Monday, September 13, 2010

Find Your Hope...

It seems like life and your journey has been the source of countless songs over generations. It might be Aerosmith reminding you that “life’s a journey, not a destination,” or Miley Cyrus telling you “ain’t about what’s waiting on the side… it’s the climb.” But a life without hope is a terrible thing. Hope spring eternal and you have to believe that the next day will be better than the last.
You have to make constant strides to improve yourself. In life, you are either growing or you are dying. There can be no stagnation because that draws complacency. And that is when you grow lazy, unfocused, and things can slip away from you.
Fight. Fight as if your life depends on it because chances are… it does. Fight for what you want and what you believe in. Hope. Hope for the best but make your destiny yours. And if you need some inspiration, here are some words that spoke volumes to me here very recently…

HOPE IN ACTION
Hope looks for the good in people instead of harping on the worst.
Hope opens doors where despair closes them.
Hope discovers what can be done instead of
grumbling about what cannot.
Hope draws its power from a deep trust in God
and in the basic goodness of mankind.
Hope lights a candle instead of cursing the darkness.
Hope regards problems, small or large, as opportunities.
Hope sets big goals and is not frustrated by
repeated difficulties or setbacks.
Hope accepts misunderstanding as the price
for serving the greater good of others.
Hope is a good loser because it has the divine assurance of final victory.

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

How to Keep Me Off Crystal Meth…

I have had three people in my life that have been incredibly influential and could not be more diametrically different. Yet, all three have one common factor that links them all together. The first is my father. The second is my high school football coach. The third is the store director at my 9-to-5 job. The one trait that all these men share is that I never wanted to disappoint them. If I was ever addicted to crystal meth and had to be on that show Intervention, all it would take is a panel of these three men in which they all say to me, “I am very disappointed in you, son.” I would shatter like a pane of glass and then be ready to be built back up by one of those motivational speakers that yell at you and you thank them for it afterwards. Pay attention, Ray Lewis. Just saying… There are job opportunities out there after football.
The relationship with my father has always been a strong one. Given the fact that he gave me life, food, shelter, and so forth, it seems pretty obvious why I would not want to disappoint him. Yet, not all people have a similar relationship with their paterfamilias. Others could care less what their fathers’ think of them.
Then there is my football coach. His coaching style left you with a desire to make him happy. I remember blowing a big play and then having to make that horrible run to the sidelines after the series was over. Yet, not all coaches can inspire that kind of relationship with their players. If you could, there would be none of these sorted tales of NFL players shooting themselves in the leg with a pistol tucked into the waistband of his sweatpants. There would be no Pacman Joneses. No Michael Vicks. They would not do stupid things for fear of disappointing their coaches. I watch America’s Game all the time on NFL Network and clearly, some coaches are better at this ability than others.
Then there is my boss at work. I cannot put my finger on it. I have worked with a large number of managers over the course of my retail career. I have found that some managers are promoted to a level of authority without being properly trained to truly manage people. Others just know how to treat people that work with them. Is it instinctive or is it taught? Is it both?
Regardless, I had to defuse a situation yesterday and I did it by taking power into my own hands. Better to go to them and say, “This is what I did” as opposed to them having to come to me. But in doing so, my biggest fear – the cottonmouth, the acid in the stomach – was that my boss would be disappointed with me. Granted, what I did was a minor infraction. There was never any fear that my job was actually in jeopardy but I did not want to have to make that “walk of shame.” And not the good kind that you make from a fraternity or sorority house where you at least have a story to tell and some inappropriate pictures on your cell phone (if you are lucky).
I did not want to disappoint him.
Curiously, one of my very good friends recently was involved in an incident and was transferred to another store. When we talked (at length) about what was going on, his biggest complaint with the entire situation is that he felt he had let Charley down. So, I am not the only person that feels this way. But I am sure that there are other people out there that could give a flip less what Charley (or their current boss) thinks of them.
So what is it? What is that intangible factor that motivates people to not be a disappointment in Person X’s eyes? Is it something instinctive where either you have it or you don’t? Can it be taught? More importantly, can it be bottled? What a powerful weapon that would be…
I have always wondered. Who drills the drill instructors? We have all seen R. Lee Ermey’s performance in Full Metal Jacket. Who are the instructors that train those men to become such revered teachers? Because I want to meet THAT person…

