Archive for category Quote

My Cracks In the Sidewalk

“I encounter people when I walk on the street now who give me sort of a sad look.  I have had more fortune than anybody I know.  And if our next gig is doing a show in a 7-Eleven Parking lot we will find a way to make it fine.  We really will.  I have no problems.  And, I don’t want to do it on a 7-Eleven parking lot.  (Audience laughs)  But whatever, uh… And all I ask is one thing…and this is…I’m asking this particularly of young people that watch…please do not be cynical.  I hate cynicism. For the record, it’s my least favorite quality.  It doesn’t lead anywhere.  Nobody in life gets exactly what they thought they were going to get.  But if you work really hard and you’re kind, amazing things will happen.  I’m telling you.  Amazing things will happen.”

- Conan O’Brien (from his goodbye speech on the Tonight Show)

I feel for Conan. Although I am extremely impressed with Conan’s words and thoughts, there is no doubt in my mind how hard this must be for him: to have reached his dream only to have it ripped from him so rapidly.  How different the world must look.  The color, fascination, and excitement that comes with living a dream quickly transforms into dull tones of grey.  No matter how easy it must be to say cynicism is the enemy, it’s never quite so easy the next day.  I’m sure Conan will never be labeled a cynic but no doubt the next couple weeks cynicism will feel much like a best friend to ‘ole CoCo.  All of that being said Conan’s goodbye has me thinking more about my own goodbyes, about my own tendencies toward cynicism, my own inability to walk away from my dreams.

I’m reminded of my cousin’s kid, Ethan, on his birthday this last year.  He immediately became infatuated with one of his gifts, a toy vaccum cleaner.  He really went at it, he vacuumed every inch of that room, probably 3 or 4 times and still there was no sign that he was ever going to quit.  The time had come to show him and his twin sister their big playhouse, that no doubt took hours for my cousin to put together and here Ethan is still vacuuming the living room.  So here comes Mom, she picks up little Ethan who almost instantly begins violently kicking and screaming, it was obvious he did not want to be pulled away from that vacuum cleaner.  He didn’t care where he was going or what was going to come next, he wanted to cry and scream, to grieve and lament that former moment in the living room with the vacuum cleaner.

I can’t help but question where, on a scale between Conan’s reaction and Ethan’s, my reactions fall.  Maybe if I were more of a seasoned writer, like Conan I would have said the right thing and let the dream go, like a mature adult should but if I’m going to be honest here Id’ have to admit I relate much more to Ethan and his story and reaction.  I, too, like Conan, have become to hate cynicism but sometimes I wonder if its not as inevitable as cracks in a sidewalk.  Life hurts, time often takes away more than it gives.  I’m only 26 years old, I have many more goodbye ahead of me in this life maybe someday I’ll be able to handle it as graciously as Conan, with what C.S Lewis called “excellent absurdity“.

“But to thank God for the “excellent absurdity” which enables us to play great parts without pride and little ones without dejection, rejecting nothing through false modesty which is only another form of pride, and never when we occupy for a moment the centre of the stage, forgetting that the play would have gone off just as well without us…” - C.S. Lewis

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Cool People Care

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When a new day dawns, we are all given the same amount of time to use as we wish.  We will have the chance to erase the slate clean of yesterday’s mistake and lay foundations for tomorrow’s success; and so we can pander to the status quo, or work for the common good; we can focus on the bottom line or on one in need; we can chase every dollar, or follow where hope will lead us.  Because at the end of the day what will distinguish us will be what we gave, how we served, and who we loved.

- Tallu Scott Schuyler (New Day’s Resolution from www.coolpeoplecare.com)

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Life as a Story

photo-40” I had always vaguely felt facts to be miracles in the sense that they are wonderful: now I began to think them miraces in the stricter sense that they were willful.  I mean that they were, or might be, repeated excercises of some will.  In short, I had always believed that the world involved magic: now I thought that perhaps it involved a magician.  And this pointed a profound emotion always present and sub-conscious; that this world of our has some purpose; and if there is a purpose, there is a person.  I had always felt life first as a story: and if there is a story, there is a story-teller.”

