All I can I think is I've got to get some fellowship. True, into each other's lives, spurring onto Christ-likeness support.
As a teacher I am surrounded by coworker friends, and yet somehow I feel like a loner in managing my class. I crave having another person in my room. I don't want to keep doing this alone. (Kids don't make for a great emotional support system.)
I left Jazzercise last night with no one to say goodbye to as everyone mingled with their friends. Apparently not-attaching is a theme for me.
But I do attach. At Bible college this last year I've sat next to the same lady every week intentionally because everyone else already knew each other and she was someone I could be buddies with.
I want a spouse. I have always craved someone to do this thing called life with. So I don't have to bear it all alone.
Proverbs 5:14 (NKJV) "I was on the verge of total ruin, In the midst of the assembly and congregation." Sometimes I think of this verse and muse in fearful awe at how we can be in the midst of people and completely slide through the cracks.
Fellowship, y'all. I am chasing it.
"As [Jesus] walked this earth He experienced all the emotions we do, and in His darkest hours, He craved community." -Rusty George, Better Together
Wednesday, April 25, 2018
Sunday, April 22, 2018
234: social media as an anesthetic for singleness
my dog on my leg while I was sick last week |
I think that social media usage sometimes anesthetizes us from our singleness.
Actually, I KNOW it does. It, like any other social activity, takes away the loneliness. So that's not quite what I mean.
A quick Google search says "anesthetize" is to "deprive of feeling or awareness." I think social media can deprive us of the feeling or awareness of our lack of in-person attachments. It can make us not quite feel our singleness.
Okay, okay, I know the opposite is true as well. Who hasn't scrolled through social media and felt angst from viewing all those engagement and baby announcements?
This last 12 month period I have been part of this amazing Facebook group of Christian singles. It's like the City--it never sleeps. There is always something going on. Some conversation, deep or ridiculous. Some meme to like. Some gif to search for and add as a comment for others to like. Some person to roll your eyes at or interaction to laugh at.
It is a unique Internet community.
The other night I had to go outside without my phone. I looked up at the stars, the moon, the dark sky. And immediately felt lonely. Immediately started praying for a spouse and kids.
And I wonder...
If I lived without this instant access to people across the country at all hours of the day...
If I lived without this placebo numbing me to real life...
If so, and I know this is far-fetched, but...
Would I be less single today?
Probably not, but--
At what point does need drive us to action? To unprecedented action? Especially in a 21st century, first-world, middle-class life where "need" is almost nonexistent.
What would it take to cause us to do the unthinkable, whatever that may be? We'll never know. Because we never allow ourselves to get to that point. All these movies and fictional scenarios where people are faced with these either/or situations, where they have to be brave or face their fears or allow themselves to be stretched beyond their desires--I'm not saying we don't experience that now, but we don't willingly throw ourselves at those situations. We pad our discomfort with distraction, our need with placebos. Our wants--those things we can do something about with little cost--we'll gratify with fulfillment. But we prefer not to feel need. We must not feel need.
I don't know. Just some thoughts.
Anyway, it's an interesting question of how much social media affects my singleness.
Yet I am still grateful for it.
P.S. I use movies to anesthetize my singleness too, but I could only pick on one thing in this post :)
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