This blog begins with the death of something quite large, though I am a bit unsure as to what that really is. Perhaps the blog is the last lament to true human interactions in a world that has gone digital. Perhaps the blog marks the beginning of the end of Western Civilization and human physicality; the laughter of friends, the lover's kiss, and a mother's soft and comforting cradle may, at worst, be endangered by this overwhelming and yet subtle behemoth that we call the internet and all her social implications. But, just perhaps, it gives us a tool, in an increasingly busy and distant world to share some piece of ourselves with those who mean much to us. Which is the truer sense of looking at the blog I cannot say (though I suspect a combination of both), but in an effort to keep in close contact with friends and family I intend to not so much document, but share about my life as it grows, changes, and adapts over the next few pivotal years. I will miss the passing conversations beginning with, "How are you?" and "What's new?" and hope that, in some small way, this blog can be a substitution for the very small, but oh so significant chatter that fills our lives.
Issues of psychology and societal philosophy aside, this blog, on a personal level, begins with a death as well. In one month I will be moving from Oshkosh, WI, having just graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh with a Bachelor's degree, to our Nation's Capital to continue my education in pursuit of a Master's degree in Catholic Theology. On the surface, it seems simply a step forward and a shortish move to a slightly warmer location, but this move could not carry any more significance in my life. It signals my movement from childhood to adulthood (though I am still grappling with the meaning of these terms). It signals the end of a very large and beautiful chapter in my life. I will be leaving behind the city of my birth and childhood, the city of first loves, best friends, family, normalcy, and the center of everything that I know to embark on an exciting, but terrifying journey to a very different city and a very different life. People are the centers of our life and I am leaving behind everyone that I've ever known and all of the people that have meant so much to me. I face change on the grandest scale and it certainly rings loudest with melancholy and a touch of the bittersweet.
Words are funny things. They are weightless and yet they can weigh us down, trip us up, and can be a source of great difficulty. I will never be able to tell all of the people around me how much I will miss them and what they have meant to me. Thankfully, words can also be the source of our greatest joys. It is often times easier to speak what we really feel with the time and reflection that must be put into writing. Hopefully, I will be able to say and speak things through this blog that I would have otherwise been too embarrassed, shy, inattentive, or forgetful to say.
In the face of so many unknowns and endings, I have a great excitement for my future. I will certainly keep in close contact with those I love and I will see them as often as life permits. My relationships will change, but they will remain. I do not face to lose very much, but I may gain much more. Education, independence, warmer weather, a bigger city, and sheer newness all sound pretty exciting right now.
I wanted to start this blog now, as opposed to that first week in DC, because I think that endings are a crucial part to new beginnings. How can we understand the future without the past? The next month will be bittersweet as I try and pack in as much time as possible with all the people I love before I move. I could never have enough time. But I know that it will be an interesting month and I'm happy that Nick brought up the idea of blogging now. I can't promise that every post will be serious, entertaining, informative, or even coherent, but that should be an accurate portrayal of life.
Thank Yous are in order-
For the past year I have lived at Fr. Carr's Place 2b helping, hopefully in some small way, to feed the hungry and give the homeless in our area a place to stay. I wish I could say that I worked as hard as I could have. I didn't. But I do feel that I learned quite a bit about myself and the world over the past year and I hope that in giving some of my time to help the place that I helped for things to run just a bit more smoothly. I had the privilege of meeting so many new people and have felt very loved and supported, even when I'm hard to live with. I really appreciate all that everyone has done for me here and I will always feel a part of this family.
I also need to thank my friends. We've spent a lot of time together and helped each other through the painful and sort of absurd process of 'growing up,' whether we knew it or not. I have been shaped and molded by this group in innumerable ways and I could not have made it a day past 5 without them. We've always been there with each other and I know that that will continue on with those closest to me until we sit on a porch somewhere, pipes extending from wrinkly faces, discussing the good old days of the summer after freshman year, nights in the Campus Center, ketchup popsicles and "...if anything it's gonna be a mountain", Call of Duty at Kev's, weenie whistles etc. etc. (you know who you are).
My girlfriend has stood by me through thick and thin (literally). I've really learned a lot from her and she means the world to me.
