******************
18.April.2007
Last night I participated in a vigil at Trinity Christian College with my RA sister and close to, if not more than 100 other Trinity students. It was a striking experience for me, recalling a time just over five years ago where as an RA, I also had to lend support and sympathy and be a strength for people at TCC. It was 9-11-2001. As I looked across the circle of faces in the courtyard last night, though--dimly lit by torches and other (all too-breakable) tea light holders, I saw some familiar faces--now in positions of leadership at Trinity, and some faces that seemed familiar, until I realized that the people I was thinking of had graduated years before. Regardless, the continuity was striking. Where my peers had taken roles of leadership, so did these current college students step naturally into those roles. I was reminded of the French saying that I had read only that afternoon: Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose (the more things change, the more they stay the same).
By catching a glimpse of continuity at my alma mater, I was overwhelmed with a sense of time's cyclicality. Though we often use a linear model of time, that seems to me, quite a human and rational imposition on reality. Nature moves in cycles. The seasons, the days, the very sphericalness of our earth, connote a cyclical understanding that what has come before will come again, though we might be in a different place, and see a different perspective on it. This metaphor also made me think of the labyrinth experience at the most recent ICS retreat.

Continuity and change--what powerful human concepts. Our ability to pick them out is striking and profound, and so very human. Maybe our human linear understanding does help us project into the future... By realizing how tragedies like what happened this week in Virgina share with other prior tragedies, we can make a commitment to change the future. By realizing our responsibility for building community instead of isolating people, we can see ourselves as quite a ways down the path, though it may not seem so very different, after all.
1 comment:
thanks, yvana.
Post a Comment