Monday, February 29, 2016

Rhetoric: Love Is...

Note: This rhetoric on what love is [is] the last post in a series of posts this year celebrating February as "the month of love". 
Click to read the rest of the blogs here, here and here
Love is...
Love is a souvenir.
It is masterpiece portrait of some sort.
It clings so tight to the soul so that you wouldn't imagine a heart without it.
Sometimes it is impossible to differentiate the two.
It inscribes itself into its depths, into the depths of the soul, and mercilessly plunders the heart with beautiful memoirs, 
So that it is impossible for a heart to deny its work of art.

Love is like a flower. 
It is like the pottering softness of lilies lying afloat on still waters, smiling melodiously under the glimmery rays of the sun.
If you water it, it flourishes; if you don't, it won't. 
And well-watered flowers do survive the toughest of droughts. 
Just be keen to water yours early for drought will always come. 

Love is a call. 
We may choose to heed its voice or not. 
But there is no promise that its voice brings only the good. 
Because where there is sacrifice, there is sweat and blood also. 
And when nobles are fighting for a good course, vultures are always staring waiting for a catch. 
It is never easy, but it is always worth it.

Love is like opium. 
Some think it is a good thing while others reiterate its wickedness. 
We share both a staggering amount of joy and an overwhelming cloud of wistfulness when under its rule.
The one is soothed by its embrace, while the other is confused by its bluntness. 
It soothes when indulged in reasonable installments, but it harms when it becomes addictive. 

Love is thinking with both your heart and your brain. 
It is knowing that the imbalance will kill you. 
That the one should always be the balance for the other. 
And that you can never fully put your trust in either. 
That is love.

Love is a story. 
Everyone has their own. 
Some love telling theirs, others don't. 
But like all stories, we choose the characters and the audience. 
And like all of them, we choose their beginnings and their ends. 

Love is cruel and unusually tyrannical. 
It is painful. It is sweet. 
Love's cruelty is sweet. 
The wounds of love should not be regretted, because they are scars for the mirror when we wake up tomorrow. 
And we don't hide scars unless we want to forget what they've taught us. 
Someone somewhere has said, "True love asks us to do hard things, almost impossible things."

Love is a mirror.
The more you look at it, the more it judges you. 
The more you gaze at it, the more it haunts you.
It awakes when you awake and lies down as you do.
Without it, there is no confidence in how we look or how we seem to look. 
Every soul that is judged by it has received a judgment that is rewarding. 

Love is like day and night. 
It is distinct and exclusive. 
It is black or white with no sahdes of grey.
And to fall in love is not like a switch. 
You cannot switch it on and off. 
You cannot fall in love and wake up tomorrow to fall out of love. 
You either love or you don't; you cannot do both to the same person all at the same time. 

Love is a journey. 
It is meant to last forever. 
Some choose to walk it for a while, some give up on the way and others go all the way. 
It is only those who've gone all the way that have a say on why going all-the-way is the only best way to love. 

Love is God, and God is love. 
We say so because He has made Himself known to us 
I am convinced that any mortal that hasn't encountered Him can even attempt to love. 
There's no love where there is the absence of God. 
For when all has been said and done, 
After we have loved and 've been loved,
It will all go down to: did we love like we ought to or like we wanted to?


Bonface Morris.

Saturday, February 20, 2016

A Boyfriend, a Girlfriend, Christ and Everything Else

Note: This is my third blog from a series of posts this year celebrating February as “the month of love”. You can read the first blog here: Relationships – Is Grass Always Greener On the Other Side? and the second one here: Relationships and Short Stories: Thirty Dates, One Truth

And, later, read the last blog in this series here: Rhetoric: Love Is...


A boyfriend, a girlfriend, Christ and everything else.
Common sense tells me that every relationship has expectations. That is what I have always known. I don't know about you, but I always think that everyone comes into a relationship expecting something from the other person. 

From what I have gathered, I have found it true that people in relationships may pretend and mutter that "I love you baby, that is all the matters" but after they have loved someone and gotten used to it, it always goes down to, "Baby, [if] you really love me, you should be doing this and that for me..." 