Tuesday, July 06, 2010

Tanks, Driving Your Car, & Destiny…

As corny and clichĂ© as it may sound, the universe can speak to you at times and you have to be prepared to listen to what it is saying. You don’t want to have the headphones to your MP3 player tucked in when you are about to hear some advice.
So, I have spoken in the past about my crippling addiction to World of Warcraft. Wait. Don’t quit reading. I am giving you a metaphor. Okay, so in that game, you do these dungeon runs where you get lumped in with four other players. You have a healer (who keeps everyone’s health up), three DPSers (which stands for Damage Per Second), and your Tank. The Tank is your meat shield. They wear heavy armor and have lots of health. They don’t dole out a lot of damage but they are not supposed to. That is the DPSers’ job. The tanks job is to wave the flare at the T-Rex so it won’t eat the kids in the stranded SUV. Then when the T-Rex starts chasing you, all the DPS burn him down with their high attack power.
Tanks inevitably have to be the leader of the group. They set the tempo for the attacks and make a dungeon run smoothly. Get a great one and your jaw drops on floor. But get a bad one and everyone dies and the other toons (players) wearing plate armor have a massive repair bill. A tank has made the commitment to be leader of the group. You are carrying the group on your shoulders and you promise to keep them safe. “I will get you through this dungeon and everyone is going to go home safe with some gold in their pockets and hopefully a new weapon or piece of armor.”
So far, in the game, I have been a DPSer. And I feel like I am getting better all the time. I feel solid in my role, learn from my mistakes, and can be counted on to wail away on those bad guys – especially against multiple enemies. As a DPS Paladin (or the horribly nicknamed Retadin for Retribution Paladin), I bring the pain and the more enemies around me, the more damage I do. But I am beginning to dip my toe into the pool of tanking. Playing this game for over a year now and understanding the mechanics more, it is time for me to step up into a leadership position. It is time for me to be in the driver’s seat.
Coincidentally, I have been watching NFL Network a lot lately. I love Hard Knocks and America’s Game. Very recently, I ran across the America’s Game featuring the 2003 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. One of the players featured in that episode was Warren Sapp talking about his Super Bowl victory. I’ve always loved Sapp (except for his time spent as a Raider) and I love to see him on NFL Total Access. Sure enough, later that evening, Sapp was on Total Access talking about the difference between football players. If a football team is a car, some players are drivers and some are passengers. Being a driver is a big responsibility. Some players should only be passengers and it is only when they are suddenly shoved into the driver’s seat that they realize that should be passengers.
All quarterbacks have to be drivers. Emmitt Smith was a great running back but Troy Aikman was the leader of that team. Peyton Manning. Eli Manning. Brett Farve. Joe Montana. People remember the quarterbacks most of all. Defenses are a little different. Warren Sapp. Ray Lewis. Michael Strahan. Reggie White. Leaders can emerge from multiple positions.
So looking around at my life, I realize that far too much, I am a passenger. I am too dependent on too many things and I am not driving my life. I am too dependent on my 9-to-5 which I hate and is a major source of stress in my life. In my comic book writing, I am too dependent on editors deciding which projects I do. I have to wait for them to say yes or no to approve a project or edit an existing project to advance my career. I am too dependant on that credit card bill I let spiral out of control.
I have decided to make massive changes in my life. It is too long in coming. Things have to change. Because how I feel right now, this is not how life was supposed to be. It is time to slide out of the passenger seat and take the wheel.
It’s time for me to be the tank…

