They say that people in your life are in for seasons, and everything that happens is for a reason...

Sunday, September 2, 2018

Woah, I'm Married

Friends and classmates may say they saw me walking down the street, blinked, and I was engaged. Then they shook their head and I was married. By the time they let out an exasperated breath, or rolled their eyes, I'm writing this blog post. 
At times I feel the same way. It seems like a month or two ago Ashley and I were laying on a small patch of grass, catching up after not seeing each other for a month. It's late January, and life is a wash. Nothing has really gone to plan since I returned from my mission 7 months earlier. My baseball dreams dissipated, taking pills every day, finishing a 5-month construction stint--this is not the Richard Hall anticipated. However, it was the Richard Hall I was. In my life's wake, Ashley Vincent, longtime friend from Freshman year, greets me on an indiscriminate hill. 
And we've been talking all 7 months. The Sunday after my return we had an hour-long phone call: old friends rejoicing that we could talk again. We planned a trip to meet up in Pocatello (of all places), I visited her during General Conference weekend, and even invited her to Thanksgiving at my place, because I knew her family lived far off. While in town for my friend's December wedding, I took Ashley to Temple Square. Each time we texted, called, visited, the area between "good friend" and "more than friend" got grayer and grayer, until that chilly night in Salt Lake, when at the time I called it quits on real dating and she didn't seem to be feeling it too, but I realized that I wanted to be her friend, a real, genuine friend. Because when you get to know someone that well, you want to always keep them around.
A great night, but a platonic night
So here we are, plopped on some BYU property, simultaneously reminiscing and looking forward, and I'm being honest with her--I have no idea what my current life status is. All I know is that I want to know where I'm at. Being a 20-something was way too ambiguous for my taste, and I was fed up with it. I told Ashley I was ready to settle down, find more purpose. The feeling was mutual, but somewhat awkwardly not for each other. We had this unspoken understanding that our hook-up opportunity fatally passed. The cosmos declared us friend-zoned, and don't mess with the cosmos.
After some time we parted ways, and I walked away thinking to myself "whoever gets her will be a happy man, a good man."

...Surprise!

7 months over the hill, I'm the happy man. It did not look like this the whole time, obviously. I left that January meeting thinking I said goodbye to an old friend, not my future wife. Sometimes, I ask myself, "How did I get here?" It's an honest question, based on the fact that at the end of April I was buying a single-student housing contract. Now I've been married for most of August. Yeah, that's a change.

My peers and close ones know me as meditative, thorough, and calculated; most would consider my dating and marriage timeline the contrary. Ashley and I started dating in March and were engaged by late May to be married 91 days later. That's hardly enough time to smell the dating roses. But rather than revealing a passionate, impulsive mindset, it attests to how right it felt logically/emotionally/spiritually/etc. The process went faster and better than I imagined. After complete soul searching during early May we agreed to get married. I proposed a December wedding, to which Ashley craftily shot down, and before you know it, I am calling temples for August. Many parts of the relationship have gone this way: better, more convenient than imagined, and personally, it has proved our compatibility.

My Freshman roommate, and subsequently the man who indirectly introduced me to Ashley once told me his list for what he wanted in his future wife. It seemed long and particular, as is some icebreakers were deal breakers, and in contrast he viewed my list as too simplistic. It made me rethink what I truly wanted in my spouse. A few weeks later, I met Ashley. I'll admit, the wedding bells weren't ringing, but I also admit that I've never really used my "What I Want in a Girl" list. Like, ever. Probably because it's so short and inclusive. Ashley beats everything that I imagined. Her character astonished me. She was an excellent friend, but an even better girlfriend. Day after day I couldn't believe the discovery I stumbled I across: true love. It surprised me, and my life felt like a Buddy Holly lullaby