I haven't met any two people in a relationship whose lives have not gone down that path after a while. We all seem to end up somewhere on that avenue where we begin expecting stuff to be done to/for us. 

In most cases, these mutterings - these unearthing expectations - may come down to pettiness, but it happens. And I now have come to a conclusion that it is normal. If we are able to expect something from the loyalty animals offer us, I think someone in love expecting something from their beloved is not worth a downplay. It is normal.

There is something you also come to notice when looking at why/what two people in a relationship are expecting from each other: that the presesence of expectations also means that someone is demanding that the other should play a specific role or set of roles within the relationship. (Come on people, I hear marriages operate in the same way too.)

This set of roles lead to responsibilities which in turn become a sense or level of commitment one has towards the other person. The main problem is when these expectations either flare signs of too much neediness or want to throw in augmentations of manipulation. But mutual responsiveness to each other's needs is what I am saying is here to stay. Expecting certain acts from either side of a relationship is normal. 

I am saying this because even Jesus - the very epitome of love and how it should be done - expects something out of his bride, the Church. Now, I am not trying to say that our boyfriend/girlfriend relationships are equal to Christ and His Church. No. The only relationship that can be compared to that one (of Christ and the Church) is marriage (Matthew 25:1-13). But I am saying that His example is the best as far as expectations and relationships are concerned.

Now, when one is in love, it is likely that their minds would not want to imagine that there would be quarrels amongst two people (especially themselves) on why/how/when/what should be done or what should be expected. Some people come into relationships expecting nothing but love. It may be possible that they are imagining of not wanting anything more than a kiss or two and words of affirmation from the other person. That is okay. These are the first stages of love: being smitten to the extent of not wanting to think with your mind. (But even these "common" and "negligible" needs are still expectations). 

As relationships progress from one stage to another, needs arise. And as it always is, all needs always call for action. And any action taken after realizing a need is always a reaction to meet a given expectation (now justifiably masquerading as a need.) I am saying this because, right then, everyone starts demanding something from the other person. Everyone starts becoming "petty". (It is viewed as pettiness because it was not existing before. It was once vivid, but now it is real.) And there may crop accusations that people are not being "loved enough" anymore (I've talked about this before on this blog) because they are being denied certain "rights" or opinions to issues. When keen observations are made, you will find out that what each party is now demanding for from the other party are solid "rights" and this concisely escalates into blunt expressions of disgust and contempt when these expectations are not met.

This is what now happens: people start expecting to be texted a little more than before, they start expecting to be called at certain times, to be supported, to be shown acts of love, to be valued, to be respected, to be given/shown attention, to be bought gifts, to be serenaded and to be pumped up with all forms of affection. 

It becomes a certain weird arena of demands and fights. A muddle of bad blood and stale emotions. 

I realized this sometime back after young people my age started asking questions in the following forms; 
• But we are [just] dating!! Why should he/she make such demands of me? 
• Can we kiss? He/she wants us to kiss!! Why is he/she tempting me to such an extend?!! 
• He demands to touch me, or caress me, or fondle, or for us to hold hands inappropriately. I can't bear with that!! He makes me so uncomfortable!!!
• Should we hug for that long? She says it makes her feel better but it makes me uncomfortable. It makes me feel bad about myself. 
• He/she is demanding for gifts and a date every week. Can I even manage that?!!
• He/she is demanding that I visit them every weekend... I think this is too much!! Can't I even have time [just] for myself!!? 

And so forth and so on. 

I know that after reading the above questions - and I promise that this is just the tip of the whole mountain - some of you are now retorting: "Aaaah, stupid and childish games!" and I'm here to unhesitatingly tell you that "You should know people!", and, "Yes, every Christian relationship has it's own slide of pettiness and they are mostly overcrowded with aimless spiritual connotations. Deal with them as they come."

While at it, have you ever imagined that as far much as we expect "things" from our baes and it seems [just] alright, Jesus is also expecting a whole lot of things from our relationships? 

Wait-a-minute, is He? 
Yes, He is. 

