Showing posts with label awe in life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label awe in life. Show all posts

Thursday, February 20, 2014

"My Father Bleeds History": Awe in Maus

Maus is a two-volume graphic novel I read for the first proper English class I ever took, English 251: Foundations of Literary Criticism with Dr. Jamie Horrocks. Specifically, this graphic novel evokes awe through a first-hand account of the terrors of the Holocaust, and enhances that by playing with the disconnect of discussing such a serious topic in a medium that is usually so lighthearted and so far removed from reality.

One thing the book especially focuses on is awe at the lengths humans will go to survive. One particularly touching and astonishing sequence is when the author's father (the book is actually a memoir of the author/artist's father's true story) is separated from his wife and sacrifices everything to find her again.

"I traded my things to have gifts," his father says. "...We went, sometimes by foot, sometimes by train. One place we stopped, hours, hours, and hours...I couldn't find my friend and my luggage. I had only my thin shirt and my water. Shivek went back to Hannover to find me again...But I went only straight to Poland. It took 3 to 4 weeks."
A page from Art Spiegelman's Maus

The author is in awe of his father's resilience and the lengths he went to in such terrible conditions to be reunited with his mother. There is a kind of reverence expressed but yet not quite expressed throughout the work, and especially at this part as the acts of courage and love go beyond the author's ability to truly appreciate, and he knows it. The awe effect is enhanced by the fact that these are personal stories told face to face from father to son--an idea that relates to +Greg Bayles's project. In a way, the whole work is the recognition that Spiegelman's father's experiences are greater than he'll ever really understand and no medium can really capture them, and so in recognition of that he chooses to at least do something to try and honor his father, and so he does what he can, he writes and illustrates a graphic novel about it. People might react with shock and awe at the audacity of depicting such a tragedy in a medium associated with superheroes and cartoons, but part of the message of the work is that experiences like these are so awesome that no artistic medium can do them full justice. But any quality artistic representation makes it memorable, and that's what matters: remembering that humans are capable of all that the Holocaust was--on both sides.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Learning to Walk in the Dark

I don't remember the exact moment I checked out The Screwtapes Letters by C.S. Lewis from the BYU library, but I do remember why I checked it out. I was lost. I had reached a crossroads in my life, and I wasn't sure which direction I should go. Things that I had taken for granted, ideas that I had assumed were unchangeable, had all come crashing down around me and I was left staring at the rubble, trying to remember how to build it back up again. I guess finding this book was God's way of giving me the first few pages of the instruction manual.

He will set them off with communications of His presence which, though faint, seem great to them, with emotional sweetness, and easy conquest over temptation. 
While piles of homework stood neglected on my desk, I laid on my bed in my cramped apartment and held this book above my face, turning the pages as fast as I could read. I wanted to understand this moral game that everyone told me I was a part of. I wanted to understand why I continued to progress and then digress, despite clear "communications of His presence," which seemed "great" and provided "easy conquest over temptation" but always seemed to fade eventually and I would once again be left feeling alone, shouting angry words, and thinking that my existence was insignificant, left with only the whispering memory of what I had once felt.
But He never allows this state of affairs to last long. Sooner or later He withdraws, if not in fact, at least from their conscious experience, all those supports and incentives. He leaves the creature to stand up on its own legs–to carry out from the will alone duties which have lost all relish. 
But, ironic as it was, these letters written from one devil to another were helping me to understand the divine nature of God more personally than any other piece of literature I had read up to that point. It made Him real. It made everything real. It put life in a sort of perspective I hadn't considered before, a perspective I would have been less willing to accept had my paradigm cathedrals still stood fully intact. Thankfully, they were broken, and because they were broken they could be molded. I found the strength to take tiny steps into the darkness, "to stand up on [my] own legs," to believe that something was one way when everything seemed to be screaming at me that it was another. 
It is during such trough periods, much more than during the peak periods, that it is growing into the sort of creature He wants it to be. Hence the prayers offered in the state of dryness are those which please Him best. 
I began to gain a deeper understanding of "trough periods." I began to understand their necessity and benefits, their power and the lessons they held within their sometimes torturous depths. I began to understand that God is sometimes silent, that he doesn't always blow his trumpet, forcing us to acknowledge Him and His power, because He doesn't want children who are forced to come to his lap. He wants children who choose Him. Willingly.
We can drag our patients along by continual temptations, because we design them only for the table, and the more their will is interfered with the better. He cannot 'tempt' to virtue as we do to vice. He wants them to learn to walk and must therefore take away His hand; and if only the will to walk is really there He is pleased even with their stumbles. 
Agency. That was what it all came down to. The more I came to understand that temptations are designed "only for the table," only for the limited and fleeting pleasure that comes from indulging appetite, the more I understood how profoundly God loved me. I realized He wants me to "learn to walk" because it is what I need. Even though it may require all of his self-control to keep His hand at bay, to let me fall on my face and cry, to get up only to stumble againHe does it. And "He is pleased even with [my] stumbles."
Do not be deceived, Wormwood. Our cause is never more in danger than when a human, no longer desiring, but still intending, to do our Enemy's will, looks round upon a universe from which every trace of Him seems to have vanished, and asks why he has been forsaken, and still obeys. 
It was a simple and profound concept that struck me to my core. He is pleased even with my stumbles.The thought echoed in my mind and stayed there. It is there every time I come crashing down to my knees in prayer, weighed down with my own weaknesses. It is there to remind me whenever I am disappointed by others and find myself cursing their stumbles. It is there when I am tired and sad, searching for some sort of explanation or fragment of hope. It is there and it gives me hope. And I get up to try again.

Friday, January 24, 2014

How Quickly We Come So Far

Me at the RMMLA Convention in October
The title above is the same title I gave an entry in my wonder journal this week. After going back to try and find literature that inspired awe in me in my life for another class assignment, I realized that some things I reacted to quite passionately before now just don't even move me an inch. That got me reflecting on my own life path and I realized with a jump of awe and wonder that a year ago at the time of this writing, I had not even yet considered the idea of videogames as art.

That means that within the space of just 12 months, I went from being unsure about what I wanted to do exactly with my life but leaning toward literature professor or maybe ditching English altogether for sociology, to planning my entire career path around a subject I was almost completely unversed in at the time.

The decision alone might be somewhat impressive, but what's really blown me away is how quickly I was able to dive into that decision. Not only did I say I would do something totally different than I had ever planned before, I've written over 20 in-depth blog posts on videogames, presented at a professional conference on the subject, been featured in one of the leading blogs of the field, and published on an online journal. I don't say these things to brag about my accomplishments, but to wonder at how quickly I turned so completely around and dove so deep into this field.

Considering how quickly it all happened, I almost panicked for a second. I've now applied to two different graduate programs to carry on this path I've started down, and considering how quickly I changed from one thing to another in just a year made me wonder if I'd totally change my mind again in another year's time. For a second, I wondered if I even liked videogames that much, to dedicate potentially my entire professional life to them. It was pretty easy to reassure myself that I did, but it was still a wondrous thought.

Where will I be a year from now? If the past year has been any indication, I really have absolutely no idea.