I work at a library. I believe it might be the greatest job in the world and is definitely the greatest job for me. Because I get to read books, talk about books and music and movies, recommend books and music and movies and generally nerd out with my fellow library peeps.
And I get to write blogs. Really cool blogs. About things I care about and think others might find useful.
Like this blog post about strong female characters in books for adults. I also wrote this one about books featuring strong girls for children.
I'd do this stuff for free.
But I have the best job in the world.
:)
Monday, January 21, 2013
Saturday, January 12, 2013
How Theatre and D&D Saved My Life.
I have started and stopped this entry countless times. But as a lovely theatre friend put it in her blog: "I realize I’ve been avoiding having this conversation with myself and others...so it's time".
I am the most content in this place in
my life, than I have ever been. And I credit theatre and Dungeons
and Dragons.
Roughly a year and a half ago, I was
utterly and completely lost. I was told by the director of my church
choir that the ministry team of the church had decided that I was no
longer welcome to sing in the choir I had been a part of for more
than 10 years.
What grievous thing did I (and other
members) do to get kicked out of a volunteer church choir? We were
too old, too experienced, not the right demographic.
Being in that choir and involved in
that church was a huge part of who I was. I made countless friends
there. It shaped my schedule, my commitments, and my service. And choir was the
greatest part of how I worshiped. Music has always been my
favorite way to find God, to speak to God, to listen to God.
These weren't faceless bureaucrats that
summarily dismissed me. They were people I considered family and
when they kicked me out of my church, they cut off personal contact
and kicked me out of their lives, too. Maybe they couldn't look me
in the eye, but there were certainly bridges burning all around me.
So, I cried for three days and tried to
figure out what I was supposed to do. Who was I now?
My church had abandoned me, but God
never did.
A few days after the aforementioned
events, I got an email for a person I have still never met. She got
my name from a friend that thought I might be interested in being in
a sci-fi rock opera. A community theatre company still needed some
actors to fill out their cast. I auditioned and was cast. I made
new friends. I had the most fun I have ever had on stage. I laughed
and sang and danced and felt like a person again.
Two days after that show closed, one of
my new theatre friends convinced me to audition for another show. I
did and was cast. And in that show, standing beneath bright lights
on stage, I felt God and home and fire and purpose. And I thank the
Creator for the people who led me there.
“Ok, so theatre I get. But how did
being an enormous nerd help you out?”
During all of the tears and the
upheaval and terror of auditions, I was participating in a Dungeons
and Dragons gaming group with some friends. That's right, we are
young professionals and we game. Loud and proud.
We were friends when we started, but we
are family now. They, and the Gaming Widows, appeared right when I needed them. I thank the
Creator for nerd-love and for putting them in my life. They held the
line, carried the light, and sounded the applause when I finally
found myself again.
Sometimes, people suck. They
disappoint you, betray you, and break your heart. Maybe it does all
happen for a reason.
Or maybe I'm too damn stubborn to let
them break me.
Either way, a year and a half, I'm
still doing theatre, still gaming -- happy again.
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Just Do It.
New Year.
Not really a new me.
I'm
pretty happy with the me I've got.
But I have decided to finally get
serious about this blogging thing. Mostly I've just been doing book
reviews and rather sporadically at that, but I have so many other
ideas: cooking, crafting, catharsis. It's time to stop talking and
start typing. Stay tuned...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
