Play Leads to Creative Strategy for Healing

“In coming!” the five year old yelled as he dove under the TV tray.

Splat! The crab apple cracked open against the apple tree and sprayed the enemy.

I stayed low behind the bushes to avoid a barrage of retaliation. I put the stem of the crab apple grenade between my teeth and gave it a yank. It was armed. I tossed it high over the bushes and watched it slice through the tree branches, releasing two apples that dropped down on Denny. A direct hit.

Craig shouted for Denny to duck under the TV tray, but it was too late. My third crab apple grenade smashed down hard, rattling the flimsy tray and tossing the snacks into the air. Success!

“We surrender!” Shouted Denny.

I stood up with a pile of grenades in my arms and walked toward Denny and Craig with the pride of victory welling up within my soul.

“Now!” Shouted Craig, catching me by surprise.

I was met with a shower of apples that appeared from behind their backs. The first hit jostled my arm full of apples, dumping them to the ground. I turned and jumped into the nearby bushes. Apples smashed through the branches landing all around me.

Thankfully I was unscathed, but they were camped out next to the crab apple tree and the only grenades I had were the near misses within my reach. They also had our snacks and my stomach rumbled for a treat.

I had no choice but to surrender and invoke the Geneva convention so I could eat. After all, little boys need food to grow big and strong, especially with me entering the first grade in a couple weeks.

Convinced that I was trembling behind the bushes, Craig and Denny set down their apples and grabbed one of the numerous snacks. The treats were so delicious that they didn’t see me walk over to them. I quickly grabbed a handful of apples and pelted them at close range. They dropped their treats and ran into the garage. I packed up the candy and headed home, the winner.

Before entering my home, I circled back around and met Denny and Craig on their back steps where we chatted and ate the snacks. It had been another exciting day filled with adventure and we couldn’t wait to see what our creative play would bring about the next day. But for the time, we leaned back against the steps and chatted about how good life was.

We didn’t know, until later in life, how our playtime allowed us to develop adult skills. Craig knew that the TV tray would protect him from the falling debris, as he sought it’s protection. His insights and methodical approach to life would one day shine as an executive of a major chemical engineering firm.

Denny always seemed to be caught in the middle of life happening to him. He was always a free spirited musician who just lived life naturally. It was no wonder he didn’t take cover, but instead watched the apples slice through the branches, depositing him with a juicy shrapnel.

I was always the creative and strategic innovator. Up until we got together, a crab apple was just another apple to the guys. They had no idea how much fun it would be to play Rat Patrol or War. And, my six year old mentality was pretty good at scrambling to find a way to win.

Years later, I realized how important that early stage of life was to each of us. We were being groomed for our future and didn’t understand that how we faced our daily lives would establish our future. We weren’t cognizant of how we would develop and use those early year experiences to the betterment or detriment of our lives.

Psychologists tell us that we go through four main stages in life and each stage adds to the previous one. What is more fascinating to me is how we fall back to the last stage where we were most comfortable the moment we encounter a crisis in our life. It seems like I’ve revisited adolescence several times including when my dad died in a plane crash and the divorce I faced.

The good news is that my mind and life experiences stayed intact and allowed me to methodically work back to being an adult (emotionally speaking) in a reasonable fashion after grieving and regrouping. In fact, I’ve noticed that the same processes help in getting past dates who have dumped me or immature co-workers who don’t understand how to be professional.

The steps I take for bounding back includes:

1. Admit How I Feel — Acknowledging my negative feelings validate my right to live and feel. It allows me to be authentic and face the fact that I was hurt.

2. Understand My Feelings — Focusing on what is at the core of why I feel bad enlightens me to my core desires that were blocked or rejected. This gives me the ability to decide if my desires are worth supporting or changing, and gives opportunity to refine it.

3. Make A Great Choice — Regardless of the pain or hurt feelings I’ve endured, I have the opportunity to make a choice of picking myself up and moving forward in seeing my desires fulfilled. This sense of action moves me closer to being fulfilled and further away from having a pity party or falling into a depression.

4. Celebrate My Growth — Every time I’ve gone through a crisis, I’ve had the opportunity to refine my perspective, clarify my desires and gained wisdom that is helpful when shared with others. This gift allows me to be a blessing to others while I’m on the trail to my hearts desire.

