hermionesviolin: (light in the darkness)
The daily lectionary readings last Thursday morning were:
Daniel 2:1-19
and
Ephesians 4:17-5:1

Joan read the Daniel and I read the Ephesians.  As I began the Ephesians reading, I was struck by how it connected to the Daniel reading (well done, lectionary crafters!) -- the nonbelievers do not have understanding, but those who follow God do.

FCS-Ian said that the Ephesians reading reminded him that it's a process, rather than just a single moment at baptism or whatever.  I said yeah, as I read it I was reminded of themes in my sermon, because these are the daily lectionaries leading up to that Sunday :)

I said that I forget sometimes what hard things we are called to do.  I said, "I'm not sure I want to commit to that."  (I thought of lashon hara.)

Joan(?) said, "Lots of people don't commit to that."  Which was really not what I was going for.  (I felt like what she was getting at was, "Lots of people call themselves Christians and don't even try to live into being the good people that Jesus commands us to be," whereas I was trying to talk about us and not about Them -- because it's so easy to be judgmental of Other People and so easy to let ourselves off the hook.)

I forget what I said in response, but Joan said, "I think we can't do that.  And that's why we feel guilty all the time."

I thought of the fact that I do the Call to Confession at Rest and Bread every week and how I've been thinking that I would like to make more explicit that in acknowledging and turning back to God, we let go of the sins we are confessing, we let go of the guilt.

What I said was, "I know that we can't perfect it in this life, but it's what we're called to do."
22You were taught, with regard to your former way of life, to put off your old self, which is being corrupted by its deceitful desires; 23to be made new in the attitude of your minds; 24and to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness.

25Therefore each of you must put off falsehood and speak truthfully to his neighbor, for we are all members of one body. 26"In your anger do not sin"[Psalm 4:4]: Do not let the sun go down while you are still angry, 27and do not give the devil a foothold. 28You who have been stealing must steal no longer, but must work, doing something useful with your own hands, that you may have something to share with those in need.

29Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen. 30And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, with whom you were sealed for the day of redemption. 31Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice. 32Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.

1Be imitators of God, therefore, as dearly loved children
Those are some strong demands (and I also love the closing line of this lectionary passage -- esp. 'cause, leading up to Baptism of Jesus Sunday).

+

We talked afterwards about the fact that I was going to be preaching, and I said I was mostly excited about preaching -- that I don't like standing up in front of people, though I'll sit down and argue with the person who's standing up.

Joan said that when she was at Lesley, there was a big emphasis on cooperative learning sort of stuff and that she insisted that teachers have power (as do students) and they need to step into that and own it, because if you don't acknowledge it then it gets corrupted.  I immediately made the analogy to privilege -- that acknowledging your privilege is the first step.
I also agreed that I think it'll be a good experience for me to stand up in front of people like that.

***

Later, I was catching up on Magpie Girl posts and read "Epiphany: Fairies, Snowballs of Honor, and Finding Your Star."
It is silent and still as “snow, on snow, on snow”  comes down. Cate and I are bundled up to our noses against the cold, but happy in the oasis that is the walled garden near our urban home.

“Can we visit the Fairy Tree?,” asks Cate.

“Of course!” I reply.

“Oh good, I want to give the Fairies the Snowball of Honor.” says Cate.

When we get to the tree, Cate leaves her snowball in a hollow as an offering.

“Hey Cate,” I say, “tomorrow is Epiphany and we get to find the name of the star we will follow for the year. Want to ask the Fairies what the name of your star will be?” She nods. She closes her eyes and holds out her hand it it’s puffy pink glove. I say, “Imagine that the Fairies are carrying a word to you. They are swirling around you like the snow flakes. And now, they are putting the word in your hand.”  I touch her open palm with one finger. “Open you eyes! ”

The second her eyes open, the word is on her tongue.
I was reminded of the Dreamboard idea.

Other posts: "*8Things: To Stop Doing in 2010" (more for the idea of the title than for MG's list itself) and "Fear — How to Break Up with the Bastard" (after the "{dear fear}" post on another blog).

