Rivers and Brooks 23

Printer-friendly version


Chapter 23

Tracy? Is that you?

I, by chance, had met the bully from my former high school two-hundred miles away. Talk about coincidences! Even more incredible, he recognized me … kind of.

“Haven’t we met before?” he inquired.

“Wow, that’s an old line!” (OMG. When I was a boy, you wanted to kick my ass, now you’re gonna hit on me?)

“No! It’s not a line! I think I’ve seen your face before! Have you ever been to San Antonio?”

“Yeah, I had a couple of cousins who lived there.”

“What’s their names?”

“Lisa Rivers and Tracy Brooks.”

“Yeah! I’m Bryan Smith. I went to high school with both of ‘em! You look just like them! Actually, you look just like Tracy, but prettier. Lisa was beautiful! I see now that it runs in the family.” (You asshole! You’re not even worthy to make comments about the way either of them looks ... and I don’t need your compliments!)

“Were you a friend of Tracy’s?” (I knew the answer to that before I asked it! You wanted to beat the shit out of him, remember?)

“Nah. We hung out with different crowds.” (Yeah, you hung out with a group of thugs and you bullied kids like Tracy.)

“I don’t know that he hung out with a crowd. He was always really shy.”

“Yeah. Hey! You live around here?” (Yes, but you’re not going to get my address.)

“Not too far, Kirby Drive in River Oaks.”

“Oh. I’ll bet you’re a snob.”

“Yeah, guess so.” (Too much of a snob to have anything to do with you.)

“Oh, you admit it?”

“Well, I just think my family is better than most people.”

“Wow, really?”

“Yeah, I gotta go now.” I discarded my trash and left. I think he was too stunned to say anything. He probably knew it would be hopeless to ask for my phone number or address. He watched me from inside the restaurant as I got into my Mercedes and I saw him shake his head. Yes, I was rude, but it was nothing next to the way he had treated Tracy. He had that and more coming, but I really hoped I would never see him again. It was kind of cool with low humidity; unusual for that time of year. I opened the windows and felt the breeze as I drove. It felt good to get back into the nice weather after putting that asshole in his place. I was kind of like closing an unpleasant chapter in my life.

Then, something happened. It wasn’t something you could see. It was like a light switch clicking, I thought about him standing in the restaurant watching me leave and I felt something I never thought I would feel for Bryan … pity, and worse than that, forgiveness. I knew next to nothing about him, his family, or his life. I knew nothing of whatever he had to endure. Everyone has their trials and, I’m sure Bryan was no exception. Incidents in high school seemed ages ago. Suddenly, I felt shame that I was harboring resentment about things that happened so long ago. No matter what evil picture of Bryan I painted in my mind, I realized that he was just human. He had a mom and dad who loved him … or did he? So many problems arise when that question is not answered in the positive. So, with the pity and the questions about his life came forgiveness.

For most people, forgiveness is a conscious, sometimes difficult procedure. A person realizes she has wronged someone, agonizes over it, and goes to the person and (sometimes painfully) talks to the person about what occurred, and asks the person for forgiveness. That didn’t take long to write, but in real life, it can take years. Even after the “forgiveness”, the forgiver may struggle for even years longer to convince herself that she has actually forgiven. It doesn’t work that way for me; I forgive quickly and involuntarily. It’s mostly the ‘involuntarily’ part that upsets me.

“Crap,” I said out loud. Then, I thought, “Why can’t I just be normal and hold a grudge? How am I ever gonna make people pay when they mistreat me? ‘Oh, don’t worry; you can shit all over Sarah. She may threaten you, but she’s all bark and no bite.’” “Crap.” I said it again. I was angry at myself for forgiving Bryan, but it was done … Bryan was forgiven. All that was left was to tell him. How would I tell him? “My cousin, Tracy, says you bullied him in high school, but he wants you to know he forgives you?” No, I’ll just forgive him for the rude way I acted at our last meeting and leave it to Tracy talk to him about the past. Yes, I know there is no Tracy any more. Well … bygones.

