I’ve been thinking about starting a live journal for a while and putting it off for the obvious reason: I didn’t have a name that was cool and hip and expressed me and my life and would make people think I was introspective enough to be worth reading and still fun. So I came up with “Living in the Gray” which is not as perfect as I wish it was, but it will do. It describes the phenomenon I’ve been struggling with since I graduated from high school. At that time in my life I strongly believed in black and white. There were right and wrong answers, behaviour, politics, language, spirituality, taste, art, faith, logic and worldviews. In a word I was hugely legalistic. In the years since that seemingly long ago time, because of new experiences and meeting new and different people, because of life, death, hurt, heartbreak, mistakes, birth, joy, depression, love and a slow and painful process of gaining wisdom, I have learned that there is so much more gray in the world than black and white. Everything and everyone has another side. I feel as though in most areas (specifically spirituality and politics) people want you to believe that they are right and everyone who disagrees with them is wrong. They want to be clearly on one side or another, black or white. Gray offends them and when they are confronted with the fuzziness of gray they are quick to judge and quick to label people as weak-minded or unbelieving.
Maybe I am weak minded or lacking faith. Â Just because I walk in gray much of the time, it doesn’t mean I don’t believe in truth or objectivity or science or discovery or faith. It just seems that there is so much out there to learn and know and the very little bit that I know is always being stretched by the knowledge and experience of others. So if I want to claim to know the complete truth about anything, wouldn’t that be extremely ignorant? I believe that we are all on a journey of discovery and there are only a few things that I feel sure of and even those are sometimes a struggle.
So maybe this doesn’t make a lot of sense to a lot of people, but I feel content at this stage. I think it is incredibly presumptuous to try and make assumptions about most things, based on my limited experience. I do believe in God. But if he is as big as I have been taught, then my weak assertions about his purposes and plans are pretty meaningless, other than my own direct experience with him. And even that is subject to my interpretation which is influenced by my opinions and friends and upbringing and hopes and dreams.
Are you feeling a bit foggy yet? If so, don’t panic. It’s a bit disorienting at first, but I’m finding that the more time I spend here, the more I’m learning about people and truth. Truth is out there. It’s just a whole lot bigger than most people want you to believe. So I hope you’ll join me and experience “living in the gray”.
September 13th, 2005 at 5:25 pm
So if I want to claim to know the complete truth about anything, wouldn’t that be extremely ignorant? I believe that we are all on a journey of discovery and there are only a few things that I feel sure of and even those are sometimes a struggle.
I agree with you so completely most times it actually caught me off guard when I read it.
Oh, and do you have any pear jam, or jelly, of canned pears, or any kind of goodness yet?
I am honoured that I get to make the first post to your new blog and I wasted it talking about pears.
September 13th, 2005 at 5:44 pm
I heard that she instituted a ‘pear at supper makes the pears go away’ policy.
I may too have a livejournal soon enough – updating my own site manually just seems so cumbersome.
mcey
September 14th, 2005 at 9:02 am
It’s actually way worse than that. We are required to eat a pear at every meal and one in the evening as a snack. I’ve eaten more pears in the last week than my whole life previous to that. But they are yummy and I may actually now be eating the proper number of servings of fruits and vegetables in a day!