But what about… (Staying Put part 3)

Building off of the previous two blog posts about staying put I feel compelled to write about my friend Christie’s appropriate question:

But what happens when you have done all the stuff and the majority of your neighbors could care less about what you are doing and are even a little annoyed by it?

That’s often the reality isn’t it? The problem with churches, the problem with business, the problem with our neighborhoods is that people ruin everything! If it weren’t for people I could have a killer neighborhood. (where’s a sarcasm mark when you need it?)

Seriously though, while I firmly believe that the individualism, hectic lifestyle, and materialism we’ve bought into in our culture are completely and utterly hallow and do not play a part in creating a life or a future worth living–they are still a magnetic draw to each and every one of us! It’s like a blue-lighted bug zapper that carries with it a strange and mysterious attraction even unto the bugs death. We are drawn to it.

So what do we do when our neighbors don’t care, don’t reciprocate, or even worse what if they find it offensive? Are there any ideas we can hold onto in the midst of the epic obstacle known as real people? Here are some of my random thoughts…

  1. Don’t forget the why–We are not responsible for changing people. The reason we commit to a people and a place (in my humble opinion) is because it’s redemptive and because it’s a better way to live. While we hope it is productive our goal is not production. Healthy relationships are never driven merely by production.
  2. Invitation and Imagination– Part of our role is to stretch the imagination of those around us. People might not respond immediately and we may never be witnesses to their response, but our hope is that by living differently and with intentionality we will stretch the imagination of those around us concerning how life can be experienced. It is an invitational stance, it’s a posture that invites others into new choices without pressure to do so.
  3. Patience–Patience sucks but it’s essential. Change rarely happens quickly. Stability kind of necessitates a long term approach.
  4. Hospitality– Hospitality is going to include rejection at times. Just remember that we’re being changed as much if not more than those around us.
  5. Baggage and Process– We can’t forget that we all have baggage and that everything is a process! We don’t know what baggage our neighbors are carrying (though on a larger neighborhood level it’s a great thing to find old storytellers in order to learn some of the baggage and blessing that the neighborhood itself already carries) we don’t know what hurts and past choices continue to define their response to you or those around them. Additionally we can’t forget that we’re all at different stages in a process of growth. I find that oftentimes my frustration is that you’re not at the place I’m at in my process! It makes me mad that you’re in a different place…and that’s a me problem not a you problem.
  6. Context– There’s no getting around the fact that some places are harder than others to make a dent. When there are no home owners its going to be harder. Where there are more single parents it’s going to be harder (more opportunities to serve but…man are those parents busy trying to simply survive!). Where there are more fences, garage doors, larger yards, or when there’s just an abundance of seemingly mean people it’s going to be more difficult. I don’t know if this means we just give up when we find ourselves in these types of places or if we buckle down and live more sacrificially…but I do know that some places are just hard.
  7. No loners— Practicing stability by yourself is hard. There’s a difference when people witness/experience somebody living differently and when they witness somebodies. Seeing a nice person is different from observing an alternative community. If we want to truly see neighborhood change I think its imperative that we have co-conspirators, that we don’t go it alone but work in partnership from the ground up. This will both sustain us as individuals and it will more likely create lasting change.
  8. Assumptions rob your soul– This is connected to #5, but assumptions about how neighbors should or will respond will absolutely kill you and rob your soul of the joy of giving. Assumptions rob you of the opportunity to extend grace in real and authentic ways. Being aware of our assumptions will allow us greater freedom in giving and will in and of itself give additional blessing to those around us.
  9. Just do it– When it comes down to it all we can do it just choose to do it. Regardless of outcome, regardless of reciprocity, regardless of everything that might fail our best option is simply to step out on a limb and practice radical hospitality because we believe that it’s the right thing to do. The hope (the ridiculous and audacious hope) is that either now or later love will win out.

15 Ways to Stay Put with Purpose (part 2)

There are things we can very specifically do in order to practice the wisdom of stability that I blogged about yesterday. I don’t claim to practice all these but I do stand behind them as some basic core rhythms that will produce a more rich life if we lean into them hard enough and allow them to shape how we live in our neighborhood spaces.

