Thursday, May 13, 2010

Home?

Greetings to those of you still reading this! So I left Chicago almost two weeks ago and it still seems surreal to be back in Cresco and visiting Luther. As I have spent the past two weeks at “home,” it has begun to make me question what it really means to “go home.” What does it mean to call a place home?

Bon Jovi says home is the “only one place they call me one of their own.” Robert Frost calls home “the place where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in.” Chris Daughtry sings about home being the “the place where I belong, And where your love has always been enough for me.” Nancy Regan shares that “I have been very happy with my homes, but homes really are no more than the people who live in them.”Dictionary.com defines home as “a house, apartment, or other shelter that is the usual residence of a person, family, or household or the place in which one's domestic affections are centered.” Somebody once told me that home is where the majority of your underwear is.

As I reflect on the past semester, I find that I have varying definitions of home. Some part of what home is will always be where my family is because it is the place I know I will always be loved. They are the people who know me better than anybody.

Yet, I find that even though I am home, I am also ready to go home. Go back to Chicago. So what was it that made Chicago feel like home? Chicago was home because it was there I felt alive and free. In Chicago I felt empowered to explore and make my life what I wanted it to be. The situations I encountered on a daily basis challenged me and made me grow. As I built a relationship with the city, I also built relationships, some with new people and some with people I had known but never had a relationship. All these things made Chicago a place that, as I became comfortable, I began to thrive, only to find my time ending so I had to prepare to head back to my small town.

It makes me think of the following quote I found as I searched for a definition of home that matches the place I am now: “When you're safe at home you wish you were having an adventure; when you're having an adventure you wish you were safe at home”

So now I sit at home, awaiting my next adventure

Monday, April 26, 2010

Endings that bring New beginnings

With 4 days remaing in my semester in Chicago, it is hard to believe that it is almost over. It really is true that time flies when you are having fun. A quick re-cap of the past couple of weeks

Two weekends ago, a couple of my co-workers(Hind, Julie and Erin) took me on a tour of Chicago. I got to go the zoo, the Lincoln Park botanical gardens, the beach at the lake, Wrigley-ville, drive up the North shore to see all the fancy-shcmacy houses, a forest preserve and finally back to my place for supper. On top of all that excitment, I got to hang out with some really great people!

Sunday of that weekend, we went to the Hull House, where social work started-kind of a must do for a house of social workers.

This past weekend I went to hang out with Julie and her youth group at Tower Hill in Sawyer MI. It was a good to get out of the city and do stuff while doing absolutely nothing. The kids where really great and it was a good time for reflection on the past semester and the end of my time in Chicago.

In exciting news for the summer, I just accepted a position working at Chautauqua Institute in New York as the Christian Coordinator for their Abrahamic Program for Young Adults (APYA). I will be working with three other coordinators- two Muslims (one male, one female) and one male Jewish- to plan programming for 16-22 year olds. While part of my position will be programming, a large part of it is also presence based, around being available for conversation.

I will leave for New York on June 20th. June 19th is Takin it to the Streets, IMAN's big summer festival-with Mos Def and Brother Ali headlining. There will also be several events happening surrounding One Chicago, One Nation that week. So I will be spending that week in Chicago, getting to do some of the touristy stuff I didn't get done now and hanging out and after Streets I will fly to New York until sometime in August.

As I look forward to this summer, it makes leaving Chicago a little easier. I have loved my time in Chicago and the people I have been able to meet and call friends. It has been an incredible growing experience. While I am excited to return home to see my family and my Luther family, I do not yet feel ready to leave this place.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

WWJD

WWJD.

It is a phrase many of us are familiar with-Christians wear it on bracelets, asked it when approaching difficult situations and remind of it by bumper stickers and billboards all asking the question: What would Jesus do?

However, this semester as I encounter the challenges of a new experience and a new city my mom encouraged me to find a new meaning to it. Where Would Joy Develop?

Let me share a couple of my answers:

*Joy develops when I look at our 108 Community Ambassadors. They range in age from 17 to 80, are from 9 faith & philosophical backgrounds, speak 20 languages, and live in all sorts of neighborhoods in Chicago and the suburbs. And they are ready to make Chicago a greater city

*Joy develops in getting to know one of the woman who is going to be a Community Ambassadors. 80 years old, got her doctorate at the age of 70, spends every Sunday in the KAM Isaiah Israel garden, and volunteer with several other projects working to make Chicago a better place.

*Joy develops in being welcomed and feeling a sense of belonging.

*Joy develops in amazing Saturday’s spent exploring the city with co-workers

*Joy develops in the building of new relationships and strengthening of old relationships.

