Archive for October, 2010

A Knot In the Gut

Kevin Mannoia Friday, October 15th, 2010

When despair sets in, human instinct is to curl up and sleep, to withdraw, to shut down, to retreat to isolation.  The “knot in the gut” feeling is nearly paralyzing. The problem, of course, is that isolation causes the despair to compound and there always comes a breaking point.  It becomes so heavy, so oppressive, that you can no longer bear it.  Although it feels counterintuitive, the Bible gives us words for moments of despair:   “Cast your cares upon Him for He will care for you.” “Bear one another’s burdens – rejoice with those who rejoice and weep with those who weep.” Pride, arrogance, self-sufficiency, and image all work hard to put up a strong image in the face of despair.  But the path through it is quite contrary.  Open up, share your hurt, declare the despair and let others – especially Jesus – feel the knot in the gut with you.  You are no less of a person for it.

Drop in to the Green Room in the Event Center Monday and Wednesdays from 3-5pm if you would like to talk to a chaplain.

If you have any prayer requests, reply to this email and I’ll be sure our 73 faculty members pray for you.

May God be close,
Kevin

The Ethics of Marketing Colleges

David Burke Wednesday, October 13th, 2010

I recently attended a conference of admissions professionals and high school guidance counselors in St. Louis, MO.  Besides the sweeping view of  Busch Stadium from my hotel window and literally the best BBQ lunch I have ever eaten, one thing stood out above all other experiences and memories from that event.  That is to say, I discovered that some colleges and universities will go a LONG way down some shady paths in order to make themselves look really good to the “powers-that-be” who spit out those annual college rankings that feed the status frenzy of our college-bound population nationwide.

Most shocking to me was the notion that any institution (or,as the case may be, many of them) would go so far as to aggressively encourage applications from students they already know will not be competitive for admission, basking in the after-effects of a higher selectivity rating and what they hope to be an increasingly attractive option for the students they desperately wish to attract to their campus (i.e. those that seem to think their best college choice is automatically the one that turns away the most students at the door).  This practice holds the hopes and dreams of highly impressionable and potentially fragile young men and women in tragically low regard, while morphing what are designed to be student-serving organizations into status-serving PR machines.

Now I sit in my office, reflecting on how grateful I am to work at a university that values the student’s experience and well-being above all else, including the almighty ranking system.  Integrity at APU is more than merely a word in a mission statement.  We honestly believe that God has a special plan for each life put on this earth, and that His direction in our students’ lives (including those that haven’t arrived yet) is pre-eminent among all the influences we can hope to expose them to through their educational journey.  Therefore, it is counter-productive for us to spend an inordinate amount of time and effort trying to “work the system” in order to look better for the world of academia, especially when it may involve deceiving young and hopeful hearts and minds.

Now, it is important to note that this is coming from a guy who is privileged to work at the highest ranked evangelical Christian institution in the National University category in U.S. News and World Report.  I say that only to ensure that my little diatribe is not misinterpreted as petty jealousy or some form of educational “short man’s syndrome”.  I am extremely proud of the academic rigor and opportunity that our APU students experience during their college journey. However, I am also extremely thankful that the vast majority of our students were encouraged during their college search to look beyond the four walls of the classroom and the statistics in the magazines, and consider how they would be shaped as individuals and young adults during what is potentially the most transformational season in their lives.

If you are reading this and caught in the throes of indecision about your college choices and what matters most to you (and your parents), I offer one simple piece of advice.  Rely on the wisdom of the One who cares nothing about how selective or highly ranked your college of choice will be, but cares passionately about you, your future, and who you will become during and after your college journey.  You deserve the best college for you, and God deserves your full attention as He leads you!

Do you believe in magic?

Lindsay Cooper Wednesday, October 13th, 2010

Calvin's Magical World

Have you ever had one of those days when everything is beautiful?

I think everyone longs for those moments in which the world, and all its possiblities, appears fresh and new. Although we are already well into first semester here at APU, for you freshmen, this is still just the beginning of your journey here, a journey that is sure to be full of new experiences and excitement. I remember first pulling into the APU parking lot on move-in day last year, my car bursting at the seams with suitcases, boxes, and pillows, and having absolutely no idea what the next year would bring. I was somewhat fearful, but nevertheless thrilled to see what I would encounter.

