Monday, August 6, 2012

Living an Alpha Phi Life

Back in August of 2011 I made one of the best decisions of my life by joining a sorority. Those who choose not to participate in Greek Life all have their own reasons or excuses but I knew going into college that I wanted to be a part of an organization greater than myself and for me, Greek Life was just the right thing! Most people categorize sorority girls by saying that we are all party animals, blonde, skinny, tall, tan, unintelligent, conformists that pay for our friends. But let me tell you about my sisters and I:

Every Alpha Phi I have met is a beautiful, intelligent, and independent women. They consistently strive on scholarship, sisterhood, service to others, leadership, and loyalty. And we pride ourselves on being women of a higher standards. 

As you have read in earlier blog posts, I have decided that I need to live a healthier, purer lifestyle and I believe that Alpha Phi is helping me do just that. Yes, we have social lives, but that does not make us a stereotype. The one thing I am trying to do is live what we call the, "Alpha Phi life". An Alpha Phi should at all times put others before herself, she should work to bettering herself as well as her community. An Alpha Phi should promote and assist helping others reach their highest of potential in all aspects of life. She should think before acting, she should make informed choices. Most importantly, she should live out our values by living a life with a purpose! This is what I need to do, what I want to live for. 

Last Saturday, one of my sisters and I were invited to have dinner with the Chef of our sorority house and his wife at their home. It was easily one of the most incredible nights of my life. Our Chef, George, is a pastor at a local church and we decided to confide in him and his wife on our new journey of bettering ourselves. They stopped everything and thanked the Lord for us the minute we told them! It was such a touching experience. Their encouragement and support for our decision was overwhelming. They offered up their home and food to us and for hours we just sat and talked, we even just sat in silence. It was the first time I announced out loud that I need a change. I am not a bad person, nor do I make that bad of decisions. I just feel that recently my social life has become more of a priority and that my actions do not reflect what my values are, and I want to refocus myself as the upcoming school year approaches. 

George said something that I don't think I will ever forget. He told us, "we all only have one life... One life to make a difference in the lives of others. Therefore, we must be like a pebble in a pond. Impact one person, and let the ripples carry on what you have taught them." That is what I need to be! Like a pebble in a pond! Maybe I have already impacted someones life, maybe not. Maybe I have been a role model, or a mentor, maybe not. But I know that I want to be that person. I know I have the capability and the resources to be and do anything. Cheers to this new journey, one day at a time. 

Until next time, 
Chani 

Friday, August 3, 2012

Try it. Love it. Live it.

It is the middle of the night, I have an insanely busy morning, and yet my mind does not seem to want to fall asleep just yet. So I am laying in bed, listening to music. Actually listening. (I never listen!) Do you? Do you stop everything, put the phone down, log out of Facebook, and listen to the words and the melodies of our lives? I never give myself the time of day just to shut up for once, and listen (whether it is just to listen to complete silence, when even silence is loud, right?)

So because it is the middle of the night, and I am now completely free to think about my life as I listen to the stories and messages these songs have to offer, I am writing my second blog post:

I just got back home to Cleveland, Ohio after a ten day vacation to Southern California. While I had the time of my life, loving every second with my wild family, I came back to a quiet home (mind you, quiet is a word rarely used to describe my home). Regardless, it gave me more time to just think about what the purpose of my life is. I want to be inspired. I need to be inspired. I read a book on my four hour plane ride about a man that felt a similar urge so he literally up and went to Calcutta to work alongside Mother Teresa. WOW. Talk about inspiration! But that's just it, I need something like that. Maybe not something so...distant, or extraordinary, but something to build back the fire in my life.You see, I used to work at a Christian summer camp and every summer, between the staff and the campers, I was inspired to wake up every morning and serve. Serve others, serve the Lord. I was a devoted Christian and I was surrounded by those who felt the same constant fire. And now, I feel a little lost. (I don't mean literally, of course) I am still surrounded by amazing individuals who push and pull me, encourage and motivate me, but I need that drive to do something, be someone bigger than myself!
In this book the author writes about this "irresistible revolution", the movement that everyone must join because it is a feeling stronger than any emotion can embody. THAT IS WHAT I WANT. I want to not be able to describe my feelings because I am not done feeling them...

