Tuesday, December 24, 2013

The Best Things of 2013 (Pt. 2)

Part One featured writings on Matthew McConaughey, the 25 best albums of 2013, and much, much more. I'm hoping to make this post just as comprehensive and wide-ranging as the first, along with new subjects to write about. I hope you enjoy it. Side note: thanks to every reader for getting me nearly 300 views in a day last Monday, which is utterly ridiculous. You're all wonderful people.

I already said a good bit about this weird year in the first post, but I feel as if it's necessary to spit this out while it's still fresh in my mind.


Last Tuesday, I saw Alexander Payne's Nebraska. It's an absolutely brilliant and authentically Midwestern film, featuring characters I could've easily interchanged for certain family members. I highly recommend it. However, that's beside the point of what I'm talking about in this post.

To give some background to the story, Woody Grant (Bruce Dern) and his son, David Grant (Will Forte), agree to take a trip from Billings, Montana to Lincoln, Nebraska so they can collect a prize Woody believes he has won. The prize? A million dollars, per the letter Woody received in the mail for winning some sort of sweepstakes (yes, it's fake). They face all kinds of adversity throughout this trip, the most of which is Woody drunkenly falling, splitting his forehead open in a hotel in South Dakota.

About 90 minutes into Nebraska, Woody and David are standing on the grounds of Woody's childhood home in Hawthorne, NE. Woody has just taken David, his brother, and his wife on a tour of the house. Woody and David survey the vast, open field ahead of them. David asks his father: "did you ever want to farm like your dad?" Woody, well into his 70s and already demonstrating a considerable issue with hearing, pauses for a moment to think and process.

Woody opens up to let out what may be my favorite and most relatable line of 2013 in film: "I don't remember. It doesn't matter."

What happened over the course of 2013 was nowhere near like what I anticipated happening at the beginning. Any expectation I had was blown away to the point that I legitimately cannot remember what I hoped for out of this year. All I can remember is that the expectations I had were influenced by very different motives than what motivates me now.

Friendships are much different. My walk with Jesus has changed a lot (for the better). Life events were far from what I expected them to be. My summer was the polar opposite of what I expected it to look like in December 2012, and I'm extremely thankful for that. All of this, and I can't remember very much about what I wanted 2013 to look like, because God blew up those plans, inserted His own, and it was way more interesting than what I dreamed up. It's funny, because I've forgotten most of those dreams.

I don't remember. It doesn't matter.

The Five Best Sports Moments of 2013, With Complete and Total Personal Bias


I hate me too.
  • 5. The Fake Spike. Also known as "kickstarted the part of the season where Lions fans tricked themselves into being confident."
  • 4. The Steal. What a pedestrian caption for one of the most electrifying (and important) plays in basketball last year: "Trey Burke made a dunk in the second half."
  • 3. Michael Palardy Redemption Tour.
  • 2. Iron Bowl.
  • 1. The Shot. A. Basketball, the best game on Earth. B. I miss this in more ways than one (the amount of times I tried to make this shot at Pratt this summer: too many).
The Best Purchases of 2013, In No Order

  • Anything I bought at Prince's Hot Chicken
  • Audio-Technica record player
  • A $5 blue V-neck from H&M
  • Febreze car air freshener
  • Both Ben Rector shows
  • Any of the seven Detroit Coney Island dogs I ate in four days in July
  • Little Caesars (thrice)
  • A car
  • Garden and Gun magazine
  • Mott's Apple Juice
Best Rap Lyric That Doubled as the Next Episode of MTV Cribs

 
"My yard so big, I got pet deers." - 2 Chainz, "Black Unicorn"

The 51st Best Song of 2013


Kurt Vile, "KV Crimes". As is Brian Cook of the brilliant MGoBlog, I'm one of those people who thinks the Big Lebowski is a substantially deep film. I think Kurt Vile's a lot like the Big Lebowski: you don't really get it the first time and you think it's corny, forgettable, and pointless. Suddenly, you can't stop talking about nothing and everything at the same time, because come on, dude, let's go bowling.

Thing I Bought That I Regretted Immediately


I bought these shorts from American Apparel, because I convinced myself that they weren't "too short" and that they would be acceptable in some form of social gathering. A. They were neither of these. B. I have worn these once and I still had to wear athletic shorts to work that day because they were more appropriate.

The Best Movie I Saw in 2013


Short Term 12. I'm still waiting to put out a full best-of list until I'm able to see Her and The Wolf of Wall Street, but this little indie film blew me away. Brie Larson steals the show as a supervisor at a home for "troubled" teenagers. For anyone planning to work at a school, with children, or in any form of social work at some point, see this immediately.

Ten Other Great Movies I Saw in 2013, in No Order


Nebraska, American Hustle, 12 Years a Slave, All Is Lost, Fruitvale Station, Before Midnight, Frances Ha, The Kings of Summer, Inside Llewyn Davis, Upstream Color

The Best Redbox Rental of 2013


Before Midnight. This film is also home to the Best Scene of 2013. Without revealing too much, Celeste and Jesse have a fight in a hotel room for over 20 minutes, in real time. That doesn't exactly jump off the page, but if you've watched the Before series (Sunrise/Sunset), you understand. Rarely do you get to see a scene like this go for so long and remain so emotionally compelling and taxing. This scene is the culmination of 18 years of work from director Richard Linklater, and how brilliant and precise it is.

Best Show I'm Three Years Behind On

Breaking Bad. 1. Life is hard. 2. The schedule I have makes it absolutely impossible to keep on track with shows I want to watch. I've seen one episode of Parks and Recreation this semester. ONE.

Show I Will Start Watching, Eventually

Mad Men. No promises.

Five Things I Didn't Like in 2013


  • Big Sean. The guy's best verse of his career was on the same song as the best verse of the entire year as dropped by Kendrick. Sucks to suck.
  • The Duck Dynasty "scandal." Can we really call it a scandal when A. they've already filmed season 4, B. people really shouldn't be surprised anymore by what 70 year old Southern Christians have to say about the marriage debate, and C. people are still going to watch the show regardless of what happens if not more so?
  • Anything Seth MacFarlane did, because he's the worst.
  • The Purge. Worst execution of a potentially solid premise in years. Worst acting since Hayden Christensen/Jessica Biel's glory days.
  • Upper respiratory infections. I HAD TWO OF THESE THIS YEAR WHICH IS TWO MORE THAN ANYONE SHOULD HAVE EVER.
Things I Liked in 2013 (Part Two)

Rembert Explains America


Let me get this out of the way as quickly as possible: I love Grantland. I don't really love Bill Simmons, but I love his vision for the sports + pop culture site he created in 2011. There's brilliant writing, hilarious pieces, and occasionally Simmons will post something that I don't find obnoxiously New England. What ties this site together for me is Rembert Browne, an Atlanta native, Dartmouth graduate, and NYC resident who did this summer what I think we've all wanted to do or still want to do at some point in our lives: road trip the USA and talk about your experiences. Among his best writings from this summer: Burning Man, Detroit, the incredible Essence Festival, and moving. My personal favorite, though, is this epic saga of his trip to Chicago, featuring everything from a traffic citation to the death of a friend, which Rembert handles beautifully, as always. I hope we all get the chance to explain America for ourselves at some point.