+

Emily K.'s facebook statuses are usually Bible verses or other Christian "inspirational" messages, which don't always map onto my theology.  But last Wednesday's was: "Moses answered the terrified people, "Do not be afraid. Stand firm and you will see the deliverance the LORD will bring you today...The LORD will fight for you; you need only to be still" (Exodus 14:13)

***

Thursday night was CAUMC small group.  It was me and Sean and Seth.

Sean had two readings -- one from Intimacy: Pursuing Love and one from Hospitality: Risking Welcome.

They were really really good readings, and in the interest of ever getting this post up I'm not going to attempt to retype blocks of text.  But the Intimacy one talked about church as "a place where friends met regularly to tell their stories, share their joys, and bear one another's burdens" (p. 32) and the Hospitality one talked about L'Arche and about how this guy single-handedly prepared a big meal and later realized that by refusing to accept help from anyone, he was signaling that "The quality of the meal---a reflection of my culinary skills---was more important to me than the experience of community" (p. 22).

I borrowed the books from Sean and read them on Saturday.  The one other really powerful story from the Intimacy book was about this congregation which contains a lot of recovering/struggling addicts (who lift up their personal prayer concerns very openly and honestly) and members of a wealthy well-to-do mission partner church were visiting and during prayer time one of the visitors said, "I want to ask this church to pray for me.  I've never said this out loud in any church; but I just can't stop drinking, and it's about to ruin my marriage and my family.  I need your help."  I about cried reading that.  Have I mentioned how bad I am at asking for prayers for myself?  (I told Ian that near the end of Friday's session, the therapist said that one of the things that struck her most was my strong desire that other people think I'm "fine," and in his reply he commented that, "I think we both know you like being seen as uber-competent and in control," which is TRUFAC.)

The L'Arche story in the Hospitality book continued:
Can we set aside our own need to prove ourselves useful and generous in order to listen carefully, to welcome the offering, to appreciate and honor the gifts of other communities, especially the gifts of those we have come to serve?  Can we receive their hospitality?

Can we?  It's an important question, because receiving hospitality is what God does.  In the incarnation, God in Christ entered a particular home, a particular neighborhood, a particular time and place in history.  Jesus went (and still goes) in search of welcome, stepping into people's homes, asking to dine with them, calling ordinary and marginalized people down from treetops so he could join them in their homes for supper.  Being fed at our table, sleeping in our guest room, receiving a cup of tea in our chipped cup, being invited into our lives to listen as well as to speak--all these are sacred acts of Jesus Christ.

For us to become Christ-like is to enter into the holy act of receiving hospitality from the world.  From strangers.  [...]  Even from our enemies.  Receiving hospitality is a sacred risk and a godly adventure.

As you take the risk of hospitality, remember that God is with you.  God. who took this same risk, is with you.  [...]  As you accept hospitality  in unexpected places, God is there.  And God calls us to be there, too.

(pp. 25-26)
Writing this up, I'm reminded of a bit from Loving Jesus by Mark Allan Powell (which full writeup I still need to make):
I ask my seminary students how many of them are prepared to devote their lives to serving the Lord.  Every hand goes up.  Then I read them Mark 10:45  where Jesus says, "The Son of Man came not to be served but to serve."  Jesus says he doesn't want you to serve him, I declare.  He says that he wants to serve you.  I'm messing with their minds, of course.  There are plenty of Bible verses that do exhort us to serve the Lord (for example, Matthew 4:10 and 6:24), but seminarians are often more keen on serving than on being served.  So are pastors.  So are many of us.  Peter would have gladly washed the feet of Jesus, but he didn't want to let Jesus wash his feet (John 13:6-8).

-pp. 177-8
The Hospitality book invokes those who sheltered Jews during the Holocaust, the Underground Railroad, and those aiding "illegal" Mexican immigrants in the USA.

And from my notes on Loving Jesus:

"I offer the following proposition: The mission of the church is to love Jesus Christ; everything else is just strategy" (p. 178).

"Jesus doesn't just want his sheep to be fed; he wants his sheep to be fed by someone who loves him" (p. 178, re: the John 21:15-17 story of "Simon Peter, do you love me? ... Feed my sheep.").

