Prayer? What the . . . ? Huh?

I’m an English teacher.  Additionally, I’m an over-thinker.  When dealing with words and their various meanings and connotations, I can really get into an analytical conundrum.  Throw into the mix that I’m a spiritual seeker somewhat akin to a rebellious outlaw, and you can only imagine how fast my head spins around some religious terms.

Take “god,” for instance.  I don’t define “god” like most do.  Hell, I don’t even capitalize the word, and that’s enough for some folks to consider performing an exorcism on me.  I do not think of god as some separate being, some man in the sky who surveys the world he made.  I believe in a divine energy that imbues all of creation which responds to our own energy in a way that some would consider god-like.  Could you call that “god”?  Well, sure.  You can call it pickled herring, if you want.  So when someone asks me this question, “Do you believe in god?”, I am in a bit of a quandary.  If I say, “No,” then the assumption will be that I am a non-spiritual person, and nothing could be further from the truth.  If I say, “Yes,” then the assumption will be made that I believe in the same picture of god that the questioner carries in his or her head, . . . and, 99% of the time, nothing could be further from the truth.  See?  It’s a dilemma.

I have had the same issue with the word “prayer.”  I’m a meditator and generally prefer the silent form of communing with divine energy.  I do believe in prayer.  But, that word, too, I would need to define.  (Damn my incessant need to avoid being misunderstood.)  I do not believe that prayer is a request or appeal to some separate being, some man in the sky (that I don’t believe exists anyway).  To me, prayer is the setting and declaring of intentions.  Those intentions carry divine energy, and thus those intentions are often made manifest in the world around us.  In other words, yes, I do believe that god answers prayer.

Allow me to give you two powerful examples from my own life.

In 1993, I was given the opportunity to return to college on a full-ride scholarship.  I had wanted this for 10 years, and suddenly here it was.  But, nothing good is ever completely free (even speech, but that’s a different blog post).  In order to receive the scholarship, I had to go to school full time, and that meant I had to cut back on at least one shift a week at my bartending gig.  Plus, there were the added expenses such as books which weren’t covered in the scholarship.

I remember very clearly the night that I sat in my living room working and re-working and manipulating and blowing up my budget in every way I knew how.  I actually had the cartoonish pile of crumpled up paper behind me where I had thrown failed attempts over my shoulder.  I tried everything, up to and including considering the possibility that I could actually live on .99 cent Totino’s Party Pizzas for the next few years.  Nothing worked.  Nothing even came close.

Finally, I stood up in frustration and began to pace back and forth.  After a few minutes, I threw my hands up in the air, looked at the ceiling where all deities apparently live, and said, “Look.  Here’s the deal.”

Some people start their prayers with “Dear Jesus.”  Some begin with “O Mighty Isis.”  Mine generally start with, “Look.  Here’s the deal.”

My prayer went something like this:  “Look.  Here’s the deal.  I refuse to believe that I have been given this opportunity just to have it yanked away from me.  I refuse to believe that you are rubbing your hands together with maniacal glee in some corner of the universe getting evil pleasure from my inability to realize a desire so close at hand.  So, here’s what I’m going to do.  I’m going to enroll in school.  I’m going to buy the necessary books with whatever money I have on hand.  And I’m going to do my very best.  I will do my best at school, and I will do my best at work.  But, you have to pay the rent.”

Some might say, “How dare you tell god how it’s going to be!”  Well, first, I don’t believe there is a “man in the sky” who is getting offended by my frankness.  Secondly, since my belief is that I was setting an intention, then I would say I did so rather emphatically.

I forgot about the prayer, for the most part.  I enrolled in classes, bought my books, and started school.

The first week of school, I was standing in the first floor hallway of Crouch Hall at Tennessee State University (I’ll never forget it) when my pager went off (remember, it was 1993).  I went to the end of the hall and called the number from a pay phone (again, 1993).  It was my friend Heather.  I had worked with her mother in the past in a job where I had written ad copy and press releases and other general corporate writing.

