Posterous
Trey is using Posterous to post everything online. Shouldn't you?
Dsc02016_thumb
 
soul - ache  - ideas, sounds and images between the already and the not-yet

a tale of three cities (Pottersville, Vegas, and Panama City Beach)

     
Click here to download:
a_tale_of_three_cities_Potters.zip (531 KB)

Okay, I get that this post may seem a stretch, but bear with me. 

Tale #1:
I just finished reading a great article by Wendell Jamieson in today's New York Times about the more "angst-istential" elements of the Holiday Classic It's a Wonderful Life. If you've got time to read it, I highly recommend it, as it will inform some of my thoughts here. For the quick-readers, he basically suggests (as others have ) that Pottersville was a much more happening place than sleepy Bedford Falls. Jamieson even does a little digging and asserts that a town like Bedford Falls would hardly be thriving in our current economic milieu/malaise. Pottersville, by contrast, would be a happening place to be--wine, women and song (and stronger versions of each if you're craving something more.)  Loosely, Pottersville is meant to look like Babylon, but it looks more like how Capra would have seen Vegas if it were in upstate New York.

Tale #2:
Printing cliches about Vegas is almost too easy. Supposedly whatever happens there stays there (except things requiring antibiotics). One recent commercial (paid for by the tourism department) actually featured two women going into a bathroom and removing their wigs, as if to shed their "Vegas" identity to return to the "real" world. I'm not meaning to wax moral here, but suffice it to say that Vegas is Pottersville if Potter were Donald Trump.

Earlier this year Jen and I went with my parents to the Fernbank Museum of Natural History in Atlanta. They have an IMAX theater there and the movie was a challenging film called Grand Canyon Adventure that focused on a rafting expedition down the Colorado River. What we didn't know is that it was narrated by Robert Redford, had an amazing soundtrack by the Dave Matthews Band, and featured information about the falling river height of the Colorado River and the ensuing environmental degradation. 

Because cities need water, so they dam up rivers and make reservoirs.

In desert climates, the water evaporates faster. Lots of it. Like 40 feet in 10 years.

But big cities need lots of water, particularly when they're man-made cities of pleasure plopped in the middle of a desert.

According to the US Geological Survey, this is a huge problem. But the average tourist in Vegas probably isn't thinking about the water.

Tale #3:
Now leave Vegas and the trickling Colorado for a second and suppose you're speaking at a youth retreat in Panama City Beach, Florida and you happen to leave your sheets, pillows and requisite miniature fan at home. You'd probably drive to the nearest Wal-Mart. But if it's the end of July, a Friday night around 8:30, you probably shouldn't go down the "Strip". Unless you forgot what kind of crowd you're going to run into. It's kind of like Bourbon Street without the beads. Trucks, Jeeps, Loud Radios. Lots of people under the age of 30 in varying levels of intoxication and stages of undress.For awhile I remember just watching it all happen, fully expecting some camera crew to be somewhere trying to turn college-age debauchery into quick and easy money.

But then I realized what was behind it all. "It was college, spring break, summer, whatever..." I was soooo drunk, I don't even remember...." And it's excused. Because you were drunk/hungover/on something/on spring break/at a club/with some friends/in PC.

Epilogue:
The reality of Pottersville, Vegas and Panama City Beach isn't the extent of their respective excess, nor is it found in moralizing about the various consequences of such behavior. The great reality is that they are places that they don't exist. They are figments of our imaginations, magical worlds where all sorts of things are possible, where hardship, fear and environmental degradation are not known. They are thriving, not because they are selling a reality but because they dare our creativity to imagine something better than what already is. So we go. We lose money and memories. We damage relationships and break sacred trusts. All for the illusion of something better.

And it never dawns on us that we don't have to live in Pottersville. 

That the water we drink in the casino is taken from the children of Mexico, for whom the Colorado is a dirty stream.

That one crazy week can haunt you the rest of your life.

The most salient point of "It's a Wonderful Life" (which is as much Kafka as it is Capra) is that it's not better out there. I have a good friend who gets irritated when people verbally express their version of the greener grass. "When I graduate, things will be so much better..." or "When I'm married, I'll...." or "If I were just in a better place..."

Discontent and selfishness can be good bedfellows. 

Shiny things look good until they turn your finger green.

And a vacation sounds nice until the wells run dry.



May we exchange the folly of what could be for the sacrament of what is.

 

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   changes   environment   it's a wonderful life   teenagers  
Posted December 19, 2008
// 1 Comment

ch-ch-ch-changes (or observing the middle-schooler in its natural habitat)

This time yesterday I was pulling my stuff together to share the morning devotion at Palmer Middle School's Fellowship of Christian Students. I was running a little late and had to swing by the church to print off some transparencies. One of our youth was helping me out by leading a few worship songs. He called me at 8, the time we were supposed to get started. "Man, it's crazy. They're so small--I don't remember being this small."


There were 30 or so of them--in full adolescent glory. There was a group of somewhat hyperactive boys who barely looked like they were in fourth grade, much less sixth. An older group of 8th grade girls, who would otherwise be indistinguishable from early high-schoolers. I don't know if it's for the Bible Study or the free donuts, but either way they were there at 8 AM, an hour before school started, which is impressive for any teenager.

I just watched them and tried to imagine what was happening with each of them. I thought about how each of them were music stars or science stars, fashionistas and homemakers, builders and bankers. There was so much potential within them and they were blissfully unaware of it.

Most all of the changes that happen during this time get blamed on puberty and it's accompanying hormones, but if you watch a pack of them for any length of time, it's pretty clear that's like saying "Adulthood's all about your job." or "High school's only about getting your driver's license." It's true, but it's an incomplete picture.

Major faith transitions are happening and you can see it in their faces. There's questions, skepticism, the continuous nod of approval. The synapses are firing at a million miles a minute. The apathy that sets in in your second semester of high school is nowhere to be found. They're still kid-like enough to dream.

Most people say "middle-schooler" in a tone of voice normally reserved for the ankle-biting "terrible two's", including me. But, as I sat there and talked about the wide swath of disciples that followed Jesus, with all those different backgrounds and stories, I saw it reflected in the eyes of a bunch of 12-14 year olds. The kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.

 

Loading mentions Retweet
Filed under  //   changes   middle-schoolers   potential  
Posted December 5, 2008
// 0 Comments