three hundred seventy seven

 FIRST TIME LAST TIME FRIENDS






Humans are created to be social creatures, so intimate contact with other human beings is vital. I have resisted this fact most of my life and in it's place I chose to interact with other humans but always keeping them at arms length. I created the illusion of intimacy by developing a skill to instantly connect with total strangers. 

My many years of working in the retail service industry helped me develop the skill to become an instant trusted friend. I became the stereotype friendly cab and bus driver. I could read a customer in seconds and launch into a serious conversation. This skill was useful in the customer service and sales industry, the question is do I use it for good or evil? As your new trusted friend, do I take advantage of you or help you? 

Many focus solely on making a sale or hustling a tip, I learned to focus on the person. I truly wanted to help them make the right purchase or have a positive safe experience. As a result I had repeat happy customers and generous tippers. 

I felt good about my priority but it still wasn't a real connection. You can only get so close to a person from behind a meat counter or during a cab or bus ride. Customers may or may not shop again, bus passengers may or may not ride again and cab passengers may get on a plane and fly thousands of miles away never to be seen again. Our brief moment of intimate contact may consist of all lies or absolute truth. It is a no risk conversation, you won't get caught in a lie and there is no threat if a secret is revealed.  

You can't imagine the things I have heard because many people choose this dynamic to dump their problems and emotions. I have been asked very awkward questions and heard explicit secrets. I have been asked by couples to settle arguments, give advice about life choices and once to assess a man's sexuality. Customers are aware of this no risk dynamic and show no shame. A man who passionately kisses his wife goodbye and as soon as the door is closed asks me about a strip bar or happy ending massage parlor or a woman obviously heading to an afternoon affair with another man while on the phone doing smoochy talk with her husband. 

However there were meaningful conversations about life that is usually due to my prompting. I have discovered these are conversations many people rarely discuss. Talking to people about fears, dreams or shortcomings is way too intimate for next-door neighbors and often family members. I love to hear what people think and I really enjoy getting them to think. If I can put a thought or two into someones mind it may spur them to have a real conversation with someone else.

Talking about the weather, sports or work is the shallow end, I love to use my time with strangers to use this no risk dynamic to wade into the deeper waters. Some people immediately get uncomfortable and I respect that but many find it refreshing. I'm sure most of us have had an unexpected profound experience with a good listener bar tender, a random seat partner on a long flight or a talkative philosopher cab driver. Life is filled with these first time last time friends.

I lived exclusively in this world and thought I was connected with people but I was still alone. I have no life long friends or close relatives. I did not have people who have known me at my worst. No-one to see my inconsistencies, weakness and hypocrisy. 

Since my move from Hawaii to Bend Oregon I have made a personal commitment to find more longterm friends. First of all it takes time and finding that person who can handle my intense personality. I can be too much for some, a bit too eccentric, opinionated or direct. I have heard I am a required taste.

I have recently had a few negative experiences but a few positive ones. I'm in my seventies still trying to make friends on the school playground. Somedays I am drawn back to the first time last time friends world but I keep trying. Making longterm friends just takes time I guess. I force myself to call people, attend social events and say yes to any group activity. People are very complicated.

We watch Cheers, Big Bang Theory or Friends because of the friendships. We are all intrigued with a group of tight friends but it is only scripted television. As I figured that out I learned that having one or two good friends in this life is enough and unfortunately rare. I think most people go through life alone. They may be like me and put on a good show but they are actually alone. 

Everyone has the need to be seen, but the fear of what others will think paralyzes them. A friendly cab driver, bar tender or fellow traveler is no substitute for a consistent friend. I wish I could give the magic words, technique or secret formula but I haven't found one. This is even more difficult today, families are scattered, social media is poorly named and mistrust is at an epic level.

I have found friendship in my life, there is nothing like it. I can't tell you exactly how or why it happened, it was just being open at the right place and the right time. These friendships will last forever no matter the time or distance. The one thing I do know I am the one who needs to make the first move, people won't find me. 