I never thought so much would develop within my soul as a result of lobbing apple grenades through the trees. Nor did I understand that my creativity and ability to strategize would be used to help others walk through their crisis. As for today, I’m currently developing a program designed to help the hurting through a new creative process. I hope to share more about it in the near future, but for now I’ll just remind you that you were wonderfully and fearfully made.

Copyright © by CJ Powers
Photo © volff – Fotolia.com

Conservatives Bash Their Own While Liberals Control the Media

I recently interviewed a man who grew up in a pro Newt Gingrich household, but he shifted his voting perspective to Romney after wealthy friends shared that he was the only possibility to beat Obama. That was until he learned that his democratic coworkers were supporting Romney. He soon found out that the one person the Democrats had no clue how to attack without alienating middle class Americans was Rick Santorum.

The man continued to explain his appreciation for how the Tea Party originally supported Michele Bachmann and his excitement over Ron Paul’s Libertarian roots and track record. He informed me that neither one was prepared for the attacks by Republicans in the primary.

After chatting further about how a house divided would surely fall, our discussion shifted to “The Hunger Games.” He was thrilled that the film had an anti-big government message. While subtle, he felt it was one little step forward for conservatives, even though the film is morally bankrupt with children killing children.

The conversation shifted to the perfectly timed “Bullying” documentary that released during a time when the Bully agenda was trying to get through the Illinois Senate. He noted that its timing was no mistake, as the film’s release was well planned out by liberals. My response was simple, “What did the conservatives do with the media during the same period of time?” He looked at me like I was crazy.

I couldn’t blame him, as I got on a soapbox about how dozens of films are financed by liberals each year and how conservatives fund few. It doesn’t take rocket science to know that the one paying for the message gets to determine what our country watches. The funny thing is that conservatives love to police the ratings and complain about the content, but they lack in producing great alternative films.

I recently attended an event with numerous filmmakers. Many of us had the opportunity to get significant funding for our next film project, but there was one catch. We had to include one pro gay scene and an anti-gun message. Every liberal filmmaker jumped at the opportunity, while the three of us conservatives chatted about our integrity.

It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that the media drives our society and changes opinions. It only took a handful of tweets for Obama to capture the under 35-year-old vote. And, advertisers see a huge jump in sales every time they invest in product placement with a movie takes off.

So where are the conservative film investors? Why aren’t they funding some incredible stories that can make a positive difference in our children? We live in the age of information and it appears that conservatives have forgotten to show up, allowing liberals to instill in the young a future agenda that will make the last 20 years look like child’s play.

Review: The Hunger Games

The most significant movie of the decade is “The Hunger Games.” At the time of this writing, it’s about to surpass $400MM worldwide with its third weekend approaching. The film takes place in the powerful world of Panem, which forces children to kill children for its entertainment.

The parallel to the Roman Empire and its gladiators was purposeful. And, the parallel to the United States and its reality television shows was also purposeful. In all three worlds people have gotten to the point where they take pleasure in watching people being humiliated, brought to tears, or suffering physically.

This voyeuristic thrill came upon the Roman Empire when the wealthy came into power and the common people became apathetic. Once apathy reigned in the United States and the wealthy were in control of society, reality television dominated the people’s pass time. In Panem, the same is true, giving rise to their hunger games.

The film’s messages go beyond the political statements and into the area of moral character. Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence) is a teenager who cares for her family and always makes appropriate decisions. She even refuses to kill any of her peers except in self-defense. When under the pressure of survival, she’ll put her toes over the line by setting up circumstances that cause others to die, but never chooses to kill directly.

The semblance of respect that the character gains through these “noble” acts provides viewers plenty of ammunition to develop likeminded morals. Unfortunately, the film also teaches that lying is a prudent survival skill and appropriate when circumstances dictate.

With America no longer teaching morals and ethics in school and many churches focusing on growing their congregations rather than teaching godly morals, the film industry is left with the job of instilling their morals into the youth of America who are mesmerized by “The Hunger Games.”

When asked, “What do you hope the readers will come away with when they read the book?” Author Suzanne Collins says, “Questions about how elements of the book might be relevant in their own lives. And, if they’re disturbing, what they might do about them.”

The film makes it very clear that America is perfectly in sync with Panem and the Roman Empire. We know what happened to the Roman Empire and the film allows us to contemplate if we will do anything before the fall of America. Of course, previous societies have given rise to the phrase, “History repeats itself.”