Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Why Do Old People Discount Young Love?

I have often said that one of the great things about music is that listening to a song can bring you back to a specific place and time in your life to the point that you can even hear certain sounds and even remember specific scents of that time.  I had one of those moments this morning with a song I won't name... OK, it was "How Am I Supposed To Live Without You" by Michael Bolton... and it made me think of something.

When I wore a younger man's clothes (Billy Joel reference... nailed it), my luck with the ladies was not something you could consider stellar.  I seemed to be the King of the Friend Zone even before the Friend Zone had a name.  I even had a group of friends in that same boat and we called ourselves The Stepping Stones because we tended to be the nice guys girls dated in between the jerks.  It seemed to be our lot in life.  (Don't think this is a pity party here; we are all married and some of us have provided a new generation to our shenanigans.)  When we were fortunate to be able to call someone our girlfriend (much less have them refer to us as their boyfriend), life seemed a bit brighter.  The sun was warmer, food tasted better, air was cleaner to breathe, and we would waste more notebook paper on notes than we would on the classwork we were supposed to be paying attention to.

And then, there was the summertime.  There were quite a few times where I would go on vacations or to summer camp and somehow meet up with a young lady that would make my heart go pitter-patter.  I seriously was trying to figure out how to move to certain sections of the country so that I could meet girls based on where they were from.  It was like I had a War Room in my mind with maps of the United States everywhere, color coded based on my luck meeting girls from the different states.  Sad?  Maybe a little.  But I DO have an overactive imagination that I am not afraid to admit to.

But what happens when that budding love affair in those adolescent years ends?  Oh dear.  Hide the sharp objects and bring on the emotional rollercoaster that can only be equated to the effect they used on "Star Trek" whenever the Enterprise was fired upon: back and forth and back and forth and a lot of shaking.  We didn't want to talk and we felt that we were the only person in the world that understood what we were going through.  All the while, there were the adults in our lives telling us that we would see how silly we were when we got older.

Now that we ARE those adults, we do tend to use phrases like "Kiddo, you have not BEGUN to understand this," or "Everyone has to go through this at least once to grow," or even "Suck it up, buttercup: it's all downhill from here."  I get the fact that we have been there, done that, and have the scars to prove it, but why do we tend to discount these things to the generations that follow us?  It is true that we get frustrated that our kids don't want to listen to the advice of "the old people," but we all did the same thing.  Add to that the fact that each generations problems seem to get more complex (two words: THE INTERNET), and some of these kids don't know whether they are coming or going sometimes.  Heck, the same could be said of some of the adults that I know.

But here is where the complication comes in for me.  As I was listening to the Michael Bolton pseudo-power ballad lamenting for lost love and how it affected the songwriter's very existence, it made me realize something that young love lost has to deal with that we really don't.  Outside of the "summer love" that can truly be a struggle for young people in our age before computers made the entire planet accessible from our living rooms, most of their romantic relationships happen in school.  And what happens when they break up?  THEY STILL HAVE TO GO TO SCHOOL.  They still have to see their former flame's friends, and they even have to see the next person they decide to bestow their affections on, and that has to be TORTURE.  As adults, it is a lot easier to bury our heads in the sand and avoid the other person.  (Unless you are dating within your office, and we all know the old saying about doing things where you eat.  That is just a tough deal.)  And outside of convincing your parents to put you in private school or one of the two of you moving to a different continent (because that is how we felt at that age... crossing international borders was the only solution), you were in that bubble five days a week for half of the year.  And heaven forbid if you had any classes together.  The mere proximity that you could not avoid was brutality, and it was somehow worse if it was not them in the class but one of their inner circle.  You KNEW that they knew stuff you didn't and that was enough to drive even a sane person to the brink of darkness.

Combine that with the hormone levels that can only be measured by the Hubble Telescope and you have a recipe for disaster.  Sure, the generation that dealt with that before us truly wants to help us through these times, but it was one of those things that we just had to fight through to get to the other side of. And all that us old people can do is wait for them to come to us.  And then we just tell them that this too will pass and to wake up and start another day tomorrow.  Because we were there and we understand on a certain level.

So, when the former Master of the Hair Cape sings about living without someone, remember how WE heard that song and it affected our world.  It's still going on with the younger people, and we need to respect that because all they have been living for may truly be gone in that moment.

