Silly Church Clubbers....

Posted on 7:55 AM In: , ,
Little Do We Sometimes Know:

I have a memory from when I was fourteen and my sisters and I are singing in a hotel room on the night before an audition for a ballet school where we would later dance. I remember our mother smiling at us and I remember getting up from the table and taking a sip of raspberry flavored soda water. We probably should have been drinking straight animal protein from a straw, but it took us awhile to learn about nutrition. I remember the soda water because the song we were singing and would love for a long time afterward was Strawberry Wine.

Lindsey and I are sitting in our sunny, window-lined Sunday school classroom with our last three children of the day. One mother, of a tiny little boy named Hayes, comes in and plops down on the carpet and plays with her child. We always love when parents do that—take time to enter a child’s world instead of yanking the kid out of the room to fit into their schedule.

Just before that a little brown-haired girl in the classroom had left after two hours of intermittently repeating to everyone:

“Thank you excuse me I’m sorry It’s ok thank you I love you excuse me It’s ok!” she repeated over and over calling other children by different names and hugging them at about the “I love you” phrase.

Another little boy with long, pale red hair, "Q", remains in the classroom with Hayes and another little girl who speaks mostly Japanese even though she’s a blonde-haired, blue-eyed two year old. Q sits on my lap and the girl sits beside me as we work with play dough and continue talking. Hayes’ mother then sits at the table with play dough and chats with Lindsey and I, her thick Southern accent drawling in the most beautiful way. I smile because her son is off playing and she is making play-dough cut outs of different animals.

Just then Q's parents enter the room and I cringe inside because I can’t stand them. They are of the more obnoxious church-going breed. I've watched them treat people at church as either "in" the club or "out" of the club. Since they led worship at one of the services they often acted as though they were the famous musical members of the club. They also often left their child at Sunday school until long after the building had closed, never said hello or thank you, and only addressed us to see if their child had done something wrong. Hayes’ mother starts chatting with them and inquires about their move to Austin.

“Oh, did you have a job change?” I ask the mother.

“Well, no, I mean, the music industry is good there so we’ll totally be fine,” she says tossing her waist-length brown hair.

“Oh, are you musicians?” I ask (yeah so I forgot about their "job" at the church). She nods and sighs as if my question is superfluous and continues telling Hayes’ mom about their move. Hayes’ mom proceeds to ask about whether or not the couple knows if the church needs assistance with the music on Sundays now that they're leaving.

“Well, you know, we’ve been doing it for years,” says the pompous couple who haven’t even said hello to their son, who still sits calmly in my lap and stares at his parents with vacant eyes. “But yeah, I guess now that we’ll be gone they’ll need help but I really don't know how that will work.”

“I’d really like to, maybe, get involved or help in some way if I could,” says Hayes’ mother,

“Oh are you a singer?” says the mother in a condescending tone-- as if everone she has ever met is a singer.

“I am.” Says Hayes’ mother,“I’m a musician and I feel the Lord is directing me to do something of that sort here. It's just, you know, been on my heart.”

“Yeah,” says the other mother as I’m smashing bits of playdough into the table wishing she’d let me keep Q. and just leave, “Chris, the guy who is arranges everything, has had lots of people interested in singing. I know that a lot of people have approached him on that. So I don't know. I don’t know what they’re going to do once we’re gone, but you can talk to him if you want and see what happens. It's always worth a shot.”

Hayes’ mother smiles sweetly and listens as the other mother and husband go on and on about themselves. Finally the dad interrupts and says someone is waiting for them to go to lunch.

“Oh! Well, a bunch of us are going to lunch! We’ll be seeing you.”

The only time the woman addressed Lindsey and I was when she told us it was their last Sunday and we wouldn't be seeing Q anymore. We will miss Q. We will not miss his parents.

As I clean up I keep talking to Hayes’ mom who says something about Hayes’ dad.

“Is he a musician too?” I ask as I wipe the table.

“No, he’s a film director.” She says. I nod to myself. Who in Hollywood ISN'T a film director?
“But you’re a musician?” I ask again. “What do you play?”

“Yeah I’m an artist,” she says.

“What kind of artist?” I ask as I wad up the paper towel and toss it into a trash can.

“Well I do sorta alternative country music,” she says as she helps us put toys away.

“Oh!” I say as I wash my hands at the sink, “We’re from Bakersfield so we’re fans of country music, but we lost the country station here in LA,” I add knowing she hasn’t lived in L.A. long.

“Yeah, KZLA is gone,” she said. We keep talking about that travesty until finally I ask:

“So do you have any CD’s out or anything?” thinking everyone in Hollywood is a work in progress.

“Well, yeah, I have a few.” She says as she starts to get Hayes ready to go.

“Oh really? What are they called?” I ask stupidly.

“Um, well, my last name’s Carter.” She says sweetly. I pause. I stare at her for a second.

Deana Carter?" I say. She nods.

“You’re DEANA CARTER?” I say again. She nods and looks embarrassed that I’m so bewildered. Lindsey’s mouth drops open.

