
Hello from my corner,
Often I am asked if my life turned out as I expected, and my unequivocal answer is immediately “no; not at all.” There is no statement I have ever spoken or written that is more truthful than that. And of course, a reasonable response would be why not? I think for me it is simple (and perhaps simultaneously complex). I had no idea of what I would do, what I wanted, or where I might go. The simple answer is I had no plan,and I had no dreams. My childhood, which had a number of positive things in terms of having some sense of stability was equally difficult as an adopted child. I have noted that in a thread that has been visited many times over the past decade-plus of writing, but I see it quite differently now. I was not taught to dream as a child or, at least, I do not remember being encouraged to do so. This is not to disparage my parents in any manner, but I do not think they were dreamers either. My father worked hard to make enough money to support his family, purchasing a larger house during my latter elementary years to make sure each of us, and especially my sister, had our own bedroom. My mother was a simple person, again not to speak unfairly of her, but she saw things as either this or that. There was no real grey area. When I faced graduation from high school, during my last semester, I skipped school one day (not a regular practice) and tagged along with another friend to the Armed Forces Recruiting Center. This was never something I had imagined myself doing. Long story short, I ended up enlisting in the Marine Corps.
Even though I did well in my service time, I came back to my hometown, still misguided and more directionless than I hoped, and the next couple years including the untimely deaths of a brother and my hero, my grandmother. I spiraled into smoking way too much pot and drinking too much Jack Daniels. An unexpected and fortunately not-life altering situation with a firearm on a New Year’s Eve was a serious wakeup call for me, and revised my life trajectory. Perhaps, like I am wont to say, “God works in spite of us.” Traveling on a LYE team was another one of those spur-of-the-moment decisions that would somehow transpire and lead me to enrolling in Dana College as a 24 year old freshman, starting my post-secondary studies from scratch, even though it was my second time in college. That acceptance at Dana College, and working with Richard (George) Schuler and the Director of Admissions, Dennis Barnum, created the possibility of dreams and opened me to experiences that would change my life. From incredible classmates, from freshmen to seniors because I was older, provided both academic and social experiences that inspired me. People like Kathy Swenson, Paulette Strecker, Barb Kalal, Sandy Barnum, Tom Kendall, Merle Brockhoff, or a roommate, Peter Bonde, kept me grounded. People in my actual class like Leanne Danahy, Shelly Peterson, Kevin Johnson, Sarah Hansen, or Michael Keenan were all more important to me than they will ever realize. I remember staying in on Friday and Saturday nights to study, and at times, people would come and drag me out of my room because they believed I needed to do something other than study. A trip to Europe for an interim, a transfer to the University of Iowa’s honors program and back to Dana woiuld propel me to seminary. And while I began to believe I had the intellectual capability to succeed in the academic world, I still had little idea where I was called, to what I should focus my energies. While I struggled with the choice of law school or seminary, I chose seminary because I was still trying to gain my mother’s approval, and foregoing seminary for her meant I no longer believed in God. And yet seminary and that first summer Greek class, the incredible classmates again, Sheryl Nielsen, Mary Jorgensen, Mark Van House, John Valentine, David Mattson, Lee Herberg from that summer, and those during junior year would change my understanding of faith and my decision, my sense of calling. Perhaps for the first time I began to dream.
The significance of beginning to dream, the willingness to believe in dreams, the taking the leap to dream creates an important consequence that is basic to life. The result of dreaming is to hope. It is connected to a faith, that something extraordinary is possible. My time at Dana started that for me; my professors, the things they taught as well as how they instructed us took all the disparate pieces of my life and established a foundation that has kept me grounded. My professors, who were pastors and mentors at Luther Northwestern Seminary taught me that faith needed to be both understood and practiced. Many of the things they offered from my Confessions class to that Constructive Theology class, incredible minds from Drs. Juel, Harrisville, Gaiser, Nestigen and Forde, Tiede and Fretheim imparted both wisdom and grace in ways that I am still understanding. And yet again, life would take unexpected turns from health to relationships, from leaving the clergy roster after taking on a bishop to feeling I was back at square one. Once again I would find dreams dashed only to turn to new ones. Two couples at dinner one night as I was waiting tables would turn into an interview and a return to the academy once again. And yet that road would not be an easy one . . . eventually through more health issues and a departure and a return, I would complete a doctoral degree and find myself in Wisconsin. Something that seemed more than an impossible vision, a pipe-dream at best, occurred, and yet in that first semester the chair told me that people would not like me because I was in the Technical Communication major within the department. I was stunned. That was nothing I was told when I interviewed that is for sure. And after 6 years I would be transient again. It’s interesting how when we look back we see connections and reasons for things we were blind to in the midst of them. My position at UW-Stout that important lessons, and I believe certainly prepared me to become a much more effective professor. Now I see the position at Stout as the vehicle that would ready me for what happened later in my academic career, but perhaps the real reason I was there was to take care of a little tornado that I would be introduced to about two years after I found my way to Menomonie. Likewise, I would meet a family (also colleagues) who would facilitate my final teaching position. And yet what happened during the time I have spent in Bloomsburg has been unlike anything I have ever experienced.
As I look back at a life that seems as fragile as it ever has, and there have been more than my share of moments wondering how my 17 ounce beginning would continue in the face of numerous medical experience, I find myself reconsidering dreams and what they are and how they affect us. Currently I wonder if my sort of merely meandering was the dream of a child who had no real carefully planned thoughts of where he would go or how that would be achieved. Some of the most significant moments of change in my life were happenstance – from the Marines to joining the LYE team, from meeting someone at dinner to interviewing for one position as I finished a doctoral degree and getting hired. And yet, here I am . . . when I was moving from Menomonie to Bloomsburg, I wanted to rethink my teaching and what it meant to be educated. A brilliant woman named Joan Navarre shared an article about what it meant for someone to claim their education. That article changed my perspective on what we were doing as professors. To claim something is to take charge of it, to make it your own, but also to take responsibility for it. And it involves dreaming about the possibilities. It means if you are in college, generally you are smart enough to be there, but asks what are you going to do with the opportunity? Life is funny in how it presents opportunity or possibility. Too often we overlook them. Too often we try to convince ourselves we are not capable or perhas we are afraid to venture out and take that chance. What I realize now, perhaps later than I should have is that our most important duty (and yes opportunity( in life is to teach another how to dream . . . and to convince them they are capable and lovable. As I look back I realize the connection between being able to dream is to believe we are loved as well as worthy of love.
That is the basis for human goodness. Sharing compassion and making another feel valued. If they are loved and valued, they can dream. While I am not completely sure, I think much of my inability to dream was because seldom in my life have I felt completely loved by someone or all that lovable to begin with. And yet, in many ways, I have been able to flourish for the most part. Maybe that is why I have worked hard to love other people, to genuinely care, and yet even some of my most intentional attempts have not been as successful as I wish. That is a possible reflection for another time. As I work on some things intentionally, I know that there are things I wish would have turned out differently, even in the immediate set of circumstances, be it with people who are more distant to things I would still like to accomplish. but we do not have much control beyond ourselves. Certainly my perception is altered at the moment, and my thoughts about priorities are more attuned than at other moments in my life. Just maybe I had more of a dream-life than I realized. What I do know is I have expereienced so many wonderful things. And for now . . . I just keep doing it, and to all of the rest of you, please dream!
Thank you as always for reading.
Michael









