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What Are Colors?

Trying to gain some proficiency in watercolors before a live art event on Thursday night. Y’know what they do in TED Talks, where a guy sits at a whiteboard and creates a visual diagram/representation of what the speaker’s saying? We’re going to try and do that for an outdoor worship service. Except with the afore-mentioned watercolors.

(Which are demonstrating that their mastery is no simple task.)

But since I’ve been in sixth grade, I’ve gauged my mastery of static media by drawing the same character over and over. Thus, Spidey:

I’ll post the watercolored pics from the live event later this week.

P.S.- there may or may not be a pun in that title. Not that I’m proud of my cleverness. But I am.

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Storyboards 2: The Ask God Project

So as I started at the church, I expected to work alone a pretty good amount–  bathing in the glow of a Dell monitor all day long, pecking away at brochures and learning web design. That’s been true.

But I’ve also gotten to get collaborative with my colleague, Vince Mims. He is a video wizard, doing way advanced ninja stuff on his Mac that looks like it got beamed down from Invisible Children’s viral marketing department. We bandy ideas back and forth, I draw storyboards, he shoots and edits footage, and since we’ve began teaming up, we’ve been doing videos at the church at a pace of about two a month–  a pretty frequent rate for us.

One of the biggest so far was an informational spot on the “Ask God Project.”

Essentially, our church is undergoing a period of expansion, and not in the “Let’s super-size our sanctuary” kind of way. We’re running out of kids’ space (a good problem to have), and so we’re starting a campaign to build a new children’s building, along with some peripheral upgrades. But it takes some care to communicate the positives and uniqueness of our plan.

So Vince and I knew we had to bring our A-game. I think we did.

First, we drafted the storyboards:

Then we passed it to our supervisors and got some notes and corrections– in this case, mostly minor ones. After that, we recorded our narration and went hunting for footage. Fortunately for us, a guy named Jordan Bradley came in and shot some beautiful documentary-style material. We noted which of his clips we wanted on the storyboard (those are the notes in red), and then Vince began to work his magic. I think you’ll agree:

(Be sure to look at the 3D shots of the buildings– Vince made those out of 2D photos in Adobe After Effects!)

By all accounts, the video was received well. The campaign continues until November 20th (when we’ll debut a video on our Youth department– and we’ve got a sweet concept for that, too).

And if you’ve got the time, check out more of Vince’s work, at his website: Seven-Nine Productions. He does freelance on the side, folks!

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Good Advice

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Extracurricular

So that you’ll be proud of me:


I got to mesh two loves today: books… and chalk drawings.

A planning sketch. The blue bars are apparently part of the notecard's natural design.

One of the local high schools does an after-school book club for kids who want a safe place to hang out and/or get some community service hours. The book of choice this semester is none other than Twilight, probably because most of the attendees are girls. And this should not surprise you. Heck, in my high school, most of the literate folks were girls. Seriously.

(More proof? I actually dictate this blog aloud to a typist.)

The kids that go end up getting a tri-media experience. Normally, they spend the hour reading along in a print copy of the book while listening to the audio version. At the end of the program, they then get to watch the film version. This is pretty rad (again, if you like the subject material). But the girl who runs the program wanted a little extra something to draw the attention of potential attendees. Enter me. I got to dress up a chalkboard.

Closer look at Bella and Edward? Sure!

Oh-ho! The puns, the puns….

The only problem was the artificial light in the classroom. That board would glitter if the sun hit it just right…

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Art with Pride (In The Name of Love)

School may’ve been out, but there was still an actual reason to get up this morning. And a good one at that: I got to participate in a pretty substantial MLK Day service project at West Ave. Elementary. Under a slightly breezy, slightly cloudy January sky, I and several volunteers worked to set up a garden by the cafeteria so kids in a 5th grade science class could tend plants and learn about the radness of nature.

Now, there was definitely a lot of work to be done. The lion’s share was handled by some volunteers from Habitat in Fort Worth, who are ballers when it comes to placing mulch. My contribution involved some of that; it also accidentally involved making friends with the kids who attended. I guess that’s natural; camp mode totally came back into play. I wound up having blacktop races and playing tag just as much as I pitched mulch off a trailer. (Me and the kids joked that the mulch pile was basically just a giant heap of “boo-boo” anyway.)

(Theirs, not mine.)

(Though I was certainly accused.)

Part of the job, too, was to paint concrete paving stones with cool pictures.  That way, the garden would look even more awesome and kid friendly, and we’d having something less seasonal than plants to commemorate the day with. To wit (and I’m a sucker for art), here are some cool pieces:

This was done by some of the Fort Worth volunteers. A nice use of splatter paint, if you please.