Detroit


Look, I honestly tried. I really didn't want to force everyone to read my thoughts on a city that occupies so much of me despite my not living there for any permanent amount of time. I covered most of my feelings on Detroit late this past summer. I tweet and talk and post a lot about this city, once holding a population of 1,800,000+, now of around 700,000. They're bankrupt. It's not a very safe place to be. The police force is undermanned and outgunned. There are 78,000 abandoned buildings as of the most recent count. It's a shell of its former self, and I couldn't be bothered to care. Do I understand the previous facts? Yes. Do I still love this city with a burning passion in 2013 despite what it is? Yes. I will always love Detroit unconditionally because of the impact the city and its people and the family I have there have made on my life. I'll always rush to its defense in conversation. Detroit is where I feel at home, and nothing can change that. And yes, unnamed friend, it is a real city.

The Resurgence of Vampire Weekend


I feel like I need to explain further on my "white people getting over themselves to love Vampire Weekend again" comment from the first part of this installment. Post-Contra (really, even after their first self-titled album), way too many self-ascribed "hipsters" began to see it as cool to dismiss the group as "typical" indie rock and being too deep. Pardon me, but what does that even mean? Vampire Weekend in 2013 have crafted the year's best album and are not just an A-list indie group, but an A-list rock band, and they're there permanently. What a joy it is, too: Contra, VW's second album, sagged and wheezed to the finish, a fairly underwhelming follow-up to the neverending bouncy fun of their first album. During the formation of Modern Vampires of the City, the band seemed to realize they had to change something to be Vampire Weekend again. They did it: an album about growing older and searching for faith is the most listenable and enjoyable album of the year. A-listers, indeed.

2 Chainz


What you see above is not only easily the picture of the year, but also a picture that could've only happened in this weird and wonderful year we call 2013: 2 Chainz, a 36 year old rapper who already bounced out of one forgotten Atlanta rap group to start a now-three year old solo career, is ASCAP's Songwriter of the Year. Thank God for that, because we need rap to be fun in 2013. I'm enjoying the Kendrick vs. Everybody theme of this year as much as anyone, but sometimes you just need comic relief. Who else but Tauheed Epps to deliver it? The man has now made two just-listenable-enough albums that have individual songs with replay values that hang with the best of music, but at this point, he's more than just a rapper. He's a social icon. After Barack's reelection, #2Termz shirts were a real thing. The amount of white kids in schools that yelled "TWO CHAAAAIIIIIINZ" this year was off the charts. Everyone, including your grandparents (even Bob!) knows who 2 Chainz is. What a victory that is, because you don't get someone like this every lifetime.

CRU


Brace yourselves, because this is going to be really sappy. I found out what CRU was on my fourth day of college when the guy who impacted my life the most over the next two years, Grant Minchew, talked about it with me over dinner after getting my name in a survey for a ministry I had no idea about. Ever since then, it's been a two-plus year growing experience in my walk with the Lord, and it has been an amazing and unforgettable ride. My life simply wouldn't be the same without this incredible and Godly group of leaders I get to work and live with. I've made lifelong friendships and the memories of events like Fall Retreat and Rave-o-ween are, of course, too much to handle. My relationship with Christ would not be anywhere near where it is without the influences of this community around me that encourages me to serve and love the people around me. Friends, you're collectively the best.

To use the only term I liked in journalism classes, that puts a --30-- on this year. I'm still working on the Bruce Springsteen Case Study (the wait is because it takes a lot of work me to rank 300+ tracks and to write longforms in general), but that could potentially be done before the New Year. If so, you may see another post on here before 2014. If not, thanks for everything you did for me in 2013, whether you supported me by reading my scattered and sometimes incoherent thoughts on this blog or by being a friend in real life. I don't say it enough, but you guys are great. Thank you.

A fresh wind and bright sky,

Will

Monday, December 16, 2013

The Best Things of 2013 (Pt. I)


This is part one of a two-part series, because several promising films are crammed into the last couple weeks of 2013 and obviously everyone likes reading these (cue Walter Sobchak's "AM I RIGHT?") so I'll stretch this out as long as I can. Or it's also because I'm not up for typing 3,000 words at this exact moment. (Spoiler: it's 2,664, to be exact. Close.).

Weird. Wonderful. Interesting. Frustrating. Idiotic. Stressful. Fun. Those seven words are interchangeable for my feelings on the year 2013, because I've felt that each of those words could aptly describe the most unique year of my time on Earth. I'll/we'll never see anything like it again, and I don't know if I should be sad or thankful. 2013 had a lot going for it and against it, but we'll count that as a net gain.

In this series, I'll be talking about both positives and negatives: things I liked in/about 2013 (spoiler: anything Matthew McConaughey did) and things I didn't. (Spoiler: anything Big Sean did.) I have a lot to talk about and this post features a lot of lists, rankings, and words, so enjoy.

The 25 Best Albums of 2013

The Five Best New Artists of 2013

  • Chance the Rapper
  • Lorde
  • Mutual Benefit
  • Run the Jewels (more of a supergroup-type thing, but still counts)
  • Rhye 
Twenty More Tracks From 2013 You Should Know


This can also be seen as a companion piece to The 30 Best Songs Released in 2013. It can also be identified as "Will found a couple songs that probably should've been on there, so we'll add some more to the list." Some of these are already listed above in the albums article, but here's your emphasis for Spotifying these. ----------------------->Spotify playlist HERE.<----------------------
Best Music Video of 2013 


The National, "Sea of Love." I've posted this five times on this blog, but whatever, it's still amazing. I end up loving something different every time I watch, whether it's the kid or Bryce Dessner's dancing.

Other Best Music Video of 2013


Toro y Moi, "Say That." 1. It's an exercise in brilliantly awkward dancing. 2. Best attempt at recreating the Neature Walk series as a music video to this point. 3. The faux-turtleneck. My God.

Best Vine User


Cousin Terio: singlehandedly making Vine not suck this year.

