Wednesday

Free to Be (if you're a friend of JC)

This morning my coworker Eunice meekly slipped this on my desk next to my elbow as she passed them around Cube City.

My Dear Co-Workers:
I am putting together a newsletter for my church for our discipleship ministry. I thought it would be a good idea to place in the newsletter how different individuals view and define discipleship. Please help me by giving me your definition of discipleship. I need your definition to come off the top of your head. That means do not use a dictionary, thesaurus, or the internet. Participation is not mandatory but would be greatly appreciated. If you can, please complete and return to me by the end of today. Many thanks to you. (Eunice) Do not attach your name.


Within minutes, this email appears from my workfriend Pashmina:
i’m not going to lie: I don’t even understand what discipleship means. I seriously don’t. I’m kind of annoyed that this was passed around.

We had to do a lap around the office to talk about it. ‘Cause, really, what can you do? I’m a Dianic-Wiccan-leaning Pagan, she’s a culturally-Muslim Agnostic. We both figure this woman means no harm, but we’re both offended. It’s not like this is the first time the assumption of Christianity has come up.
Ultimately we decide to just ignore it, not make a fuss but not participate. What’s interesting is how I felt when she gave it to me. My first reaction was to write something for her! Like, say “I’m actually not Christian, Eunice, but this is what I think discipleship probably means”. I could probably give a pretty god definition, actually, I grew up in a Protestant denomination called “Disciples of Christ” and all.

Here’s the really fucked up part: Some part of me feels embarrassed not to be a Christian. I feel like my existence is just sort of rude.

This is the insidious damage the Christian guise of the patriarchy inflicts. I’m swimming in the American national identity, a pollutant in the sea of Christianity, the presumption washing over me until I feel like this is just how well-mannered people conduct themselves; it’s propriety to be part of a church. Like saying “I’m not Christian” is sort of like saying “I watch a lot of porn”. Both of these are true, but it’s not polite to mention either one at work.

So the question I have is the origin of this shame: Am I embarrassed because Cube City is a casually Christian environment that makes me feel like an outsider by
omission? Or is this a symptom of growing up Christian and still feeling the tentacles of guilt that come from leaving the Church?
Well, I don’t so much have guilt about leaving the Church, I really, really don’t. It’s more like growing up Christian gives me some insight into how this little memo from Eunice happened and some empathy for her. I’m certain, 100% certain, that she never thought it would offend anyone. She’s just asking, right? She said you don’t have to do it, right?
I can see her good intentions. I can picture the newsletter committee trying to work on their issue, in the windowless church office or the fellowship hall, after the opening prayer, over sugar cookies and Styrofoam cups of grape juice. I can imagine their excitement about Eunice’s great idea to ask her officemates to define “discipleship”, the earnest attempt to incorporate an outsider’s point of view. I don’t want to put her down, she’s trying to create something. She’s part of something that makes her feel special, she’s a contributor. Somehow I’m not able to be annoyed with her, even though this memo is hers alone, not an office-sponsored request.

But here’s my damage: These Christian assumptions feel like an army of termites trying to eat into my identity and make it rickety. Like a casual, even unconscious, but insidious way to break me down, erase me.

The office Christmas party that seems to last the whole month of December, with religious symbols all around, and coworkers (seriously, this happened) are offended when I say “Happy Holidays”. Religious posters on the walls of offices. The pressure to be a Secret Santa. Bible quotes in email signatures. Devotional booklets or Bibles on 5 of the 9 desks in my area. The office closing early the day before Easter. Inviting coworkers to church-sponsored events over email. Church fundraiser order forms in the lunchroom. Everyone here apologizes when they say “Oh my God!” as though it’s a cuss word and says “God Bless You!” when you sneeze. A what’s-your-zodiac-sign conversation where two people at the table said “I don’t believe in that, I’m Christian.” The anti-Halloween “Devil’s Day” discussions I’ll overhear starting soon. Our information and referral operators ask “Do you belong to a church?” when people call looking for help. Every third person wishing me a motherfucking Blessed Day.


