Gift of God. Because all things come under Jesus who rules at the right hand of God. Nothing is accidental, and all will be made right. Romans 8:28
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
Tuesday, March 22, 2016
Monday, March 14, 2016
Saturday, March 12, 2016
Ten Years
Wednesday, March 09, 2016
ugh ugh ugh
I need to keep in mind that this anxiety is built into the system on every level. But more than that, I need to be a Caleb too. Feisty, brave, faithful Caleb.
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Update
And God responds by showing up in a big way. So glad to have time to chat with Sarah Will. in the evening. She totally understands what it means to do this work, and walks closely with God. Walking with God doesn't mean she doesn't struggle. She was very open about her fears, desires, and anger (she and Paul are going through a time of transition), but her love for God is still front and center of all of these.
When I first heard her speak last week, and at the beginning of our chat yesterday, I thought, "Oh dear, she's talking shop and I was hoping to be ministered to....." But both things happened. Both things can happen at the same time! It was also profound that I found it profound that God is interested in my intellect and wants even more than I do to see my intellect grow and flourish. To hear it from a Christian academic who loves God passionately means more than anything anyone else can say because she knows what the temptations and challenges are.
Their spiritual practices inform their work. For example, Sarah didn't just start a seminar series on religion in public life, she did that as an act of hospitality, to open up a space for conversation to take place. And in sessions in previous years, Regent faculty had talked about how important the human being is to God, and that part of our work is to see our students and colleagues the way God sees them, and to help them become fully human. That's an undivided life.
Sarah has two ways of reacting to situations:
1) Oh, this is wonderful, this is an encounter with God!
2) Oh, this is a challenge. It's an opportunity to be missional!
Again, this isn't because she wasn't real or open about her struggles. She struggles. But when her intellectual faculties kick in, they go into gear so that her mind returns God to the center, and He guides her responses. How amazing is that.
Later in the conversation, she asked me, "What is the Holy Spirit to you?" I thought she was joking but she waited in silence until I answered. And God showed up. He just did.
The point wasn't my answer. The point was God showing up.
He is amazing, and he is enough. He is enough!
Saturday, March 05, 2016
Faith and Global Initiative
What am I valuing?
What am I yielding?
Wednesday, February 24, 2016
my life
A Letter to My Younger Self About Dealing with Rejection in Academia
1. Don’t take yourself (or your reviewers) so seriously
2. Remember that you don’t need to sprint
3. Focus on process, not outcomes
4. Know that it’s not just you
5. It’s okay to feel bad about this
6. Embrace, don’t fear
Parting words
Monday, February 22, 2016
First ark social
My team won the first ice breaker and got a gift each. Wonder woman has found her new home.
Wish it had been the Black Widow though.
Friday, February 19, 2016
more lessons
1. I have a lot of negative thoughts.
2. When I come across a problem I can't solve, I obsess about it constantly, and it doesn't help. TV does help to break that loop, hah.
3. I need to learn space-holding. (See below.)
http://heatherplett.com/2015/03/hold-space/
(accessed Feb 19, 2016)
What it means to “hold space” for people, plus eight tips on how to do it well
- Give people permission to trust their own intuition and wisdom. When we were supporting Mom in her final days, we had no experience to rely on, and yet, intuitively, we knew what was needed. We knew how to carry her shrinking body to the washroom, we knew how to sit and sing hymns to her, and we knew how to love her. We even knew when it was time to inject the medication that would help ease her pain. In a very gentle way, Ann let us know that we didn’t need to do things according to some arbitrary health care protocol – we simply needed to trust our intuition and accumulated wisdom from the many years we’d loved Mom.
- Give people only as much information as they can handle. Ann gave us some simple instructions and left us with a few handouts, but did not overwhelm us with far more than we could process in our tender time of grief. Too much information would have left us feeling incompetent and unworthy.
- Don’t take their power away. When we take decision-making power out of people’s hands, we leave them feeling useless and incompetent. There may be some times when we need to step in and make hard decisions for other people (ie. when they’re dealing with an addiction and an intervention feels like the only thing that will save them), but in almost every other case, people need the autonomy to make their own choices (even our children). Ann knew that we needed to feel empowered in making decisions on our Mom’s behalf, and so she offered support but never tried to direct or control us.
- Keep your own ego out of it. This is a big one. We all get caught in that trap now and then – when we begin to believe that someone else’s success is dependent on our intervention, or when we think that their failure reflects poorly on us, or when we’re convinced that whatever emotions they choose to unload on us are about us instead of them. It’s a trap I’ve occasionally found myself slipping into when I teach. I can become more concerned about my own success (Do the students like me? Do their marks reflect on my ability to teach? Etc.) than about the success of my students. But that doesn’t serve anyone – not even me. To truly support their growth, I need to keep my ego out of it and create the space where they have the opportunity to grow and learn.