That is what I am here to talk about; not our demands from our bae's (which we have already declared normal) but Jesus' expectations of us in our relationships. 
If we claim to belong to Him and our claims are not mere fallacies, then He has every right to demand a few things from us and our relationships in the same way we demand the same of others. 

Who said that Jesus doesn't care about our relationships and everything surrounding them? Well, if you think or thought so, why would He die to save the very hearts that we are using to love our baes? Isn't it because He cares about hearts and what takes place in them? These hearts can't be useless to Him who died for them. The same heart that loves Jesus is the same heart that throbs for my girlfriend. I bet you me that Jesus cares a lot about what happens in these hearts. (And, by the way, a heart that refuses to love Jesus wholly will also fail at loving other human beings wholly.)  

Because He cares about our hearts and relationships, here are a few things I've discovered He expects from us:

First, from all people in relationships, He expects that; 

1. We will maintain purity. Purity not only of the body but also of the heart and of the mind. Having sex isn't the only problem here, but that we as a whole will keep our minds, bodies and hearts to Him and for Him. 

2. We will make Him central in the relationships. Not to just think that He is central, but to truly entrust the relationship and everything in it to Him i.e. when all is well, and when everything is the devil. 

3. We would stop expecting too much of each other but put out focus on expecting everything possible from Him. Because, come on, all of us are just so kaput, broken and retarded. We are very poor at faithfully delivering anything. The only One who can fully deliver all our unreasonable expectations is Jesus. No one else. 

4. We would seek perfection in and from Him first before seeking perfection in and from anyone else. 

5. We both should love Him above our boyfriends and girlfriends. He knows that this will cause us to obey God more in every area of the relationship and stop converting our baes into gods.

Second, He expects the following of young men (me included) in relationships: 

1. To be gentle, loving, caring, supportive and forgiving towards the opposite sex. He uses the apostle Paul to command the following of us: 
1 Timothy 5:2 (NLT) "Treat the older women as you would your mother, and treat the younger women with all purity as your own sisters."

2. To love one lady only, and assure her so. Christ loves one Church, His body. He doesn't love "churches". To Christ, there are no "churches". Although many may say that this tall order belongs to marriage, I would say that a strong foundation to any meaningful marriage begins with reasonable relationships. Failed relationships speak the same language as failed marriages. If a man "loves" quite a "bunch" of ladies all at once, this man is not worthy of a daughter of God. He can't love her well whose Master loves jealously. (You can quote that, haha) 

3.  To be willing to sacrifice His time and self for her. Christianity is all about laying ourselves down for others. In fact, Jesus willingly did the same for us. He demands that every Christian does the same for the other. And relationships aren't different.
John 10:17 (NLT) "The Father loves Me because I lay down My life that I may have it back again." 
John 17:19 (NLT) "And I give Myself entirely to You so they also might be entirely yours."

4. He intercedes for her. 
Jesus intercedes for the Church. He also commands that we pray for one another. Relationships are not an exception. 
James 5:16 (NIV) "Therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective."

5. He protects her and leads her in His ways. 
He does it with words. With deeds. In humility. And intentionally. With honesty. With faithfulness. By leading her to the cross of Jesus and at His feet. 
No matter what, the man shall always be expected to take the leadership role (whether in relationships or in marriage.) Christ expects us to protect our baes by not leading them to a place of intimacy if we're not expecting to make them our wives. 
1 Thessalonians 5:11 (NIV) "Therefore encourage one another and build each other up, just as in fact you are doing."

Third and lastly, He expects the following of the lady. He expects that; 

1. She learns all the ways of a Christian woman from MATURE Christian women so that in the near future she may understand how to support her man, praise her man, submit to her man cheer her husband and lay down her life for her man. 
Titus 2:3 (ESV) "Older women likewise are to be reverent in behavior, not slanderers or slaves to much wine. They are to teach what is good and so train the young women to love their husbands and children."

2.  That as the weaker vessel, she learns to be led. 
Jesus says that women are the weaker vessel (not 'weak' but 'the weaker vessel' - there is a difference). It doesn't really matter what the present culture says, but Christ says so. If the guy isn't leading, ask him to, and also pray that he will learn to lead. 

