Looking in the broken mirror

There’s a certain freedom in the anonynimity of the Internet. Sometimes it’s hard to know how to navigate that freedom. It’s a useful exercise. Ask a person, if they could commit a crime in which they were guaranteed never to be caught what crime would they commit? Would there be some sliding scale in terms of depravity? I know what my answer would be. That there would be one person who would know that a crime had been committed. That person couldn’t live with himself.

I’ve been at this game a while now. This is my fourth blog in four years. It can definitely be carthetic to allow your rants into the public domain. Most of the time there are far worse methods of dealing with the struggles and strains that life throws at us. Typing text into a page where in reality only a few dozen strangers scattered across the globe will end up reading it is “mostly harmless” with one exception. It’s something the inestimable Stephen Fry touched upon. Any medium, or any form where a person expresses their opinion becomes a vehicle for self-indulgence, self-gratification and narcissism of the highest order. My opinion matters. My feelings matter. My hurts matter. They do matter. But the danger is that we we acquire delusions of adequacy. My feelings matter more. My unreasonable expectations matter more. And as Mr. Fry points out in his podcast above he is guilty of the same as is this black pot building itself up into a right little huff in front of you over that self-righteous kettle.

I suppose I should start by getting it out of the way where I definitely screwed up. I flirted too much. I made too many comments about sexual acts in a manner designed to provoke a reaction. And in some instances I engaged in cyber sex. It’s funny how an activity on the one hand can be so addictive and on the other hand, when described to a stranger made to sound so stupid. Take football for instance. The most popular sport in the world bar none. Yet if Marvin the Martian arrived tomorrow and you tried to explain the sport to him you may have a tough time relating how so much money revolves around the abilities of twenty two men to guide a spherical object in a skilled manner. It’s something I often wonder about. Pornography or cyber sex or even voyeurism. Isn’t it on one level an incredibly absurd activity? Yet even the simple sentences at the start of this paragraph fail to convey the intense way doing something like that can affect the people involved.

Then there’s the areas where I was unwise or naieve. I think that in heterosexual opposite sex friendships if you ignore the attraction factor you’re an idiot. It either gets discussed and dealt with or it gets ignored, and festers. It can eventually become a non-issue but only after many years. I’ve got a soft heart. I love too soon and too easily. I want to help. I want to make things better. I like to see people smile and to see people happy. Fulfilling the second most important commandment and all that. If you’ll excuse the arrogance I wonder if God’s like that. Loving more than he should. One virtue doesn’t make up for vices though. Widsome and discernment need to be exercised in the Christan walk.

Blogging has become part of what I do; how I live my life. It’s impossible not to do it any more really. It’s how I, to use that annoying term from the American vernacular, process things. It’s how I sort them out in my head. But the problem arises when it concerns other people. There’s an altogether massive illusion with regard to how what we blog can be seen. There’s issues associated with the generation gap and the digital divide. A person reading from another continent may find the nicknames you use for the people at work endearing or amusing but a second degree of separation acquaintance who happens to stumble across your blog will more often than not put two and two together. What you intended to communicate; what you actually communicated; what a person actually understood and how they interpreted might as well be electrons buzzing around your own self important nucleus.

We fool ourselves into thinking that we can blog without consequence. I try to not blog about a person without having talked to them about the issues that I’m blogging on. It’s not easily done though. We live in the Web 2.0 world. It’s all about broadcast and sometimes we just have to shut out the noise. The observer effect is easily forgotten. In politics or the world of celebrity there are often rumours about a new appointment. Person X is in line for the vacant job. In politics at least, the people who don’t know talk. The people who do know don’t. It’s an easy trap to fall into. It’s easy to do. To vent and rant but it very rarely solves the issue. In fact with me, venting and ranting just emphasises why the issue exists in the first place.

It’s socially acceptable to talk about a woman’s instinct. I’m not sure what the male equivalent is but there are times I’ve ignored my gut feeling on an issue. And every time it’s come back to bite me in the ass. This year is only nine days old and it’s already seen important people leave my life. I find it ironic that I’m having done unto me what I’m doing unto others, in a manner of speaking; I’m not sure it’s what Jesus intended but it’s an interesting perspective. You don’t really have a choice in what happens to you in life. Sometimes it just does. You do get to choose how you react to it. I hope that I can swallow my own feelings and emotions as they bubble and act in love. Another family left my fellowship a while back. One member asked for prayer for blessing before he left. I was one of the people who prayed with him. I know it hurts. I know what I want to do and to scream and shout but thus far I’ve been successful in giving that to God and acting the way I feel a follower of Christ should when confronted with hurt.

