Daily Reflection

“Loving your neighbor is easy when he’s nice or when she’s the same as you. But the rule is ‘Love Thy Neighbor’…Even if he is different. Even if she is a bit mean. Even if they don’t believe in the same things you do. You don’t have to hang out with thy neighbor or agree with thy neighbor, just love them. Treat them with as much respect and acceptance as you’d like them to treat you.” (Doe Zantamata)

I have a neighbor living next to me now, who has never trusted me from the start, always believing I have some hidden agenda, some angle, as to why I’ve done the things I have in our neighborhood, including me meticulously maintaining their front yard for a number of years when no one else regularly was. For years their father was ailing and couldn’t get out and do any yard work and the only other occupant of the house was a son who never seemed to do much to help out with anything. The grass in their front yard often went uncut and unkempt for weeks at a time because of it. I found compassion for the situation, so one day I decided I was just going to help out by beginning to maintain it for the ailing father. Their yard really needed a lot of TLC, as it was mostly weeds and wild violets. I began diligently working with it, slowly restoring it to its glory, simply because I wanted to do something nice for someone else who wasn’t able to do it for themselves. I didn’t want or ask for anything in return and just desired to create joy for another. When their father unfortunately passed away about a year ago, the son was removed from the home and another sibling moved in, the one who hasn’t trusted my motives from the start. They immediately informed me early this spring my yard services were no longer needed, of which I said I understood. So, I spent this cutting season only doing a few strips to the left of my fence bordering their yard, as I learned fences are never placed on property lines due to it often creating legal battles when they are. Fences are typically placed because of this, back at least 2 inches, to a foot and a half from property lines. My neighbor never said anything to me about those few strips I cut each time, that is until just a few weeks ago.

They had put some grass seed down in a few areas, some of which was within my normal cutting area. They had also placed a small movable fence surrounding those areas, which I carefully mowed and edged around one day. Having been in the landscaping world for a long time, I wasn’t about to damage any of my former or their present hard work. Sadly though, my actions that day triggered a very loud and expletive response from them that essentially was no more than “Stay the f$$k off my yard!!!” When I tried to talk with them in a calm manner, explaining that I was only trying to maintain a part of our property still, their rage grew only worse, with many of our surrounding neighbors hearing their angry rant at me. A rant that continued well into that night and even the next day with whomever they spoke to, as I unfortunately caught part of it each time I walked outside to do some of my normal chores. Frankly, it hurt immensely, leading me to cry profusely over it. That principle of “Love Thy Neighbor” felt like it had meant nothing to them whatsoever in those moments, even given all the hard work I had done for them with having never once asked for anything in return. My ego initially wanted to retaliate with negative words, but my Spirit had me pause, reflect, and pray over the situation and for them. In the process, I realized that loving one’s neighbor doesn’t always mean that the love given out will be returned in kind. Sometimes it actually means getting nothing in return, other than the sole satisfaction that comes from being a loving steward in this world for God. While my neighbor may never understand this or grasp that I have no other motive than to serve God, I plan to continue loving them, albeit from a greater distance now, but loving them nonetheless, because loving thy neighbor isn’t about doing something with the expectation of it coming back in kind, it’s about doing it no matter what, knowing it’s how I’d want to be treated, and how God would want me to treat others as well.

God, I pray you may help me to always love thy neighbor, even when thy neighbor may never love me in return.

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson

Daily Reflection

“Judge not according to appearance…” (John 7:24)

I was in one of my favorite coffee shop hangouts recently, one where I know most of the baristas there, when I saw a proselytizing action that bothered me immensely, one solely based upon appearance. There, at the coffee shop, what unfolded before me was a young female customer handing over to a barista a few dollars stuffed into a small pamphlet. What was the pamphlet? One of those Christian conversion pamphlets I often see in bathrooms of public places that focus in on being saved.