*Joy develops in good food, good friends and good conversations.

*Joy develops in new possibilities and new opportunities

*Joy develops in the new life of spring that covers the city.

*Joy develops in being able to wear my sandals again.

*Joy develops in the challenges that make you stronger.

*Joy develops in running the lakefront.

*Joy develops in the smiles on the faces of children.

*Joy develops in discovering that I could maybe be a city girl for a little while longer.

*Joy develops in the feeling of grass between your toes.

*Joy develops in the ability to stand up for what I believe in

*Joy develops in hearing the stories of others.

So-that is where joy is developing in my life.

Now, it is your turn: WWJD??


Also: To see some of where joy has developed for me this semester check out the following Facebook albums:

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2059479&id=59203733&l=f48fda1427

http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2061164&id=59203733&l=b6283b1ce1



Monday, April 5, 2010

Easter Weekend

Overall, it was a pretty non-traditional Easter but a pretty exciting weekend overall My family came to town on Friday afternoon, when they arrived they came to the office to pick me up which meant they got to meet many of the people I work with. Friday night we hung out around Hyde Park for a while before they returned to their hotel. Saturday we went to the Field Musuem, got to see Sue(the T-rex) and the Mammoth exhibit-impressive. We spent the afternoon doing some shopping and enjoying the sunshine. While Mom and Grace stayed at the hotel for the night, Dad and I got to see a concert at House of Blues-AMAZING.

Perhaps one of my favorite things about the House of Blues was the ornamentation above the stage. In the middle of the arch above the stage was three sayings-“Unity in Diversity”, “Who do you love?” and “All are one” spreading out from this point were symbols representing several religions of which I could only identify Christianity, Islam, Judaism and Hinduism but several others were also included. The power of the ideas of Blues music being a commonality for these religions was an incredibly visual.

Sunday morning we returned back to the House of Blues for Gospel Sunday Brunch (for Lutherites-Peace Brunch and Gospel Sunday on steroids). We ate a lot of good food and listened to some great Gospel music. Overall it was a really great experience but weird to never proclaim on Easter Sunday-“CHRIST HAS RISEN, HE HAS RISEN INDEED!”

My family left directly from House of Blues and I headed home for the rest of my Easter Sunday plans. Once I got home, I changed clothes and headed to KAM Isaiah Israel-the Jewish Synagogue down the street from me-to hang out in their new urban garden. I was invited to become a part of this congregation’s garden by a woman, Gloria, I meet at the Shared Earth conference at Lutheran School of Theology Chicago. When I arrived I was warmly welcomed by those already present and immediately got to join in the turning and tilling of the Earth. Working together in the garden gave me a chance to interact with people and learn about Judaism in a way I would not have otherwise. Once the produce is harvested they are hoping to donate it to a food pantry that will take fresh produce.

As we finished up our work, Gloria showed me around so I got a chance to see the inside of the sanctuaries(I believe that is the correct term). They have a large sanctuary that they use for special occasion which was magnificent. Entirely made of stone and beautiful-words cannot describe the beauty of the place, nor the humility I felt standing inside. I can only imagine what it must be like to worship in the space. Then I got to see the small sanctuary-which was more simple but still very elegant.

Being in a garden on Easter Sunday was very symbolic. It was in a garden that Jesus was first seen after his Resurrection and upon seeing him Mary first thought Jesus was a gardener. Beyond that, to be working in the dirt helping to transform a dead garden of weeds and dead roots into a place that would be a place of birth and new life.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

This is my story

Hey friends. Here it is, at long last, my story. I am sorry for its length.

Growing up in a small town, I was surrounded by people who, for the most part, looked and talked like me. For all I knew everybody believed like me as well. Religion was something that was assumed but rarely talked about.

I was raised in ELCA Lutheran church going to church and Sunday School every Sunday, attending Bible Camp in summer, learning all my memory work and, as I got older, teaching Sunday school and serving as an Assisting Minister.

Yet, my lessons about what it meant to call myself Christian were learned by watching my parents and the way their faith was apparent in the way they lived their lives. My parents were always helping in any way that they could.

In Decorah, there are a group of artists, called StoryPeople, who believe in the power of stories to connect people. They do this through the sharing of short stories such as the following:

I asked her why she never told us about the Ten Commandments & she said she wasn't ever that good with numbers so she loved everything as best she could & I remember thinking who needs all those rules anyway with a mother like her around.

Now, my mother is actually quite good with numbers, but this was my experience growing up. My mother’s faith was something that seemed to be something that was difficultly simple. She never denied to us that living a life of faith would present some challenges but she also believed that our Christian faith was simple-it was about loving everybody.