A very Banksy-ian entry, done by a girl who SKETCHED THIS FROM HER iPHONE. In, like, 7 minutes.

But, of course (of course), the coup de gras was administered by yours truly, with a little help from my friend D.T.

D.T. is in second grade. Our art styles totally clicked once he suggested we maaaaaaaaaake:

(Behold: greatness!)

For you Philistines out there, that’s an angel flying out of the sun, which is his home, over a monochrome rainbow, while a triceratops down below eats a snake.

(We didn’t have time to paint the also-planned-for cowboy. He was supposed to be the angel’s friend.)

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The Warm Glow of Community

The box-cutter's fault. The little green thing. By his leg.

Chance Coe, felled by a mighty blow

The picture above is ridiculous hilarious. Ridiculous.

But you probably can’t even make it out. It’s a blurry man, kneeling. What’s he doing? Praying? Retching up his guts?

Ah, good questions. I’ll help:

This is Chance, who I, A) lived with last year in Tyler, and B) admire for many things like his discipline, conservation of words, and openness to spiritual insight. Chance has a very nice mustache and beard, a questionable neck-beard thereafter, and he is very, very strong. And quick. Classify him with Artie from “The Adventures of Pete and Pete.” He’s a hometown version of Mr. Norris. A mighty individual, not easily riled up to anger or defeated by pain.

This picture is really funny because it’s his reaction to getting hit in the cash-and-prizes.

Heh. Does that help? Are you laughing yet? I mean, I am, looking at this picture. I’m inwardly chuckling like mad over here.

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

There’s a point here.You’re seeing this thing I posted on purpose, thinking it’s of interest and amusement, but more likely than not, you’ll never find this picture as funny as I will. You do not know Chance, have not lived with Chance, have never seen your friend Stephen try with all his might and energy and mischievous power to make Chance lose his veneer of calm and come out angry and turbulent. You’ve never seen Chance take control of a group of arguing people just by putting a cupped palm in the air, like a god holding an invisible goblet, to get attention and speak a simple, well-thought-out truth. You haven’t seen Chance be strong. Or silent. Or humble.

Which is why him getting his bells rung doesn’t strike you as incongruous and funny.

I think the reason this is particularly funny to me at this moment in life (and I wasn’t even THERE for the incident), is because I got to spend quality time with Chance recently. I had some business in Tyler to take care of the day or two before New Years, and I was like, “hey, I want to reconnect with some of the guys up there. Let’s make some time.”

So I got in touch with Chance, Stephen, and our friends Micah and Chris (who took the picture). These guys all live in proximity and community with each other, and I hadn’t gotten to see them since just after the summer. Add to that the fact that Waco gets pretty empty during Winter Break (thank you the Job), and I was hungry to connect, to be with people I knew and made me feel known.

We didn’t do anything remarkable up there. We shopped for flannel shirts. We watched Mortal Kombat and Stealing Harvard and ended up wanting a couple hours of our lives back. We ate frozen pizzas, we talked about life, and we spent some time in Scripture together. The guys actually get together once a week to do their own Bible Study, independent of a church, and they critique the leader of the session at the end so that he can continue to improve as a teacher. How rad is that?

More than anything, it was nice just to be with them, because they were continuing to live life on purpose together. And it woke up a desire in me to see the same in my circumstances.

I left Tyler feeling a warm glow of community, one that was only reinforced by seeing a random photo of Chance’s crotch-shot on the internet. And it made me realize: last year at this time, I wasn’t even sure I really wanted to be involved with these guys. We were doing this hard-core leadership program, and I felt my friendship to them might’ve just been an obligation. I had no choice but to live with them, but I wanted the comfortable old friends from college to be my inner circle of brotherhood.

A year later, they’re who I deliberately choose to spend my time with. Amazing.

I want the warm glow of community to be alive and well in my life. This last semester has been a little devoid of that. I mostly connect with good friends over phone and the computer, and here’s the beauty and aberration of the internet: it lets me talk about what I care about,

read what I care about,

and check in on who I care about,

but it can’t replace my community. A social networking site can help memories flare up, but it can’t hold a candle to making new ones in person. And it certainly can’t help you find a picture of an anonymous person as funny as meaningful as I do.

So what do we do with that? Do I just rely on communicating from a distance with friends like you? Do the memories of good friends keep me warm while I try like crazy to connect to you, my reader, through a medium of pictures and radio-broadcast data? Is this how we’re supposed to be buds?

Not hardly. Things are sorted out now. I’ve got the Job, the dwelling, and the income, and ultimately the Source, so it’s time to take the next step.

