I am sharing about what's going on for me this year, next year. And I tell them that my team leader is on paternity leave, so I am leading the team and the fellowship for the first few weeks. "Wait, you are?" Not exactly a tone of excitement. I am suspicious about their hesitation, but I will gloss over it at the moment.
At some point someone points out that all the women, save myself and two other girls at my table, are all sitting together in the other room. I pointedly tell them that this is always the case, I keep telling people our church always self-segregates like so. But he asks me what's really wrong with that, especially if the alternative is the youth groups that are all over each other. "All churches are like that, right?" No, I point out--your sample size of two churches, one being our church and another being a church plant based from our church, does not constitute "all churches". And under a quick breath I murmur that you will miss out on the gifts, perspectives, and life from your fellow sisters but this is not the place for theological arguments, this is not the place to point out how patriarchy in its broken form hurts all of us, and this is not the place to argue for redeemed relationships between men and women, and so we go on.
And they talk about their college fellowships, and one of my friends shares about how it "went downhill" his year. By downhill, he talks about how a guy friend of ours was asked to be admin (which I gather is the leader title of this fellowship) but turned it town, and then asked a girl instead. A girl. "You know this isn't good when they can't raise up leaders," he says.
And they ask me about our fellowship dynamics and I admit we have way more females this year than male and as he shakes his head several times, he says, "That's not good. That's really not good." And he asks me if I lead Bible studies and I can't tell if this is with the women-teaching-in-authority question in mind so like a coward I tell him that this year I sort of co-led one but next year I won't be. Somehow I've lost my confidence and my authority appears to be hiding behind a bush.
And I look around the room that is full of men and a handful of women and I wonder who will have the eyes to see what's going on here. I wonder what it means for relationships between male and female (for He created them both) to be beautiful and co-existing and flourishing. I desperately want a robust grasp on my position on egalitarianism or complementarism yet I fear the stronger I stand, the more I won't fit in here. But I suspect that some already get a hint. And I suspect perhaps that their view of gender--be it in leadership, appropriate distance, assumed dynamics--may impact the fact that few new women have joined the group as I see it. But who am I to say?
In the meantime, I am about to run out of fingers for number of times I hear these comments about women leading ministries spoken in doubt or disagreement. It's like I need a file for them, how to interact with the people who say them, and how to articulate my own convictions, but it's so complicated because it encompasses the emotional, theological, professional, relational realms and much, much more.
And so this advent season I will remember Mary. Mary, who in the gender roles of her time, said yes to an incredulous task with all its associated gossip and presumption and the destiny of never fitting in again. "Let it be to me according to your word," she says. Oh Mary. Did no one expect God to speak through you? No one expected the Messiah to come from you, did they? We can look at Paul and we David and all the men of scripture, but I also won't forget that this woman was a favored one. "And blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her from the Lord."
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Thursday, August 21, 2014
[edited title: on ferguson]
I hesitate because "speaking up"
cannot be reduced to facebook
or a blog post
On the other hand I admit my silence because
Who can I even speak up to?
Will my social circles care to listen?
What do I say?
What if I've got it wrong?
Is "silence" interpreted by
social media streams devoid of shares
That look just like
"everyone" else's
Is it enough that speaking up
Comes in quiet questions asked in prayer
Consistent thoughts in the back of your mind
Bracing and facing hesitation as you call a friend
Prepared to fumble over words
The truth is:
I have not intertwined my life with theirs
Thus I have to choose hurt.
Before the sin of silence
Is the sin of distance between them and me
When I choose to speak,
Is it because I feel guilty?
Because I choose not to
Is it because I don't feel convicted enough?
In the flurry of
blogs
posts
news
videos
hurt
pain
right
wrong
sadness
silence
expectation
yearning
what part of the deep gray matter and mess
do I choose?
Help me
I am not avoiding
I just don't know what to say
cannot be reduced to facebook
or a blog post
On the other hand I admit my silence because
Who can I even speak up to?
Will my social circles care to listen?
What do I say?
What if I've got it wrong?
Is "silence" interpreted by
social media streams devoid of shares
That look just like
"everyone" else's
Is it enough that speaking up
Comes in quiet questions asked in prayer
Consistent thoughts in the back of your mind
Bracing and facing hesitation as you call a friend
Prepared to fumble over words
The truth is:
I have not intertwined my life with theirs
Thus I have to choose hurt.
Before the sin of silence
Is the sin of distance between them and me
When I choose to speak,
Is it because I feel guilty?
Because I choose not to
Is it because I don't feel convicted enough?
In the flurry of
blogs
posts
news
videos
hurt
pain
right
wrong
sadness
silence
expectation
yearning
what part of the deep gray matter and mess
do I choose?
Help me
I am not avoiding
I just don't know what to say
Monday, August 11, 2014
Flourishing
Power, resources, flourishing. Two days ago, my roommate and I successfully hosted a dinner that brought together a couple different circles of church friends as well as two new friends who moved to Sacramento within the past six months. In the 48 hours since that successful hamburger night and while I try to finish Crouch's Playing God (yes, another reference), I've been mulling over those three words and how they played out in our evening of cheeseburgers and dessert.
Crouch defines power as "the ability to make something of the world" - to transform your environment, and the ability to interpret and make meaning from the world. And as I think about why Ro and I threw together this dinner party, we wanted to make community happen. I saw new friends in positions where I was not too long ago: showing up at group-hosted events but otherwise having little to do on weekends. Slowly finding their life in this new city but still a-ways from having a home. These two years in Sacramento have made me incredibly sympathetic to newcomers, re-locators, and transplants. I remember being there. And I hope they will find a home here sooner than later. In that sense, we had the power and used it to create connections, relationships, and communities among our newer friends and our church regulars.
Our other undercover, personal mission has been to bridge gaps between our young adult and career adult groups. Both of us have dabbled in both and have recently been churning thoughts about their similarities and differences, for better or for worse, as they both reflect God and also our broken human selves. While there is no need for the groups to merge, this summer I've found myself wanted to erase the lines that unnecessarily separate the groups. So here I am -- about a year and a half into knowing these church friends and already mixing up social groups and guests lists. Transforming the environment indeed.
