Thursday, December 07, 2017
His tear broke my heart
I try really hard to avoid stepping into any ongoing, in-progress, encounter between a CitySquare staff member and a neighbor.
Occasionally, I fail. At times I fail miserably by injecting myself where I shouldn't.
Yesterday, I ended up in the between position completely unintentionally. As I approached my JEEP to leave the Opportunity Center with a partner from Paris, Texas, I found myself in the middle of a dispute. One of our most competent team members had dealt with a gentleman who brings with him a reputation for anger and temper flairs.
By the time I got into the mix and realized where I stood, the man seemed calm. He even told me he understood our basic inability to solve every problem or to respond to every request.
We have limits.
"I understand what they are saying," he told me. "I just need to wash my clothes."
What happened next felt like a blow to the head.
As we talked, he repeated, "I just need soap to wash my clothes."
As he spoke, a over-sized tear rolled down his cheek. Both of us were silenced by that tear.
We found detergent, but I'll never forget this man's tear, one more reminder of how fundamental my lack of understanding remains after all these years.
Monday, September 18, 2017
2017 Hunger Summit: Dallas Coalition for Hunger Solutions
When
Evening Arrives and There Is No Bread
Matthew
14:15-21
Dallas
Hunger Summit ▪ September 15, 2017
Dallas Coalition for Hunger Solutions
Introduction:
·
It
is an honor to stand with you today
·
Knowing
your work, your tenacity, your commitment and your faith, I am truly humbled to
be with you
·
You
guys happen to be my heroes!
____________________________
·
I
also know that none of you are satisfied with where we are today
·
When
we get together, we typically hear the dismal, disheartening, depressing
numbers—I’m sure we’ll hear them again today
·
I
trust and hope that the numbers will bring challenge and renewed determination.
·
But,
we’ve got issues, don’t we?
--runaway obesity
--malnutrition
--toxic stress related to food insecurity
--life in food deserts all across this great,
wealthy city
--hunger
_____________________________________
What are we
going to do?
Forgive me, but
I’m going to tell a “Jesus story”!
Not a church
story. . .
Not a
proselytizing story. . .
But a story of
mystery, power and fulfillment!
Is that
Okay?
_____________________________________
Here it is:
When it was evening, the disciples came to him and
said, “This is a deserted place, and the hour is now late; send the crowds away
so that they may go into the villages and buy food for themselves.” 16 Jesus
said to them, “They need not go away; you give them something to eat.” 17 They
replied, “We have nothing here but five loaves and two fish.” 18 And
he said, “Bring them here to me.” 19 Then he ordered the crowds
to sit down on the grass. Taking the five loaves and the two fish, he looked up
to heaven, and blessed and broke the loaves, and gave them to the disciples,
and the disciples gave them to the crowds. 20 And all ate and
were filled; and they took up what was left over of the broken pieces, twelve
baskets full. 21 And those who ate were about five thousand
men, besides women and children.
Now what might
we observe here?
1.
At the end of the day hungry people too
often find themselves in a desert
without food!
2.
At the end of
the day hungry people
too often are dismissed by their leaders.
. .those with resources and authority who now claim they have no remedy for
hunger in the desert!
3.
At the end of
the day hungry people, including children, find it normal to be “on their own”
to find food to satisfy their hunger—not only “send them away,” but also let
them buy food for themselves in the surrounding villages.
4.
At the end of
the day, those with power face the hunger issue with a well-developed “scarcity
mindset”—look how little we have here, 5 loaves and two fish!
But in the
story, Jesus represents something so amazing:
intervention, innovation, insistence, direct
action!
1.
You are responsible!
--Bring what you
have!
--Here is where
I get lost, frankly—but the mystery of the miracle answers our need perfectly—I’m
lost, but I feel right at home! I’ve
been lost for 40 years when it comes to hunger and affluent America!
--We’re in a
desert with not enough resources
--We’re
underfunded for the challenge
--We’re
ineffective much of the time
2.