“Oh my gosh!" I gush, "we’re huge fans….” (Ok, so apparently not huge enough to know what she looks like, but hey, she's a singer). "And you're a CHRISTIAN?" I say in shock. Probably too much shock.

What struck me as so ridiculous about the thing was that this well-known, extremely accomplished musician just sat there as the extremely “churchy” people told her to “try” to get involved in the music aspect of church. I know far too many people who have been wounded by the "club" nature of churches to not boil when I watch it happening in front of me. I was annoyed at their behavior even before I found out she was famous. But once I learned that, their behavior looked even more ridiculous.

Deana, however, never aired her accomplishments. She always thanks us. She is kind and patient with her son. She acts like a Believer, though you wouldn't label her that unless she told you. And yet she stands on the margins of our church...and leaves last of all while little Hayes runs through mud puddles. And instead of saying who she was or what she could do for the music of the church to the couple who were "talking down" to her, she just sweetly wished the obnoxious duo luck and gently asked us where she could find an indoor play place for Hayes.

And her re-make of Strawberry Wine--that song from my childhood—is online at her new MySpace profile. Go check it out and meet a truly beautiful,refreshing and humble woman.

Dough Duty

Posted on 7:19 AM
After running to the store, leaving my lights on, being rescued by Sam, and buying the needed dye, I arrived home, unloaded my packages and set to work. I didn’t have a recipe.

No problem, I thought, I did this so many times back in the day I can surely do it now. No measurements needed.

Oh were they needed.

On Sundays Lindsey and I enjoy letting the kids in our two-year old Sunday school class work with play-dough. The extremely controlling, overbearing teacher for the earlier class, however, insists that the children must play with home-made, “non- toxic” play-dough. She makes this play-dough at home, and God love her, it looks like vomit. It has a great texture and the kids love it, but every week the parents come in, sit down, hold up gopher-gut green mass of dough and ask “What IS this?”

I finally told a mother a few weeks ago I would make some more play dough and dye it colors that wouldn’t leave the children with a curious desire to use cookie cutters on their boogers.

“Here’s my question,” I said to Lindsey the other Sunday “Don’t you think the Play-Dough people or Crayola or whoever makes that crap, you know, makes sure that stuff isn’t toxic? Have there been any studies of children growing extra heads from Play-Dough?” I asked her and she shrugged.

“All I know is if “toxic” were a color—that’d be it,” She replied.

So it’s Saturday night and I decide to “whip up” a batch of home-made play-dough, as they say on cooking shows where everything is pre-sliced for you.

I dump the flour, corn starch, baking soda and water into a pot on the stove and let it begin boiling.

This is going to need salt, I think, and open the cupboard. Of course the canister of salt is in there, but it is empty. By now it’s too late to go back to store and I suddenly imagine that my project is no longer going to turn out like the perfectly non-toxic rolls of neon-colored dough. Pulling everything from the cupboard I nearly rip it apart with my frustrated frenetic energy. No luck.

Where can I get SALT? I thought to myself far more intensely than needed. For awhile I eyed the canister of Lemon Pepper.

No way I’m sifting out those granules of white salt tucked in there, I told myself, though it may become necessary.

Suddenly I remembered that sometimes we keep those packets of disposable knifes, forks and spoons that come with a napkin and salt and pepper packets in a drawer next to the stove. After digging through a pile of plastic knives and ketchup I found one….ONE…packet of salt.

After dumping that in I scraped the browning edges of the mass into a big, steaming pile in the middle of the pot. What had I done and how would it turn into play dough? Taking the mass and dumping its stickiness into my hand I poured the dye onto the dough. While my hands blistered from the heat and the dye ran in strands down into the creases of sludge, the back of my neck began to sweat. This was exhausting. It was taking too long. And the first ball:

It looked like a hot ball of snot.

Next I dyed the dough blue. Because I poured loads of corn starch on the stickiness it stopped clutching my hands and fingers. But the dyes were now soaking my fingers and veins turning my hands a hideous indiscernible color.

In my head I imagined the children playing with the balls of dough and dying themselves all sorts of colors.

“Oh, look, you got some colors on you!” would say a sweet little mother with her hair perfectly done. Then turning to me, “Is that washable crayola stuff?”

“Oh no,” I would say pleasantly with my face in a smile, “It’s neon egg dye. It should wash off in three to five weeks.”

To another parent:

“Oh don’t worry, your child is under there. You just need to scrub harder. But don’t worry—it’s not TOXIC!”

My last ball of dough required that I remove the bits of bread that had baked into the dough that didn’t need all the flour I dumped in there. In fact, I realized AFTER the fact, I don’t believe any flour at all was called for in the original recipe that I of course, did not have.

After the bread had been removed and the mud-like dough was in a ball shape I poured on the bright purple dye. With the hardened bits of dough and corn starch and pot-lining, the purple ball looked exactly like a wad of gum that had been stuck to the bottom of a table at a diner.

And the next day when the parents came in with the bright balls of dough decorating the table, they sat down, picked up the masses and asked “Oh, what IS this?”

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