Young post-adult, it’s time to make friends. Local ones. GOOD ones.

Because that’s the only way I can think to keep that warm glow alive.

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Drunks, Cons, H.E.B.

Jeff was honest. I liked that about him. That, and the fact that he wasn’t asking me for money.

That’s not par for the course, because Jeff was a panhandler.

The grocery store near my apartment is a prime target for panhandlers. It’s close enough to campus to draw a ton of students, especially on a colder, rainier night like this one, when lazy co-eds want to get quickly in and out with their supplies of eggs, milk, and varying degrees of recreational beverages. I’m guessing it takes less work to hassle college students for money (since we’re supposed to be idealistic and compassionate and all), especially when the environment itself is working in your favor. But still, you hear a lot of crazy schemes, strange stories and such.

This night, I had seen Jeff standing in the parking lot and decided to go ahead and make the  first move. After introducing myself, I asked Jeff straight up if he wanted anything, like a warm beverage. He said a fifth of vodka would be fine.

“Um, I don’t know that this store sells vodka,” I told him.

“It’s okay. I already got a beer in my coat.”

He patted a bulge in his jacket, smiling. It was honesty!

I liked this.

Really, all it seemed like Jeff wanted was a little conversation himself. So we chatted in the light drizzle about some pleasantries: our names, where we were from, the weather (naturally). Jeff had a strange, square-looking bulge in his sleeve that didn’t look like beer, so I asked him about that too. He grinned proudly. It was his Scofield Reference Bible, he told me, complete with his name embossed on the cover in gold-stamped ink. It was the one thing he kept on him at all times.

This really piqued my interest. Jeff was openly a Christian, but also openly (he said this himself), a drunk. Truth be told, I don’t that I would have denied him a beer if he’d really wanted one. I was working hard to reconcile this in my mind when we got interrupted:

“Scuse me. Me and my wife just had a bad fight, and I was wonderin’… could you help me get her somethin’ to eat?”

I turned. Another panhandler had arrived. And y’know, I’d heard this story before.

If Jeff was upfront, this interloper was, more likely than not, scamming. The two of us had actually met the month prior, where he’d used that exact same scenario on me. Call me obtuse, but I’m guessing if you have a fight with your wife, repentantly feeding her might work once… but twice? In fact, if this was the same guy I’d shopped with a month or so ago, it was looking like his marriage was in pretty sore shape. (Or his wife needed to practice moderation. One of the two.)

I couldn’t remember his name, and I was pretty sure he couldn’t remember mine. All I knew is that last time, we’d gone to the convenience store across the street  and proceeded to buy a combination of necessary goods and ice cream. Necessary goods, things to live off of… that’s fine. You’ve got my dollars; here, let’s get Supermarket Sweep on this!

But ice cream?

Frivolous ice cream?

Conversation now interrupted, the new guy looked at Jeff, his face betraying some subtle embarrassment. For all he knew, Jeff was already trying to scam me, too. And I think there’s a code about this stuff: namely, don’t try to horn in on my panhandle. It’s a minor faux-pas.

The interloper reached out his hand. “What’s up, John?”

“Jeff.” Jeff corrected him.

(I felt less bad about forgetting the dude’s name.)

“So, um,” the interloper said, turning back to me, “I was wonderin’ if maybe you could help me get some ice cream, or some bread or something.”

I considered the weather. “I mean, it’s pretty cold outside. You sure you want ice cream? How about I get you something more… necessary? Like eggs, or bread, or meat?”

“Yeah. That’d be fine. How ’bout some hamburger meat?”

“You sure? I’ll get you some hamburger meat, if you need it.” (I made sure to emphasize “need.” He was so lucky; thank God that I was here to lecture a panhandler on his dietary choices.)

He thought for a second.

“Naw, get the ice cream. My wife likes Butter Pecan.”

I looked at Jeff, trying to apologize with my gaze. “I’ll be right back.”

After scooping up what I’d come for anyway– Ramen noodles, milk, cereal, and extra-fiber bread — I paused by the frozen goods case in the store to check my options. I immediately crossed off the gallon-sized ice creams — my generosity had limits.

The pints were more promising. I landed on the low-fat store brand, cheap as all get-out and sure to save some needless calories. This would help both of us out, I figured. I save some money while doing good in the world, and my beneficiary gives his wife a healthy incarnation of let’s-make-up-here’s-processed-sugar. Surely she’d be grateful that he was so considerate of her weight.

I paid and walked back out. I gave my friend his ice cream, telling him why I specially selected it and only it. He eyed the bag in his hand.

“Alright. Thanks.”

Then he walked off.