I'm writing this after four days of a guys campout. I enjoy the interaction and banter of a bunch of men but not all personalities mesh. I really relate to John Candy's nervous obnoxiousness in Planes Trains and Automobiles because I love to talk and I know I can be a chatter box. 

The usual male rifting got personal and I got my feathers ruffled so I needed to write this post, even a seasoned thick skinned cab driver can get his feelings hurt. Like I said I'm an acquired taste and don't mesh with everyone so I decided to focus on the other nervous chatterboxes I met around the late night campfire. One sure thing is running back to that first time last time world is not an option. 

three hundred seventy six

MY UNLIKELY BIBLE HEROES 


THOMAS NEEDED PROOF


JOHN THE BAPTIST HAD DOUBTS


PETER DENIED


PAUL PERSECUTED CHRISTIANS

Four of the many flawed men God chose to do great things. 

I first thought the men an women of the Bible had special super powers. I assumed if they had spent time with Jesus, witnessed his miracles and heard his words, how could they possibly doubt and deny him? As I learned more I found these were all just regular people. 

I have lived enough life to realize bravery is an extremely rare trait. Very few people will actually step up and risk their physical safety, their wealth or their reputations. Today our lives are relatively safe and easy. It is hard to understand how things were back then but this doesn't stop us from judging their actions. 

I think a lot about bravery and honor. I love any story about physical bravery, ethical bravery or someone keeping an oath or promise at all cost. Unfortunately our modern culture has lost something. Selfishness, fear, embarrassment, rationalization, narcissism and victimhood have eroded the respect for these selfless acts. 

I love to watch royal knights prove their loyalty to the thrown, soldiers brave danger to protect our freedoms or gun fighters turned lawman risking their lives to protect defenseless citizens. I then quietly ask myself if I have what it takes to be that selfless and brave.

As I studied more about these Bible heroes I found they had moments of greatness but they also had moments of weakness and failure. This is one of the reasons I am convinced the Bible is God inspired because men would not document these failures of character. They would craft a better story and "spin" like our modern politicians. 

From the beginning Jesus and his followers have been slandered and persecuted. Today the main line of attack is to point out hypocrisy. Throughout our media I hear jokes and criticism of Christians because they have character flaws. They build a straw man by saying Christians claim they are perfect then point out their humanity. Portraying Christians as judgmental uninformed hypocrites is the main way they discredit their message. 

In reality being a Christian does not make us immune to temptation and failure, this leaves us open to the perceived charge of hypocrisy. Because of this many Christians make an attempt to rationalize and hide their shortcomings. They attempt to present a perfect saintly image, but like the heroes of the Bible we have no super powers. We can fool ourselves and the world around us but inevitably our flaws are revealed. What matters is what we do with these moments of doubt, cowardice and pride. 

These four Bible heroes took corrective action. When they had a doubt they asked for proof, when they acted cowardly they asked forgiveness and when they were prideful they were open to being humbled. Doing nothing when we fail is always the wrong answer. 

Each man was given proof, forgiveness and correction. Ironically each man was strengthened by their experience. If we take action we too can become stronger in spite of our own times of failure. Wasting time hiding and denying is destructive because we will eventually drift away and believe our own lies. If we continue to fool ourselves we will inevitably lose our connection with God.

I find comfort through these flawed men and I realize their strength comes through their weakness. Their dependance on God is strengthened which in a way became their super power. Being open, honest and willing is a large part but accepting our own powerlessness is the key. 

Each of these examples had an amazing result. Thomas became a fearless witness, John the Baptist met his executioner reassured, Peter was freed of shame to launch the church and Paul was put on the right path to proclaim the truth about Jesus. 

I have taken many paths through my life, doubt, uncertainty, shame and pride have broken my connection with Jesus. Sometimes it was only moments but sometimes it was years. My story does have one constant, I eventually asked. Jesus has always reacted with me the same way he reacted with these great men. 

No matter how far you have fallen being honest and asking for help is the answer.