12.28.2008

a week and a day out (a collection of thoughts)

a friend of mine asked me recently what i want out of life, and i had no good answer for him at that moment. what dawned on me within the next day after much pondering was that i want a life full of stories where God comes through. i'm uncertain of precisely how cliché that is, but if i were to describe my last few days at wheaton that little phrase would pop up frequently.

my roommate, karen, and i happened to acquire a car the night before we needed one. karen was an amazing help and bright light while loading up and moving me out, and driving brilliantly through the insane weather that hit chicago that day. that weather held off just long enough for my plane to get home safely, even if it was a little late. i found out that my sister-in-law had been accepted to law school for next fall (CONGRATS!). you know what, i'm just going to chalk that whole day up to God being cool. i hope for many more days like that.

in the first few days of being home, i kept constructing really broken metaphors about what it's like to be graduated: none of them have stuck with me. to be honest, it does not feel real yet. i'm checking my grades online every day with bated breath to see if i passed everything. i still expect to go back to campus in a week and a half and buy textbooks and get lunch at saga and ask people how their breaks were, while at the same time it has been hard to remember that everyone else has another semester of work to do before they get the kind of time "off" i have. it's this strange middle ground of realization i'm living in.

as a highschooler or freshman, post-graduate life seems a million miles away. adulthood is something you leap into with both feet and once you're there there's no going back: a flip is switched and you're done with things you did when you were young. as a senior and now a post-graduate, i've realized the line is much thinner and the gap much smaller than what we all think. grown-up status is not achieved in one big ceremony (truth be told, marriage might be an exception to this, i just don't know), but something you wander into like a blind mouse.

there is so much i could say about the last semester. so much of it seems a blur now, but arkansas has that effect on things. i hope to keep thinking through the things i've been learning and keep on trying to love the people i've been loving, and maybe some more. this bears saying over and over again:
honestly, wheaton friends and fellow improvvers, you have made my life more beautifully complicated. if it weren't for you, i wouldn't be working so hard to find ways to pay rent in wheaton when i can get both free room and board in arkansas. so, you have that on your heads. you have been a bit of heaven on earth for me. thank you so much.

merry christmas, happy new year, may the Lord pour blessings on your head when the world seems bent on curses. stay tuned.

1 comment:

Luke Brewster said...

it's late so this post is bound to be sentimental.

your analogy of the blind mouse struck me. that is a good way of looking at it. even my year off seems sheltered now, next to the reality of being truly naked in front of the rest of our lives.

anyway, yeah, i don't know what to do with the future. i'm truly scared of it in moments when i realize it won't go away, when i realize time doesn't move in a circle. we don't get to go do freshmen year over, better. we don't get to live this experience again.

and then in the next moment, i get excited. there is still much to come. we don't have to stop practicing improv, or working in theater, or pursuing love. just in a different context. but boy, it does feel like the death of all we know.

i guess i'm glad to have 14 more weeks, but i know they'll pass, and i'll be in the same open ended position. there's no going back through that door, no undoing credits, no backwards learning. :-\.

all of this to say i love you, and i'm glad you're still breathing, and that you've been a part of my life. i wish and hope and pray the best for you, and can't wait to see your campus/at Panera with us this next semester if you're there. if not, keep in touch online, and know that I want only happiness for you in my best moments.

much love to your wonderful self,

luke.