on the surface as possible. The goal is transformation. I want to change the space I’m living in. 

It made me think of how, on the yoga mat and in life, we so often attempt things from only one angle. We try and we try, thinking if we just do more of that thing (eat better, go more often, push harder) that we’ll reach the goal. Often, we end up with just more of the same. But the goal is never more yoga, less carbs, more learning, less toxins (or to make this more spiritual: more books, more prayer, less sin). The goal is transformation. 

If adding more of the same isn’t changing your work, perhaps take it from a different angle. Come at it sideways. Ask a question, look at it from the other side. Walk around the thing, change the lighting, maybe even ask a friend to lovingly put their fresh eyes on it to see where you might have missed.

And for heavens sake, wash the brushes thoroughly when you’re finished. The paint is harder to remove with age. (That idea begets its own separate writing. But I have to go paint another room.)

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