With apologies to Mr. Bowie, I present to you a space pleasantry.
All in Vignettes
“Seems like we were always burying Bryton. The problem was he wasn’t very dead and the earth was much, much smaller back then. If you buried him too deep …”
There is a certain town in Oklahoma I’d like to discuss, but I won’t say exactly where for two reasons …
Letter Twelve, in which I deal with my existential crises by letting God off the hook because God never asked for this.
Letter Eleven, in which I deal with my existential crises by wondering if I’m simply talking to myself.
Letter Ten, in which I deal with my existential crises by wondering if I’m fishing.
Letter Nine, in which I deal with my existential crises by almost sounding grateful. Weird.
Letter Eight, in which I deal with my existential crises by complimenting God’s plagues, pondering the effects on my lawn, and wondering if what we really cause or don’t cause.
Letter Seven, in which I deal with my existential crises by suddenly realizing that none of my suffering matters, or, potentially more frightening, that my unrest might be the very point.
Letter Six, in which I deal with my existential crises by starting to acknowledge that God might have bigger fish to fry.
Letter Five, in which I deal with my existential crises by wondering if persistence is always the best course of action.
Letter Three, in which I deal with my existential crises by contemplating how frustrating it must be to watch my life knowing all the right answers.
Letter Three, in which I deal with my existential crises by struggling to come up with things to tell an omniscient being and question the results of a church that claims to be the one, true denomination.
Letter Two, in which I process my existential crisis by some how getting grumpy about resurrection and renewal. When will it be my turn?!
Letter One, in which I process my existential crisis through questioning God’s plans as revealed through country music.