My fellowship recently had a family leave us. Over 29 years of relationship and now it’s no more. It sucks. It hurts. That’s life. Some people said that what was going on was covenant breaking and that it was sin. I’m not sure if I agree with that. I haven’t read enough to come to a firm opinion on it. The discussion itself tended towards acrimony at points. I prefer to remember the positives from life and draw out all that was good from a relationship. I know a man who spent three weeks being fed only on bread and water by his own parents because of his faith is praying for me every day. I know he is because he said he would. I don’t know if/when I’ll see them again. But I know there’s love there. And that’s why it hurts so much.

I sometimes wonder what my character flaws are. The ones nobody tells me about. I know what buttons a person can push to get me angry but I’m not going to leave a step by step list here :-) I guess I find myself worrying that I’m too forgiving at times. Maybe I should get more angry. Maybe I should get more upset. Maybe that’s all bollox and I should continue as I am. I don’t know. But I’ll probably blog some more about it

3 Responses to “Looking in the broken mirror”


  1. 1 Esther Saturday, 10 January, 2009 at 19:22

    I think you are wrong about having the attraction discussion with friends of the opposite sex. Unless it does become an issue I would leave it out of the friendship. I think it would only make things awkward. For me it is possible to acknowledge within myself that I have an attraction but it doesn’t mean anything. I never know the friend in question as well as I know myself and my husband. It’s easy to be attracted to someone when you have no history with the person. My response to attraction is to accept it, ignore it and move on to the friends portion of the friendship. And just so you know, I love others very easily and forever. I recently lost a friend (he started avoiding and ignoring me with no explanation) and it took me an entire year to accept the fact that he’s just not going to talk to me anymore. Now I’m okay with that. But I will not forget the friendship.

    As for the rest of your post, I haven’t thought of anything I can say about it and I probably won’t.

  2. 2 decisivelyuncertain Sunday, 11 January, 2009 at 03:09

    Esther
    Can I just say thank you for being so straight forward? It’s one of the things I really find refreshing in you.

    I suppose this is where my blogging for myself and making sure I communicate clearly to anyone who reads clash

    I would like to think that in the case where a person is in a covenant relationship that another individual would respect that and not even bring up the matter of sexual tension. Love is not a feeling. It is a decision. According to the Scriptures it is a command. So the idea that married people would discuss something of that nature with a person who isn’t their spouse is one that is a very dangerous one in my book.

    I think with young people around our age of life, especially in Christian circles, the whole subject needs to be discussed in an appropriate manner if one party feels it is an issue. People need to be wise and exercise discernment in how they interact and who they discuss things with but if it’s proving to be a problem ignoring it solves nothing for me.

    My response to attraction is to accept it, ignore it and move on to the friends portion of the friendship.

    That’s a wise attitude for a person in a marriage. I’m just not sure it’s necessarily as wise for two single friends. Ideally they would discuss it with the people they are in covenant with and then limit their interaction alone or something like that. Hormones and emotions don’t handle logic well though and that’s my fear.

  3. 3 Esther Monday, 12 January, 2009 at 18:19

    I am nothing if not direct. There was a time when I would have called myself blunt, but that’s not true. I’m direct and sometimes lacking in tact. Anyway, thanks. I’m glad that it doesn’t bother you.

    After considering your thoughts I do agree in part. You are right about being single and sometimes having to have certain conversations. Obviously, it would be irresponsible and even wrong for a married person to discuss something like that with someone other than his or her spouse — except when telling the person that it’s just not meant to be if the other person brings it up.

    I think even before I was married and even before I was dating my husband the whole attraction conversation served to make a few relationships awkward. It got in the way when the other person wanted to bring it up and then the friendship was never the same again. I guess you have to be willing to take the risk if you know you feel something toward someone that you want to pursue. Sometimes it’s better to stay friends. I’d say waiting and getting to know someone is probably the only security a single person has against those awkward, lost friendships.


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