Where Have I Been? Scribbling.

Where have I been? I haven’t been around lately. I’ve been going through the motions, but not really here. I’ve been multitasking, but all the tasks are just distractions from where I really belong. And where’s that? Here. Here with me. I haven’t been here with me.

Where have I been? Nearby. Not too far. But not here. I’ve been able to preach sermons, but not write new ones. Thanks be to God for the file. I’ve been able to write stories for my kid while they’re at camp, but not the normal ones. Not stories with a plot, but rather a gimmick. I’ve been able to build the scaffold of a gimmick, and fill in the cells of the spreadsheet. That’s fine, it’s served the purpose, but it’s not been me. I’ve been writing, but it’s not the written me. It’s just scribbles. I’ve been scribbling.

Where have I been? Stuck playing video games. Stuck lying around. Stuck fiddling with sticks, playing fiddlesticks. Fiddling while Rome burns. Fiddling while I waste away my life. Waste my life away. Watching as day by day I fill up one more slash on the calendar, one more tally on the tally-sheet, one more morning where I say, “How am I going to get through today? I have to be around people today. I wish I didn’t.”

Where have I been? I’ve been so close. I’ve been peeking through. That smile you saw – that was me. I wasn’t wholly absent. That clever turn of phrase you heard – that was me. I was able to send a few missives through. But I’ve been hiding for the most part.

But what have I been hiding from? From the mess all around me. My desk is a mess. My bed is a mess. My office is a mess. My schedule is a mess. My diet is a mess. My “to-be-read” book pile is a mess. Everything’s a mess. And I don’t want to clean it up. I don’t have the energy to clean it up. But I don’t want to live in it like this either. So I run away.

What have I been hiding from? From the possibility that I’m not who I think I am. From the thought that I am not the depressed pastor I make myself out to be. That I might be more maudlin than bedlam. That there might be more gravy about me than grave, and no gravitas whatsoever.

What have I been hiding from? From looking for meaning in all this, because all this is just…well, all this. What if there is no meaning? What if it’s all just a façade? I walked home in the rain tonight, wondering what it would be like if a lightning bolt struck my umbrella. “As long as it’s quick,” I thought, “that would be fine.” As long as it’s quick.

I check my work email so frequently, and why? Mostly to see if someone is angry with me. I’ve been doing this for years, absolutely years. Checking email to check if I’m okay. If nobody is angry with me, then maybe I’m okay. But the funny thing is – in those rare occasions when I have found some anger there, it’s torn me apart, ripped me to shreds. It wasn’t a case of “Well, that’s what I expected.” So why do I check it? Because I’m hiding. I’m hiding from allowing myself to judge myself. I look to others to judge me. “Am I okay? Only you can tell me.” I check my work email for this, because I don’t get much in the way of emails at my home address anymore, except for junk and information from places I do business with. There’s nothing personal about it anymore. Only the work email is personal. Only the work email can show me who I am.

I’m hiding from who I really am. I don’t want to face it. Because if I face who I really am, then I have to face the mess around me. If I face who I really am, then I have to face the reality that I have to do something. I have to choose what to do. I have to choose to write. I have to choose to clean. I have to choose to do something. It’s my choice. It’s always my choice.

I’m hiding from the void. The nothing that’s calling from within. The deep, deep quiet that’s in the heart of everything. It’s so empty. I preach that the presence of God is in there. But I don’t know that for sure. It could be God. Or it could be the Evil One. Or it could be Abandoned. Just Abandoned. An empty tomb. Funny that. The empty tomb is usually such a source of hope, the original symbol of hope in Christianity. And yet right now an empty tomb at the center of it all feels not like a source of hope, but of gnawing, wanting, yearning, emptiness.

Then again – if there is an empty tomb at the heart of everything, a place of death and decay so ancient and so bereft that there’s nothing there – then doesn’t that mean that death has flown away? And doesn’t that mean that life is therefore to be found? And doesn’t it mean that there is something, something, something out there?

But what? And how will I find it? It’s flown like a dove. A pigeon. A city bird looking for a morsel of bread. And I’ll never find it. Life has flown away, and I will never find it.