But what a dinner party it was. The word resources is included above because prior to moving into this home, I wouldn't have the space to host a dinner where 11 of us could sit around a table. I think of the power we used to create a space for people to flourish through our hospitality: as resident and host of this home, I made the choice to put two tables together so all of us could sit around and face each other. Even that choice versus the paired-off seating of group parties was meant to communicate come, join our family. Tablecloths and set placements said, We're ready for you. And in really cheesy, practical ways (no pun intended), we allowed for creation. We had gaps in our planning that made it so Joe and David were at the stove during all of prep time. We picked a menu so that everyone could contribute and together we created our dinner.
There is no perfect community on this side of heaven, but as I play my part in a kingdom-like community here, maybe this is a new start: using my power and resources to have mealtimes where people sit around a table with a whole group, where old friends meet new people, where people are invited to participate and contribute something to the table, where I create space for joy, laughter, communion, and fellowship. And may it be a place where people and communities may flourish.
Crouch defines power as "the ability to make something of the world" - to transform your environment, and the ability to interpret and make meaning from the world. And as I think about why Ro and I threw together this dinner party, we wanted to make community happen. I saw new friends in positions where I was not too long ago: showing up at group-hosted events but otherwise having little to do on weekends. Slowly finding their life in this new city but still a-ways from having a home. These two years in Sacramento have made me incredibly sympathetic to newcomers, re-locators, and transplants. I remember being there. And I hope they will find a home here sooner than later. In that sense, we had the power and used it to create connections, relationships, and communities among our newer friends and our church regulars.
Our other undercover, personal mission has been to bridge gaps between our young adult and career adult groups. Both of us have dabbled in both and have recently been churning thoughts about their similarities and differences, for better or for worse, as they both reflect God and also our broken human selves. While there is no need for the groups to merge, this summer I've found myself wanted to erase the lines that unnecessarily separate the groups. So here I am -- about a year and a half into knowing these church friends and already mixing up social groups and guests lists. Transforming the environment indeed.
But what a dinner party it was. The word resources is included above because prior to moving into this home, I wouldn't have the space to host a dinner where 11 of us could sit around a table. I think of the power we used to create a space for people to flourish through our hospitality: as resident and host of this home, I made the choice to put two tables together so all of us could sit around and face each other. Even that choice versus the paired-off seating of group parties was meant to communicate come, join our family. Tablecloths and set placements said, We're ready for you. And in really cheesy, practical ways (no pun intended), we allowed for creation. We had gaps in our planning that made it so Joe and David were at the stove during all of prep time. We picked a menu so that everyone could contribute and together we created our dinner.
There is no perfect community on this side of heaven, but as I play my part in a kingdom-like community here, maybe this is a new start: using my power and resources to have mealtimes where people sit around a table with a whole group, where old friends meet new people, where people are invited to participate and contribute something to the table, where I create space for joy, laughter, communion, and fellowship. And may it be a place where people and communities may flourish.
Thursday, August 7, 2014
turns out i'm not supergirl
Well my dear friends, it has been awhile, but I got hurt today. It's funny how a long streak of good health and fast recoveries make you forget that you are not invincible. But after this afternoon's bike accident, I sit here with a sore jaw and swollen lip, skinned hands and a bruised leg, and a dull headache on the left side of my head where I hit the trail. I'm glad I wore a helmet.
Fortunately the roommate Rosanne and I were together, and I had my phone (which is another thing I don't always take with me, but today may have me convinced otherwise). She called down the list of all our church friends who were nearby, and it was another one of those moments that I realized...times have changed in Sacramento. There was a time a year and a half ago when an injury or accident felt a lot more isolating and lonely, when I had only so many phone numbers within a 10 mile radius.
The boyfriend would laugh at my how I make dramatic conclusions or life lessons out of small things, but here we are: as I sit here with my head hurting and my body tired, I remember that some things take time and I can't control how fast my body heals. That I am made human and humans get hurt. And I am thankful that God gave friends and people to care for you.
On other notes, I put on the socks Jane gave me from Korea because they make me happy on this slow, tired night. It's the small things, guys.
Fortunately the roommate Rosanne and I were together, and I had my phone (which is another thing I don't always take with me, but today may have me convinced otherwise). She called down the list of all our church friends who were nearby, and it was another one of those moments that I realized...times have changed in Sacramento. There was a time a year and a half ago when an injury or accident felt a lot more isolating and lonely, when I had only so many phone numbers within a 10 mile radius.
The boyfriend would laugh at my how I make dramatic conclusions or life lessons out of small things, but here we are: as I sit here with my head hurting and my body tired, I remember that some things take time and I can't control how fast my body heals. That I am made human and humans get hurt. And I am thankful that God gave friends and people to care for you.
On other notes, I put on the socks Jane gave me from Korea because they make me happy on this slow, tired night. It's the small things, guys.
Saturday, August 2, 2014
On Idolatry
I think it's an obvious fact that many Asian American students and families have an academic idolatry. But tonight was the first time in awhile that I remembered how alive it is in our churches. At the high school senior Grad Seminar, a handful of questions were asked about balancing life, how to handle academics, where to put your time. There was a variety of answers: figure out your goals, choose your priorities, put God first. etc.
It wasn't till I drove home that I realized what was bothering me about our panel responses: when we talked about grades, we talked about it like it would be our choice. If I failed, it's because I didn't prioritize it enough, I didn't manage my time, or I didn't care enough about it. Nowhere did we say, "The Lord gave, and the Lord takes.." Nowhere did anyone say, "You might study all you can and still fail."
We are still in the grip of the idol, thinking we can control it. I'm churning thoughts off of Andy Crouch's Playing God as he talks about idolatry, how it "embodies a false claim about the world's ultimate meaning." And we think that the world will work right and in our favor if we study correctly. Nowhere does our Chinese Church narrative tell us that following God will leads us to an F.
Now, there are a lot of idols our churches have, a lot of things that are in the Bible that are missing in our teachings. But tonight this whole thing about good grades and academic success leads me to success. Because idols (again, borrowing from Crouch) will ask for more and more, while giving less and less, until eventually they demand everything and give nothing.
I remember this in undergrad. I remember when a low result on a midterm drove classmates to give more and more for their time, but to no avail. Individual classes or semester loads that demanded friends to give everything--all their time, energy, emotion--to their grades, and then gave nothing. In one case, the "nothing" turned out to be failure still: not passing, not making it, not understanding material regardless of hours put in. In others, that "nothing" came in other forms: withered relationships, tired people, purposelessness and depression.