I notice that Jesus gets them organized—he has
them sit on the ground in groups—Mark’s version has them in groups of 100s and
50s: I wonder how much community
organizing might have been going on here? Something about folk getting’ together over
food!
3.
At the end of
the day, there was more than enough thanks to faith and action—I expect a
lesson for Jesus’ followers!
___________________________________________
For me, this
story forces and inspires a new conversation about the challenge of hunger in
our community and our nation:
·
We need new
strategies
·
We need
empowering impatience
·
We need to ask
hard questions
For example:
► Why can’t we
develop plans for strategically located, full-service grocery stores in our
food deserts that includes whatever subsidy is necessary to attract and retain
these merchants?
► Today we can
calculate the economic impact of notorious food on community health. Why not take some public health $$$ and apply
to the preventative work of the availability of good grocery stores?
► Why can’t we
mobilize and deploy all of our SNAP benefits in Texas and in Dallas? Full mobilization of food benefits would help
fund grocery markets in the places where most needed.
► Why not reward
community gardeners with supply grants and other field to market cost supports
to ensure these endeavors survive and thrive?
► Why can food
centers and neighborhood pantries better coordinate their work to increase impact?
Why can’t we replace competition with
cooperation?
Conclusion:
1.
I’ve been
watching, knowing, hearing hungry and poor folks for over 4 decades—I’ve got so
many memories:
--Mr. Adrian in
New Orleans
--The precious
folks who line up outside our food center daily. . .waiting so patiently for
our groceries
--Almost 25
years ago in East Dallas, the little boy and his younger brother with the
single banana
--The kids we see
after school and all summer long
2.
Your work is
hard.
Please don’t
give up—you are in good company!
Embrace the
challenge—you’ll likely find and encounter the mystery.
Wednesday, September 06, 2017
Tuesday, September 05, 2017
Wednesday, August 09, 2017
Monday, August 07, 2017
Criticism
[What follows is a chapter from my new book set for publication in 2018, House Rules: Considerations for Leaders. Recent criticism prompts this post. I really do love my critics, especially the honest ones.]
“I like criticism. It makes you strong.”
LeBron James
“Few people have the wisdom to prefer the criticism that would do them good,
to the praise that deceives them.”
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
"You can’t let praise or criticism get to you.
It’s a weakness to get caught up in either one.”
John Wooden
“The final proof of greatness lies in being able to endure criticism
without out resentment.”
Elbert Hubbard
“A successful man is one who can lay a firm foundation
with
the bricks that others throw at him.”
David Brinkley
_____________________________________________
Chapter 12
Pay Attention to Critics
Criticism.
Few of us like to hear it directed at us. In fact, most of us don’t even enjoy it when leveled against another person, do we?
I know that I don’t like it at all. It is somewhat amusing to consider the lengths to which I often go to sidestep criticism. I find all sorts of creative ways to justify my actions in the face of the critic.
You know what I mean:
“Well, that’s not what I really intended!”
“You’ve got to understand me here. I had no choice but to defend myself.”
“The fact is no one really understands me. If they did, they wouldn’t criticize me for this.”
“If you were in my shoes, you’d react just like me!”
“No way was I going to let him get away with that sort of thing!”
“If you knew all the facts, you wouldn’t be so quick to criticize me.”
“I saw the red light. You started yelling at me a hundred yards away from it!”
“I intended to pick up the office, but I just go too busy. Give me a break, already!”
“I did the best I could. Obviously, that’s not good enough for you!”
“No one cares if I go ahead without asking. Why would they?”
My lists of reactions can go on and on! I become a master excuse-maker when faced with even an honest critic.
Sadly, at times, it doesn’t stop with my rationalizing to critics or to innocent by-standers. What comes next is even uglier. I begin a conversation with myself! I actually carry on an argument internally, a debate within my own mind and heart! Somehow it’s just important for me to establish to myself that I am not deserving of the criticism that I’ve received.
