{"id":29033,"date":"2014-02-07T07:57:16","date_gmt":"2014-02-07T12:57:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/?p=29033"},"modified":"2016-05-30T23:42:25","modified_gmt":"2016-05-31T04:42:25","slug":"bo-knows-heaven","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/2014\/02\/bo-knows-heaven\/","title":{"rendered":"Bo Knows Heaven"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>So there\u2019s my sort of neighbor big Bo,<\/em> who despite owning two rock-solid Scandinavian names including, yes, Bo, doesn\u2019t exactly seem to have things rock-solidly together. <!--more--><\/p>\n<p>We could start maybe with his wife-of-Bath-quantity marriages, or maybe just his announcement in church after his last divorce went through that he was happy to inform everyone he was happily single again, a free brother in the Lord, like he couldn\u2019t think of a finer theological or actual state to be in but more likely (in suspicious minds) clarifying for any interested ladies his totally legal availability, a suspicion that was pretty convincingly confirmed when right after his announcement he hobbled down substantially from the pulpit on his one good leg and one bad one (that bows way out) and took a substantial seat right next to one of the stunned single ladies in the congregation who was almost but not quite in the same universe age-wise, which for him is pushing 70.<\/p>\n<p>Or we could move on to his car, which is changing all the time but is basically always the same, namely old and busted-up and increasingly-dented-the-longer-he-drives-it (if he has a little money he gets a \u201cnew\u201d one when he hits that financial sweetspot right where the cost of fixing the dents in order to pass inspection ends up being more than buying a certain brand of whole other car would), and that also needs regular jumping, which I know because he\u2019s asked me at 6:30 early for one, or failing that maybe a ride to his most recent job, regaling along the way how lucky he was to get this particular honey of a car for only 300, making the two thou or so that he\u2019s put into it since then a bargain when ya think what he woulda had to shell out for new or even somewhat so-called reliable used. <\/p>\n<p>Or don\u2019t forget the job itself, the most recent being in a call center full of youngish people, but Bo is a chatty guy and doesn&#8217;t mind, except the potential problem looming there is that when Bo starts chatting long and free he tends to chat blunt and offensive too (see e.g. above, but also his occasional unintentional digs at church about some former or irregularly present member, or the occasional unintentional racist comment, or maybe his questions to the teenage daughters of a family he home taught that were meant to show his interest in their lives but ended up coming across as close to predator-like), and so ends up offending without his even realizing or meaning to, and pretty soon just like old Ishmael Bo\u2019s hand might as well be &#8220;raised against all, and the hands of all are raised against him,\u201d all maybe helping to explain why Bo isn\u2019t always in work, or for that matter in car or phone, and for all I know barely in apartment too, let alone in any reliable pension plan that at his age he really ought to be drawing from. <\/p>\n<p>But Bo is really good at one thing, in fact supernaturally good, and that\u2019s where this is going. Bo\u2019s in charge of sacrament meeting at the care center within the confines of our geographically tiny and very non-NIMBY hodgepodge of a neighborhood, and not necessarily non-NIMBY because of so much virtue or something on the part of the neighbors but maybe just because there\u2019s just not enough collective energy or clout or money or moral outrage or even physical stability to stop something like a care center or the nearby halfway house for the nearby mental hospital that really together neighborhoods know how to put a stop to. <\/p>\n<p>So the weekly 20-minute sacrament (and only) meeting is held in the center\u2019s combo TV room\/rec room\/dining room\/filing space\/church room, which consists of a couple of couches, a big-screen TV, some brown folding chairs in rows, a piano, some filing cabinets, a couple of sinks, and some bulletin boards with the month\u2019s big events in large letters. <\/p>\n<p>Even before it starts, the anywhere from 15 to 20 residents who attend the meeting, ranging from maybe 25 to 70 years old in assorted but not-viable-in-the-outside-world states of mental and physical non-well-being, are scattered around the room, some on couches and chairs but most in wheelchairs and walkers, all waiting for Bo, including Wally, one of the four or so residents who talks okay and so who conducts the meeting in his bolo tie and his wheelchair that he rolls up right next to one side of the kitchen\/sacrament table, so he can set his 64-ounce Big Gulp on it, which he needs in case he gets thirsty conducting in his really loud voice.