Sunday, July 29, 2018

Mistakes

Today at church a girl was singing a solo and at the beginning of one of the verses she started singing the words to the chorus (at least I think that is what happened, she sang the right words at the wrong time... that much I gathered) and she grinned at her mistake and kept going. The grin was perhaps a little sheepish but very genuine. It reminded me of times when I am reciting something from memory but I mess it up and my audience just smiles. And it doesn't feel like they are laughing at me, it's more like commiseration or something...
So what is it about mistakes, especially in formal, predictable situations that makes us smile?
I saw a video once of a baby, just old enough to laugh, who was shown a ball rolling down a ramp. The ball was sent rolling twice in the exact same way and then the third time something different happened. It rolled off the end or got knocked off course or something and the baby laughed. It was the unexpected that made the baby laugh. That's probably a rule of some sort among comedians.
One thing that I think is nice about making mistakes in songs or memorized words is that it makes me think more about the words I'm saying.... because when everything is going fine its easy to forget what the words actually mean.

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Eowyn's Walls


I think I was in high school when I first read Lord of the Rings and with the movies coming out everyone was obsessed with it. Some of the other girls and I all really like Eowyn. She's one of the few girl characters and she fights with the men and is awesome.
My sister wasn't as a big fan, and I asked her, surprised, why she didn't like her. "She's always so desperate. Desperate to fight, desperate for Aragorn's love, just desperate. I just can't relate to her character."
The other day I read a ridiculous regency book about a girl who is so desperate to fly from her gilded cage she makes a terrible bargain with her mother and ends up deeply hurting herself and the boy she loves and finally just runs away. I enjoyed the story more or less but I just couldn't relate to the character she was just too desperate.
These two characters seem like all they see is walls, when in reality they have so many opportunities in front of them that they just can't see it.
Maybe I just live in a charmed life, but I just don't feel like I'm surrounded by walls. I don't feel caged. Do some people just look for the walls? or are they really there and I'm just blind to them?

Sunday, July 15, 2018

Wandering



Often on my hikes by myself I will start out on the same trail until I look up and see something and say to myself "I'm going to go to that outcrop." And then I do. When I get there I hike some more until I decide on a new objective and go there.
When I'm on the phone I often go for walks and it is kind of a similar process. I walk straight until I decide I want a change and then at an intersection I will turn and walk straight for another stretch.
On both the mountain and the neighborhood jaunts I mostly go up or out from my initial spot until I decide that I want to turn around and then I wander back in the same fashion.
The wandering isn't exactly random but it certainly isn't planned out before hand with a specific destination in mind.
I was talking to a friend about wandering and how peaceful it is... how it provides a change in pace.
It made me wonder if I'm wandering through life, and I think I am. I think I have a tendency to just go where life takes me, go with the flow, until I see some specific (but short term-ish) destination and then I make for it (a mission, BS, MS) and then I wander some more until I catch sight of another destination that looks intriguing and go for it.
I told someone once that I didn't really know what I wanted and he was skeptical. "And yet you have a Masters," he said. I kind of wanted to respond, "I think that was an accident."
To be fair, it wasn't an accident but it was more of a short term plan rather then a life goal.
And just like my wanders are always up and out (well until I have to turn around) I think my life is pointed in a higher faster direction.
I know this wandering type of life might drive some people insane, or just be utterly unfathomable but I think it works for me. When you do things this way you never know if you'll find mountain goats or bones, new friendships or fascinating facts.

Change/Time

This week I've re-read some entries from my old journals, mostly within the last five years and it has been fun to notice some things.
Some of my thoughts seem super immature.... And it's only been a few years.
I came across a few realizations that I documented and looking at it now I was like, "that's when I realized that? I thought I'd known that forever."
Some of the people I mention I barely remember... They have fallen from my life with barely a ripple.
Some of the relationships, problems, classes, and over all stresses are completely gone. I remember them but just like those people I mentioned above they are essentially meaningless in my life currently, except as memories.
I am not the same person I was ten years ago, or five or even just two years ago. And yet I'm still very much inherently me with some of the same thought processes, weaknesses, likes, and dislikes. 
I always find it fascinating to read books that cover large amounts of time so that you can watch the character grow up but still keep being themselves. Perhaps series are the best in that way. Anne of Green Gables and Harry Potter are pretty good at it, but perhaps the best I've read at this particular feat might be the book Chop-chop, which I read a month or so ago.

Sunday, July 1, 2018

The Dangers of Common Ground

My sister and I were talking about how it is easy to get talking negatively with certain people. Sometimes it's because the person is just negative but sometimes it's more because you just start sharing experiences that are alike and they all happen to be negative.
People are always talking about the importance of connecting over common ground* during small talk or even when you are preparing for heavier topics (like as a missionary).
But lately I've been thinking about how sometimes it is so tempting to make the connection that I emphasize something in my life to do so.
For example, when talking to someone shy sometimes I talk up my feelings of social inadequacy. When someone is complaining about the heat I talk about how sunny it was that morning.
It isn't as though those things are not things I've felt or noticed but they just aren't as big a deal as I portrayed. 
When this happens the common ground is built but I'm just not sure it is the positive, accurate common ground that is firm enough for continued interaction. So how do you build on common ground without inaccurate emphasis? I have no idea. Perhaps it doesn't actually matter that much and I just think too much.... that's been known to happen.


*No I do not have any sources for this statement.