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DEVOTION LEADERSHIP INTEGRITY PATIENCE HUMOR TECHNOLOGY |
DevotionStill waters run deep. My loyalty lies in many directions. I am a U. of Southern Cal Trojan, and shall always be. I am a Davis Blue Devil and shall always be. My friends are a priority. To the profession I have chosen as a career path, I intend to follow wherever it shall lead me. I am a brother of Alpha Rho Chi, and that right shall never be forsaken. My oath(s) for all offices I have held or will hold, all confidences I have been graced with, shall never be broken. These are the spheres in which my life revolve. I find that this is a quality that can be taught, but from the individual to own it, it must rise and make its presence known to others. How far will I take my devotion? I can only answer I have not lived long enough to have it truely tested. 2001.1118Reflection on Faith FaithYour faith was strong, but you needed proof. You saw her bathing on the roof, her beauty and the moonlight over threw you. She tied you to a kitchen chair, she broke you throne, she cut your hair, and from your lips, she drew a 'Hallelujah'.-Rufus Wainwright "Hallejuljah" Faith is something up until recently I didn't honestly ever question if I had this trait.
As a recent discovery, I find myself believing very much in 'blind faith', faith that comes because
you have to believe that certain events will occur. This is not to detract from my religion, nor
from my belief in the scientific theories. I again employ the use of blind faith with regards to my fraternity. On a recent return to trip to the University in search of some serious employment as I am unemployed, I stayed over to watch the proceedings of the fraternity. As an active member, I believed and often said, often told, the catch all phrase "Andronicus will live on." While you're sitting there trying to make decisions, you know that come hell or high water, the fraternity will survive. And sitting there in a meeting where I no longer had the right to voice my opinion, I suddenly felt deprived and cut off. I didn't need a voice, but I sincerely felt that there were principles that were missing when I did have a voice, when I did sweat and worry needlessly. I know deep down the principles are there, and those that have the voice believe in them. I have to convince myself that blind faith will lead them and myself to the answers every time. It's a hard lesson, and the alum before me keep patting me on the head and telling me it's not my chapter. It may not be my chapter, but it sure as hell isn't any easier not to let your heart skip a beat when you don't hear something said correctly, or a bit of history get thrown out because it's in the interest of conserving time. The first time I had to so suspend my blind faith was actually in a religious service.
My confirmation, no less. In the Catholic Church, confirmation is the moment one declares for
one's self that they ARE Catholic, that the individual believes in God, Christ, the Spirit, and
all the doctrines. It by no means does not prevent the person from questioning faith, that may go
on a lifetime, but you pledge before the entire parish that you will and are able of conducting
oneself as a good Catholic. Now that defintion does meet up with some serious theological fine
tuning, none of which I can actually provide the reader unfortunately. Neither of my parents by
definition are Catholic. Blind Faith doesn't solve problems. It can't feel, it can't even promise that the right answer will be found. As a principle, it provides comfort that the priciples believed in will prevail overall. I have to believe. It's the one source of comfort I allow myself. 2002.0410 LoveLove takes time to heal when you're hurting so much. Couldn't you see that I was blind to love you. I cannot keep the pain inside 'cause love takes time. And I don't want to be here. I don't want to be here for long. Loosing my mind from this hollow in my heart. Suddenly I'm so incomplete. Lord, tell me how to stop the pain. Tears are falling endlessly.- Mariah Carey "Love Takes Time" I hold back from everything I really want to say. (Should I let my guard down?) I don't, I don't make commitments that can break. (Baby it's just too late, it's just too late.) This doesn't have to be love, but it's all I can feel. It doesn't have to be anything at all, but why is it so hard to fall from this high above? Wilson Phillips "This Doesn't Have To Be Love" Then what is this I'm going through tonight? If my heart is lying there, then why am I aching to hold you forever? Give a part of me I thought I'd never give again to someone I could loose? If I'm not in love with you? It�s the heart afraid of breaking that never learns to dance. It�s the dream afraid of waking that never takes the chance. It�s the one who won�t be taken, who cannot seem to give. And the soul afraid of dying that never learns to live. When the night has been too lonely, and the road has been too long. When you think that love is only for the lucky and the strong. Just remember, in the