December 27, 2010

Have I told you that you are strong?

"A woman named Helen Keller fought her way 
through long, silent darkness.
Though she could not see or hear, 
she taught us to look at and listen to each other.
Never waiting for life to get easier, 
she gave others courage to face their challenges."
Of Thee I Sing - Barack Obama

December 19, 2010

The Giving Gift.

After he had unwrapped his gifts on Christmas morning the the 5 year old boy’s mother asked him which one of his presents he wanted to donate to a poor child who had less than him. “None”, the boy replied. His mom sat him on her lap and explained to him thatsharing with those who were less forunate was part of the holiday spirit and how a child who had less would probably be very happy to receive a gift. This took some convincing from mom but the boy eventually agreed to part with one of his gifts. Mom told him that he could have until the following morning to decide. The day after Christmas the boy put his four gifts in front of him and tried to decide which one to part with. It was a difficult decision. His eyes scanned over the toy flute, book of Aesop’s Fables, Popeye book bag, and the toy dump truck with doors that really opened. He decided that he part with the flute. “Where do we take it?” he asked his mother. His mother explained that there was a Salvation Army box two streets away and that the people who emptied this box would make sure that it got to a child who needed a gift. “How will they know it is for a child?”, he asked. His mother told him that he could tape a note to the flute and she helped him to write one that read, “Please make sure this gets to a kid who doesn’t have a lot of toys.” After securely attaching the note to the flute the boy said, “I forgot to write my name, how will they know who this came from?” His mother explained that they wouldn’t need to know who it came from and how sometimes part of giving was doing it so that others wouldn’t know where it came from, like putting coins in the poor box at church. “Well, can I please write my name?” His mother said it would be okay and he wrote his name at the end of the note.
This parting with a gift the day after Christmas became a yearly ritual. When he was 8 years old the boy so treasured the gifts that he had that the decision needed to be made by eeny-meny-miny-mo and he had to part with a set of checkers. “I really love these, mom,” the boy said. His mother said that he could select something else but he didn’t want to have to decide again. His mother left the room and returned with a piece of cardboard, the boy’s crayons, and his bottle cap collection. Together they created a board and set of checkers. “I bet no other kid in the world has checkers like these,” he said. That year he decided all on his own not to put his name on the note that he attached to the checkers box. Three months later when he saw a checkers set at his friend Jerry’s house he fought back the temptation to say “that was mine” after Jerry had told him that an army man had brought it to his door.
When he was 10 years old the laundromat where his mother worked closed shortly after Thanksgiving and gifts were sparse. On Christmas he looked over his three inexpensive gifts. His mother came and sat beside him and told him that this year he didn’t have to part with a gift. At first this sounded great but when he woke up the morning after Christmas he thought about how much fun he had seen Jerry have with the checkers and how the giving gift could be secret and magical. He told his mother that he wanted to put his new football in the Salvation Army box. “You don’t have to do that,” his mother said. He told her that he wanted to. She got teary-eyed and gave him a big hug.
Six months later his mother’s birthday was approaching and the boy emptied his piggy bank and counted out three dollars and forty-nine cents. “What would you like for your birthday?” he asked his mother. She was silent for a moment and then she spoke, “I’ve noticed Billy playing catch football with his dad and it looks like a lot of fun. I think I would like a football.” That year his mother got a football for her birthday.
The giving gift tradition continued into adulthood. One Christmas his own 5 year old boy asked him, “What was the best gift you got for Christmas when you were a kid?” He wanted to explain to his son that the best gift he ever received didn’t come in a box, it wasn’t wrapped and you couldn’t even hold it in your hand.
He tried to explain the giving gift as best as he could in words that a young child might understand. "Do you still do that, Dad?" His father explained that he had not missed a Christmas in over 30 years. The following day the father selected a new sweater and wrote directly on the white box, “Please give this to someone who needs it.” As he was getting ready for the drive to the Salvation Army box his son asked, “Can I come?” The father asked the boy to have his mother help him put on his boots, hat, and coat while Dad went to warm up the car. The father sat in the car waiting for ten minutes and thought about the Christmas of the first giving gift. He was just about to go back inside to see what was taking his son so long when the little boy came running out with a new play-doh set in his hands. “Dad, can you help me write the note?”
By Brian Joseph

December 3, 2010

Perception.

Too much beauty in the world is about having big eyes and full lips.
What about having eyes that can see the way to change the world, and lips that can speak the words to do it?

November 30, 2010

I'm not quite sure what to think.

There are some things that I hate.

I hate when my car has a cracked radiator, and in order to find that out I have to smoke out an entire street with my overheating engine.
I hate homework, especially statistics.
I hate cold weather.
I hate seeing people being judged. People are judgmental. It's weird how after someone pulls through a challenge, you can look back and say wow, they are so cool and strong. But when they're in the middle of it, it's so easy for people to judge them.
I hate meatloaf.
Most of all, I hate when someone tells you something you already know, but haven't been able to admit. And then all of a sudden, there it is, written out for you in plain English and you know you're going to have to agree and it's not going to be easy.

But then again, there are some things that I love.

I love having the heater in my car working again... and okay, I secretly loved my smoking car because it was funny.
I love learning, especially psychology and French.
I love snow.
I love seeing people overcome judgment. When someone can pull out and be who they are, no matter what anyone says.
I love tofu.
But most of all, I love having people in my life that tell me what I need to hear, even if it is going to be hard. They have faith in me. They care. I love that, and I love them.