In all honesty, it is the first case of "nothing" that I irked me: as I started this post, I wished that these incoming college freshmen knew that academics and grades were not in their control. They are not guaranteed success no matter how they put in. Try as they might, they may get an F. But as I write, I am convinced that that second "nothing" is all the more terrifying yet invisible: that they could walk out with the grades after they put in and not realize that it will demand more of them. We've seen it: the bigger idolatry of success transfers easily from academics to career and position.
These thoughts are incomplete. It's been awhile since I've paid attention to this idol in my community. But tonight the language and our illusion of control over this has given light to it yet again.
It wasn't till I drove home that I realized what was bothering me about our panel responses: when we talked about grades, we talked about it like it would be our choice. If I failed, it's because I didn't prioritize it enough, I didn't manage my time, or I didn't care enough about it. Nowhere did we say, "The Lord gave, and the Lord takes.." Nowhere did anyone say, "You might study all you can and still fail."
We are still in the grip of the idol, thinking we can control it. I'm churning thoughts off of Andy Crouch's Playing God as he talks about idolatry, how it "embodies a false claim about the world's ultimate meaning." And we think that the world will work right and in our favor if we study correctly. Nowhere does our Chinese Church narrative tell us that following God will leads us to an F.
Now, there are a lot of idols our churches have, a lot of things that are in the Bible that are missing in our teachings. But tonight this whole thing about good grades and academic success leads me to success. Because idols (again, borrowing from Crouch) will ask for more and more, while giving less and less, until eventually they demand everything and give nothing.
I remember this in undergrad. I remember when a low result on a midterm drove classmates to give more and more for their time, but to no avail. Individual classes or semester loads that demanded friends to give everything--all their time, energy, emotion--to their grades, and then gave nothing. In one case, the "nothing" turned out to be failure still: not passing, not making it, not understanding material regardless of hours put in. In others, that "nothing" came in other forms: withered relationships, tired people, purposelessness and depression.
In all honesty, it is the first case of "nothing" that I irked me: as I started this post, I wished that these incoming college freshmen knew that academics and grades were not in their control. They are not guaranteed success no matter how they put in. Try as they might, they may get an F. But as I write, I am convinced that that second "nothing" is all the more terrifying yet invisible: that they could walk out with the grades after they put in and not realize that it will demand more of them. We've seen it: the bigger idolatry of success transfers easily from academics to career and position.
These thoughts are incomplete. It's been awhile since I've paid attention to this idol in my community. But tonight the language and our illusion of control over this has given light to it yet again.
Friday, July 11, 2014
Saturday, July 5, 2014
For the knowing
I don't really like long days of silence and solitude. Correction: I don't even like one day of silence and solitude. For someone's whose instinct when life happens is to call someone and tell someone--good news, bad news, surprises, joys, angers--a whole day with no one to tell is lame to me (not to everyone, I know). Truth is, I do my best with people. My best ideas come when I'm talking out loud, I often figure out who I am in the company of those who know me best.
But the reality is that as much as people are good for me, it's easy to wrap my life around them. This week I found myself in that quiet but persistent urge for approval again, even in matters as dumb and subtle as wanting to defend my bookshelf because I'm not reading the "right" authors. I am wondering my position at letting women teach the youth but not the adults, of leading devotions and applications but not interpreting and preaching the word. I have in my hands my performance review of a job that takes deep heart and serious spirituality but I know if I'm going to do this for years more my roots had better sink deep, deeper than they are now.
And even with these specific needs and issues aside, I need to let my Creator speak. Spaces where I just be, where no one else speaks, hears or knows me remind me that, while my life is woven into the community around me, it is, at its best and at its purpose, fully centered around God. And in the middle of career decisions, resurfacing goals to please and perform to those around me, and awareness of doubts of who I am, no other voice will be more important.
So here's to silence. I know better than to set expectations for that day. But at the very least, I know that I need this.
But the reality is that as much as people are good for me, it's easy to wrap my life around them. This week I found myself in that quiet but persistent urge for approval again, even in matters as dumb and subtle as wanting to defend my bookshelf because I'm not reading the "right" authors. I am wondering my position at letting women teach the youth but not the adults, of leading devotions and applications but not interpreting and preaching the word. I have in my hands my performance review of a job that takes deep heart and serious spirituality but I know if I'm going to do this for years more my roots had better sink deep, deeper than they are now.
And even with these specific needs and issues aside, I need to let my Creator speak. Spaces where I just be, where no one else speaks, hears or knows me remind me that, while my life is woven into the community around me, it is, at its best and at its purpose, fully centered around God. And in the middle of career decisions, resurfacing goals to please and perform to those around me, and awareness of doubts of who I am, no other voice will be more important.
So here's to silence. I know better than to set expectations for that day. But at the very least, I know that I need this.
Friday, May 23, 2014
New Clothes
What are the scripts I follow? The role I'm born into, a narrative handed to be at birth: the words and roles for the youngest daughter and the little sister, always looking up to someone older with more experience. I might be the most responsible and capable in the room, but I'll downplay it or at least not draw attention to it. The lessons that tell me never to be proud of myself, to wait and let others praise me. The training to see critique first, and maybe a sliver of success. The script I've been given puts authority and pride in a confusing gray area, mixes confidence and arrogance so I can't tell them apart and am afraid to show one in case it's misinterpreted as the other.
It takes practice to hold back the lines I've recited my whole life, and to replace them with ones that I still feel unsure about. My supervisor says I am not allowed to say, "I don't know what I'm doing" anymore, as it undermines my own authority and just reinforces my own self-doubt. So I stop. But even if those six words don't come out of my mouth, I find my insecurity wanting to creep out in other ways: I want to double check my instincts with my supervisor in the room even when I'm the one leading, I am tempted to speak in hesitancy and doubt instead of confidence and direction. I want to remind everyone that I am new, inexperienced, and figuring it out.
But I hold back, even if it means the five hour meeting is filled with choices of what to say and what to hold back. Say my decision, hold back my hesitation. Say my instinct, hold back the need for affirmation. Say my plan, hold back my doubt. There are many places for feedback, discussion, teamwork and collaboration, but I can create those spaces well as a leader. This is practice, this is discipline, and it makes me more aware than ever of my lack of confidence. Who would have thought?
