Thursday, July 26, 2018

A Series of Open and Closed Doors


There is a door that had always seemed closed to me—the door of literature. Growing up, I loved reading and writing, but I had a stutter and dreaded being called on to stand in front of the entire class to read. I would see letters on a page and struggle to read and pronounce words that I would otherwise know how to say. I learned to laugh with others when they laughed at me and to make jokes out of my own mistakes. I struggled in grammar school to write in the proper way. I knew what I wanted to say, but writing it down and spelling it out was something I never figured out how to do well under a time limit. Reading and writing was merely a hobby, one that began to fade when finding a couple of hours outside of school work and extracurricular activities was next to impossible. This was a door I knew I would struggle through, even if it was open. The story of how I found myself where I am today is a story of a series of closed doors.

The first closed door was a political one. Like any ambitious student, I had my whole life planned out. I wanted to be a lawyer and make a difference. I wanted to be successful, and the ultimate picture of that would be having a top floor office with a view of San Francisco. The problem, however, was myself; more explicitly, it was my shallow reasoning for why I wanted to pursue law. I wanted to be a lawyer because money meant success and success meant that I beat the system. I would not have to fear a system that worked against so many disadvantaged people. Such motivations turned making a difference for the better and for others into a difference for myself, to be unique and superior.
With a pre-law mindset, I found myself involved in everything that would give me experience with conduct and code. I joined the Residential Hall Peer Review Board and imagined myself on a panel of like-minded justice-driven students to challenge stubborn-minded peers. This was my second closed door. Upon the first week of training, it became clear that the goal of this board was not to accuse and prosecute, but to restore and educate. Restorative justice was the goal, and success was measured not by the admission of guilt and acceptance of punishment, but on whether our peers understood the purpose of the conduct code and how to return to their community. The board was ultimately there not to judge but to serve. After my first year, I was offered the opportunity to apply for the paid coordinator position. It was then that I had to stop and reflect.

I was taken aback at how little we cared about the broken rules. I found myself caring more about broken people. I stood convicted of my selfish ambitions and narrow-mindedness. It was then that I knew, no matter what I did, it would have to be for reasons beyond myself and my own success. It was never about being right or wrong, but being able to work through and struggle together. It was never about proving myself, but about the humility to learn and be built up.

My lack of a summer job showed me my third closed door. With nothing else to do, I spent a summer studying restorative justice. I read all of my supervisor’s books on why restorative justice was important and how powerful the rhetoric of restorative justice is in a community. The philosophy behind the rhetoric of restorative justice is the understanding that words are powerful and must be used constructively with restoration in mind. Convicted of this, I proposed a project called restorative circles, to address the worry that the way the board stood now, it was clear that there was still a side that was right and a side that was potentially in the wrong. In a restorative circle, there were no sides, but a gathering of people who all found themselves wrestling with similar situations. Conversation happened where all sides were expressed, and both empathy and sympathy moved the dialogue to one of support from within the community itself. The goal was to restore hurt people side by side. It was community done with others in mind. Such is the field where philosophers and rhetoricians sow and reap.

The fourth door closed simultaneously with the opening of the doors to a class called Rhetoric 160: Introduction to the Rhetoric of Legal Discourse. It was clear from the first day of class that most of the people who enrolled in the class were pre-law and had the idea that we were going to learn about laws and how to read and interpret legal documents. It was expected that every rhetoric class would discuss the use of language and knowledge as a force to be reckoned with in a positive world. That understanding was suspended in this class, where I learned that language is powerful not because of how it is used or abused; it is powerful because language speaks and calls for its readers to respond. It was in this class that I learned language not as a means to an end, but a sign to be acknowledged and respected. It was through this door that I learned for what seemed like the first time how to read words and not just how to use them. It became clear to me that my aspirations were no longer for my own success but for an usher for others’ aspiration for success. Any difference that I make in the smallest or greatest of ways cannot be for my name’s sake. It must be for another’s.

