Hope for Us Losers – Tim Tebow, Advent, and Bitches, Man, Bitches

At the heart of Christianity is not our souls, hell, heaven, the odd theology about when exactly the bread and wine become the body and blood. And Christianity has nothing to do with cannibalism. You haters.

At the heart of Christianity is the resurrection, a rebirth, life from death. I was dead, and I am reborn. I was blind, but now I see. That is the bottom line, but we humans have to muddy the water with questions like, “Did Jesus really come back to life?” We have been trained to seek scientific proof in realms where science is not the tool to use.

Oh, you bitches, I’m gonna kill you all with blogging about this stuff. You’ll be praying for me to go back to Ayn Rand. Which I have one more post to do. I won’t go into my full Karen Armstrong, A Case For God now, but all of this ties into that wonderful, life-changing book.

Remember in Dead Poet’s Society, where the textbook gives instructions on how to graph a poem? Using science on religion is exactly that. Stupid. So, did Jesus come back to life? It doesn’t matter. What matters is in the truth behind the facts. There is always hope, always good, always God in the world.

Which brings us to our newest messiah, Tim Tebow. Tebow changed the story of the Broncos this year, changed the narrative. We started the season with Kyle Orton, and it was just re-runs of last year. Yeah, this is the Happy Days where Richie nearly gets beaten up, but the Fonz saves him. Yeah, we’ve seen this before. Only as far as the Broncos went, this was where the bullies beat the hell out of Richie. Richie Cunnnigham. Of the Milwaukee Cunningham’s.

Our season was dead. We couldn’t win a game. We were cold with death. Death was everywhere. There were flies on the windscreen.

But lo, a voice is crying in the wilderness. Let despair not into your heart. There is hope. There is life. Roll away the stone. And Tim Tebow changed the story, and the Broncos started to win. And the narrative played itself out in game after game. We were losing. No way we could win. Down by ten points with two minutes to go? It’s impossible. We are dead. Turn off the T.V.

And yet, Tebow played out the resurrection and we won. In prol’ly ten years, we’ll have a T.V. movie about Tebow. Hope On Grass: The Tim Tebow Story. Um, prol’ly not that title, but you get my point.

In this season of Advent, in the Roman Catholic Church, it is a dark time, days are short, it’s cold, and yet, we celebrate the coming of the light, the hope of a new life, change when change seems impossible. In the darkness, in the cold, listen, for the Kingdom of God is at hand.

Which is just another way of saying, we don’t have to be scumbag losers forever. Even normal, troubled people like us can come from behind and win the big game. God bless you Tim Tebow, where ever you are.

Aaron Explodes Onto the World’s Stage – BOOM!

On Tuesday, I had my very first speaking engagement as a published, well, pre-published author. Yeah, I spoke at Pikes Peak last year, but I didn’t really have a product. I was a writer. But this past Tuesday, I went as an author. Big whoop. The more I live, the more I see, most of life is very very, very undramatic, and very, very plain. Even if you are Paris frakkin’ Hilton, you still wake up, pee, eat, feel the wind on your face, simple, plain, unromantic. The trick is to enjoy the unromantic and relish the plain. The irony is, God made it all very fair. We all have the same challenge, to enjoy the plain.

So, my debut was plain, unromantic, and I am victorious. I loved every second of it. Even the awkward and uncomfortable seconds. But I think next time, I’m going Michael Scott it up. Bring in a boombox, pick an old song (I got the power!), and do some sort of stupid intro and babble a lot more. Make it shiny and sparkly and dramatic as hell.

But first, thanks to Terry Kroenung for giving me the chance. And I didn’t curse. I didn’t talk too much about God, and it went well in his classroom. Yeah, I had about three people listening to me, and I had to fight for stage time with the local toughs. Niwot toughs, yo. Ghetto. But the bad kid said I didn’t suck. So I have that going for me. I tried to get a big, huge, philosophical conversation going, but it didn’t quite work. I think I’m rusty, being back in the classroom. Back in the day, well, they’d still be blowin’ the debris off their quaking minds.

