Wednesday, 26 September 2018

Changes in perspective

When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things. (1 Corinthians 13.11 KJV)

A university tutor I knew said in a seminar that we should welcome disillusionment: because who in their right mind wants to live in the light of an illusion? I found that observation helpful.

There’s a certain no-going-back quality to growing up. I’m not convinced that older always means wiser. All of us know some bigoted, snobbish, obtuse old people — and we may even all unawares exactly fit that category ourselves. Wisdom? Perhaps. But there is a kind of familiarity with the ways of the world that does accrue. It sometimes takes the shine off things.

This has been true for me in the sphere of politics. As a young woman I was a passionate socialist, and swallowed whole the ideology held (in the main) by my fellow Methodists, that poverty is a random accident which can strike any person at any time — there but for the grace of God go I; it’s a lottery.

My mother (hers is a Conservative vote; mine remains socialist, with reservations) thought otherwise. She used to recall her childhood growing up on a large farm. The horsemen were hired annually at a labour fair, and made their lodgings in the outbuildings, but there were cottages housing some of the men who worked the farm, with little gardens. These men came out to the fields each day with a packed lunch made by their wives. They all had the same pay, but my mother observed that some of the men had meat with their bread while others had only “pepper-and-salt-sandwiches”. It wasn’t just a matter of wages, then, but of the skills to make the money go round. Rudyard Kipling was his household’s principal source of income, but he used to call his wife “the Committee of Ways and Means.” Absolutely.

“Thrift” is a wonderful noun, of Norse origins; the same rootstock produced the verb “thrive”. So a “spendthrift” is a person who scatters and disperses the stores meant for our necessity, that would have ensured the household could thrive.

I have known quite a number of people who fit into the category of people in poverty, and they managed it very differently.

I especially remember one dear Christian soul who was poor from the day she was born to the day she died. She spent her childhood in the workhouse. She married a young man who went to war as a soldier, came home broken in body and spirit, and was hers to nurse and comfort until he died. He occupied her attention, so she did not work outside the home. They lived on his military pension; it was not much. After his death, in her old age she had a state pension; that also is not large. She never had much, and she populated her wardrobe from judicious buys in charity shops. But she took a taxi to chapel once old age made the distance too far to walk — not only to worship but also to arrange the sanctuary flowers. She had her hair set and colour-rinsed regularly (her special luxury). And she set enough money aside to give me, every now and then, ten pounds to send a man in prison, so he could buy himself some cigarettes. He was inside for burglary, and she never smoked in her life: if that’s not selfless charity, I don’t know what is.

That same young man in the prison was a bit of a rascal (that's why he was there). He prided himself on never paying a utility bill of any kind. He lived in accommodation found him by kind people. He went straight to the pub with his social security payments and drank the lot in one evening. He shop-lifted what essentials he needed. When his gas or electricity bill came in he ignored it. When the debts accumulated and he was fined, he’d opt for a prison term instead, and “go and lie down for a month”, as he put it. He was proud of it, it amused him — he saw it as himself outwitting the big, faceless system. That reminds me of Malvina Reynolds song about the mouse. I used to think it was so funny, when I was a younger woman — us against the system. But I see it more as sawing off the branch you're sitting on, now. The farmer in the song would be as badly hit by the failure of his bank as the failure of his crops, at least in the short term. It's still a good song, for sure, but . . .

Anyway, they both were poor, that old lady and that young man I knew. Each of them did as they thought best according to their view of life. Who am I to judge? But I knew them both, and they coloured my attitudes. I won’t keep you here all day with tales of people in poverty I’ve known, but I’m sure you get the drift. The opportunity to observe how people live has rubbed a lot of the varnish off the ideology I held as a young woman.

Then there’s preaching. When I was young, I embraced what I heard wholeheartedly; now, not so much.

Here’s an example. In the 1980s we had a Mission (I think it deserves a capital M) here in Hastings. A young evangelist with a strong sense of himself as a Church Leader (capital C L for sure) was spearheading the event as main speaker. Possibly even Main Speaker (do you detect how cynical I have grown with the passing years?)