Thus, following all the closed doors, I found myself before this open one. The first door humbled me and broadened my perspective of a world beyond myself. The second door convicted me of the need for education and restoration in a world that judges and leaves broken. The third door taught me the power of language and how it can create a beautiful environment for healing and growth. The fourth door challenged me to close the door of my own ambitions and seek to share what I have learned. So now, I come to the door where I had never imagined myself to be—the door of literature and words. Today, I stand here, still with a bit of a stutter and a little bit anxious about reading aloud. But I stand here more learned, humbled, and prepared for this door to open before me.

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This was my personal statement a while back. Flash forward to the present day, this has led me to the door of my own classroom where I have the privilege of teaching 4th grade. 

Thursday, May 10, 2018

Dear 204

This was one of our first pictures as an apartment...
(picture not taken in our apartment)

Graduation is just around the corner, which means a time of transition is upon us. Looking back at these last four years of college, three people come to mind when I think about those I will miss most,  those who have taught me most, and those I have learned to love most. Lucky for me, they are also the people I had the privilege of living with for the past two years. Within the thin four walls of 204, I have made the best of friends, bought and received way too many matching things, and learned the most valuable of lessons. They have taught me so much about who I am and for that I am grateful.


So here is a tribute to my apartment-mates that have stuck with me for the past three-ish-four years. 
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Dear Miss-I-Have-A-Dark-Soul, 

Thank you for all meaningful conversations we've had over these two years. You took none of my BS and was never shy to speak your mind. You taught me what it means to have faith even when it doesn't make sense. You taught me that it was okay to not have all the answers and that sometimes having the answer was not the point. Thank you for being understanding, but never too understanding. Thank you for telling me to stop being so dramatic. Thank you for not judging me when I say "hi" or "good morning" or "how's your day" even though I know you just woke up. I still get nervous knocking on your door to see if you want food because I still can't read your face. Lucky me, I get a whole other year to live with you, bother you, and see you grow in the way that you love and serve God. I don't expect to have all the answers at the end of the day but I am thankful to have someone to talk through them with me. What I know for sure though, is how much of a blessing you are in my life. You remind me many times a day how inadequate of an older sister I am (lol), but nonetheless how much more I have to learn to love. While I have very little offer, it is my hope that everything I do have to share with you will only be the truth that is from God and His Word. Here's to another crazy year of living together and Charlie-esk shenanigans... OH AND SETTLERS! =) 
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<--This was our first retreat picture.  Notice what everyone is wearing...

This is some retreat picture in-between...-->


<-- This is our last retreat photo together. Notice that 3/4 of us are wearing the same thing... as... #collegelife #whyfixsomethingthataintbroke








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Dear Best Friend,

Patpat! Oh how I have taken for granted your presence in my life. Let me be dramatic for a second. I am going to miss you soooo much! Living and breathing and eating together is literally the epitome of our friendship. Watching you live life these past three years has truly been a testament of God working in you. Your love for people and your genuine care for those who are in need is crazy. You have really taken to heart the command to love God and love others. In your imperfect way of doing that, you have also grown in confidence and found your strength in God. How we are friends to this day is still beyond me. Thank you for being literally everything I am not and giving balance to my life. Thank you for always pushing me to love others and walk this earth with hands ready to give. Thank you for being a constant reminder that God is the one who makes things beautiful and good. Thank you for your testimony of obedience to a God who has nothing but good plans in stored for you. As you go on and continue your life in SF, please come back to eat with me and be a shoulder to lean on. OKAY BYE FOREVER! JK my life would be a mess without you and Jesus.
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Throwback to when we did a food tour in SF and had like 8 meals in one day...