Note: The point of leadership in relationships differs from that in marriage. Here, leadership is not the "you lead and I submit" type, but the "you lead and we seek Christ for direction" type. 

3. She possess a humble and gentle spirit.
I know someone would want me to quote a verse from 1 Peter 3 that applies to married women, but I won't. Although it is a great verse. But I'll quote the following verse: 
Philippians 4:5 (NIV) "Let your gentleness be evident to all. The Lord is near."
Gentleness has a way of revealing the Jesus in you ladies. It is a firmer grip on what you value than the adornments on your body. Embrace it. 

4. She prays for her boyfriend. 
This instruction is the same as the one for the young man above about interceding for the other. 

5. She guards her heart against the futile lies of the enemy. 
Eve loved foreign words. She loved them so much that she couldn't remember exactly what God through her husband Adam had instructed her to do with that fruit. She didn't guard her heart against foreign words that seemed true and sweet at the moment but poisonous and life-threatening in the end. 
Christ expects the redeemed lady to guard her heart against finding pleasure in the sweet words and enticements of foreign love from a guy that is not her own and from friends that mean her relationship harm. He expects her to live as a new being who has been redeemed from the sins, failures and mistakes of the first woman. 


I rest my case.


Keep expecting. And know that He is expecting too.


Further reading notes for guys:


And read the last blog in this series here: Rhetoric: Love Is...

Bonface Morris. 

Thursday, February 11, 2016

Relationships and Short Stories: Thirty Dates, One Truth

Note: This is my second blog from a series of posts this year celebrating February as “the month of love”. You can read the first blog here: Relationships – Is Grass Always Greener On the Other Side?

Thirty Dates... One Truth
*******
Brian looks grimly at his phone, swiping at its screen from right to left with impatience.

This is the second time she has stood him up, or rather, come late.

“Why on bloody earth is she late?” he cusses within himself.

He then decides to call her… The call goes through but she doesn’t pick up.

He is now burning with anger. It is eating him up. He is infuriated.

He stands up, fidgets with the coins and the USB thumb drive in his left side trouser pocket, holds his phone in his right hand, opens his contacts app and scrolls down the call history to see how long ago she had promised (or lied) that “she was just 10 minutes away”. He recollects that it has been an hour already.

“One bloody hour!” He cusses again.

He then swipes to the left within the dialer app to access his “favorites” or “most called” and just below his “bae” Betty is his dude’s number, Sam.

He calls Sam.

He has now moved on to the other end of the café and is looking down at the streets as he plucks on the potted plants in their vases right at the grills. He is absent-minded at most as his call to Sam goes through. It drizzling outside, and a wind mixed with moisture hits his face bringing with it palpitations of both dread (due to the anger he already is feeling) and calmness (due to a decrease in temperature). The drizzle causes the soil on the outside to smell both rusty and chunky.

“Niaje jamaa? I hope zinakuendea poa leo. Imagine huyu mrembo ameamua kuni-standup tena raundi hii. Si hii ni mchezo!? Ni kama hii date nitafanya na waiters tu kama last time before aingie na petty excuses. Hii ni kuzoeana tunazoeana.”
(Hi dude! I hope you’re doing just fine. Imagine my girlfriend happens to have stood me up again. This is ridiculous! It’s like I am going to have a date with the waiter just like last time, after all, before she comes in with her petty excuses. I think it has now turned into a game of taking each other for granted.)

Sam, being the dude he is, a solid member of TMF, and that he is either into all kinds of chiqs or no chiq at all, throws his buddy a bummer:
“Hey, man. Nilikwambia hizi story za kukazana na kutreat mrembo as if anakupatiaga kidneys unatumia mchana halafu unamrudishia jioni zitakuletea noma. Si you lenga her for a month or two tuone atafanya nini.”
(Hey, man. I told you not long ago that when you treat a lady as if she hires her kidneys at a fee will deal you a blow. I propose that you break up with her for a month or two without notice and see how it rolls…)

“Okay acha nione. Wacha aingie hivi na mimi nitoke, nimwambie kama ni hii kubebana tutaendelea kubebana, wacha tubebane after one month or two.”
(Okay, let’s wait and see. Once she’s here, I’ll pick myself up and leave. I’ll let her know that I can extend these mind-games of hers to a month or two.)