Each of these examples seem so petty – it’s harmless, why get all upset because people feel strong in their faith? They didn’t ask if you were Christian when they interviewed you, right?
Ok, true, it’s not like anything illegal is happening here. People are just expressing their personal beliefs. But it’s far from harmless. To me, it just makes it a hostile environment. When I say “I’m not Christian.” I get the startled, scandalized “oh!” And a glare like I have three heads and eat babies.

Which I do, but still.

4 comments:

Starla said...

Here's a comment posted on Pashmina's behalf off of email.

On Wed, Sep 17, 2008 at 2:09 PM, Pashmina wrote:
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAH
I AM SO GLAD YOU HAVE A BLOG NOW
THIS IS PERFECT
I love that you have sympathy for her
and I totally get that weird guilt of not feeling Christian. I feel that way right now actually because it's Ramadan and I usually do SOMETHING, at least ONE day of fasting...and I'm not. But I don't believe in it, so what's the point, why feel guilty???

Oh i just love this entry. I love it so much.

On Wed, Sep 17, 2008 at 2:17 PM, Pashmina wrote:

OK. so I read this again because I seriously love how you write and I just feel like everything you say is so meaningful. I really do.

You also made me think about working here-- it is a WHOLE lot more Christian oriented than any place I've EVER worked at. I mean, ok, I get the Christmas parties happening-- shit, I have a Christmas tree. I love that stuff. But that's secular now, so I don't care as much. But I am BOTHERED by the assumption that people think everyone is Christian and that it's ok to do these things.
It's ESPECIALLY weird to me because I am Pakistani, and look Pakistani, so then I think-- do they REALLY think I am Christian or are they just trying to convert me? I get all suspicious. I mean, seriously, if you saw some of the emails that were sent to me-- I would have thought you would have made damned sure that the people you were sending them to we’re Christian. I mean, they were completely not appropriate.

But maybe there's something about this office…or maybe it's because we are non profit? I don't know...but I don't feel like any of this is really accepted or done elsewhere. Anytime I mention this stuff to Arlo, he always tell me how wildly inappropriate stuff like that would be at his place-- there they don't know ANYBODY's religion because it's something you just don't ask...sort of like political affiliation I guess.


On Wed, Sep 17, 2008 at 2:20 PM, Pashmina wrote:

ok, you know what maybe is the root cause of this annoyance? I think it's because I am bothered by Eunice just assuming we have to be Christian because "how could you NOT be?" It's the thought that there isn't anything else out there that someone could follow. It's ignorant in the fact that we all believe in different things!!!!!!
It's just weird.

Starla said...

Here is another email exchange with Pashmina about this Jesus topic:

PASHMINA: Here is the email I was talking about:

(Forwarded through four people)
From VICKI –

When you reach the end of your rope you will find the hem of His garment. I'm not breaking this one.
This is ABSOLUTELY beautiful...
(HUGE BLOODY PICTURE OF JESUS DRGGING CROSS)
I would rather live my life as if there is a God, and die to find out there isn't, than live my life as if there isn't, and die to find out there is. You are my 8 in 8
seconds. I am not breaking this.

No way! I'M TOLD THIS WORKS! Bishop T.D. Jakes '8 Second Prayer.' Just repeat this prayer and see how God moves!
'Lord, I love you and I need you, come into my heart, and bless me, my family, my home, my finances, and all of my friends,
in Jesus' name. Amen.'
Pass this message. You will receive a miracle tomorrow!

I HOPE that you don't ignore the prayer...


PASHMINA: My response was "Vicki, thanks for thinking of me…but I’m actually not Christian!"

STARLA: This makes me feel really crazy. Did she respond?

PASHMINA: Yea I remember this, she wrote
“Oops! (smiley) Sorry!”
At least she wrote the smiley face? Ahahahaha

I received the worst one EVER from Lulu, though. It had a picture of the bloodiest Jesus face EVER
I practically screamed when I saw it.