   
                                                ^Squat and read                   ^When random things remind                                                                                                                                                   us of each other 

This is just a cute picture of us together =) 
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Dear Roomie, 

There are not enough words in the world to express how much I love you and how grateful I am that God had in his plan for us to live and room together for the past three years. From the first secret sister to creepy unicorns, your hilarious nail video to late night McDonald's run, sweet potato or regular potato fries to late night pillow talks about creepy things in the dark, pouring our (my) soul out to you randomly in our tetris arranged room, my mind literally cannot handle going down memory lane. While I know that neither of us are leaving the Berkeley area, there is a sense though that 204 and my life will not be the same without coming home to a room filled of people who want to talk to you and fighting everyone to just have 2 seconds of your time before you fell asleep. Thank you for keeping me accountable all these years as we served alongside each other. I have definitely taken for granted how easy it is for the two of us to work together to get something done when we share a space. The way you serve the fellowship, especially the girls of the fellowship is something that I have always admired. There are days that I am sure you are exhausted and stressed out about many things but you never cease to let that stop you from loving on and pouring into the fellowship. There are night that I remember just watching to make sure you are breathing only to hear your snore really loud and out of fear I got you a salt lamp LOL. Those are also the days that I think..."dang, what would crossroads, CFC, my own college experience, be without Esther?" And I would just be at a lost for words. The amount of work you put into the things you love is not humanly possible... and that is why I know that above all else, you love God. Over the pass three years I have seen how God has challenged you and spoke truth into your life. He has taught you not to rely on your own strength by bring you through cycles of physical weakness. He he has taught you humility throughout the many times that you learned to receive love and be served by those in your community who love you. He has taught you persistence by placing some of the most challenging and crazy scenarios in your life to see if you will trust Him and continue to obey His command to love even when it doesn't make sense to. I got the privilege of what I imagine to be front row seats to God wrecking your life and making you all the more .... (i want to use the word beautiful here but that seems weird)... all the more whole, precious, full of His glory, and in God's eyes, a child He delights in. There are many more things I can say but think that no two words have ever felt are more appropriate and heavy. So Esther, thank you. Thank you for the past four years of crazy shenanigans and thank God that His plans for us are not yet over. If I have ever met anyone that I thought would change the world, you are on the top of that list. God is going to use you in some crazy way and I am honored to have had this short opportunity to witness and testify that truly God has got you through it all. 
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Dear God, 

If you had told me the day that I got into Berkeley that I would spend three years living in a space where I will not be the only one calling it home, I would have no idea what you were talking about. If you told me I would see my best friend get baptized and cry like a baby, I would not believe you. If you told me I would relearn again how to love as a sister would to her younger siblings, I would laugh. I already got two. If you told me the person I would trust and enjoying serving alongside the most will be my roommate, I would have thought you were kidding. You brought together four very different people into one space and taught us what it meant to called each other sisters in Christ. You brought two very different person and taught them what imperfect love is what perfect love you offer. You brought two seemingly strong people to our knees as we learned to find strength in you for your kingdom work. You brought two deeply confused and doubtful people together to struggle and testify to each other the truth that is in your Word. You taught this apartment what it means to be hospitable, to use the space given to us as a way to serve our fellowship. You taught us the joy of reconciliation. You taught us what it means to love. God you taught us to live together in harmony, seeking the best for each other in all that we do. You taught us to be vulnerable, how to spur each other on when life got tough. You taught us how to prioritize and keep our gaze fixed on your commands to love you with all our heart, soul, and mind and love others as you did. Thank you God for these amazing sisters in my life, these sisters that I have had and will continue to have the privilege of living with, growing with, and rejoicing with. I pray that as we depart from what we have now grown comfortable to, you will continue to use our lives for your glory sake no matter where you will bring us. I pray that the things we have learned here, in the four walls of 204, will never be forgotten. I pray that we will continue to obey and bless the people around us with what you have given us. I pray that we will always remember the work that you have done in making something so beautiful from four very lost and broken people. I pray God, that we would see in each other the work of your provision and craftsmenship. While everything else in our lives will be changing, God you are constant.You know what is good for us before we could even comprehend your work. You have been faithful to this apartment despite our lack of faith. You were working something amazing before we could even recognize glory in each other. Thank you God, for taking care of 204. Thank you God, for bringing 204 together. Thank you God for using 204 in this smallest and humble way for your kingdom sake. Thank you God making something beautiful out of the lost and wounded. Thank you, God for 204. 