This belief translated into a non-tolerance of intolerance in our house. She always encouraged my sister and me to consider the way another’s story impacted their decisions and to find our similarities. My mother often reminded us that for a large part of the gospels, Jesus was found ministering and friending the social outcasts of his day.

The summer before my junior year, I had the honor of being a part of my cousin, Kari Beth’s, wedding. In many ways it was a traditional wedding, with family gathered, an adorable flower girl, and a beautiful outdoor ceremony. The one thing that made it untraditional was that it was two women getting married.

At this ceremony I saw my mother’s lessons being lived out in my entire family. The day was all about how to best welcome Pat and her daughter Alex. My relationship with Kari Beth, Pat and Alex, also meant for the first time I had a direct relationship with somebody who identified as differently than me. Because of this, I could no longer stand idly by while derogatory comments were made about members of the LGBTQ community.

As I was learning to make these assertions, I was also beginning to become more active in my church, I was teaching Sunday School, assisting with worship and participating with our youth group. As I became more active, I had to also start to define why my faith was important to me. Until this point, I had gone to church and Sunday School because my parents had told me I was, but as I became more active it was my decision.

These two journeys started turning my world from black and white to gray which carried me through my last two years of High School, right to Luther College, were I have spend the past four years being challenged and questioned, comforted and consoled in my faith. Through these challenges I meet people who knew how to walk the line of give and take, to challenge and comfort. I was also continually introduced to people who identified as differently then me, but was always surprised to find that more powerful than the things that made us different, where the things that made us similar. As I made these friends, my world began to once again shift from a dull gray to a vibrant rainbow, where differences only made my life more beautiful.

However, my final semester at Luther, this past fall semester has perhaps been one of the most transformative. Our fall convocation speaker was Eboo Patel, founder of Inter-faith Youth Core and author of Acts of Faith, and he present a picture of interfaith cooperation that was inspiring to me. Knowing IFYC was based in Chicago and that I would be spending the coming semester in Chicago, I was hopeful to find ways to become involved and started to work to find was to complete my social work internship with IFYC.

As I worked for this goal, I had the honor of participating in Luther’s first interfaith Dialogue group- JourneyConversations. Every other week for twelve weeks(6 meetings), we would gather to hear about people’s faith journeys. These were people who identified as Christian’s, Muslims, Hindu’s or no particular faith at all. Yet despite the outward differences, each week as people shared, I heard a part of my story in their story.

As the semester came to a close, I was excited to hear that I would be able to complete my internship with IFYC. But with this excitement, has also come pain, as it has meant the loss of some dear relationships because I have chosen a path of religious pluralism. It has meant having challenging conversations and having to repeatedly defend my identity as a Christian and inter-faith leader.

Yet, despite the pain, I continue to move forward, because as a pastor I deeply admire said in one of her sermons this fall:

"Jesus tells us the greatest commandment is to love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul and mind and love your neighbor as yourself. Our neighbors include people of all faith traditions and no faith tradition I believe dialogue with Jews, Muslims, Hindus, agnostics and secular humanists has made me a better Christian. I am a better interfaith leader because of my deep Christian commitments. I believe my deep faith helps me to be more welcoming of people who hold deep commitments in other traditions.”

The challenges along the way have only made me a stronger person. And the relationship I have formed with my co-workers this semester who are Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Secular Humanists or who claim no faith tradition at all, have inspired me to be a stronger Christian and have empowered me to fully claim my beliefs. As I listen to their stories, I hear a part of my story woven in there, and I find that our stories are inextricably linked. Each day I spend with the IFYC staff, I become more confident in the power of my story and my belief that I can be a Christian and an interfaith leader.

And when my time at IFYC is done, this will be work I continue to do throughout my life, so that when I come to the pearly gates and I am asked what I did with my life my answer can be “I loved everything the best that I could”

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

The project, My inspiration

Hey Friends- So once again I apologize for not getting things posted earlier. It is amazing how much time flies when you are having fun-or just working full-time :) ) Anywho, I will hopefully get "my story" posted soon, it is a challenge to get it typed up, I also attended a conference this past Friday about Interfaith and the Environment which has been really thought-provoking so I will hopefully blog about that as well. Other than that, life is going amazingly well.

While you are waiting for all the promised blogs, here is a blog that I wrote about One Chicago, One Nation.


In his song, If You’re Out There, John Legend sings ,

“We’re the generation. / We can’tafford to wait.

The future started yesterday. / We’re already late.”

These lyrics present the kind of call to action that Gandhi made when he asked us to “be the change you wish to see in the world.” Legend’s lyrics expand on Gandhi’s call continuing:

“Oh I was looking for a song to sing / I searched fora leader

But the leader was me… / We don't have to wait for destiny

We should be the change that we want to see.”

