On August 4, 2013 I spoke here at Northlake and inadvertently
misquoted Emerson when I said that ‘It’s not about the destination; it’s about
the journey.’ I didn’t even know that Emerson was credited with the words ‘Life
is a journey, not a destination.’ On August 10th, I left Bellevue in
my truck and towed my new home away with me.
The first question that I am often asked is ‘why are you on
this journey?’ In all fairness, I have to say that it depends on who is asking.
It was a long-time dream to be able to just travel and see all that I had
missed while I was driving the freeways from destination to destination in my
life. I decided that from now on, anyplace I would have driven past or flown over, I was
going to stop and see. And it is a remarkable journey that continues as soon as
I walk out of church this morning and get back in my truck.
But there was more to it than that. A desire to go see would
never have gotten me off my butt and on the road. In 2012, I entered a period
of darkness and secretly battled depression for most of the year. Perhaps you
have even experienced this. No light was coming into my life so I decided to go
out in search of it.
This is not a travelogue. Rev. Marian asked me to talk about
what I’ve learned and how I’ve grown. So whether you want to hear it or not,
that’s what you get this morning. Some of it surprises even me.
Part I
Part of that was also realizing I was not ruled by a clock.
There is nowhere in the past fifteen months until I returned to Seattle that I
needed to be on time. There was no need for me to drive 70 or 75 mph just
because that was the speed limit. I made it a practice not to go above 60 when
I was pulling the trailer and if I discovered cars behind me to pull over and
let them pass. After all, they are probably late for something important. I
reduce my speed to the speed limit when I enter towns and make it my practice
to never, ever exceed the speed
limit. To keep from accidentally speeding up, I set the cruise control at 35,
30, 25. I am always down to the speed limit by the time I pass the sign that
gives it and never speed up to the new speed limit until I pass the sign that
announces it.
Hmm. That is an interesting concept. How often have I put my
life on cruise control and not paid attention to my speed. How often in life
have I become angry when people ahead of me are not going my speed? My entire
adventure has led me to take my life off cruise control.
Part II
One of the things that kept me coming to Northlake over the
years was the commitment to social justice. In 2007, the church started the
share the plate program as part of its commitment to the ten-year plan to end
homelessness in King County. A thousand dollars a month of undesignated
offerings is given to organizations working with the homeless in King County.
We’ve given over $94,000 so far. I put my crumpled $5 bill in the offering
plate each Sunday I’m here. So we must be doing something right. Right?
According to the One-Night Count done near the end of
January each year, there were 7,839 people homeless in King County on the night
of January 25-26, 2007. On the night of January 24-25, 2014, there were 9,194
people homeless in King County. An increase of 17% in eight years. There is one more Tent City than there was at
that time. The number of people in transitional housing—the housing that should
be moving people off the street into permanent homes—fell by 50 people. The
number in overnight shelters rose by 22%. And the number of homeless in our
county who spent the night on the street without shelter rose 45%.
Believe me, I am not condemning our efforts in any way. The
work of the shelters, churches, and organizations working on this problem are
doing a good thing and are well-supported by our donations. But it was a
wake-up to me to realize that I can’t change the world.
I published a book two years ago by an educator in New York
titled Counterfeit Kids: Why they can’t
think and how to save them. It is a book worth reading.
When I was a child, my address was RR2, Mishawaka, Indiana.
That’s an address, but it isn’t a location. From the time I was old enough to
understand language, I was told that I lived 8/10ths of a mile north of U.S. 20
on Elder Road. That was a location.
I haven’t been everywhere, but I’ve been a lot of where. Now
I’m going to ask you to think in very big terms. The beginning of the Universe.
What scientists call the Big Bang. How old is the Universe? Let’s say that the
Big Bang was in Boston, 12 Billion years ago. The earth is about 4 billion
years old. That means that on my journey across the U.S., with the Big Bang in Boston,
I would already have reached Yellowstone National Park before the earth solidified in its
orbit.
Animals first appeared about five miles south of Portland.
In the play Inherit the Wind, a fictional account of the Scopes Monkey Trial on the teaching of evolution in public schools in Tennessee in 1925, defense lawyer Henry Drummond ended the play by saying of prosecutor Matthew Harrison Brady, "He looked for God too high up and too far away." And that's where we look for problems to solve.
