Aug 01 2011

Wanna play ball?

Category: Round Peg Square HoleBrent Watkins @ 6:30 AM

As a kid everything I did was done with my pals. Most was done outdoors: Sledding in the winter, riding bikes in the spring, baseball in the summer, football in the fall. Each of these activities made me know a lot about my childhood buddies. I knew who could be selfish, who was competitive, who was insecure, who had ambition.

I’m not waxing nostalgic for my childhood. Rather, I’m reflecting on the simplicity of childhood relationships. There was no mystery about how friendships were formed. You asked someone to play with you. Unless they has some compelling excuse, like it was dinner time, or they had chores to finish, they would almost always say yes.

The problem with adulthood is that the chores are apparently never finished and no one has time to play.

This makes me sad :(

The older I have become, the more I realize what I need in life. I have discovered it really hasn’t changed that much since I was 5 years old.

I need friends I can play with.

I recognize this need in me may be more than the average person requires.

As I became a teen, the involvements of playtime became more complex – especially after puberty. I didn’t just want to play ball, I wanted to bond with my friends at a deeply intimate level. I sought out those who experienced music the way I did and who shared a similar aesthetic in almost every other area. I had to know what my pal’s worldview was. Whether or not we could play together depended on whether their worldview lined up with mine.

Now I think of this as “tribe formation.”

In socially diverse American culture, the bonds common to ethnic identification have been fractured, leaving the individual to fend for themselves. I believe the teen years are spent trying to figure out which tribe we belong to. Thankfully, the new tribal definitions no longer rely on the color of one’s skin or ancestral origin. I believe they have more to do with socio-economic class, geographical origin and, as I’ve said, one’s worldview.

Unfortunately, living in a culture that is hyper-focused on individual freedom – coupled with a preoccupation with material success – little time is left growing one’s tribe.

I’m not talking about family – though family is central to tribal formation. No, I’m talking about the deep brotherhood that exists between people who have found one another, who recognize the richness of their commonality and the creative power that exists in their unity.

As I aged I grew out of touch with how importance these tribal relationships were. Moreover, I was ignorant of how rare tribal formation is.

Even in the midst of a spiritual quest, we are tempted to be inclusive of all who profess that same desire for truth. I have come to the conclusion that one’s tribe is not based solely on a spiritual journey, but also recognition of other intangibles that make us attracted to one another.

One of the things I have identified in my own life – and apparently this is not a need everyone has – is the need to share as much of my life with others as possible. How rare it has been to find someone as interested in sharing their life with me.

This seems to be the underlying force that motivates my creativity; the desire to experience the intimacy of knowing others as they are known by me.

I understand there are boundaries that must exist. I understand the need for personal space and solitude. What I don’t understand is a society that describes a standard of living defined by almost every ideal except this one: true intimacy.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Nov 02 2010

Big Dream Gathering

Category: Round Peg Square HoleBrent Watkins @ 5:45 AM

This month the University of Iowa will host a “Big Dream Gathering.”

This is a unique event scheduled for Friday, November 19th. The idea is that people can write their “big dream” on large post it notes and stick them on a wall in the Levin Building.

The “Big Dream” event has helped selected projects become funded by major corporations, or at the very least, allowed dreamers to connect and encourage one another.

We will be in attendance.  Our “big dream” is to produce quality television programs and films right here in Iowa – using local acting talent and production crews – all for the purpose of sharing the Love of Christ with those involved in the productions.

Thanks to your contributions, we have purchased basic production equipment to accomplish this ambitious goal…but we need $6000 more to complete our modest studio.

Since leaving our jobs as pastors, people from all walks of life have taught us how to better reveal our faith – by representing a church that is outward focused.  Jesus never hid behind church walls. Our “big dream” includes a missionary vision that delights in engaging people wherever we find them, instead of expecting them to find us.

Because of your support, NorthStar Network:

- Makes connections with the Cedar Rapids Community School district to connect with students interested in pursuing careers in the performing arts.

- Produces a short documentary for Spanda, a medical mission that brings eye and dental care to Kenya and the underprivileged of Cedar Rapids.

- Seeks sponsors for the production of the “Awkward Stage” written and produced by Pastor Zach Blickens at River of Life Ministries.

- Continues our involvement in the documentary film “The Entertainers” a feature film about a quirky little piano contest in Peoria, Illinois.

Because you chose to partner with NorthStar Network. With your support and God’s favor, a heavenly vision can become reality.  We need financial partners to provide $6000 to complete our production studio. Thanks to you, over $12,000 has been raised thus far. We will use this facility to mentor aspiring visual artists and students while also sharing Christ.

Continue to pray for us and let us know how we can pray for you. Share our dream with someone you know…and be faithful to the “Big Dream” God has for you!

Brent and Jackie Watkins
NorthStar Network
www.northstar-net.org

Big Dream Gathering


Apr 25 2010

Not Good Enough

Category: My Life in Music,Round Peg Square HoleBrent Watkins @ 4:30 PM

As an artist – no matter what your medium is – you may struggle with the thought, “I’m just not good enough.” This core insecurity has companioned the most successful people I’ve worked with. I am consistently amazed at this dynamic: The greater the ability, the greater the insecurity.

I’ll never forget the fortune cookie prophesy a friend of mine once taped to the side of his camera, “Talent does what it can. Genius does what it must.” This speaks to the degree of obsession required to channel creativity at an almost alien level. Talent tends to emulate what has gone before – genius shatters previous preconceptions about a medium and opens new vistas of understanding.

This distinction became personal to me when I realized that, though a professional musician, I could not “make music.” I could regurgitate music on the printed page – after considerable effort. I could even add my own “voice” to that music. I could not, however, take my instrument and create my own music. I have many musician friends who amaze me with their ability to do so.

In my experience, the consummate artist becomes slightly annoyed with those who sing their praises. They are energized by interactions with peers they respect – seeking a community that both encourages and provides constructive criticism.

Even in this environment discouragement takes hold. There is always a higher peak to climb, always another whose work evinces some deficiency in their own – always a critic whose indictment of their work cannot be dismissed as ignorance or misunderstanding.

“I’m not good enough.”

The inner voice that speaks like the toll of the bell as the coffin of your career is laid to rest. The last rejection letter, placed on a pile of rejection letters.

Be of good cheer. I come to proclaim:

You are ABSOLUTELY NOT good enough.

Never were – never will be.

Once you realize that, you can be unshackled to create at a whole new level – the level where you are not preoccupied with what others think – the level where you no longer serve yourself, but the One who sent you. The great lie in worldly wisdom is, “No one knows you like you do.” “Follow your heart.”
“To thine own self be true.” I believe this to be utter nonsense. In my experience, I know myself least of all. I certainly have very little capacity to see myself as others see me. Furthermore, the Creator – the architect of my soul is much more intimately knowledgeable regarding my inner workings than I could ever hope to be. So though I may not be good enough – the One who created me is.

When you seek His direction – your ability to produce reflects His plan instead of yours – a plan not dependent on ability but availability. Career breaks often come when you are at peace with abject failure. Contentment comes with His success through you – when you forsake the need to be known by others for the need to be known by Him.

We are all faulty vessels. Avoid the pretension, “It wasn’t me, it was the Lord.”

A true friend once noted, “Oh really? I didn’t think it was that good.”

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