PERSONAL ESSAYS




Final Fantasy: There's one thing I've never done in bed, and I'm saving that for my future husband



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It was late morning, and the New Mexico sun was bleaching the shadows off the ground. I'd been staring out the car window at desiccated scrub brush for two days; it was like watching a loop of a Tom & Jerry chase scene without Tom or Jerry. So my heart leapt in my chest when my girlfriend, Sam, said quietly, "We're here." I was thrilled, because I really had to pee, but I was also nervous.

We turned up a long driveway and the ashram came into view. It was a small adobe compound with exposed beams, decorated by winding rock paths and xeriscaping. Parking attendants in white robes and sandals directed us to a spot on the crunchy grass. Most of the other cars had bumper stickers featuring a lotus or the symbol for Om, or the words "Jai Jai Ma" or "Visualize Whirled Peas."

I started to make a snarky comment, then stopped myself. Sam was visibly buoyant. She was bounding up the hill, overjoyed, and this was from a stone butch who doesn't bound. I fumbled around in the dark of my brain, trying to find my cynicism dial and turn it down as far as it would go. This is serious, I told myself. These are her people.

promotion

She's sharing something important with you. Be nice. But as we neared the ashram's open doors, I could hear chanting. And there was no one with whom to exchange a glance that said, "Seriously? Chanting?"

Like many people, I had issues with religion. But I didn't always. Growing up, my mother was the organist for the local Methodist church, and when I turned ten, she started letting me scamper around the church grounds alone while she was at choir practice. That meant for two hours every Wednesday night, I attended the Church of Me, where I made the rules and enjoyed a direct line to God.

There was no one with whom to exchange a glance that said, Seriously? Chanting?

I believed He and I were on uniquely good terms, and that, as a sign of our secret pact, he allowed me to control the flickering of the candles during Sunday service.

I cultivated a comprehensive personal dogma. People from other religions would definitely go to Heaven — anything else didn't seem fair. (In fact, as a congenital bleeding-heart liberal and moral relativist, I suspected God was a tough-talker but secretly a softie, and that nobody was going to hell.) The Old Testament was some sort of primitive beta version of the whole God-human relationship, and became obsolete as soon as Jesus broke onto the scene. Women and men were equals, divorce was a necessary option and homosexuality was both innate and, for reasons unclear to me at the time, awesome. Abortion was sad, but mostly for the mother, because it was like finding a Saint Bernard puppy when you live in a studio apartment — it's not that you don't love puppies, it's just that you can't keep him. The baby was okay, in my line of thought; it just went back into the shining, cloud-upholstered waiting room and was born in another place where it could be received with unadulterated joy.

When I went to college, I auditioned a few churches, but I never found one I liked as much as the Church of Me. So I carried around my faith in my heart, as my secret. I still felt that God and I exchanged secret winks as we lovingly tolerated other people's bumblefuckery of His divine will.

Then came Sam. When our eyes met for the first time, I didn't just fall in love — I was clocked by love. TKO. I'd never felt about anybody like I felt about her, and I was so naïve that I thought everyone would be happy for my happiness. I told my mother, the organist, right away. She withdrew. She was embarrassed and angry. She didn't want to talk about it.

But strangers wanted to talk about it. When I went to PrideFest to eat roasted corn and listen to mediocre bands, strangers stood across the street holding posterboard that said, "Leviticus 18:22. Homosexuals burn in hell." This didn't count as persecution by a long shot, but I knew that among my new friends, Christian meant that guy with the sign. I stopped telling anyone I was a Christian. It took too long to explain.

        

  

Commentarium (17 Comments)

Jul 14 08 - 2:34pm
CSC

Snore. Lesbian rantings? No, but close.

Jul 14 08 - 4:35pm
GB

I interviewed Amma last year, during her European tour. I lined up and received the darshan. I also cried. And I was as skeptical as they come.
I really could see why everybody was so into her.
Your essay is 100% accurate, I can vouch for that.

Jul 15 08 - 2:51am
jr

When one person suffers from a delusion, it is called insanity. When many people suffer from a delusion, it is called Religion.

