Seasons Greetings

Cookies and punch on a table across the back, folding chairs in lines across the industrial carpet, bulletin boards with flyers and happy images: I was in a church hall. SuburbiaOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA USA.

I was at a talk on masculinity and femininity. The presenter was a friend of mine, a quiet soul who comes to life when giving presentations. I was the chauffeur.

I enjoyed watching her in action. She used simple, relatable ideas to talk about profound topics.  It was engaging and smart and light-hearted. As she wrapped things up, much of the group lingered. People lined up to speak with her individually or in small groups. I hovered at the back of the room and kept an eye on her book table.

I had had a long day. I was tired…even more so, exhausted. My graduate program was doing a special week of talks from visiting professors and I had just sat through hours and hours of lectures. Days and days of trying to wrap my head around challenging content had worn me out.

One of the ladies also hovering at the back of the room struck up a conversation with me.

“Ugh,” I admittedly thought.  “Just leave me alone.”

But, I was polite and put on a happy face.  Chatting began.

It didn’t take long before I realized that she wanted to get into it.  Her natural style was skeptical and she was ready for some meaty conversation.  I understood the material given in the presentation and was chest-high in studies on the topic.  My mind raced.  I opened my mouth to respond and…

I just didn’t want to.Minefield

It was too much.  I was too tired.  The topics were too sensitive.

The possibility of walking into a minefield was way too high.

I mumbled something and dodged the conversation.

I’ve thought about that moment for months.  I feel guilty for not going there, for having a good opportunity where real conversation was possible and avoiding it.  I can cut myself some slack but haven’t let it go quite yet.


By personality, I am a peacemaker….or so I’ve been told.  I would prefer to think of myself as a courageous warrior and maybe I’ve had a few quick moments of glowing bravery.  However, my day to day manner is quiet, easy-going, and eager to avoid an argument.

The challenge is that I am a peacemaker in a pluralistic culture.  And the issues of our country and our time are deeply divisive.  I am a peacemaker who has well-formed ideas that many others don’t agree with. And tragically, I am a peacemaker who feels despairing about the state of our conversations.

I’m from Arizona.  My experience of seasons is subtle: hot, super hot, super crazy hot. Looking for inspiration for this month’s theme, I googled “seasons.”  “Seasons Greetings” was near the top of the list.  (As was “Seasons of Love” which is now an earworm in my head.)  “Seasons Greetings” is tied to my story of dodging a sensitive conversation in a way that I can’t fully articulate.  It represents the “should” in the art of conversation.

There is something beautiful about the inclusivity of “Seasons Greetings”–that we’ve developed a phrase that embraces the variety of cultural traditions in our country.  I went to a Kwanzaa dance celebration last year and was aware when Hanukkah started. And, in my heart and practices, I’m a “Merry Christmas” girl.

Perhaps its just the turbulence of a cultural shift in majority and minority opinion–the burden of the “Post-Christian era” that intellectuals write about. Maybe it’s that I am a sensitive soul who would prefer that everyone got along and I live in a culture deeply divided. Perhaps all of my studies on the nature of man and of the state and of freedom and so on have made me think in a language I can’t converse in yet.  Maybe the simple fact is that I want people to like me.

Whatever may be the case, I’m unsettled.

And, frankly, a little afraid.

(I mean, I chickened out at the back of a suburban church hall!)

My warrior’s cry might simply be–

Show up.

Go there.

Have your voice tremble.

I am Mary, hear me…speak.