December 31, 2009

entry ~ heritage ~

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December 31, 2009 - 12:10 AM

I haven't written in seven days?  I think that's correct.  Why haven't I written in seven days?  I don't know.

Christmas happened; it was a good day.  We went to my brother's new home for the day.

Hmmm....this isn't what I really want to write about. Remember that I don't have to write to please anyone; nor do I need to write to publish my writing. Yet for some reason I probably will throw this entry up on a blog.  I'll tweak it a bit; I usually do.  I keep the original though; I have learned to keep the original. I had a piece once that I tweaked so much, the original got lost in the midst; the essence of what I wanted to express became almost empty, like a shell housing hollow facts.

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As of 12/30/09, we have new floors on the lower level of our house.  John and Joshua and I packed up all the collection and remnants of life that were stashed in various corners.  John and Joshua moved lots of furniture out of the rooms that were getting the new floors; I felted the bottom of the furniture we didn't move out.

Now the hardwood is laid and I need to dust, vaccuum, wipe down, and rearrange the furniture.  I imagine I will leave most of the packed remnants in boxes for now. Most of it I've not used or touched in a couple years.  I have the boxes labeled.  I won't toss or sale those remnants yet.  I have time to go through them over the next years to discard what will be discarded and to preserve what will be preserved.

I found a TWI banner in the closet.  It's white cloth, about eight inches by twelve inches, with green tasselling at the bottom. The bottom has two edges that come down at an angle to a center point.  I think there may be gold trim at the top of the banner and perhaps at the bottom, right above the green fringe.  A wooden rod with decorative horizontal mosque-shaped ends slips through the top of the banner, like a tiny curtain rod.  A gold entwined cord is tied to each end of the rod; that is how the banner hangs. The banner states The Way International in the circular emblem which I think also has The Way Tree symbol, a tree trunk with an open Bible as the tree crown.  I used to draw those regularly when I'd doodle. I always liked trees, still do. "The Word of God is The Will of God" is written in block letters across the banner, I think in three lines with "is" sitting alone on the middle line.

I didn't toss the banner; I rolled it and placed it in a box with some other stuff, and then labeled and taped the box.  I'm not sure why I kept the banner.  In an odd way, I feel it is part of my heritage.  I can't just throw it away; not yet.  Maybe never.

Nor did I toss the framed print of Craig and Doctor.  I didn't know I still had it.  I thought I had tossed it, but there it was in the back of the closet, sticking up out of a box.  It surprised me and I thought, "Oh..."  I felt a bitter sweetness amble through my heart.

I had once truly believed The Way to be the Household of God and The Way Corps to be the highest calling.  I believed I had been trained with the finest training on earth and that I had turned my back on my Way Corps calling. Yet I still tried to live up to it; Craig had encouraged me after I dropped to continue using my training, that there weren't enough of us for any to sit on the sidelines. The belief system and the structure were the fabric of my life.  I had loved Craig as a brother and Doctor as a father; both as my spiritual teachers, guides, protectors of hearts and pillars of integrity.

Yet I have no doubt that Craig and Doctor and other past and/or present leaders have abused.  I don't think the sexual abuse goes on anymore in The Way; but I do think spiritual and emotional abuses continue.  The doctrine over person and heirarchy system will probably always be standard opertaing procedure within The Way.  Those two aspects seem regular fare in fundamentalist-type groups.

Sometimes I wish I could feel the anger and rage toward Craig and Doctor that others feel.  I feel guilt that I don't feel that 'righteous anger.'  With that guilty feeling, I have an image of Ralph or some of the Greasespot Cafe judge and jury hollering at me, telling me what scum those leaders were. Shouldn't I be angry?

I have felt anger toward Way leaders, but not to the extent that I have felt rage toward certain ex-Way followers who 'self-righteously' judge ex- or current-TWI leaders (or other TWI followers), all the while excusing or being blind to their own abusive past (or even present) words and deeds.

It confuses me at times.  I then breathe deeply and tell myself that my confusion is understandable.  I'm responsible for me, not for them.  And if I sit in self-righteous judgement, I could be guilty of the same.  I don't know; if there is an eternity and so-called judgement day, I imagine we are all in for some big surprises.

Well, I didn't expect to write those last five paragraphs.  I wanted to write about the print of Craig and Doctor and the bittersweetness I felt upon seeing the print.  But now I don't want to; I feel kind of sick to my stomach.

I'll just say it is the print of the painting by the artist Tom Cowan, portrait busts of Craig and Doctor; they appear to be seated. Doctor is wearing a green ball cap with "The Way Corps" in green letters on a white background, a squared-oval patch on the front of the green cap.  Green and white were the Way Corps colors.  With his left hand Doctor is holding an open Bible, probably to Ephesians. His right hand is placed on the Bible pages like he is pointing something out as Craig is looking where Doctor's fingers are pointing. Doctor's eyes are also focused on the page where Craig is focused. Doctor has his mouth open slightly, like he is teaching or showing Craig a scriptural or spiritual truth, "the eyes of his understanding being enlightened."

Doctor's holy spirit ring on his right fourth finger is prominent; it is a ruby color which is similar to the background color of the painting. His wedding band is seen on his left fourth finger.

Craig appears to have the fingers of his right hand on the fourth finger of his left hand, like he is touching or twirling a ring.  Is it a Corps ring or a wedding ring?  I don't remember.  It seems we were told once.  Craig has on a wrist watch.  I recall Craig once stating with a chuckle something like, "If you ask me what time it is, I'll end up telling you how the watch works."  An example of how he was always "apt to teach," as the scripture commands of overseers in the Church.