Best Joseph Fauria Touchdown Dance


All of them, but Bye Bye Bye.

Best Unplanned Moment of 2013


Miguel's Leg Drop. Nothing at an awards show may ever top this again.

Best Thing That I Promise Is Almost Done, Seriously

TIE: The Mixtape Series and the Bruce Springsteen Case Study. I can promise both of these will be of high quality...it's just a matter of finishing both of these up. Mine and JL's first mixtape should be out very soon, as he's out of Arkansas and back into the promised land of Tennessee. The Case Study will be a Christmas break project.

Best Christmas Break Project of 2013

Finishing Breaking Bad (seasons 3-5) and The Wire (entire series) in fourteen days. If this actually happens I may not watch TV of any kind for months.

Most Applicable Quotes of 2013

"God isn't calling us all to go to Indonesia. He's calling some of us to stay here." - Greg Pinkner, associate pastor at Fellowship Church in Knoxville

"As I began to cry in the middle of Starbucks (not from listening to Bon Iver), I could almost hear Jesus saying, 'Yes. But I want to go with you, hold you by the hand, and weep with you there.'" - Sammy Rhodes, RUF pastor at the University of South Carolina, on overcoming hard memories

"I believe in what I've done. I don't apologize for what I've done. If they want to fire me, go ahead." - Bo Pelini, Nebraska football coach, last seen with guns blazing
Things I Liked in 2013 (Part One)

To be fair, a list of things I liked in 2013 could literally go on forever, so I'm only writing about the ten things I tweeted about recently. For space and time, I'm limiting myself to no more than 250 words on each of these items. These are done in article format, they aren't for everyone, and if you hate this I'm sorry.

Matthew McConaughey



"McConaughey here ... just keep livin'." Matthew had a short prologue featuring that quote leading into some Dallas Buyers Club teasers this fall, and they were brilliant. It's nuts, because we're not supposed to be here with him right now. Before 2011, McConaughey had featured in exactly two quality films: 1993's Dazed and Confused (first and perhaps best performance as a high school graduate who still socializes with high schoolers) and 1996's A Time to Kill (I'm being a little flimsy with the term "quality", as this is about the fourth or fifth-best John Grisham film adaptation). Suddenly, a switch flipped in Matthew's head ("I don't have to star in all of these godawful romantic comedies no one talks about anymore") and we're here. Just look at the ridiculous list of nominations over the last two years. Dallas Buyers Club features what will probably be regarded as the performance of his career to this point, Mud is quietly great, and he owns his role in Bernie (a criminally underrated film, by the way). Has anyone surged harder from "forgotten B list actor" to "top tier" in less time? We're comfortable with this, too, because Matthew remains as endearing as ever. Just keep livin', indeed.

The Indiana Pacers


I can't get enough of the 2013 Pacers. Paul George went from "that guy the Pacers overdrafted for in 2010" to a top ten player in one season. The Pacers, formerly known as the New Old Pistons, are now the new guard in the NBA, the first team that we can firmly identify as better than Miami, whose odds at winning a third straight title are dwindling with every hard-nosed Indiana defensive performance (currently on pace to be the best defensive team since the 2003-04 Pistons, as determined by points allowed per 100 possessions). Even though George is easily the best offensive player Indiana has had since in-his-prime Reggie Miller (Danny Granger's two-season stretch in a "take whatever's open" fast-paced offense is looking more and more like an outlier), this is still a very identifiably state of Indiana team: "us against the world" approach, a legitimately annoying team to play against (first time since the mid-90s), and beautifully blue-collar, featuring Roy Hibbert disguised as a 7'2" Mack truck. We're lucky to see a franchise like this in 2013.

Prince's Hot Chicken



We live in exciting times. Food is as important as it's ever been, and quality is at an all-time high. Unfortunately, we're still failing to notice what is our most integral component to enjoying food: originality, creativity, and legitimate quality (we're not talking about that "quality" #5 you just ordered at Wendy's). That's why it's important to take note of truly excellent restaurants, like Prince's Hot Chicken, located in north Nashville. I don't have enough time or space to explain Nashville hot chicken to someone who knows nothing about it, so just read this. It's more of an experience: you have to feel the delayed burn of the cayenne pepper. You have to feel the sweat rolling down your face as your thoughts are screaming "how is this considered 'medium?'" You have to realize for yourself that it's one of the most unique eating experiences you can find, along with being incredibly rewarding.

Bob Warren's Facebook


My words can't really do justice for this, so I'll just save them. Here's a compilation.

Michigan-Area Sports


What a year. Some of these are pending, but these are the things I was excited about in 2013, all relating to this subject:
  • The Detroit Lions sit in first place in the NFC North; they'll gain their first divisional title of any kind since 1993 if they hold on
  • University of Michigan men's basketball finished as national runner-ups, their best season since 1993 (sensing a pattern?)
  • The Detroit Tigers won their third straight AL Central title
  • The Detroit Pistons are somewhat relevant again and currently sit at fifth in the Eastern Conference
  • The Detroit Red Wings made the NHL playoffs for the 22nd (!) year in a row (this isn't quite as important to me as a Predators fan, but they're in different conferences now, so...)
Michigan won 2013. No state was more relevant in every major sport, and what a year to do it when the state and its most prominent city are facing tumultuous times (spoiler: Detroit gets its own short article in part two of this installment). I didn't realize how much I identified with these teams until I was sitting on the MARTA in Atlanta on April 6th, ready to shell out up to $200 for a seat miles from the court at the Georgia Dome (don't worry, they were more expensive than that, so we watched at a bar ten miles north of Atlanta) to watch a group of similar-aged people play the sport I loved the most. It's insane, but it makes sense, because sports make sense. It's why I would've driven to Detroit for the World Series parade had the Tigers won it. It's why my December paychecks are potentially going towards the 16 hour round trip for a Lions home playoff game. Sometimes in life, you latch yourself to things that are rational to no one else but you. I ride an emotional roller coaster with these teams and sports as a whole, and I love every second of it. Have a sub. It's crazy.

Part II will be posted within the next week and will feature writings on my feelings toward Detroit, Vampire Weekend's resurgence, and Big Sean, among other occasionally important things.

    Tuesday, December 3, 2013

    Romulus

    Song. It's been a really long time since I wrote something. I'm sorry. I'll have two more posts before the new year happens: the Bruce Springsteen Case Study and some sort of end-of-year thing.



