Our congregation had a discussion about the Advent Conspiracy the other day. The general idea is that the Church should move away from the consumerism that hides the true meaning of Christmas. Our congregation, faithful Episcopalians, adherents to high, high worship, focused the discussion on the shopping mall’s early advertisement of the season, and were very upset that so few people understood that Christmas does not begin until December 25, lasting 12 days (as it strictly states somewhere, I am sure). This, they proclaimed, is when we should do all our decorating and celebrating. But, as I see it, this is just another way we lose the ‘true meaning’ of Christmas. To return to a spiritual celebration of G-d With Us would, in my mind, imply that we not only leave the falsity that consumerism creates, but that we would also acknowledge our tendency to create meaning through Church calendars and the codification of beliefs; a tremendum et fascinosum that bows to ceremony rather than the mystery and presence of G-d in our daily lives.
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Through whose eyes?
“I wish you could see yourself through my eyes”, my husband assures me as I berate my body, compare my cup size, and generally degrade, offend, slur, and affront every conceivable part of my physical being. His wording makes me wonder whose eyes I do see myself through in these embarrassingly unflattering moments. I’d prefer to blame it on advertising, which survives on the psychology of creating insecurity. I did watch television yesterday for the first time in a modern-world eternity. I would also be happy to place the blame on men. My identity as a sexual being is nothing I can closet walking on Third Street after dark, where an astounding number of guys, strangers, find it appropriate to use the endlessly offensive word “cunt” to refer to me as a woman. Or even my best male friends, who do not talk about meeting women, but about meeting “pretty girls”, as if it were perfectly natural for them to dictate that standard. Though, another plausible source of this verbal mutilation I subject myself to all too often may be any other woman I have ever met. I am not sure I know a woman who has not commented on her weight or hair or teeth or toes with disapproval. It has led me to the conclusion that this is what we women do, and where we place our worth. None of us are good enough. If Suzy thinks she’s fat, then I must be a whale! And if Joan finds herself unattractive with those lips, then I must be the blandest person in the world! It becomes this balancing act; this way of finding my place in a delusional but still very hellish pecking order. So, of course, it is my own eyes that too willingly see the beauty in the many women of my life, but use it only to evaluate myself. How do I stop this? I can, at least, stop degrading myself in front of other women, in hopes that I play no part in spurring on this dialogue in their head. Can I stop putting emphasis on my physical attributes once and for all? I don’t think so. Not alone, at least.
Sometimes Shrek almost gets it...
Thursday, October 27, 2011
A justification for passion
A friend asked me the other day why I like being a social worker and, in typical Renee fashion, I have been mulling over my response for a week now. My initial reply, taken a little aback, was that I like people. After those three words, my answer became awkwardly scripted. Perhaps it’s all the job interviews. I felt like I was giving an answer to my mother, fitting my passions into her expectations. I began to define what I do by success. True, I don’t think there is any field that yields such practical and life changing results as social work. Medicine, sure, they save lives, I guess. But I have created families. I have ended domestic violence. Of course that’s bullshit. But playing any small part in these outcomes fills me with pride. I like people. I remember everyone I have worked with (in my young and very short career). But to justify myself, I talk about what I have done for people. Even though I was talking to my friend, who was putting none of this on me, I was addressing my parents and my culture. I would rather be true to my passions than justify them.