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Meeting Your Heroes…

There is an old expression out there that you should never meet your heroes. Most of the time, you have put them up on a pedestal in your mind and to have that come crashing down can be devastating. Back when I had a MySpace page (remember when MySpace was cool?), I liked to do my own graphics and I had one that featured the Top 5 people I would liked to be trapped in an elevator with. Vin Diesel was tops in the list because we go to the same barber and I want to do a CHRONICLES OF RIDDICK comic book. But what if I actually got a chance to meet Vin and he blew me off or was a total jerk. It would sour all of my feelings for him – wouldn’t be a fan anymore. Hans Zimmer? Joe Quesada? Stephen Colbert? How would it change my feelings if they were jerks?
So with MySpace dying, I converted over to Facebook. I have become fans of several famous people, one of which was Seth Grahame-Smith, after reading his book Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter. Curious to see what other writers might be on the list and having just finished The Ghost King, I looked up my #1 favorite author of all time. I have what I call my Magnificent Seven – the seven people who have influenced me the most creatively. Arnold Schwarzenegger, James Cameron, Jim Lee, Todd McFarlane, Kevin Smith, and topping the list is George Lucas. (I know that is only six.) Lucas tops the list in the number one category. But imagine my surprise when I found #2 on my list on Facebook…
The #2 slot belongs to a gentleman named R.A. Salvatore. Salvatore is not the household name that others are on the list. Although most people might not know Lee or McFarlane. Google or Wikipedia them. I can’t do everything for you! Salvatore is a New York Times Best Selling Author who created the character of Drizzt Do’Urden. Salvatore made me want to write. In all his book dust jackets, they talk of how The Lord of the Rings changed his life. I always wanted to meet him, shake his hand and say, “The Crystal Shard changed my life.”
That book put me on the path to becoming a writer. There is no doubt about it. I think it is a rarity where you can look back on something and say, “This [book/film/college class/set of boobs/etc.] changed my life.” So on his FB page, it had an email address.
Hey, if he didn’t want fans to email him, he wouldn’t put the address out there. Right? Now, again, you don’t want to put people up on pedestals. Many times they do not survive the fall when they crash down to reality. But I sent a politely worded email to Mr. Salvatore and tried not to gush too much.
Imagine my surprise when he emailed me back… And not some form letter. He actually took the time to write me back. That is a pretty cool thing. And we have exchanged several emails since. I was going to be an eternal fan of his anyway but to know that he appreciates his fans… that just cements it even more.
Life is all about lessons. You cannot imagine my excitement when R.A. Salvatore popped up in my email inbox… When it comes to fan mail or if I ever am popular enough to make into the comic book convention circuit, I am going to remember how important it is to be accessible and friendly to fans. I probably would have been that way anyway – Mrs. Foley’s baby boy could not be any other way. But it is always nice to get some reinforcement.

