The Ministry of a Braxton Scholar: A Taste of Sarah Peterson’s Writing
Editor’s note: The current print edition of ESR Reports
includes Development Director Marty Sulek’s article, “Parallel Lives,” a profile
of benefactor Viola Braxton and student Sarah Peterson. For more recent work
by Sarah and other ESR students, visit esr.earlham.edu/writing-as-ministry.
Marty writes, “Sarah Peterson believes that writing and storytelling are important
ways to communicate God’s transforming power. Through ESR’s Writing as Ministry
curriculum, she’s had the chance to improve her writing skills as an aspect
of her training in ministry. The following story is excerpted from a lighthearted
writing exercise that was conducted in Peter Anderson’s August 2003 intensive
course, Aspects of Writing as Christian Ministry.”
I put my hands up to wet my hair, already worrying that
shampooing it again will wash out more of the dye I so painstakingly put in
only days before. Before dyeing it Black Cherry Red, I remembered the stories
my mother has antagonized me with—Russian women she knew who, in trying to
color or curl their hair, scorched themselves so miserably with vile chemicals
that all their hair broke off, never, for some reason not fully explained,
to grow again.
In direct contradiction to my mother’s fears, my hair hardly
notices the chemicals I slather it with. The dye washes out as quickly as it
can. I wonder if even the chemicals the Russian women used would be strong
enough to bring my hair to heel.
My hair is like my life in that regard. I long for lightening
bolts, drama that will turn me inside out before setting me on my feet again.
I want to be harrowed by raw experience, prepared for the planting of spiritual
seeds. Instead, I feel, I have spent the last year in a spiritual drought,
pacing anxiously, scanning the sky for signs of rain, worrying about the future
of the crops.
I do things to step out, to shake my fist at the sky, to
send up smoke signals, warnings that things will be different. I wanted that
with my hair—to start a year decisively, to make everyone turn their heads
and stare. Instead, these gestures seem like prisoners shifting weakly under
their chains, the creaking and clanking audible but signifying nothing.
My hair feels like that now, as I rub it with shampoo. When
I lean back into the shower stream, letting it rinse out the soap, water swirls
and spatters in the white ceramic basin pink around my feet.
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