Last summer I told a staff director that the influence and authority I found myself with felt like new clothes. New clothes - they fit, they're right, they're good, they're needed. Still, it takes some getting used to. It might actually fit perfectly, but it doesn't mean that the for awhile, I will still be very aware that I am wearing my New Shirt when I put it on. But like a perfect-fitting shirt, I will choose to wear the leadership that is made for me and that fits me well. New shirts are good things.
It takes practice to hold back the lines I've recited my whole life, and to replace them with ones that I still feel unsure about. My supervisor says I am not allowed to say, "I don't know what I'm doing" anymore, as it undermines my own authority and just reinforces my own self-doubt. So I stop. But even if those six words don't come out of my mouth, I find my insecurity wanting to creep out in other ways: I want to double check my instincts with my supervisor in the room even when I'm the one leading, I am tempted to speak in hesitancy and doubt instead of confidence and direction. I want to remind everyone that I am new, inexperienced, and figuring it out.
But I hold back, even if it means the five hour meeting is filled with choices of what to say and what to hold back. Say my decision, hold back my hesitation. Say my instinct, hold back the need for affirmation. Say my plan, hold back my doubt. There are many places for feedback, discussion, teamwork and collaboration, but I can create those spaces well as a leader. This is practice, this is discipline, and it makes me more aware than ever of my lack of confidence. Who would have thought?
Last summer I told a staff director that the influence and authority I found myself with felt like new clothes. New clothes - they fit, they're right, they're good, they're needed. Still, it takes some getting used to. It might actually fit perfectly, but it doesn't mean that the for awhile, I will still be very aware that I am wearing my New Shirt when I put it on. But like a perfect-fitting shirt, I will choose to wear the leadership that is made for me and that fits me well. New shirts are good things.
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Home
It's been awhile. I checked my archives: With the exception of last month, I wrote at least one post a month for the past three years. Which means this two-month gap of not blogging was the longest I've gone without writing. Not even a draft, not even a written-but-unposted piece.
There is a lot I could write about in absence: the continuing journey of voice, ethnicity, and ministry; D at long last entering his last month of school; his job offer and the short-lived hope of not being long-distance; the slump of post-Mark Camp-is-the-school-year-over-yet? and finding energy to keep going amid that; etc. etc. etc.
But today, I will write about home, Sacramento-home, specifically. This blog has had its share of displacement angst and even its own "transition" tag, chronicling my move from Stockton to here. And while I've been here for two years come August, and as much as I love Sacramento as a city, it wasn't till two weeks ago that I really found a home. Long story short, I moved in with two friends from church and everything changed. The rest it's given for my heart, my subconscious, my emotions is amazing. I didn't realize how much I had wound up in a year and a half of non-ideal housing. I never really relaxed in that first condo I lived in, as differing values, life stages, and resentment built up into angst. The room I rented for six months was in a house that was never really mine, and I always felt like talking to my housemates then was making small talk with women who would never understand my lifestyle.
I think our lives of following Jesus involves some level of displacement. But these days, I am so grateful for God's grace that says, "Not right now." That says for this next season, let your heart rest and feel at home. Settle and unwind and find comfort in your physical dwelling. Another day, you will be on the move again. Another day, you will be placed in a place you don't fit. Every day, remember that this world is not your home. Yet for now, right now, grace comes in the form of a home-space, a physical belonging. And I don't know how to explain it to anyone enough, because I think it takes feeling never-quite-at-home for a long period of time to really, really appreciate home.
Home is a lot of things. It is having a place where the chopsticks and spoons belong, instead of having your Chinese soup spoons be awkwardly put on the counter because your roommate doesn't know where to put it. It is having a shelf for board games again, instead of stacking then in a box that has to move to different corners of the your room as you shuffle it around. It is actually unpacking every box, finding a place for each thing and finally throwing out the items without one instead of letting it all sit in a box you shuffle through as needed. It is finding the compromise in chores, groceries, and sharing instead of inwardly rolling your eyes when someone else's preference trumps yours. Home is no shoes inside the house. Lots of rice in the pantry but also pasta and canned vegetables. A sauce cabinet with Lee Kum Kee, soy sauce, dark soy sauce, chili oil and sesame oil but a spice cabinet with cumin, cinnamon, and Lawry's. Walking with your roommate to your friend's house two streets down. Carpooling to church and offering your home-cooked leftovers. Home is eating at the dining table and wanting your roommates to join, it's leaving your door open all the time and not trying to avoid your roommates.
Sometimes, you best know something by what it's juxtaposed against (can you even use that word like that?). These days I'm realizing how little everywhere else felt like home now that I have this to compare it to. And I'm so, so grateful for the grace in this season and moment.
There is a lot I could write about in absence: the continuing journey of voice, ethnicity, and ministry; D at long last entering his last month of school; his job offer and the short-lived hope of not being long-distance; the slump of post-Mark Camp-is-the-school-year-over-yet? and finding energy to keep going amid that; etc. etc. etc.
But today, I will write about home, Sacramento-home, specifically. This blog has had its share of displacement angst and even its own "transition" tag, chronicling my move from Stockton to here. And while I've been here for two years come August, and as much as I love Sacramento as a city, it wasn't till two weeks ago that I really found a home. Long story short, I moved in with two friends from church and everything changed. The rest it's given for my heart, my subconscious, my emotions is amazing. I didn't realize how much I had wound up in a year and a half of non-ideal housing. I never really relaxed in that first condo I lived in, as differing values, life stages, and resentment built up into angst. The room I rented for six months was in a house that was never really mine, and I always felt like talking to my housemates then was making small talk with women who would never understand my lifestyle.
I think our lives of following Jesus involves some level of displacement. But these days, I am so grateful for God's grace that says, "Not right now." That says for this next season, let your heart rest and feel at home. Settle and unwind and find comfort in your physical dwelling. Another day, you will be on the move again. Another day, you will be placed in a place you don't fit. Every day, remember that this world is not your home. Yet for now, right now, grace comes in the form of a home-space, a physical belonging. And I don't know how to explain it to anyone enough, because I think it takes feeling never-quite-at-home for a long period of time to really, really appreciate home.