<\/p>\n<p>Wally likes to think he\u2019s in charge and not Bo, but Bo doesn\u2019t mind because he doesn\u2019t act like he\u2019s in charge anyway, he just goes around and talks to everyone, even though only a few can talk back, but Bo doesn\u2019t care, he\u2019s shaking both of everyone&#8217;s hands and touching their shoulders and talking to them like he knows everything about them and also rubbing Donnie&#8217;s head, because Donnie likes that, and with Bo Donnie doesn&#8217;t even have to grab Bo&#8217;s hand and put it up on his head the way he does with everyone else, which has got to be Donnie\u2019s highlight of the week, someone finally and voluntarily head-rubbing real long after a week of smiling entreaties.<\/p>\n<p>Wally\u2019s real competition for top-dog conducting rights actually comes from Marian, who likes to position her wheelchair on the other side of the kitchen\/sacrament table from Wally and do a sort of parallel or maybe alternative sort of conducting, calling on someone to say the prayer for instance before Wally can, or correcting Wally when he gets the order of things wrong, or announcing what they\u2019re doing next before Wally can announce it, or telling Wally to give it a few more seconds before ending the meeting so fast like he always does (he likes to hear about one short talk or testimony before shutting things down), and by the end Marian is pretty much conducting, making you think that maybe the revolution in female leadership in the Mormon Church has already happened, right here in the care center, and nobody is even thinking about wheeling Marian from her spot, but just accepting that a parallel or rival or maybe cooperating female conductor is just the natural order of things in Mormonism, especially when someone like Marian is doing such a good job at it. Wally gets back at her though by interrupting her testimony and telling her to cut it short.<\/p>\n<p>Some time after the sacrament there\u2019s the weekly musical number too, which is the same every week, and features Myra, Myra with the permanent smile on her face, Myra one of the oldest and tiniest and frailest ladies, Myra hunched way over in a wheelchair with her toothpick-shoulders poking up because the sides of the wheelchair are squishing in on her to keep her from falling out, Myra who when Wally says it\u2019s time for her solo metaphorically jumps right in, right from where she&#8217;s sitting and sans accompaniment, singing the song she\u2019s remembered all these years, Jesus Once Was a Little Child, and she sings both verses, including the second one you\u2019d probably forgotten, about Jesus never getting vexed if the game went wrong, which is stunning not so much for saying that Jesus played games but for using the word vexed, which isn\u2019t something you usually hear in a primary song, but she sings it right out, and also that Jesus always spoke the truth, and her voice quavers on the last try, try, try.<\/p>\n<p>And there\u2019s some group singing too, as in the opening, closing, and sacrament songs, taking almost half of the 20 minutes, but no one&#8217;s really singing except the visitors who\u2019ve come to do the sacrament or give talks or play piano or lead music, plus a couple of staff or visiting family members, but a lot of residents are really interested in leading the music, right from where they\u2019re sitting too. <\/p>\n<p>But it\u2019s the sacrament part of the sacrament meeting that\u2019s the most memorable and that\u2019s really where Bo comes in again. His talking and head-rubbing and hand-shaking in advance are just a warmup for this part, because see Bo is the one who passes the bread and the water around, which is no easy thing in a room full of walkers and wheel chairs, but making it even harder is that most of the people can\u2019t for the most part actually manage to get the bread or the cup to their mouths on their own.