Yea. Ok, so honestly, if you ever had to guess someone’s religion for a prize, and they put someone that was Indian/Pakistani—would you guess Christian? I would not, but I wonder if that’s because I’m not. I just don’t understand why they think I am Christian…or WORSE if they just don’t care? Or WORSE if they KNOW I’m not Christian but they need to spread the gospel so it doesn’t matter?

STARLA: That’s a tricky one. I would try to be careful not to ASSUME you are Muslim – like the being-careful-with-your-terms conversation from this morning, I’d be scared to say just because you’re Pakistani (and have I been spelling that word wrong all day?) you have to be Muslim or Hindu -- but I certainly wouldn’t assume Christian.
Also, I don’t assume that sort of thing. Um, because it’s effing WRONG to assume somebody’s religion!!?!?!?!
But it’s either a complete head-up-the-ass ignorance of any other possibility, which is offensive, or an evangelist move, which is worse.
But I bet it seems very benign, to them! I’ve heard this kind of talk. Like “well, maybe there are some non-Christians in your office.” “there are, but only a few, and it wouldn’t hurt for them to hear the Good News, would it? If they don’t like it, they can just delete it. And who knows, maybe Christ will touch their hearts and bring them into the fold, Praise Jesus!”

PASHMINA: Yea, that is ALSO true. I don’t assume what religion ANYBODY is EVER. I sometimes will play games and think about it based on conversations we have, but I don’t upright assume enough to ever send someone literature.

STARLA: Well, and making an assumption seems pretty different than sending someone literature. There’s a personal interaction between the sender and receiver of literature that’s not there when, say, the office Christmas party is about Christmas. A personal message feels more like a personal slight.
I try to think of this in the opposite direction…what if I was raising money to fund abortions for poor women? I would put it on the lunch table and think “some people won’t like it, but they don’t have to give.” I get mad when folks say that being public about my same-sex relationship is shoving my lifestyle down their throats, don’t I?

Anonymous said...

I HATE workplace environments like that. Just like I wouldn't forward political emails, I certainly don't find it appropriate to forward religious ones. It's one thing to forward something to your friend(s) at work whom you know affiliate with this or that, but those whole forwarding schemes to an entire floor/department are ridiculous.

Yes, you're right, Starla, that the assumptions about one's affiliation with Christianity is just rude and I LOVE JESUS. Love him, but it ain't my job to tell you how much I love him or how much you should get to know him.

I hate "Have a blessed day" on voicemails and emails. That has to be my biggest pet peeve about religion in the workplace. And office Christmas parties are a load of crap no matter how many times you call it a "holiday party". If it's just a holiday party, then have it on Arbor Day.

I grew up a Jehovah's Witness and I can truly empathize with the feeling of being ostracized for not assimilating into the mainstream religious culture. People thought we were freaks.

Now that I have left that religion and found my spirituality on my own, I have an even more fervent dislike of people who lack religious tolerance. So, kudos to you for functioning in such a jacked up environment.

Have a blessed day,
MarilynJean

Starla said...

MarilynJean, you crack my shit UP!!! I am totally having an Arbor Day party with gifts and eggnog this year.

That was a really great comment. You are so thoughtful and you write your voice really well.

I appreciate your sympathy and also your perspective. I don't have many friends that are Jesus enthusiasts, though my family is and they do it in a beautiful, loving way. Princess is getting confirmed as an Independant Catholic (that's another [several] post[s]), but it's not JC focused, she digs the whole trinity pretty equally. I appricate your take quite a lot, it's a great healing antidote to the brand of Christian at Cube City/in the government/Fred Phelps/etc. ad nauseum.

It's really a comfort to know that you are able to hold all that you are peacefully together in your heart. I think that is a lifetime of journey for most of us, but moving through growing up as a Witness had to be inTENSE, ladyfriend. I love it that you've figured out how to have your own sacred, tender, authentic spiritual life and be yourself as well. As it should be.

Also I am so throughly thrilled that you are reading and commenting on this blog project. It makes me feel real shy and happy and excited too.

smooch to you!