The weary world rejoices.

Even if we overate at office parties.

…if we spent well beyond our budgets.

…if reckless drivers tried harder to get prime parking than to protect pedestrians.

…if ruthless shoppers rolled their eyes at us because we paid with cash instead of credit.

…if it’s 80 and humid on Christmas Eve.

…if there are 900 miles between us and someone we wish were here.

…if we are weary.

Even if we are tempted to be distracted by all those things, we have reason to rejoice.

“But the angel said to them, ‘Do not be afraid. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord.'” -Luke 2:10-11

May we let what we celebrate disrupt our lives in all the ways they should be disrupted. And may whose birth we celebrate use what would otherwise distract us to fill us with a thrill of hope.

Invulnerability.

Early this year, I posted a video of a talk by Brene Brown about the power of vulnerability.

I’m a little enthralled lately by Brown’s research. She is really tackling something that — at some points or others — tries to tackle each of us. In the spirit of not letting that happen, I have to share another, equally awesome talk by Brown. This one’s about the the price of invulnerability. Worth the 15 minutes to listen or watch.

Fear.

I can’t count how many wedding receptions I’ve wasted.

How many ball rooms whose floors I haven’t scuffed.

Until last fall, while (almost) every wedding guest at almost every wedding I’ve attended danced to the music provided by a DJ, performed by a live band or provided and performed by a DJ and a drummer…

everyone else from my table could rest assured that no rogue wedding guests would swipe their bags of candied almonds. Because I’d never, ever leave my seat. Until the bouquet toss* — the part of every wedding at which, oddly enough, I always have to use the restroom.

This 20-something year feud with the dance floor did not start because I don’t like to dance. On the contrary, I love dancing. I enjoy it so much I have injured myself doing it (like the time I poked a hole in my foot when I accidentally danced onto one of these.) Also, my dog is probably scarred for some of what he’s seen. I’ve got moves. Maybe not the moves, but they are moves.

My fight, it turns out, was not against dancing. It was against the letting go it takes to dance. The willingness to risk poking a hole in your foot. The willingness to risk looking ridiculous. In her book The Gifts of Imperfection, Brene Brown says it best:

It didn’t take me long to learn that dance is a tough issue for many people. Laughing hysterically can make us feel a little out of control, and singing out loud can make some of us feel self-conscious. But for many of us, there is no form of self-expression that makes us feel more vulnerable than dancing. It’s literally full-body vulnerability. The only other full-body vulnerability that I can think of is being naked, and I don’t have to tell you how vulnerable that makes most of us feel. 

For many people, risking that kind of public vulnerability is too difficult, so they dance at home or only in front of people they care about. For others, the vulnerability is so crushing that they don’t dance at all. One woman told me, “Sometimes if I’m watching TV and people are dancing or there’s a good song playing, I tap my feet without even noticing it. When I finally catch myself, I feel embarrassed. I have no rhythm.” 

There’s no question that some people are more musically inclined or coordinated than others, but I’m starting to believe that dance is in our DNA. Not super-hip and cool dancing, or line dancing, or Dancing with the Stars dancing—but a strong pull toward rhythm and movement. You can see this desire to move in children. Until we teach our children that they need to be concerned with how they look and with what other people think, they dance. They even dance naked. Not always gracefully or with the beat, but always with joy and pleasure.

Until we learn to be concerned by how we look, and with what other people think of us, we dance.

Until we learn to be concerned by how we look, and with what other people think of us, we aren’t afraid to dance.

Until we learn to be concerned by how we look, and with what other people think of us, we aren’t afraid to [fill in the blank].

What would you do if you had never learned to be concerned by how you look, or with what other people think of you?

What would you do if you had no fear?

*which will not be part of my hypothetical wedding reception. For the record.

Kids write the darnedest things.

Make a mental note of this: if you have kids (currently or eventually), and your kids keep journals in school, make sure your kids save them. Because when a kid, say, turns 26 and stumbles upon a couple of bound collections of thoughts she wrote when she was 6, 7 and 8 years old, it’s instant entertainment.

That, at least, is how it was for me when tonight, I stumbled upon the journals I kept as a first and second grader at Spring Hill Elementary School.

First Grade

“My mom wroks Monday, Wensday, Thersday, and Friday.” Spelling error, or Freudian slip? I’ll go with spelling error. My mom rocks seven days a week.
“I one a trofie from the siyins fary.” Who rewards you with a quarter when you lose a tooth? The tooth fairy. Who rewards you for an exemplary science project? The science fairy.
“I love school.”: Some things never change. “I want to milk a cow.”: Some things do.

Second Grade
  
Nov. 9, 1993

“If I were a turkey…”

If I were a turkey,  I’d be very pretty. I’d (wear) lipstick. And (clothes). I’d be the (prettiest) turkey in the world. But the people that found me better not try to chop me up and eat me because I’ll grab an ax and chop (their) legs off. And I would have nail polish on too!

Part 1.
Part 2. Please note: not just any nail polish, but pink nail polish.

 Dec. 10, 1993

“Christmas Poem”

Sugar plum candy tastes so good. It tastes the right way, the way it should! Here comes Santa with eight reindeer, with “Rudeoff” to lead the way. But tomorrow (?) is a very (special) day, when Jesus was born. MERRY CHRISTMAS!

I’m glad my belief in Jesus is the one that stuck. (For the record, I stopped believing in Santa when I was five. I faked it at school for years, though, for the sake of my less skeptical classmates.)

Jan. 10, 1994

“How to be Safe on a Bike”

You should have a helmet. If you don’t, get one! If you live in front of a busy street, ride in your driveway with a helmet on. If you’re on a street going somewhere on your bike, look both ways the same as when (you’re) walking.

Some people have to be more careful. Some people don’t think they need a helmet, but they do. It’s better safe than sorry. Get a helmet if you don’t have one. And never forget, it’s better safe than sorry!

And by “some people,” I’m pretty sure I meant “my brother.”
This public service announcement is brought to you by a girl who had training wheels through age 7.