Author Archives: lauholder

off to tx

i’m leaving for texas tomorrow to see all my family, including four grandparents and a great grandmother who turns 101 this month… how cool is that? this is likely the last time i will see the texas crew before moving to benin, so it’s exciting and sad all at once. pictured is the dirt road that leads to my grandparents’ farm. i love the big skies there.

p.s. i have written 3 songs in the past month. my first 3 songs ever. i’m about ready for a record lable.

i think this is funny

i just got a paper back monday, and these were the comments.

This is a nice piece of writing–clear, provocative, attentive to text, well-reasoned, and obviously with a point to make. I believe I disagree with your argument, but you do make a strong case… I want to stress that any substantive disagreement I have with your argument does not at all prevent me from recognizing and admiring its quality as an essay. Good work. My only concern is that it’s too short… but since I approved this topic, I’m at fault, I suppose; I didn’t think one could treat the topic so well in such a short paper. Obviously, I was wrong.

does anyone else think that’s funny? i also think it’s cool a tutor can disagree with you and respect you at once. yay st. john’s.

so much to say

i am just bursting with information today, but i’ll try to save some of it for later posts. susanne sent me a story this morning, “eight places every woman should go…” turns out i’ve already been to one (volcanoes in hawaii, pictured) and i’m headed to another (benin, can you believe it?) so i might as well add the other 6 to my list. though i think i’ll replace the belly dancing trip with the camino de santiago in spain. shoot. you can belly dance in federal hill. also, have you noticed the birds chirping lately? and the geese flying north? knowing that spring is around the bend puts me in the best mood.

4th annual w&c

this past friday marked the fourth (and perhaps final?) annual wine & cheese celebration. pictured are your lovely hostesses for the evening: anne marie, me and paige. gosh, i’m going to miss these ladies. and i hear the cheese in africa is not so tasty, but maybe i’ll luck out living in a former french colony.

peeps came from far and wide to attend what has become baltimore’s finest tradition. robin drove up from dc with her beau matthew… fellow johnies everett, peter (ever loyal blog reader) and camille (all pictured) drove up from annapolis. adam came from catonsville and megan walked from light street. plus 30-40 of our closest friends.

it was especially fun to have our various groups of friends mix. farhan commented that within my groups of friends, people already feel like they know one another even before meeting, either from my blog or just because i always talk to my friends about other friends as if they’ve already met. what can i say… my friends are my best asset.

plagiarizing

i was about to write up a post, when i got my church’s weekly newsletter in my email. it’s worth a read:

There is much study of Lincoln today and a dissecting of his personality and health but whatever the findings and conclusion Lincoln ’s place in history is secure. Great leaders like all people have flaws. Luther was quite possibly bi-polar and he certainly was, as most people in the 16th century were, anti-Semitic. St. Augustine was a womanizer. St. Peter had a temper. Winston Churchill if not an alcoholic was certainly alcohol dependent. All of which simply illustrates a truth: that all people have problems and issues and are sinners in need of grace. Great people are not exceptions and neither are we but we can still admire their greatness and celebrate their accomplishments.

What is amazing is how God raises up the most unlikely people such as the gangly country lawyer, Lincoln, to lead a great cause and to set people free. Some leaders rise to great historical events and others through lack of insight, courage or will fall beneath the burden and are judged failures.

i’ll write my own thoughts tomorrow… i think i need another day or two to process them anyway. happy b-day lincoln.

life’s like frog

the frog is a simple yoga position to get into, but a difficult one to hold (especially when you modify it the way we did in class friday. ouch!)

my life right now is like practicing yoga. you get into these positions and they’re uncomfortable and they stretch you to the limit, and you feel like you can’t hold it any more, but you practice patience knowing you really can hold it even if you don’t feel like you can, and knowing that you’ll feel stronger, more open and more fluid because of it, even if you are sore the next day or two. so you concentrate on your breathing, clearing your head, centering your focus, and you find this unusual peace supporting you from the inside out. your core strengthened, you’re ready for the next challenge. i think this is similar to what reinhold niebuhr meant in the serenity prayer when he described hardships as the pathway to peace.

"super bowl" party

good ole mollie blessed the east coast with her presence this weekend. i haven’t seen molls since my trip to denver in september, and it’s been about as long since i’ve seen rachel (fellow magnolia cupcake). farhan, of course, i see all too often. but not too, too often. the four of us got together at metro last night, oh… and the game was on in the background somewhere. somebody won. and there was prince. but mostly, there were good friends.

yoga

i’m going to *hot* yoga tonight, which i’ve grown to love this past month. the room is lit by candles and glowing space heaters that keep the room at a cozy 90 degrees. awesome. and though last week was only my 3rd class at this particular studio, i was able to pull off the move pictured here… though i doubt my face looked that calm.

the cabrio that could

anna left today 😦 turns out “just 3 suitcases and my carry-ons” is actually a lot of luggage! but with the top down and the trunk not-quite-shut, the cabrio was able to pull through. we were in such a rush, i didn’t even have time to cry. which is good since i’d already cried twice this weekend over anna’s departure. so so sad 😦

give love

considering the hard time i give my friends for not updating their blogs, it’s a shame i haven’t posted on phos in nearly two months. perhaps it’s because this blog is primarily for my own spiritual growth, and i’ve lately taken to other activities to further the development of my faith. nonetheless, i appreciate how phos is a chronicle of what has spoken to me at different times, and to that end i want to keep it current.

one of the books i’ve been reading of late is henri nouwen’s “the spirituality of fund-raising.” a friend of mine tipped me off on this book, and i’m very grateful. what i like about this book is it frames fund-raising in the context of love, which is very much how i’m wired. the first page of the book says, “make love your aim” (1 corinthians 14:1) and the last page of the book says, “love never ends” (1 corinthians 13:8). here are some of the things nouwen says about giving:

those who need money and those who can give money meet on the common ground of God’s love.

asking people for money is giving them the opportunity to put their resources at the disposal of the Kingdom.

people have such a need for friendship and for community that fund-raising has to be community-building.

there’s a lot more that he says a lot better than i could ever say. his words are helpful to me, not because they tell me what to do, but because they remind me that my primary purpose is to love… that is why i am asking others for support (to take my love to benin) and it is how i should ask others for support (loving those i come into contact with).

it’s all about the love.