Wednesday, February 22, 2012

When are Books more than books?

Maribeth McFaul

Today there's been some chatter about books being just books.  Is the careless disposal of Korans in Afghanistan  just an excuse for pent up anger to break out?  In the west, where books are being replaced by e-readers and even made into altered book art, its really hard for us to imagine that anyone who have this depth of feeling about books.

This is a perfect example of assumptions running past each other, as we talked about on Diversity Day.
We have to listen and use our imaginations which, far from child's play, turns out to be essential tools in diplomacy.

Imagine the most important thing in your life.  It may take a while, and some honesty with ourselves, but all of us have something that is "ultimate," that gives meaning to our lives.
It might be friendship, family members, a particular faith, or set of practices.
Now, imagine that someone treated the person or thing with the utmost disrespect, beating, burning, belittling.  (Have you ever seen someone angry because their mother was direspected?)  Now ramp that up by 1000% and you have an idea of how Muslims feel when a Koran is disrepected.

Most faiths have something that "embodies" the holiest of holies for them.  For Christians it's a person, Jesus.  For Muslims, its the words recorded in the Koran and spoken by believers.

Does this make it right to break out in violent protest?  No.  But it explains why people feel as strongly as they do.  And explains why we need to learn a little more about what we hear in the news.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Why Whitney Houston Matters

I've been struck by the different reactions to Whitney Houston's death, and the accompanying media coverage, that I'm hearing from friends, family, and acquaintances.  Many comments are mornful but others are dismissive.  Why the difference?
Some is old/young or a difference in musical tastes.  Houston was THE crossover artist of my generation.  And even then she never acheived critical acclaim on the same scale as her popularity.  She used that magnificent voice to touch hearts more than heads.
Some is black/white.  It's hard for us in the dominant culture to realize the enormity of her impact. We tend to focus on the struggles (marraige, substance abuse), as though we need to take her down a peg instead of recognizing a common human frailty.
Here are some examples of why I think Whitney Houston matters, whether you like or don't like her music, whether you are offended by or sympathetic to her struggles.  I hope you'll read them through the lens of Black History Month.


Professional Achievement
*Only artist to chart seven consecutive No. 1 Billboard Hot 100 hits.            
*Second only to Elton John (and only female artist) to receive two number-one “Top Pop Album” Awards.
*In 1985, her “Whitney Houston” debut album was the best selling debut by a female artist.
*”I Will Always Love You” was the best singing single by a female artist in music history.
*The soundtrack from “Body Guard” made Houston the first musician to sell more that a million copies of an album in one week and made her the top female act, number four overall, in the top ten selling albums of all time.

Inspiration
*As a teenager, Houston broke color barriers by modeling on the covers and layouts of mainstream fashion magazines.
*As a young adult, Houston broke color barriers by appearing on popular late night TV shows.
*She refused to appear in any agencies that did business with apartheid South Africa.
*IN the early days of music videos, “How Will I Know” made Houston the first African American woman to be be prominently featured on MTV
*Her stunning and respectful interpretation of the Star Spangled Banner was a unifying force for  the American public at the start of  the first Gulf War and became the top selling song as the second Gulf War broke out.  It created a new standard for interpreting the national anthem.
*Her film roles counteracted stereotypes of African American women.
She is credited with helping to create a new form of Pop music without sexualizing performances as did  other  pioneers of the genre.
*Despite her personal struggles, she was a professional inspiration for many of today’s top female artists of all ethnic backgrounds. 

Whitney Houston's fall from grace scares us.  From most perspectives she had it all:  a good upbringing by loving middle class parents, a church that cultivated her faith, friends who mentored and supported her; professional success that catapulted her to the stratosphere of popular culture and made her a role model for a generation of young women drawn to making the most of their talents in entertainment.  Maybe it's hard to breathe when you soar that far that fast.  It scares us that her faith didn't save her from heartbreak, hardship, or bad choices.  

We can treat her as "the exception that makes the rule" (whether the rule is an assumption about entertainers, african americans, women......) or we can be grateful for her gifts even as we mourn the brokeness and struggle that was exposed. 
Instead of chosing between seeing hers as a life wasted or a life to be celebrated, I'm choosing to see Whitney Houston as a gifted human sister reminding me how precious life is. 