    The most important find of my fifth semester in college is this little green bouncing ball (like a Sky Bounce or whatever they're called at regional supermarkets, but older and smaller) I dug out of a storage compartment a month ago. This ball has become the Swiss Army knife of my room. It can be tossed into the air, viciously thrown at a wall post-stressful event, or bounced off the ceiling to see how fast your reaction time is. (I also think I'm realizing that I'm very easily entertained.) It's really useful in the most idiotic ways possible and I love it.

    I remember hearing around a year ago in a CRU or Crossroad talk (at this point, they're starting to run together for me, because life is nuts) that God is a lot like a Swiss Army knife. The Swiss Army knife is just one tool, but it does so much more than we can imagine. There are so many functions that God has that are absolutely mind-blowing and I've seen a lot of that this semester. I continue to set records for stress levels seemingly each week and I had to admit to myself that I really wasn't enjoying junior year. However, I can see God using all these things going on in my life to draw me closer to Him and to realize that He is all I have.

    I have a little over a week left in semester five of eight. That's one of the most ridiculous things I've ever typed because it feels as if college just started yesterday. These 2.5 years have flown by faster than I could have ever imagined. I've made the best friends that I'll ever make and have been blessed to be part of an incredible community in CRU. God has taught me critical lessons through everyday experiences. It's been fun and I'm already getting apprehensive and nervous about it ending. Good thing I've got three more of these to finish.

    Bullet points:
    Andre Drummond,

    Will

    Saturday, October 26, 2013

    Interstate 8


    Song reference. Up next/soon: a case study on Bruce Springsteen, featuring lots of words about a 64 year old man and his music.

    I have a lot of material from the last month to cover and no one reads these introductions, so here's a lot of bullet points with something occasionally italicized.
    • Fall Retreat with CRU was yet again a wonderful time. As always, the people of CRU poured into me and made me feel at home for another year. I love this ministry and all of the people in it. This year I was given the opportunity to be a discussion group co-leader and it was pretty amazing. I met some great new friends through it and I'm incredibly encouraged by the amount of love and willingness to discuss and interact this freshmen group has. If any of you are reading this (dear Lord please tell me someone reads this otherwise what am I doing), you're great.
    • Along with this, the Lord has blessed me with an absolutely incredible Bible study in Clement Hall. All of the guys there are awesome and have taught me more than I've taught them. I grow more and more thankful every single day that I have the opportunity to serve here.
    • Important events update: I finished the Bruceathon on October 18th after 13 days of nothing but Springsteen. 17 albums in 13 days was more than a bit of a chore, to say the least. Bruce has some absolutely epic stuff (Born to Run, Darkness on the Edge of Town, Nebraska) and some things that really shouldn't have happened (everything from 1987 to 1995). I'll be covering all of this in a post devoted to the Boss soon. (It's because I wasn't allowed to write my term paper over it so I've got to talk about it to someone wait no one's going to read that whoops)
    • The Official List of 2013 Movies That Will Liked (as of October 26th, to be updated next month) (ASCENDING ORDER):
      • Short Term 12 (10/10)
      • Gravity (9.4/10)
      • Fruitvale Station (9.1/10)
      • Mud (9/10)
      • The World's End (8.9/10)
      • The Place Beyond the Pines (8.5/10)
      • Upstream Color (8.4/10)
      • The Conjuring (8.2/10)
      • The Kings of Summer (8.2/10)
      • Despicable Me 2 (8/10)
      • This Is the End (7.7/10)
      • Monsters University (7.5/10)
      • Captain Phillips (7.4/10)
      • Rush (7.2/10)
      • Star Trek Into Darkness (7/10)
    • Movies that will likely earn a place on the above list after I have the chance to watch them in late October/November: Before Midnight, Prisoners, Blue Jasmine, 12 Years a Slave, Nebraska, and Dallas Buyers Club. (Yes I understand I care too much about movies leave me alone)
    • Important moment in American history: Matthew McConaughey (sorry, I promise I'm almost done) has a little preview for Dallas Buyers Club running at the two Regal Cinemas locations I went to this week. He starts his preview to the preview with "hey, McConaughey here" and ends with "just keep livin'." There are so many questions presented because of this. Can I end every conversation with "just keep livin'?" What does that even mean? Does it have a deeper meaning to it than the one I've made up for it? Does Matt McConaughey start every phone conversation with "McConaughey here?" Can I do that too?
    • The October/November Playlist for Other Awkward White People:
    • MIXTAPE UPDATE (mupdate?): By the end of 2013. First single, titled "Michelle Obama" and written by Young Jay Thugga, can be found HERE. Eventually we'll probably just rename the first mixtape "Sorry For the Delay."
    • Something I've realized this semester that I'm very passionate about is analyzing and diving into wealth and racial inequality in America and how it affects our school system. As a hopeful future middle/high school English teacher, it's very hard for me to read articles like this from The Atlantic, which shows how your school district and others compare to state, national, and international levels of subject proficiency. It's absolutely heartbreaking reading about how proficiency levels in reading and math in many areas of America (especially inner-city districts) are declining and how kids in these districts are given a much lower and less likely opportunity at success than their more affluent neighbors. I think we can at least begin to attribute this to the gigantic wealth gap in the United States (the top 1% in America takes home 25% of the wealth; the bottom 80% take 15%). As someone who was able to see racial and wealth inequality in unbelievable ways in Detroit for part of this past summer, I feel more inspired each and every day to play a part in trying to help turn this around. I feel like the Lord has given me the opportunity to serve somewhere (wherever that may be) through teaching and I pray that wherever He sends me it's an area in need of help and care.
    • This week at the Clement study, we diverted from going through Ephesians for a couple minutes to analyze Galatians 2:19-21. This is one of my favorite passages in the Bible and it's three verses that I want to continue to apply to and understand in my life daily. I love this.
    • Unfortunately, the world's greatest baseball team did not make the World Series this year. However, the Tigers provided the world with two of the best GIFs this season. (Next year.)
    • Tennessee gets to (and wins) a bowl this year.
    • Unfortunately, it's 1:30 AM at the time I'm typing this and I had to wake up almost 20 hours ago, so writing is an extreme struggle right now. I'll cover these VERY important topics soon: Big Sean's merits, or lack thereof; the official list of the 100% worst things ever; Jim Leyland and Grandfather Bob's similarities; more, potentially.
    • Last but not least, no one is allowed to complain about how "cold" it is until the temperature drops below freezing at any point. 50-60 has never been and never will be cold; please don't do this to me.
    I haven't slept in a really long time,

    William Edward Warren I

    Tuesday, September 24, 2013

    Born to Run

    I can't just title a post "September Updates," because at that point what's the use of even trying to get someone to read this? The title has no relation to anything in this post except for ironic purposes, because running is depressing. The real reason: when I started writing this, it was Bruce Springsteen's birthday. Bruce Springsteen is a certified Real American Hero, so this is only natural.

