I Want Them All
August 28, 2011 by Steve Pogue
Filed under Prayer, Recent MMMs, Tolerance

Anthony LaBounty,
College of Fine Arts,
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
[Sept. 4, 2011] –
In my spirit I sensed that the Lord was moving on my campus and working in hearts. One thing I knew He wanted from me was to invite others to join me in a faculty prayer time on campus.
At first I thought it would be a faculty “organized prayer group” with the usual trappings, but little by little He showed me that that was not His desire – at least not here and now. For us here in America after the spring and summer months of 2010 passed, fall was marked by a paradigm shift in economic and political terms and, most importantly, I sensed change in the spiritual realm.
Who To Invite?
One morning in early August before the term began, I was walking through campus on my way to get coffee at the snack kiosk we call ‘the grease hut’. The question of how to list the Friday Faculty/Staff Prayer on the daily, campus-wide electronic news bulletin filled my mind. Although I knew the prayer time was to include both faculty and staff meeting on Fridays, still unanswered was: Who among this group of people should be invited?
Should I invite Christians only and use that as a starting point? Should it be under the aegis of Campus Crusade? As I continued my caffeine-driven sojourn, there on the sidewalk I heard the voice of the Holy Spirit quietly, but very clearly declare, “I want them all.”
I was stunned by His gentle voice and the sheer expanse of His desire. Actually I admit I had not been praying for direction or revelation at all. As indicated previously, I was merely thinking about the guest list for the invitation.
Watching To See
Although it raised eyebrows among some Christians, the electronic message publicizing the weekly campus prayer read the same every week:
MEET IN FRONT OF COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING BUILDING.
PEOPLE OF ALL FAITHS WELCOMED.
ATHEISTS AND AGNOSTICS ALSO WELCOMED.
COME AND GO AS YOU PLEASE.
Since we began that September, among those who gather are a math professor who is Hindu and two Bahai followers, along with several Christian colleagues.
I am filled with excitement and expectancy watching to see what God chooses to do. I know that I obeyed His very clear direction.
© 2011 Tony LaBounty © istockphoto
Why You Should Make a Fool of Yourself
February 14, 2011 by Steve Pogue
Filed under Recent MMMs, Recognition, Tolerance
Heather Holleman,
English,
Penn State University
[Feb. 27, 2011] —
Some students who regularly frequent local bars recently told me that the reason why college students drink so much is because it’s the only time they don’t feel self-conscious. Alcohol makes them feel free to be themselves. Without it, they worry so much about making a fool of themselves.
Today I reasoned that making a fool of yourself might not be such a bad thing.
I remember being terribly self-conscious in high school and college (who isn’t?). I remember agonizing over whether people liked me and whether I was impressive. Years of trying to manage other people’s perceptions of me exhausted me.
But in one terrible semester of graduate school, I stopped trying to impress people.That year, I nearly failed out of school.
A certain professor mocked me publicly, claimed I wasn’t fit for graduate school, and implied that there had been a mistake in the application process that allowed me into a Ph.D. program. The tormenting shame I felt for that (and for nearly every mistake I was making personally that year), drove me into hiding and despair.
And it was the best thing that could have ever happened to me.
Before that year, I was self-conscious to the point of never being my true self. But when my worst fears were imagined and everybody saw me as a failure, a beautiful thing happened.
It wasn’t that bad. It actually felt like freedom.
I was free to be exactly who I wanted to be. I stopped expending energy on wondering what people thought (I already knew—it wasn’t good), and instead I asked myself what I could do to serve the academic community there. I figured out how much I loved teaching, I wrote an entire dissertation on the emotion of shame (how convenient!), and I didn’t have to try to earn anyone’s approval (I had already lost it).
And of course, as these things always go, I had more friends, more accolades, and more respect from professors than ever. That one grumpy professor even apologized to me. People like people who aren’t self-conscious. They like people who can make a fool of themselves.
I haven’t struggled with self-esteem since then. What drives self-esteem issues is a profound fear of being exposed as a loser, a fraud, a fool. Well, maybe we need to be exposed.
I wonder if college students wouldn’t drink so much if they gathered their friends together, admitted their weaknesses, regularly did ridiculous things that made them supremely self-conscious, and tested the theory that we’d all love them more because of it.
Why not practice letting people see you at your worst? When it happens to you (like it happened to me), you recover, you find that people love you even more, and you stop trying to impress everybody.
© 2011 Heather Holleman