So he waits.

It starts raining. It pours, actually. There is even a thunderclap. He waves at the waiter and calls for coffee. It’s 6pm. He feels the chill but smiles at the prospect that the coffee will help. He had come out of work early for this date. He has even skipped his evening classes. See? He is that kind of dude that sacrifices both his time and commitments in order to spend time with his girlfriend of two years. This thing is serious to him, and he is intentional about it.

After he’s sipped his tea halfway through while clutching the cup with both hands in order to feel and tap from its warmth, Betty comes rushing in, umbrella in hand and literally dripping of rain water. He looks at her with the “did-Steve-Harvey-just-announce-that-Uber-left-Kenya-just-a-few-seconds-ago?” look mixed with the “haiya!-this-Wi-Fi-just-got-to-10mbps!” look.

She is dripping, or at least her shoes are. And he doesn’t care… Oh, well, he does. But not like he used to.

“Hi babe!” he quips while making a paltry gesture with his head.
“Hi!”
“Sorry for the rain”

*Silence*

“But you should have been here an hour and half ago! You promised, remember? You wouldn’t be dripping like a donkey if it were so. At all. What happened?”

She gives him the “come-on-duuude!!” kind of look.

“Nothing happened. I just ran into friends, one thing led into another, and then here I am. Ain’t you gonna order coffee for me, or even pull me a chair? Or even, in the slightest manner, offer to take my umbrella?”

“Oh, sorry. I am just not sure what you take nowadays. I could order coffee, but you would end up telling me that you are not doing coffee this week or month; or I could order tea, and you would say someone just advised you against it yesterday. So, I can’t. But you can tell me what you need and I’ll call in the waiter for you.”

She gives him that look again, stomps her dripping feet, folds the umbrella, hands it over to the waiter and requests for black coffee.

“So, do you think we can talk? It’ s almost 7.”
“Yeah, I thought that is why we are meeting. No?”
“Yeah”

Her coffee is served.

“I just wanted to complain about how you are treating me these days. I feel like I am playing second fiddle in your life all the time. Everything else but me, is a priority.”
“I’m listening”
“I hope you won’t see that I am trying to judge or condemn you.”
“Mmmhuh”
“This is the second date you almost stood me up and I never hear an apology from you at all. It seems like our good sides just vanished, huh?” he rants.

“Babe, how many dates have we had so far? Thirty-something? Probably forty? Have we had the best of times? Yes, I think we have. And have we had the worst of times? Yes, I do think so too. Have I been perfect? Yes, quite minimally. And have I been imperfect? Yes, numerous times. Have you been perfect? Yes, you have. And imperfect? Yes, multiple times. We have tested both ends of what a relationship can have and bear. According to me, the one truth that we cannot all escape from is this: we are evolving as individuals and we just need to keep up with it. We all are evolving. Our relationship is changing us. We keep changing. We are neither who we were yesterday nor who we were when we first met. There are things I expect of you today that I never did before. Why? Because we are growing, changing, evolving every single day.
Our expectations keep changing. Our bodies keep changing.
Our questions keep changing. Our visions keep being reviewed all the time.
Even the way we show affection keeps changing. That’s why you didn’t pull my chair when I came in… And in the course of changing, baby, we will always have friction. Only unchanging people lack what to fight over. I didn’t have a job before, but now my job demands both my commitment and attention. So am I to stop everything else and take care of only one part of my life? No. That will be an imbalance…”

Just before she finishes saying all she was saying, Brian jumps in…

“I understand your point, and I totally understand what you are saying. And it seems that that is the same thing I am talking about: that although we are evolving - which I understand - why are we now switching priorities? Doesn’t our time together matter anymore than our jobs or friends or time alone? The fact that we are meeting to talk about stuff even after having numerous dates and arguments is proof that we truly are good friends. And friends care to keep the fire within the friendship burning. Ours is fading. Yes, we are changing, but the spark is dying. I care that we should rekindle it again. I am not working hard to keep this fire burning as I used to, and I feel the same about you… What do you think?”

