Monday, February 4, 2013

Monday after the Super Bowl

I didn't watch the entire Super Bowl, but tuned in for some parts that showed the fun of the game and its excitement. I saw that disgusting Old Milwaukee Beer commercial and wondered again why people choose that brand. I saw only one Clydesdale ad. My Facebook friends posted their fondness for the  young Clydesdale, even describing tearing up at the foal's cuteness.

Sports and consumerism, a cocktail for America's pleasure, a Sunday of relaxation and good times. We all need a break from the daily drive of our lives and find these culminating moments of sports competitions full of the best medicine that doesn't come from a physician's prescription.

Life can be unpredictable, but it is more often exactly as we anticipate with little deviation from the routine of work, meals, daily hygiene and household cleaning, conversations and interactions, amusement from entertainment, transportation, and sleep. These ordinary events make life good and provide comfort in themselves; however, the fun that comes from something that only happens once a year, a holiday or a Super Bowl is a lovely time to break free, kick back, relax, cheer, drink beer, and be a part of something besides our personal and regular lives.

No, the Super Bowl is not on par with the dramatic and religious festivals that brought together the ancient Athenians. Although less exalted and far more excessive, our American Super Bowls satisfy our need for communal sport and catharsis. Congratulations Ravens! Better luck next time 49ers!

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Saturday Symposium

I am ready to take 7 students to SMU's and the Rotary Club's International Peace Symposium today. I hope we learn something that helps us contribute to peace not only at the global level, but also at the local level. These great projects often have small beginnings. We form relationships one-to-one and extend those friendships as we continue to extend ourselves and call upon our best intentions. Not that we are models of perfection, but we are on a journey to a better place for ourselves and those we love. We travel one step at a time, or as we do today--by van. Happy trails to all who aim for peace here and abroad. They are called blessed, yet their contributions bless us all.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

New Faces and Beginnings

One of the best parts about teaching at a community college is meeting so many new people at the start of every semester. Seeing familiar faces is gratifying too. Beginnings of the semester are great, what a colleague of mine used to call "the honeymoon period." As the semester moves forward, some of those students will become more committed to their studies and find their talents and capacities for sustained work will take them even further in life than they imagined. Others will begin to waiver and face self-doubt. It's striking to see that failure comes from within, from fear that overtakes students able to accomplish the tasks, yet unable to see themselves as successful. I could almost agree with Hamlet that the mind is its own place, able to make a heaven of hell and vice versa when I experience the same kind of self-criticism that is destructive, rather than helpful.

Each day requires belief of some kind for envisioning happiness as ours. We enter into circumstances that only appear to shape us, when in fact, it's our response to what's happening to us that shapes our characters and our destinies. If we are to see the seeds blossom, to move from beginnings to happy endings, we must look within to find a love and compassion for ourselves and others that is greater than our self-doubt, our fears, and all our worries about what might happen if we're not "good enough."

No, we don't simply choose. We abide, take root, grow, and discover our true self in that larger self that is divine and more capable and consistently present in caring for us than we can ever be. Receiving grace daily nourishes and provides strength to meet challenges as they come. Generative, constructive, creative power lifts our hope, which does not fail.

Monday, January 21, 2013

It's been a couple of years since I played with this blog. I wonder about the new dashboard and how the technical parts of posting work. I hope to play around with the blog and maybe even have something to say now and then. Until that time, here's a promise that I plan to get around to having something worth writing about.

We're back to a fresh year and new semester tomorrow at Grayson College. It's been a valuable break spending time with my family and helping with recommending cut scores for the new computer adaptive TSI for students still needing to show college-readiness scores when they apply to college. I feel great to be back home and ready to meet familiar and new students in the morning.