  1. Support local businesses–It can be less exciting, it can be slightly more expensive, but it’s a commitment that’s worth pursuing. Not only does it invest in your immediate community but you’re also going to get to know your local owners, movers and shakers, and fellow neighbors who also shop and eat locally.
  2. Redeem where you live, work, and play–Overlap is word. The hope is to create as much overlap in life as possible so that you can stop trying to be involved and connected in fifteen different social circles in life and instead attempt to create social circles that overlap. How can the places you work, where you live, and where you spend your free time become more united?
  3. Be out front— The days of having a large front porch are gone, they’re no longer a part of our construction mentality…and this is a major loss. If you have a front porch use it! Drink your coffee out there, read your books out there, do what you’ve got to do to be present in that important space where you’ll visually see your neighbors! What we’ve done in previous houses that did not have a front porch was we put our garden out front, this allowed us to have an ‘excuse’ to linger out there and meet neighbors.
  4. Eat Together–Invite neighbors over for dinner. It’s hard to turn down a genuine invitation for food…so invite away! We’ve also started a weekly neighborhood meal. While this is a bit larger commitment to make, the point is that amazing and miraculous things happen over food (it’s called relationship!).
  5. Bring Cookies— That classic act of bringing over cookies to the new neighbors is classic because it’s the right thing to do. We should be looking for any excuse necessary to be kind to those around us (new babies, new moves, etc.)
  6. Be responsive (not responsible but responsive)– This piggybacks on the previous one, but responsiveness is priceless. You notice a single mom trying to bring in the kids and all the groceries…help. You notice someone working on their car…go help (or stand there and talk while they do it themselves). You find out that your neighbors sick offer to bring over a meal. Be responsive!
  7. Be vulnerable (but not creepy)— It’s important to receive help from others. The goal is not to be a hero but to be a neighbor. Being a hero is to live a lie…because none of us can fly, have x-ray vision, or can shoot lasers out of our finger nails. Receiving is as important as being responsive and generous…and for many of us it might be an even harder thing to practice.
  8. Walk as much as possible–As a general rule if you can walk instead of drive…do it. When you walk you’ll actually run into people, you’ll notice things you’d miss while driving, and it will help you to slow down your life in general. (not to mention its good for the body right?!)
  9. Be aware of what’s going on–there are local events happening all the time. Use Facebook, coffee house window adds, and other locally type things to find out what kind of park days, festivals, picnics, concerts, grand openings, etc. are happening around you. Also be aware of what social services, non-profits, and the like are making a difference and investing in your neighborhood. Join and partner with them whenever and however you can!
  10. Be available– This is the most difficult thing on this whole list. Availability necessitates slowing down your life in incredible ways. Relationship does not happen on a schedule very well, it happens spontaneously, it happens randomly, it happens when your available for life to happen around you. My tendency is go go go and to find my value in what I get done…but if I’m constantly going going going those around me will quickly learn that I’m unavailable ’cause I’m always gone gone gone. (quality writing right?)
  11. Get a dog or a child— This is crucial. You’ve got to have one or the other ’cause they’re people magnets. Get on it!
  12. Remember names— I think this is so important that its worth making an awkwardly (and potentially creepy) map of the neighborhood with people’s names on it. You learn a neighbors name run home, do not stop at ‘go’ or collect $200, and immediately write it down!
  13. Dream and experiment— This is next level stuff, but its the kind of stuff that is going to bring longer term culture change to a community. Child care co-ops, vegetable sharing and swapping (from your gardens), shared backyards (eliminating back fences and creating green spaces), neighborhood tool libraries, street murals, phone trees…how beautiful would it or could it be if neighbors started dreaming together about what they could accomplish if they were crazy enough to experiment and try?
  14. Practice gathering— Learning to gather people together is a valuable skill. We’ve experimented with storytelling nights where we invited people together to tell stories that have shaped our experiences in our community, we’ve had “dreaming nights” where we all shared our dreams for the future of our community, we’ve thrown parties, etc. Learning to gather people together is a valuable skill and something that often gets lots these days.
  15. Neighborhood Associations— Just do it. Just join it, go to the meeting, vote, and all that other stuff that can be boring. It shows an important commitment and it’s a part of the fabric of how our neighborhoods function.

Staying Put (part 1)

Is staying the new leaving? For most of time you stayed where you started. If you were born in a region you lived in that region for your whole life, if you grew up in a specific town, city, or village most likely that’s where you spent your entire existence. Movement was more rare than it was normal because for most of time leaving and going to a distant place entailed so much more than it does now.