Often this internal argument gives way to external arguments with both my critics and my allies. How easy to divide people up into groups along the fault line of an honest, but negative piece of feedback!
So, note the progression.
Criticism heard and “received,” sort of.
Excuse making and the initial explanation and rationalization.
Fuming.
More detailed and articulate (sometimes, at least!) rationale explained.
Gathering allies to hear and bolster my case.
Development of a more comprehensive list as to why and how I am right and my critic or critics are wrong.
Shameless attempts to explain away a mistake or a failure or a weakness. Blood pressure may rise at some point along this continuum. Or, I may “stuff” all of the emotions generated by my critic so that it emerges sort of sideways at some strategic point in the future—immediate or distant, depending on my memory.
Depending on where and why this escalation of defensiveness occurs, other people may be brought into the fray. At the extreme, I create a situation where I and others expend and waste a lot of energy that could be directed toward mission and purpose, all because I don’t want to honestly accept and evaluate a word of criticism from someone near me.
If this repeats itself as my normal response to criticism, I can expect really sub-par results no matter what I tackle.
Every effort worth your time and energy likely will spawn some negative reactions, evaluations and appraisals. It’s just a fact that of work and of life I’ve had to face. The truth is, any honest critic who is moved by a desire to see things improve is worthy of my attention. The honest critic should be regarded as a very important and necessary alley. Critics who care about what you care about will tell you the truth almost all of the time, and they should be given an honest, open hearing.
We all need the honest critic. And, I must learn to respect, appreciate and listen to the voices and opinions of such people. Critics, rather than enemies, should be considered highly regarded assets.
Any critic just “out to get you,” your project or your team should be treated with respect, given a hearing and then dismissed. That assignment is actually very manageable after a while.
Not long ago, I ran into a vociferous critic who attacked my organization, my personal philosophy concerning a central portion of our work product and my basic motivation for championing a particular approach to a difficult, but not impossible social challenge.
I reached out to him, attempting to establish meaningful conversation about the issue, as well as our differences. He seemed very open to a meeting, which I arranged. We met at his place of business, a very interesting place. We had a long and spirited discussion. I took him a book that I had found very instructive in regard to our point of contention. We talked for about an hour. I left feeling that we made progress and that, even though we still disagreed on several things, we could work together.
I was wrong. At the next large, public gathering of our work group he stepped up his attack on our solution to the vexing problem we met to address. At that point, I simply checked him off of my “helpful to engage” list.
No disrespect.
No elevated blood pressure.
No arguments or attempts to defend, justify or persuade.
He had staked out a clear position. I knew what I believed and I knew what worked in my hometown and across the nation. No reason for further argument with his gentleman.
I was kind.
I was honest.
I tried.
I respected him. I heard his critique.
I evaluated it.
I rejected it.
There are just times when that is the best option.
Notice, I did not reject the messenger. I rejected the message.
If that same person raises another criticism about another subject unrelated to our first engagement, I feel it is important that I hear him out again. I have found that I take care of myself by going the extra mile and by not prejudging or stereotyping based on past experiences. Besides that, I’m looking for the truth about what works, what is effective and what will make us all successful. Once a rejected critic does not mean always a rejected critic!
Don’t hear me saying that this will be automatic or easy. Responding with respect to those who challenge you, especially publicly, is not an easy assignment. But, taking the high road in search of objectivity is always the good road, even when you discover your critic was correct.
Honest, openness to other points of view endears me to observers.
In my former life I served as a pastor in four congregations over a span of almost twenty-five years. Along the way, I attracted a nice group of critics. Nothing all that bad, but just the normal experiences with those who found me lacking in one area or another, and believe me there was a lot lacking to point out!
Most of the critics were kind. Many wanted to help me out, and they did. Anyone who stands up every week and has to say something, no matter if they have anything to say or not, is a set up for critics! I’ve made so many awful gaffs while preaching. Most are really funny. Some mistakes had to be ironed out the following Sunday morning after a week of stewing on my own stupidity.
