Ann Lamott, The UnShootable Moon+The Unlivable Sin of Belief








I write this on the airplane, flying home from Arkansas then Boston, exhausted from long days of travel and speaking, but also light with the joy of so many embraces with strangers now friends.





But when we travel among friends, relatives and strangers, even sitting at home at our desks, we are given so much conflicting news, even about ourselves. 

What do we do? What do we believe? Try this:




 So you discover this morning from a reputable source that a grand nephew twice removed through divorce and adoption--thinks your writing (or your sculpture or your music or your novel) is second-rate and your last book was “whiny.” You don’t know him, and he doesn’t know you, but your relatives who know him a little bit nod sagely at his words and believe him, though they’ve never read what you’ve written or only read certain parts, the parts they are sure about them.



Worried, you decide to try therapy to make sure you’re not harboring ingratitude or a pathetic victim mentality. Or, as a cheaper option, you consider hiring an editor for your next manuscript to eradicate any possible language that might be interpreted as “victim-y.”

 After this decision, which you feel good about, you think, you get an email from a woman who says your last book is the best book she’s ever read and she wants everyone in the world to read it or at least to see it stocked it in all the airport books stores, and would you send some more books with your autograph and maybe even a family photo?  You smile, breathe deeply, read the email over several times and block off time to do this.









Later that day you hear that someone thinks the scarf you wore at last night’s event was “derivative” and rumor has it that you might have even looked fat in that purple paisley  dress when you gave your presentation. Stricken, you drop the scarf in the trash, a bit sad because you did like it, after all, and at dinner an hour later, you eat only salad because you know it’s not just the dress.  



While picking at your salad and checking your email, you stumble across a comment on your recent essay condemning you because you were a bit too mystical to see God in that heap of dirty laundry. You vow to deepen your theology, maybe even enroll in an online degree from a Reformed seminary. And just before you leave for your evening event, you check Facebook and discover that some friends are angry with you for not including them in your latest writing project and others who asked to be in your manuscript are bitterly complaining about their inclusion.



Saddened, you head to your seminar that night, after carefully choosing slimming clothes and a plain scarf. You speak with all the passion you have left after such a day and some people cheer and cry, and afterward a woman tells you you’re better than watching a movie, while an elderly man in the back row falls asleep in the middle of the most dramatic part.










And after many such days, you lie awake on your pillow finally knowing what the unforgiveable sin is---or, rather, the unlivable sin and you vow you will no longer do it, you will no longer commit the terrible sin of belief.  You will no longer believe rumors of madness and mysticism, rumbles of inadequacy and girth, nor reports of laud and praise. You know they are all true in some way, and they are all false in some way as well, but mostly, you know, they will kill you with redirection and indecision.



 In such times, you dose yourself with Ann Lamott:

"Yet, I get to tell my truth. I get to seek meaning and realization. I get to live fully, wildly, imperfectly. That's why I'm alive. And all I actually have to offer as a writer, is my version of life. Every single thing that has happened to me is mine. As I've said a hundred times, if people wanted me to write more warmly about them, they should have behaved better."





And this:


My pastor said last Sunday that if you don't change directions, you are going to end up where you are headed. Is that okay with you, to end up still desperately trying to achieve more, and to get the world to validate your parking ticket, and to get your possibly dead parents to see how amazing you always were?”


And you suddenly know it’s true: the world will not validate your parking ticket so give it up and return to the life you’re supposed to be living.  Your one “wild and precious life” given to you not to be hoarded but to be given away. And when you give it away, however kind you try to be, and whatever form it takes---a painting, a song, a poem, a knitted scarf, a letter, a wooden box----because the world is a crazy place, this will always be true: Someone is always waiting to shoot your moon. Just know that some will be angry, some will bless you, some will betray you, some will be mean and small and some will be grateful and love you for life, till death do you part. 



In all the betrayal, admiration and lights, here is what you do:

You work at loving them all, and you keep on writing (or singing or sculpting or knitting or designing).

You will not be hushed, not by hurt or by hate; you keep on writing.

You will not keep trying to satisfy insatiable people; you keep on writing.  

You will not listen to critics in the shadows afraid of their own lives; you keep on writing.

 You will not let praise erode your stability; you keep on writing (and rewriting.)

Don't let anyone shoot down your moon. Tell the truth. Please God. Love your neighbor. Love your enemies. And for the sake of us all, 

keep writing. 






35 comments:

  1. Oh my Leslie! This is a piece I will read time and time again. We MUST seek primarily the approval stamp, the validation of our creative efforts, from our great Creator and refuse to be blown off course by both human critism and praise. All human commentary must be sifted through the wisdom of God first and foremost--for our greatest good, for the greatest good of all others (although truth to many still seems bitter in their current level of spiritual development), and the glory of God which grows and enhances all life. Thanking you for your oft knee-shaking courage to keep writing. I trust your heart. You want to be honest and honestly helpful to others and honestly glorifying to our Lord and God. I am truly honored and blessed to know you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Heather thanks so much , but maybe we should wrestle over the honor because I think you're pretty amazing!!

      Delete
  2. I am shocked at people's pettiness, especially those who claim to be living a life pleasing to God, but I imagine similar cutting remarks have come out of my own mouth. I'm sorry for their hurtful words as well as my own.

    Wonderful a conclusion: "Tell the truth. Please God. Love your neighbor. Love your enemies. And for the sake of us all, keep writing." As a friend used to say, "That's a keeper."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you Constance. I'm using some hyperbole here but the larger sense is accurate. We can be so paralyzed by what other people think and say. we try so hard and yet it never comes.So let's keep our focus clear. (My challenge to myself as well)

      Delete
  3. Thank you Leslie, I needed to hear this more than you will ever know.
    Beth

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh so glad! (It's still okay to be happy when you do happen to please someone!)

