Aung San Suu Kyi and Grace, a thought that changed the world

Aung San Suu Kyi
Aung San Suu Kyi

In 1990, after her party swept the majority of the Burmese elections, Aung San Suu Kyi was expected to become the next democratically elected Prime Minister of Burma.

Instead of a peaceful transition to her leadership, she was denied the results of the election and she’s faced oppression from the ruling regime and spent 15 of the last 21 years under house arrest.

She was released earlier today.

20+ years of oppression and today she walks free.

“The release of political prisoners is the most important thing for all those who truly wish to bring about change in Burma.” – Aung San Suu Kyi (via e-mail from Amnesty International)

During their U2 – 360° Tour, U2 has been dedicating their song, Walk On, in support of Aung San Suu Kyi and those living under oppression everywhere.

With her release, U2 has issued a statement regarding the release of Aung San Suu Kyi today…

I thought they beautifully summed up the ideas behind a Love Insurgency…

“For a life denied the basic freedoms, she has lived so vividly in the minds of her people and supporters and accomplished so much. By putting the people of Burma’s interests above her own, she has lived in stark contrast with her oppressors. Her struggle has become a symbol for all humanity, of what we are capable of – best and worst. Her very grace so infuriating to the bully government whose brutish gorging of the country’s rich resources have left the people of Burma poor and hungry.

May we all lives that put the interests of others above our own.

May we live lives in stark contrast to our oppressors.

May we all live lives so full of grace and love that we infuriate those who wish to oppress us.

And may we all live lives that prove, beyond a shadow of doubt, that love wins!

Outlive your life – Laundry Love

Earlier this year I was asked by Bluefish.TV to tell the story of our Laundry Love Initiative in Red Oak.

A few of their guys came out to the laundromat and interviewed Todd and I about Laundry Love for a video project they were working on with Max Lucado — Outlive Your Life.

The filming actually took place on two separate dates. The first video was the interview with Todd and I — and then the rest of the filming took place on a special Friday Night Laundry Love. Since most of our group was unavailable that night, some friends brought their small group and joined us for the “b-roll footage.”

The book, Outlive Your Life, was released in October — and our story was included as part of the companion DVD small group package.

Not that I expected anything less — but I’m really pleased with the end result.

They did a great job telling the story from an “outsider perspective.”

I’m so thankful to be a part of Red Oak Laundry Love — and love telling the story to others.

When we started the initiative, I was totally unsure as to how it would play out.

Our group was excited in the beginning — but as time went on — fewer and fewer people showed up.

There was also uncertainty on my part about starting something like Laundry Love, knowing in the back of my mind that Laurie and I were seriously considering selling our house and moving.

There was even more uncertainty when the two laundromats we approached said they weren’t interested in helping us.

But I knew there was a need (both for the community and our community group) and so we moved forward with it.

Ultimately, we just picked one of the two laundromats, started showing up to do our laundry and just “happened to pay for other’s laundry along the way.”

And in the end, I believe the owners were excited about the results.

There was no fancy fanfare, no ads, no flyers announcing we’d be there. We just showed up at the same time, every month and cared on whoever we could.

And each and every week — no matter how I felt walking into the Laundromat — I walked out blessed and excited.

We kept the Laundry Love Initiative going for a full year in Red Oak before Laurie and I moved to Forney.

And now I’m dying to get another Laundry Love going in our new community.

I truly believe we’ve been blessed so that we can be a blessing to others.

Here’s to hoping it gets many others interested in starting their own Laundry Love Initiatives or something similar. And here’s to getting another Laundry Love group started in the Forney area ASAP.

Also, I’d be amiss if I didn’t say a huge thank you to Greg Russinger and Charles Lee for their willingness to befriend the under-resourced in their community and to cast the vision that’s led to the creation of 65+ Laundry Love initiatives around the country.

Thanks for all you do guys!

Find out more here or at just4one.org.

Open Our Eyes – an interview with Kevin Hendricks

Kevin D. Hendricks
Kevin D. Hendricks

Last week, I told you about Kevin Hendrick’s latest publication – Open Our Eyes: Seeing the Invisible People of Homelessness.

The book officially releases today but I ordered an “advance” copy and loved reading it over the weekend.

Kevin and the other collaborators did a great job to help share the message Mark Horvath has been sharing at invisiblepeople.tv since 2008 — and all the proceeds from the book go straight to helping Mark continue his great work.

Plus – I believe it’s the first book (other than my own) to make mention of our podcast… so that makes it cool in it’s own right :-).

Kevin graciously agreed to take time away from writing his next novel to do a short interview with me via e-mail. Here’s what he had to say… Continue reading Open Our Eyes – an interview with Kevin Hendricks

Agents of grace

Fail
Ice Cream Fail | Photo by jblndl

We all have certain expectations of others, don’t we?

We expect our bosses to treat us fairly.

We expect our friends to return our phone calls in a timely manner.

We expect our spouses to treat us right and fight with us on our side.

We expect our neighbors to keep their yard freshly manicured, just like ours.

We expect the other drivers to observe the same laws we observe and to properly yield to us.

But sadly… no one will live up to our expectations 100% of the time.
Continue reading Agents of grace