Home is a lot of things. It is having a place where the chopsticks and spoons belong, instead of having your Chinese soup spoons be awkwardly put on the counter because your roommate doesn't know where to put it. It is having a shelf for board games again, instead of stacking then in a box that has to move to different corners of the your room as you shuffle it around. It is actually unpacking every box, finding a place for each thing and finally throwing out the items without one instead of letting it all sit in a box you shuffle through as needed. It is finding the compromise in chores, groceries, and sharing instead of inwardly rolling your eyes when someone else's preference trumps yours. Home is no shoes inside the house. Lots of rice in the pantry but also pasta and canned vegetables. A sauce cabinet with Lee Kum Kee, soy sauce, dark soy sauce, chili oil and sesame oil but a spice cabinet with cumin, cinnamon, and Lawry's. Walking with your roommate to your friend's house two streets down. Carpooling to church and offering your home-cooked leftovers. Home is eating at the dining table and wanting your roommates to join, it's leaving your door open all the time and not trying to avoid your roommates.
Sometimes, you best know something by what it's juxtaposed against (can you even use that word like that?). These days I'm realizing how little everywhere else felt like home now that I have this to compare it to. And I'm so, so grateful for the grace in this season and moment.
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
my exodus from apa
The three days of our APA Conference were beautiful. While the roles I played on the planning team felt relatively minor, watching all the elements fall into place as we moved, executed, planned on the spot was incredible. I sat there on Saturday night in the dimmed room and thought, "This is more than I had even hoped this conference to be." I remind myself that God can succeed our expectations multiple times over, and I'm also in awe of Matt's leadership and vision that was bigger than mine.
I took the past two days off, and it kinda still feels like APA was just yesterday. A majority of my thoughts continue to center around it, partially as I think and dream for next year (that deserves a separate post), partially because it was just a damn good weekend and maybe the most solid thing we've offered our APA students.
I took the past two days off, and it kinda still feels like APA was just yesterday. A majority of my thoughts continue to center around it, partially as I think and dream for next year (that deserves a separate post), partially because it was just a damn good weekend and maybe the most solid thing we've offered our APA students.
Now that my body has enough rest (read: slept in without an alarm two days in a row) and my room a little more sanity (read: I finally cleaned), I'm ready to pick up campus work again. Unfortunately, after five days of being off campus I'm a little disoriented: following up the first week of new student outreach with a second week full of conference details leaves you a little confused by the third week. How do I pick up where I left off if the momentum for the semester hadn't even started? Am I re-starting now, except that we're already three weeks in?
And just as I was getting ready to settle into bed, a solid, present sadness hit me. Two days ago, I loved, hugged, and said goodbye to my APA family. And tomorrow, I wake up and walk back into the world of explaining and calculating and code-switching and speaking up. Where my values don't always line up with my teammates, where I've chosen to translate and speak and fight and care over and over again...where I walk as the only Asian-American staff on a staff team in a fellowship that is predominantly white.
I remember this sadness last fall, as I left the comfort of my friends and peers at Area Time and walked into my daily life where I am not quite as understood. I didn't think this would reoccur. But as I think about the myriad of things I loved about the weekend, it comes hand in hand with what I say goodbye to as I step back onto my campus. The innate and elegant servanthood of our community, always watching out for other people, whether it means bringing out extra chairs or offering a refill of the bottle. The fact that many of us were tired but not once did I hear a complaint or regret. Our honor and respect for elders and our investment in the younger generation. How we watch out and make space, even if it's just physically for people in chairs or tables in the crowded dining hall. Our standards of excellence. And so many, so many hands always ready to help, always ready to serve.
I could apologize and be understood. I could speak in facts and directness if I wanted to, but I could also tell stories and examples and not worry if the listener got the main point. I didn't have the question floating in the back of my head, "Does he get what I'm trying to say here?" So many words from up front made perfect sense--our speaker Jonathan spoke to a life of in-between and never settling...that, my friends, that is my life right now. Nate's spoken word pierced in so many levels, so many ways, and I've listened to and read the the pieces over and over again and there is comfort in someone speaking straight. straight to my experience. Bianca and Mary step in and make a seminar for the APA Women, and while an itty bitty part of me feels as if I have failed in not having one prepared (I tried, but a few things fell through), another part surges with pride because these girls, these women are my sisters. And our prophetic voice will speak loud and clear, and I am so proud to call them my peers and my sisters.
And I carry this pride, I carry this love...and I walk back to campus and I feel alone. As the staff team asks, "How was APA?" how will I choose to respond? The weekend was powerful and many left embracing their ethnicities and cultures, and here I am feeling tired of standing alone. Fighting to love who I am and still partially hating that it sets me apart, that on this team I am still different. This team which loves students yet awkwardly I've ended up in the most trusted relationships with the students of color. And as I stare at a rigid agenda and fill out another evaluation, I also realize there are some missing values here. Ones of relationship and harmony that make me sense guilt and shame in certain situations, certain situations where I feel forced and awkward to move on but hey, something about efficiency or intention or whatever mis-matched value and I guess it's time to go to the next bullet point.
I leave my APA family where we have just begun airing out our brokenness, our hurt, our idols. This weekend we called our students to choose to live in between dichotomies but right now, I'm not ready to straddle that line again.
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Right now, in photos
The Dream Team. It's a slightly-conceited name, but word on the streets is when Steve was stepping into his supervisor role as Natalie, Harrison, and I all started our intern year with InterVarsity, he said something along the lines that this was the dream team of interns he would enjoy leading.
Somehow, that name has stuck, as has our friendship. None of us could have imagined that we would be together at National Staff Conference in 2014, dreaming big about how God could transform our students to become world changers. We started together as undergrad but have since spread to different campuses, and it's not likely we'll end up in the same city together anytime soon. Still, we dream together, process together, love together.
I went over to Harrison's yesterday for company as we both did work. I called Natalie for dreams for APA, for personal struggles, for friendship.
Friendship is a gift.
We've been having these discussions with my mom about what's teochew and what's not (I'm realizing hoe I've failed to keep all the Chinese foods/cultures/dialects apart...), and in a mildly eye-opening conversation, it turns out my favorite noodle dish ever is distinctly teochew after all. Tell me, how did I go all 25 years of my life thinking it was "just Chinese", as opposed to a specialty from my mom's regional culture?
I made it again this week and it was delicious: the beansprouts, the garlic, fish tofu, fishballs (the bokchoy isn't typical in our family, but I decided I should have some greens)...
I first learned about shin&shin at Asian American Staff Conference when Shin Maeng was invited to be the artist in residence. I spent part of an afternoon with him as he chatted up a storm and explained the intricacies of the drawing, drawing out meaning in every little icon and space. I stared at the prints, wondering if I should by an art piece in a year where budget was so tight. I didn't.