The Rumors of My Demise Have Been Greatly Exaggerated…

What the hell? I haven’t done an entry since the end of March? I know most of you Ryaddicts must be pulling your hair out at this point. I wish I could explain my absence. It might be my addiction to World of Warcraft or my recent involvement with Facebook. I wish I could say that. But truth be told, I have signed gag orders with the government promising not to disclose too much information. Let’s just say that certain ninja skills were required in a place I like to call Ear-nay Fghanistan-way. The world is now safer because of me. You’re welcome. Medal of Freedom please… [Making grabby hand gestures.]
Getting back into the swing of things takes a little time and practice. I have created two pages on Facebook. One is dedicated to all the crazy wackadoo that one would expect coming from me – even though I have toned down my language now that both my boys are on FB. The other page is dedicated to me as a Comic Book Writer – which is infinitely more professional and probably more insightful.
But I am trying to get back into the swing of things. With a little bit of luck, my current comic book publisher and I are in negotiations to possibly create my first 100% original project for them. You have to understand how big a milestone this is for me creatively. All of my projects thus far have all been adaptations of classic novels, mythological stories, or commissioned projects. Even with all my other publishers (Image, MVCreations, and Arcana), all my works have been commissions… except for one.
That title is known as THE PRAETORIAN. The artist assigned to that project (the ridiculously talented Robert Gill) is chewing through Issue #3 as I write this blog. So between THE PRAETORIAN and this current project that I have submitted, it would give me two books that are all me. 100%. Which means if they suck story content or character wise, it is all on me. On the other hand, if they are a success and people like them, it is all on me. And that is pretty darn cool. I am not saying that Robert and I are creating the next Drizzt Do’Urden or Red Sonja or anything – that will be kind of up to the readers to decide. But to create a character that has the potential to be out there in the comic book lexicon... Well that should be the dream of every comic book creator.
As a creative individual, you inevitably want to flex your muscles. You want to expand your horizons to become a better writer. I took on the task of writing STOLEN HEARTS because I wanted to see if I could write a romance book. I wanted to see if I could. Thankfully, given the editorial comments, blog reviews, and reader praise, I guess I did a pretty good job. But you never know until you try. That is why you have to get out of your comfort zone every now and again. Broaden those horizons. You won’t be sorry. At least if you fail, you fail while daring greatly…

“It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error or shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself for a worthy cause; who, at the best, knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who knew neither victory nor defeat.”
Teddy Roosevelt, speaking at the Sorbonne in Paris, April 23, 1910

Saturday, March 27, 2010

And The Meek Shall Inherit The Earth… But It’s Kind of a Fixer-Upper

This entry began as a review for my blog dedicated to movie reviews but I quickly surmised that it was more fitting to put these thoughts within my own more introspective blog. I just watched Capitalism: A Love Story and it got me thinking. If you watch a movie and rush out and want to talk to people about it, then that is the sign of a good film. If it can stir up emotions in you, it is a freaking awesome movie. Now, I do not agree with everything that the director put out there but there are several instances where you do just want to stand up and scream, “WTF?!”
If I had to pigeon hole me into a specific category, I would have to say that my religion is Christian but have yet to find a denomination that fits my personal POV. I feel like everyone is entitled to his or her own faith. Who am I to say that Muslim, Buddhists, or Shinto are wrong and I am right? I feel like there are many different highways to get to Disneyland. The destination is the same and we all get to the same place. We just take different routes to get there. Some may take the main highways while other take boulevards, and other sneak over the fence while the security guards aren’t looking.
So, without getting lost in ecumenical politics or offending the majority of my audience, I find that I am liberal about some things and conservative about others. I want a strong military. I want criminals brutalized. I want small government and I want Uncle Sam to keep his nose out of my business.
But at the same time, I want drugs legalized so we can tax the revenue and make it less dangerous for those that chose to partake. I want prostitution legalized. I want gambling legalized. I think food stamps and welfare are great to use as a crutch – as long as you don’t make it your lifestyle.
I do not hate capitalism. I would fully embrace it in its most pure and uncorrupted form. But what Michael Moore brings to light in his movie is just infuriating. If his facts are accurate, the top 1% of this country possesses more wealth than the bottom 95% combined. Think about that.
It is clear through his interpretation that Moore is not a fan of Bush, Cheney, and the Republican Party. But in his movie, he equally takes the Democrats to task. The TRUE villain of the film is the banking industry. I am not talking about your local branches and the small town banks but corporations like AIG, Goldman Sachs, and Merrill Lynch. The underhanded things that these corporations were doing are just disgusting.
Like many underprivileged Americans, my retirement and 401k plan consists of the lottery tickets that I purchase. I know I am never going to win but I find it interesting to imagine scenarios and what I would do with the money. Aside from my fully functioning replica of the Tumbler from Batman Begins and my castle room to play World of Warcraft in, I would start several businesses – including my gentlemen’s club Fairy Tails. But with me well off financially, I would ensure that the lion’s share of the profits went back to the employees – since they are the true backbone of a company. It is not its CEO or executives that make a company work. It is the grunts working in the mud and the blood everyday. They are the ones that make it work.
One of the more poignant segments of the movie is how people believe that God has blessed America and it is his favorite nation in the history of the world. Yet, I feel that Jesus might be a tad irked about our capitalistic system. If the system was pure and uncorrupted and worked the way it is supposed to, I don’t think he would have that much of a problem with it. But have you seen mankind lately? We screw up everything we touch!
Did Jesus not talk about being kind to the poor? Did He not say how you treat the least of my brethren you treat me? And yet, the wealthy CEOs at all of these massive companies are making ridiculous salaries while grunt workers unable to make their mortgage payments are being shown the door.
This is why I wish the poor and the day-to-day workers could be granted their own businesses because they would know how to treat the people who work under them with respect. But sometimes, the world just doesn’t work that way… and it is a damn shame. C’mon lottery. [And I am fully aware of the irony of talking about starting a gentlemen’s club and citing Jesus in the same article.]
So while I am not one for massive citing of religious text within this blog, I found this article on the Internet and it seemed to speak volumes. Enjoy this food for thought:
To the rich, God has given wealth that they may relieve and comfort His suffering children; but too often they are indifferent to the wants of others. They feel themselves superior to their poor brethren. They do not put themselves in the poor man's place. They do not understand the temptations and struggles of the poor, and mercy dies out of their hearts. In costly dwellings and splendid churches, the rich shut themselves away from the poor; the means that God has given to bless the needy is spent in pampering pride and selfishness. The poor are robbed daily of the education they should have concerning the tender mercies of God; for He has made ample provision that they should be comforted with the necessities of life. They are compelled to feel the poverty that narrows life, and are often tempted to become envious, jealous, and full of evil surmisings. Those who themselves have not endured the pressure of want too often treat the poor in a contemptuous way, and make them feel that they are looked upon as paupers.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Oklahoma Weather & Childhood Memories