The rain outside has subsided. There is a breeze of chilling air sweeping across the room in which they and several others are seated. Their coffees are done. They are now blankly staring at each other. Betty offers to give him her spare pullover which she pulls out from her hand bag and gives to him.

“You know what babe? The one thing I love about us is that we can solve our differences without involving other people.
(After saying this, Brian now feels guilty that his friend Sam knows almost everything about this relationship as he does, and Betty too knows pretty well that her friend Ann has grown weary of her tantrums concerning Brian. So she is careful about what she says next…)
“Even as truth unveils itself before us, the question to ask ourselves is: are we really ready to accommodate each other as far much as we are very different people from those that had their first date just over two years ago? Are we? Okay, am I ready to understand that you don’t see it a big deal today to not pull my chair anymore even though I would really thrill in the moment when you do so? Are you ready to accommodate the fact that my job now takes too much of my time and I can no longer be as available as I used to be? Are we ready to evolve together or are we going to end up evolving apart?

Brian now realizes that his one-month or two-month break threat was a petty strategy. It could not work here in this very situation if he was to remain to be the man of integrity that he truly is. He calls in a truce right within his mind.

“I think acclimatizing to who we are right now or who we are becoming is a journey and a reality we cannot avoid. We truly have changed. I have become more inquisitive, more demanding, pettier… Can we work on evolving together? One step at a time?”

Betty gives him the “come-on-duude!” look again. Which means she agrees with him.
He later escorts her to her place. His heart isn’t racing like when he brought her here for the first time, but the assurance that they still love each other and that they both care where the relationship is headed makes him have a bounce in his feet again. Their next date, the thirty-something date, ’d better be exciting…

*******
The story above is derived from a true story.
Within the story is one lesson: that after two people have been together for a while, they tend to grow fond of each other and therefore take each others’ needs (or love language) for granted. But if the two realize that their relationship is eroding due to this tendency of growing apart and decide to light up the spark again, the relationship (or marriage) may find itself on its feet again. They only need to agree to grow and evolve together.


And here is post number three in this series: A Boyfriend, a Girlfriend, Christ and Everything Else


Bonface Morris.

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Relationships: Is Grass Always Greener on the Other Side?

Side note: This is my first blog from a series of posts this year celebrating February as "the month of love". Read the second one here: Relationships and Short Stories: Thirty Dates, One Truth

*******
So I've sat down and I've been thinking: how many of us in relationships don't sit down - intentionally or not - meet another person of the opposite sex, and start comparing this new dude/lady with our bae and thinking that they are better? That they might make a better bae than the one we already have? It happens a lot, eh?

We would find ourselves rolling our thoughts to and from, in and out, within and without, trying to figure out existing/evidential possibilities that maybe this person we are in a relationship with may not be "the one". (Even at such times denying the truth that Pastor Matt Chandler of The Village Church tells us: that there is no-one called "the one", and we should not waste our precious time dreaming of having a "perfect" relationship with them. That's dreamland sweetheart, leave it alone.)
Anyway, in our encouraged day-dreaming, this other person seems perfect. And real. And inducing a state of hypnosis that just can't be brushed off. He/she laughs and smiles like an angel. He/she has a perfect body. A perfect smile. Dreamy eyes. He/she happens to say just the right thing(s), has more ambition and direction than your bae, they're more intelligent, they seem to have all the time for you, their jokes are original, they dress gloriously, and their devotion to God seems deeper than that of your bae - maybe he/she even serves God better. Of course, in most cases - and if not, all - our baes are normally not lacking in these departments, but we encourage our bingeing on these thoughts nevertheless.
Is the grass always greener on the other side?
Take, for instance, my true story: I have this lady friend who almost everyone else who hasn't met or known my bae (because I choose to make my relationship life private at most) thinks is my girlfriend. We always laugh it away because her boyfriend is my buddy and he is a friend and I have also (just to shield my guts from petty gossip) clarified to my bae about her. My lady friend also knows about my bae and they might just be meeting soon.
Frankly, between the two of us and our better halves, we are good. No fishy underground undertakings.