Heather said, “Hey, Deb.  Are you interested in a writing gig?”

I said, “Uh . . . YEAH.”

Heather explained that she was dating a man who owned an industrial video company and his regular writer had been called out of town on a family emergency.  She gave me his name and number.

I met Paul at his office that afternoon.  He explained the script he needed written, and I assured him I could do it.  We discussed compensation.  Honestly, I was clueless, but Paul was a man of integrity, so he paid me fairly despite my ignorance about what “fair” would be in this situation.

It took me three days to write the script.  I held on to it for an extra week so Paul wouldn’t think it would be too easy, but hey, this was in my wheelhouse.  The check Paul gave me the day I delivered the script was . . . exactly nine months of rent.  One school year.

I took the check directly to my landlord, who also happened to be a friend of mine.  I told her that I wanted to pay nine months of rent in advance so I wouldn’t have to worry about it through the next two semesters.  She informed me that landlords often give a discount when renters pay several months in advance.  Without me asking for it, she gave me a discount on my nine-month rent payment that exactly equaled what I had paid for books.

So, the other day I was mowing my yard when I just happened to be thinking about this event in my life from 19 years before.  As I recalled this magical moment, I wasn’t filled with wonder at the fact that it had worked; instead, I wondered why I didn’t do it more often.

Just that morning I had expressed to a dear friend that I truly, honestly, absolutely, completely, for realsy wanted to stop smoking for good.  I know how to quit smoking; I’ve done it thousands of times.  It’s the staying quit part that is so challenging.

Smoking saps my energy and kills my motivation.  Smoking takes at least three whole notes off the top of my singing range (but it is gracious enough to add them to the bottom).  Most importantly, I’m generally convinced that the surgeon general is probably correct, and I have this deep desire to live a long time.

So I rode my garden tractor around the yard speaking these words out loud.  “Look.  Here’s the deal.  I desire and need to quit smoking.  I want a healthy body.  I want an unclouded spirit.  This behavior does not serve me in any way.  It is damaging and dangerous and debilitating.  I want it to be gone from my life.  I need some help.  I need strength of character or will power or inspiration or whatever it will take to keep me focused.”

And then I let it go and just kept mowing.  (Sidebar: I am certain my neighbors have binoculars and watch me doing this sort of thing regularly.  Talking to myself is my spiritual gift.  I have learned to embrace it and no longer attempt to mask it with a fake cell phone call.)

Three minutes later — I so totally kid you not, it was three minutes — I heard a strange sound from my mower, turned around in my seat, and discovered that a little old man on a John Deere was puttering along about 10 feet behind me in my own yard.  I pulled up under a shade tree and cut off the engine.  He did the same.

He told me his name was Billy and that he lived two doors down and across the road.  These are the things I learned about Billy in the 10 minutes we chatted:  He had lived in that house 20 years.  His family used to be in construction and had built most of the interstate highways ’round these parts.  He has been married five times; four of his ex-wives are dead, at least that he knew of.  The one living ex-wife came back to see him about seven years ago, “but she wouldn’t let me touch her.”  I also learned that he had turned his mower over driving over to see me, and sure enough, the hood of the engine was cracked and Billy had a bit of blood dripping down his arm.  Billy’s real regret about that, however, was that he had spilled half the Jack Daniels out of his insulated mug.  He wasn’t too worried about the blood; he said he bled easily because he was on blood thinners, and he had the beaten and bruised arms of a man on Coumadin who wasn’t very careful.  I also learned that Billy was going to be 70 in November (he didn’t look a day over 97).  I learned all of this while Billy chain-smoked three cigarettes.

The interesting “coincidence” is that Billy was telling me all this on my father’s 70th birthday, the same father I had just struggled to keep up with as he scrambled over boulders and down the side of a ravine to reach the bottom of Ozone Falls just two days earlier.

