Monday, July 20, 2009

You have to run before you can crawl.


I considered not writing any blog posts this week (my last in brazil), as a gesture of my commitment to savor every last moment with the kids. However, the intensity of this transition and my 30+ looming goodbyes demand reflection time. This is not my final magnum-opus blog post (nor do i intend to write one). This is just another update from the front lines - a chance to collect my emotional dead...a chance to innodate myself with my own propoganda...a chance to plan the next battle and fortify for the next attack. (a chance to use dramatic war imagery)

Today is literally day #101 of living in Brazil. In 9 more days, the wheels of the plane will release their grip on the runway, and I will leave Brazil. I sigh, the sigh of the conflicted. I feel...in an emotional way like this.  After 3 months it has come down to just a few more days until that damn line.

The First Shall Be Last - the finish line is an illusion.
A month ago when I was house sitting for Mike and Mary, I experienced a few days when the weight of the Mr. Fix-It To-Do list, the weight of piggyback rides, the weight of portuguese conversation, the weight of fights, and the weight of the tears forced me to crawl like those exhausted IronMan women....I would crawl into the shower, into bed, or into a cup of coffee. I would picture the day that I could plop down in my plane seat - i would imagine experiencing this triumphant feeling - like I had won - I had done good. To comfort myself on those bad days, I even imagined the perfect movie-script ending for my Brazilian adventure...

If Life Were a Movie.
 A calming, fun indie rock song would start playing as I gazed out the airplane window, watching a Brazilliam Pione Tree shrink into a green dot. Then the camera would cut away to the kids of CLM playing tag under a similiar Pione tree. One of the children would stop to wave towards at a jet streaking through the sky above. The camera would quickly cut from the child's waving grin on the ground to me from outside the plane window - just as my slight grin would stretch into a full yet silent laugh. Smiling wide, my weary head would fall into the airplane headrest. A rapid montage of moments would flash across the screen - and then the camera would freeze on my now serene face...just before my eyelids fell shut the screen would fade to black and the credits would roll. (that's called catharsis).

Life Is Not A Movie...The Credits Won't Roll...Where's My #*@%ing Sound Track? I'll spare you anymore of this 'life as a movie' metaphor. But, before we get on with it... if I could have a sound track for this moment of pensive, conflicted reflection it would be Work Me, Lord by Janis Joplin.

It's Not About The Finish Line...It's About The People Crawling. 
I don't want to be an American tourist sitting on plane feeling triumphant and pleased with myself that I did some good for the orphans of Brazil. It's not even possible for me to feel this way - because those orphans aren't orphans - they are people. They are my friends. They are unique, and amazing personalities. I'd rather crawl with them - the skin on our knees tattered and bleeding - than stride across some good-deed finish line. There is truth and meaning in the crawl...the slow, painful, exhausted crawl. I fear life at home will quickly turn into a sprint...and I will pass by and forget those crawling behind me. I pray that everyday God would shove me to the ground so that I can fall onto my hand and knees and crawl with them...bleed with them...be with them.

I had incredible interesting and note-worthy stories that I wanted to write - but this is the second night in a row that I am simply unable to muster the words. Maybe I wont write anymore for the rest of my time here - maybe i will my usual 3 pages of ramblings tomorrow - or mabye it will all pour out of my in Atlanta airport.... 

"The legs are there you just can't feel them. The eyes still see but through a gauzy viel of delerium."

grace.peace.pat






Tuesday, July 14, 2009

What Makes Us Happy?


Blog MusicHalelujah by Jeff Buckley (open is seperate window)

More Blog Music: Now We Are Free by Hans Zimmer and Lisa Gerrard (from the Gladiator Soundtrack)

I recently read an amazing article entitled What Makes Us Happy? by Joshua Wolf Shenk of The Atlantic. Don't let the title fool you... this article is far more earth-moving literature than Dr. Phil self-help.