Why this bothered me so immensely was the action was based solely upon this barista’s appearance. How did the barista look? She had bright green hair, black mascara that spread out from the sides of her eyes in triangles, and a nose ring. What I found even more frustrating was that this barista wasn’t even the person who waited upon this customer. It was simply an action that was based upon a judgment from what the customer saw with their eyes. And when that customer left, I watched her smile and glow as if she had done the most amazing action to someone she judged really needed it.

Here’s what she didn’t know. The girl with the green hair is a pretty awesome person. She loves to dance in the store to 80’s music. She greets every customer with an amazing smile and a friendly hello. And always, and I mean always, makes sure that every drink she crafts is done to perfection. She truly exudes a joy in what she does that I would go so far as to say already represents the joy of Christ. So why did she need a Christian pamphlet? She didn’t. Yet this is what I struggle often with people who proselytize their religion. They often try to save others they judge need it, who don’t need saving. They claim themselves as knowing more than the person they feel they need to save.

What I’ve come to learn in my walk with Christ, one that isn’t a religious walk and more a spiritual one, is that people will ask me when they are interested in my faith, not the other way around. I don’t believe it’s my purpose to ever judge someone else needs Jesus, or Buddha, or Mohammad, or anyone. It’s my job to not judge another on what they need at all, especially in their faith walk. It’s my job to simply be unconditionally loving and treat everyone as my equal.

Nevertheless, after that customer left that day, I talked to this barista and learned this regularly occurred in her life, which I find sad because in my book, she already represents the Jesus I know, someone who stands apart from the masses and does their best to love everyone, unconditionally. Did she need Jesus? No, but ultimately, maybe it was the customer who needed to get in touch with a little more of that…

Dear God, help me never to judge others by appearance or deem who needs you and who doesn’t. Help me instead to just love others unconditionally, just as you do of me…

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson

Daily Reflection

“If we could change ourselves, the tendencies in the world would also change. As a man changes his own nature, so does the attitude of the world change towards him.” (Mahatma Gandhi)

Many eons ago, I had received tickets to a special early screening of a very politically charged movie about 9/11 at an artsy theater in downtown Washington, D.C. After the movie ended, I left the theater deep in thought about it, when suddenly, a major television news anchor directly outside accosted me, demanding to know if many of the problems of our country at the time were because of the current POTUS. The answer I gave her then wasn’t one she expected nor wanted to hear, as she quickly moved on to another patron who emerged behind me. What I told her was simply that the problems in our country weren’t the President’s fault, they’re ours.

During much of Biden’s Presidency thus far, as well as during Trump’s, and Obama’s, and before that Bush Jr., Clinton, Bush Sr., and all the way to as far back as I can remember with Reagan, the number of judgments I’ve heard that blame the state of our country on who’s in the POTUS position is countless at this point. How many of those judgments also came from strong devout followers from faith-based religions where judgment isn’t even supposed to be a part of their walk is also countless.

All this finger pointing at the President has always baffled me because those constantly doing it, are also the ones saying and doing things regularly in their lives that is just as judgmental and unloving and has nothing to do with who’s President. It has to do with no one else except themselves. But it’s far easier to focus on things like the high cost of housing, massive inflation, steep gas prices, tanking 401k’s, constant gun violence, and more, and place blame upon it all on the current President, rather than taking a hard look in the mirror at oneself and beginning to focus on changing our own attitudes in life. It’s by changing oneself and how others are treated is how we will ever see any positive change happen in this country.

For all those who regularly complain about any President, or Vice President, or anyone in political power for that matter, simply resorting to shouting obscenities, throwing judgments, shaming, bashing, or doing any of the sort, will accomplish nothing but spread more hatred. For five decades, I’ve watched one individual after another blame the POTUS for the misery in their lives, rather than look at how they themselves act towards the rest of the world. Change begins by looking at that, by practicing more restraint of tongue and pen, and by living out greater unconditional love and tolerance for all. Maybe if we all started doing that, we might finally see the changes we seek at the POTUS level coming to fruition because it’s already manifested within us all…

May the change I want to see always begin with me God… 

Peace, love, light, and joy,
Andrew Arthur Dawson