and before you know it the Beach Boys kicked in


Between my junior and senior year I discovered the quintessential album "Pet Sounds", and though my music education was limited, I realized this was one of the Greats. Songs like "Still Believe in Me, " "God Only Knows." "I Know there's an Answer." and yes, "Wouldn't it Be Nice" penetrated my hopeless romantic soul. I longed for someone I could equally cherish: the sober realness, the giddy anticipation, the incredible feeling love and life gives. I was 16 when "Pet Sounds" united with my soul, and I had considerable work to do before I reached these euphoric highs. I was mature, but not mature enough to be married. Compatible, but not that compatible. Understanding, but not really.
Five years later, I feel much different, but still fairly incompetent. I suspected one day I'd achieve this bliss, but so quickly, and clearly? It caught me off guard. I felt like I wasn't ready. All of my roommates were engaged when I started dating Ashley, I didn't want to come off as anything but sincere, far from replicated. Love felt dangerous, failure seemed likely.
While I am understanding, compatible, and mature, I'm not "marriage-ready." Honestly, there was a stretch after my mission where I felt I wasn't "life-ready," but that's not how you know you're ready. Ashley gave me an attribute that surpasses any other--Faith. She makes me feel like anything is possible, and I feel the same way about her. I trust that whatever happens will happen, and she will still be at my side. That's what a role model, good friend, loved one, and Ashley is all of that. As sappy as it is, she is all I need. And you know what, I'll take it when I can get it. When you find something this good, you do whatever it takes to keep it. So I married the crap out of her.













Saturday, May 5, 2018

The Art of Depression (Pt.2)

I found this Google searching "anxiety art". While it accurately expresses
the disorderit also poignantly captures depression's infuriating clutch
He's slowly waking up to the morning hollow;
the tears tasted sour and so did the air.
should he arise or stay in bed's fictioned warmth?
cold was the season and life's spark left him dead.

This stanza is an exert from a poem I wrote long ago. It's somber, bleak, and beautiful. In it a man struggles with understanding his identity and accepting the dreary winter. He's a hopeless mess. "His frost-born brain iced away time/like trees--not losing leaves, but love". Poignant, gorgeous, and miserable. Who is this man? 
It's not me, but he's very similar to the me that wrote it. The character is my thought-child, therefore he is part of me, but not wholly me; and I'll deny that my characters are ever myself, no matter how much they resemble me. 

The same could be said about my battle with depression. Did I ever have depression? Though I was never diagnosed, I definitely say yes. My early high school years were an ugly time filled with dark thoughts. It was a perpetual downward spiral; I always felt controlled, nothing was enough, nobody really cared for me. My dad--my math teacher--would make me count on the white board how many times I smiled in a day (usually under ten). I was enveloped in acting, trying to infuse my soul with my characters (displacing your soul is heavy work). I'd voraciously critique myself, hoping to avoid the pain associated with letting others down. My mother called me moody and my dad and I fought, but to me that was easier than admitting mental illness: some chemical imbalance estranging me from family and friends. 
Sure, I had highs, but with the lows were frequent and agonizing. I didn't have to hide them, but I tried, because if other people could see them, then they would know something was wrong. And there was already plenty wrong with me.

Something was wrong with me.
Eventually, I saw a therapist, started to realize the atonement's power, and began to "lighten up". Life became beautiful, and I a happier person. It's all over now. I currently love life. I haven't felt truly depressed in probably 4-5 years. 
But this post isn't about how I conquered depression (though I did). It's not even about how awful having it is (because it is). It's about how beautiful it is. I don't know if you can read British Romantic literature without catching depressed tendencies in the protagonists. You can't listen to a true break-up song without hearing the illness' sputtering moan. Starry, Starry Night doesn't look right if Van Gogh wasn't a little crazy. Art connects with the soul so intimately because it presses the our emotions' reaches until we feel something naturally eternal. Mother goose's childhood purity, Stravinsky's brilliant climaxes, and A Clockwork Orange's deprecating self-portrait. Depression has a thrill, a lasting truth that exclaims beauty equal to joy's light--it just goes the other way.

MUSIC

Above is a link to Sufjan Steven's "The Only Thing". It's a lovely piece discussing a man flirting with suicidal thoughts, tortured by recollections of his lost love. The music surges passion into your heart, and the lyrics tug at your empathy. The orchestration and sound mixing creates a delicate mist to wander in, and you wonder how something so horrid could be so poetic. Well, I wouldn't say Sufjan is truly depressed. This is the same man who wrote "Come on! Let's Boogey to the Elf Dance!" But he obviously knows how it feels. He uses those emotions to create art. It may be raw, but it is true, and real, and everything you'd like.