 Shenk opens the article by explaining;

Last fall, I spent about a month in the file room of the Harvard Study of Adult Development, hoping to learn the secrets of the good life. The project is one of the longest-running—and probably the most exhaustive—longitudinal studies of mental and physical well-being in history. Begun in 1937 as a study of healthy, well-adjusted Harvard sophomores (all male), it has followed its subjects for more than 70 years.

The problems with the science of the study are glaring right from the start (all white harvard men who lived from the 1920s till today), but thankfully Shank never expects to find the answer to his own generalized question: What Makes Us Happy? Instead he uses the title as a subversive attention-getter to tell the gritty dramas of these well-documented lives (which include Bill Bradley, JFK, and other notable white guys).

Other than one or two obligatory paragraphs that describe the obvious (mostly physical) qualities that Harvard has determined as the keys to a well-lived life, Shank and the study itself float in the contradictions, the singularities, and the oddities of the men being studied, as well as the men doing the studying. Even the head Harvard scientist mixes his scientific method with a philosophical rhythm. He states of the men being studied, "Their lives were too human for science, too beautiful for numbers, too sad for diagnosis and too immortal for bound journals."

I highly recommend that you waste the next 15 minutes of your work day to delve into this fascinating scientific-character study. It started me thinking about my own life - and its lessons and unlessons have been resonating within me all day. Below you will find my twisted life analysis as inspired by the article...so continue reading if you dare (er...i mean care). However, if your attention span is as short as mine...then please just go over and read the real deal - What Makes Us Happy? by Joshua Shank.

Life as a Longitudinal Study.

Isn't every life lived, in fact, a longitudinal study with one subject and many observes? If you are reading this... please let me thank you for being an observer of my longitudinal blog/ study. In my very first blog post, I proclaimed the goal of my travel adventures would be to erase/finish/perfect/ erratic/ become/ forget the following thought;

I wait for a moment of brilliant, purifying redemption. I wait for a combination of words so lovely, so undeniably, eternally true that they will apologize to everyone I have ever known and make them understand why I never apologized before.

I wait for fleeting moments of innocence when I can smile and feel a rush of happiness without a hint of guilt.

I wait for a sign from a God, I really don't even believe to exist. At night, I talk to my phantom creator and potential savior, but mid-sentence I am silenced by the suspicion that I am either talking to myself, or God already knows I am insincere and has stopped listening. So I wait...

I wrote the above paragraph on the inside cover of my journal 3 years ago, and I identified strongly with its confessional truths until now. At the time, I was drowning in the thick, self-flagellation of depression. [I just deleted several sentences that described the lowliness of my depression. I feel that it is not beneficial or necessary to delve into those details any more. To say it was a painful and disturbing time is enough.]  The above journal entry feels like a relic of my decaying past. I once read it daily, marveling at how beautifully it captured some truth about life. Now, I read it and wince at its untruth, its passivity, and tone of hopelessness. Specifically, the phrase "I wait" strikes me as particularly untrue in this place, at this moment.

I am no longer waiting. 

I haven't been waiting since I made the decision to quit my job and runaway to Brazil. The phrase "I wait" is inherently passive....as was my life prior to the last 4 months. However, my time since leaving Barbour Publishing has been different - It has been lived deliberately. I was unhappy behind a desk so I quit. I decided to come to Brazil, and I came. I decided to appeal my final semester transcripts from Mount Union, and I did. I have decided to move to Portland when I return home, and I will.  It's not that I have found the (self-help nonsense or religious gibberish) Meaning of Life in my travels. It's that I am no longer waiting on a mystical answer at all.

 My friend (and future Portland roommate) Kevin is also no longer waiting. Kevin has taught high school english for the last two years, and for two years Kevin has been waiting to find satisfaction in his job. Well, as of last week, Kevin taught his last day at New Philadelphia High School...like I said he is done waiting. Before we adventure to Portland together, Kevin is spending "an amount of time" in Chicago with his brother - just as I did after quitting my job.  "I am calling it 'the pat gerber road to recovering your soul' trip", Kevin joked in an email to me.

Maturation makes liars of us all.