But graciously, all the staff were gifted a print from this lovely duo at the end of staff conference. When they announced it, I knew this deserved a good frame. So last night, I bought the nicest frame I've ever paid for. One might think that as a photographer I would have better frames, but I've always leaned towards cheap ones, received nice ones as gifts, or given my best away to others. But real art deserves good presentation. I walked the aisles of the store multiple times, picking up one, putting it down in favor of another, repeating until I settled on one. And when I got home and got the print in the frame, it was perfect. I found myself drawn to it several times since: the bright mat and dark wood highlighting the colors and giving space for the details. I realize that there's a way my eye appreciates this presentation and wish everyone could see it too. I can't stop staring at it.
I'm incredibly grateful to Shin and Sarah for listening to the spirit and creating such prophetic pieces (and I love that they're Asian-Americans). And I'm grateful that someone in IV nationals chose such a beautiful, meaningful gift for the staff to receive. I receive it with joy and gladness.
Somehow, that name has stuck, as has our friendship. None of us could have imagined that we would be together at National Staff Conference in 2014, dreaming big about how God could transform our students to become world changers. We started together as undergrad but have since spread to different campuses, and it's not likely we'll end up in the same city together anytime soon. Still, we dream together, process together, love together.
I went over to Harrison's yesterday for company as we both did work. I called Natalie for dreams for APA, for personal struggles, for friendship.
Friendship is a gift.
We've been having these discussions with my mom about what's teochew and what's not (I'm realizing hoe I've failed to keep all the Chinese foods/cultures/dialects apart...), and in a mildly eye-opening conversation, it turns out my favorite noodle dish ever is distinctly teochew after all. Tell me, how did I go all 25 years of my life thinking it was "just Chinese", as opposed to a specialty from my mom's regional culture?
I made it again this week and it was delicious: the beansprouts, the garlic, fish tofu, fishballs (the bokchoy isn't typical in our family, but I decided I should have some greens)...
I first learned about shin&shin at Asian American Staff Conference when Shin Maeng was invited to be the artist in residence. I spent part of an afternoon with him as he chatted up a storm and explained the intricacies of the drawing, drawing out meaning in every little icon and space. I stared at the prints, wondering if I should by an art piece in a year where budget was so tight. I didn't.
But graciously, all the staff were gifted a print from this lovely duo at the end of staff conference. When they announced it, I knew this deserved a good frame. So last night, I bought the nicest frame I've ever paid for. One might think that as a photographer I would have better frames, but I've always leaned towards cheap ones, received nice ones as gifts, or given my best away to others. But real art deserves good presentation. I walked the aisles of the store multiple times, picking up one, putting it down in favor of another, repeating until I settled on one. And when I got home and got the print in the frame, it was perfect. I found myself drawn to it several times since: the bright mat and dark wood highlighting the colors and giving space for the details. I realize that there's a way my eye appreciates this presentation and wish everyone could see it too. I can't stop staring at it.
I'm incredibly grateful to Shin and Sarah for listening to the spirit and creating such prophetic pieces (and I love that they're Asian-Americans). And I'm grateful that someone in IV nationals chose such a beautiful, meaningful gift for the staff to receive. I receive it with joy and gladness.
Monday, January 13, 2014
On Prayer
Pray Big and Pray Bold: Sunder Krishnan from Urbana on Vimeo.
Natalie and I were talking about prayer a few weeks ago, and it dawned on me that this talk from Urbana 09 was a big turning point in my prayer life. This talk was such a reality check about our approach to prayer, but woven into it were practical bits as well. After this talk, I decided to cut crap out of my prayer, to stop filling my prayers with words I churned out from routine. Through Sunder's example of jobless John, I realized the empty regurgitation of most of my prayers. This part is tricky to write about because there is nothing inherently wrong about the, "Thank you for bringing us here", "Thank you for freedom to gather because we know not everyone in the world can", etc. But for me, I realized I felt obligated to pray these things...and I didn't want that to be the case. So instead, I started opening my prayers with the sovereign character of our God. To this day, my prayers are still marked as such: in times of suffering, I call on a God who suffered alongside with us; in times of sickness and pain, I call out to the ultimate Healer. In times of confusion I remember he is a God that gives peace. I take a few sentences to remember who God is and what scripture says of Him. This sets up my prayer, and the request that follows sits under His character and His sovereignty.
I think this talk challenged my priority on prayer and my belief that it works, that we are invited to create with God and engage with the world through prayer. When we were still at Urbana, there was an afternoon where Natalie and I sprawled on the floor in the prayer room and talked about Large Group, ministry, and life. I challenged out loud - If we really think prayer is fundamental to our ministry, how do we orient our times/lives/meetings to reflect that? I recall that being the discussion that we would move our prayer/devotion time to start our meetings (we called it "First thing") instead of haphazardly throwing it in our closing. In hindsight, what fun and how powerful it was to make that change as a student leader (in many ways, Steve's sabbatical that semester really was a gift).
It's hard to remember the other changes I made four years ago. But if I think hard, I also remember challenging myself and Natalie to find scripture that paralleled our prayers. I don't remember the situation, but I remember asking, "Well, where can we find that in scripture?" We flipped through the New Testament to glean from whatever was prayed back then. I think that was the year I first loved Psalm 24, my favorite psalm to pray before large group because of how it rightfully puts the King of Glory in his place, prays for our clean hands and pure hearts, and then calls for the gates to be lifted up.
As I've rewatched it a few times over the years, there is much more to learn from it. For one, my prayers and motivations are not exactly done in light of God as Sovereign, Creator, Revealer, and Worker, as Sunder highlights as the four corners which set up the character of the God we pray to. I must also remember that prayer changes us - that if every time we pray we remember the character of God, then over the years, we are bound to be transformed. This is the prayer life I want to have - one that engages reality, one that worships our God, one that changes my life.
Friday, January 3, 2014
2013: Great moments - This is a long post.
Urbana 12 (January): This is totally cheating because it happened at the tail end of 2012, but hey, it technically kicked off January 1, 2013! Incredibly fun to work backstage and see so many pieces moving behind the scenes, as well as meet and interact with many different people in different roles. Other highlights: Kolkata GUT reunion, dropping by the Pan-American lounge to listen to James and Tracey talk about writing and publishing (remember, I had just finished my 30-days of writing), watching the bff dance, and these skits. Remembering: falling in love with the story of the prodigal in Luke 15: "Do you still have lunch with dad every day?"