I also had to straighten out the issue of my family being superior. That reflected on my whole family. Boy! I made a mess of things when I ran into Bryan!

I told Lisa about the encounter with Bryan, and she thought it was hilarious. I didn’t say anything to her about forgiveness, because she would think I was a wimp, but when I told my dad about it. He responded with Bible scripture.

“Honey, Matthew Chapter 5, verses 44 and 45 read, ‘But I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you; that ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven: for he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust.’”

“Well, Daddy, maybe God used me to send rain on Bryan.”

“You have it backward. Most people think ‘rain’ in that scripture means that God brings curses on both the just and the unjust. Remember the part of the world where Jesus came to earth was very arid and rain was a blessing. The scripture is saying that both the just and the unjust receive blessings.”

“Well, maybe it was the sun I brought down on him, because I’m pretty sure he was burning before I was finished with him.”

“So you should apologize to him.”

“I know, Daddy. Despite everything, I’ve forgiven him. I didn’t want to, but I can’t help it. I’ve tried many times to hold a grudge, but it’s just not in me!”

“Sarah, I’m so glad to hear you say that. I am so glad and proud right now! Remember, the fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness and temperance. You forgave him even when you didn’t even want to! That’s the spirit working through you; a sign that God is working your life! Don’t ever lose that!”

“Ok, if I see him again I’ll apologize. It’s a big city. It was a real coincidence that I ran into him at all. It probably won’t happen again.”

“Just remember Proverbs, ‘Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall.’”

That scripture hit home. I thought about it and, before I knew it, I was starting to leak a few tears. “You’re right, Daddy, I’m sorry. Thank you, Daddy!” I decided that, should I meet Bryan again, I would make things right. Maybe I would tell him my story. No … scratch that. The story could come back to bite me … maybe bring about “a fall,” especially if someone like Bryan has the information. I don’t think The Bible says you have to tell an enemy your life story. I decided I would apologize if I ran into Bryan again, and forget about it for now, since it was unlikely that I would see him again.

Why did my dad always bring up The Bible? Well, his straight-laced attitude was a big part of the reason for his success. That was undeniable, and it wasn’t long ago I was blubbering and telling him how proud of I was for the way he followed the straight and narrow path. I just wasn’t thinking just how narrow was that path. I made a vow to myself to follow that path as my daddy does, even with the multitude of temptations to stray.

After those considerations, I really wanted to talk to Bryan again. I felt I had been inexcusably cruel. I didn’t really know whether he was hitting on me. I knew little about him or his life. It was natural that he didn’t want to confess to bullying my “cousin”. I didn’t know what crosses he might have to bear. Also, it was a coincidence that I ran into him the first time, but he probably lived in the area where we met. I decided I would stop at that burger joint frequently to see if he was there. People change after high school. He’s probably not a bully, now. Maybe he’s a great guy. Who knows? We might … no … forget that! I figure I’ll tell him I know how he treated Tracy. He owes Tracy an apology and if he doesn’t know that, he hasn’t changed. I’ll still apologize to him for my rudeness, and without any indication of regret about Tracy on his part, that will be the end of it.

I thought about my dad’s reaction to my meeting with Bryan. I was proud of rudeness and arrogance until I talked with my dad about it. I was no longer proud and was ready to make things right. Once again, my dad showed how awesome he was. He indicated what he would do in the situation, and caused me to want to emulate him. This is called “discipline”. So many people confuse the words “discipline” and “punishment”. Punishment is what is resorted to when a subject rejects discipline. Discipline, based on the word disciple and it’s about setting an example to follow. It’s not just about “do as I say,” it’s about “do as I do”. What a wonderful example my father sets! I have never known him to lie, to break the law, or to harm anyone. He loved his family and my mom and was unquestionably devoted to us. He had his rules, but he made us understand that each and every rule was for the good of the individual and, by extension, for the good of the family. I hate to compare him to Lisa’s dad because the two were like different species.