I had spoken my intention out loud (and I think that part is important, at least for me), and within minutes, the man I have lived down the road from for a decade decides THIS is the time to be neighborly and introduce himself.  The man who is a walking, talking example of what poor choices might look like was sitting in front of me 90 seconds or so after asking for inspiration.  The man who is a stark contrast to the healthy specimen of aging that is my father presented himself to me as an answer to prayer.

Forget the smoking part.  This is NOT a moral judgment about smoking.  For anyone who smokes, I so get it.  It’s about speaking your intentions.  It’s about voicing your needs.  It’s about prayer.

I don’t think I could say, “Look.  Here’s the deal.  I need to win the lottery.”  I think intentions or prayer or whatever you call them must come from a pure heart and must somehow serve you on a deep level or help you in serving the world.  I think they are most effective when they are true representations of the reality of your life.  And I think you must approach them with an I’ll-do-my-part attitude.

But, I have indeed learned that (dare I say it?) god answers prayer.  Though, I might need to explain to you what I mean by that . . .

My Two Favorite Words

Like a great novel, every life has a theme.  There is a driving purpose in the story arc of our existence.  Determining that focus may be the key to that one admonition of every great thinker and writ most succinctly by Aristotle — “Know thyself.”

In my life, two words keep showing up in a myriad of ways.  Not just the words, but the very concepts.  I believe that if something shows itself to you again and again, it might just be trying to get your attention.

The first word is “integrity.”  Personal integrity is the most precious possession of any human, in my humble opinion.  As I have explained it to every class I have ever had the privilege to teach, “Integrity is doing the right thing even when no one is watching.”  It brings the sleep of babes.  It generates respect and trust.  It creates legacies.

I have always been guided by the beacon of integrity.  And sometimes it has cost me.  Living a life of integrity does not necessarily equate to success as the world so often defines it.  But it does equate to a personal success that exceeds the financial holdings of Bill Gates and Warren Buffett combined.  If your only motivation is money, then you will likely be asked to compromise your integrity at some point.  If your motivation is integrity, then every dollar you earn will be as solid as a brick of gold.

Yes, I’ve tried to live with integrity.  And sometimes I have failed.  I have sometimes worked against the grain of my own story’s theme.  I have delved into subplots that derail the focus.  But with failure comes lessons.  Integrity is only ruined if you miss the opportunity to recognize your own lack of integrity.

Whether I was living with integrity or momentarily distracted, there have been events in my life which were challenging, . . . difficult, . . . okay, they just felt bad.  But every single devastating moment in my life brought a message, often a vital message, that improved and strengthened me.  That brings me to my other favorite word:

Serendipity.

You can think of serendipity as a “happy accident.”  It is that event in your life which initially seems downright horrible but which ends up bringing the most precious gift.  When you are laid up from an injury and then discover in your weeks of healing boredom that you need to reprioritize your life — that’s serendipity.  When you are fired from your job and discover that you suddenly have time to go back to school like you always wanted and are brought back to a place where dreams are no longer blocked by a steady paycheck — that’s serendipity.  When you endure a devastating miscarriage that seems to have no possible rhyme or reason but then your spouse undergoes brain surgery and will require your constant care for the next several months — that’s serendipity.

There is one vital difference in these two words.  Integrity is created, protected, and nurtured solely by you.  Serendipity can only be recognized.  But here is something I’ve discovered: Integrity will help you see serendipity.

The truer you are to yourself, the more you know yourself, . . . the more you will see the rhyme, the reason, the theme, the purpose of this life.

Even when it hurts.

Life is a Wonder, Woman

I recently attended our local Pride Celebration.  I walked through the crowd and filled the reusable bag I received from one vendor with all the freebies I snagged from the others.  I didn’t pay much attention to it all until this morning when I needed to make a grocery list.  I remembered there were several notepads among the handouts, so I reached in the bag and grabbed one.

I had written “frozen blueberries, apple juice, bananas, toilet paper” before I began to actually notice the writing on the notepad.  It was from an attorney’s office (all too appropriate, as you will soon learn).  The writing and lines were all in red — brilliant, fire-engine, angry red.  The heading said, “My Crisis List,” with the word “crisis” in a big thunderbolty font.