Asian-American Staff Conference (February): In the middle of my first year working with very few Asian-American students and no Asian-American staff, it was a breath of relief to unwind some of my subconscious and internalized tension as a minority. It was also rather humbling to have what seems like "higher-up" staff just sitting around at the table with you during small group time, participating just like every other staff in the room. Remembering: the call to bring everything we are and have to offer instead of keeping ourselves at the kid table.
Making friends at church (March): After a few months of going to CG on-and-off, trying to catch a glimpse of the 2 or 3 people whose names I knew (or just D's relatives...), my staff friend Peggy connected me with her old childhood friend who also attended my church. We met up one Sunday after church and she quickly introduced me to half of the career adult group, including Amy. Amy in turn introduced me to everyone else and also invited me to lunch. I remember having the half-awkward thought of, "maybe I shouldn't say 'yes' to this invite since I don't know me" contrasted with the desperate thought of, "who cares, what if this is an opportunity?" Needless to say that one lunch at IHOP was where I met a fair amount of the CAT group I continue to talk now (even though I had to ask for everyone's name frequently in the upcoming month). Come to think of it, I think I even shared chicken and waffles with Rosanne that day. And even though I am still figuring out community here and don't always feel like I fit in, that Sunday was definitely a turning point in friendships and relationships. Remembering: That Sunday reminded me of God's provision and promise even as I followed him to a new city.
Playing Ultimate (year-round, but especially April): I have never played Ultimate so regularly. I've significantly improved since I moved to Sacramento. But perhaps the league that changed a lot was when I said "what the heck, what do I lose by inviting myself?" (come to think of it, I said that a lot in 2013........) when one of the girls posted in a facebook group that their team needed a few more players. I signed up with the Midtown team and learned their names and they learned mine, and even more, and I made it a point to go with them to the sports bar after to get to know them (and also watch the tail end of Giants' games). Even though I had played with a fair amount of Sac peeps through hat leagues and tourneys, tagging onto this team meant friends I played with a little more regularly and a team to sign up with for non-hat tournaments. Remembering: Choosing to go to a sports bar with your friends may be more important than being "productive" that night.
Mini-highlight (May): Finishing my second half-marathon at 2:07:54! That was fun.
Totally enjoying large group talks (starting in May): First, I loved the topic of my May talk and had much experience and many thoughts with our identity as an employee. Second, I wove in a little engineering nerdiness. Third, as I was preparing, I remembered listening to James Chuong speak at AAMSC and thinking, "He is an incredible speaker: able to teach, challenge, sound like he's talking straight to you, barely uses his notes!" and then, "huh, I would like to teach like that someday." While I'm still discovering the unique teaching gifts God has given me, I think that note put into perspective what I appreciated about effective teachers. As I practiced my talk in the shower a couple days before my talk, I realized I could give nearly the whole introduction without notes! This made me more aware of how much I could speak naturally, from memory and also without my paper. Even though it was my fourth talk in my staff experience, it was the first I loved! I also loved teaching on hospitality in September and then Moses in November. Lots of fun. Remembering: finding freedom to embrace what I love and recognize the gifts and strengths God has given me. And: It's okay to claim/accept/embrace you're good at something.
Seattle Roadtrip (July): Roadtripping with Jane, the perfect vacation buddy. Long talks everywhere. Relaxing boat ride with old Kolkata friends. Celebrating the McEntee's wedding. Sleeping at good times and waking up at good times, feeling so rested. Pike's Place and July 4th with the gals. A good, good vacation. Remembering: Take vacations! Also, I love water.
Intern Trek (July): Returning to the trek just two years later at staff put my growth into perspective, and I surprised myself when the multiethnicity conversation rolled around and I spoke with a sure, confident voice to both our entire group as well as to individual AAm interns. It was a voice that had grown over two years, one that tested the waters of trust, vulnerability, and redemption and had learned a little of where to speak up and where to hold back. It was ready to speak and teach things that my eyes saw, it testified of brokenness and our need for Jesus and for grace, but also told story after story of why the messy journey was worth it.
And it was a voice that others were listening to: ones that my fellow Asian brothers and sisters followed, ones that my non-Asian comrades sought for perspective. It caught me off guard. I suppose my response to Pauline at the end of the trek summarized it well: as she commented about authority, respect, and the the way I carried myself, I said something along the lines of: "New clothes, it feels like I'm trying on new clothes." The last night of the trek, I had an adrenaline rush as I realized the things that I had led, initiated, and encouraged as well as what had been affirmed in the past 10 days. Remembering: Walk in the authority that God gives you when he asks you to hold a whole fellowship, a whole campus in your heart. Lead out of your time spent with God, not out of your expertise. And speak loudly and clearly.
Mini-highlight (September): Celebrating five years with Darrell! This sounds absolutely ridiculous. I've been with this guy for 20% of my life! But every year is different. We are very different people than we were when we first started. And you know what? That's a very, very good thing. I think we were going to hike Mission Peak that day too, but it rained...and it was the day before my sister's Bridal Shower, so he went shopping with me...but maybe that really is our life together: changing plans and making it work together. And we did end that night with some absolutely delicious lamb chops, and walking, sitting around, and reminiscing...just like we always do (minus the lamb chops).
November: I love the month of November. I may be biased because it's my birthday month, but it's also a lovely autumn month (my favorite season!) as well as the start of the holiday festivities. But this November was especially lovely, so it gets it's own section!
Asian-American Staff Conference (February): In the middle of my first year working with very few Asian-American students and no Asian-American staff, it was a breath of relief to unwind some of my subconscious and internalized tension as a minority. It was also rather humbling to have what seems like "higher-up" staff just sitting around at the table with you during small group time, participating just like every other staff in the room. Remembering: the call to bring everything we are and have to offer instead of keeping ourselves at the kid table.