My mom loved my dad and lived her life to make him a better man, and for the good of the family. When I think about it, my family actually was better than most; not inherently better, but better because my dad and my mom worked together to see that we were the best people possible. We weren’t snobs, as I led Bryan to believe, we were generous, caring people. My dad gave to charities, but he set up a company so that he could give anonymously. He didn’t take a deduction for charity on his income tax because he said that is what The Bible means when it says “don’t let your left hand know what your right hand is doing”. He was audited once by the IRS, and when the auditor looked into where a large amount of money went and saw that it went to charity anonymously, he complimented my father and put a quick end to the audit. He said looking for discrepancies in the records of someone like my dad would be an exercise in futility.

I asked him once why he went to all the trouble to give to charity without taking advantage of a tax break. He told me that The Bible says giving should be in secret and the Father would reward you openly. Everyone who knew about his giving, and that was only the family, his lawyer and his accountant, were amazed by the way he handled this. The accountant showed my dad the financial advantage of taking the tax deduction, trying in vain to get my dad to change. My dad courageously refused, and the accountant got angry and told my dad he was being foolish. Dad got a new accountant; a big blow to the accountant, but my dad said it wasn’t a good partnership if the two partners don’t agree on something so important. He also said that he refused to have an employee tell him he’s foolish.

▬▬▬▬▬▬▬

By this time, Katy had finished the legal work and had a patent that protected my dad’s idea. He realized that people would have to see the window to appreciate it, but he didn’t want a parade passing through the house, so he rented a small storefront just outside of River Oaks. He also hired a person to show the window and a full-time security service. He opened it on a Monday at 9:00AM. At 10:30AM, Lisa and I decided to see how things were going. When we got close to the store, however, the traffic was too bad to get close. Apparently, there was a shooting or a fire in the area. We went back home and figured we’d go back after things settled down.

We went back at 2:00PM, and the traffic was worse. We asked a man on the street what all the excitement was about. “There’s a new store with some kind of special graphics where you can see in another state!”

“Oh my God, Sarah! This is all about your dad’s window … our dad’s window!”

“You’re right. We’re gonna have to train some people to build windows. If we don’t, we’ll never make it to college!” We parked and started walking, but we couldn’t get to the store. We called Aunt Katy’s cell phone and she let us in the back door. She was giving demonstrations of the window, while two new employees were compiling waiting lists of potential customers. She announced a web address to find more information and to get on a waiting list. That thinned the crowd out some. At 7pm she asked everyone to leave. The place was a mess, but Aunt Katy just locked up and left it. Whether we would open the next day was questionable. My dad had extra guards posted that night.

That evening, the whole family had a meeting about what to do. My dad decided to talk to the company he worked for to see if they could help. We had figured there would be demand for the product, but we had greatly underestimated that demand. The next day, my dad had someone go and remove the window and close down the store. Everything related to the window was on hold. Dad said his work with DNA was far more important than a window, regardless of how creative and entertaining that window.

The company had to send engineers, lawyers, and other people to inspect the window. Everyone was duly impressed and Dad worked out an awesome agreement regarding the window. A new company would be formed to handle franchising of the product and set up a production facility in Houston. Facilities would be set up in other locations should the need arise. The best part of the agreement was that my dad would be the 51% shareholder. He was free to devote full time to his real job without losing control of his creation. DNA research was his overriding interest and, I think he knew more about it than anyone in the world.

The pressure was off all of us in the family. Lisa and I were free to get educated, mom to return to her photography, and Aunt Katy to her online business or law. The window was awesome, but no longer having responsibility for it was like a weight lifted off all our shoulders.