We had a Preparatory Meeting in readiness for the Mission. All of us from participating churches around the town came to be briefed and fired with enthusiasm by our Leader.

I have forgotten everything he said except one story. We sang the hymn All for Jesus, and he spoke to us about financial giving. He spoke about tithing. He parodied the hymn we’d just sung as “One tenth for Jesus”. He described his experience of giving and tithing. He said that when he offered God one tenth, God instead took ninety per cent and said, “Here, you can have the tenth.” Then (yes, you guessed right) he invited us to dig deep into our pockets to resource the Mission.

At the time, in my early twenties, I thought that was wonderful. So trusting, so visionary, so wholehearted and generous, so committed. It spoke to me of Charles de Foucauld’s “abandonment to divine providence”, giving all to Jesus and trusting him for the way ahead.

I came across a snippet of information about C.S.Lewis that said he started out giving ten per cent of all he had, and increased the percentage as his income rose until in the end he gave ninety per cent and kept back ten. I can’t remember where I read that and don’t know if it’s true.

I see things through a different lens now. I had no idea, back in the early 80s, what a vast amount of money it costs to maintain and repair the fabric of buildings. I never imagined the increase in property prices would so massively outstrip the rise in incomes that most of my children would not stand a chance of buying their own homes. I didn't expect to get divorced and remarried and add another two offspring to the quiver. I didn’t understand how much the world would change and how exponentially the slime mould of Mammon would grow. I hadn’t factored in that you have to apply a different rationale as you grow old — once you lose earning capacity you have what you’ve saved and nowt else. I hadn’t expected that the UK government would become so focused on shrinking and distancing old age pensions. I didn't grasp that a day would come when my income would have diminished but bills with three noughts on the end would come my way. There were so many things I didn’t know in my early twenties.

I count nothing as my own. I am Christ’s property and all I have is to be shared. I’ve tried to set the example of giving the most and choosing the least. I live simply. 

I also believe in paying our way and not looking to others to foot the bill. So when, recently, at a church council meeting we discussed how to meet the cost of property repairs, mine was the voice for giving and fund-raising, not the voice for seeking grants and assistance from other churches. The path I favour is the one where you take responsibility for meeting your own needs and generate a bit extra to give away — not the one where you look round to see whose resources you can beg or borrow. So I agree with the 1980s Leader that if we wanted a Mission we should have given a little thought to financing it.

But preaching that relies heavily on guilt-tripping people into parting with their money no longer strikes me as wonderful. Making people who came eagerly, to see how they could help, feel ashamed and inadequate because everything they have is already committed to housing, feeding and clothing their families, no longer looks like spiritual vision to me. Nowadays I like things done quietly, frugally and on a planned basis. No grand gestures.

I think I can pinpoint the time my illusions fell away. It was with the birth of my fifth child.

After our twins (Child 3 and Child 4) were born, and we had a houseful and four kids still in nappies at night, I felt I’d had enough babies. Then, through Christian circles to which we belonged, began to come a trickle of words and prophecies. I started to feel that, against all my inclinations, we were being called to make room for another child. I felt it very strongly. So I said “yes”, and our family increased. 

I remember the week before Child Five was born. We had houseguests — another family of parents and children. We had a lodger. All in our modestly-sized three-bedroomed Victorian semi. There was a day when I stood in the town centre carrying so many bags of groceries my arms ached, and thought, “I think I’m too tired to do this.” But there is no going back from nine months pregnant!

Five children is a lot more than four, if you think of packet size, sofa sizes, sets of chairs/glasses/plates, bunk beds etc. 
I and my children’s father slept, at various times, on the living room floor, on the boarded joists of the attic (got mighty nifty at shinning up and down a step ladder), in the box room, in a garden shed. Every penny he earned was turned straight over to me to budget, and it lasted three weeks of the month — which was a good thing, because it taught our children the power of prayer.

After that, though, I had a chat with the Lord, in which I humbly offered him the opinion that if he wanted me to have any more children, the way he might let me know it would be by sending along the big house and increased income first.

