Thursday, November 19, 2015

All I Want to Do Is Go to the Bathroom (from the head of a teacher)

All I want to do is go to the bathroom.
Chapel just ended and I am flung
Between throngs of 9th, 10th, 11th, and 12th graders,
And I wind around the snack shop, past the soccer field,
Past the old tree,
And up the high school stairs to deposit
My trusty Bible, attendance sheet, and
Contigo travel mug before
Whisking into the bathroom
For a quick pee,
So that I’m not distracted by a full bladder
When my discipleship girls show up.

As I turn the corner to enter the second stall,
I see the glow of a screen lighting up a
10th grader’s face as she quickly turns so
As not to be seen by her teacher.

All I want to do is go to the bathroom.
In a moment of tension,
I actually have to force myself to turn around
To approach her about the phone,
Confiscate it,
Walk back to my classroom to place it on my desk,
And then return on my mission to finish the task,
Because all I want to do is go to the bathroom,

But I am interrupted by my on-call duties as a teacher.

Monday, November 9, 2015

Is It Any Wonder?

Is it any wonder?
Is it any wonder that we can look
At the same thing
And draw different responses?
Is it any surprise that one day I might see
The sky and marvel at its graceful décor,
Illuminating the landscape with sparkling diamonds
That will never get lost between sofa cushions
Or disappear on the subway.
Yet on a different day of the week,
Maybe even tomorrow,
I will gaze at the papers in my hands that
Are crying out to be graded
And I will answer their desperate pleas
And swoop in like a mother bird
To redeem the abandonment—
And in doing so I will attend to
An item on my list of ever-growing items to
Attend to,
And I might never even lift my head above
My desk, my path home,
My hands,
And I might never make eye contact with the clouds?
The half-moon?
The life pulsing all around—and
I might just plain forget that
“all creation groans and waits”
For the return of the God-man who will
Descend from His throne in the Heavenly realms

And sweep down to draw me near.

(NANOWRIMO Entry)

Saturday, November 7, 2015

Sweet Sweat

Someone else’s sweat against my cheek. Not the sweet sweat of a lover or the sticky inevitability of a child, but the sun-beaten-down-on perspiration of a woman I greet as she passes me. Jacqueline. She is a machann who sells her wares in between the school and my house, so I see her each afternoon as I return to my abode. Angrily, she passed today. She was up on Delmas Swasant-Kenz—arguing with another machann about something, for when she storms down the street I inquire,

“Poukisa ou fache” (why are you angry)?

Her words returned void. Some disagreement between her and one of the other women who faithfully sits along the street, waiting for passersby to run their hands over a ripe zaboca or fig: to purchase.


Somehow sweat is sweet sometimes. In the middle of my workday, over my lunch break, is when our cheeks brushed—mine was fairly dry from being incubated in air conditioning all morning and hers was dripping moisture from standing under the orb in the sky all maten (morning).

(NANOWRIMO Entry) 

Sunday, November 1, 2015

In the Middle

Mid-twenties. You are a funny bunch of years.

I’ve always liked the middle.
When I was younger, living in a suburban neighborhood—
Positioned across from a small patch of rolling
Cornfields,
I fought for the middle in my trio of friends’’
Biking entourage.
I wanted to be second in the line-up,
With one neighborhood friend in front of my 5-speed,
And one neighborhood friend behind.
My mood turned foul if this didn’t happen just “so”…

I am the second middle child,
In a collection of four.
I’m third;
I’m in the middle.
I didn’t have to do things first,
But I still ended up paving “the way” somehow
With a rebellious streak yearning for boundary-pushes.
I often wanted to stand out—not for outlandish opinions
But for music taste, outfit choice, sarcastic jests.
I wasn’t the firstborn and I wasn’t the baby of the flock.
I had to make my mark somehow, huh?

I never liked being the one to rock the boat,
I straddled the middle,
Fought for the center,
Disdained the thought of being a killjoy
Or unpopular.
I wanted favor and to know I was appreciated.
I wanted to stand up for the leftovers
And looked-down-upons.
I didn’t want to be an extreme on any side of
The spectrum, ever.
Well, rarely, I suppose.

The middle.
It’s safe, but it’s dangerously so.
Reaching out toward one side or the other
Leaves a vulnerability—the fear of man
Begins to kick in,
And I grasp for air because this is the ultimate
Choke factor for me.
But Jesus never stayed in the middle,
And if He’s my role model, then what am I doing
Drifting to the center of the situation
Trying to hold fast to some middle ground?
He frequently entered into polarized discussions,
Opinions,
Made frighteningly strong appeals
That left no middle ground to be clung to.

I need a get-out-of-the-middle lesson.

There is one grande middle in which I
Struggle to remain.
And that is a sort of equilibrium,
An anchored peace and state of dwelling,
Where I struggle to exist in full.
This is one middle, that Jesus did promote,
That I struggle the most to embrace.
The anchored center,
“Come and take Your place, in the center of
Our hearts/Come and take Your place, Jesus.”
To find rest in the anchor for my soul,
I am often on a search and rescue mission.
This is “middle” that I have never gravitated towards
But that I deeply need.
I need my Dad’s perfect peace
And solid direction for my life.
I need His ultimate view on every issue and situation
I encounter.
I need to find rest in a balanced kingdom:
His kingdom’s floor plans.


I need to find my middle in Jesus.