Next: Apologizing

Note: For a look around the Brooks’ neighborhood, go to:

https://www.google.com/maps/@29.7507781,-95.4185729,3a,75y,0.79h,87.58t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sYcy5Ok82kBu9cFJ0OxuiYw!2e0!7i16384!8i8192?hl=en&authuser=0

This link uses Google Maps – Street View. I assume that, if you use Google, you have Google maps. I’m not sure.

up
147 users have voted.
If you liked this post, you can leave a comment and/or a kudos! Click the "Thumbs Up!" button above to leave a Kudos

Comments

I don't want to look around

I don't want to look around the area. I get enough of that when I go home from Greenway Plaza, with the "YOU'RE DRIVING TOO FAST" radar signs and the "I paid $120,000 for my car, so get off of my road." drivers, as I head down San Felipe to Kirby.


I'll get a life when it's proven and substantiated to be better than what I'm currently experiencing.

Mmm, I still read this ...

Mantori's picture

... a pity though, that you are using it to preach such a horrible oppressive religion with it.

"Life in general is a fuck up,
but it is the rare moments of beauty and peace
in between the chaos,
That makes it worth living."
- Tertia Hill

Eh. I tolerate it. It's a

Eh. I tolerate it. It's a bit too preachy for my tastes, but it's her characters, and that's how she wants them to be. At least the characters aren't going to one of the various religious schools around - it's mostly a 'private life' thing, not a 'you need to be like me' thing.

Edit - Also, horribly oppressive religion describes at least two I can think of, one being just certain sects, the other being most of it.


I'll get a life when it's proven and substantiated to be better than what I'm currently experiencing.

Funny.

The way she describes it, it doesn't sound oppressive.

Houston

I fiddled with your link a little bit and got it to display a white house on a corner, a very pretty one. :)

I have to warn you that there are those here who will hurt you because of your mentioning religion. I was a long time Christian Evangelical but they are really harsh and rejecting to T folk.

The story itself is interesting and well written.

Thank you.

Gwen

I was there at about 5:40 PM.

I was there at about 5:40 PM. (not in the house, obviously)


I'll get a life when it's proven and substantiated to be better than what I'm currently experiencing.

Well the guy DID deserve

Samantha Heart's picture

What he got she may forgive him but he still deserved it. Closing down the store was a good thing & now life get back to normal for the Brooks family.

Love Samantha Renée Heart.

Well the guy DID deserve

Samantha Heart's picture

What he got she may forgive him but he still deserved it. Closing down the store was a good thing & now life get back to normal for the Brooks family.

Love Samantha Renée Heart.

I grew up in a Christian home

I grew up in a Christian home. Went to Bible college and had ministerial credentials.
When my sister came out as a trans-woman, I took a look around at our churches and the people in them. You see, I also have gender dysphoria.
There is a lot of hatred, but there is a lot of people who love as well. I still go to church, although my sister does not. She has transitioned, while I have not.
I have six kids, my wife, and I care for 2 DD people in my home. One of my sons is an atheist and homosexual and lives in my home. We treat him the same now as we did before he came out.
My opinion is that Christianity is not the problem. As in many things, it is the people and their failure to understand what they are supposed to be living that is the problem.

Jamie, your portrayal of the father is exactly what I try to show others in my life, and I hope and pray that I do.

Humanity and Religion

There is a religion who's loudest proponents perpetrate brutality, misogyny, and acts of terrorism -- so bad, in fact, that the moderate practitioners of that religion are rightly afraid to speak out lest they be accused of apostasy and murdered.

So people judge the whole lot based on the admittedly large fraction who are brutal and inhuman.

I have an internet friend in Indonesia. He friended me in order to get practice with the English language.

When I first started talking to him and watching his feed, he posted a number of anime/manga type popular Japanese culture type messages. It wasn't until later that I found that he was from a Muslim family. One thing that I noted is that his mother is somewhat strict -- but she is one of the leaders of the household, not the abused piece of property that you see in the more radical households.

He once sent me a news story about a small group of teens that tried to do a mass shooting. They caused some damage, at the cost of their own lives. I commented that they probably saw what their radical compatriots were doing, and thought that God wanted them to do the same. He agreed. He also commented that the people in his own country consider the Middle Eastern Muslims to be nuts.