winter, far beneath the bitter snow. Lies the seed that with the sun�s love, in the spring, becomes the rose. -Bette Midler "The Rose" This is not even a sampleing of what love is described as. Broken, new, or healing, love has probably been the most fickle of any of my experiences. And I can't honestly say I've ever been in love. I've definately wanted to be in love, and there have been times that I was thoughly convinced I was. I've definately been given a lot of advice. Mostly, again, blindly faithful, that it'll find me because apparently to date, it sure as hell hasn't found me. I can say at this point in my life I a very tiny part of me still hopes for my last significant other to pull it together, but I know in reality, that this person is better off with out me, as this person does need to pull it together and spend more time healing and dealing with life. All of my crushes, well, they're just crushes, and guess what? I'm over them. (Okay, maybe not so much over my 'screen heroes' crushes, but those are people I've never met, and probably never will meet, so for all purposes, they're quite safe.) I was once encouraged to make good on my initial crush being reminded fundamentally, that anything worth loving, has to be worth loosing. And as painful as loosing was, it was worth it for those short months. Maybe one day I'll get another chance, with someone else. Until then, love is ellusive, but it's not broken or shattered. But I think I can do without blind love. 2002.0410 DeathWould you know my name if I saw you in heaven? Would it be the same if I saw you in heaven? I must be strong and carry on. 'Cause I know I don't belong in heaven. -Eric Clapton "Tears in Heaven" I was six the first time I went to a funeral. I was fourteen before I understood how fragile life was. Now with this in mind, it's been ten years since Andrew Mockus was killed in Davis. Ten years. I'll spare you the details, but it was fueled by three things (according to all reports) firstly he was drunker than a fish, he was high, and the group that actually was convicted of killing him were also in the same conditions. And the lightbulb that went off in the person who pushed him into the train wasn't exactly the brightest of the bunch. His death taught me a lot about human nature. I will never walk into a room of angry parents. I will never buy someone I don't know a beer or any drink for that matter. And finally, some people can be 'corrected' and others, their fathers will bail them out only to crumble when their kid screws up again. Andrew's death sparked a fury in Davis the kind that had never been seen, a least not since the time a student was killed on the DHS campus itself. I went to an open PTA meeting with my mother because the Student Council, which I had been a part of at the time had planned on being there. My mother didn't really want any part of the meeting, but went along out of curiosity. Seeking refuge among the other Student Council members at one far table, I sat waiting for the meeting to start. When the PTA President got wind of this, she thought it would be 'wonderful' if we were broken up and a voice at every group of tables. My mentor and teacher at the time did mention to me in passing as I was transplanted that I would have been probably more successful if the student council hadn't broken up. But in my table of twenty some odd parents while reminded that "Whenever you point one finger, there are three others pointing back at you." the rabid parents squelched my movements to moderation. I ended up shutting one of them up because he insisted that detention should be "pure hell lead on a Saturday by a Marine Drill Sergent." I rebuttled after fustration of hearing him repeat himself five or six times by asking him "So you don't discipline your kids and you want someone else to watch your kids? Send them to boarding school it will be cheaper." No one solved anything or could brain storm for the given topic-preventing this, Andrew's death, from happening again. And the subsequent meetings, I never returned. The rabid desires played out a year later, as I knew they would. It's all but swept under the rug, and so many new people live in Davis, no one understands the shrine by the railroad tracks, or the the grove of redwood trees planted in Andrew's memory. Just those who were involved in his life. As I was never in that circle, I'll never have the grief, or question the robbery of a boy's life. Life happens. And subsequently, so does death. It's tragic to someone so young, expected to someone much older. You do what you have to do to protect the kids, to watch them grow up. But I find truth in the fact that if you loose one every now and then, you have a new appreciation for why they're so precious in the first place. I don't advocate killing of kids by any means. Pedophiles and the like should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law without a second thought. But it's ironic that it always takes a loss to realize how precious something really is. 2002.05.1
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