After a while, I came to realize that most folks who point out the mistakes are really good friends who want to see you grow and do better. The critics with the more substantive issues, they are the ones who cause the heart burn and headache. These are the good people, almost all honest, who simply believe that you are wrong, possibly heretical and maybe just evil. These folks are much harder to manage because their concerns often come down to a win/lose struggle, with the loser going away.
I had such a critic at my last church where I served for over 14 years. He determined that my view of the Bible was anything but Evangelical. He regarded me as neo-orthodox, and possibly downright liberal. He picked that up from my preaching, from the sources I read and studied and from my community agenda in the church. So incensed was he that finally, he wrote a personal letter to every member of the church in which he called me out for heresy, literally. He had not given me any advance notice, nor had he shared his letter with me before it showed up in my mailbox at about the same time it arrived at the home of every other member of our church.
I can remember vividly crafting a letter of response to everyone in my church. The uproar necessitated the response. I remember speaking to his charges while doing my best to respect him as my critic.
I confess: the situation was very hard.
I was supported by the church’s leadership board. The critic and his family left the church, as did several others. It was a painful time.
Ironically, it was a time of growth as well, both personally and as a church. My critic was honest and good. He did what he felt he had to do. Somehow, I came to that conclusion rather quickly. I realized that the criticism, though its delivery rather dramatic and a real blindside, made me stronger and our group closer and more effective.
And, all these years later, I’ll tell you what I told those who stayed with us, in part my critic was exactly right. I am not an Evangelical in my approach to the Bible. Things just aren’t that simple. And, I’m more of a Liberal than even he or I discerned at the time. By embracing the truth about myself as defined by a harsh critic, I experienced personal growth and genuine inner peace. I know I found it easier to pray! And, the struggle made me stronger in faith and in perseverance.
There are situations and circumstances guaranteeing criticism will arise.
At one point in our housing development for homeless persons, we attempted to gain control of an old hotel property at the corner of Akard Street and I-30 on the south side of Downtown Dallas. I recall attending a number of meetings with the local neighborhood association to discuss the project.
We hosted a design charrette. We briefed everyone on numerous occasions. We answered questions again and again. Finally, the neighbors banned together and threw us, the mayor at the time and the council member form the district out on our ear, almost literally.
Nothing personal you understand. Just not in our back yard! Not here, not now, not ever!
This one made me fighting mad, until I calmed down and realized that people often want different things. In this case our critics were property owners. They had the support of elected officials, whom they elected and re-elected. We were beat before we even showed up. And, it wasn’t our fault. We arrived well prepared, but preparation made it worse because it seemed that we might prevail. We had done our homework.
At the end we were defeated by an organized group of democracy-exploiters. The well-presented self-interests of the property owners prevailed over the pressing needs of the voiceless homeless.
We had to gather up our maps, our renderings and our big plans and hightail it back to where we came from!
What a valuable lesson.
Critics can be fact tellers.
They warned us. We didn’t listen carefully enough. There may have been a way to win them over, but I really don’t think so. Our critics won. Game over. Respect maintained. We’ll do battle elsewhere another day.
Ironically, years later our housing company (CitySquare Housing) entered a partnership with a for-profit developer, helped capture the same old hotel property and redeveloped it as a convention hotel with a mid-range nightly price point. This time our plan worked, and we got paid for it. We put the funds earned back into our community development corporation to be used in building more affordable housing in Dallas. So, our critics didn’t stop us. They just diverted us toward a new, practical approach around a real opportunity.
Guess who some of our loudest cheerleaders for the project are today?
You guessed it, the same group that opposed our original plan.
It just works this way if you take the long view on the high road, while working hard to respect your critics, no matter what.
One final note.
Determine to be a positive, constructive critic yourself.
