In the
end my perspective is mine and I'll never be able to see through your eyes to see
what you see. The way I see it the information that I can come up with is
filtered first through others filters and then through my life filters and the
conclusions I come to are as often as not based on what others might consider
faulty logic but none the less how I perceive the world and if you're honest
with yourself how you perceive your world as well.
Right
now, in this moment, it's obvious that pretty much the whole of this nation is
seeing a future that likely will never happen and yet the panic on the parts of
many has already set in. Each in their own way is seeing doom and gloom. And
though I for one don't see the doom and gloom that many others are predicting
I'm not naive enough as to not acknowledge that this nation has been through
hard times in the past, some of them damn hard times, likely will be again and
still in all has come out the other side if not the better for it then at least
somewhere close to alright. And yes it takes time, it always takes time,
memories are often longer than we wish for them to be, but they do fade and
things do change and sometimes they even get a little bit better.
I want
to believe that this nation is set up to argue and bicker back and forth and in
the end to come to some sort of agreement where ultimately no one is truly
happy but everyone is agreeable with what's been accomplished. In the end we
each make up our own story about how we got what we wanted and everything will
be alright because honestly that's pretty much how we live our lives, we make
up stories that work for us and we keep moving forward.
Sitting
there that Sunday morning on a wooden pew listening to a man I called friend
tell me something I'd never thought about before, something I'd believed I
wasn't allowed to think about, changed my world. In a very real way it let a
whole lot more of that world in and I will always believe that's been a good
thing though honestly at times it does get more than a little maddening. I
admit to not liking to have to come to the realization that I'm not the only
one that might be right or worse still that I might in fact be wrong.
Then
again no one really wants to find out they're wrong and the damn shame of it is
that we all always find out we're wrong to late. We suddenly realize there's no
"Overs!" in this game of life we're involved in. We've done what
we've done and it can't be taken back no matter how much we want to. We're
stuck in the reality of our latest choice and sometimes that really sucks. No
matter how much we want to believe the world is some other way than the way
others tell us it is we want to believe it's different, it really is different
or at the very least could be different or should be different if only...
Sometimes
folks do try to step back from what they think they're seeing all around them
and take a second or third view of what they think they see right in front of
them. Sometimes they realize that perhaps they're standing at the foot of the
mountain and maybe if they're willing to make the effort to walk to the top of
that mountain there just might be a different view from what they've been
believing was the only view there was. And yes it is a fact that it's only
sometimes and sometimes folks look out and around or only in one direction or
even back down the trail they've just walked up but in that moment their
perception can't help but be changed if only by admitting to themselves that
there is another perspective. And accepting that reality changes everything.
When I
was a kid growing up in a Lutheran Church in New Lisbon, Wisconsin the pew I
sat on most every morning was hard, damn hard, and damn uncomfortable for more
than merely the impatience of a youngster who was being forced to wear a
buttoned up shirt and bow tie. Those
mornings were hard because the God I was looking at was holding lightning bolts
and telling me he was going to use them on me if I even thought about thinking
something other than what I was hearing from Pastor Rose. He was going to
strike me down and I was going to be sent to hell if I didn't think and yes
I'll use the vial word, believe, what I was hearing.
Most
mornings I couldn't get off that pew and away from it all quick enough.
The day
came when I was a freshman in high school and my English teacher gave me an assignment
to write about Bertrand Russell. I had no idea who this man was but I was
suppose to give a report on him and so I knew there was no way I'd get a
halfway decent grade if I didn't do at least a bit of research which of course
wasn't one of my strong suits but still I had to do what I had to do. Now you
have to understand that this was 1964 and Bertrand was still alive but there
was more than a little information on him in our little public library and so I
actually went to work researching him and it truly changed my life. You see, he
was an atheist and New Lisbon didn't have any of them as far as I knew. As far
as I knew everyone went to church on Sunday and that was that. In the world I
grew up in the pew you sat in on Sunday morning was pretty much either
Lutheran, Bethany Lutheran (which I'm still not sure what that's about),
Baptist or Roman Catholic (which brings up a whole family history thing that I
won't go into here). In my world it had never been that complicated, you went
to church on Sunday morning with your parents, you went to Sunday School after
that and then you collected your sister, went to Red's Bar and collected your
parents and then you went home to a meal that mom had put in the oven before
we'd headed off for church. Simple right? Nothing to think about in those days.