I don’t want to be one of those slack-jawed yokels that say, “Gawl dang, lookie at all this snow!” However, Friday was the last day of winter here in Oklahoma. It was 72 degrees, warm, and sunny with a nice breeze. Yesterday was the first day of spring and there is a foot of snow on the ground. The wind is howling and snowdrifts were piled so high we got stuck in the middle of the road. So I called in as “unavailable” to work today.
Yesterday, I managed to make it home from work fine as the temperature was not bitterly cold and the massive wind had not kicked up yet. On Friday, I was home from work and the kids were on Spring Break. I warned them to go outside on Friday because on Saturday, they would not be able to.
Sure enough, the snow came. Normally I have to chase Jason out of the house and away from the video games with a broom. But yesterday, while I was at work, Amy told me that she could not keep Jason inside. Decked out in his black Under Armor and dressed in his Clone Trooper helmet, Jason reenacted the Imperial assault on the Rebel base on Hoth.
This got me to thinking of my own childhood and how the apple certainly doesn’t fall far from the tree. I grew up in North Carolina in the city of Charlotte. Now, for Charlotte to receive snow, it has to come up through Georgia – which doesn’t happen very often.
But I remember one winter we finally got snow… and being a young Star Wars fan, this was the moment you waited for since you saw The Empire Strikes Back. Before you were relegated to draping white sheets over the carpet and furniture in the den (until your parents discovered what you were doing). But the problem is my mother never bought just plain white sheets. So all my Hoth environments had little paisleys or designs on them.
But finally, snow. Honest to goodness, deep snow. I remember setting my Tauntaun action figures out with the cold weather Luke Skywalker riding him and then taking my snow speeder and flying circles around him (by running in the yard) to get the picture perfect camera angles for my mind’s eye.
I would flop down in the snow and play with the Tauntaun and my Wampa Ice Creature, reenacting the whole scene over and over again, despite my front getting soaked from lying in the snow… and I could have cared less. I think it is extremely cool that my sons are just as obsessed with a wonderful thing like Star Wars just as I was at that age. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree at all…

