Acknowledging our Lenses (To See More Clearly)

Blue Like Jazz, a philosophical and spiritual self-examination by Donald Miller opens with, “I never liked jazz music because it doesn’t resolve.”  The author shares a memory of observing a man playing the saxophone outside a theater.  The musician didn’t open his eyes for fifteen minutes. 

“After that [Miller says] I liked jazz music.  Sometimes you have to watch somebody love something before you can love it yourself.  It is as if they are showing you the way.  I used to not like God because God didn’t resolve.  But that was before any of this happened.”

The best thing that came out of earning my doctorate a few years ago was being forced to truly examine my beliefs (which is also the scariest thing I’ve ever done).  I used to be afraid to question things too deeply.  I was afraid things wouldn’t resolve.  But that was before any of this happened….

I began that journey looking through the lenses of some pretty thick glasses.  I really never paid much attention to them sitting right there on my nose coloring my perspective on everything.  I grew up with them.  They felt natural.  For all of us, the world comes into focus through lenses that have been adjusted to fit our own personal DNA, culture, and experiences.

“Men and women are not only themselves; they are also the region in which they were born, the city apartment or farm in which they learned to walk, the games they played as children, the old wives’ tales they overheard, the food they ate, the schools they attended, the poems they read, and the God they believed in.”  (from Maughm, The Razor’s Edge)

Although none of our lenses could ever be identical, for the most part, I interacted with people whose vision was very close to my own.  We wore the same rural, southern, white, American, Christian prescription.  So, there never was much need to notice them or explain them to others or even myself.                           

Every once in a while, I had to wrinkle my nose and squint through my glasses when I bumped into someone whose view of the world was different than my own.  I am a special education teacher because of one such collision with a little boy considered severely and profoundly disabled.  He was non-ambulatory, non-verbal, and non-compliant.  I became a first-hand witness to how a simple communication device eased his frustrations and gave him a way to begin expressing all that was trapped in his beautiful mind.  Because of him, physical appearance no longer limits my perception of a person.  Although, on occasion, I allowed certain people, ideas, and experiences to adjust my prescription ever so slightly; for the most part, I remained blissfully unaware I was seeing through glasses in the first place.  Until, they were called starkly to my attention.  At first, it was unsettling to even reach up and feel for them and frightening to think about taking them off.  I was afraid of losing my balance, but looking back I learned as Gail Sheehy once said, “growth demands a temporary surrender of security.”

I remember an assignment early on to write a blog about our “emerging research identity.”  I used the metaphor of a chrysalis.  A cohort member posted the following comment.  I’ve thought about it often. 

“There is a point in metamorphosis where the entity inside is neither caterpillar nor butterfly, but simple “mush”—pure potential.  M.C. Richards referred to a similar idea.  She talked about the ‘crossing point,’ such as in a plant, where a fine membrane (one cell thick) of intelligence separates the growth of a shoot upward toward the sun, and the growth of roots into the earth.  This is a great, creative place to be.” – Susan Reed

I chose this metaphor without realizing how truly fitting it would become.  Many sleepless nights, the word “mush” summed it up quite well—an exciting, wonderful, pressure-filled, uncomfortable place to be.  Searching for resolve.  Pure potential.  (Collectively, maybe this is where we all are now: pressure-filled, uncomfortable—but, pure potential.)

 As I examined my convictions alongside those of others and took a hard look at my personal lenses rather than through them, I emerged from my chrysalis not any less of myself, but more.  A much broader perspective developed, along with new ways to get around and make sense of the world.  I still mattered, but only as part of a much bigger, grander picture.         

I remember feeling like I was in the story of the six blind men arguing over unwavering descriptions of the elephant.  Based on direct observation, they each walk away with a different conclusion equally convinced of their knowledge.  One man examines the trunk and professes the animal is snake-like.  Another finds the tusk and argues that the animal is most like a spear.  A third kneeling on his knees gropes a thick leg and envisions the trunk of a tree.  The tail is compared to a rope and the ear, a fan.  After falling into the elephant’s side, the last man insists the beast is most like a sturdy wall.  Although each man was partly right, they all were ultimately in the wrong.  Perhaps Mark Twain said it best, “It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.”

So, I reached for my glasses.  I didn’t let go of them; they were part of me, but I pushed them back on top of my head and let fuzzy images of new perspectives come into focus.  I began to question.  Although I was realizing how presumptuous it is for any of us to believe we were lucky enough to be born in exactly the right little corner of the world where we got it all exactly right the first time, I could not just let go of the elephant.  There had to be one.  Parts of it had been discovered.  I had touched it myself.   