Not all my illusions and disillusionment have been to do with money, but it serves to illustrate what I mean. The view from where I stand today looks different from the vista forty years ago. Scepticism has replaced hope and eagerness. Wariness has ousted trust. Sometimes it seems sad, in a way; life is flatter, less joyous, somewhat grittier. But then, as my tutor said all those years ago (and he, then, so much older than me) who in their right mind wants to live in the light of an illusion?

God still provides. He always provides. There are still the sweet miracles and happy surprises of his unexpected rescues. But I accept that much of the time our self-discipline, self-denial, careful thrift, willingness to live simply and advance planning make up the channel of his provision. 




16 comments:

Rapunzel said...

I've read this three times and I'm still thinking about it.
Mercy you wake my brain cells up sometimes!

Elin said...

There is wisdom in inexperience as well as experience. My children grow up in a multicultural area with people more or less representing many different countries, regions and continents. They have no idea that some areas of Sweden is almost all white and that some people find where we live a scary and confusing place and all those different colored faces a threat. They just see this as natural and the way things are. I used to live in one of those all white areas and had to get used to different people, cultures and religions. Now it is natural to me as well but I started from a different place. At the same time, my experience also helps me. When I say hi to my Somali neighbors in long headscarves we don't share a language but I know we are all mothers and they also worry about their kids, want them to do well in life (whatever that is) and have to buy the new rubber boots when they outgrow them when the weather is at its coldest and wettest. They don't have to tell me, I know.

As to kids I have more or less made the opposite journey. I was convinced that I would have a big family, at least 3 but more likely 4 or more. I have two and I don't think there will be any more of them. God may offer me a surprise but it really doesn't feel like this will happen.

Pen Wilcock said...

Rapunzel — I bet you are hatching wise insights! Bring them back here when they've emerged!

Elin — Yes, I so agree with you. I was thinking just the other day about how we used to wait for the school bus at the corner of the street, during my childhood. There was a girl in the group of us who went to school by bus, called Judith Arikans (or maybe Arikaans? I never saw it written down). I thought she was so beautiful, because she had long dark eyelashes, golden-dark skin, very dark hair. Just the loveliest person I ever saw. What interests me looking back that is that at the time I didn't know that I was white and she was not. These were not categories I'd ever heard discussed. I didn't even know her family was not of English origin (though she may have been British). I only knew three things about her: she was Judith Arikans, she was beautiful, and she had a way of blowing her nose I'd never seen before, which struck me as particularly effective and I've used it ever since.

Anonymous said...

I am thinking of an alternative way to blow ones nose - which I observed (and tried once in the outdoors. Tell my your way first! :) Mairin.

Buzzfloyd said...

What you describe at the end there might also be a way to pick up your cross and walk?

I think Elin is right that there is wisdom in both experience and inexperience. We need the idealism, drive and hope of youth as well as the insight, caution and realism of age.

I am also a great believer in complexity. Seeing people and their lives as simply one thing or another will never give a full picture. A person like the ex-convict you describe is linked to the generational abuse and societal failing that generates poverty as much as the old lady is linked to the infrastructure and societal care that supports each of us. We need to apply general principles because that is the best way to function, but simple rules generate complex results that we can't always read backwards.

Rapunzel said...

You do know you've got us all curious about the nose blowing....?

Pen Wilcock said...

Hello dears. Mairin and Rapunzel — My mother taught me to old the hanky to you nose, blow into it, then sort of wipe one's nose as one removed the hanky. Judith was a lot more thorough. She got her forefingers into the hanky and gave the inside of her nose a good poke around.