      Delete
  4. Oh thanks Leslie! This is a reread. Great encouragement...now believe it yourself! :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh I know Diane, That's why I write. To write myself into belief. (Thank you)

      Delete
  5. Keep writing! This I need today. Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  6. "...as working for God and not for men"!

    Thanks for the reminder, Leslie!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I believe I need to read this every single day Leslie. I've written a book. Me - who has always lived to please and sought approval at every turn. I am learning to bend the knee and find my approval in Him and to try to keep writing no matter what happens to those words.
    P.S. If your travels take you to San Antonio, TX, we must get together.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Linda, we must meet someday! (Does your church do a women's retreat?) ANd bless you, you writer who has written a book!! What will you do next with it? Don't let it lie fallow . ..

      Delete
    2. I am working with Ann Kroeker to get the book into shape. She is my writing coach/editor. I couldn't do this without her.
      Our church just had a women's retreat. It is one of those mega-churches, and I don't know much about the planning. It is Community Bible Church in San Antonio.

      Delete
    3. I think we should all get together on this certain river... in Texas...

      Delete
    4. What is this river, Sandra?? ANd yes, it sounds terrific! (I LOVE river rafting!)

      Delete
  8. Oh Leslie, thank you, thank you, thank you! (I sound like Gomer Pyle. Do you remember that goofy TV show from a simpler time?) This is just what I needed to hear via your words-and Anne Lamott's....reminds me of Sara Grove's song--This Journey is My Own.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Lisa--I DO remember Gomer Pyle! So glad this spoke to you where you are. I think a lot of us are here!!

      Delete
  9. Leslie,

    Your words arrive as I've begun to realize how much of my writing has (subconsciously) been trying to figure out what I should write, not writing what I really have to say. I've been too busy figuring who I should be. Like Merton says: "Many poets are not poets for the same reason that many religious men are not saints: they never succeed in being themselves. They never get round to being the particular poet or particular monk that they are intended to be by God."

    My biggest point of feedback as I finished my MA in creative writing 12 years ago was, "I want to know what you have to say. All I see here are beautiful words." How could it be that repentance is spreading my wings and letting myself fly? And yet, that is the invitation I hear.

    As I so often say, thank you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Amy, what a great Merton quote. I find that I cannot merely write beautiful sentences. They won't be beautiful unless they come from the furnace of passion and belief. Try reading something you know you disagree with! That always fires me up. I HAVE to respond---and then the words come. So--yes, write, write! (And, how blessed you are that you can already write beautiful sentences. You're more than halfway there!)

      Delete
  10. Thank for these wise words, Leslie, and reminding us why and for whom we write.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Sigh... I don't wear scarfs because I think they make me look fat. But I'll keep writing. Thanks for this, Leslie!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Haaa!! Sandra! Wrap yourself up in your most beautiful scarf and sit down and write!! Cheering you on!

      Delete
  12. As one who met you at one of your last engagements, I can vouch that you are engaging, lovely, well-dressed and thin. Of course, this is coming from a self-conscious, tongue-tied fangirl. ;-)

    Thank you for the reminder that we are so much more than what other people think. God is writing stories in all our lives that we will tell throughout eternity. And I'm glad we a little preview of yours here.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Leslie, I always read and very rarely comment; I began reading your online writing sometime in 2012 after my daughter and her husband moved for assignment to a military base in interior AK...I don't remember where I discovered but I suspect, perhaps? Ann Voskamp's site.
    Anyway, always your writing pushes me to draw closer to Him. I 'won' one of your books from an online promotion and have purchased several more...love your latest book about the way we must forgive. Thank you for being willing to share yourself with those who don't know you.
    AuburnCathy

    PS: I'm here with my daughter for an extended visit...what a wonderful, fierce place!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Cathy! How good to hear from you! I am so honored by your presence here and your faithful reading. Wow---a great gift. And so glad you won a book! (Which reminds me---I have a few more to send out today!) ANd grateful the forgiveness book spoke to you. I am guessing you're somewhere around Fairbanks right now? Or Anchorage?) So blessed to hear from you. Thank you for writing back!!

      Delete
  14. This is just gorgeous, Leslie. You write beautifully, you look wonderful, you have a great heart, a courageous spirit and a willingness to dive deep. Don't believe the naysayers, but do hang onto the truth. Oh - and retrieve that scarf, okay??

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Awwwww,thanks Diane! The hardest part is the anger of those included (though they gave permission) and the anger of those excluded. But the scarf---yes, I'll keep wearing it!

      Delete
  15. Leslie, your words couldn't have arrived at a better time. Just today - in ONE day - I went from feeling like my words make a small difference in the world to considering the possibility of never writing again - all based on a few selected opinions of the people around me. What a roller coaster! But, one I'm absolutely certain that God has called me to ride. I've printed your final words to paste in my journal as a reminder, through the hills, valleys, high, and lows - even when I'm screaming, crying, and want to be sick - to keep writing. Love your heart so much.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Tarissa, so glad this arrived in time to rescue you from belief!! People have no idea how their words hurt …. And it is always this way---those with the courage to step out are shot at the most. KEep writing, Tarissa. You know aha thou know. You must say what must be said.

    ReplyDelete
  17. The thing is - could you tell me what a derivative scarf is? I'm sure I must have several. And I know people must be talking.
    Ellen Davis

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ha!! Ellen, it's just an example of some of the inexplicable, sometimes absurd criticisms we receive that have nothing to do with our work, our thinking, what we're really about. So----don't trash that scarf!!

      Delete
  18. One of my favorite blog posts. :) Persevere, no matter what people say.

    ReplyDelete