Friday, March 19, 2010

How Honest Abe & The Undead Made Me Look Like A Psycho in Wal-Mart…

Disclaimer: Everything I am about to tell you is TRUE.
Today, I went to my local Wal-Mart to pick up some pizza for the kids’ lunch, dinner for tonight, and a Monster for me. (It is my last guilty pleasure with my diet.) I am not a compulsive person by any means. I was there with a mission: food, pricing a new set of headphones & mic for my computer, and to price a new TV to replace the boys’ that went nuclear last night.
I was done shopping but for reasons that cannot be explained, I went down the aisle with the books and magazines “just to see.” Then, it caught my eye – this wonderfully, ridiculous template of utter insanity. When I first saw it, I said out loud, “What?” The title was four words that should never have justifiably been used together in… well, in all of modern history. I snatched it off the rack began devouring the dust jacket blurbs – scarcely able to contain my excitement of this incredibly off-the-wall concept.
And I immediately started laughing. I had to have this book. No matter what it took. So I called the Comptroller and got the disbursement of funds approved.
Book in hand, I laughed all the way to the check out stand. I talked up my purchase with the cashier – who did not seem to openly share my mirth in the book title. I laughed in the parking lot. I laughed all the way through Pryor. As I was driving, I was thinking to myself, “To whom can I call to tell this story of abject insanity? Who can I call that would appreciate this tale as much as me?”
Out of all my friends, I knew there was only one. There was only one perfect choice. He was the first on the list… So I scrolled to the end of my address book and pulled up “X-Ray Man Aaron.” This man is a black hole for books. I proceeded to tell him the story almost exactly the same as I have told it to you now. As I reached the conclusion of my tale and I prepared to unleash the title of this masterpiece, Aaron simply said, “Let me guess…”
I could not have anticipated this would be his response but, really, there could be no other conclusion to this tale. And then he said those four precious words:
Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.
I gave a huzzah that rattled the windows in my car and we continued with the discussion. As it turns out, he is reading the exact same book right now. Now, just let that title sink in for a minute. Yep, the author has taken real moments from Lincoln’s history and has blended in elements of vampirism. This is his follow-up to Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.
I would type more but I have to start reading right now. Good bye, free time. Let’s start the insanity.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Building Great Foundations For People Can Start With You

I am extremely lucky in that I knew from a very early age the industry I wanted to be in. Comic books (or Graphic Novels for all you snooty peoples out there) quickly became my passion. Originally intending to break into the industry as an artist, I quickly realized my art talents were not up to snuff and I began to switch over to more of the writing aspect. Obviously, this has paid off in dividends. I still consider myself an artist but I paint my pictures with words now instead of my pencils.
Still, in high school, any teacher that paid attention knew about my artistic side. Nurturing artistic sides can be a difficult thing. I love Michael BublĂ© and I totally wish I could sing like him. He does a rendition of I’ve Got You Under My Skin that just blows the roof off the dump. But I don’t have the chops. I just don’t. And you have to be careful not to nurture people when the talent isn’t there. Want proof that this happens? Watch any start to the American Idol season. So you have to have passion but you also have to have a certain amount of natural ability. The embers have to be in there to start the fire.
Now, my dad is an All-American Water Polo player. He is in the Swimming Hall of Fame. To this day, he still has that “swimmer’s body.” Clearly the athletic gene in the Foley DNA strain skips a generation. I played High School football for two years. Don’t worry. This isn’t some Al Bundy tirade that ends with me saying, “I played High School football! All City back in ’66. Scored four touchdowns in a single game.”
Fact of the matter is I stunk at football. Well, let me take that back. I was the best Scum-O running back Adair football had ever seen. (If you don’t know what Scum-O is, ask your brother.) I was smart enough to know how to run multiple opposing team’s offenses from every position so that our First Team Defense could practice against it. Unfortunately, I had no athletic ability. I had heart for miles and wanted to perform desperately… but I just didn’t have the chops.
Between my Sophomore and Junior year of high school, things went south at my house. My mom & dad both lost their jobs in the same month. The SAME MONTH. And a decision was made. If I wanted the high dollar sneakers and the fancy jeans and my comic books, I had to get a job.
Now, when you go from playing high school football in a small town to NOT playing high school football, your stock has a tendency to dip. I think it was a year or maybe two after I graduated from high school that I ran into my football coach at a basketball game. The first thing he asked me was if I was still drawing.
Man, are you kidding me? Do you know how special that is for an athletic coach to recognize the true gifts of a person and acknowledge the importance of cultivating that gift – especially when said gifts are not athletically related?
So, needless to say, I was not surprised at all when I just heard that Coach Russell Kruse was part of the 2010 class of inductees for the Oklahoma Coaches Hall of Fame.
Teachers, mentors, parents, Big Brothers & Sisters, all of you have the potential to play an extremely important role in a person’s life. You can be a rock of encouragement. You can be a source of inspiration. You can be a booster.
Ask yourself sometime, “What role am I playing?” After all, you never know whom you might inspire…