    It's been a month and a half since I last wrote something to my friends. (I promise this won't be over 5,000 words. Excess happens sometimes, right?) There's been a few notable events recently, but there hasn't been much to get me to stop my day to write about. Junior year started and my free time ended with it, so I've been hopelessly busy as of late. I'll try and sum up six weeks in a few paragraphs (with bullet points, as always) as best as I can.
    • The most important development of my third year at Tennessee so far has been this: I'm currently on a streak of seventeen straight weekdays where I have spent at least 90 minutes in Hodges Library. This is why free time does not exist for me anymore. It's been good for productivity and/or creativity (my daydreams are way more adventurous) and/or my impending death in a library.
    • The actual most important development of my third year is my leadership role in CRU, the ministry I've attended and worked with since my first semester here. I'm co-leading a Bible study in Clement Hall with my close friend and former roommate, Blake, and it's been nothing short of incredible so far. Every time I get to see the guys from Clement, I'm blown away at what God is doing through the study and how much he has blessed me with the opportunity to get to do life together with freshmen (and sophomores and juniors) this year.
    • My new apartment in the Maplehurst community this year is solid. It's a lot less hectic and much more fun than the house formerly known as Neverland. Also, the view is incredible. (And no, the name is no longer the Underground Railroad.)
    • I do this every time, so I might as well get the list out of the way now. The Official List of Songs I Liked Over the Last Month or Two:
    • Today at work, I had the opportunity to help a kid with his Religion homework, which went over Genesis 1-3. We went through the chapters together and discussed it in-depth; I can't describe how awesome and rewarding it is to have a job that gives me opportunities like this. The Lord is doing some really great stuff through SHCS.
    • This semester, I've already made lots of new friends (my mother would be so proud) through several different things: CRU, my job, classes, random encounters, and more. Life is really fun right now, even though...
    • ...I haven't been this stressed at any point that I can remember. I discussed the idea of "wanting wind to blow" in my last post, but I'm not sure I was prepared for a semester like this one so far. As I mentioned before, my free time doesn't exist and all of my time is either spent on campus or at work. It's crazy, wild, and anxiety-inducing, but I kind of love it. Stress is actually a welcome thing for me now in some ways, especially when it's because of courses that I'm enjoying.
    • My biggest achievement this semester (other than tricking people into thinking I'm not really strange and the really weird time I made the highest score in my Spanish class on our first exam?) has been consciously cutting down on swearing. Aside from the occasional outburst (in the Warren household, we call these "Michigan games"), progress is being made.
    • I keep talking/tweeting/tumbling/other media-ing about mine and JL's rap project. There's been a major development recently that I can only share basics about. Here are three things you need to know: it's a trilogy of mixtapes, the first mixtape is titled Hood Rich (near-completion), and we have cover art (all I can say is that it's very name-appropriate) that I'll post whenever we can figure out a release date.
    • I have no idea when I'll post next, so Tigers over Braves in six. I'll be at the parade two days later. 
    Currently accepting donations in the form of 1990s Starter jackets,

    Will

    Monday, August 5, 2013

    Hello, My Old Heart: Summer 2013

    (the Oh Hello's) 

    I like the idea of song or album names being blog titles as opposed to continuously searching for a one-word title to sum up a really giant post like this. Also, because music and life go together pretty well.

    Hey guys, it's me, Will, and I still like writing about my life. (I also like stealing Ben Rector's little "Hey guys, it's me" thing he does a lot.) It's really hard for me to condense what feels like the most interesting and self-introspective summer I've ever been able to experience into something decently cohesive, because there are some moments from this summer I'll have trouble putting into words. If I've noticed one thing this summer, it's that life is like that a lot. Experiences sometimes have such a deep emotional impact that it's hard to describe in a couple sentences. I notice that I can be prone to rambling in conversations when it's talking about something I enjoyed a lot or something that affected me deeply.

    I want to put all of my experiences from this weird and wonderful summer into one post, but because of the volume of things that happened I'll be splitting it into parts and it's going to be very long. (Don't worry, every part has its own separate song or album title, too.) I've learned more about myself in the last three months than I believe I knew in the first 19.5 years of my life. With that many learning experiences comes a lot of words, which is why I've (somewhat) purposely not posted a lot this summer, because A. it takes time to process these things and B. writing is hard.

    Anyway, I have a lot to share and apparently the Internet is supposed to be good for that, so here's a lot of words. Because reading a lot of text by itself is no fun, I've included some pictures from my summer as well. (The musical titles are suggested theme music, I guess? Let's go with that.) I hope you enjoy reading this.



    Back to the Wild

    (Langhorne Slim)

    At the start of the spring semester, the ideas that I had for my summer looked a lot like the streets leading out of downtown Detroit: they fraction off in many different directions, it's hard to keep up with all of them, and some of them are pretty scary. For a good portion of the spring semester, I had it in my head that I was going to spend a good bit of my summer on a mission in Canada, where I had never been (until a couple of weeks ago), but I was already set on loving, solely based on our mutual love of hockey and maple syrup.

    January and February flew by, and suddenly it was halfway through March, the application was due in a week, and I was alternating between struggling with anxiety over summer and going through the college equivalent of the mid-life crisis in realizing that what you've worked towards over the last three semesters isn't what you wanted to do after all. I don't talk about it often, but I mentioned in my first post on here that I struggled with different cases of depression in high school. That mixed with my seeming inability to understand that God was in control when it felt like my life was spiraling out of it led to this: 1. bouts of anxiety and anger, 2. a much less productive walk with the Lord, and 3. a feeling of dread when I woke up nearly every day.

    During all of this, I was struggling in school, my job was beginning to be more of a frustration than a joy, and I still didn't have a car. (I played the role of Cameron Frye minus the car really well for most of my life.) I couldn't take Knoxville much anymore, so in the midst of March I took a weekend off to go home and visit my family. While at home, I talked to my mom extensively and openly about my summer. She encouraged me to explore the option of staying in Knoxville for the summer, which I found crazy at first, because I felt as if all of my friends had experienced mission work by now and that perhaps God was calling me to do the same.

    As I thought about it more and more, a quote from Greg Pinkner, an associate pastor at Fellowship Church in Knoxville, continued to pop into my head: "God doesn't call everyone to go to far-off places. For some of us, he's calling us to stay at home and serve here." The more I prayed about it, the more I felt and knew that God wanted me in Knoxville this summer. I finalized that decision the next day when my boss and I agreed on me working this summer at Sacred Heart.