With the ice cream.

Frivolous ice cream.

I turned back to Jeff. “Can I give you a ride somewhere?”

We ended up hanging out for the next thirty minutes or so, taking refuge in my car and chatting before Jeff got back out into the cold. He told me jokes, told me stories. He told me how his sister was convinced he was going to die somewhere, forgotten, and how he wasn’t too sure she’d be wrong. His liver was shot. They kept in touch once a week anyway.

The whole time, he didn’t really ask me for one thing. Just the pleasure of staying in the car and soaking up the heater for a few short minutes. It was a cool connect. Me and a self-professed drunk, free of pretense, parked at an abandoned gas station. When I wasn’t processing the possibility of me getting unexpectedly shanked, I was enjoying myself. I was laughing.

And then he had to get out to go pee, walking into the lit gas station next door. We said goodbye. We shook hands. And though it was a fleeting moment, I felt like we connected.

I haven’t seen either Jeff or the other guy since. But I know that for one night, I felt like more of a friend to an honest bum than one with a sob-story. And it’s because I couldn’t pity Jeff.

It’s because I respected him.

I’m still trying to reconcile that.

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Should The Word “Job” Have A Long “Oh?”

I got a new job.

Now, when arriving in Waco back in August, I tried to think hard about what I’d like to spend my time as a wage earner doing. I came up with books… and coffee shops. And long-haul truck driving, but that might’ve caused parental disownership or something.

So I quickly (i.e., day I got back) put in applications at both sorts of places at the same time. Barnes and Noble hired me first and hired me quick, so I let the other apps lie fallow. And I was content to work shelving magazines and running a cash register for a couple of months.

(I was NOT content to wear business casual clothes every day, however, so I subtly decided to stick it to the Man by wearing polyester pants and thusly carving out my own offbeat style niche. Then I realized that polyester pants were uncomfortable, which is probably why the whole sexual revolution went down in the ’70’s or something. People were probably finding all sorts of excuses to take those bad boys off.)

But about a month ago, a coffee shop called, saying they were hiring. I’d researched ’em pretty well, and while the bookstore was good in and of itself, this seemed like it might just be an even better fit. And there’d be free coffee. Not to mention that I could downgrade to just khakis, or shorts, even. That was a plus.

So I signed up, said a tearful farewell to bookselling (and, honestly, a great management team and coworkers), and moved over to the land of what Stan Ward calls “legal stimulants.”

It’s been rad. I get to start my day before the sun starts his at times, but that also just means I get to come home at 11:00 and nap. (Suckers!)

But I also get minimum wage. Just like the last job. Which is still more than I’ve ever earned hourly at any previous point in life (see: Christian summer camp and college work-study). But still- you got to, I don’t know, keep the belt a little tighter on that sort of income.

I can hold down an apartment. I can eat food. I can afford the occasional new book of interest, though I visit the library more often these days. But I have gone from middle-class comfort to, well, probably what the majority of my fellow countrymen are used to. Working hard, and NOT getting glamorous dividends and rewards for it.

This is not a complaint. This is a blessing. Before this year, I was pretty sure I was unmaterialistic because I shopped at Goodwill, rather than the mall. But that’s back when I spent extraneous money on clothes (freaking polyester pants!). Now, I feel bummed if I don’t spend x amount of money on iTunes every month. What in the world?

On particularly bad days, there’s a bit of an instinct to feel like a the biblical character of yore, one whose house got blown down and his cows torn up. Who got boils on his skin and picked ’em with pottery. Who was told to curse God and die. He had a comfy life, then quickly, kaput! All he had left were his bones and his faith. But if I’m honest with myself, I got a lot more than that.

I am seeing, on one hand, how spoiled I am, if my life is dependent on the ability to point-and-buy for my comfort and satisfaction. I am, on the other, seeing how blessed I have been, and would hope to be again, with a little extra margin to do things with.

Most of all, however, I am forced to seek the face of Christ for both my joy, and my material need. And that’s never a bad thing. If I can’t escape into a new purchase for some momentary joy, makes sense that I become that much more wide open to live my life influenced by a heavenly treasure.

I even wonder if this would help me become more generous. If I learn to live with just what I need, can I freely give away the extra? Or even tithe, which is a discipline I am learning to enjoy.

Praise God that I didn’t launch into cushy-ness. Today, I am a real person, working a job that doesn’t make extra bank, and I am a small and minor part of a large and persistent workforce.

Thusly he gets bigger. And in God’s economy, the bigger he is, the better the Job gets.

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Stage Directions

Okay. Let’s give a little context here.

