Core People

corepeople“Here’s something I realized,” G said, as we sat under that red umbrella, soon after the fan and the lights were turned off. It was late — way later than I expected to be up on my first night back at this country. I wanted to be in bed earlier for the long day tomorrow, but it was the only time we would be with R while I was there. In times like this, I learned that you must sacrifice sleep for things that may never happen again. So we sat there, the night dark and humid around us, with bottles of beer in front of us going along with our discussions. Over at the other bar, the band that was playing earlier had started packing up, and all we can hear were the noise of the people talking, laughing and drinking the night away.

“I realized that you don’t need to be friends with everyone,” she continued. I nodded slowly as I took a sip from my beer. “You just need a some people, outside of your family. I mean, you can be chatty and chummy with everyone you meet, but you only really need a core group of people. The ones I know and who know me and the ones I trust. And with them, I’ll be okay.”

“They’re the people you can run to anytime and won’t judge you.”

She smiled at me. “Exactly. And you won’t judge them, too. They’re the ones you would keep for life. The friendships you will put a lot of effort on.”

“The ones you’d call at three in the morning in the middle of a breakdown, or the ones you’d call first to celebrate with good news.”

“There’s one you’d call for financial advice, and another for love advice. And maybe another one when you have a stupid decision to do and they’ll remind you of the things you don’t need to do.”

“And they’d cry with you too. Or just let you cry until you’re all out.”

“Then they’d find a way to make you stop crying and make you laugh again.”

We laughed at this, because it was true.

“And they’ll be the first ones to tell you that you will be okay, even if you feel the furthest away from it.”

R, who sat on the other side of me, smiled. “My psych friend from college said that people don’t always need counselors or psychologists to help them feel better. Sometimes, all you need to make you feel better is a good set of friends.”

We sat in silence for a while as we let the words sink in. It was dark and humid, and the fan that whirred over our heads earlier that made us choose that table among the many tables in the bar had long been turned off. There were empty bottles of beer in front of us, some cigarettes (for them) and other knick-knacks (for me) from the day-long tour. It was so late into the night that it’s already considered early, and I was tired but also not so much. I sat there, thinking and feeling and being, and in a place 2,391.81 kilometers away from home, I smiled. Because I know, without a shadow of a doubt, that I already have my core people.

* * *

Good friendships are like breakfast. You think you’re too busy to eat breakfast, but then you find yourself exhausted and cranky halfway through the day, and discover that your attempt to save time totally backfired. In the same way, you can try to go it alone because you don’t have time or because your house is too messy to have people over, or because making new friends is like the very worst parts of dating. But halfway through a hard day or a hard week, you’ll realize in a flash that you’re breathtakingly lonely, and that the Christmas cards aren’t much company. Get up, make a phone call, buy a cheap ticket, open your front door.

Because there really is nothing like good friends, like the sounds of their laughter and the tones of their voices and the things they teach us in the quietest, smallest moments.

Bittersweet: Thoughts on Change, Grace, and Learning the Hard Way by Shauna Niequist

 

New Beginnings

Last week at my SFC household, our topic came from Matthew 6:24-27. Upon reading, I realized that this was one of those Gospels that hit us a lot back when I was in YFC. In a funny way, I didn’t like this back then, even if I kept on going back to it, because it sounded so hard. Deny yourself, take up your cross and follow me. For someone who’s still trying to find her footing in a bigger world back in college, this was a scary thing. Still, I knew it was important, so I tried.

So our household head asked us: what are the things you denied yourself so you can follow God?

Of course I had an instant answer, but I stopped myself from speaking first because I wanted to chew on the question a little, and perhaps try to find another answer that doesn’t lead to that automatic answer. It was a good example, but I personally thought it was already old, passe, and wasn’t I supposed to be done with that already? So when it was my turn, I picked my answers carefully…and still ended up talking about that. Oh well. Anyway, here’s what I shared:

I denied myself of being self-sufficient. On my recent trip to Singapore, there was a time when I wondered if it was worth it. I wondered, because as I was planning my itinerary, I felt like I was hassling my friends there. For one thing, I was already crashing with them, and now they were rearranging their schedules for me. I tried to shake it off, and instead, focused on accepting this grace from them — because it is grace — but then somewhere in the middle of the trip, I felt it again. How maybe I’m such a burden to them, especially since I forgot to have my money changed at the airport. How they don’t have to do this, how I should be able to manage alone, how I should try not to be a hassle to them especially since I’m just a guest. I shouldn’t disrupt their lives and all that.