    I began to realize that God truly was in control, and no matter what I did with my summer, He would be there, guiding me through each day, opening my heart to serve and love. He would be teaching me just like I realized I wanted to teach others in the future. At that moment, I was able to rest in the love I knew God had for me, and for the first time in months, I truly felt joy and happiness in my heart.

    The rest of the semester went well enough; I figured out what I wanted to do with my life (teaching, if you didn't know), I felt more confident in Christ, and I felt more confidence in myself as a whole. I don't believe that means much for a lot of people, but as someone who struggled heavily with self-confidence issues for essentially my entire life, it's a wonderful feeling.

    As the semester wound down and summer rolled around, I began to see that God, as always, knew what He was doing. I saw that I could positively affect the lives of the middle schoolers I interacted with five days a week at Sacred Heart in everything I did, whether it was by tutoring, simply spending more time with them and less by myself, or by supporting them at their softball games. (Twice. Go Lady Eagles?) I remembered what I said to my boss the first time I met him - "I want to show the love of Christ through what I do here" - and I finally realized that I COULD do that, despite me thinking it to be such a hard thing to do.

    We're nearing in on the summer camp portion of this post, so I guess I should explain a little behind the titling of this. Middle schoolers can be best split into fractions: 1/4 teenage awkwardness, 1/4 sass, and 1/2 insanity. I knew before taking the job at Sacred Heart that working with the toughest age group at the school would be a challenge, but even in that, I truly did enjoy going back to the wild. I honestly could credit the middle schoolers at SHCS for so many things, but in short, they showed me that I really did enjoy teaching and interacting with the most awkward people ever and that it's fun to go back in time to when you were just as rough as them. Best job ever, you guys.


    (no, I don't remember exactly what throwing up W's was for. we'll go with the Wu-Tang hand sign)

    Good Morning

    (wake up, Mr. West, Mr. West)

    Waking up is hard to do. Yeah, I know, it's not like I had an 8 AM class this year or anything, but the "professional sleeper" part of the biography I have on here is there for a reason. I really suck at waking up on time unless I'm extremely motivated to wake up for something, and while I do love my job at Sacred Heart, it's still a daily struggle bus for me to force myself out of bed by 8:30 to get there at 9:30. (No I don't take extremely long showers, I'm just really slow in the morning. Promise.)

    Anyway, I worked 30 hours a week this summer (which isn't a lot, but hours add up more quickly in the summer than they do during the school year, seemingly), 9:30 to 3:30, Monday through Friday, following a similar schedule each day: four hours of outside time (it was sunny and at or around 90 degrees most of the summer, I'm pretty sure), two hours of not outside time in which I watched middle schoolers (and second through fourth graders from time to time) either play Mario Kart or text.

    After a couple of weeks, I felt frustrated in what I was doing. I really did enjoy my job, but for whatever reason I felt like I wasn't getting enough out of it to satisfy my needs. I was focusing too much on myself and too little on others. I was letting the early (for me) mornings get to my performance at work, which led to me not being very creative with a job that requires lots of creativity and stamina. Thankfully, this went away pretty quickly after I started to kick out old habits that led to my selfishness, and I saw yet again just how much God had blessed me with a great group of kids and co-workers.

    Because I could go on forever about summer camp, I'm making myself sum up the highlights in another series of bullet points. I've already shared two of my favorite stories from summer camp this year, so it's probably best I share other ones. I'm limiting myself to these three.
    • We went to Dollywood during my last week at camp and there's several stories I could share about that, but my favorite one involves the funniest character I met at camp this year, a middle school kid named Reese. The other middle school counselor and I had all kinds of fun with this kid, because we knew he's going to be a high school frat star in the future and we can't wait. So many inside jokes were made about him out of how much we enjoyed his presence, but we're getting away from the main story here. Reese isn't the biggest fan of roller coasters, but I made him go on Tennessee Tornado with me, because I had to ride at least one with him that day. These two very large black gentlemen were in the row in front of us and got a kick out of conversating with a terrified Reese. Their words of advice as we reached the top of the hill, which were the best five words I heard this summer: "don't look down little buddy!" I've never laughed so hard on a roller coaster in my life; the on-ride photo was me laughing and Reese screaming. This was the greatest moment of a great day at Dollywood.
    • For the majority of the summer I was sick in one form or another - a cold for the first half and a sinus infection for the last. I missed four days of work in a seven-week span after missing a total of one in my first eight months on the job, which was, in a word, terrible. However, my new best friend Isabelle (the kindergartener I talked about in the post linked above) is the nicest person ever and apparently knows my love for sea animals, so she drew me this, the best thing I received all summer.
    • I received a rather unfortunate nickname around the third week of camp that may stick with me for the rest of my time at Sacred Heart. This little third grade girl named Holly was going through different nicknames for me (unfortunately for you guys, I can't remember those. But I do remember calling her Holly Bear which started the back-and-forth nickname battle.), which went on for the better part of a day. Finally, she struck gold and screamed the words "WILLY GOAT" at me, which led to the entire middle school center's roaring laughter. Some advice to other people named Will: never have a beard and the name Will. Willy Goat was my official camp name for the rest of the summer for everyone from kindergarten to eighth grade. As you can tell, Young Folks Summer Camp was wild, fun, and unforgettable.
    Summer camp ended for me on July 12th, and I've missed my job ever since. I'll be starting the new school year at Sacred Heart on August 12th and the wait is somewhat unbearable. (Look, YOU take a trip to McMinnville and tell me how you like it.) Every day, I feel incredibly blessed to have a job as fun, encouraging, and interesting as mine. God is good.


    Just Ain't Gonna Work Out

    (Hawthorne, Mayer)

    Summer camp wasn't the only thing to end on July 12th for me. My time in the house known as Neverland came to a close, with mixed feelings and a ton of Hawaiian Punch still in my car from my move-out day. I'll keep this relatively short even though I said this house deserved more than two sentences a few weeks ago, so here's the deal. I do think, as a whole, living in a house with nine (for half the year, eight for the other half) other people was quite the challenge for someone like me who came in as one of two real introverts in the house.

    With challenges comes both good and bad qualities, and for parts of the year I let the bad outweigh the good: I didn't have very much private time or space, I became more introverted at times because of hating how extroverted my house was, and I was down and out more often than I want to admit. (We'll just go with "the entire first two months of both semesters.") Sure, I really enjoyed all of my roommates (and I mean that honestly), but any time you put ten people in a house together and tell them to function as one, it gets rough. Or at least it did for me. I battled a lot with different people and a few months into finding Neverland (shameless movie reference about a movie Will likes), I wanted out.

