A note from the editor:
What do we do when "supposed to" isn't bringing the happiness we've been promised? How do we react to others whom we perceive as "not doing what they're supposed to"? Do we create an "enemy" in our speech regarding those with whom we don't agree, and thus make them less relatable to us? How do we experience connection? Does God love us despite of, because of, or in our differences?
Once again I invite you to move in and read a story that differs from your own. One about curiosity and differences and wickedness.
Once again I invite you to move in and read a story that differs from your own. One about curiosity and differences and wickedness.
Story 4 of many.
What is Wickedness?
I took a sip of beer. And I didn't like it. Tasted like a fruit rollup made of rotten
fruit. So why did I drink the beer? Because I was curious. Curiosity killed the cat. Will it kill my soul too?
* * *
I wanted to write about feeling
lonely, feeling like a failure, having no friends, crying myself to sleep, not
being feminine enough for some people to appreciate me, feeling ugly and
unappreciated and like no one cares. I
wanted to write about everything that has happened to me in my twenties. But I cannot.
Well, I could, but it would take too long and who would want to read
that? Instead, I am writing about curiosity and differences and wickedness. Because when I was young, I was taught that wickedness never was happiness. And some people that I thought were wicked
because they did not follow to the 'T' what I believed were a lot happier than
me. So I began to question what
wickedness was and why I was judging these people to be wicked. The
guys who I took my first sip of beer with had been and were still drinking a
Great Pyramid of beer cans. And they
were happy. And I sipped my beer with
them and I was happy.
I was raised to believe that
partaking in alcoholic beverages is bad for you and I am not saying that it is
not. Alcohol can lead to a whole slurry
of traumas and problems and darkened, twisted paths. So if I took a sip, or maybe three, to really
know the taste, was I wicked? Was I
breaking religious laws and becoming unclean?
* * *
Other
people are not like me and I am not like other people. I have never had a steady relationship with a
man, I am not married, never graduated college and in the last three years have
visited eight countries and lived in three.
My plans for the next two years involve me visiting at least two more
countries and living in one more. A lot
of my friends are married, have graduated, are having kids, have settled down
and figured out what they want to do with their lives. And they seem happy. I have not figured myself out nor have I
followed, based on my friends, what the 'norm' is. It's not that I would not like to have a
partner or a husband to share my adventures with, or a steady job so that I
wouldn't have to live day to day and week to week, it is just that it has not happened yet. I am different. Does that make me wicked?
wicked /ˈwɪkɪd/ - evil or morally wrong; intended to or
capable of harming someone or something
(Oxford English Dictionary)
Intended to or capable
of harming someone. Alcohol. Drunk driving. Capable of harming someone. Water.
Driving. And I could still go out
and due to negligence, strike another car and harm someone. Is it the drink that is wicked or the person?
different /ˈdɪf(ə)r(ə)nt/ - not the same as another;
distinct separate (OED)
Or is the person just different than
I am? Is alcohol just a different drink
than to what I drink? Were the four men
sitting and drinking a barrage of beers just different? Am I just different? Does
God still love us both?
Will He still love me if I continue to travel and if I am different? And if I am curious?
* * *
My religion taught me never to
partake of drugs or alcohol and to more or less stick to appropriated gender
roles. Men are men, women are
women. Women should marry men, men
should marry women. If we do what is
right, God will bless us. If we do what
is wrong, God will punish us. But as I
look out into the world, I do not see this.
I do not see that conformity blesses every individual. Diversity
flourishes the heart.
In the past three years, I have been
offered marijuana, jell-o shots (jell-o made with vodka instead of water), I
have had beers spilled on my clothes and my shoes, seen people add drugs to
their own drinks and I have loved
every minute of these interactions.
Because these people cared about me.
They were not offering me drinks or drugs to hurt me, they were
genuinely offering them to me because they enjoyed them and thought I might
like a spin too. And these nights where
beer stuck to my clothes and skin and smoke followed me into my car were some
of the best nights of my life.
Every single one of these
experiences has happened at a rock concert: AC/DC, Guns n' Roses and U2. Even though every single person in that crowd
was different, our souls transcended
above this earthly plane into an ethereal world where the music was our bones and our hearts beating in time and the
sweat and the drugs and the drinks were merely our fleshy coverings.
People hear rock music and think of
drugs and sex. I hear rock music and think of freedom and the ability to all come
together despite our differences.
Not because we are all wicked people bathing in more wickedness. But
because we are individuals knit together in
our differences.
Curiosity into the realm of live
music and what I have found there in people has stirred my soul, not crushed my
soul.
Is this jumping all over the
place? Is any of this making sense?
We jump to judgment, we jump to
condemn but we do not see the talent, the goodness, the richness of lives
around us.
I saw a Drag Queen once who was so
beautiful. And who had on the most
amazing black and white outfit. I was at
a bar when I saw her. Are these points
of wickedness or points of eye-opening understanding? Because when I walked up to her and told her
that I was in love with her ensemble, she told me that she herself had made
it. Have you ever tried sewing a cute
little dress composed of different pieces of cloth? I can barely sew in a bloody straight line,
but maybe you are a sewing master. If
not a sewing genius, you will understand the profound respect I suddenly gained
for this man who was dressed as a woman.
This man who was brave enough to dress as a woman in front of others,
who was not ashamed, who was different and who was kind and who had sewing
skills beyond my comprehension. He was
not wicked. He was simply a he being a
she for the night and she was kind and fun and talented.
Me?
I was at the bar because I was curious.
There were slews of other people around me drinking what may be to some
people a wicked drink. Did I have any
problems there? No. In fact, one of the men who I had sipped my
first beer with, actually came up and danced with me and the Drag Queen when
they put music on for all to enjoy. Is
this all coming together? Beer sipping
and music and people who are different?
This is so hard for me to write and
I do not know why. Maybe because I do
know people who would judge, who would say this is all wickedness. Because they are too scared to step outside
of their own bubble and see other parts of the world. I am not saying that everyone has to travel
around as I have done. But I mean seeing different parts of their own world. So you live in a privileged family in a nice
house in a neighborhood where you can walk out safely at night. Go to a homeless shelter. Feed those and see those who are not like
you. Take a walk to a place where you
would not usually go. I do not care if
it is a bar or the library. Because there will be people there.
People you do not know, you may have
never seen and they will be different from you.
Maybe they have piercings or tattoos or drink or smoke or cuss like a
sailor. Maybe they have a job that seems
less than desirable or a lack of formal education. Or maybe they are extremely successful, dress
in Armani suits, drive a Mercedes Benz and own a summer home on Lake
Tahoe. Maybe they seem completely dull
and a snooze but have actually been to all seven continents and yes, that
includes Antarctica. Who would ever
know? Would you ever know? If you weren't willing to take your first sip
of beer would you ever know that the taste was horrible?
I was taught that wickedness is not
happiness. Which means in the world,
there are so many good and happy people.
People who are different. But who
are good.
Behold I say unto you, difference is not wickedness.
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