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Goal Tending


Have you ever felt like a one armed paper hanger or a multi-tasking mama?  The two share a certain incongruity in the way capacity meets expectation.

Here's a story about goals that needs help writing the ending (post yours as a comment!). 

Once upon a time there was a little boy who dreamed of a precious box.  It shimmered in his mind’s eye:  dark polished wood, carved curves, inset shots of enameled color.

When he closed his eyes at night he could see it, but when he woke in the morning, the box seemed to hover just out of sight.

The little boy sometimes practiced making boxes:  out of cardboard that he found and folded, or bits of wood from crates picked up behind the corner grocery into which he would crookedly pond nails.

His big brother poked fun, good naturedly he thought, at the little boy’s projects, so he learned to hide them away in his closet and chase after the bigger boys’ ball games. 

Still, his dreams brought glimpses of the precious box, even as he was increasingly aware that it was not real.
When it came time to choose a path through school, classes tempted the boy where he cold put his hands on wood, learn to measure and to cut it, how to join pieces, and create hinges. But his father, a handyman at the mill, and his career counselor, urged him to look ahead, toward a profession, which meant a full college prep schedule.  There would always be time for hobbies later, they said.

The boy did his homework, earned his scholarship, and headed to a good college.  Picking up his first semester books, he noticed a display of fine woodworking books. His hands itched a little.  Funny he thought, as he toted his bags down the hall.  In the Student Union, he passed a list of leisure time classes.  There was a picture of a beautiful cherry box, simpler than the one of his boyhood dream, but solid.  He could almost feel it in his hands.  Not now, he thought, but maybe after I get my first semester routine down, he thought to himself.

The dorm was full of new friends and new activities. Soon the boy had season tickets for football, and hockey and had been recruited for rec. baseball.  The guys played cards in the dorm to relax at night, and he had to keep up with his studying in order to stay on track toward his profession, which also took some time to consider.  He settled on business, which seemed like a secure future.

He did everything he was supposed to do. He met a girl, he graduated and joined a company; they married and had children.  His oldest boy spotted a craft kit in a hobby store one day, it was an awkward pine box embellished with wood burning.  “Daddy, can we make that?” his little boy asked. 
“Oh, son, take a good look, It’s just a big chunk of wood. Not worth the time.”  The next time they passed the history museum, The man took his son in to see finely crafted containers of all kinds.  He lingered by the boxes, which raised some kind of echo in him.

“Daddy,” he heard his excited son say, “can we make a box like that!?”

He saw his son pointing to a gleaming walnut chest inlaid with mother of pearl.
 “No, that’s difficult, he answered.” 
“It takes a master craftsman to create something like that.” 
“You could make one, Dad, you can do anything,” declared his confident son declared.
“ I don’t have the time or the skill, son,” the man replied, with a tinge of regret.

“Well then,” his son asked.  “Can we buy one?”  The man thought about it.  His business had done well.  “Yes,” he said. “Yes,” we will find just the right one and buy it.

So they began to search. 
They visited craft shows and shops. 
They met master woodworkers and watched them work. 
The man’s eyes and hands lingered over the tools in the workshops.

They talked about the box they would buy, and the man began to remember the box of his boyhood dreams.  But he couldn’t quite describe it to his son.  And each of the beautiful boxes they saw was different, not like the one that still rested in his heart.

Finally, his son went off to school himself, and their box hunting trips became a fond memory.


The years went by and one day the man, nearing the end of a productive career, found himself short of breathe, experiencing pain, and, in short order, in a hospital bed.  In the deep sleep given so that his body could heal, the man heard a voice asking him if he had any regrets.  He thought of the wife and children he loved and was grateful.  But there is one thing, he thought.  I wish I’d had time to learn how to make that box.

You had a life-time.

Yes, but there were so many goals to reach, I never the opportunity, mused the man.

Every time you imagined it, every time your hand itched, was an opportunity. I even led you to those who could teach you and put the tools at your hand.

How do you want the story to end?