And yet. And yet, I know that I will get up and look. I don’t know when. It won’t be today. It might be tomorrow, I don’t know. But I will get up again and look for that bird. And when I do, I won’t find it. But I’ll find something. I always find something. In that moment, it will look exquisite – no, it will be exquisite. And for a time, I will find meaning and perhaps even joy or peace there. But it won’t last. It never lasts very long. And I’ll be right back here again. Peering into that empty tomb. From wherever here…is. It’s somewhere nearby. I’m not far.

I’m just one step away, but it’s such a very long step. For now I’m just scribbling. I’ll write again soon.

8 responses to “Where Have I Been? Scribbling.”

  1. I feel like this, sometimes. Overwhelmed by the mess I’ve made by not being able to literally and figuratively put things away when I’m done with them. For instance, it’s okay if I only put away 90% of the groceries today, as long as I can put away 110% of the groceries tomorrow. But if I have a stretch of days where I can only put away 90% of the groceries, then I’ve got a ton of groceries sitting out not put away where they belong. And the mess doesn’t just stay a literal mess in my physical space, but becomes a mess of guilt and shame in my head. It was only ten percent…like two things, and I couldn’t put them away right away? Two things are so easy, and now I’ve got a dozen or so things that need to be put away, so now it’s a JOB. I should have done it when it was small before it grew out of control.

    I don’t really have a solution, but what I try to do is take a day off from the day-to-day stuff that I’m only getting done at 90% and attack the piles of 10%. That’s not always possible. Sometimes, it’s not a whole day, just a few hours. Shut off the phone, ignore the TV, give the cats some catnip and a couple new toys, and make cleaning up both the literal and figurative mess my priority. That might mean sitting quietly/meditating (I suck at meditating, but just sitting quietly and just letting my mind wander achieves a similar result), then cleaning off whatever surface is bugging me the most. Or just clearing out a couple of the little jobs that have no deadline and therefore keep getting put off. I find that the typical suggestion of “take 15 minutes a day to devote to clearing up” just doesn’t work for me. If I had the ability to do that, I wouldn’t have gotten myself into this mess! So, since I need to be loving and compassionate with my own self, I let that idea go and deal with my reality, which is that sometimes I need to stop everything for a time and tidy up my head and my space.

    I’m sorry I haven’t been checking in here more and responding to your writing. Life’s been less than stellar around here the past few years, like a shitty roller coaster. Sometimes, there are highs, and things seem better for a while, then we head down again for a while. So far, 2023 has been a downer. I try to read your writing when I can, but I know I miss a lot, and I haven’t had whatever it is I need to have to respond. Just know that I’m still out here, and every time my email pings that you’ve written, I send a little love your way. ♥♥♥

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    1. Thank you so much for your reply, Michelle. It means a lot. I think for me the problem isn’t so much the physical mess around me, but what that symbolizes in my heart. I so often feel like a jumbled mess inside, and looking at the outside when it matches that can feel devastating. (Maybe that’s how it is for everybody — I don’t know.) I’m sad to hear that this year has been a downer for you — I hope you find something positive soon to bring you some joy!

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  2. Keep scribbling and playing video games. Fiddle fart. Find joy where you can. And go from there. It’s the little things for me. A big beautiful sunrise while driving into work today. Very pretty. I’ll just start with that as one nice thing for the day. Love you bud-

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    1. Fiddle fart! That’s the name of my new band. Thanks so much for this comment — you have always been so much more down-to-earth than I, and you’ve helped ground me. A big beautiful sunrise. Maybe that’s enough.

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  3. I also wonder about the meaning of my life sometimes. Last night I came across some lines from Ithaka by the Greek poet Cafavy. I felt hopeful and thankful and looked at my life as an adventure.
    As you set out for Ithaka hope the voyage is a long one. Full of adventure, full of discovery…
    May there be many a summer morning
    When, with what pleasure, what joy
    You come into harbors seen for the first time;
    Ithaka gave you the marvelous journey
    without her you would not have set out.

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    1. Thanks for that, Karen. Perhaps the meaning of life is just being on the journey. I hope I can find my Ithaka.

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  4. I was trying to find a meme about scribbling and it’s okay. Just part of the journey. None seem to fit to express feeling. Just know scribbling is OK. You are loved. Not just by God, but by a few humans too.

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    1. Thanks, Mary. I need to hear that sometimes. Over and over again.

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About Me

I’m Michael, the author of this blog. I search for meaning through walking labyrinths, through exploring my Christian faith and my experience of depression, through preaching, and through writing about it for you.