Sunday, March 07, 2010

Finding Him and Yourself in the Details

I have professed my love of the films of Kevin Smith for years. And while I am not skilled enough to critique his skills as a director, I know beyond a shadow of a doubt, that he is a fantastic writer. In one of his more controversial films (for really no reason whatsoever), Smith wrote the following dialogue for Rufus the 13th Apostle who was purposefully left out of the Bible because he was black. Speaking of Jesus, Rufus said:
“He likes to listen to people talk. Christ loved to sit around the fire and listen to me and the other guys. You know whenever we were going on about unimportant shit he always had a smile on his face.”
There is an expression that God is in the details. The true definition of person does not come in the big, sweeping questions. Christian? Jew? Muslim? Republican? Democrat? Pro-gun? Anti-Abortion? Giants fan? Cowboys fan? (Although for the record, that last one… yeah, just stone those people in the streets.) People are never impressed with the broad strokes of an artist. Broad strokes do not a painting make. It is the small strokes, the subtle blends, and the minutiae of the details that make a piece of art or music truly inspiring.
Now, stick with me. It seems like over the last several months, a few people have been removed from my life because of job changes. And it is strange. My former boss and I at our 9-to-5 used to share stories as we were setting up the department of the day. These conversations could be about World of Warcraft, fantasy football, movies, cool facts discovered on TV shows (we both dig the History Channel and Discovery)… All of the conversations were of things that, in the grand scheme of things, had no relevant bearing in my life. I don’t want to call the topics “stupid” but more “inane” than anything else.
I have friends from high school – good friends – friends that I would be happy to call brother. Some of these guys I have not seen in years. We maintain contact via email and Facebook but it does not have the same level of closeness. So you would think that if we got back together, we would have just loads of stuff to talk about. And yet… have you ever experienced that? You should just be spouting Wikipedia levels of information at this person. It has been three years! But you find yourself with nothing to talk about.
Then I have my friend Luke who I see all the time at work. To this day, we have NEVER run out of things to talk about. Granted most of those conversations revolve around boobs, video games, intercourse of various fashions (filmed and live), work related BS, movies, and such. By all accounts, it is all inconsequential… Yet I crave those conversations.
So if we are made in His image, and if God is in the details, then one could surmise that these inconsequential details – this unimportant stuff – are who we truly are. It is these little exchanges, this small, meaningless crap that actually makes your life worth living. So to this argument, I would add a quote from one of history’s greatest minds.
Everything that can be counted does not necessarily count; everything that counts cannot necessarily be counted. --Albert Einstein