- Make them feel safe enough to fail. When people are learning, growing, or going through grief or transition, they are bound to make some mistakes along the way. When we, as their space holders, withhold judgement and shame, we offer them the opportunity to reach inside themselves to find the courage to take risks and the resilience to keep going even when they fail. When we let them know that failure is simply a part of the journey and not the end of the world, they’ll spend less time beating themselves up for it and more time learning from their mistakes.
- Give guidance and help with humility and thoughtfulness. A wise space holder knows when to withhold guidance (ie. when it makes a person feel foolish and inadequate) and when to offer it gently (ie. when a person asks for it or is too lost to know what to ask for). Though Ann did not take our power or autonomy away, she did offer to come and give Mom baths and do some of the more challenging parts of caregiving. This was a relief to us, as we had no practice at it and didn’t want to place Mom in a position that might make her feel shame (ie. having her children see her naked). This is a careful dance that we all must do when we hold space for other people. Recognizing the areas in which they feel most vulnerable and incapable and offering the right kind of help without shaming them takes practice and humility.
- Create a container for complex emotions, fear, trauma, etc. When people feel that they are held in a deeper way than they are used to, they feel safe enough to allow complex emotions to surface that might normally remain hidden. Someone who is practiced at holding space knows that this can happen and will be prepared to hold it in a gentle, supportive, and nonjudgmental way. In The Circle Way, we talk about “holding the rim” for people. The circle becomes the space where people feel safe enough to fall apart without fearing that this will leave them permanently broken or that they will be shamed by others in the room. Someone is always there to offer strength and courage. This is not easy work, and it is work that I continue to learn about as I host increasingly more challenging conversations. We cannot do it if we are overly emotional ourselves, if we haven’t done the hard work of looking into our own shadow, or if we don’t trust the people we are holding space for. In Ann’s case, she did this by showing up with tenderness, compassion, and confidence. If she had shown up in a way that didn’t offer us assurance that she could handle difficult situations or that she was afraid of death, we wouldn’t have been able to trust her as we did.
- Allow them to make different decisions and to have different experiences than you would. Holding space is about respecting each person’s differences and recognizing that those differences may lead to them making choices that we would not make. Sometimes, for example, they make choices based on cultural norms that we can’t understand from within our own experience. When we hold space, we release control and we honour differences. This showed up, for example, in the way that Ann supported us in making decisions about what to do with Mom’s body after her spirit was no longer housed there. If there had been some ritual that we felt we needed to conduct before releasing her body, we were free to do that in the privacy of Mom’s home.
Tuesday, February 16, 2016
Cny candy
I felt gypped because there were only two gummy candies in the tin. I thought it was a big box of mints. But I guess I paid 7hkd for the tin.
a reminder for myself
Carmen M
Elaine W
Fifi Y
Katy C
Karen C (while she was still in the city)
Kaz
Sarah R
They are all so different in their temperaments and gifts, and I guess that's how they help me see God's world in all its different facets. I'm thankful they're patient with me.
Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Monday, February 08, 2016
CNY
Monday, February 01, 2016
Buh bye
Warming up to me on the last day. He followed me around my tiny apartment and kept trying to get me to play tug of war.
Damned allergies.
Thursday, January 28, 2016
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
thanksgiving on a rainy winter day
Monday, January 25, 2016
Friday, January 22, 2016
strategies
Oh. Yeah. Duh.
I'm SO dumb.
On a more positive note, Timothy is really a great person and a wonderful boss. #thankful
Monday, January 18, 2016
new normal
I do tend to be more suspicious of people when I'm stressed, so I need to watch out for that.
Friday, January 08, 2016
Finally, resolutions
And of course, hours after I make this resolution, I am tempted to give it up. Why are academics so weird?
Thursday, January 07, 2016
runneth and runneth
Shout out to Mar and Karen for providing human connections this morning as I open The File again after vacation.
Wednesday, January 06, 2016
so far so good
Rest, and renewal of old friendships. I learn so much from talking to my old friends, and learning about their lives, loves, and challenges. I must remind myself to make time to meet with people.
Came back to a hassle-free mandatory window inspection (no repairs necessary, only 600$!).
Visited my dermatologist who said I'll probably only need to be on Accutane for three months.
2016 is starting off very, very well. Praise God. The upcoming year may turn out to be hard, but it's great to start off well, and to be reminded that our God is a very, very good God.
Monday, January 04, 2016
Dad
Maternal grandad
Saturday, January 02, 2016
Memories
Tua ee, who is 79 this year, said that I was an easy kid to have around. When I visited, I sat quietly with a book and didn't make a peep. She has a set of children's encyclopedias in her home and apparently I was the only one who read them out of all her children and grandchildren.
She also said that the best place in Taiping to buy fabric to make clothes was my grandfather's shop.