"A more biblical model may describe the external mission of the church as being to love God (through worship) and to love neighbor (through service)" (p. 179).
hermionesviolin: (light in the darkness)
Fight [with God] like you fight with the people you love, heartfelt and raw and needy. Be willing to submit, to admit you were wrong, to kiss and make up; but be unwilling to give up or go away.
-Eve Tushnet ("Defining the Relationship" 1/15/09)
"Joy Sadhana is a daily practice in the observation of joy."
-[livejournal.com profile] mylittleredgirl [more info]


Do not be afraid, I am with you
I have called you each by name
Come and follow Me
I will bring you home
I love you and you are mine
     -"You Are Mine" (David Haas)


Five good things about today:
1. From an email one of my friends sent me today: P.S - I started doing "Joy Sadhana" two days ago. :-)
2. At CAUMC small group tonight, the whole time I was there (well maybe not while I was debriefing to Sean before dinner re: [redacted, v.1]) I felt like the weight that had been on me for some days now was lifted.

Expandmore about group tonight, while I'm here )

3. I got a way better response to an email than I was expecting (Megan and Ari, I'll email you after I get some sleep).
4. Having comfortable interactions with Someone even before this intense exchange.
5. Having my read on someone (different someone than #4) validated and elaborated on by an actual mental health professional.

Three things I did well today:
1. Expandgym )
2. I read more of the posts about [do we have a better umbrella term for this current round than Cultural Appropriation?]
3. I wrote a really honest email.

Two things I am looking forward to (doing [better]) tomorrow:
["anything that you're looking forward to, that means you're facing tomorrow with joy, not trepidation," as Ari says]
1. LEM book group
2. a response to aforementioned honest email
hermionesviolin: ((hidden) wisdom)
Michelle was at small group, which was an awesome bonus surprise. Apparently her last class ends this month and then she just has her externship, so she should be all gradumucated by January.
She works until 1 on Sundays so is thinking of coming to CWM \o/

Laurie, a BU STH student who apparently has been going to CAUMC Sunday mornings for some time also showed up. She recently went to a conference on sabbath and was talking about how do you do that as a pastor -- e.g., most people will only call you with crises (either of faith or medical) so are you supposed to say, "No, it's my sabbath"?

At one point we were talking about looking you and Michelle said she acts about 15, so... I said that I do act like a grown-up, so I'm extra-frustrated by looking so much younger than my age. Someone (probably Michelle) questioned this, and I said, "I work in an office and manage people. I'm totally a grown up." She said this was undercut by the fact that, "You spend 80% of your time there watching porn." Everyone was appropriately speechless. I just kind of laughed, 'cause while not technically true (and she was of course joking -- she apologized, and I insisted she didn't need to) the spirit of the statement was true.

Later, she was telling me that she and her sister had been talking about shows that should have been on cable so there could be more hot gay sexing -- including Buffy and Angel -- Angel/Spike, and Buffy/Faith. Through this I learned that Laurie is a Joss fan. She is apparently now into Doctor Who and Torchwood.

***

Because last week was topical, I partially forgot about Living the Questions, and I'd been reading about Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur and blogsurfing, so I opted to excerpt some blogposts which I found interesting and thought would inspire discussion.
Expandwhat I handed out )
We talked about Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. We talked about holidays and which ones we get off. We talked about Eid. (Laurie's from Minnesota, which apparently has a burgeoning Muslim population.) We talked about the upcoming Presidential election. I should have cut us off 30-45 minutes before I did.

***

Affirmations

Michelle to me: "You give the best hugs in the universe. Except maybe for my boyfriend -- but he's twice your size." (6'5", 285 -- to my 5'2", 140) After closing prayer, Laurie commented that I/we do "full commitment" hugs, which she appreciates.

Mike thanked me for pulling this together, said "we couldn't have done it without you," said I'm "reliable."

Laurie to me: "You're very smart. [In an almost awed tone.] But you know how to hold your tongue. Which I don't. But I hope that spending time in your presence, it'll rub off on me. And along with your wisdom, you also have an appreciation for dorky things like Joss Whedon."
hermionesviolin: ((hidden) wisdom)
E-mail from Trelawney:
Tonight: Forgiveness - i heard this cool sermon in lebanon all about forgiveness. i finally got a copy of it. it's something we've wrestled with a lot in our group, and i thought this preacher did a good job outlining it in ways some of us will find useful in our lives. so that will be small group. Eric will put on supper and i'll join you a little late b/c of a lecture i need to attend by my adviser at harvard.
[I've misplaced her handout, so I'll have to finish this writeup another time.]

