The official definition of bored is, "feeling weary because one is unoccupied or lacks interest in one's current activity."
And even though I know the word is off limits, I find driving kids around to be one of the most boring things I do. I love spending time with my kids and that they are active, but there are times I feel like that one creepy worm thing from Star Trek is eating my brain. (I'm not a Star Trek fan because that thing still gives me nightmares.)
So, I signed up for a hand-to-hand stage combat class. See what I mean about the worm thing eating my brain.
I needed to do something interesting and frightening so I can check back into the less interesting aspects of life. The first class was last night and I learned that my body does not bounce back like it did 25 years ago in college. Little stiff and sore today.
There were several times I felt utterly ridiculous, but luckily I laugh at myself well. I loved that the teacher apologized every time he swore, which was a lot. Oh yeah, there's a pastor in the house, you better behave.
But, my favorite part was a line he kept telling us, "It is more important to be a good partner than a good person."
On stage, being a good partner is more important than being a good person because you are working together for the audience's belief. You need to act with purpose your role and expect your partner to respond appropriately.
Being a good person is defined in my head and I think most of our culturally assimilated heads as behaving in a way people expect us to behave. Good people don't rock the boat, speak the truth if it is uncomfortable, or let their children say shit. They punch softly from a great distance. That is not believable for an audience. It also leads to sheltered, shallow relationships.
So, what makes for a good partner? We did an exercise of giving and receiving energy. Little creepy, but fascinating to feel and get into sync with another person. A good partner listens and responds appropriately. A good partner trusts that the other is not an incompetent idiot who must be carried or coddled. A good partner is loving and critical because that is the only way you grow and improve.
I wonder what the church would be like if we focused less on being good people and started figuring out how to be good partners.
4 comments:
You had me at, "My kids are allowed to say, "shit" but they aren't allowed to say "bored."
It all comes back to that boundary stuff:)
My therapist is working with me to "be honest, not good". It isn't that I've been a rampant liar, but that I'm more likely to try to "be good" based on what I think other people expect/want vs. actually being honest. I'm considering a "be honest" tattoo.
Thanks for the thoughts. I struggle with distinguishing niceness/goodness with compassion. I do want to be more compassionate, but since it hurts and takes quite the investment, being good is a dull substitute.
I'd get a tattoo if I had a groupon, otherwise I'm too cheap and somewhat lazy.
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