What really saved the day were the five girls who were in the Creative Writing club. They were so full of zip and wit and fire. One had self-published a book already, Infected. Another jammed out 51,000 words for NaNoWriMo. And they loved my opening sentence, but then, yeah, duh, because my opening page rocks.

In the end, what really struck me, is that I’m not so completely old and out of touch. I somtimes feel that the kids are of another generation, and I am an alien visitor writing stories for a people I don’t know. But people are people and kids are kids and teens are teens and it’s all about the same. Completely different, but inside, at the soul level, the same. Hard. Dramatic. Full of longing and wonder and despair and love and lust and hate. And that’s why I write Young Adult novels. Because in my novels, things are never simple, plain or unromantic. And next time, I’m gonna bring watermelon and props and drugs, lots of drugs. Kidding. No drugs. Just pop, pop music.

Okay maybe a few drugs. A little V. For Valkyr. Max Payne reference. Nevermind. Out of touch. That’s me.

Eating Is Murder

I grew up weeping at rodeo’s. I cried when King Kong fell off the Empire State Building. My friend had a Doberman and I was sure the dog was starving because I could see its ribs and I insisted that my parents buy dog food for the poor animal. I couldn’t watch nature documentaries because in the end, the mama bunny would lose its babies to the coyotes. And I didn’t grow up in Greenwhich Village where my hippy liberal parents would have praised my sensitiveness. My dad would sometimes scratch his head in wonderment, but he was never mean and he never teased me. Much. But yeah, I was sensitive.

Maybe it’s because I’m a writer. I could imagine the tragedy playing out when the coyote ate the bunny, the lone rabbit, alone, missing her children, pining under a cold sky.

But I still ate meat. And I didn’t think much about the sorrow, the horror, the inhumanity that is the meat industry. If you eat meat, something had to die for you to do so, and someone else had to kill it and someone else had to butcher. You are eating flesh that was once alive, but is now dead and cooked.

Factory farming is wrong. It is a holocaust. It is unsustainable. And I’m sure there are people who could tour a factory farm and then eat at the next McDonald’s and not care. I am not one of those people. The reason why I flirt with being a vegan\vegetarian is that it is sustainable and nothing had to die for me to eat. Yes, broccoli did give its little broccoli life for me to eat, so yeah, part of life is killing other things to eat, but I would imagine the broccoli stalks around the one I harvest aren’t sad for the life of their fallen brethren. I’ve never heard an orphaned broccoli cry.

I went hunting this past week. I helped hunters shoot animals from hundreds of yards away. I helped them spread apart the legs, cut out the anus, disembowel the animal and then hung it up to bleed out. I helped kill a doe, who was still lactating, and a young buck, in his prime. Both are dead. I held the buck’s warm heart in my hands and watched the dark, dark blood drip across my skin. When I kill my first deer, next year, I will take a bite out of the heart because that is what my father did when he killed his first deer.

This is not a happy story. Killing, death, the sorrow of the hunt, these are hard stories to tell. And it’s a crime that we are a society of carnivores but only a fraction ever really understand the horror of killing to eat. If you find hunting deplorable, I would suggest you evaluate your consumption of meat.

And that’s why I’m hunting. I have eaten meat all my life other people have killed, and if I’m to eat meat, I need to be a part of the killing. Yes, I feel bad. Yes, I am still sensitive. Yes, when I saw a fawn on the road, lost, confused, because most likely, her mother had been shot, I felt terrible. But even with the trauma, that fawn is going to have a better life than the millions of animals now being processed through the holocaust engines of the factory farming industry. If I feel bad enough, maybe I’ll stop eating meat. Until that happens, I’m a hypocrite if I don’t at least kill and butcher one animal. Yes, it’s symbolic. No, I’m not saying everyone who eats meat needs to hunt. I’m saying I need to do this.

The irony is that all the meat we eat is ruining our health. Yes, I’ll quote the famous China Study, where the closer you can to eat a vegan diet, the more likely you are to avoid some of the major diseases we have. Raw vegan is the way to eat, but it’s a big commitment. Meat is easy, fills you up, tastes good, is a nice source of quick protein, but in the end, it’s a bloody business. But now I understand the story more, and like I said, it’s a hard story. A hard story to tell.