<\/p>\n<p>But Bo knows. In fact Bo is possibly the only person in the world who knows exactly the sacrament-taking preferences of all the assembled residents\u2014whether they want to take the piece of bread or cup of water themselves from the respective trays and consume it on their own, whether they want Bo to put either one in their hand and let them take it from there, whether they want Bo to put bread-piece or water-cup in their hand and then put his hand underneath theirs to guide it up to their mouth, or whether they even want Bo to actually put bread or water right in their mouth for them, old-Catholic-style so to speak. <\/p>\n<p>And it\u2019s no easy thing remembering all that but it\u2019s even harder managing all that, starting with Bo having to squeeze himself into just the right position to do his thing, which might in some cases mean standing in front of but in others standing or sitting next to, and remember Bo isn\u2019t exactly the most graceful guy to begin with, what with his bum leg and bodily largesse, but there he is moving like Baryshnikov between the irregular and regularly shifting rows of wheelchairs and walkers, twisting and turning and possibly pirouetting and then standing or sitting according to their particular preference. <\/p>\n<p>A few residents are wearing helmets so they don\u2019t hurt themselves, and when Bo approaches them they tend to rest their helmet on his upper arm so they can get a good angle to take the bread or water on their own. But that\u2019s easy compared to the more than a few who are making repetitive movements with heads and arms, which exponentially complicates sacrament-taking, but Bo is in sync with every single one, sometimes putting the bread with his own free hand right between their cheek and gum at just the right moment, or the water cup in their palm and helping it stay steady as possible, sometimes pouring the water right in too, and especially with the water Bo is always ready with the forearm of his tray-holding hand and with the handkerchief of his bread-or-water-giving hand to catch and wipe up whatever comes spilling or sometimes gushing out, then he wipes their mouth clean when they\u2019re done, Bo as unfazed by all this as St. Francis licking a leper\u2019s wound, Bo indifferent to saliva and other bodily fluids and also the possibly alarming hygienic state of assorted gums and teeth and mouths.<\/p>\n<p>During all this Beth is as usual holding the three children\u2019s books she likes while constantly waving and smiling too, alternating an open-handed wave with one that features only her middle finger but no one seems to mind. And of course Donnie is wanting his head rubbed again even during the sacrament, which Bo multi-taskingly does while letting Donnie take the bread and water for himself. But it\u2019s especially when you see Bo on his bum leg leaning bulkily but carefully over to gently wipe clean yet another only partially-successful intake of blessed water, and you see all the residents knowing that Bo knows just what they want sacrament-wise, that you realize that oft-married oft-divorced oft-offensive oft-struggling Bo is going straight to heaven.<\/p>\n<p>Here\u2019s religion right here, you think, and not so much the sacrament part, but the wiping up of their messes without a second thought part, helping them do something they like doing, which is probably why they even show up early most of the time.<\/p>\n<p>After a short testimony, Wally brings things to a screeching halt, the meeting ends, and one guy bursts out crying, for reasons not entirely clear\u2014maybe he didn\u2019t like something, maybe he can\u2019t explain it, maybe he\u2019s sad at the thought of Bo leaving again, but Bo assures all of them he\u2019ll be back next week and maybe during it too, and he stays longer than anyone even though he was the first to arrive, doing some more talking and double-hand-shaking and head-rubbing and arranging for someone to stay and help him give Doris her weekly blessing right afterward, and he tells you afterward how much he loves all of them and you sense he\u2019s not just blowing pious smoke.<\/p>\n<p>And don\u2019t forget Bo\u2019s work with the fellows at the nearby mental halfway-house too, and that he chauffeurs them and still other people around more than you\u2019d think a guy with a battery-jump-needing seriously-dented car could, Bo always saying when you see him in the street that he\u2019s got to go give someone a ride (Where do they live? \u201cOh up in \u2026.\u201d Which is about 10 miles away), because see among his many acquaintances Bo has the \u201cgood\u201d car, even just \u201cthe\u201d car, plus not to mention Bo watching over one of the halfway-house fellows to the literal end, who had terminal cancer, and who was black, which matters only because of Bo\u2019s aforementioned occasional racist comment, but Bo seemed to not remember he had anything to do with anything like that the way he took care of this guy, who had no family whatsoever on earth except for Bo, who might as well have been now.