***

I was tired, so I didn't really say much (another reason I've gotta start getting enough sleep regularly, f'r serious), so I thought it would be really hard for people to come up with Affirmations for me, but I actually got a really nice round.

+ At the beginning of dinner, Eric was debating what seasoning to put on the green beans, and I snagged some for.  Michelle said, "Yes, green beans are generally better left alone."  I said, "Of course, I think most food is better left alone," and in Affirmations she brought this up, said stuff like that is part of what she loves about me :)
+ Trelawney Affirmed my positive demeanor, said we don't get to talk much but whenever we do, she always comes away from our interactions feeling positive.  I said I suspected this was a function more of her than of me, but I accepted the Affirmation.  Jess said she agreed with Trelawney about my positive demeanor.
+ Jess also Affirmed my ability to tell stories -- that she tends to tell stories very briefly and not very interestingly, so she's impressed when people can tell stories well.  Jenny echoed this.
+ Eric Affirmed my listening and being present -- and also that I retain things, that he'll often listen and be present but then he goes on to listen and be present in the next moment and forget what the person had just said.

***

Before dinner, I was talking about my VCR issues, since I had been on the phone with my brother on my way in, and Jenny was saying she kinda wanted to go check it out.  She did in fact come back to my apartment with me after group (we stayed to help wash dishes first), and she couldn't in fact improve my VCR situation any, but it was nice to have someone over.

[I bought a programmable VCR-DVD player, but its only coaxial cable connector is for output, so I can't have it receive the signal that way, and my TV only has red-white-yellow plug connectors for input, so I can't record anything.  I don't understand why finding programmable VCRS is so hard, and now apparently I also need to find one with a coaxial input -- which a lot of them don't specify; my brother said I should look for if it has a tv tuner, since that's basically what that's used for, but they don't all say.  The manual says I can connect to a cable box, so I need to find out from RCN if their cable boxes have those connectors -- since if they're all coaxial that doesn't help me.  It's tempting to get DVR or something to solve my problem, I'm just not excited about spending very much money on that since I really don't watch much tv.  I'm bummed that I can't tape the Tin Man miniseries, though.]
hermionesviolin: image of a white teacup on a saucer with a medium-brown liquid (hot chocolate?) being poured into it (warmth in the cold)
Our reading was a UU sermon: "Getting Real About Food" by Ana Porter

She talked about God telling Moses to take off his shoes in the story of the burning bush.
Moses had to have the humility and intimacy of his bare feet in direct contact with the earth before he could begin his conversation with the divine.

Our sun is a fire that burns like that burning bush. For all intents and purposes, it burns without being consumed. And the light from that great fire travels all the way to earth and gets transformed by green plants into substances that we can then eat. Plants grow in the ground and they turn sunlight into food which literally becomes our bodies. Surely any ground in which such miracles happen is holy ground. Perhaps we should all be taking off our shoes.
She talked about our dislocation from our food and challenged her congregants to pledge to spend $10/wk on locally and/or organic food.

In the discussion that followed, Trelawney said I inspire her every week with my vegetarianism. I said this was funny because I can so easily get complacent. Trelawney said that's one reason she thinks community is so important -- that we keep pushing each other and suchlike. She said we all inspire her in different ways -- and then went around the circle. And then did a round of real Affirmations.
hermionesviolin: black and white image of Ani DiFranco with text "i fight fire with words" (i fight fire with words)
I was SO EXCITED that the topic was "Hermeneutics: approach/method of interpretation/lens." And not just because it was, as Trelawney had said in her e-mail, "leaving off Wesley/poverty for now."

Plus, we had been talking about HP, and I was saying that I loved reading stuff about the OotP movie and how stuff that was (de-)emphasized in it might be indicators as to what will and will not be important in Book 7 since JKR has such close creative control.

The handout was a collection of excerpts, all of which actually had source listings, whee! I excerpt them further and comment behind the cut. ExpandRead more... )
hermionesviolin: ((hidden) wisdom)
We were gonna watch the LtQ DVD on "intimacy with God," but Trelawney had the wrong disc, so instead we did the "Bonus Reading" from the associated handout: "on prayer" from the prophet by Kahlil Gibran.