Anyway, the other day, just as a joke, I asked her: what if you truly were my girlfriend? She laughed. I told her I was serious. I mean, everyone thinks so. (Confessions, meeen, haha.) People think we were "good together". (Those are misplaced observations, but it happens. People always think all they want to think. They will always think that they know what's right for you. They don't. No, they don't. Only God knows what is right for you.)

This is what she told me: "I seem interesting because you haven't got me. You don't have me. I am not easy to handle. I am stubborn, and a nuisance, and full of what you wouldn't like to have for yourself." I laughed.

Although I laughed, that answer really got me thinking, thus the birth of this post.
I mean, isn't this what is happening in our relationships everyday and what is causing grown up men and women (even men and women of the cloth) to be fooled into thinking "I married the wrong person" or "I think I'm in a relationship with the wrong person"? Or "This is not the person God planned for me, I have found 'the one'". Kwani where were they when they decided to be in their current relationship?
This, my dear friends, is a real snarl and temptation which if left unattended and unguarded, will escalate into one or both of the following: infidelity or emotional cheating. This is a talk on why we tend to think that the grass is "greener on the other side". And here are a few reasons why I think we keep running into desiring the "greener" grass:

1. The fondness
When you are fond of another person more than you are fond of your bae, they always seem more interesting. I mean, you love their company, their jokes, their random dates (lunch, coffee, "meet my buddies", tiny parties e.t.c.). Things which your bae totally lacks. You give in to this other person's texts and inboxes and DMs and calls and WhatsApps and imo's and all kinds of interactions, but you deny your bae every right to your time. It is even made worse when the "greener" side has an ex involved. Emotional cheating is looming but, dear, you don't seem to care. That is you thinking that "it is greener on the other side." By the way, this is why players are always on top of the dating game, and this is why naive Christians are preferring them to their "boring" partners. (Although I won't deny it, some of us are pathetic boyfriends or girlfriends.)

2. We forget that love is a war.
Love is a war. If we don't keep fighting for our relationships and intentionally seek positive change from both sides, another person who seems "to get it" will always get more of our attention.
That's why I normally say that a relationship without fights is a time bomb waiting to explode. Meaningful fights mean that you both want the same thing: (a) that you both are still interested in each other and in the relationship, and (b) you both would like to see the other person becoming better. This thing of "he/she took me as I am" is great, (it is commonplace and acceptable) but if your boyfriend/girlfriend doesn't want to see you improve or become better, baby, I'm smelling plastic. It's gonna melt soon.

3. Commitment
Commitment is two-way: (a) as long as you're not committed to the other person (the one perceived as "greener grass"), it will always seem sweet, and (b) if your relationship is casual (what postmodernists actually call "an open relationship"), greener grass will always have a leeway.
When there is no baggage, the promise of an infinite thrill, no tantrums, no pettiness, no "blackouts", no "catching ma-feelings", no mood swings... You will always love to swing on the pendulum of unpredictable and incoherent relationships. You will always find comfort in the "grass is greener on the other side" mantra.
Cheating is the new 'normal' in relationships that lack commitment.
4. The tendency to think that a relationship with the other person will ultimately solve our own impeding relationship problems.
You know when a rebound mechanism is effected in order to counter a real/existing catastrophe? Yes, that's what happens when people are trying to run away from solving their own relationship problems.
They end up spreading their gangrene into their next relationships.
Stop for a while and figure it out. Okay, aren't we most prone to fall into emotional cheating or unfaithfulness or infidelity when our own relationships are on the rocks? When our relationships are in seasons of hardship, other people (even the most absurd) seem tastier, sweeter and more attractive.
We should strive to work on the disagreements in our relationships, because the other person (the "greener" grass) will eventually (sooner or later) face the reality that the demons that made us unacceptable in our previous relationship have not yet been annihilated, and they'll come haunting them too.