Grace — What you say has to be right, because that's how life is; old people and young people together, learning from each other, and the old people teaching caution while the youngsters' idealism and love of truth continually re-inspires us.
You're also right about the convict. He graduated from children's homes to Borstals then to the army. He experienced abuse of one kind or another from an early age. I was very fond of him, I don't blame him in the slightest and I'm glad we took him in. I don't even mind that he stole our money and burgled your grandparents home. Nonetheless, the woman I am today would be less likely to get so closely involved with his life. The old lady was also raised in an institution (the workhouse), and her kindness arose not from advantage and support but from faith. She and he had the same support; in fact he had rather more than she did. I think she was mostly the person doing the supporting. But she did not judge him. She understood.
I like your point that simple rules generate complex results! Somewhere along the way I lost all my rules and most of my principles — my karma ran over my dogma long ago. There is one simple rule/principle I have come to dislike particularly — the one where one person does the hard work and exercises the self-discipline and the other person takes advantage of it. Because of Jesus, one has to be kind about this, but it fails to impress me every time I see it in action.
"The rain it raineth every day
Upon the just and unjust fella
It raineth more upon the just
The unjust hath the just's umbrella."

Pen Wilcock said...

I also believe what Wayne Dyer said, that every individual is doing the best they know with the information they have at the time. There is nothing to be gained by judging people. They are all just muddling along doing their best. God bless them all. May they live long and prosper.

Rapunzel said...

Judith's method does sound nicely efficient. When it comes to breathing efficiency is a definite PLUS.

I'm still a jumble of thinking, no great wisdom though. I do find as I get older I'm less idealistic (less vapid, some might say).
Also as a young idealistic person I was very interested in JUSTICE, writ large and hailed loudly. Half a century onward I'm more impressed with mercy, kindness and humility.

I raised my four children in genteel poverty, partly by accident and partly on purpose. Which is to say, while married I was a stay-at-home mom, keeping house thriftily and raising kids, and we were fairly poor. Post-divorce we were more poor.
However, if we'd been rich I'd have still chosen to live in simple homes, cooked with actual food, hung my washing on the line and so on.
I call it genteel poverty because it was a non-violent, sober, non-blasphemous curse-less household we made. Love for all and to spare. As my dear daddy used to say, we were rich in everything but money.
For years we followed the pattern of our generation: "the husband goes out and makes the living, the wife keeps home and makes the life worthwhile". I like that system, it worked well for eons. It suited my personality, which is slightly hermitish. It suited my outlook on life. I seriously believe there are differences between men and women and that those differences are important, a notion that is becoming more old-fashioned by the minute in the liberal college town where I now live.

Post-divorce I became a working mother, and while I've turned out to be decently good at it I must say the working world is not half as interesting as keeping house and raising children. Family life is a lot of work, but I always felt a sense of higher purpose in it. In the working world I am just doing a job for a paycheck, and am slightly haunted bytthe feeling that this is not where I really belong. I miss being at home during the day, even though the children are all grown with homes and families of their own.
If the university closed down tomorrow I wouldn't miss it at all.

I need to think about this some more.

Pen Wilcock said...

As Buzzfloyd points out — it is indeed complicated.
Like you, I prefer being in my own home, and have come distinctly reclusive. On the differences between men and women, it's what I think of as a true generalisation, which is to say I believe those important differences are there for the vast majority. But for the sake of the few who march to a different drum for one reason or another, I think the doors should always be kept open so that everyone can be fulfilled. As George Herbert said, "With customs we do well, but laws undo us."

Anonymous said...

Another interesting post, thankyou. So much of this resonates with me. How can we possibly know and judge another’s inner landscape. Humbling.
But the nose blowing thing?!? Eeyew
Have a good day, Deb x

greta said...

is it disillusionment that we acquire as we get older or simply a more sane and balanced view of the world? we know more fully that we are in the world but not of it. like rapunzel, i've always felt that being a homemaker was the most interesting and fulfilling job around. not that i didn't work outside the home at points but, now that i am retired, giving my full attention to household chores is my delight. we live very frugally on a pastor's pension and never feel 'poor.' since i know how much you like to explore both simplicity and spirituality, here is a link to the community that i am close to: https://www.mississippiabbey.org you will see that there is a link to videos that they have posted. this lovely group of women is my inspiration. i go to the abbey on retreat whenever i need a reset to my monastic heart. they never fail to give me courage, hope and a clear-eyed vision of how to live a good life.