"The Teacher," a poem apparently written by Doctor as his signature is under the prose, is calligraphied on the right side of the print. Doctor called himself "the teacher."  He instructed new graduates of his Power For Abundant Living Foundational Class that wanted to write him, to address their envelopes to "The Teacher."   That's what I did when I first took 'The Class' in December, 1977.  Doctor wrote me back; I was thrilled and stunned.

All the Way Corps were called to be teachers.

The Teacher

The teacher of God's Word is one of a kind
Who loves God with all his heart, soul, mind, and strength;
And who loves nothing more than to teach His Word.

The teacher of God's Word is an artist
He works alone ~ reading ~ thinking ~ praying ~ studying
Believing to share his product with all the world.

The teacher of God's Word is a giver
One who gives without the gaurantee of being received;
One who rejoices without knowing if anyone else will joy;
One who corrects the irresponsible and careless;
One who gives, gives, gives, and keeps on giving.

The teacher of God's Word lives only to teach
to receive, to weigh, to discard, to develop,
to learn, to treasure, to give, to motivate,
to enlist, to stabilize, to encourage, to direct.

And may I add, and to build equipped believers,
   abassadors strong and wise
Who teach because they love the teacher's task
And find their greatest prize
In eyes that open, and in minds that ask.

                                                                                                Victor Paul Wierwille


I used to think that was such a humble poem.  Now it creeps me out, and makes me feel dirty.

I notice in this above entry that I use the word "Doctor" for V.P. Wierwille. That is how I felt about the print when I saw it; it wasn't VPW, the man, but VPW, the beloved teacher and "doctor" of the scriptures.

Why did it end up such a lie?  It causes my heart to ache, and that's o.k.

Living is a hard thing, sometimes.

I hope I'm making a new tapestry; one that is more real. Surely I am? Surely I am...

It's 1:55 AM now.  Goodnight...
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7 comments:

Provender said...

It's hard, when so much of your being is caught up in a group - even your spiritual identity - to see things as bitter rather than bittersweet. Though I no longer brood over our abusive group, as confusion fades, the sweetness of memories does, too. The memories might be bitter, but I don't have to be. Interesting post.

oneperson said...

Thanks for stopping by Provender and for commenting.

I've read your comment about 10 times. I'm endeavoring to understand your first sentence. I can't quite wrap my mind around it.

(reading and thinking again....)

Oh...I think I just got it! That things REALLY WERE bitter, but because so much of one's identity was the group, it is difficult to accept that things were bitter and NOT bittersweet.

That does clear the cobwebs! I have those moments of clarity from time to time. :-D

Your next to last sentence really catches my attention:
"The memories might be bitter, but I don't have to be."

I've simply never heard it stated that way.

The bitter memory is like a picture on a wall; one can (with time and learning) view it for what it was without being what it is.

Thanks again for saying so much in a few words!

Happy New Year!
~carol :-)

PS: May I use your sentence, "The memories might be bitter, but I don't have to be." as a quote sometime and credit Provender?

Cyndee said...

Hey ,Happy New Year to Ya...during this time I met with a former friend from 12th Way Corp and we talked to another from 4th Corp (it was very healing as we are all out now and found out more people we also OUT of The Way.
Our sweet friend who was also an ordained from TWI still encouraged us to read the bible cause it will bless you she said.
I will try to keep in touch now that I found these 2 after not seeing them since 1981!

oneperson said...

Happy New Year to you too Cyndee!

Glad to hear of the reunions. *thumbsup* Yay!

To life and the journey...
~carol :-)

Cyndee said...

My Wow sister from 1980 just found me this week on facebook!

I was reading your blog and I was reminded of those left behind still
I visually see them as wounded warriors,vets who were trained wrong to fight the fight, 20 years ago I felt that way wounded and broken trying to find my place in the "body of Christ"(without TWI)

This New Year has shown me Time does heal,and the love of God never fails when your heart was there in the first place.

I wish Peace to those feeling broken and wounded from Cults.

Elizabeth D. said...

I'm sorry that I can't tell who's blog this is. But I just posted a bunch of photos of the 10th Corps, while we are in residence. While the context of what we were engaged in was CRAZY!, the actual day to day living was full of friendship and love and support and care amongst us. Take a peek, it will help you remember the good parts of the deep connections between people. All the best to you, whoever you are.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/8561538@N02/sets/72157624332965813/

Elizabeth

oneperson said...

Hi Elizabeth D. :-)

Thanks for stopping in and for linking the photos! I've only glanced at them right now, but will look closer at them later and maybe even add any names that I recall.

My maiden name is Hamby, so in the 10th Corps I was Carol Hamby. My married name is Welch, so I'm known now mainly as Carol Welch. :-)

And yes, I remember the good times too. As I've stated elsewhere in cybersphere: "For the most part I enjoyed my in-residence training years in the Way Corps. They were rich times of adventure and learning. I loved the Ministry, the Root locales, and the in-residence program. Of course that meant I loved the people; without the people the locations were just buildings and land."

Looking forward to perusing the photos!

Maybe I'll run into you over at Corps site. :-)

To life!
~cw

PS: Since you had a difficult time figuring out who the blog author here is, I moved my profile up higher on my side bar! It was way down low. Thanks for letting me know. :-)