5.  Lack of contentment with where we are and what we already have in our current relationships.
Relationships are not a one day affair. They don't become great and perfect in a week. I repeat: relationships need hard work in order to work. Impatience makes us think, "Aaaah, I think I should just get out." Or "Maybe God wants me out, this dude/lady ain't 'the one'".
I can't deny that there are moments when we are justified to move out (those reasons need a whole blog post of their own), but the postmodern mentality of solving issues by running away from them will leave the world a loveless arena that is full of bitter people.
We need to reach a point where we decide: "I'm proud of this relationship and the far we've come. I'm also proud of where we are headed. I wanna give it my all, so dear Lord, please help me."
Because if we lack such a drive, no relationship will ever work for us. We'll keep on looking for "the one" until Christ comes back. And we'll meet him single. (Sic).

6. When your current relation "ship" is consistently hitting the routine iceberg.
This is the situation: you two have been in that relationship for two years, yet you keep solving, fighting about and disagreeing on the same issues over and over again. Also, you seem to be doing the same things, at the same time, in the same way and in the same places. Forever. That's dangerous. (Most of us who in one tiny way or another seem to be inclined towards perfectionism tend to think routine is a good thing by the way.)
A ship and an iceberg is exemplary of a relationship that has hit a stall.
Routine (as my bae has been slowly teaching me) is such a killer of intimacy. Getting out of our comfort zones can be helpful in breaking monotony and sparking that interest again.
Change the way you solve conflicts, the places you visit, the stuff you do together, the things you talk about... (Even saying "I love you" every day seems to get boring after a while. Really.) 

*******
My verdict: grass is never greener on the other side. It may seem to be, but it is not. It may seem to have some great watering but we should work on watering our own. It may seem promising, but we already have our own. It may seem convincing, but it might as well be conniving.

My own relationship is teaching me that patience and intentional growth are things that are very dear to a relationship. Your bae becomes "the one" when both people in a relationship decide to work hard on it and make it better.

PS: Read the next post from this series here: Relationships and Short Stories: Thirty Dates, One Truth


Bonface Morris.

Monday, February 1, 2016

Lyrics and MP3 Download: 'Resurrecting' by Elevation Worship

Elevation Worship's "Here As In heaven" official album cover
Song: Resurrecting
Track number on album: 5
Album: Here As In Heaven
Genre: Contemporary Worship Music
Year/Date of release: Official digital release date will be February 6, 2016. (The album was recorded live at the Time Warner Cable Arena in July 2015.)
Label: Essential Records

Note: From now onwards, links to downloads will be downloading directly, and you can now use any browser (on phone or PC) to download any stuff that'll be shared on this blog. I found a work-around, yaaaay!!

Lyrics:

1. The head that once was crowned with thorns
Is crowned with glory now,
The Savior knelt to wash our feet
Now at His feet we bow;
The One who wore our sin and shame
Now robed in majesty
The radiance of perfect love
Now shines for all to see

CHORUS:
(Your Name, Your Name, is victory
All praise, will rise, to Christ our King) x2

2. The fear that held us now gives way
To Him who is our peace
His final breath upon the cross
Is now alive in me

CHORUS:
(Your Name, Your Name, is victory
All praise, will rise, to Christ our King) x2

VAMP:
(By Your Spirit I will rise, from the ashes of defeat
The resurrected King, is resurrecting me
In Your Name I come alive, to declare Your victory
The resurrected King, is resurrecting me) x3

[Is resurrecting me 
Our God is love...]

3. The tomb where soldiers watched in vain
Was borrowed for three days
His body there would not remain
Our God has robbed the grave
Our God has robbed the grave

CHORUS:
(Your Name, Your Name, is victory
All praise, will rise, to Christ our King...) x2

VAMP:
(By Your Spirit I will rise, from the ashes of defeat
The resurrected King, is resurrecting me
In Your Name I come alive, to declare Your victory
The resurrected King, is resurrecting me) x3
The resurrected King, is resurrecting me

[Oooh-oooh
Eee-eh]