When I was younger, my parents taught me by the way they lived their lives that our Christian faith is deeply linked to the way we live our lives. This lesson has led me to embrace my Christian faith as a lifestyle. Each day I find faith intersecting and overlapping with my day-to-day activities and decisions. As a senior social work major at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa, I’ve been working to discern how I’m going to connect my faith to social work in way that allows me to bring my entire self to the table, not leaving my faith behind.

This spring, I’ve been interning in Chicago with a non-profit organization, Interfaith Youth Core (IFYC). IFYC’s work to build mutual respect and pluralism among different religious and philosophical traditions spoke directly to my desire for my work and faith to intersect, allowing me to explore new concepts of change. At IFYC, every day I work with people who identify as Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, and some who claim no religious tradition at all. Yet, rather than focusing on those things that could potentially separate and divide us, we find commonality through empowering young people from diverse religious and non religious backgrounds to serve the common good.

One way we’re doing this is through a new Chicago-based civic engagement program, One Chicago, One Nation that we’ve launched in partnership with The Chicago Community Trust, Inner-City Muslim Action Network (IMAN), One Nation, and Link TV. As part of the program, One Chicago, One Nation is looking for 100 intergenerational Chicagoland leaders from diverse social, religious, cultural, and ethnic backgrounds to work for the common good in their own communities. These leaders will serve as One Chicago, One Nation Community Ambassadors.

Community Ambassadors will receive training by IFYC and IMAN in storytelling, interfaith and intercultural dialogue facilitation, community listening, and community service strategies. Using the training, Community Ambassadors will facilitate conversations around Chicago about issues that are relevant to their communities, and they’ll have the opportunity apply for service grants to enable collaborative community service projects.

As I get the opportunity to read applications from potential Community Ambassadors, I’m inspired by a refusal to sit idly by and let others define the world we live in. By simply applying to be a part of the program, Chicagoans are embracing the challenge and changing the world. In these applications, I find that for many of us, our identities and our lifestyles are inextricably linked together through a desire to work for a better world.

To learn more about One Chicago, One Nation, see: http://onechicago-onenation.org. To apply to be a Community Ambassador, please see: http://onechicago-onenation.org/community-ambassador-application/.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

AMAZING WEEKEND!!!

So I had a fantastic weekend.  As I mentioned in my last blog the weather turning into spring so we have had some absolutely fantastic weather (ok, so maybe yesterday was really nasty, windy and wet but at least it was rain not snow!).   I had an absolutely wonderful weekend and I would love to share some of if with you now. 

Friday:  After work, a couple of us from the office went to Sayira's(a former intern who finished about two weeks ago) place and she cooked us a wonderful supper.   Otherwise, we just chilled out and had wonderful conversation.   

Saturday:  Cold, nasty and rainy day so I was grateful for my rainboots to keep my feet dry.  Since it was St. Patty's day weekend there was a fair amount of stuff going on downtown so I wandered(aka took the CTA) downtown.   I got to see the river dyed green, which was quite impressive.  I also got a chance to see a lot of ridiculous green outfits!   Then it was off to the parade, which was led by an impressive group of bagpipers wearing kilts (could not have been warm at all!).   After the parade it was time to head home, relax and do some laundry.   I found out some of the people from the floor below us were going to a Cajun dance so I tagged along to that.   For those of you at Luther, it reminded me a lot of the freshman contra dance that is at the begining of every year, without the pizza ranch or the freshman.   The three of us were the youngest ones there by at least ten years but we still had a GREAT time and learned how to do the Cajun waltz and attempted the Cajun two step.   

Sunday- This morning, after figuring out the wonderfulness of Daylight Savings time, I went for a nice run (8 miles- I am over half way there!!!!!  5 more to go) along the river.  It was a bit windy and a little chilly but once I got moving I was loving running a long the beach listening to the waves crashing in to the rocks and slapping at the beach.   Also, there was a group of surfers  (yes, surfers in Lake Michigan) which I had to laugh at a little bit and then decided they were a little crazy.   After my run it was home to clean up and chill out before heading to Julie's (one of my co-workers) for a surprise party for Erin(co-worker/un-official supervisor).  There I got to help make Navajo flatbread.   After eating, we had a pinata which Erin destroyed and then it was hanging out and visiting. Then home again to get ready for tomorrow!

So that was my wonderful weekend.  On another note, I mentioned in my last blog that I had shared with a group "my story," hopefully sometime this week I will get that typed up and shared on the blog!  

peace to you all!