People who are determined to get things done will take seriously the challenge of growing into the kind of critic that others appreciate and seek out. Some of your best work likely will involve you in assisting allies and new friends by offering an honest, concerned word of critique in a manner in which it can be received more easily by those to whom you offer it.
Tuesday, June 13, 2017
Tuesday, March 28, 2017
Sunday, March 26, 2017
Lenten Poem 2: Father Michel Quoist
Another poem from a good friend from Father Michel Quoist.
The Subway
The last ones squeeze
in,
The door rolls shut.
The subway rumbles off,
I can't move.
I am no longer an
individual but a crowd,
A crowd that moves in
one piece like jellied soup in its can.
A nameless and
indifferent crowd, probably far from you, Lord.
I am one with the crowd,
and I see why it's sometimes hard for me to rise higher.
The crowd is
heavy-leaden soles on my feet, my slow feet-a crowd too large for my
overburdened skiff.
Yet, Lord, I have no
right to overlook these people; they are my brothers,
And I cannot save
myself, alone.
Lord, since you wish it,
I shall head for heaven "in the subway."
Friday, March 24, 2017
Lenten poem 1: Father Michel Quoist
A good friend sent me this poem from Father Michel Quoist. It moved me as I think about the City and faith.
The wires are holding
hands around the holes;
To avoid breaking the
ring, they hold tight the neighboring wrist,
And it's thus that with
holes they make a fence.
Lord, there are lots of
holes in my life.
There are some in the
lives of my neighbors.
But if you wish, we
shall hold hands,
We shall hold very
tight,
And together we shall
make a fine roll of fence to adorn Paradise.
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Tuesday, February 21, 2017
Friday, February 03, 2017
Thursday, January 26, 2017
Monday, January 23, 2017
Racism, location and enduring poverty
Living in a poor neighborhood changes everything about your life
by Alvin Chang on January 12, 2017
In 1940, a white developer wanted to build a neighborhood in Detroit.
Meaning black people.
Read and view more here.
So he asked the US Federal Housing Administration to back a loan. The FHA, which was created just six years earlier to help middle-class families buy homes, said no because the development was too close to an "inharmonious" racial group.
Meaning black people.
Read and view more here.
Sunday, January 22, 2017
Holy Unrest
|
|
Friday, January 20, 2017
Thursday, January 19, 2017
Change makers
Here’s to the Crazy Ones
Here’s to the crazy ones.
The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers.
The round pegs in the square holes.
The ones who see things differently.
They’re not fond of rules.
And they have no respect for the status quo.
You can praise them, disagree with them, quote them,
disbelieve them, glorify or vilify them.
About the only thing you can’t do is ignore them.
Because they change things.
They invent. They imagine.
They heal. They explore. They create. They inspire.
They push the human race forward.
Maybe they have to be crazy.
How else can you stare at an empty canvas and see a work of art?
Or sit in silence and hear a song that’s never been written?
Or gaze at a red planet and see a laboratory on wheels?
While some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius.
Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world,
are the ones who do.
Here’s to the crazy ones.
The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers.
The round pegs in the square holes.
The ones who see things differently.
They’re not fond of rules.
And they have no respect for the status quo.
You can praise them, disagree with them, quote them,
disbelieve them, glorify or vilify them.
About the only thing you can’t do is ignore them.
Because they change things.
They invent. They imagine.
They heal. They explore. They create. They inspire.
They push the human race forward.
Maybe they have to be crazy.
How else can you stare at an empty canvas and see a work of art?
Or sit in silence and hear a song that’s never been written?
Or gaze at a red planet and see a laboratory on wheels?
While some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius.
Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world,
are the ones who do.
Jack Kerouac
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
Prophetic Communities
The
Church’s Role
The church must be reminded that it is not
the master or the servant of the state, but rather the conscience of the state.