    Because I decided this a long time before my move-out date, this summer functioned as me somewhat going through the motions, but I started to find that I began to kind of enjoy Neverland from time to time again. I started to see some joys in the house that I hadn't seen since we moved in. For the first time since the fall, I didn't hate going home after work anymore. (Having the Three Amigos together permanently for the first time since January was cool, too.)

    JL and I laid the foundations of what could be the greatest thing to hit hip-hop in a decade...our debut mixtape. (Coming in September or October. I think.) Residents of the house next year (one in particular; their name starts with a Matt and ends with a Magill) would come over, watch basketball, play basketball, watch movies, talk about movies, play more basketball, and eat. I enjoyed the fact that there was a Bible study literally directly under my room (it was this way during the school year as well, but I wanted to mention it again). It was a wonderful month of June and half-month of July. However, I'll be living in a smaller apartment this year, simply because I enjoy that living situation a lot more. Still, Neverland gave me a very unforgettable twelve months of my life.

    If nothing else, Neverland taught me the following things: don't steal food or this happens. Ride tire swings. Be active. Dress up. And most importantly...be creative.



    I Will Be Back One Day

    (Lord Huron)

    presumably more appropriate theme: Now everybody from the 3-1-3...

    After my time in Knoxville ended, I moved back to Middle Tennessee for the rest of the summer. I didn't realize how important Mid Tenn was to me until this past semester, when I slowly lost my sanity in Knoxville and needed to see my home again. Regardless of what I do or where I go during and after college, Middle Tennessee will always be my home, even if the town I grew up in frustrates me more often than not.

    However, something that's just as important to me as keeping it real at home is getting out to see the world. I daydream about taking long road trips way too frequently and I jump at the opportunity to go anywhere. Yes, my family may go to the same places a lot, but there's something refreshing and renewing about going somewhere that isn't home. (Except you, Florida. You and your beaches are Hell on earth.)

    I had the opportunity to spend two weeks in Detroit and Atlanta (one each), but I'd prefer to spend this section talking about the former. (BECAUSE URBAN SPRAWL SUCKS.) Detroit is a city very near and dear to my heart for many reasons. My dad's from there, my mom worked there, half my family lives in Detroit's suburbs, and I've been there around 15 times now. If you need a two-minute crash course in Detroit's greatness, this is it.

    However, due to recent events, I think and care more about the city than I ever have before. Detroit, as you've probably heard, declared Chapter 9 bankruptcy a couple of weeks ago, which is a different way of saying Detroit is, more or less, broke, and owes a lot of money. Like, a lot. $18 billion is a lot to me, anyway. The city's leadership has been useless for decades now and the population has declined from 1.8 million to 700,000 over the last 60 years. Detroit is in a world of pain, something unlike anyone has seen before in a major American city.

    What this means to me is that because God has placed this city on my heart, I feel much more motivated to care for and pray for the city of Detroit because of what it means to me. Many of my favorite childhood and adult memories can be traced back to spending time doing ridiculous things with cousins in Redford, going to church with my grandmother in Birmingham, being with my grandparents in Southfield, seeing the greatest cinematic experience I will ever have in second grade at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn (it was a Michael Jordan documentary in 3-D, if you must know), attending sports events downtown (I was a fan for years before, but it finally hit home for me when I went to my first Lions game late in high school), and so much more.

    For years, my dad has worked off-and-on in Detroit while living in Middle Tennessee, but we made what could be our last visit for a while two weeks ago, and he wanted me to get the full experience. After making the ten hour drive from McMinnville (guys, seriously, Kentucky takes FOREVER. The state takes 5,000 hours to get through despite the fact it's a north to south route), we spent the next few days doing literally everything in Detroit: eating the greatest hot dogs you can find in this country, seeing the Detroit skyline from Canada (which costs $9.50 total to go to, there and back), driving through some of Wayne County's worst neighborhoods to see the "real Detroit" (this video is a great sampler and shows several that we went to; if you saw these neighborhoods in person, you'd understand why this is a highlight), going back to the Henry Ford Museum for the first time since second grade (no MJ documentary, though), and those are just the immediate highlights I can think of.

    Almost everything said in the video posted above is true (Detroit's unemployment rate is 16%, not 50%, which is still very bad), which leads back to the statement I made earlier: Detroit is in a period that no American city may have ever seen before. I've been praying a lot for the city, its leadership, and the state of Michigan's control over the city (the governor, Rick Snyder, appointed an emergency financial manager, Kevyn Orr, to essentially take over the city for 18 months) and the direction those will take in the immediate future. I have too much love invested in my family that lives in/around the city and the communities there that I can't help but think and care a lot about it. I pray that the Lord is with the people of Detroit in every step they take to ensure this once-great city's return to being great again. It's going to take a while, but Detroit will come back. They always do; these people go harder than anyone else I know (if you're going to read one thing I link to, it should be this), and maybe that's why I love them so much.


    Return to Hot Chicken

    (Yo La Tengo, but this is a better introduction to the band, because 95% of readers likely do not know of a Yo La Tengo. But seriously, hot chicken is so good Yo La Tengo wrote THREE songs about it.)

    Oh, but it's not like I can't give love in the longest post I've ever written to my favorite American city, you know. I grew up slightly under 90 minutes from Nashville in a small town in the Interstate Triangle of Tennessee, but, like Detroit, I can connect so many of the best childhood (and, yes, adult) memories of my life to Nashville. Bridgestone Arena is my second home, the Batman Building is way cooler than any other famous architectural achievement, I loved visiting the Frist and Tennessee Performing Arts Center during summer camps in elementary school, and the city itself just screams "cool." (There's not really a better way to put it. I'm sorry. I'll go home now.)

    Through high school, I knew that I enjoyed Nashville a lot, but I took it for granted. I began to really despise Middle Tennessee as I moved on to college and began to consider Knoxville my new home. The aforementioned collegiate mid-life crisis shook me back into loving Middle Tennessee, but now that I've spent some time away from Middle Tennessee, I realize just how lucky I am to be close to such a fantastic city. It's been fun watching it grow from being known as nothing more than the birthplace of country music to now being America's "it city." (Sorry, Macklemore, but this is "The Town.")

    I feel like there will be a time in the future when I write a love letter to Nashville much like I wrote the letter of indifference to McMinnville, so I'll save the actual good writing for then. Here's the point of this: if you know me, you know that I have a love for food that is second behind my love for Jesus. (The Predators are third.) This summer, I finally had the chance to enjoy a food item that's definitively Nashville: hot chicken.