We read the whole thing in turns around the circle (okay, our version skipped the first two lines) and then went back and discussed line by line (obviously not having time to get through the whole thing).

ExpandRead more... )
hermionesviolin: (light in the darkness)
On my way to CAUMC tonight, I passed a house on Powder House that had strings of blue and green lights up on the giant bushes in its front yard.  I approve.  Their upstairs porch railing had red and green lights so it actually looked like holly draped (well inasmuchas lights can), which I also approve of.

Dinner included these amazingly yummy biscuits -- low-fat whole-wheat.  I also tried yams -- which I had once more than ten years ago; still not a fan.

I learned that Trelawney shares my "My family didn't do Santa, and I'm glad about that."

Edit: Forgot to mention, during dinner conversation I mentioned how I'm going in to work briefly tomorrow to pick up my present, and I ended up talking about how when it comes to my family and friends I don't feel any particular desire to get presents from them, but at work I very much want presents from my bosses, which is an irony I hadn't thought of before -- though on reflection it makes sense because in neither case do I want the actual stuff so much as I want recognition/appreciation, which I already get from loved ones. /edit

I was wearing my patchwork-looking shirt and she complimented me on it; I mentioned that I got it at a thrift store, with my usual comment that it's usually the thrift store clothes that I get compliments on.  She Affirmed that I shop at thrift stores -- that I'm not controlled by trends etc. -- and said, "You must really love yourself a lot" to be comfortable enough with my body to do that, which I found interesting because I don't really think of the two as connected (nor do I think of myself as having a particularly great relationship with my body).

We watched How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, which I think I saw once as a youngster.

I was reminded that I have such suspension of disbelief issues (as well as issues with things being pastede on), though I was crying laughing at a lot of the physical comedy near the beginning.  I can't help loving the dog, and I like the Grinch at the beginning a lot -- see myself in him, what? ;)  "You're a Mean One" has some of the best lyrics -- "You're as cuddly as a cactus, you're as charming as an eel. [...] With arsenic sauce."

Afterward, Trelawney talked about how Christmas can be a difficult time and how there are traditions that bring us joy and traditions that are stressful [she actually segued from the ending of the film, with the "Christmas means more than just presents" thing] and opened it up for people to talk about that as they felt moved.  It was just her, Eric, me, Michelle, and Meredith, and she started off by going around and acknowledging the ways in which the/this holiday season is/can be difficult for each specific person.  She did me last and said she doesn't know much about my personal history with (Christmas) traditions and commented that, "You're very cynical about a lot of stuff, but other times you take simple joy in things."
My favorite part was totally the acknowledgement of my cynicism :)
hermionesviolin: ((hidden) wisdom)
Amanda and I were on the same Red Line home -- and then both stopping at the library to pick up ILL items.  We chatted for a while and she had made a crockpot of vegetarian soup yesterday and started to invite me over for dinner, but I had CAUMC, so I declined (I would have postponed, but I have to do laundry tomorrow night, and I expect the weekend to be booked up -- I suppose I could have asked about Monday, but I wasn't thinking that far ahead; maybe I'll e-mail her).

We took the escalators up at Davis, and near the top a guy came up all growly "Stay to the right if you're gonna stand."  I had completely zoned and not even registered that we were standing on the left (Stay Right, Pass on the Left is one of my big things, so this is ironic).  I was a little miffed 'cause dude, you're coming home after work, the only connection you would be making from here is the frequent busses, so why the hurry?  But given that inability to grasp Stay Right, Pass on the Left (either on sidewalks or escalators/stairs) is one of my Peeves, I really liked that somebody actually called somebody on it ('cause I always just growl silently, and I suspect I am not alone in that).

*

I went grocery shopping this evening and only saw boxes of individual packets of hot chocolate, no canisters like we get at my parents' house.  What up :(


***

Trelawney's father is still in the hospital, so Megan stepped up and led tonight.  She's taking a Wesley theology class, so she used Wesley & Christian Perfection as her topic.  Since I know next to nothing about Methodism, this was largely new and interesting to me.  Once I sat down after arriving (before dinner) it started to hit me how tired I was -- and I think most all of us were a bit overtired, but it was a really good session, which pleased me especially in the contrast to last week.