Even in a place like APU, however, it is easy to slip out of this initial excitement and trod down into a steady routine in which those moments of exhiliration become fewer and farther between. This is where I meet you now: in that least exotic of places–the middle–halfway through this semester and immersed in the routine of classes and college life.

For me, this semester has been the busiest of my life with school, work, different volunteer services, leadership positions, friends, and other events; however, even amidst all of these things, I cannot help but feel as though I am repeating the same things over and over again. While I am never bored, I become weary of doing things and often lose sight of simply being in those things, blinding myself to how God may be working in my various activities. It is in those times that I feel the need to have a “Calvin and Hobbes” moment.

Calvin, a six year-old boy, views the world with such vivid child-like imagination that he draws you in to join him on his adventures, to discover with him, to experience the novelty of the world. You and I live and see vicariously through him–we look beyond our “adult” vision for a moment and watch through the eyes of a child. Isn’t it funny how little kids are able to see things that you and I would normally miss? Isn’t it interesting that something that you have seen a million times, possibly something that bores or even irritates you, can be magical to them?

I had an experience like this the other day. Every Tuesday afternoon I babysit a little boy who, like Calvin, is able to create ridiculous scenarios and crazy games, and yet, in the middle of it all, say things that are effortlessly profound. This last week, it was pouring rain. As a life-long, southern California native, I have never experienced a deep connection with the rain, to say the least. Sure, there are times when I love the feeling of curling up in a cozy blanket, drinking hot chocolate, and watching the rain–all from the indoor comfort of my dry, heated home, of course–but last week, I was simply tired of its inconveniences. As a preventative measure, then, I came up with several ideas for indoor activities Sean and I could do–science experiments, an indoor scavenger hunt, crafts, board games etc. Apparently, however, I was thinking of all the wrong ideas.

Immediately after I picked Sean up from school, he told me, in great detail, his incredible idea for our afternoon together. (Lesson #1: Never try to make plans with or for a precocious six year-old; he will always create something much more exciting and imaginative than your baking soda and vinegar volcano experiment.) His idea was simple, and only had 5 basic requirements:

#1: Hose down the trampoline until it is soaking wet. It had been raining, so we had already achieved this goal.

#2: Cover the trampoline with a thick layer of dish soap.

#3: Spray more water onto the soapy trampoline to create a lather.

#4: Wear plastic bags over your feet so as to maximize slipping and sliding.

#5: Attack the babysitter at all costs.

After asking myself, “How the heck do you think of something like this?” I realized I had neither a change of clothes nor a way out of participating in this activity. Needless to say, after several hours of falling all over the trampoline in the rain with a slippery, soapy child leaping on top of me and rubbing suds in my face and hair, I was a mess. You probably could have washed your car with the amount of soap that was embedded in my jeans.

I write this with a purpose, though. After being outside for a short while, I made one final objection to this activity, as if I could somehow persuade him that my reasoning was correct. (Lesson #2: Reason means nothing to six year-olds.) Despite the obviousness and simplicity of his statement, his response caught me by surprise.

“Are you sure you don’t want to go inside now? It’s starting to rain pretty hard.”

“No way! The rain makes it so much more fun! Come on, Lindsay, jump higher.”

And he was right. By the end of this adventure, it seemed as though I was having even more fun jumping around than he was; but before it all began, I had been trying to prevent it from happening. I had attempted to plan activities that would limit our afternoon to the indoors, not even stopping to consider that the rain may have been more beautiful than I had thought. Looking through a child’s eyes, it suddenly became magical.

How often do I lose sight of the beauty in things that I think I have all figured out, things I have seen a million times? How easily do I lose that initial magic and excitement of something just for the sake of a routine? The middle is the hardest part of a journey, no matter what journey you are on, and those moments where the beauty of the world is extraordinarily evident are necessary to maintain perspective. To reverse, rethink, and move forward. To encourage. To see that the journey does not stop in the middle, but has a greater ending and a larger purpose. When was the last time this happened to you?

STOP.

THINK.

Photo I took on a short trip to Honduras two years ago.