Mr. Renner is the subject of an entire book, but along with my parents, he has introduced me to Truth and been absolutely instrumental in my life. Words fail epically in trying to sum up his significance. Indeed, my whole move, education, and career choices stem directly from his influence. (A lot of professors would tell me to lose the comma after 'education' in that last sentence, but I stick by it because that's the way Mr. Renner said it ought to be done and anything else is simply an English heresy of modernism and laziness). In The Great Divorce, C.S. Lewis mused that those who have had the largest impact on our lives and our relationship with God, those who have taught us and helped us discover ourselves, the world, and our Source greet us in heaven and show us all that is to be seen. For Lewis, this was George MacDonald and if this is truly how heaven works and if I have succeeded in life only through God's infinite mercy I am positive that I'll be looking for Mr. Renner to introduce me to heaven just as he has always done.
I owe my biggest thanks to my parents. They have loved me unconditionally for 22 years and I know that that alone has pushed them to the brink of sainthood. (My brother seems more than capable of providing that final nudge). I owe everything to them for making my life and dreams attainable via financial support, but more importantly through teaching me by word and example how to be a decent human being. They taught me to keep things in perspective, to always do the right thing, to work hard, and keep things tidy. I'm still working on all 4. I hope that in some way, I can resemble them as I grow older and that all of my childishness and crabbiness will not outweigh their pride in who I will turn out to be. They have been the clearest picture of Christ to me as they continue to sacrifice their entire being for my brother and I.
There are so many countless people who I could and should thank. There are so many countless family members, friends, and acquaintances that I wish I could have more time with to grow closer, but I suppose that is always the case with life. All of these people have been a part of who I am.
I apologize for the length of this post and also for its overdramatic flare. As W.B. Yeats said, "Being Irish, I have an abiding sense of tragedy which sustains me through temporary periods of joy." He was a funny guy.
I'm reminded of another quote. I'm not sure if he made it up, but my father certainly said it a lot growing up. It goes something like, "You can wish in one hand and shit in the other, but guess which one will fill up first." Here's hoping that you all can have a laugh or two at me as I try to figure out what being an adult means. Here's also hoping that God blesses you all and that relationships stay strong even as life, work, school, marriages, travel, etc. puts physical distance between us. Start a blog yourself and we'll keep in touch.
Dominus Vobiscum,
Taylor
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I just have to say that this first post really did bring tears to my eyes. I am looking forward to reading your blog as you embark on your independent journy to D.C. I will pray for you everyday and I will worry about you everytime I read about some tragedy that happens near your residence. I'm positive that you will do very well in school and quite certain you will become one of the most successful Theology professors in the United States someday. Your "perfectionest" style of life will allow you to achieve great heights that I believe will set you apart from others in your field. I do look forward to the days far away from now when we are able to sit out on the porch or a dock sipping away at our pipes discussing the old times.
ReplyDeleteRight now though I want to say a few very important things that I have always been too shy or hesitant to put out there. This may be awkward for anyone besides Taylor and maybe Taylor too. First of all, "...and I say this with an unblemished record of staunch heterosexuality..." as George Costanza would say... I have never truly loved another man as much as I love you. You've been there for me in any and every way possible. Literally, there is not one person on the face of this earth who has meant more to me the last decade of my life than you. I am who I am because of you. For that, I am very thankful.
The other thing is that I am sorry. This probably should have been said in private much longer ago but as I've aged, I've become far more introverted and I see this as an oppurtunity for me to get things out. I'm sorry for not being as good of a friend as I once was. I'm sorry for not always being there and I'm sorry that things aren't the same in our relationship as they once were back when we were 15 or 16 getting chills watching Meredith Viera discuss the Beatles. I'm sorry for not being there to talk to as much as I once was. I'm sorry for not expressing my feelings to you and not always being comfortable to listen to yours as we used to. It seems that ever since we came to DePere and literally lived within 5 feet of each other that our relationship has changed... and not always for the better. Now, it may not necessarily be worse but it is definitely different and no one will ever deny that. Hopefully, we have grown a deeper and long lasting friendship. We have both changed in curious ways I believe, and I think that these changes stem directly from things that have happened to us in the last few years of our lives. I will not discuss those things specifically but to me that point is obvious. I hope that you can remember me fondly and know that no matter where you are or what you are doing, that I'll be there for you. I'm going to miss you so much...