THEATER

Othello doesn't directly engage with beastly Depression, but it does torment the viewer. (SPOILER) Othello kills Desdemona, his innocent wife, because he believes Iago's evil whisperings. The audience views in horror as he denies every alternative before he slays his wronged wife. It's cruel and painful to watch, but you can't deny the play's greatness. The play purposefully confuses Iago's evil with accomplishment, making the audience ponder the classic questions "why do good things happen to bad people? Why do bad things happen to good people?" and while excellently portrayed in Othello, little is more depressing than that

THOUGHT
"Maybe they're right"

Perhaps Psychology is a science academically, but it's studying an art form. This particular thought rampaged my mind during my depressed days, and now occasionally slips through cracks during weak moments. It was almost always connected to my family. While many friends will exclaim my greatness, often my family gives little reassurance that I'm excelling. It has always been difficult, to say the least--having the people I care most about most not bother to let me know I'm doing good in their eyes. And if I attempted to break down the wall I'd be called "sensitive" and "emotional". I can get chewed out by my boss, I can get disgraced by a professor, but I am intensely motivated by the idea that I could make my family, God, and loved ones proud. But if I let their impassive observance get to me, "maybe you're right" jumps into my mind, and every accolade and joyful shred becomes dust.
Depression has claimed your life sludge. You are guilty for not being enough, then ashamed for not trying hard enough. Even when you realize you are thinking with depressed perspective, depression oppresses you for doing so, slashing you for your weakness. The thought process is horrifying. It is impressive. Depression is anything but beautiful, but it proves itself powerless, because it empowers itself by beautiful things. It dethrones that which it uses to raise itself. Depression uses logic, intuition, counterargument, all the same tools given to us by God, the source of light. Its sound argument that you are worthless is the same argument God uses to argue you are worth everything. And when your life includes God, you cling to the good.

It should be noted that I love my family, and I recognize their love frequently. 

Depression contains truth. And anywhere you find truth, you can find real knowledge. And that is a beautiful thing.


Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Capturing Happiness (Pt. 1)

I haven't watched all of You're a Good Man Charlie Brown, and I probably won't, but there's a gorgeous song right after Charlie Brown discovers the Little Red Haired Girl chews on her pencil. "Happiness" touches the memory's most innocent, untouched areas, reminding you that childhood's beauty isn't far away. Tears pressed on the corner of my eyes the first time I heard it (about 6 months ago). On this lazy Sunday I reflected on the simple lyrics, and gave thanks for the happiness gracing my life.
Happiness cultivates a purity that elevates it past other emotions. Often happiness stands alone; it doesn't rely on other events or people. When you run into a chipper person, they're separate from their surroundings, like an orb of light floating in a grey world. Sometimes you wonder if they even belong. Happiness is inherently transcendent, and noticeable.

Part 1 of this series will attempt to magnify snapshots which caught happiness: precious moments that shouldn't be forgotten. Searching for happiness has its benefits. For one, once you find it, you've found it. You know where to go! And eventually, you'll realize happiness starts in moments and ends in lifetimes.


SONYA AND MOSBY



Happiness is a pleasant surprise. These pictures encapsulate joyful bursts. To the left is an extra photo taken between poses. Sonya moved to Jerome from Utah State before her mission and we grew to be friends. She was struggling in the dead space of a relationship's end and a mission's beginning when my good friend Benny, his girlfriend and I grabbed her and escaped to Sun Valley. We were taking pictures in front of a lovely resort, and I was being my usual self: silly, clever, dumb. I made a stupid joke and she laughed, which made me laugh. And now I can share this simple laughter between us forever. I guess she needed it.
My sister Callie and her husband Spencer and their celebrity-status dog Mosby visited me sometime in March. On our way to dinner we realized that we had no place to keep the dog in the meantime. Well, there's only two front seats, and I wasn't getting shotgun. Driving through Provo with a giant poodle trying to cuddle with you is absurd. It's also hilarious. My sister turned around and saved this ridiculous memory, and it makes me smile every time I see it. These little moments make for all kinds of joy.