What destructive thoughts, right? I think I’ve been so used to taking care of myself and trying not to be a hassle to anyone that I forgot that people just want to do things for you because they want to. Not because you forced them to, or you asked them to, but because they love you and care for you. I’m that person who will go and do things for my friends and not ask for anything in return because they’re important to me, but when I’m at the receiving end of it, sometimes it’s hard to just accept it.

So I forced myself to stop putting myself down, and instead, just humbled myself and accepted this grace, no questions. There really is something humbling about allowing yourself to stop thinking of yourself as a hassle, and instead, leaning in to the people who care for you and accepting the grace and hospitality they can give. Because surprise surprise, we need just as much grace as the next person. We can’t give what we don’t have.

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Coming Home

There was a time, one day I was roaming Singapore alone when I felt it, that feeling that I was kind of expecting to feel at some point during the trip.

I want to go home.

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It’s not that I wasn’t enjoying my trip. I did, and I loved being where I am, and knowing that there’s a 50% possibility of me getting lost somewhere. It was even more exciting because I had no internet while I was roaming around, so I relied on good old-fashioned maps and my good sense of direction (that only surfaces when I’m alone). I liked it, and even if my legs were screaming from all the walking, it was fun to go around, go in stores, enter streets where you have no idea where it goes. I loved watching people in the train and in the bus, marveling at the fact that other than the friends I lived with while I was in Singapore, I was in a place where I don’t know anyone, and no one knows me.

I’m going to echo what a friend wrote about the same feeling, because her words captured it beautifully (and because she wrote it while she’s in the city I’ve always dreamed of going):

In New York, I am not needed. I have no expectations. I can be anyone. I can do anything. I am not rooted to the earth. I am absolutely free.

JD Salinger wrote: “I’m sick of not having the courage to be an absolute nobody.”

That’s who I am in New York — a speck in the center of the universe. And it feels good to be here, to listen to the heartbeat of a new metropolis, to sit by the pulse of a different landscape, to dream new dreams, to see new things, to be alive in a continent that isn’t my own.

I am happy, so happy, to be invisible. It gives me what I was looking for. It gives me a chance, quoting Sara Bareilles, to show you how big my brave is.

But I’m going to be honest:

I miss home.

That’s me after I have been in a place for just three days. I don’t know if it’s pathetic or crazy or just…well, real. Perhaps it’s all. I always tend to go homesick the closer I get to the day when I have to go home. When I was in Europe two years ago, I started calling my family on my last day there. Never mind the phone bill I got after that call — I was just so, so excited to go home, even if I loved Europe and wished I could have stayed longer.  In the same way, I loved Singapore and I loved being there and I loved seeing my friends and I loved being alone…but at the same time, I know that I don’t really belong there. I guess I’ve always been just a homebody. I like traveling and seeing new places and staying out with friends and all that, but at the end of the day, I think my heart really just knows the truth: there’s really no place like home.

* * *

I took a window seat on the plane on the way home. I take aisle seats most of the time for the sole purpose of convenience (except when I’m traveling with friends), but this time, I took the window seat because of one thing: I want to see home.

Image source
Image source

As the pilot announced our descent, I looked out the window and watched the city lights. They were tiny from where I sat, but they were bright. They weren’t as impressive compared to other cities, but I don’t care. This is mine, this is home. Allow me to use Coldplay to describe that moment, as I stared and watched as the lights grew brighter and the cars bigger, as I strained to identify the places and roads from my seat on the plane: Lights will guide you home. Yes, my trip was fun, and I needed it…but I still think that the best part of any trip is coming home.

Literally, and figuratively: it is so, so good to be home. :)