Indeed, "Recovering my Soul" is exactly what this experience in Brazil has done (is doing). Kevin and I are very much at the same transition of our lives. We are unapologetically looking for the ideal ways to live our lives - to be happy - to become the people we envision ourselves as. I used to call this my quarter life crisis, but now I can see that it is actually the process of entering adulthood.

If I am finally entering adulthood at 25, it means I have been a 20-something child for the past 5 years. I might feel ashamed of this delayed maturity if not for one of the conclusions drawn by the Harvard study that I found particularly fascinating. The evidence overwhelming acknowledges that the person you are at 20 is absolutely NOT an indicator of who you will be or how happy you will be at 50. Perhaps this seems obvious, but it so flies in the face of everything we are intentionally and unintentionally taught as students from kindergarden through college graduation that I felt chains fall off when I read it.

I can remember vividly this sense that my future (and even my identity) depended entirely on the next placement test, the next college admission essay, my final, my next step on the predetermined path to success.  And now at 25 years old, siting in an orphanage in Brazil, I realize it was all a lie...none of it ever mattered.  The Harvard scientist said it this way, "Maturation makes liars of us all". Meaning no matter your test scores or predicted future at 16, 20, or even 24, our adolescent attitudes will be proven false with the passage time. I feel like I am just beginning MY life, and (apparently) it's an okay time to start. How is it that I found peace and justification by comparing my life to the lives of Harvard graduates from the Greatest Generation?  

A Life Well Lived.

As Kevin and I embark on the adventure of adulthood, our transition is being beautiful mirrored by my parent’s transition into retirement. The same week that Kevin finished teaching at New Philadelphia, my mom taught her last day after 30 years as an Elementary Teacher. And in about a month, my dad will retire as a School Administrator (for the second time). The shocking thing about my parents' life transition and the my life transition is not the differences, but the shocking similarities. Kevin, Ted, Sue and I are all asking the same questions:

What now? What do I want to do? What will I enjoy doing? Where do I want to go? Who Do I want to go with? Have I lived a life well thus far? Can I live it better?

The answers are certainly not going to be found in this blog post or in any Harvard study. However, I can say with utter assurance (in my case) that LIFE MUST BE LIVED intentionally and delibertitly. “What we do,” the Harvard scientist also concludes, “affects how we feel just as much as how we feel affects what we do.”

There is another similarity in the overlapping transitions within my family.... I am now the age when parents first became parents and they are now grandparents (times 3).  Our relationship is evolving from the dependent/caretakers stage into the equals/friends stage. This is a wonderful season of life to just enjoy each other. These are the conversations and moments that are worth savoring...Worthy savoring because eventually our relationship will again evolve back into the dependent/caretaker stage - only this time I (and my sister) will have the hard job.

 Just last year, my father carried the burden of a dying parent. I watched him greive through the in-home care, the nursing home, the funeral home, and the in-home auction.  It was painful and inspiring to witness his dedication as a son to his mother. Only seeing it acted out first-hand was I able to grasp the reality of parents aging and dying. I don’t know if I am ready to carry that burden (or if I will ever be), but I pray I can be the son my father was to his mother when my mother needs me. Thankfully, according to our friends from Harvard, my parents meet all 7 of the major factors that predict healthy aging - education, stable marriage, not smoking, not abusing alcohol, some exercise, healthy weight, and mature adaptions. (I told you the actual scientific findings of the study were unexciting and obvious)  I guess this means my mom and dad will go on being Annoying Helpful and Loving well into their 100s. (and I guess I get to savor every annoying moment :)

 Mature Adaptations – Duh.

The only finding of the Harvard study that peeked my interest was the idea of Mature Adaptions. (This would be The Secret – if you were looking for one.) Shanks captures the idea of Mature Adaptaion like this;

The central question is not how much or how little trouble these men met, but rather precisely how—and to what effect—they responded to that trouble. His (the researcher’s) main interpretive lens has been the psychoanalytic metaphor of “adaptations,” or unconscious responses to pain, conflict, or uncertainty. Formalized by Anna Freud on the basis of her father’s work, adaptations (also called “defense mechanisms”) are unconscious thoughts and behaviors that you could say either shape or distort—depending on whether you approve or disapprove—a person’s reality.