Two little girls I met in Honduras--look at those eyes

Re-open your eyes to see the world differently this week. View the things you do through the eyes of a child, of someone bursting with imagination and unaware of expectation. Pause and close your eyes and let them be opened to see the way God has weaved himself into the world. Seek after Jesus and in the process notice life again.

The Rain & The Tracks

Matt Mo Thursday, October 7th, 2010

A certain key to professional communication is for the speaker, or in this case blogger, to establish an eleven letter word called  credibility as soon as possible. This usually happens within the first paragraph or so of a conventional article. Being a freshmen at APU, my explicit credibility is close to none. It also doesn’t help that I’m from Colorado, therefore relatively new to this whole Southern California vibe.

However, in lack of my credibility lies my perception, something which no one can take away from me. I want to use my perception to talk about the drudgery that is “SoCal’ weather. The way I understand it, it never ever forever never rains out here. For a poor boy from Colorado, that just about breaks my heart.

Here’s a smallish known fact about Colorado: the weather changes about every 30 minutes, and it is awesome. You could walk inside a grocery store from blinding sunshine, leave thirty minutes later in pouring rain, and arrive back at your house thirty minutes after that in snow. It doesn’t make sense but it does keep you on your toes!

For me, coming from a state with such diversity, I was more than a little sad that I wouldn’t get to experience the schizophrenia of Colorado weather, specifically the powerful rain showers that cover the state in their beauty. As usual, I spoke too soon, because yesterday, I got just what my heart was longing for…

After some debate with my lazy personality, I persuaded myself that it would be best to counter the onset of the dreaded Freshmen 15 by going on a nice jog at the Citrus College football stadium conveniently located right next to the dorms on APU’s East Campus. I left, running shoes and white shirt, in the slight drizzle of rain; it was a little cold, but looking toward the potential calories I could loose, I set off to the swooning melodies of my iPod.

I arrived at the track, stretched (a must do for running, folks) and began my jog. Not to long into it, I realized something: I was soaking wet. This wasn’t your typical, Oh my lanta I haven ‘t ran in ages I’m so sweaty right now and my body hurts kind of wet; the rain had picked up, and conspicuously matted my hair, shirt, and iPod in a matter or seconds. It was more of a soft, seductive, inconspicuous slip from a dream, where you realize something has been for quite a long time.

Katherine Mansfield , a classical fiction writer, once said, “I love the rain. I want the feeling of it on my face.” Truths don’t come much more simple than that.

You see, to me, that rain was a reminder of home. Life doesn’t get much more beautiful than a new freshman experiencing a taste of home all the way from his or her new one. The taste, while not making the hard transition into this new life , this whole new experience, any easier. But, I know, at least personally, that it gives a renewed hope that God has each and every one of us right where He wants us to be. What’s even better is that this hope translates into a hope for tomorrow, for the future.

So what is it out here that gives you hope for tomorrow? Hope for a future?

Procrastination Station

Pauline Thursday, October 7th, 2010

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Procrastination Station: That desk, kitchen table, coffee table, bed, couch, card table, or picnic table you sit down at to do the massive amount of homework all your professors assigned; but, instead of doing homework, you sit there for 5 hours on certain social networking sites, celebrity gossip sites, emails, and whatever else that will help you avoid doing it.

Beware the effects of the procrastination station.

Cement Shoes

Kevin Mannoia Thursday, October 7th, 2010

Have you ever felt like you are trying to run with cement shoes on?  Sometimes you just can’t seem to get ahead of things that are piling up — reports, work, things to do at home, and class assignments. The more you work, the farther behind you feel. It’s sort of like running with cement shoes on!! Everything you do feels sluggish and so hard to do.  We’ve all been there…and maybe you feel that now. Stay committed, be encouraged. You’re not alone. The best antidote for cement shoes is taking a moment to do a little priority inventory.  What’s weighing on you?  What’s important?  And who’s with me that I can rely on? Let me remind you the last question is the most important.  Jesus Christ wants to be part of your burden; to help you carry it; to lift you.  Although it helps to know that, it mostly helps when you take time to partner with you. Remember that God loves you. Exhale and rest in that knowledge.

Every Monday and Wednesday from 3pm-5pm a Chaplain is in the Event Center Green Room if you would like to drop in to pray or simply share your burden.
Feel free to let me know if you have a specific prayer request. We’ll pray for you.
Blessings,
Kevin