This morning I woke up twice. Once because, well, I guess sometimes something just wakes you up. A thought? A baby crying? A really weird dream? One never knows. The second and final time to a dog howling out in the distance. It could have been a cry of pain. All I really remember was thinking that it's only 7 am or so and that I should try and get more sleep. And then there was the thought, "doesn't the dog know I'm trying to sleep here?" Clearly street dogs are no more aware of our need for sleep after ringing in the new year than, say, the sun.
The new year always puts me, and several million other individuals, in a philosophical frame of mind. Several years ago while sitting at dinner with my step-mom in Denver, I reneged entirely on the idea of new year's resolutions. My step-mom likes to make new year's goals. (Any change in philosophy or practice calls for conversation over a glass of wine and sushi at the Four Seasons in Doha, where she and my dad recently moved.) New year's resolutions tend to last for a day, a week, a month, but not typically for an entire year. Goals are a bit more...trackable, flexible, renegotiable, measurable, up my alley.
So I'm now sitting in the same spot I sat last Thanksgiving reflecting over sunrises and pecan pie. I wonder what my goals will be for 2012. Yes, January 1 might be a bit late to be deciding these things. I could say that I want to master the entire Turkish language. But that is not possible this side of eternity. I do want to get better at Turkish. Yet how do you measure such a thing? Does that look like being able to discuss everything from the stock market to aliens in outer space while not sounding like a small child? Or I could say that I want to memorize every story in the first four of the NT. Could be realistic. Or could it be that I want to keep my 10k time consistently under an hour? It always helps to run downhill for 10.8k.
The possibilities are truly endless. Everything from learning to make dantel (very detailed crocheting that women do here...I'm basically hopeless) to checking out every bus company in the country of Turkey. In search of the decision I plan to spend this afternoon on my favorite ridge, hopefully not freezing to death, in prayer. Always thankful that I serve One who reveals Himself and His desires to His people.