Brought to tears by your departure,
Nicky Sem
I just read your question on google help and wanted to just take a quick guess at it.
ReplyDeleteI am in the midst of learning blog design and have come across this problem before.
My best guess would be that the resolution of the computers you are using are different. My husbands computer is a lot bigger than mine and has a different resolution. When I look at my blog on his computer the colors become a lot brighter and the layout shrinks.
I don't think there is anything you can do to fix it unless someone else on google help knows a way.
Hope this helps...
Lindsay
www.whenmommymetblog.com
I look forward to reading. Very touching entry. As much guff/flak/shit as I give you, you are certainly an insightful person, even if I don't always agree with your opinions. Best of luck and you will certainly be missed.
ReplyDelete-Cappy
Thanks for responding guys.
ReplyDeleteCaptaine - I appreciate your honesty and genuine nature. I'll miss giving you crap as well. Hopefully we'll see each other whenever I'm back. You should come and hang out in DC when you're free too. We can contemplate all the art in the Smithsonian.
Sem - What can I say? You are the best friend that I've ever had and I will miss you very dearly. As sad as I am to leave behind so many people, thankfully I have the reassurance of knowing that you and I will always be the best of friends no matter what life throws at us. We've been through a million different problems, situations, social scenarios etc. and the one constant is our friendship. That has meant the world to me. I once made a list of all the people that I trusted in this world. As you could perhaps guess, it was extremely short, but you were of course in the number one spot.
Our relationship has grown and changed, but only because we as individuals have changed so much over the years. I think we've both grown to be quite introspective (for better or worse) and I know that I find it hard to speak with anyone about a lot of things. This is perhaps the beauty of the blog. We can keep in touch (though I know we will be in touch through other various outlets), but this way I can speak about things that I otherwise wouldn't feel comfortable or wouldn't want to bother people with.
I'm still not exactly certain what life is or what is happening to us now, but it certainly is vastly different than anything I've known. We had a lot of great times in high school and afterward, but I appreciate and love the few people who mean a lot to me more than ever before. I can't think of anyone else I'd rather experience and discuss the woes of "maturity," responsibility, adulthood, women, and existential angst with. Maybe we watch too much Woody Allen. Maybe not.
I could never tell you how much I respect you or how much you mean to me so I'm not even going to try. Just in case you don't make it to 125 I'll save it all for your funeral.
Taylor,
ReplyDeleteGuess I'm a bit of a creeper. I found Nick's blog and it led me to yours. But I'm glad!
First of all, I commend you for your writing itself. It's seriously enjoyable to read your insights and I appreciate your willingness to share. Blogging is indeed weird and perhaps a sign of the impersonal turn our universe is taking. But then again, it can also be a tool that connects, and that's neat.
Secondly, congratulations on your exciting "next step." I think you'll do great things in D.C., and I have no doubts about your abilities as a future instructor of Theology. I must say that I am glad, after perhaps wandering a bit, that your heart has been reunited with Catholicism. Sure, I have some issues with our Church, but ours is, first and foremost, a beautiful faith. Your desire to continue deepening your knowledge of that faith and your personal relationship with God-- and your decision to pursue as your life's work the education of others with regard to this topic-- is really inspiring. I'm excited for you and all that is to come.
Also, you mention acquaintances that you would have liked to get to know more. You should know that, for me, you've always fallen into that category. Thanks to creepy conveniences like Facebook, however, I suppose we can stay relatively connected and perhaps even have a conversation again someday in the future. :)
And finally, I think that all this business about "growing up" is pretty hard to navigate, and I'm glad to see that you've managed to wade through the mess of uncertainty and discern what it is you'd like to do with your gifts and passions and questions. I wish you all the best. As for me, I still have absolutely no idea what I'm doing with my life, but someone once told me something kind of cheesy but entirely true: We may not know what our future holds, but we know Who holds our future.
Newness is frightening. Leaving Oshkosh, where we've put down such deep roots and have formed such inextricable bonds, is terrifying. But there's a big, beautiful, challenging, confusing world out there ready to teach us all sorts of things, and that growth is good. Your roots will always be here; now spread those wings!
I should honestly write Graduation greeting cards. Goodness gracious.
Good luck. Many blessings. Keep writing, please!
Perhaps also overly melodramatic (but well meaning), Your friend,
Amanda (Wolff)