As we all know we now live in the most mobile culture that has ever existed. We don’t stay anywhere longer than fifteen minutes and have, in fact, developed a whole set of cultural norms to fit around our constant movement. Even more so today than in our parents (probably grandparents) generation because at least in that time you used to stay with the same job for most of your life (at the very least the same career field). Today we flitter like a butterfly from one place to the next, we go away to college, we go away to get married, we go away for vacation, we move away for jobs, we live in many houses in our one lifetime (we’re on house number six in just a few years of marriage!!!), we can go from one side of the country to the other and it’s considered normal.

Its come to the point where very few people even value where they are. We’ve lost our sense of neighborhood, our sense of localness. We drive to the church twenty minutes away, we commute to work thirty minutes away, we grocery shop ten miles away, our kids are in little league with other kids sprawled across the whole city, our friends are not our neighbors (generally) and in fact we’re lucky if we see or even know our neighbors in meaningful ways. Our commitment is not to the betterment of our immediate neighborhood but to individual success and growth (i.e. the next job that’s going to get me to the next house, etc.) Individuality and mobility can be good things but they do come with baggage, they bring some heavy losses.

I don’t mean to be a downer here but I think we’re missing something huge! I think we’re missing out on something that could quite possibly change not only our own lives but the fabric of a whole community. What would it take for us to commit to each other, to commit to a place, to commit to a people, to slow down, to shop closer to home, to not get our kids the school boundary exception, to walk more and drive less…what would it require of us? How much sacrifice would it invite us into? Honestly I’m afraid it requires a lot! I’m afraid that the sacrifice is pretty huge for many of us!

Mobility used to be hard…now its become stability that is the obstacle. Are we willing to experiment with the strangely old and yet radically fresh idea that, as one author says, there’s wisdom in stability? I think we’d be wise to do so.

The essence of all my blogs compiled into one

(I’ve built this blog around yesterday’s post of the supposed most used words of all time in my blog. I don’t know if I believe that these are the most used words…but if they are, the following post is what my blog is all about. I’ve highlighted in bold the words off the list)

This is a rant, it is a series of amazing words ranting about life, about our story as radical or simple as it may be or will become. This is a blog for all you brothers, fathers, mothers, and even Josh and Alex. The time has come to remember, remember who we are, remember how to love better, be better parents (especially you Alex), and finally finding the capacity to let go of the way we’ve lived our lives Monday through Sunday trying to create a future void of disappointments. Tumors, cancer, radiation treatments, growing old (as if growing old fits on this list) fill(ed) our minds and keep us busy. But its not only those things that cause disappointment and make us feel in need, its also the ‘goodthings of life that keep us busythings like owning land, pursuing love, getting things (more and more and more things!), building a family, saving money, looking pretty, getting the right job, looking cool…the list could go on. These are good things, not things to be regarded with hate or distaste…and yet do they produce a life worth living? Christians build churches, they build nice buildings that are filled with nice people and complete structures of hierarchy that are intended to be a part of the life-producing system…but do even they produce a life worth living? The reality is that even if we’re given more than our one life, say even three lifetimes to pursue all these ‘good‘ things we will never arrive–because arrival is a myth. It’s like you’re flying your dad’s airplane in search of the right place to land only to discover bad news that you’re flying over the ocean (killer illustration right?). In the end if we spend our energy on all these things we’ll simply be churning cream into butter accomplishing little that is new, radical, or better than what we currently posses. No, the message that we need to be reminded of is to circle back around to where we started–we must tell a story with our lives, we must be patient enough to allow the time it takes to live a story that is worth telling–a story of depth, a story with purpose, a story that is bigger than ourselves. This is the story that Jesus invites us into: one of death to self, one that’s not just about the pursuit of love but the personification of it, and of hope that transcends silly things such as cancer, church buildings, and looking cool. So live your life in a way that’ll be worthy of a party come death…and don’t wait ’till tomorrow, start today.

Words from my brain

So this is supposed to be a collection of my most used words from my blog…really? Dad? Screw? Flying? Cream? Alex? Really, do I talk about Alex a lot? I don’t even know an Alex! Either way and regardless of whether its accurate or not it was kind of fun to see at least a partial collection of what spews forth from my mind. (if you click on the image it will get bigger)I wonder what kind of word collection would show up if your brain was picked?!