TWO NORDQUISTS AND ONE VINCENT 

Happiness is a finish line. There are few photos which capture bliss as well as this one. Erik and Nathan Nordquist flank me after the Redfish Lake Fun Run. The two brothers were my first friends in Idaho, and 11 years later it's stilling running strong. This occurred only weeks before I became a missionary, and it would be my last moment with them for a while. Countless hours of backyard football, Lego-building, speech-writing, cross-country practice, Calculus studying, culminated right here. What could be happier? 
I was talking to my dear friend Ashley after she finished her final ballroom performance Saturday night. Having done my fair share of musicals and plays, I know what the feeling is after a good show's closing night: a sort of electric serenity hard to define. So I asked her "how do you feel now that it's over?" "I'm happy." "Happy that it's over?" "Happy that it happened." 
And happiness is that it happened.   

BASEBALL

Happiness is baseball. Next to God and my mother's cookies, baseball has been at my core. The shoe tip pressing on a base, flying down the pitcher's mound, hearing the mitt snag a pop-up, quirky dugout conversations, it's my heart and soul. 
Amidst collegiate chaos, my good friend and I went to a BYU baseball game. It was heaven on earth. Life was good already, but this--seats behind home dugout, eating a two-foot long doughnut, on a bright spring day? Bliss.

"Happiness is anyone and anything at all that's loved by you."
- Charlie Brown

Friday, February 16, 2018

Pray for...


I had to drive the company truck back to the shop to drop off of some pallets. It's a bit of a drive, so I flipped on the radio. While most of my coworkers listen to one of the swath of country stations that cluster Idaho's airwaves, the old man within me flips it to National Public Radio. I heard a reporter shouting over screaming herds of people. He was in Barcelona. A man drove a truck through a crowd on the busiest street at the busiest time of the day. over a dozen dead, even more injured. It was jarring; scary, really. The rest of the world stopped as I drove down a country lane in Idaho, almost as if the next hill over I'd be in Spain. Forget about pallets and orders, this was it. For today, at least.

A few weeks later I took a truck off site and almost the exact same thing happened. I switched the station and heard a massive explosion in Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia. Hundreds of people dead. Clips playing of Somali refugees living in the US were sharing stories about family members that died in the attack. Doctors in the city described looking at the carnage with horror.

These two cities joined a sad slew of other towns that have their name on a map for the wrong reasons. What do you know about Aurora, Colorado? How about Columbine? Or Newtown? Even New York and Las Vegas have been scarred. This year there it seems like there is no time to breathe or
to dwell.

It reminded me of a song by Mark Kozelek. In the song "Pray for Newtown" he uses his intensely intimate writing style to describe what it feels like to go through these experiences, this time on a more personal level.

"I was a Junior in High School when I turned the TV on
James Huberty went to a restaurant, shot everyone up with a machine gun
It was from my hometown
We talked about it til the sun went down
Then everybody got up and stretched and yawned and then our lives went on"

"I just left Safeway, when I walked through my doorway
When a guy took a boat to an island and shot up a bunch a little kids in Norway
Called a few friends, but no one much really cared
But I did, because I got a lot of friends there"



I had a friend serving her mission in Paris the same time as the bombings. She sent out an email saying she was fine. I would occasionally tell people around me of the coincidence. They would be jarred for a second, then courteously sympathize when they learned she was okay. But, there was no reason to feel bad for me if she was okay. It was a strange moment.



Three weeks ago, while flipping on the TV to check in on my favorite team's game, and just like the radio, a reporter is in between me and the game, telling me there was a church shooting in a small town near San Antonio.
Blood began to rush a little faster. I finally felt the same as Mark. "I lived in San Antonio suburbs. I actually know people who that could be." The next ten minutes I battled a sling of emotions as I searched for more information. "Thank goodness, it wasn't a Mormon church." "How could you say that?" "It's also a town I never heard of." "It's still a shooting, there's still something wrong with it." "That's only 10 miles away from where I lived, how are my friends?" "They're probably still in church, how could they have ever been there?" The thoughts blasted on, but this was something that I really cared about., this was something that could have had detrimental impact on me. I felt like Mark, rushing for comfort, but I didn't really need it.
None of my Texan friends said anything about the shooting. My mission friends still in Texas said nothing of it the next day. The story kept unfolding to uncomfortable degrees; politics was tossed into it; opinions began to be made, and the last coals of this heart-breaker are almost out, to sit alongside Newtown, Aurora, and Columbine in the dark halls of history.