    Hot chicken is exactly what it sounds like: hot fried chicken. Oh, but it's so much more: the perfect balance between heated pain and delicious poultry is found at several locations throughout Nashville and almost nowhere else in the country. (Asheville, Portland, NYC, Atlanta, and Ann Arbor (!) have versions of Nashville hot chicken, and that's all I know of.) Hot chicken makes use of cayenne pepper - lots and lots of cayenne pepper, along with some other spices - to really emphasize the "hot."

    The original hot chicken eatery can be found in North Nashville at Prince's Hot Chicken Shack. Aside from the fact that's it's freaking named Prince's Hot Chicken Shack, here are three reasons to go immediately to Prince's Hot Chicken Shack: 1. The store has THIS prominently displayed. 2. SERIOUSLY LOOK IT'S A RUNNING CHICKEN MAN!!! 3. Just look at it.

    Hot chicken is the single most addicting dish I've ever had because it's the most unique dish I've ever had. My dear friend Grant (who will be going to Lipscomb U shortly!) had the joy of watching me sweat while trying Prince's medium (the medium, mind you, is an extra-hot on most restaurants' scales), but the heat is so worth it just because the chicken itself is better than your grandma's. I just wrote four paragraphs on a meal I had. I think I'm losing it. I'll stop this right now. But seriously, hot chicken, you guys.



    Feel It All Around

    (Washed Out)

    So now, it's August, and here we are. Like I said when I started writing this monster of a post, I learned more about myself from May to August than I did in the 19.5 years before. Some of those learning experiences are harder to put into words than others, so maybe it's best if I just choose the most important ones. Some of these may strike you as inane or nonsensical, but they've been a big part of my summer and are the reason that the summer of 2013 is the most memorable summer I've experienced yet.

    For example, in the middle of a pickup basketball game, of all things, I learned how to deal with depression when it hits me and it feels like I have nowhere immediate to run. I had always had Bible verses that I liked to turn to when times were hard - 1 Peter 5:6-7, Jeremiah 29:11, John 16:33, etc. - but there were times of doubt when the words felt empty and I struggled to find something positive to look at. I hadn't played a full game of basketball in over a year until this summer rolled around, and it was the only consistent recreational activity I was able to enjoy. Even though I rarely enjoy things that I'm not that good at, I've always been able to get past negative feelings to play basketball.

    In the middle of a game, though, something went off in me and every positive feeling I had drained from my body. I don't remember what exactly caused it, but I don't deal very well with deconstructive feedback and words do a lot of damage for me, so perhaps someone said something I disagreed with. Whatever it was, from having experienced this many times before in other situations, I knew the oncoming waves of nothingness all too well. I sat down and shut down, blocking out everything around me to try to focus on what went wrong. For whatever reason, though, I couldn't immediately pinpoint why. I kept staring at the ceiling and wondering what could've caused me to go from content to catatonic so quickly.

    It's weird that in life, you can have such simple but mind-blowing realizations that can change your mood, your confidence level, and everything around you. I started to think about my relationship with Jesus and why I didn't have the joy of the Lord if He was my savior. I began to realize that some of the central causes of my depression were putting things that had little importance above my relationship with Jesus and suffering the consequences of worldly desires when I was let down by said things. It's never fun to realize just how deeply wrong you were, but it's a joyful thing when it comes to Jesus, because no matter what I do or how far I fall, He still loves me and I love Him. I haven't had an issue with depression since that day and I hope to keep this going for a while.

    I found out that it's possible for me to attack my self-confidence issues, which I've battled my entire life. I struggle with social anxiety and I'm somewhat introverted (which people are surprised by, in turn surprising me), which leads to me having trouble breaking old habits from an old heart. I was very insecure in high school, mostly because I was always frustrated over my figure (during my junior year, I was 220 pounds; I typically weigh in somewhere around 165-170 now) and because Warren County isn't exactly conducive to the whole "being yourself" thing.

    Being insecure has carried over into college, but this year (and this summer) I learned a lot about being confident in myself and being able to understand that God made me who I am because He wants me to be who I am. I didn't understand this in high school - I didn't become a follower of Jesus until after I graduated - but feeling like I "get it" in college has been wonderful. I'm not terrified of meeting new people anymore; I actually really enjoy it. I went from scoring 54% introverted the first time I took the personality test to under 20% when I re-took it in May. For entertainment purposes, unfortunately, there isn't a real "breakthrough" moment here. It's just that I slowly figured out that I can be myself and be confident in that while being confident in the Lord and His plan for me.

    I learned how to buy a car. (I would've laughed at that sentence too, it's fine.) It took me a month and several different potential sellers to go through once I started, but I finally ended up with one that meets my needs and gets me to and from work. This is only worth including because the amount of cars I borrowed to drive to work this past year (five) and the rides I've borrowed were way too high to continue on with, so it's good that I used the money I've saved up since midway through high school to avoid having to do that anytime soon.

    I've always been told that summer was the most opportune time of the year to experience growth and I've been able to see that this summer in more ways that one - spiritually, mentally, and emotionally. (Not physically. Why work out when there's donuts?) After several summers in my youth where I felt stagnant and had no taste for enjoying a summer, it was such a relief and joy to see a summer I had anticipated a lot come to fruition in ways I didn't expect. Thank you, Jesus, for the summer of 2013.



    I Want Wind to Blow

    (the Microphones)

    Where do I go from here? I'm sitting here typing this in McMinnville on August 5th. I move into my new apartment in Knoxville on the 10th. Sacred Heart's school year starts on the 12th, so I'll be working again in a week. Freshmen move in on the 16th and 17th, and I'll be co-leading a Bible study in Clement Hall with four others. Classes start on the 21st, and I've got 16 hours to take care of while attempting to catch up to graduate on time. I have to interview to get into the Education program this fall. I will be balancing school, work, Cru, payments, and more. I'm also supposed to have some semblance of a social life, so we'll root for that too.

    It sounds like it's going to be a tough, challenging, and potentially overwhelming semester...and I can't wait. If I've learned one thing this summer, it's to welcome challenges, because when I feel challenged and pushed, I feel as if I should trust God more in what I do. When I begin to feel overwhelmed, I can rest in knowing that He has a plan for me and that it is good. I want wind to blow, because that's where I can see God work the most - when it seems like things are getting crazy and it feels like life is spiraling out of control yet again, I know He is in control and I have nothing to worry about. When I am being pushed to take steps forward, I have faith that God wants me to take these steps with Him by my side.

    Sure, this semester will be hard and challenging and a really, really long four months. But there's something inherently beautiful in being able to rest in knowing that I am not in control. Jesus is, and that's the best feeling of all.

    Thanks for reading/Go Vols,

    William Edward Warren I