Despite a lifetime conditioning me to be content as a recipient of knowledge, I slowly became a questioner.  I found out, not only was the ground still under my feet, there was also stability over my head and all around me.  Outside the lines and boxes I had drawn for myself, my new view of reality was more dazzling, chaotic, precise, multi-dimensional, and absolute than I could have ever imagined. 

The lines and boxes we’ve all drawn for ourselves seem to have backed us all into tight corners.  Recently, however, it seems more and more lines are being crossed.  It only takes turning on the news, reading posts on any social media website, or even tuning in to Sunday morning sermons to observe one another in a defensive stance.  At the same time, never has there been such economic, political, and cultural interdependence.  It is becoming increasingly difficult for opposing points of view not to collide.  There is a sense of urgency. People representing every possible perspective are desperately seeking a way to maintain control.   At such a pivotal point in our society, Margaret Wheatley offers a profound proposition, “What if we could reframe the search?  What if we stopped looking for control and began, in earnest, the search for order?  Order we find in places we never thought to look before….  Is it possible that our conditioned narrowed focus is blinding us to what is significant? “ Although it is frightening to suspend a worldview, it is conceivable that we can at least begin to adjust our glasses.  Even reaching up to notice we are wearing them in the first place could have far reaching effects.  No matter our personal beliefs and experiences, humanity is our common denominator.  Whether we like it or not, we are part of one another.

My personal journey toward resolve could never have happened if I refused to acknowledge my glasses.  I did not get rid of them.  It is because of them, I possess a perspective that enables me to offer a unique contribution to something much bigger than myself.  Acknowledging them, however, allowed me to see that there was something much bigger than myself in the first place.  Zohar & Marshall describe society as a “repository of skills, knowledge, and potential… not possessed by any one of its members.”  The authors reference the idea that a whole is not identical to the sum of its parts.  It is something new.  In order to draw from this abundant source of supply, we must learn to appreciate our underlying unity expressed as diversity.  We must make an effort to get to know people different from ourselves. 

“People who are different from us – whose differences we acknowledge and understand – help us realize that we aren’t the center of the universe and that other people’s experiences are equally valid.  This ability to see the world through someone else’s lens greatly expands our ability to navigate in an increasingly complex world and to do so with skill and grace.” – Mara Sapon-Shevin

Think about it this way.  It is necessary for musical compositions that each of the eighty-eight keys on a piano keyboard produces a different sound.  In this writing alone, 26 uniquely individual letters of the alphabet make up over 1,829 words.  The same is true with people.  Our whole is not identical to the sum of our parts.  It is something new.

Imagine if we all at once could just push our glasses back on top of our heads and blink?  And bravely, let fuzzy images of new perspectives come into focus.  We shouldn’t get rid of our glasses.  It is because of them that we possess individual perspectives that enable us to offer unique contributions to something much bigger than ourselves.  Acknowledging them, however, allows us to see that there is something much bigger than ourselves in the first place. 

       

          

              

The He(art) of Teaching

I have come to believe that a great teacher is a great artist and that there are as few as there are any other great artists. Teaching might even be the greatest of the arts since the medium is the human mind and spirit.                                                                     – John Steinbeck

In high school, I drew the picture on the right during art class. I worked as hard as I could. I remember determinedly trying to use shading techniques like I was shown. It took a lot longer than it looks. It was one of my best pieces.

Renowned artist, Phillip Philbeck painted the picture on the left. I have three of his landscapes hanging in my house. He graduated a year before I did. We had the very same art teacher, Doug Pruett. I remember Mr. Pruett’s teasing grin as he tapped his fingers on his desk saying, “I just don’t have the talent in here I had last year.”

If Mr. Pruett’s teaching abilities were judged solely on the artwork we produced, Phillip would be making him look pretty dang good. Me? Eh. I mean really, is that the best he could do with me? I should be pretty ticked in comparison.

Except that I remember Mr. Pruett as one of my greatest teachers—someone who had an impact on my life, a true artist who shaped my mind and spirit. I’m sure it took way more skill and creativity and a whole lot more patience to teach me, than it did to teach Phillip. Truth is, I could take art classes ‘til my last breath, and I would never have landscapes hanging in anybody’s house.

But you know, since I still remember the term cross hatch and dipping a pencil eraser in ink to give my football texture, I must’ve been proud of my work. Although there’s no way to measure it on any standardized test, that’s what makes Mr. Pruett a great teacher. He recognized my individual potential and weaknesses, and yet I left his class with a lifelong confidence in my creativity and a desire to always find a way to express myself.

Mr. Pruett inspired me to be my personal best and to realize there is no one standard of beauty or one single measure of success. He could’ve crushed my spirit by holding me to Phillip’s standards (or pretty much any other kid in the class), but he chose to focus on my strengths instead.