- G.K. Chesterton

For the last month I have suffered the effects and consequences that follow a brain attack. Don’t worry, I’m fine. Apparently the brain is stronger than the heart, if I would have gone a month with a blocked artery I would have been dead, but instead it was my brain that suffered the massive blockage, leaving me cranky, irritable, emotional, and  in need of some good ideas.  During this time, I’ve pondered the idea of life as a story, something willed into being by some magical story-teller and maintained by a collaborative of my own will and His.  Maybe my blockage was for a point or a purpose, like: what if my brain’s lack of ideas prevented a tragedy or catastrophe, and I single-handedly saved the world from “the bunny flu” or “H1N1000,” or Maybe I stopped a terrorist attack or saved the life of a small child, or maybe I was just saved from myself.  There are parts of my story controlled by my will and parts I have nothing to do with, and it’s in those moments that a growth of my faith is required.  I like the idea of life as a story, and I look forward to discovering what my story holds for me.  Maybe dreams will be possible again after all.

Here are a few other Story related items:

  • Here is unique story of brothers, community, acceptance, and love from the New York Times created from a collaborative of wills.

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If Only We Could Truly Know…

If men could only know each other, they would neither idolize nor hate.”

- Elbert Hubbard

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Human Affection

The effect of the indulgence of this human affection is a certain cordial exhilaration.  In poetry and in common speech the emotions of benevolence and complacency which are felt toward others are likened to the material effects of fire; so swift, or much more swift, more active, more cheering, are these fine inward irradiations.  From the highest degree of passionate love to the lowest degree of good will, they make the sweetness of life.”

- Ralph Waldo Emerson

MY RE-WRITE

The consequence of the taking part in this pleasurable experience called human affection is an intensely comfortable and lively emotion.  In our stories and our real life relations the feeling of kindness and satisfaction which we feel for one another is much like the physical feeling of warming yourself by a fire.  There are few things more exhilirating than these sparks of light that peirce through the dark.  Whether it be an intense affection or just a kind act done one to another, these are the ingrediants that add the sweetness to life.

-  Ralph Waldo Emerson (paraphrased)

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The Incomprehensible Depth

Mystery honors the incomprehensible depth that resides in every finite reality.”

-Quote from David Richo in his book, The Five Things We Cannot Change

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The Broken Pinion

I walked through the woodland meadows,
where sweet the thrushes sing;
And I found on a bed of mosses
A Bird with a broken wing.
I healed its wound and each morning
It sang its old sweet strain,
But the bird with a broken pinion
Never soared as high again.

I found a young life broken
by Sin’s seductive art:
And touched with Christlike pity,
I took him to my heart.
He lived with a noble purpose.
And struggled not in vain;
But the life that Sin had stricken
Never soared as high again.

But the bird with a broken pinion
Kept another from the snare;
And the life that Sin had stricken
Raised another from despair.
Each loss has its compensation,
There is healing for every pain;
But the bird with a broken pinion
Never soars as high again.

- Hezekiah Butterworth

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Jane Fonda on Jesus…

jane_fonda“In the beginning, I thought, “Oh come on, give me a break.” But I began to realize that there is a fundamental need for human beings- it’s like we’re empty chalices, and our souls essentially yearn to fill our chalice with spirit. So I began to feel more and more drawn to faith. I could feel reverence humming in me… I very much feel the presence of God. And then this person Jesus- I am utterly fascinated by this man. I feel that what he preached was revolutionary, and it’s totally what we need now…”

- Jane Fonda (from in Interview in Rolling Stone Magazine)

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The Source of Everything Ugly

Most of the ugliness in the human narritive comes from a distorted quest to possess beauty. Coveting begins with appreciating blessings. Murder begins with a hunger for justice. Lust begins with a recognition of beauty. Gluttony begins when our enjoyment of the delectable gifts of God starts to consume us. Idolatry when our seeing a reflection of God in something beautiful leads to our thinking the beautiful image bearer is worthy of worship. “

- Shane Claiborne and Chris Haw

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Thou Art Not Gone

Thou art not gone being gone, where’er thou art,  Thou leav’st in him thy watchful eyes, in him thy loving heart.

- John Donne

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