I audibly giggled when I read this description because my father has worked my whole life to engrain one nugget of wisdom into my brain – “It is not what happens to you in life, It is how you react to it.”  Apperently, Ted’s hoksey Philopshy of Life has more truth to it than my teenage eye-rolls realized. And He didn’t even need the longest running longitudial Harvard study in the history of mental health to discover the Secret of Mature Adaptation – he just lived and loved.

Mature Adaptations may be obvious from the safe-distence of a Harvard study, but thier incrimental effects on lives is frighteningly-interesting. The power of Mature or Immature Adapations to alter, improve, predict, or destroy a life is sickening. The stories of men stuck in the mier of immature adaptation are painful to read - like watching a car crash in slow motion. You can see the destruction, the pain, and the saddness coming and all you can do is watch. However, men who lived “successful” lives are equally as frighteningly-interesting to ponder. Far from being lives of ease and leiser, the happiest men overcame and conquered like legandary heros of war (which some of them were).  Shank observes, “The most inspiring triumphs were often studies in hardship”.

The Nicest Natzi You’ll Ever Meet.

I recently had (what can only be described as) an encounter with a man who created triumphs from harships and adapted more than successfully to his life. This giant of a man is named Senhor Jack (I never got a last name). Senhor Jack is one of the orginal founders of CLM. After spending time with this aged and wise man, I felt like life was a true adventure – like the road to happiness had been laid out at my feet – like I had just conversed with the oldman version of myself from the future …There was a profound smirk in Senhor Jack’s eyes like he knows…stuff.

Senhor Jack and his granddaughter/nurse, Jessica, stayed with us on the farm for a week. Technically, I suppose this is actually Jack’s farm because he donated the land for CLM 30 years ago (and has been actively investing in CLM ever since). Jack is suffering from the late stages of Parkinson’s Disease, and I got the impression that this visit to CLM might be his good-bye visit.  Despite his shacking hands, his half flipped–up shirt colars, and his question mark-like posture, Jack sat at Vicky’s Kitchen table like a king…his steady and controlled presense filling the room.

Over tea and translations, I learned that Jack was an engineer and inventor in his youth. (anyone that can legitametely call themselves an inventor is automatically cool). He patented the first design for the spare tire holder that is still used today on he backs of Jeeps. In his words, “I just thought… ‘Isn’t this stupid I have crawl on the ground everytime I want to change the tire’. So fixed that problem.”

On our last afternoon together, I drove Jack and Jessica to Turvo. All three of us were squeezed into the front seat of Combi Van, and I was anxiously asking about and listening to Jack’s whimsically well-lived life. Jack was just wrapping a tri-fector of invention stories when he said “Really, I owe a lot of my mechanical skills to the war. I learned a lot working on the weapons, trucks, and tanks. My Dad fought for Germany too, in first world war, and he told me to become an engineer so I wouldn’t have to fight on the front lines.” I was still nodding like a star-struck teenager, as his words slowly hit me.

Senhor Jack was a Natzi.

He continued to describe the modifications he developed for various models of German tanks and planes, but I was no longer really listening. In stunned confusion, I stopped asking questions and silence fell over the car. I just staired out the front window of the van as scenes from Band of Brothers flipped through my mind. Occosianlly, I would peak at Jack from the corner of my right eye – just to make sure he wasn’t sporting a Hitler mustache. But there he was…this generious, gentle, wise old man. He and Jessica casually gazed out the windows as we passed the Guruapuava slums as if they had no understanding of the historical and cultural significance of Natzi Germany – especially to an American who’s Grandfather fought in WWII – They just smiled and we rolled along…

An American and two Germans driving on a dirt road next to a Brazilian shanty town talking about how Natzi Germany helped make this old man into a rich inventor, who gives his money to orphaned Brazillian kids that once lived in the wooden shacks of the shanty town….How the hell did I get here again?