That’s what I learned. I can’t change the world. I can’t end
homelessness in King County. In fact, I wrote a novel in 2010, published this
year that is a journey inside the head of a chronically homeless man. It
exceeded all my sales projections. I anticipated sales of ten copies and eleven
actually bought that book. And I think half the people who bought it are in
this room and the other half are in my family tree. It’s a hard book to read.
Not because it is difficult words or badly written. I wrote it. Of course, it
is perfect. But because the man in this book will never not be homeless.
I love this church’s vision statement and I read or recite
it with you each Sunday morning I am here:
I can’t
be that community. I can be a vibrant
and welcoming person. Well, welcoming, at least. I would have to think long and
hard about what it would mean for me to be vibrant. I do know that I can feed
the human spirit.
Many of you know that in addition to writing mysteries and
thrillers and the odd literary fiction, I also have a pseudonym, Devon Layne,
under which I write erotic romance and adventure. Think Fifty Shades of Grey, only actually well-written, with a plot, and
likable characters. I have eight books out under that name. When Odalisque was released last year, I
started getting email.
As I was preparing this on Tuesday, I received an email from
a person who had just finished reading my book “Redtail”, published in January.
His email said: “I’ve never lived north of Texas but have driven past Laramie,
& I can hear that hawk in my mind. As my days are numbered, I find comfort
in the hope that friends are waiting. Thanks for the work & creativity.”
Even in stories that are, shall we say, frivolous, I can feed the human spirit
and maybe feed a few humans, too.
I don’t know yet exactly how to light a beacon for love and
justice in my life, but I’ll willingly aspire to that.
My great revelation, my growth, my discovery, is that I
cannot change the world. But if you are busy changing the world, perhaps I
could cook you dinner.
Part III
But that is what sells. It sells newspapers. It sells
television shows. It sells shares and likes on Facebook. And it simply makes me
upset, terrorized, and polarized. So, I quit watching television. I have a
beautiful 24” 12-volt LED television with digital antenna in my trailer.
I quit reading newspapers. I quit listening to news
broadcasts. I follow the weather when my sister reminds me to. On my timeline
on Facebook, I quit “liking” things. I don’t “share” things. In fact, I “hide”
anything that is shared from a popular source, TV station, somebody else’s
website, that is posted “via” another source, or that has the least hint of a
commercial, political, or religious application--Yes, even the stuff from George Takei. What I am interested in are the notes from my friends
that tell me who is sick, celebrating, excited, or sad. And I don’t "like" their
posts. If it is important enough to me that I should “like” it, I comment on
it. I don’t clean it every day, but my timeline, should anyone look at it, has
little on it that isn’t real news from my friends.
I have told my friends and followers and those people I meet
along the way that nothing in my religion or my politics requires me to
convince them that I am right. Nor does anything require me to listen to them
try to convince me I am wrong. My stress has gone down significantly. I have
not woken up in the morning with a sore back or been unable to stand up
straight when I got out of bed in over a year. Yes, I am aware of Isis. She is
a goddess of ancient Egypt, the ideal wife and mother and patroness of nature
and magic.
Part IV
Part V
But that utter independence also brings me face to face with
my harshest critic. Me. When I wake up in the morning, no one passes
judgment on me. No one tells me I’m a good person. No one castigates me for
speeding. No one criticizes my writing. Well, that last isn’t exactly true. It
seems there are a lot of people willing to criticize my writing. But in
general, I don’t face them each morning. The only one I face each day is me.
I have spent as much as a week cutting myself to pieces over
every major and minor decision I have made in my life from my first attempt to
kiss my high school girlfriend to sleeping with the enemy. I woke up every
morning that week with a headache, but I blame that on my nephew’s moonshine.
But for the most part I listen to Rod, in Counterfeit
Kids as he asks his students if they have completed their homework in the
spirit it was intended, to help them learn something about life. On those
mornings when I sadly shake my head, he says, “Do better tomorrow.”
I am not seeking enlightenment.
I am not trying to change the world.
I have no great advice to give you.
I am only trying to do better tomorrow.