I thought about that a lot this testing week. I thought about it every time Dusty used one of the three words he is beginning to use to ask for something rather than take it by force. I thought about it when I was required to ask him to “solve for x” on his 7th grade Extend 1 End of Grade math test. I thought about it when I watched tears well up in a teacher’s eyes who just gave an 8th grade reading test to many students who came to her barely reading at a 3rd grade level. I thought about it when she whispered, “What can I possibly say to convince them how much they’ve grown, when they make another Level 1 on another standardized test?” I thought about it as I tried to find words to convince her of the infinite ways she helped them grow, when they made another Level 1 on another standardized test in her class.

Not to take anything away from teachers and students who performed well—I love my Phillip Philbeck paintings. They need to be admired and gazed upon. But so do the best attempts at footballs and tennis shoes. There are some teachers whose hard work and passion and insight will never pay off in excellent test scores, but their impact will be manifested in countless other ways.

To the true artist teachers who wonder how those kids who struggle academically will know how much they’ve grown, I just wanted to tell you about Doug Pruett. If you spent every single day for nine months focusing on a child’s strengths and pouring your heart into working with the most precious of mediums, you can’t help but have positively shaped minds and spirits. I am certain that you’ve helped instill in your students a lifelong confidence in their personal worth that will stay with them long after test scores are forgotten.

 

Don’t Worry About the Odor

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Happy Mother’s Day!  Love, Sydney Kate

So I live with Jodi Grubb. She’s literally the most amazing person I can think of to live with. She thinks all the time. She thinks about cool things like butterflies, and fractals, and inclusion, and people who have different views, and weeds that grow in between bricks. She takes the simplest of things and somehow ties them all together, to make something that’s big and something that really matters. Then she’ll come up with an amazing Facebook post that will make your heart swell a lot, and your mind grow a lot, and your perspective change a lot. I want to be like her more and more every day. I think about how truly beautiful life must be through my mama’s eyes. Literally, the woman doesn’t go a day without witnessing a miracle because that is what she looks for. She can find God in every situation. I’m not saying she’s perfect – she’s late to everything, she loses her keys once a week, and I recall her putting the toaster in the refrigerator once, but she doesn’t sweat things like that. Honestly, I’ve never seen her sweat, period. : ) My mom knows what is important. She lives her life by God’s greatest commandment… which is to LOVE GOD AND LOVE PEOPLE, and it’s really inspiring.

I was reading the book of John last night, and I was at the part where Lazarus had died and Jesus had come to visit with Lazarus’ mourning sisters, Mary and Martha. A few things struck me about this passage.

  1. Mary and Martha were so upset and sad about the death of their brother. Jesus saw their hurt, and mourned with them, it says in verse 35 that “Jesus wept.” But, Jesus also saw their love and it says in verse 33 and 38 that he was “deeply moved” by the amount of love they shared for Lazarus and each other. (This part reminded me of my PawPaw Puzie, and what my family likes to call “Summer Camp 2017,” but that’s a different story – maybe one I can try and write about soon.) Now, Jesus had been persecuted throughout this entire book of John, the Pharisees were all over him. Like my dad always told me when he was teaching me how to play defense, “Be on her like white on rice, on a paper plate, in the middle of a snow storm.” That’s how I imagine the Pharisees were on Jesus – Never giving up, always trying to find a wrongdoing so they could pounce on it (which they never found, btw.) : ) Any other human, would probably be ready to give the Pharisees a flagrant foul, or if you’re small maybe give up and take your seat on the bench. But multiple times, he was in situations where it would have been easy to break down, and easy to get upset, but what stuck out to me was that He didn’t get emotional about anything of this nature – what He got emotional about didn’t have to do with selfish things, or hurtful comments towards him but rather, He got emotional about love. You can literally SEE HOW MUCH JESUS LOVED LAZARUS, AND HE LOVES YOU THAT MUCH TOO. SO MUCH. So, what I first wrote down in the margins of my Bible were the words – “love so deeply that it hurts.” Love like Jesus loved. Be “deeply moved” by acts of kindness and selflessness and empathy and pure love, because loving is His greatest commandment.

