One Year Back
A year ago today I returned from my deployment to Iraq. In some ways, it seems impossible that a whole year has passed, but in many others it is easy to believe.
It took me most of the first half of this last year to really adjust to my life and feel like I was "home." I have thought a lot about why this happened, and decided it all boils down to how I have perceived and responded to reality. You see, I came back from Iraq with a definite story of how my life was going to be - how much I had grown, how I would put relationships first, and how great everything would be.
Of course reality never conforms to our stories about it, no matter how carefully crafted they are. Even more surprising was the way the stories other people told themselves about me differed from my own stories. It took me a long time to notice and accept that we all have different stories about ourselves and each other - and how attachment to these stories can cause so much pain.
There have been some great influences in my "waking up" - first, my therapist Brian. I spent a lot of time with him, and he reflected my reality more than my stories and helped me see where I was. I learned more about Buddhism through reading, meditation practice, and Shambhala training, illuminating the path of presence, surrender, and acceptance.
Special thanks to Marti for introducing me to the work of Eckart Tolle, whose calm words helped me through many a rough morning. Thanks to ALL of the members of my Covenant Group (Chalice Group) for providing a safe place for me to really show up and be heard. And thanks to Shaun, my evangelical Baptist co-worker and friend, for his faith and friendship. Finally, thanks to my Warrior Brothers and the ManKind Project for providing another safe space to show up as a man and learn to trust other men again.
Lots of things have changed in the last year. 365 days ago, I was certain we would move to Northern California when I retired from the Marines, and that I would attend seminary there to become a UU minister. Today, we plan to move to Colorado and join a cohousing community just now starting up. I plan to take at least a year off and just LIVE MY LIFE - spend my time taking care of my family, playing my guitar, meditating, riding my bike, and building community. Wow. I might even learn how to cook. I am still called to serve others, but I'm not sure what shape this ministry will take. If I go to seminary, I'm not sure where or when it will happen.
When I got back from Iraq, my guitar playing was a lot better than when I left, and now a year later it's much better still. I bought a new guitar, and now love playing fingerstyle more than just about anything else in the world. Making music with voice and six strings is a spiritual practice for me.
This is really getting long, isn't it? No problem, it's my reflection on the past year and I'm writing for myself, not for you.
It looks like I'll finish out my Marine Corps career here in Northern Virginia, so we have about two more years in this community. I've thought a bit about leaving, and although there is a lot I will NOT miss about this area (can you say TRAFFIC?!), I will miss many of the people I've met.
In my congregation, of course there is our Chalice Group Leaders' Group. And my (as yet unformed) Chalice Group. And the Board - the Sinister Minister, Sister Emily, Professor Puck, Miss Violet, Captain BRUU Brew, and all the rest. And Mary, my dear enigmatic faithful friend and co-conspirator in the world of RE. And, yes, my fellow Marines in MPP-50 whose friendship and humor make work something I actually look forward to most days.
Well, I've reflected enough - it's time to move ahead. Who knows what the next year will bring. I hope it won't matter exactly what happens, just that I can notice and accept and appreciate every moment of it for what it is.
3 Comments:
What are "the stories you told yourself?" Why were they important? What did they mean to you? Have you given up on them or adapted them? How do you incorporate that vision of yourself and the important meanings or values it carries?
I think we all have stories, visions of ourselves. I suspect their point is to give ourselves experience with seeing ourselves in the way we deserve. The question is how do I become the person worthy of myself in the middle of the chaos, how do I find peace with myself, not as I imagine; pure, separate, unruffled and unperturbed, but as I might be in the middle of all my pettiness, faults, my chaotic mundane often superficial life?
Brother
I honor your journey. Keep bloggin'!
I invite you to visit my blog on MKP and NWTA at http://www.nwtamkp.blogspot.com/. I ask that you share your expreience at http://nwtamkp.blogspot.com/2005/02/your-nwta-and-mkp-experience.html.
Old-faithful Wolf
Well, we do need UU troubadors
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