Thursday 25 April 2013

So what is normal?

I did Maths to A-Level (yes I know that is surprising, even more that I passed since I am hopeless at basic arithmetic) and sad person that I am I got excited to learn a definition of ‘normal’. It is a line in geometry which is (IIRC) perpendicular to the tangent of a curve. 
My quirky mind loved the idea that normal can be defined – and have nothing to do with the matter at hand! As someone who had always felt, or was made to feel, abnormal, a misfit, this was an idea to hug to myself.

I find myself once again wondering about normals.  I have got used to being depressed, and what effect that has on aspects of my life, my anxiety in certain situations, my fears.  But am I attributing to the depression things that are simply normal bumps in life? I have spoken with some colleagues about my guilt over visiting anxieties, only to find I am not alone. Others also feel nervous and awkward in a range of the situations we find ourselves in as clergy.
Have I got so used to the idea that what I feel is a result of the depression filter that I have a distorted view of what is normal? Do I have a rose tinted glasses view of normality? What if  feeling what I do is actually normal but I have forgotten how to recognise it?
In which case am I just being lazy and a whinger after all?
And off I go tying my brain in knots, just as Gabi wandering on the long field lead can do laps round the tree trunk and then wonders why she is stuck!

Wednesday 24 April 2013

Here's one to read elsewhere...

I haven't posted for a while - busy fitting in life as a doggy mummy and back to work. I know regular walks are good for me, but right now they just leave me exhausted. But then too tired to notice the grumps as much.

Anyway here is a recommendation to read until I wake up enough to write my own  -

Another Christian outting herself as having depression, another insight to the emotions and reactions from other believers. (And yes her dad has just started a new job and Lambeth Palance - but this is about her, and her experiences)

Wednesday 3 April 2013

When the horror is down your street...

Written because of our situation here, but remembering also the Philpott fire trial whose jury returned a guilty verdict on the same day (2/4/13) as our village murder case.
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Life is going on as normal, ordinary lives behind ordinary front doors, and then all of a sudden life has changed – a tragic event, a missing person, a fire – pain; loss; panic; then the community pulls together. The police are all around, the media hovering in their wake – life in this place, in this street, will never be quite the same again.
Time passes, people adjust to what has happened and hold it with them whilst also getting on with life, because normal life must go on.  Then suddenly the tragedy invades again, an arrest, it was close to home, not stranger danger but death at the hands of those who should have loved.  Time goes on, arrest to charge and finally, finally to trial.
Information flows out from the court, is this really true? Can something like this really be happening in our place, in our street? Weeks of witnesses and lawyers in wigs, then 12 men and women gather to discern the truth.
Guilty! Condemned. An answer at last – this did happen. It happened here. It happened to people we knew, it was done by someone we know.  The media hover to close their stories, tie up the loose ends with a few quotable quotes. Is this the end of the beginning and the beginning of the future for our community?
And what of those who are left? Family living with both loss and treachery? Neighbours who will look out of windows at the reminder of what has happened. Onlookers whose own past horrors are stirred up by events and play and replay in their heads.
Yet in time the world will move on, the newspapers will be shredded, new headlines will move to the top of a Google search, the rhythm of community life will move on. In more time new curtains will hang at those windows, eventually it will just fall into an old story of people long ago.
But until then let us be gentle with the wounds, the healing scars, and memory of those whose lives were taken.