Rapunzel said...

A true generalization. Makes sense to me. Over the years I've had friends and co-workers who marched to a variety of different drums: people who choose not to have any children, people who have a dozen or more, gay couples, lesbian couples, people who wouldn't consider coupling with anyone even for a million bucks, people of many colors from many different countries....
I honestly never had a problem with any of that, the world is vast and filled with options and possibilities and I like to take people as they come.

That is, I never had any problem with it until I came to live in a college town that is not only liberal, but is becoming aggressively liberal, annoyingly politically correct.

In this new social climate it is becoming "wrong" to be happy about anything in your life because your happiness apparently oppresses people who have other circumstances or have made other choices.

If I say I loved being a stay-at-home mom I am insulting working moms, if I say my husband was a good father I'm insulting unmarried mothers. And if I say even a word about my European ancestry I'm a white supremacist. We are no longer allowed to be proud of our heritage if we're caucasian. sigh. Only non-caucasians are allowed to be proud.
It's a very sticky situation, and I'm getting quite weary of it.

Feel free to not publish this if you choose Pen, it's quite crabby.
the world definitely looks quite different to me now that it did even a few years ago.

Taken as a whole it kind of stinks....
BUT, if I divide life up in parts I fine I'm quite content with everything but the local political climate really. The rest of my life is warm and lovely. I just have to not let local politics overshadow the things that really matter to me. Your George Herbert quote is spot on!!!!



Pen Wilcock said...

Hi Deb — nose blowing tutorials given as a generous extra at any time.

Hi Greta — ooh, thanks for the link! Off to check it out.

Hi Rapunzel — you articulate well something I often feel. I have come to the conclusion one has to let all this angst flow over the top or life would become impossible. I suspect some of the aggressive political correctness may be displaced anxiety in a world over-blessed with information.

Anonymous said...

Thank you. I needed a comforting reminder that God always provides. We received a note in our letterbox today to tell us that the owner of the house we rent is selling it. I am devastated and my children are heartbroken. We have only just started to allow ourselves to love the trees, plant vegetables and make friends... join in community groups. Its a lovely village we are new to We only moved in 2 months ago after our last tenancy was ended after only 12 months. Before that we lived in a tent and a caravan for 6 months.... it is not the first time we have been homeless. finding somewhere to live is a constant challenge. We only have income from a government pension because I have health problems and need my husband close. We are wise with our money and so we live very comfortably, and never want for food, can share generously, and enjoy the luxury of breakfast at the markets every saturday. We have significant savings in the bank, but are considered too poor to lend money to and so cannot buy a house. My health was starting to improve here, but its hard to start to heal when I cannot have the space and security of a stable home. But God always provides.... so chin up, start looking, start packing.
On another note, a dog followed me home from the shops this evening, me pushing a pram and laden with groceries. He walked with us a ways and showed us an echidna in the bushes ( I am in Australia). When i got to the top of the road that loops round to my house he stopped and started barking and growling with heckled up and refused to allow us to go on. So I listened. And we turned and went back and took a short cut across an empty lot to the back of my garden. It’s quite steep, so I carried baby, groceries and tried not to lose the pram down the slope. When we got to the gully it was full of fireflies. I have never seen fireflies here before as they are not that common here. I went up to the house I have loved and will have to leave soon to I don’t know where, and called the rest of my family and we all spent the early evening gathered amongst the fireflies. It was a moment that comforted and lightened our souls and dried our tears.
God always provides.

Pen Wilcock said...

Oh my goodness! You be sure to come back and tell us all about the home you find and how things unfold for you.
So, now — may the courage of Jesus flow through your soul, your bones, your viscera. May you find the faith you need, the hope and trust in God who knows and loves you, watches over you, and always provides. May you find a home to settle in that will be just right for you. God bless your circumstances, your family, your finances, your whole situation. May you be happy, may you be provided for, may you be peaceful, may you be content. May the way open for what you need to come to you. God is with you. Hold fast. xxx