Then, suddenly Jack broke the silence. He started pointing wildy out the window and gesturing for Jessica to fill me on on the excitement. She smiled warmly. “Grandpa just donated that building to a local church to be used as a daycare and after school center”, Jessica explained. “The pastor told Grandpa, ‘I have been dreaming of this center for 2 years now. We just need the land.’ Grandpa told the pastor, ‘I have your land. I have been dreaming of this for 30 years and waiting for you.’”

 What's The Meaning of Life?

I have learned…it is best not to ask. The file cabinates full of paper at Harvard no more reveal the answer than the profound smirk in Senhor Jack’s eyes.

Joshua Shank came to the following (nicely worded) non-conclusion in his article, which I will barrow for my non-conclusion;

Only with patience and tenderness might a person surrender his barbed armor for a softer shield. Perhaps in this, I thought, lies the key to the good life—not rules to follow, nor problems to avoid, but an engaged humility, an earnest acceptance of life’s pains and promises.
Grace&Peace. Gerbs. 





Monday, July 6, 2009

The Inadequate Blog Post

I get frustrated with books like The 5 People You Meet in Heaven or The Shack that try to capture things as intangible and unknowable as heaven or the holy spirit.

Inevitably, these ambitious descriptive paragraphs become silly cliches. In The 5 People You Meet in Heaven for example, Mitch Albom uses floating, techni-color light shows, and teleportation to describe the places between heavenly checkpoints (note: the similiarity to old Star Trek episodes)...as I read these inadequate descriptions,  I just felt bad for Mitch. It's not that he isn't a good writer - it's that he tried to describe the indescribable. His efforts to capture Heaven in a 194-page book struck me as the literary equavelent of a toddler who scribbles a picture of a 'Heaven' with thick crayons. I imagine that if God read Mitch's book he would smile after reading the last sentence like we smile at our childrens' drawings...in a loving yet patronizing grin God would tussle Mitch's hair and compliment his cute 2D creation and then return to his 3D (or 11D*) world.

*According to String Theory there are at least 11 demonsions to our world. Poor, Poor 3-D Mitch Albom was always a few dimensions too short. Mitch - your book was cliche ridden and predictable, but I'm sure God enjoyed your cute scribbles anyway. I am sure 'The Creature of the Universe and of all Reality' lovingly hung your book on his giant refridgerator next to Dante's Inferno and my nieces fingers paintings.

What does all this criticial bashing of Poor Mitch Albom have to do with my adventures in Brazil? Welp...I, like Mitch, am going to attempt to describe the indescribable. However, unlike Mitch, I have decided against crushing you with a avalanche of adjectives and clinhes... instead, I will let the multimedia power of links, photos, and film do the indequate job of describing the undescribably for me.  

Waterfalls, Butterflys, and Rainbows.
No really - Waterfalls, Batterflys, and Rainbows.  

*To kick off this multimedia adventure listen to the theme from Jurassic Park as you read. (open link in seperate window)

Last week, I traveled to the edge of Brazil, where Argentina, Paraguay, and Brazil meet to see one of the Natural Wonders of the World - the Iguazu Falls. To say that seeing these Falls was an awe-inspiring, breathe-taking, humbling, beautiful experience is accurate - but laughable inadequate. None of those expressions capture the senation I felt as the mist gently wrapped itself around me, as I turned in 360-degree circles to see the water spilling over the canyon walls in all directions, as I stood next to a rainbow so perfect that I swear if you touched it your hand would be painted red, yellow, green, and blue, as I raised my voice louder and louder to be heard over the constant white-noise roar of water hitting rock. Standing in the midst of the falls all my of senses were turned up to 11, my mind whirled with sappy cliches and eternal Truths, and yet I all I could do was gawk....dumbfounded. 

My companions and I stood on the final platform in the park for over 30 minutes smiling and staring, smiling and gawking, smiling and reflecting and smiling. As I watched the hundreds of different falls trickle, stream, charge, and gush to the groud of the horse-shoe shaped canyon, I thought to myself if the world really was flat...if the oceans actually ended and casacaded over the edge of the earth before falling into space...this is what it would look like

More dumbfounding adventures on the way, but now I have to watch movies on a rain day with our kids. -Gerbs