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An Evening with Anne Lamott
October 19, 2018
St. Paul's United Methodist Church, Houston
People are fanning themselves in the church. The air isn't on, it's a packed house, and it is a warm October night in Houston. I dare to ask to sit in an open pew less than fifty feet from the pulpit.
I am surrounded by people with strong political and spiritual views, and we talk about important things while we wait.
And then she arrives. It's Anne Lamott, and she seems different than the last time I heard her speak, ten or so years back, stronger, more confident, even...dare I say it?...happy. She has a new book.
“I accidentally wrote this book on hope. It was originally called Doomed,” she tells us. We laugh. That's one thing we adore about Anne Lamott: she dares to be honest, and she finds a way to be honest while also making us laugh.
“I'm as scared and angry as everyone else, but one of the blessings of being a little bit older is that being scared and angry doesn't last as long. And you don't always remember why you are scared and angry.”
Anne Lamott is here to share what she has learned in this life with us. She has put everything she knows in this little book, Almost Everything, written for her young niece and grandson:
“We are not alone.”
“Love gives me hope.”
“I spent a lot of years unlearning everything I'd been taught as a child.”
“All truth is paradox.”
We listen to Anne. We laugh with Anne. She reads a few bits from her book, but mostly she talks, seemingly extemporaneously. A few brave souls pose questions to Anne. One woman tells her that when she was at her lowest, in an abusive relationship, she saw Anne on tv, and she asked herself, “Who is this woman?” and she got Anne's books and she changed her life. “Could you give me a hug?” the woman asks Anne. Anne says yes.
This book is a hug from Anne to the world.