November 19, 2010

Nature.


"Climb the mountains and get their good tidings.  Nature's peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees.  The winds will blow their own freshness into you, and the storms their energy, while cares will drop off like autumn leaves." 
John Muir

November 10, 2010

Being your own.

Being independent is an interesting thing. It's not about making your own decisions really. It's about furthering your own life. So many of my friends talk about how excited they are to graduate so they can finally do what they want instead of being ordered around by their parents. But when I ask them what they are going to do, exactly, they have no answer. Apparently they are just going to sit around in their new free life and do a whole lot of nothing.

I'm excited to graduate too, of course, but not so I can just wave goodbye to my parents in the rearview mirror. I'm excited to get out there and do something with my life! College and a career and my own family are waiting for me and I can't wait to grab them! Isn't that what independence is? Getting somewhere?

There are always people who "can do what they want". And they can. Sometimes doing drugs is what they want so they go get them, or other people's stuff is what they want so they go steal it. And they do, and they get what they want. They're making their own decisions. But what they don't realize is that by doing what they want, sometimes they get things that they don't want, too. A meth addict sitting in rehab did what he wanted, but now he's stuck there and has to make a long, hard trip back. He made all his own decisions, but he's not independent.

We all want to make our own decisions, and we all can. But we all want to be independent as well, and it may not always be the same thing.

November 3, 2010

"Go now and get your own life and live it your way.
Who you are is not up to them."

October 28, 2010

Midas.



"They don't know evil or jealousy or discontent. To sit with a dog on a hillside on a glorious afternoon is to be back in Eden, where doing nothing was not boring--it was peace."
Milan Kundera

October 13, 2010

Live out loud.


"Music is love in search of a word."
Sidonie Gabrielle

"It takes us out of the actual and whispers to us dim secrets that startle our wonder as to who we are, and for what, whence, and whereto."
Ralph Waldo Emerson

October 7, 2010

The name.

There is a difference between looking, and seeing.
Between hearing, and listening.
Between touching, and feeling.
Between saying, and doing.

"We've got to stop crying, and start sweating.
We've got to stop talking, and start walking."

"The time has come for us to stop quoting it, and start living it."

October 4, 2010

Senior.

Okay, so I'm reviving the blog. I gave up on it for a little while but I'm back.

I'm like five weeks into my senior year, and it is so weird. Part of me wants to get involved and do everything that it is humanly possible to do and just pack it all into my schedule. The other part just wants to do as little as possible, graduate, and move on with my life.

So far I'm kind of in the middle. I work three or four days a week, have a moderate amount of homework, I'm Key Club president, and I'm on my church's stake youth council so I stay pretty busy. But I still find myself with a lot of free time that I didn't have last year and I can't really figure out why. Sometimes I like it, and sometimes I don't. Sometimes it makes me feel super unproductive, and sometimes it is a nice way to relax. I don't know what to think.

I was expecting senior year to be super great, a big party, the best year of my life, and all that fun stuff, but in reality, it's just like every other year of high school: full of drama, football games, and crazy teachers. Except for you have to deal with all the stress of applying to colleges and applying for scholarships and making sure you have all your credits done to graduate. And half of your friends graduated last year and all the senior boys date sophomore girls. But besides that, it really is all its cracked up to be! Whatever that is!

Don't get me wrong. I love high school. I think it's great. I'm optimistic about the rest of the year. Who knows what it could bring.

August 11, 2010

The train.

My grandmother came over the other day. She always has advice to give me. This time it was "Sometimes you see the train coming, and it's going to hit you, and there's nothing you can do to stop it."

What do you do when that happens? What can you do?

My train is coming next Wednesday.

August 8, 2010

Pieces.

So I've been thinking lately. Girls always get mad about a boy acting different around his friends than he does around her, and vice versa. You act different at work than you do at home or at school. So how do you tell who someone really is?


In my opinion, all of these things make up the whole of that person. Of course you are going to act different with your friends than you do with your manager or your boyfriend.. It's a different situation. What would your boss do if you came into work and acted the way you do with your significant other? Are you putting on a face for your friends, or your mom? Or both?


I think it's neither. You have the hard working, responsible side of yourself that you show at work, the fun side when you're with your friends, the romantic side when you're with that special someone, and the crazy, weird, family side when you're at home. There's not only one side that's really you, you have to put them all together and they make you.

August 6, 2010

Hey.

Basically, this is what happens when I am searching for a new creative outlet. I buy a $500 camera on a whim, and then start a blog. I used to think music could do that for me... express things that I couldn't put into words. But I came to realize I am just not talented enough at guitar, and definitely not piano. I kept having the urge to draw pictures, but I don't even know how to draw or what I would draw pictures of. So I decided maybe I could take pictures. Pick up a camera and maybe I can create something bigger than myself.

Of course, this could just be another one of my crazy ideas, since I don't even know how to work the camera I just brought home today. But I think it sounds like an adventure so I'm excited. And what I can't create with that camera, I will try to express on the internet. Maybe if I put all my jumbled thoughts and opinions into a keyboard and onto someone's computer screen, somewhere they will make a difference.