We opened with "Love Divine, All Loves Excelling", which Megan said encapsulates Wesley's theology, and then read a series of Bible passages (NRSV) -- the ones Wesley drew on heavily in his creation of this theology.The obvious paradox is "No one who abides in him sins" (1 John 3:6) and " If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he who is faithful and just will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness. If we say that we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us." (1 John 1:8-10).  We even get "Everyone who does what is right is righteous, just as he is righteous. Everyone who commits sin is a child of the devil;; for the devil has been sinning from the beginning" (1 John 3:7b-8a).

We talked about this some -- about how the forgiveness after sin removes the sin.  Then she brought up "Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect" (Matthew 5:48).  I said I'd always understood it as something you're aiming for even though you can't achieve it.  I mean, saying "Try to be a moderately good person" does.  She said that in philosophy, obligation presupposes ability, which makes sense when you point it out.  Wesley really believed that people could become perfect.

I said, "So he definitely doesn't believe in the Calvinist Absolute Depravity, huh?  Total Depravity, rather."  (TULIP had come up in conversation over the weekend)  She said that actually he does, which is fascinating.  She said that his reasoning was: God is always present, and it is because God is always present that we can choose to do right or do wrong -- without God's presence, we would have no choice but to do wrong.  I'm uncomfortable with the idea of Total Depravity, but I do find that a really interesting theology (the It is only by the grace of God that we are able to choose to do right, though it does not mean that we will always do so).

She said Wesley's favorite metaphor for God was a physician or therapist.

I forget how it came up, but she also mentioned Wesley's idea of the faith of the servant (Jews, Muslims) versus the faith of the son (who obeys the laws because they love God) -- which is obviously problematic, though definitely interesting.

She said that his idea of Christian perfection was like walking up a down escalator -- that stopping is equivalent to backsliding (you can't stop moving forward).

In my Affirmation, I told Megan that this is the kind of thing that makes me want to be a div student ('cause I had literally been thinking that during the discussion).  She had talked about Augustine and the church fathers, both of which reminded me of [livejournal.com profile] sk8eeyore and her (course) readings etc., and thinking of her and the classes she takes I added, "Though I could probably do without the pastoral care classes."  Megan stage-whispered in response, "M.T.S."  Recalling the conversation I had with Nicole over the summer, I feel like I should create a tag for this imaginary div school plan :)

After dishes, Sue and Mike both complimented me on my blouse.  I was wearing my blue flowered blouse 'cause it was gonna be high near 69F and also 'cause I'm running out of options what with overdue laundry (though I really have better options than I had expected).  The last time I wore this I think Alyssa complimented me on it.  I don't wear it often because I feel like it's not a great shirt, but apparently I may be in the minority on this.  When Eric saw me this morning, he commented on how it's unusual for me, that I'm usually wearing "black... or solid colors."  Yeah, solid colors; I almost never wear black shirts 'cause I'm almost always wearing black pants.

***

Oh, Grey's Anatomy.  I don't actually watch the show but have watched enough to know what people are talking about and keep somewhat abreast of current storyline events because I have [livejournal.com profile] jennyo and [livejournal.com profile] fox1013 on Track, which ignores cut-tags (and polls -- like when you get responses to your entries e-mailed to you).

From [livejournal.com profile] musesfool: "This one is less with the funny and more with the disappointment: more on the Isaiah Washington-Patrick Dempsey choke-a-thon, which makes me respect Isaiah Washington a lot less. This is why I generally wish to know nothing about actors. "

via [livejournal.com profile] fox1013: one of the cast officially Comes Out [which link won't display in Firefox for me, weirdly; I pasted it into IE and it worked fine]

***

P.S. If you're gonna comment and don't have an LJ account, could you please sign your name?  Thanks.  I usually assume it's my dad (whom it usually is, and who usually signs his initials) but it isn't always, and then I get confused.

***

Wow.  All my housemates are home and awake.  This hasn't happened in possibly over a week.  OriginalRoomie came home and my door was open and she said, "You do exist!" and I replied, "As do you."

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hermionesviolin: an image of Alyson Hannigan (who plays Willow Rosenberg) with animated text "you think you know / what you are / what's to come / you haven't even / BEGUN" (Default)
Elizabeth (the delinquent, ecumenical)

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