In case you didn't know, Indonesia is mostly Shinto (Japanese,) Christian, and Muslim. I won't say that the place is a wonderful and peaceful place to live, but I would take it over the Middle East without a second thought. And, given a choice between moving there and some parts of Europe, I would have to think it over and do some research.

Similarly, we have a very loud group of self-proclaimed Christians who like to picket funerals with signs that tell us that God hates queers and God hates America. Most Christians try to distance themselves from them, but they are the ones that the public sees.

And so we have people, like the commenter a few messages up, who judge Christianity based on the loud haters.

But it isn't without reason. It's human nature to be clannish or, shall we say, tribal. We have the 'them versus us' mentality that served us so well when we were hunter gatherers.

Also, we tend to listen to what the preacher says without looking too closely at the Bible. The fact that most people are kinda squicked out by lgbt makes it easy to listen to outdated old testament verses. I could go into a long discussion about how we are no longer under the law, and I do often ask people who like to cite Deuteronomy and Leviticus if they like bacon and seafood.

But the LORD said to Samuel, "Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him. The LORD does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart."
-- 1 Samuel 16:7

Take that, all you haters! If you want to look at the part of The Law that supposedly prohibits cross dressing, then trans people are required to dress to match what they are in their hearts.

Similarly, there is absolutely no prohibition against lesbian relationships -- Old or New Testament. And you would have to bend things really hard and take a really legalistic stance to say that male homosexuality is sinful.

I have argued thus with my brothers and sisters in Christ, but my main argument is that we are not following Christ's order to tell the good news -- to draw people to Him. We are chasing people away. As we see a few comments up.

In fact, the Evangelicals tend to be particularly legalistic and rigid -- to the point of disowning and casting away loved ones who dare to follow who they are instead of slavishly following the doctrine that that group preaches. Even to the point of driving their very family members to seek other faiths. I really mourn for that sad reality.

I point out that, even if we convince others to sin as we sin instead of sinning differently, we have accomplished nothing. But if we welcome them to the family of Christ with open arms, we have accomplished EVERYTHING. Even if they don't change their other behavior one iota.

I mourn that people scoff when I say that God is all about love -- not because they disagree with me, but because people who should be exemplifying God's love have pushed them away.

We like to sing in church, "And they'll know we are Christians by our love, by our love..."

It is sad that we are too picky about who we love. We don't seem to think that we need to love ALL of our neighbors.

When Jesus was asked what the greatest commandment is, he replied that we are to love God, and love our neighbors as ourselves. How are we doing that if we act hateful toward those who we think sin differently from the way that we sin. And yes, we all sin. Every single one of us.

There is an entire chapter that is called the Love Chapter -- 1 Corinthians 13. And we seem to forget about the part that says that we are like a clanging cymbal if we don't have love. That what we do is useless if we don't do it in love.

4 Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. 5 It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. 6 Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. 7 It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.

Yeah. We seem to forget that.

Some of us do love, but many don't. We might not be as loud as we should be, but we are here, and we are accepting.

Some still think that homosexuality is wrong, but they don't use it as a reason to reject their family and friends. They are accepting -- even in the face of the more legalistic and self-righteous telling them that they are wrong.

Rated sins

You mentioned the part of The Law that prohibits crossdressing. I find it fascinating, but also very sad, that people tend to rate sins. What I mean is "this sin is horrible, but this sin is trivial"
I've even had pastors who, when I was a kid, would just smile when I did something minor, but had I "came out" in their church, would have thrown me to the wolves.
These same pastors preach from their pulpit that a sin is a sin is a sin. I agree that it is. I also feel that if I'm going to eat pork and shellfish, I need to remember that both Jesus and Paul made it clear that we are not under the Law. Also, every sin I have or ever will commit is forgiven.
I could go on and tell why I don't consider my sister to be sinning, or my son, but suffice it to say that I don't. They are who they are, and I find it out of God's character to create someone who is a sinner by being who they were created to be.