I leaned back and put my pen down.  No, this just would not do.  Why would anyone want to create that kind of list?  Perhaps an attorney wants you to have items in this category, but . . . really??? 

I had a dilemma.  The greenie inside me could not just throw away a perfectly usable pad of paper.  What to do, what to do.  I stared at the pad for a few minutes and then had an idea.  I got a red pen out of the drawer and scribbled until the “c” and the “r” were no longer readable.  I had changed my CRISIS list to my ISIS list.

Some might wonder whether a few letters on a page are really important enough to matter.  I think they do.  But even if they don’t, that’s not really the point.  The point is that the universe gave me a wonderful message that I have a choice.  I spent several moments in the conscious awareness that I can determine whether to live in a place of crisis or a place of power.

And this is a gift that keeps on giving.  Now I have a ready reminder each time I rip off my old sheet and focus my energy on deleting “crisis” from my life as I begin a new list and a new day.

At the bottom of each sheet is the attorney’s website.  It’s www.(attorney’s name)bankruptcy.com.  Ah, now it made such brilliant marketing sense.  But, I’m scratching out that part too.  It just isn’t information an Egyptian goddess needs.

Oh, Mighty Isis!

Mom’s Advice for Everything

Several years ago, a tiny book called Life’s Little Instruction Book was a best-selling phenomenon.  H. Jackson Browne wrote the book as a gift to his son who was going to college.  If you were alive on this planet 20 or so years ago, you know of this book.  It was everywhere.  I had the privilege of briefly working for the original publisher of the book, jokingly referred to by those of us in marketing as “The House that Jack Built.”

It was such a simple and rather obvious concept.  Despite its simplicity (or maybe because of it), the book spent almost a year at #1 on the New York Times Bestseller List.  Copycat publications began to fall like rain behind it.

As a young writer, I longed for that kind of publishing success and wracked my brain trying to create a similar premise for a book.  Creating the simple is often the most difficult task.

With Mother’s Day just behind us, I’ve been thinking about my mom.  Well, of course.  In the story arc of my time with my mother, what she has taught me is not exactly conducive to book form.  Sure, she has given me quite a few lessons over the years, but there is a definite and predominant theme which would ultimately be the whole of any literary endeavor built around her wisdom.  It has been my mother’s answer to everything:  “Get up and move around; you’ll feel better.”

When I feigned sickness to avoid school as a child, that was her swift reply.  I suppose some mothers might feel a forehead or sit at the edge of the bed in pursuit of further information about the purported illness.  Not mom.  As she would zip through my room, probably putting away freshly folded clothes or (often) running a vacuum cleaner as my alarm clock, she would fling the phrase over her shoulder.  No matter how pathetic I made my plea sound, her response was the same: “Get up and move around; you’ll feel better.”

And the part I couldn’t easily admit as a child was that she was almost always right.  Even when I did have some aches or pains which might have justified my complaint, usually if I just started moving they began to dissipate.

Over the years, I have heard my mother’s voice echoing in my brain on many occasions.  When I was ill or depressed or just in a general funk, I could hear my mother advocating her cure for everything.

When life felt untenable and just generally bigger than me, “Get up and move around; you’ll feel better.”  When a job or my checkbook or the mess in the garage seemed out of control, “Get up and move around; you’ll feel better.”  When my heart or my spirit or my hope was broken, “Get up and move around; you’ll feel better.”

It’s no secret that exercise can combat depression.  My mother knew that far before it became the conventional wisdom of mental health, though in her eyes exercise is a waste of precious time you could actually use to work and accomplish something.  Of all the great wisdom in the world she could have passed on, in her endlessly pragmatic way my mother gave me the one piece that is actually useful in most situations.

I hope my mother is on this earth for many more years.  But, when the time should come for her to slip this mortal coil, this will be my vote for her epitaph: “Get up and move around; you’ll feel better.”