Making friends at church (March): After a few months of going to CG on-and-off, trying to catch a glimpse of the 2 or 3 people whose names I knew (or just D's relatives...), my staff friend Peggy connected me with her old childhood friend who also attended my church. We met up one Sunday after church and she quickly introduced me to half of the career adult group, including Amy. Amy in turn introduced me to everyone else and also invited me to lunch. I remember having the half-awkward thought of, "maybe I shouldn't say 'yes' to this invite since I don't know me" contrasted with the desperate thought of, "who cares, what if this is an opportunity?" Needless to say that one lunch at IHOP was where I met a fair amount of the CAT group I continue to talk now (even though I had to ask for everyone's name frequently in the upcoming month). Come to think of it, I think I even shared chicken and waffles with Rosanne that day. And even though I am still figuring out community here and don't always feel like I fit in, that Sunday was definitely a turning point in friendships and relationships. Remembering: That Sunday reminded me of God's provision and promise even as I followed him to a new city.
Playing Ultimate (year-round, but especially April): I have never played Ultimate so regularly. I've significantly improved since I moved to Sacramento. But perhaps the league that changed a lot was when I said "what the heck, what do I lose by inviting myself?" (come to think of it, I said that a lot in 2013........) when one of the girls posted in a facebook group that their team needed a few more players. I signed up with the Midtown team and learned their names and they learned mine, and even more, and I made it a point to go with them to the sports bar after to get to know them (and also watch the tail end of Giants' games). Even though I had played with a fair amount of Sac peeps through hat leagues and tourneys, tagging onto this team meant friends I played with a little more regularly and a team to sign up with for non-hat tournaments. Remembering: Choosing to go to a sports bar with your friends may be more important than being "productive" that night.
Mini-highlight (May): Finishing my second half-marathon at 2:07:54! That was fun.
Totally enjoying large group talks (starting in May): First, I loved the topic of my May talk and had much experience and many thoughts with our identity as an employee. Second, I wove in a little engineering nerdiness. Third, as I was preparing, I remembered listening to James Chuong speak at AAMSC and thinking, "He is an incredible speaker: able to teach, challenge, sound like he's talking straight to you, barely uses his notes!" and then, "huh, I would like to teach like that someday." While I'm still discovering the unique teaching gifts God has given me, I think that note put into perspective what I appreciated about effective teachers. As I practiced my talk in the shower a couple days before my talk, I realized I could give nearly the whole introduction without notes! This made me more aware of how much I could speak naturally, from memory and also without my paper. Even though it was my fourth talk in my staff experience, it was the first I loved! I also loved teaching on hospitality in September and then Moses in November. Lots of fun. Remembering: finding freedom to embrace what I love and recognize the gifts and strengths God has given me. And: It's okay to claim/accept/embrace you're good at something.
Seattle Roadtrip (July): Roadtripping with Jane, the perfect vacation buddy. Long talks everywhere. Relaxing boat ride with old Kolkata friends. Celebrating the McEntee's wedding. Sleeping at good times and waking up at good times, feeling so rested. Pike's Place and July 4th with the gals. A good, good vacation. Remembering: Take vacations! Also, I love water.
Intern Trek (July): Returning to the trek just two years later at staff put my growth into perspective, and I surprised myself when the multiethnicity conversation rolled around and I spoke with a sure, confident voice to both our entire group as well as to individual AAm interns. It was a voice that had grown over two years, one that tested the waters of trust, vulnerability, and redemption and had learned a little of where to speak up and where to hold back. It was ready to speak and teach things that my eyes saw, it testified of brokenness and our need for Jesus and for grace, but also told story after story of why the messy journey was worth it.
And it was a voice that others were listening to: ones that my fellow Asian brothers and sisters followed, ones that my non-Asian comrades sought for perspective. It caught me off guard. I suppose my response to Pauline at the end of the trek summarized it well: as she commented about authority, respect, and the the way I carried myself, I said something along the lines of: "New clothes, it feels like I'm trying on new clothes." The last night of the trek, I had an adrenaline rush as I realized the things that I had led, initiated, and encouraged as well as what had been affirmed in the past 10 days. Remembering: Walk in the authority that God gives you when he asks you to hold a whole fellowship, a whole campus in your heart. Lead out of your time spent with God, not out of your expertise. And speak loudly and clearly.
Mini-highlight (September): Celebrating five years with Darrell! This sounds absolutely ridiculous. I've been with this guy for 20% of my life! But every year is different. We are very different people than we were when we first started. And you know what? That's a very, very good thing. I think we were going to hike Mission Peak that day too, but it rained...and it was the day before my sister's Bridal Shower, so he went shopping with me...but maybe that really is our life together: changing plans and making it work together. And we did end that night with some absolutely delicious lamb chops, and walking, sitting around, and reminiscing...just like we always do (minus the lamb chops).
November: I love the month of November. I may be biased because it's my birthday month, but it's also a lovely autumn month (my favorite season!) as well as the start of the holiday festivities. But this November was especially lovely, so it gets it's own section!
- Mini-highlight: The first few days of this month were spent preparing for my sister's wedding! And then I got a brother-in-law! The whole helping-with-wedding-stuff and explaining-and-interpreting-for-both-sides made me extremely aware of my bi-cultural life as I explained American weddings and perspectives to my parents, and found words to explain my parents' expectations, traditions, and perceptions to friends. But hey, it pulled off rather smoothly.
- Finding rhythms: When Darrell started his hardest rotation in early November, I told him I would wake up at 8 am and pray for him (us campus staff have the flexibility to start our days later, but we do stay up later to make up for it...). After less than a week of 8 am wake up times, I felt incredible! I had leisurely time to get ready in the morning, and best of all, I started taking long, extended quiet times, spending up to an hour or an hour fifteen with Jesus in the mornings. I could journal the whole time, read scripture, do some stretches, or even get artsy. I had so many good mornings with God!
- Choosing to receive: I spent most of my 25th birthday in San Francisco with a couple support meetings. Then I dashed home to grab some snacks before heading out for a mini-game night....and then was surprised by chocolate cake halfway through! Almost every year from the past five years, I've been surprised by people who love me. Almost every year, I give Darrell the same spiel about how I feel bad that people are making a big deal out of my birthday, that I try not to draw attention to it and feel awkward that people did anyway. But this year, I think I'll receive it....receive the love and all.
- Rediscovering my love for campus: Some sweet, much-needed prayer time at Cultivate left me rediscovering the freedom to be fully who God made it...or at least, the freedom to find that out. Man, letting go of the burden of trying to be someone else, remember how God made you and what you loved about loving people, and choosing to be yourself in ministry is a wonderful thing. I had the best two weeks of campus after that.
Okay. This is a long post. And there were more great moments in it!! (says the eternal optimist) What a year, what a year! Here's to another one!
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