Son and sister

I don't consider them to be sinning, either. I acknowledge that a large fraction of the Christian community doesn't agree with me, but I tend to try to discuss it with them. Yeah, that doesn't generally work. We are often slaves to what we were taught as kids. I suspect that my atheist phase is a large part of what taught me to critically think about all of my base assumptions, even those that seem self evident.

What is sin? I go back to "love your neighbor as yourself."

If what you are doing is not harming anyone else -- if you are not being unloving -- you are not sinning. The passage even goes on to say that all of the Laws and Prophets is based on those laws.

Thank you

Thank you so much for your comments!
I started writing a response, but it grew long and wordy, and I realized I could sum it up in one word: AMEN!.

Jamie

You must not be Baptist. You

You must not be Baptist. You didn't add "Pass around the plate."

:)


I'll get a life when it's proven and substantiated to be better than what I'm currently experiencing.

No plate

I'm not passing a plate, but I'm such an accepting person that any contributions will be accepted.

Jamie

Guest Reader

It does my heart good to see someone exemplifying God's love. I'm very happy to see someone who does the right thing and loves unconditionally.

When I was in junior high and half of high school, I went through an atheist phase. Rather than weakening my faith, it has strengthened me and showed me that God doesn't give up on us even when we give up on Him. It is probably part of the reason that I am unconditionally accepting, and that I am willing to think outside the box and, especially, think outside of the doctrine that some humans are teaching in error.

I guess what I am saying is that you needn't despair about your son's soul. I'm confident that he is safe. God lets us wander without having to be overly worried.

By the way, I don't have any idea what you mean by DD. I don't think you're talking about a bra size.

DD

DD refers to developmentally disabled. ;-)
When my wife and I were in college, we worked with DD (not the bra size) people. Ever since then, we have worked with foster kids, oftentimes disabled there as well. I hate to see how many people have had problems with social services if the stories on this site are any indication.
Now, our kids are grown, and I care for people in our home. Seems like I was being prepared for that even as a student.

Anti homosexuality anti Christianity

0.25tspgirl's picture

The ROMAN Catholic Church formed under imperial Roman rule. Roman alpha male dominance was often exerted through sexual acts. (Kinda like a dog humping your leg....) Low status males and women and young men seeking patronage were sex objects. (Think Julius Ceasar, Mark Anthony, Octavian, Cleopatra etc.) Perversion was a high status male receiving rather than providing penetration. As Christians were slaves and other low status beings I am sure that informed church views on male homosexuality, just add scriptural justification.

BAK 0.25tspgirl

I like the charity giving.

I like the charity giving.
A good Christian should be consider 10%(Tithe) giving to charity.
I like the anonymous giving and keeping the Tax system out of the loop.

"
Jesus Christ taught that "tithing must be done in conjunction with a deep concern for justice, mercy and faithfulness (Matthew 23:23)".[2] Many of the ancient and historic Christian Churches, such as the Catholic Church and the Methodist Churches, practice tithing, as it was taught by the Council of Tours in 567, and in the Third Council of Mâcon in AD 585, a penalty of excommunication was prescribed for those who did not adhere to this ecclesiastical law.[17] Tithes can be given to the Church at once (as is the custom in many Christian countries with a church tax), or distributed throughout the year; during the part of Western Christian liturgies known as the offertory, people often place a portion of their tithes (sometimes along with additional offerings) in the collection plate.[18]

2 Corinthians 9:7 talks about giving cheerfully, 2 Corinthians 8:12 encourages giving what you can afford, 1 Corinthians 16:1–2 discusses giving weekly (although this is a saved amount for Jerusalem), 1 Timothy 5:17–18 exhorts supporting the financial needs of Christian workers, Acts 11:29 promotes feeding the hungry wherever they may be and James 1:27 states that pure religion is to help widows and orphans.[2]

According to a 2018 study by LifeWay Research that interviewed 1,010 Americans, 86% of people with Evangelical beliefs say that tithe is still a biblical commandment today.[19] In this number, 87% of Baptist believers, 86% of Pentecostal believers, 81% of Non-denominational believers share this position. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tithe#Christianity "