So far, I’ve used this space to document the joys and lessons that have come out of a year at Pine Cove, both as a valued employee of their summer camping staff and as a sometimes-really-confused student in the Forge discipleship program. And those lessons are captured in digital print so that I can be called on ’em and held to them. But I’ve neglected to talk about what’s come after.

That would be non-collegiate life in Waco, Texas.

As a student at Baylor, I used to view this place as The City Around My College. Not so much as The City Where My College Is. There’s a subtle difference, but it’s key.

Assuming I get my demographics right, this place is majorly blue-collar, and we boast one of the largest per-capita populations of folks below the poverty line in the state, if not the U.S. We house a lot of weird things ranging from creepy (“You know what’d be fun tonight? Going to that bombed-out Branch Davidian compound while it’s REALLY DARK!!”) to peculiar (one of our local museums apparently has a painting done by Hitler. As in, Adolf). We are smack in between two Texan bastions of culture, DFW and Austin, and yet none of the interest or cool factor seem to rub off. And as a student at our prestigious Jerusalem-on-the-Brazos University, it seems like the only involvement you have with the community at large is if you treat it as a project. You don’t stay in a town that merits a “poor you” mentality. And you certainly don’t go back by choice after a year away from it. That’s lame.

But my apartment’s right by 35 now! And boy, those passing trucks on the freeway do lull me to sleep at night.

So why spend time here if not to get a fine Baptist education? Well, actually, that’s the goal.

With any luck and a little prayer, I start back at Baylor for an M.S. Ed in May. But the application’s not yet filled out, and until Friday, I got no GRE scores. God has a penchant for bigger plans than I usually envision, so this may not materialize. But I’m pretty confident teaching is the next step, so I don’t see why not.

Until then, I’m taming a wild newsstand at our friendly community Barnes & Noble for a few shifts a week and trying my hand at freelancing on the side. I may have recently found myself eating mostly peanut butter to get to the end of the month. But this kind of stuff is fun. I am seeing the value of trusting Jesus for daily bread in a community where half would settle for even a weekly loaf, and those at school might be tempted to think life is a giant Panera.

So that’s the scene. The backdrop isn’t glamorous, and I’m still trying to get a hold on my lines. But there’s a lot to learn still, even outside of camp gates.

Welcome to young adulthood, Part I. May the march toward maturity continue anew.

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Contributions to Society

Here’s the problem with free wi-fi: it’s tempting to abuse the privilege.

I was in Panera Bread a couple weeks ago for a meeting. Not like, an official businessy one. More like a couple people meeting to plan something on their own time. Regardless, whatever it was, I was early for it.

I partially blame camp. If you ain’t early, you ain’t on time. I also blame my abstractly-geared memory. But waiting around, I had time to kill, so out came the handheld digital device and up came the internet. I dawdled for about 15 minutes before a friend texted me to expose my overeagerness, so I left, locking eyes with one of the front counter attendants.

When I got back, my friends still hadn’t arrived, so I got back on the web. The front counter lady was still there. I thought she was giving me a look. Then my friends finally showed up, and hey, it was about time for dinner! So I got up to order.

Now, my pocketbook is slimmer than it used to be, and as a result I am slimmer than I used to be. I choose to go cheap at resturants these days. When it was my turn in line, I decided to get one of the least costly things on the menu- a cherry bagel that was denoted as a special promotion that week. I brought out my debit card to pay no more than 2 dollars.  I gave it to the front counter attendant, who then handed back my receipt and drolly said, “thanks for your contribution.”

I was taken aback a little. What the heck?!? Now, I know it might be viewed as a little impolite to freeload off wi-fi for a bit, but I had just established myself as a paying customer! Was it just because I didn’t get some more expensive sandwich? I know the economy’s saggy, but seriously? Sarcasm? Give me a break.

We sat down and I got my bagel delivered to me. I got more disappointed: it didn’t even look right. It wasn’t a letter “O.” It looked more like a Jesus fish. One of those ones you’d find on the back of a Southern fundamentalist’s car, eating a “Darwin” fish with legs and boasting the word “Truth” inscribed inside its loopy form.

I told my friends how unhappy I’d made Panera and what I thought my bagel now looked like. One of them looked real close and observed, “hunh. It looks like one of those breast cancer ribbons. Isn’t Panera selling some bagel that helps with research?”

Oh.

“Thanks for your contribution,” she had said.

So yeah. That’s right. Even with little dollars in my pocket, I helped with cancer research. I’m a saint.

I’m also seeing that jumping to conclusions and helping society are two totally different things, even if they happen at the same time. Which I guess they did for me.

I felt less bad for freeloading then. And more bad for being a jerk.

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