Not bye forever but bye for now. Maybe we will find each other again at a different crossroads... 



Until next time, 
Charlie 

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

A Time to Mourn

There is a hope that’s waiting for you in the dark… ( Scars to Your Beautiful was on our repertoire) 

Before going to Hong Kong with CTI, Hong Kong meant my grandparents. I was reminded frequently that I did not go back to visit often enough. Growing up, I always made an excuse to not go back. In reflection, this was because growing up, Hong Kong also reminded me of death. My most vivid memories of Hong Kong were always of death or sickness or the reality that someone is nearing the end of their life. It scared me. This also led me to choosing not to engage and not to invest in my family overseas. This fear kept me from sharing with them the most important thing in my life—the reality of God and the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

Many of you know that three weeks before starting CTI, I went to Hong Kong to mourn the death of my great-grandmother. There I saw not only the pain and sorrow that comes with death, but also the desperation to preserve life. Every ritual addressed a fear of the unknown. I had the opportunity to talk with my grandpa and he explained to me how meticulous and how exact everything had to be in order to keep our family in good fortune. Our conversation then transitioned to him telling me about his preparation for his own death. At that moment, I was taken back by how sober-minded my grandpa was in talking about his own death and funeral. At the same moment, my heart also broke because he truly believes that his preparations were enough. In the face of death, I found myself again scared and unable to speak. The truth that I know would only bring him back to face the reality that he thought he overcame himself.

Truly for these three weeks, I learned to mourn and see death face-to-face. But God is faithful and brought light into the darkness. When I first found out I was placed in Hong Kong, I did not know what to expect. Hong Kong was not familiar enough to call home but it was not foreign enough to feel alienated. I struggled to find my place as I oscillated between these two realities. Hong Kong was not my home, but I have family in Hong Kong. On paper, it said that our team would be partnering with Youth for Christ, Hong Kong but like most of my expectations, I was surprised to find out that our main audience would be the elderly. Looking back, it was not a coincidence that my team and I had the opportunity to serve the elderly people of Hong Kong. I had spent a big portion of my life scared of proclaiming the Gospel of Jesus Christ to the family I knew in Hong Kong, and now God had placed me in a position to proclaim boldly this truth to complete strangers every day, multiple times a day. Every day that I looked out into the audience and saw the older grannies and grandpas, I could not help but think of my own family in Hong Kong. I would tell them stories and jokes in broken Cantonese the same way that I tried to speak with my grandparents. I would play for these grannies and grandpas and be reminded that my own grandparents have never heard me play guitar before. I had grown to love these grannies and grandpas like my own grandparents. The only difference was that I had the courage to also share with them the message of Jesus Christ.  

But God is faithful and gracious beyond my understanding and made a way for my grandparents to come see me play and testify. They had come from another part of Hong Kong to where I was playing one afternoon and for the first time, they saw me play. But more so, this was the first time they heard me share the single most important thing I could offer them—the Gospel. I looked into the crowd and my grandparents were sitting among the other elderly, listening to the same message, and hearing the same testimony that God is real and that He is the only way to life. On that day, God gave me the boldness to share the truth and it is my hope that seeds were sown that day, in family and strangers alike.


I left Hong Kong hopeful and confident that God will continue to work and transform lives. For the first time, I left Hong Kong at peace and no longer scared of death, because the reality is that HE HAS WON! (This song was also on our rep: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kr1OfNUOFPE)  While we were broken and lost and looking for our own way out of whatever darkness, God had the ultimate plan to save. He sent Christ down in the form of man to suffer and be with his people. God sent His Son down to Earth to DIE! Christ died in our place and overcame what we could not. On the third day, He rose from the grave and was victorious over death. Because of this, in His name there is eternal life. There is no fear in death anymore. In the midst of darkness, Jesus came down and brought us light. In the reality of death, Jesus came down and gave us the opportunity to live. I left Hong Kong hopeful, because the God who brought the dead back to life is the same God that is working and changing lives.


Picture of my aunts, uncle, grandpa and grandma!