Saturday, August 08, 2015

Inside Prison Walls And Why I Can't Wait To Go Back

It is the night before a performance, and I can't go to bed just yet.  I know that I have to be up at 4:00 in the morning to get on the road to meet up with my guitarist down in Gatesville, Texas to do at least one (if not two) services in the morning.  Ken Belcher and I have been collectively known as Grace Descending for almost four years now, and I still get restless the night before we perform.

Many people have been clamoring to see us do what we do, and some have been able to see us at things like the Biker Bash in Granbury, Texas (which we will be at this year on September 5th in the late morning), or as part of the Battle of the Bands earlier this year in downtown Dallas.  Friends have been kind enough to check out our limited list of songs on Soundcloud and Reverb Nation, and some have even asked us to come and play for their churches, and we could not be more thankful for the friends we have made over the years that have also become some of our biggest supporters.  But the largest crowds that we have been able to play in front of are some of the most amazing and participatory crowds you will ever see.

They are in prison.

Now, when I say "they are in prison," I don't mean metaphorically (although some of them do qualify under this category).  I mean it literally.  Most of you know this, but for those of you that don't, Ken and I have been a part of a network of ministries that take the time to bring the Gospel to the men and women of various prisons of all levels around the state of Texas.  The first time I was able to do this was about four years ago when we were part of a Praise and Worship team at our church.  I have always been a "Lord, I will go where you send me" kind of guy, but when I agreed to do this for the first time, even I had to look up and say, "Did I hear you right?  THIS is where you want me to go?  Are you SURE?"  But knowing that I was going in surrounded by people that truly would not leave me on my own was enough to say I would try it at least once.

What I was not prepared for was how heavy the Holy Spirit would be in that place that evening.  These offenders truly had a heart for God that even made me ask myself some hard questions.  Their willingness to participate truly blew me away and it even made my faith a little bit stronger.  What I thought would be going into the darkness and hoping that a single person would hear what we had to say turned into a room with arms raised and voices singing that almost brought me to tears.

Since that day, we have just about seen it all in these services, but the biggest thing that we have seen is people changing their lives and focusing them on God.  I have heard my share of detractors that have a very jaded view of what may or may not go on while we are in there, but people will only believe what they want to believe.  I want to believe that we are truly doing our best to help people see the love of Jesus through us and want to be a part of the body of Christ.  Recently, we were even able to take our full band in with us thanks to the great Tammy Schaefer Ministries, who have stood by us through thick and thin with more love and support than any group of people should be allowed.  That service was one of the best services I have ever been a part of in any capacity.

And tomorrow, we get to do it again.  I have spent over 42 years on this planet, and my God has shown me so many things that I cannot understand what makes me worthy of the blessings that He gives me.  I am truly one of the luckiest souls on the planet on SO many levels: to be able to call Grace Descending a ministry that I am part of, to have people like Al & Tammy Schaefer and their entire ministry team past, present, and future in my life that support and give the chance to do what we do, to have people like Ken and Heather Belcher in my life as friends (someday, I will chronicle the Grace D story... it is an AMAZING one, kids) who I can honestly say are the yin to my yang, and I theirs, and to have so many great people that I have had the privilege to call "friend" and/or "family" that have lifted us up even when we didn't want to be.

Sure, the road can be long.  The temperatures can be less than desirable.  The hours can start early and end late.  But I would do it every day for the rest of my life if I could.  Hindsight being what it is, this thing called "music ministry" is something that has been in my blood my whole life.  Sometimes, I wish I could have figured it out much earlier, but there was no way that I would be ready for it.  Whether we want to believe it or not, God's time is on time, every time.  We can question why, we can shout to the heavens "WHY ME, LORD?  WHY NOT SOMEONE ELSE?"  But what we realize in the end, the answer is simple.

"Because it is part of My plan for you."

We don't always understand that plan; we are not meant to.  Sometimes, a leap of faith is just that.  It took me walking through that metal door for the first time to understand that plan, and that plan has taken me to places that I never thought possible and those places have made my understanding of the plan stronger and stronger.  I will tell you what I know is this: I can't wait to go through that metal door again and again and again.  I can't wait to bring The Word to the crowd in front of us.  I can't wait to see Kenny, Heather, Al, Tammy, and the rest of the crew.  And I hope someday, that we get to see all of you worshiping with us on the OUTSIDE of those gates.

I love you all more than you may ever know.

Rob