<\/p>\n<p><em>And then there\u2019s me,<\/em> who despite owning only one slightly-Anglicized Scandinavian name and despite assorted and undeniable lapses in life seems in comparison to Bo to have various things seriously together, maybe starting with a long marriage to a longsuffering wife, and three kids who seem to be doing all the right missioning and collegeing and marrying and grandchild-having things, and don\u2019t forget my Pee Aitch Dee, and my full totally non-partial professorship, and my overly reliable Consumer-Reports-approved and maintenance-scheduled cars that have a few small dents only because anything big gets fixed thanks to rainy-day funds, and my fifth-of-an-acre estate with tightly mowed lawn, and my pretty regular exercise regimen, and oh yeah my dynamite life-insurance\/retirement-investment\/and retirement-pension plans that have together just about secured a soothingly secure future. Yes sir, a lot seemingly together.<\/p>\n<p>Except when I see Bo in action with the sacrament and around the \u2018hood there\u2019s something itching inside that needs scratching, something along the lines of I\u2019d like somewhat inexplicably to be more like Bo, which I have to admit is an itch that I never ever expected to find myself feeling. <\/p>\n<p>And so I think maybe I could do that by bulking up my service portfolio, to go with my other portfolios, maybe doing things like going to the care center when Bo asks me to help out with the sacrament, and I say sure, but see down inside I\u2019m actually hoping that I\u2019ll just have to bless the sacrament and not actually pass it, because unlike Bo I don\u2019t really know how everyone likes to take it, but truth be told I can\u2019t get past the patented care-center smells, or the almost certain encounters with stray saliva, and I can\u2019t get myself to manage skin-to-skin touching which is what the residents seem most to want, I can manage only maybe just some quick hand-to-clothed-shoulder or something, or maybe I can rub Donnie\u2019s head for a couple of seconds but what if he\u2019s got something, is what I\u2019m really thinking. And then I\u2019m not even very good at the sacrament, because Wally has to pound his Big Gulp on the table to get my attention and remind me, who\u2019s sitting in a sort of shock, not to sing during the sacrament song but to stand up and start breaking the bread, which is something I\u2019ve known I was supposed to do since I was 16 but now here I sheepishly am having to be told by Wally. <\/p>\n<p>But I can\u2019t will myself to do what Bo does, and I think I\u2019m starting to figure out why. It\u2019s not an act of will to Bo, or a matter of doing, it&#8217;s a matter of being. He\u2019s not taking the classic seemingly-together-person\u2019s approach of \u201cI have so much that I need to give something back,\u201d or \u201cI\u2019m happy to help the less fortunate,\u201d but instead he\u2019s right there with them, giving everything he is and not just something, feeling just as fortunate or unfortunate as they are, thoroughgoingly identifying with them, the way Jesus did, equal to the least of these instead of superior to these, and basically saying not \u201cI am helping you\u201d but like some medieval imitator of Jesus \u201cI am you.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>Most of us to identify with other people have to go through exactly the same things they\u2019ve been through, maybe because we don\u2019t have Jesus-level imagination. Bo\u2019s got some though. He\u2019s not just like his friends here at the center, but he can take his general and vast experience of being beaten up by life and that\u2019s all he needs in order to identify, in order to see that he\u2019s basically like them. I\u2019ve got some beaten-up stuff too, but haven\u2019t thought hard enough about it, or am still not convinced about just how fragile and ultimately unreliable any of my seeming-togetherness actually is. <\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m also starting to get the sense that my very hard work and investment at getting myself so seemingly together might be precisely the thing that\u2019s keeping me from identifying here, that the illusion of togetherness is what keeps you from understanding that you\u2019re one of the least too, because see if you have the illusion of togetherness it\u2019s just about impossible to imagine that you\u2019re also least. <\/p>\n<p>And not only that, but the illusion of togetherness is a total (and non-tautological) illusion anyway, because like my neuroscientist friend tells me, we all have like 6 billion brain cells and 11 miles of connective tissue in that brain (I always mix up the 6 and 11 but it\u2019s a lot either way) and so the chances of every single one of us having something seriously wrong inside is like 100 percent. Which is just another way of saying what King Benjamin said about us all being beggars. We\u2019re all literally messed up. And beggars. Which is why we all need to identify with and help each other, and recognize that yes we need serious help too.  <\/p>\n<p>But it\u2019s easy to look around and think that because wow we seem in a purely visible way to really have more together than some or even a lot of people, then we must actually have things together period, which keeps us from identifying with comparatively-less-seemingly-together people who in actual truth are in total value our exact equals, not to mention might also keep us (me) from noticing our (my) own Bo-quality troubles too, maybe because ours (mine) are sometimes (but not always) of a less visible sort than Bo\u2019s, but visible or not they\u2019re of the same exact depth\u2014like seriously vexing all sorts of people around me without always even meaning to but other times certainly meaning to, and though maybe sometimes (but not always) employing a more subtle and formally-educated brand of vexing than Bo prefers it&#8217;s at least as offensive and regular as his is, and very possibly even more shattering than usual to recipients, and very probably actually takes recipients even more days or weeks or years to recover from, as certain wife and kids and teachers and students and fellow-workers and -drivers and -Walmart-shoppers and -citizens and -believers can attest, and which vexing, given the right cascade of events and circumstances and persons, could easily have no-joke led to employment very much different from my seemingly-together sort. And by the way who, very much including me, with the same right set of other-cascading events and circumstances and person(s) couldn\u2019t have been divorced and married one or two or four times by now, and very probably be just as clumsy and unsettled as Bo in negotiating the anxiety- and mistake-ridden minefield of the singles scene that you\u2019d thought you\u2019d left oh so comfortably behind? <\/p>\n<p>And so last of all I&#8217;m starting to think that losing that illusion is maybe the big key to getting what Bo has and that I&#8217;m hankering for, which is nothing less than the quality of at one ment that Bo\u2019s got, and not just among the sorts of people I already know and like, which as Jesus pointed out just about anyone can do, but among all sorts of people, and at one ment really is what that word means by the way, it\u2019s not just some lame sacrament-meeting-talk-trick of playing around with a word to try to find something original to say. \u201cA tone\u201d has come to have the connotation of \u201cpay for,\u201d as in if we do something wrong we need to pay for it or make up for it or that Jesus pays for it, but at one ment it seems to me (relying here heavily on Bo and maybe Alma a little) isn\u2019t so much about doing as about feeling, or as much about paying for as about identifying with someone. It\u2019s maybe not as big of a mystery as we like to make it out to be, maybe especially when we turn it into theology instead of experience and feeling. But how to get it is another thing: by selling all you have? By losing your life to find it? Come to think of it, Bo\u2019s basically done both of those, so yeah, maybe that&#8217;s it.<\/p>\n<p>Outside the care center and halfway-house Bo is still vexing people left and right, like nobody\u2019s business and unlike the child Jesus. He\u2019s not trying to, because at heart he\u2019s basically a good-hearted guy, which is how he can do what he does inside the care center and halfway-house, where his heart translates rightly instead of potentially disastrously. Inside those places, Bo knows just what to do, or better yet, how to be. And that\u2019s how he knows heaven. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>So there\u2019s my sort of neighbor big Bo, who despite owning two rock-solid Scandinavian names including, yes, Bo, doesn\u2019t exactly seem to have things rock-solidly together.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":110,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1,54],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-29033","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-corn","category-mormon-life"],"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/29033","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/110"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=29033"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/29033\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":35110,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/29033\/revisions\/35110"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=29033"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=29033"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/timesandseasons.org\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=29033"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}