What can we do though? To get flustered over these moments simply isn't worth it. We can't prevent what already happened; we can't quite console those who went through it, but there's an overhanging guilt that presses on our empathy.

Mark goes on:

So when Christmas comes and you're out running around
take a moment and pause to think about the ones who died in Newtown
They went so young, who gave their lives
To make us stop and think and try to get it right...

When you're gonna get married and out shopping around
Take a moment to think about the families that lost so much in Newtown

Like the other attacks, Sutherland Springs is another dark spot in life that we must walk away from. For Mark, it's enough to think. Just take a moment out of life to sympathize and especially apply. It's perhaps the only we can do in these circumstances. Ugly things are not fun to look at, however there's still something to learn from them.

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Premature Maturity


This morning I got a ride to my new Ward with a man I’ve known for a good 18 hours. As I entered into the lecture hall which doubles as a chapel on a weekly basis, I see a room fllled to the brim with nice haircuts, slim-style sweaters, perfectly fitted dresses, and anything that has ever been on sale at H&M. There were two special musical numbers, one featuring a recorder and the other a gorgeous piano solo. The brief talks were sculpted beautifully and featured the right balance of humor and spiritual experience. Couples looking almost too ideal hold hands while singing “Behold! A Royal Army!” And I come to a rapid realization that I am not in Jerome, Idaho anymore.

Welcome to the start of the newest (yet not so new) and most anticipated chapter of my life. Here, surrounded by people who look impossibly complete, is my new home. Attending Brigham Young University was my dream growing up; part in love for the gospel and part in admiration of my siblings whose paths went through the church school. I lived that dream vividly for 8 months then took a hiatus to serve the Lord. Yesterday my sister and brother-in-law lovingly plopped me into an apartment filled with my roommates’ things, but not my actual roommates. With time to myself, I have been left to think that this may not be the same dream I had long ago. 

For starters, it isn’t the same vision I had of myself when I came home from my mission. With the instilled faith of an Elder, I sketched a Utopian Richard. Six months after returning, I dreamt of being halfway through my sophomore year, catching a wave of hard work to straight A’s, most likely with a girlfriend, definitely owning a car, and soaking in a Christmas break. 
In case you haven’t been following my life, that’s not the case. Instead, I lost much of my funding for college, so I took an extra semester to work, which leaves me crashing into an already set social spectrum, used to the easily lovable, down-to-earth YSA of Southern Idaho. My work lulled me into an affection for the smell of silage. The car which I devoutly cared for lost its fight and left me with my feet for transportation. After some tough luck I remain single. And I was so longing for my idealistic collegiate life that I’m spending a week of Christmas break in Provo, 4 hours closer but still a week away from what I’d really like to happen. Perhaps this version of me is better described as Bizarro Buckets.
However, with the undaunted faith of discipleship, I still trust this is all part of God’s plan for me. Because if it wasn’t, then I would be miserable. I’d hate to live a life where you believed or knew you were off track. To me that would be true dystopia. 

While sitting in this morning’s sacrament meeting, feeling a little underdressed maybe for the first time in my life, a thought budded in my ponderings. “Humility is WAY underrated.” 
Hey, that’s right. Being a young single adult is an awful time of life to be humble. It’s something that God has been kicking into my head for the past years, but especially the past few months. In my early teens recognition of my own vanity and pride shook me to the core and devastated my self-worth. It took a while to realize imperfection was accepted so long as I improved.

Tomorrow is a universal beginning for everyone, but why not make it a personal beginning for me? Sit down. Be humble. You don’t have to be the best, you just have to be your best. It’s easy to distort proper perspective. More important than what I’m wearing at church is that I’m actually in church. My social life at BYU isn’t as impactful as the fact that I am going to BYU. Don’t have money? At least I got brains! And family. And true friends. And hope. That doesn’t sound too bad at all. So with the next phase of life staring me down, and I’m not where I’d thought I’d be at this moment, I should think, “You have what you need.”

Humility is way underrated.