Those who know me closely, know that I have decided to start a new path in life. And I think right now, is the beginning. I agree with the author again when he basically says, that we have all studied and studied and studied what Christians are supposed to believe and how we are supposed to behave.. but no one has told us how Christians are supposed to live. So this is me, living, starting now.

"Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done, on Earth as it is in Heaven." I never understood what it meant, and now I finally do. It isn't about who knows more bible verses, but who lives out their meanings. It's not about who goes to church every sunday, but who lives each day as a living church. I am not that person, but one day at a time, maybe I can be. I am so far from the 'ideal Christian' I still screw up all the time but I am working on it!! In the bible, John chapter 14 Jesus says, "very truly I tell you, all who have faith in me will do the works I have been doing, and they will do even greater things than these." I am not about to perform any miracles, but like Shane Claiborne says, "it is not just miracles, miracles were an expression not so much of Jesus' mighty power as of his love." And boy, do I love to love. Let the adventures begin.

Until next time,
Chani



Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Surrendering

I started blogging back in High School and deleted all of my posts once I realized how dramatic they all sounded. Recently however, I have been inspired to start back up. Blogging to me, is a sense of release from my inner thoughts. I have decided to start a new leave in my life. I need a new path, to live a happier, purer lifestyle making sure that I go where my values need me the most. I need to live more, learn more, and love more. And through Christ alone, I can. (With of course, the continuous encouragement and motivation of the amazing women that are doing it with me!!)

About a year ago I started writing a book after a couple major events in my life occurred. So I thought that for my first blog entry, I would simply post the first chapter. I'm not a good writer, in fact, I write the way I talk, which isn't always a good thing. I never intended for this book to be public so for anyone reading, this is your lucky day!


Here we go:

Chapter 1

While my story starts in 2008, really, it’s an ongoing story for many. Many much like me, like my friends, like my sisters. It’s a battle for life, for love, for acceptance, for dignity, identity. This is me, so I dare you, challenge you even, to look between my eyes.
            It was May 2008, strangely still cold outside, yet warm air seeped in on the occasion. I was coated in Nike under armor standing on first base plate of the JV softball field. I was fifteen years old. Just started my period only a couple months’ prior, so I suppose womanhood had arrived- so they say. What does that even mean? I didn’t feel womanly. I barely felt girly. I started producing acne like it was my job, bitched at my mother for doing absolutely nothing wrong, and wished I looked like some prettier version of Blake Lively. The only thing going for me was my boyfriend sitting in the bleachers. We had been dating for 3 months and 4 days so rightly so, he was there watching me. My dad hadn’t arrived yet, and my mom was too career focused to show up to this particular game apparently. None of my friends were there at first, and then to my surprise, two showed up. It was shocking, I used to beg my two best friends to come to my games and then all of sudden they were there, judging by the running shorts and sneakers, they must ran to the fields. It was so unlike them. They’re the laziest girls I know. Athletic by nature obviously, but I always assumed asking them to attend a game was rhetorical request. Who the hell comes to a high school softball game? Other than the oh so loving parents, and boyfriends that just wanted to get some? But nonetheless, they were there. When it was our turn to bat, I ran to see them, they were frozen solid from the run. And they were acting weird- something I didn’t see out of place. We’ve been three best friends since the 7th grade. And we were so fucking weird. We did weird things, said weirder things, acted like we ran the school, and everyone else thought so too. Those who didn’t understand our humor hated us. We laughed at people, judged those who didn’t look or dress like us but we didn’t care. We had each other and that’s all that mattered.
            This day however, was different. Off, in some way but I couldn’t figure out how. Why would they show up on the coldest day of the season, wearing only shorts, to the most boring game played ever? They looked at me with emotions built up in their eyes. Almost as if I said one wrong thing, they would crumble into each other’s arms and start sobbing. I wasn’t about to stand that so I just ignored their presence until the game was over. The game ended, naturally, with victory on my side, and the two potential crybabies approached me, pulled me away from the team, and began to speak.
            The next twenty minutes of my life almost felt as though time had slowed. The words that fell from their mouths were muffled and deep as if they said it all underwater. As tears dumped out of their eyes, anger fell from mine. I dropped my bag and ran into the locker room, a place of peace- so I thought. I remember slamming shut a locker door and breathing heavily as my heart raced. My eyes and head both felt like they had a pulse, beating out of their normal rhythm. When I finally turned around, I saw my dad, standing arms open, waiting for me to collapse into them, and I did.
            Seven years is too little for a life to end. Too short of a time lived on this earth and yet, seven years was all this little girl had. The little sister I used to beg my parents for came to me through another family and then was gone. I was told that she was put on life support, having only 24 hours left to live and that family and friends were allowed to go say our goodbyes. Shaking at the thought of saying my first goodbye to a loved one still gives the chills to this day. I remember sitting in the car, wearing a stupid yellow hoodie, trying to think of what I could possibly say to this family, to this lifeless little princess, and to myself. It felt like I was gliding through the hospital halls. My feet were moving slower than my brain and I could barely breathe. When I reached the room where she lay, I just stood there. Terrified that if I went in, it would all become real. Until that very moment, I was sure this was a fantasy. That this illusion is something cooked up in my mind, that I could turn off this nightmare. But it wasn’t a fantasy at all.
            “What are you doing here?” asked the mom slowly. She sounded genuine, shocked, and scared all at once.
She was shocked that I would dare come to see her baby girl like this. She wanted me to remember her for the bubbly, beautiful little angel that she was. Not this way. This way was wrong, everything about the situation was wrong, is wrong. A seven year old is not supposed to die.
I couldn’t talk. My mind couldn’t think of a good enough reason. What was I doing there? Why would I want to see her like this? What did I think it would accomplish? Instead of responding, I fell into her loving arms, like I always have, and sobbed. I remember trembling as I finally got the courage to approach the tiny hospital bed. She was still breathing, not because her body would allow it, but because the machines and tubes forced her to. I sat down, and for two hours, I didn’t move from that chair. I couldn’t, I was just as motionless as she was. My head started to hurt from my beating headache and my eyes couldn’t produce anymore tear ducts yet I somehow still couldn’t control my crying. I held onto her tiny hand, painted with pink nail polish, hoping and praying with everything in me, that she would be my miracle, that at the end, she would wake up, she would defy the odds, beat the system. See, this girl represented life in my eyes. She was a better daughter than I was, that I am. She loved and was loved. She was energetic, full of life, and now, she was gone. It never happened, she never woke up. Instead, on May 8, 2008, this precious little girl passed away.
            From that day on, my life has yet to be a fairytale, but still I am not searching for any sort of ending just yet, whether it is a happy one or not. I am not saying my life is awful, I am not even saying my life is bad. But my life, is complicated. It’s dramatic. You see, you’ll learn quickly that I’ve loved, I’ve laughed at nothing, I’ve cried for no reason, I’ve spread rumors, I’ve lied- many times, to many people. I’ve changed, grown, matured, even given up at times. I’ve drank, had sex, smoked, but that doesn’t make me a badass teenager, I’d like to believe it simply makes me human. Something I am still learning to be. I am watching the people around me; I’m making mistakes, while making progress. And four years later, I am still searching for womanhood. I am not a bad person but I’m the farthest thing from perfect. Perfect is Lea Michel, and even she has flaws- I think. Where this story truly starts is senior year to the present. When life tests my ability to be a rationale human being, to be a devoted student, to remain a loyal friend, and a sister to some of the most amazing women, in my life. 


Until next time,
Chani