 

  1. The second thing that really jumped out at me was when Jesus asked for the stone to be moved (so that He could enter the tomb and see Lazarus), Martha replied by making a statement about how the odor would be super horrendous, that Lazarus had been dead for four whole days. Jesus, made no comment about the rank smell, but instead said, “Did I not tell you that if you believed you would see the glory of God.” And Jesus went on to go into the tomb and pray, and raise Lazarus from the dead! Super amazing. The thing that I thought was so cool, and what I think I’m going to make my new motto is, “Don’t worry about the odor.” For all of you comedians who think that I only shower once a month, (you know who you are) I am not making this my motto in order to justify my uncleanliness… just setting that straight. : ) Rather, I want to use it as a reminder to not get caught up in the little things. As cliché as it sounds… DON’T SWEAT THE SMALL STUFF, you don’t have to. Jesus has got it alllllll taken care of. The smell was the last thing on Jesus’s mind. His mind was on loving His people and being about what God sent Him to do on earth. And we need to make that our main goal too. So don’t let “the odor” stop you from seeing and experiencing the glory of God, because he’s got big plans. It’s so easy to get distracted… maybe “your odor” is an injury, or a bad hair day, or a test grade that stinks (pun definitelyyyyy intended), or maybe something worse, but don’t let it trip you up. You’ve got a God that loves you, and that has literally overcome the world, so nothing inside of the world can stop you – your God is bigger and stronger than it. Let yourself see God work, let him show you His glory, His grace, His forgiveness, His compassion, His kindness, goodness, and gentleness. If Martha hadn’t realized that the smell was nothing to worry about, it could have prevented the miracle that Jesus was getting ready to bestow upon her! Jesus doesn’t care about the odor – He proved that to us in John 11:40 – now all you’ve gotta do is plug your nose and open your heart.

So, I like to use my mama as an example of this. She’s pretty immune to odors considering she changes diapers at her job and she washed all my basketball socks for many, many years : ) – but really though, she doesn’t let little things keep her from seeing the big picture. She opens herself up to His glory.

Be a lover.

Seek miracles.

Close your nose, and open your heart.

Peace Out,

Sydney Kate

 

Well, If That’s Not the Salt Calling the Sugar White… Or Something Like That

Why I Think We’re All Snowflakes (Some of us just don’t realize it.)

My husband’s taking a couple online classes. So, people pretty much gather twice a week in our living room on his computer screen. Because I can’t help it (not because I’m a nerd), I “overhear” things sometimes. The other night, the conversation got a little controversial resulting in a white student using the term “snowflake.” Ironically, when people didn’t agree with her, she got more than a little upset and excused herself from class. I rolled my eyes—out of sight, of course. I think she eventually came back, but she definitely melted for a while.

A few days later, I was reading a book and ran across a passage about Wilson Bentley—the actual guy who, in 1885, discovered that “no two snowflakes are alike.”  Without any modern equipment, he painstakingly photographed more than 5000 crystals of snow and published lots of them in scientific journals. But this is the part that stood out to me….

“What amazed Bentley was the realization that each snowflake bore the scars of its journey. He discovered that each crystal is affected by the temperature of the sky, the altitude of the cloud from which it fell, the trajectory the wind took it as it fell to earth, and a thousand other factors.” (A Thousand Miles in a Million Years, Donald Miller)

Each snowflake “bore the scars of its journey.” Wait a minute. That sounds like us. We are all shaped by our unique conditions and experiences—by the foods we ate or didn’t, the stories we grew up hearing, the love we knew or lacked, the privileges we inherited or not, and a thousand other factors. We bear the scars of our journey.

The thing is, some of us are born into environments highly conducive to snow, in places where we aren’t likely to melt, places where it’s pretty easy to hold it together, places where we are in the majority. And we tend to look out from those comfortable, easy places and wonder (make assumptions about?) why those “other” snowflakes seem so fragile and sensitive. Why can’t they just “chill?”

Truth is, we all have a melting point. And sadly, I think for those of us who happened to be born into the majority, it seems we start thawing at much lower than 32 degrees. Let’s face it. Historically, we’ve had it pretty easy, and I believe that lingers in our makeup. I read once that, “a way of knowing becomes more complex when it is able to look at what before it could only look through.” I think we become conditioned to seeing the world through our own experiences. Some snowflakes I know have withstood much harsher and hotter conditions than I ever have or most likely even could. Some snowflakes have truly been oppressed.

I think those of us who are used to being securely inside a big snow drift, where most other snowflakes see from our vantage point, begin to feel a little heated simply by being disagreed with. We’re not used to it. We feel kind of threatened. We relate disagreement to oppression because that’s the most uncomfortable (collectively) we’ve ever had to feel.

I’m not saying any of us should be sorry for who we are. We each possess a perspective that enables us to offer a unique contribution to something much bigger than ourselves. But we must remember that there is something much bigger than ourselves in the first place. We must respect each other’s scars. It’s true what Plato said, “Justice will only exist where those not affected by injustice are filled with the same amount of indignation as those offended.”

I’m a snowflake. (You are too.)