Saturday, June 30, 2007

Beginning Thoughts

The fact that I woke up at 1:30 a.m. two nights ago, tried everything to get back to sleep, and, failing all else, took out the computer, searched "free blogs", and set up this blog in an attempt to empty my mind of what was keeping me awake was not, perhaps, the best motivation for starting an online diary! But it worked, (sort of like Dumbleore's "pensive" or the mystics' mantras) and I fell asleep.

Getting back to this on another early morning probably means that I am doomed to be a night-time blogger! As fuzzy as my thoughts are during the day, they will probably be even less clear at night.

My first attempt at blogging was the July of 2005 when I took a number of young adult pilgrims to World Youth Day in Cologne, Germany. We blogged as a way to keep friends and family at home up-to-date on our experiences with BXVI and hundreds of thousands of other WYD pilgrims. I enjoyed it, but never thought of setting up my own blog - it seemed, and still does to some extent, to be a rather self-centered enterprise: Why would anyone want strangers to know what one is thinking? What would make me think that what I said would have meaning beyond my own life? I've decided, however, that the thoughts ARE mine, but that I would welcome the thoughts of others in order to expand my own world.

Last night, a friend and I went to see Evan Almigty. Now, I do not particularly care for Jim Carey as an actor, but there were things in Bruce Almighty that I used in some of my teaching, so I thought I'd give this a try. (Of course the trailers with all the animals intrigued me!) Being of a certain age, I couldn't help but think of Bill Cosby's standup on building an ark ("What's a cubit?). The movie was hilarious - we laughed from beginning to end - perhaps we were just ready for a good laugh - there's been stress to share lately! I couldn't help thinking, though, as Evan works his way from sarcasm through fear and confusion to faith and following that his is a common story as God pursues all of us out of love. Francis Thompson's Hound of Heaven, still rings true: "I fled him down the nights and down the days. I fled him down the labyrinthe ways of my own mind...." God pursues, we run, we evade and avoid, but when we stop and turn and dance with the almighty we can change the world because God's love has changed us.