My view of the world was crystal clear. What's to be confused about?
So now
my mean English teacher who as a child had survive World War Two over in Europe
in some place like Hungary or Yugoslavia or someplace and telling us about goulash
that I'm not sure she should have been telling us about was telling me to write
about this Bertrand Russell guy and the minute I went to that catalog file to
begin researching this guy my life takes what you might call a U turn.
Books
pulled from the shelves, sitting there on the table in front of me, and I swear
the first thing I read is that this guy is an atheist! What in hell is an
atheist? Wait, this is a mistake, there are Lutherans and Baptist and Catholics
but atheists? How can that be a religion? God's honest truth is I didn't know
there were folks like Islamics and Buddhists and though I think I had an idea
that there were folks that didn't believe in Jesus who were called Jews I
wasn't really clear on all of that so there was massive confusion in my world
sitting there in the New Lisbon Public Library. I was rather certain that I
didn't know anyone who didn't believe in God but then here I was being
introduced to someone who says they didn't. To be honest with you there was a
bit of pure panic that came over me in that moment because I was pretty sure
that library was sitting way too close to my church and I was pretty sure those
lightning bolts hadn't just somehow disappeared.
In the
end I did a report on Bertrand Russell and I have no idea what sort of grade I
got though most of my grades were in that C range plus or minus a bit so you
can figure that report wasn't much different. The thing is it changed my life
in a way that nothing since then has and so I guess if I were to have to give
it a grade I'd have to say it was an A plus with two big thumps up.
It
started me on a journey that has lasted a lifetime. I've found myself
contemplating God everywhere from the middle of the Mediterranean and the
Atlantic seas to the ponderosa pine forests of northern Arizona and I've yet to
come to grips with it all. The one thing that I guess I've learned through all
of this is that I don't do well at believing whether it be about the big things
or the not so big things. And maybe because I find it so hard to believe I want
to think, and I'm sorry yes believe, I look at things just a little more than
those fortunate ones who believe and leave it at that. After all from my
perspective believing in something can end up feeling a lot more comfortable
than that day in that public library when I came to realize that not everyone
believes in what I was expected to believe in. Let me tell you that there was
one uncomfortable moment in my life.
I don't
have the answers for the world, the nation, my loved ones or for that matter
even for myself but I have come to the conclusion that I know a thing or two
about a thing or two. Plain and simple the truth almost always isn't the truth
we decide to believe whether you like it or not. Then there's one more thing
that I've learned and that's that perception comes from perspective and thus
changes with longitude and latitude. Jimmy Buffett might tell us the lower the
latitude the lower the attitude and Lord knows I do wish it were that simple. I
tend to want to believe that the higher the latitude the better the view.
That little
boy that sat on that pew all those years ago staring up at a God throwing
lightning bolts and hearing how there was only one way has gone away forever.
He went away one day in a library in a little town in New Lisbon, Wisconsin and
as would be the story of the rest of his life he'd never come back. Some might
say he grew up but the best I can say is that I got older and did my best to
keep on thinking just a bit. Sometimes it's hard and the truth is I admit to
not being smart enough to know when I fail miserably but I do keep trying to
look beyond what's popular in the moment. In fact I even try to look beyond
what's been popular in more than just the moment.
I sit
here today realizing that some things in my world would have been so much
easier if only I hadn't done that assignment all those years ago in high
school. The truth is that even though I've not had an easy time of it I thank
that teacher for giving me that assignment because maybe, just maybe, for the
first time in my life I opened up my mind just a bit to other possibilities.
Believing is easy, thinking brings on questions and believers don't like or
want questions. These days I work hard at questioning.
That
little boy sitting on that wooden pew wanted to believe in most anything and
everything he saw and heard. As the years went by he came to understand that
though most beliefs may not be lies they're likely not truths either. As often
as not they tell a story and the story that gets told comes from the
perspective of the storyteller and the storyteller is always just retelling the
story.
So I
guess what I want to tell you is that I hope you enjoyed the story and
hopefully you got something out of it but never forget you're reading it from
my perspective which turns into your perspective. About the only truth I think
I know is that perspectives change even when the story stays the same. Good
luck out there.