It must be the guide and the critic of the state, and never its tool. If the
church does not recapture its prophetic zeal, it will become an irrelevant
social club without moral or spiritual authority. If the church does not
participate actively in the struggle for peace and for economic and racial
justice, it will forfeit the loyalty of millions and cause men everywhere to
say that it has atrophied its will. But if the church will free itself from the
shackles of a deadening status quo, and, recovering its great historic mission,
will speak and act fearlessly and insistently in terms of justice and peace, it
will enkindle the imagination of mankind and fire the souls of men, imbuing
them with a glowing and ardent love for truth, justice, and peace. Men far and
near will know the church as a great fellowship of love that provides light and
bread for lonely travelers at midnight.
Friday, January 13, 2017
My friend Terry, the entrepreneur
After weeks of above average temperatures in Dallas, the cold snap whipped us hard last Tuesday night. I mean, from over 70 to below 40, that's a real snap!
Upon arriving at my office Wednesday morning, I found this note taped to my door.
Terry and I have been friends for a few years. We met on the street when he approached me offering to do a couple of card tricks. I obliged with a $5 tip. He wowed me and others who gathered with his 1/2 magic, 1/2 stand up routine.
He's never been much of a beggar or panhandler with me. Too proud and independent. Only when really pressed to the edges does he ask for help of any kind. Last Tuesday evening at the end of the day, he stopped to see me to ask for special assistance as the note reflects.
I was busy when he came in, and he was gone when I got free.
This note shook me a bit, as I thought through what the night must have been like for him outside. I had seen him the day before, and finally convinced him to make an appointment to see our staff who could really help him head in a new direction. We talked several times that day, actually to the point of distraction.
As I worried about him on Wednesday morning, he showed up for a cup of coffee! It was a relief to see him.
I asked him if he had made the arrangement with his friend to stay in out of the weather. He told me that he had solved the problem himself. He then went on to tell me how he had found shelter back of a restaurant dumpster. He went into great detail about how he used scrap lumber and tin siding to construct a warm little home that blocked the wind that forced him to bed down around 9 p.m.
"That little house made me happy," he told me. "It was just too cold to stay up, so I went to bed when I finished building it. I got a good night's sleep, Larry!" he exclaimed.
When I commented about my amazement at his creativity and toughness, he simply replied, "Well, Larry, you know me; I'm an entrepreneur at heart."
Well, Terry, that's one way to look at it for sure.
Just one snapshot from a guy I count as a friend. . .and, we're working on finding real housing for him.
Upon arriving at my office Wednesday morning, I found this note taped to my door.
Terry and I have been friends for a few years. We met on the street when he approached me offering to do a couple of card tricks. I obliged with a $5 tip. He wowed me and others who gathered with his 1/2 magic, 1/2 stand up routine.
He's never been much of a beggar or panhandler with me. Too proud and independent. Only when really pressed to the edges does he ask for help of any kind. Last Tuesday evening at the end of the day, he stopped to see me to ask for special assistance as the note reflects.
I was busy when he came in, and he was gone when I got free.
This note shook me a bit, as I thought through what the night must have been like for him outside. I had seen him the day before, and finally convinced him to make an appointment to see our staff who could really help him head in a new direction. We talked several times that day, actually to the point of distraction.
As I worried about him on Wednesday morning, he showed up for a cup of coffee! It was a relief to see him.
I asked him if he had made the arrangement with his friend to stay in out of the weather. He told me that he had solved the problem himself. He then went on to tell me how he had found shelter back of a restaurant dumpster. He went into great detail about how he used scrap lumber and tin siding to construct a warm little home that blocked the wind that forced him to bed down around 9 p.m.
"That little house made me happy," he told me. "It was just too cold to stay up, so I went to bed when I finished building it. I got a good night's sleep, Larry!" he exclaimed.
When I commented about my amazement at his creativity and toughness, he simply replied, "Well, Larry, you know me; I'm an entrepreneur at heart."
Well, Terry, that's one way to look at it for sure.
Just one snapshot from a guy I count as a friend. . .and, we're working on finding real housing for him.