Jul 15 08 - 3:48am
LR

Awesome essay. I feel a lot better about things just knowing there's an Amma in the world. Thank you so much for sharing this experience.

Jul 15 08 - 4:15pm
ted

Nice piece, the ending is an unanticipated twist. I am interested to know, though, whether you think you ended up crying at the end because she is connected to a higher god-like power, or if it's because most all humans really really need a hug. I don't mean to trivialize the experience, but it does seem to me that much of puppy love -- early experiences of falling in love which also cause people to cry and cathart -- are fundamentally about being touched for the first time in a decade as our parents used to touch us as children.

Jul 16 08 - 8:02pm
AH

Huh. Great essay, great climax, but I would really have liked to know why you think you broke down. Then again, maybe the point is that it doesn't matter why.

Jul 17 08 - 12:13pm
eos

sweet lady you.

Jul 17 08 - 8:20pm
ks

brought me to tears - well done! ;)

Jul 18 08 - 10:16pm
JD

Very beautiful essay. Thank you.

Jul 19 08 - 4:08am
MV

Thank you for this nice story, i really appreciate you sharing it with us.
There were some sceptic comments here of people who obviously never had an experience like that.
I just wanted to say i feel this is genuine, although i never met Amma, and i also felt emotions rush through my body. However, for the last 12 years i am involved with another chinese technique, and although my master doesn't give hugs, her classes and sessions produce the same effect. I think it's NOT about the hug, as TED wondered in one of the comments above, i do believe it's a matter of a energy connection that we normally don't yet have. Hugging with these people, or for that matter when we learn to connect, we receive "the blessing", or in my words we get online.
truly unique experience.
thank you!
greets from croatia

Jul 21 08 - 4:00am

The sheep will flock together...

Once you have convinced people to believe that their whole reality is based upon colorful fiction, something which you cannot prove, something which pontificates wild inconsistencies, then you can get them to believe or do almost anything.

These people act like reactionary lemmings, running modern society over a cliff with their hypocritical, unnatural absurdities. They believe rumors and lies without evidence and remain ignorant, even when bombarded with facts. They espouse violence, fear and misinformation, fake science and anti-knowledge. Their entire brainwashed belief system is based upon a massive collection of lies.

Unfortunately, because the world is too small, those who are educated, independent thinkers suffer the results of those who are not. Humans need to move on from ridiculous, distorted folklore parading as reality. Humans need to progress past the age of fear, ignorance and anti-intellectual complacency or we will never change for the better.

Aug 04 08 - 9:27am
thea

Oh hush. Whoever commented below me didn't even read the damn story just copied and pasted a stock atheist rant. None of this huggy-cult has any espousal of violence or lemmings over a cliff. Just compassion in a super-strong concentrated form. I'm as faithless as they come but I think this is a beautiful essay.

Jan 15 09 - 12:01am
MG

I too thought I was kind of.. making my own version of the Christian faith. I myself had a LOT of issues with religion, it just didn't make sense that our so called loving father would send us to hell for using what he created. I even got pissed at al anon meetings when they mentioned a higher power... I realized later that the bible is up to so much interpretation. It is true that some use God as a vessel to promote hate and prejudice. On the other hand, there is a wonderful Christian church I discovered called "Unity". We study a positive, practical approach to Christianity. This church is considered "new thought" and sparked from the transcendentalism movement. I hope you find this interesting and not presumptuous! Feel free to check out their website. I have never felt more at home with a group of people than at Unity.
here is the website if you are interested :)
http://www.unity.org/

Jan 15 09 - 12:06am
MG

I'm worried you will feel like I'm trying to promote something. I was personally very touched by your essay and feel like I can really relate to you as far as questioning my faith and wondering where to go. I am NOT advertising. From one confused person to another, I just wanted to let you know where I feel at home. Thank you for sharing such an inspirational story :D

(i am the same person that posted below this, sorry for the double post)

Oct 01 10 - 2:40pm
crackpatch

Your writing is simple great, Especially for beginners!

Feb 18 11 - 12:30am
tayla

ha-ha-ha-ha! That is standart point of view, be more original!

Feb 18 11 - 8:24am
Serial Saniyah

Whay are you don't publish actual news?

Now you say something

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