Journeys of a Wandering Wordsmith

Journey with me on my blog!

After Helene: And the Leaf Still Holds
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

After Helene: And the Leaf Still Holds

Walking out your front door, you rarely consider how different life will be when you return home. When you walk back through that door. Like a portal, you leave one home behind ... and return to another altogether. On September 21, I left Asheville for a road trip to visit family and friends across Pennsylvania. On October 2, I returned home to a hellscape like nothing I'd ever seen.

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Everybody Needs an Uncle Pat
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

Everybody Needs an Uncle Pat

I became an uncle six years ago, and Uncle Pat has always been my template for uncling. Because everyone needs an Uncle Pat. Someone to remember them on their birthdays, buy them Slurpees, ask about their lives, and drive them around on special journeys. If my nieces or future nephews ever have anything positive to say about their Uncle Tom, it will be because Uncle Pat showed me how to uncle well.

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I Can't Believe I Came From Her
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

I Can't Believe I Came From Her

My grandmother died. These words rattle around my heart like pinballs that won't settle, even a week beyond her funeral. And yet I wonder if the settling of these pinballs would be any better – the finality of their lodging into the belly of that machine, no longer kept alive by another flap of the paddles. Mayme Alice was the last of my grandparents to leave this earth, and undoubtedly the one with whom I grew closest.

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Older Than Jesus
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

Older Than Jesus

Growing up, Jesus always seemed so much older than me. Not like eighty or ninety or a hundred "old," but when you're only eight or nine, thirty years old feels a hundred years away. But now to have lived the ages of 30 to 33, I have a new perspective on the life of Jesus. Turns out he was way younger – and way stronger – than I'd thought. I've had a tumultuous three years; perhaps the most shaping three years of my life. Again, as a storyteller, I can't help drawing parallels with Jesus' thirties.

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The Problem of Ravi Zacharias
Ponderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Ponderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

The Problem of Ravi Zacharias

Hiding begets hiding; darkness begets darkness. The problem of Ravi Zacharias is the problem of pastors and ministry leaders the world over. They struggle, too. We all do. And this idolatry of certain Christians needs to stop.God, I pray it stops.

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Another Dawn Closer
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

Another Dawn Closer

What a comfort. What an assurance. That no matter how much the last day or last four years have tested us, drained us, broken us . . . the sun rises anew. Gives us a new chance to absorb the light and also a new chance to shine it. Or as poet laureate, Amanda Gorman, perfectly put it at today's inauguration: "For there is always light if only we're brave enough to see it, if only we're brave enough to be it."

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A Time to Step Out and Speak Out
Ponderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Ponderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

A Time to Step Out and Speak Out

As a conflict-avoidant person, I've always had this general rule of thumb: stay away from politics when talking with other humans – online or offline. Just stay away. But something's changed in the last year. A tension not previously felt now rages in me, building over the span of Trump's presidency. I've often been left wondering: at what point do I step out and speak out . . . and at what point do I just throw up my hands and take a deep breath and let it be, and pray, and pray? It's hard to sit down for my weekly blog and ignore last week's events at the Capitol. The insanity that erupted and has been swirling in America, within Christianity since Donald Trump descended down that escalator six years ago. It's all I've been thinking about this week, and again I feel the tension. Bubbling tension that must be released.

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Prodigal Father
Reviews Thomas Mark Zuniga Reviews Thomas Mark Zuniga

Prodigal Father

The plot twist of the book is Nouwen's charge that we aren't merely to identify with the lost younger son or the lost older son. But we are to identify with the founding father. Becoming more like him as we walk this road. We are to be ones who create home for other people. Ones who keep them safe and warm. Ones who always welcome them in. Even – especially – after they leave.

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'Twas the Night Before Treatment
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

'Twas the Night Before Treatment

Tomorrow morning, bright and early, I set out on a new quest. A new quest within an already new journey of the last couple months – this unforeseen journey with an autoimmune disease. Tomorrow begins this new quest for healing and recovery. Remission. Or so I hope.

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A Time to Refrain from Embracing
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

A Time to Refrain from Embracing

Looking down at my precious niece in my arms, I realized it's really something, how we need physical touch to survive. Need to be swaddled. Need to be held. Need to feel the warmth of another human emanating against us, if only to affirm to one another we are not alone in this desert. To embrace for my soul or not to embrace for my body? Life with an autoimmune disease during the pandemic of the century: one calculated risk after another.

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Give Us Tomorrow's Barabbas
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

Give Us Tomorrow's Barabbas

Our entire lives we have wanted to be more present. And now that we've been given nothing but buckets upon buckets of the present, we are kicking away the pails and saying, "Give us back our precious longings." The savior we have anticipated through countless yesterdays is finally here in our midst, and we cry for Barabbas.

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Thank You for Being Brave
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

Thank You for Being Brave

I'm writing this blog from home. And I never blog from home. Like ever. I have no other choice. Nothing is open. No late-night coffee shops and no early-night coffee shops either, for that matter. Coronavirus has violently disrupted every facet of normalcy. Society's. My own. Normal Monday evenings aren't normal Monday evenings anymore. And for God only knows how much longer.

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Broken Belonging
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

Broken Belonging

Looking back on the last 16 years, I see that "takes too much effort" excuse as an easy out. Digging deeper, I see something else blocking my pursuit of church membership: my self-worth. Surprise, surprise; it's my single biggest struggle. Am I worthy of church membership? What do I even have to offer the church?

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My Name on a Stone
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

My Name on a Stone

I traveled to Pennsylvania for Christmas, my first trip there since Ahh died this summer. My grandfather's gravestone wasn't chiseled until just recently, so this was my first time visiting it. Seeing it. It was the first time I'd ever seen my name on a stone.

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Anything Mentionable is Manageable
Reviews Thomas Mark Zuniga Reviews Thomas Mark Zuniga

Anything Mentionable is Manageable

I saw the new Mr. Rogers movie, "A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood." It's unlike any other movie I've seen. A unique story structure, beautiful set design, and phenomenal acting. "A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood" is a movie that will stick with me for a while. I was teary-eyed the entire way – both from the sheer beauty of this story and its haunting connections to my own.

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God's Love is Still Reckless
Ponderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Ponderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

God's Love is Still Reckless

When "Reckless Love" first came out in 2017, I, like many others in Christian worshipdom, fell out of my seat. For the last year and a half, though, as many songs just do, it faded. Back at church, the electric guitar strings belted a familiar intro. One I'd not heard in a church setting for many, many months. "Reckless Love" returned to my life. And I couldn't skip it this time.

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Itch
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

Itch

I'm itching for home. God, I'm itching for regularity again. I'm itching for therapy and CrossFit and training for a marathon and the same coffee shops and writing my third book and building local friendships and taking Your Other Brothers to bold, new frontiers. I'm itching for this road trip to end.

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Leave Me Alone
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

Leave Me Alone

I'm grieving more than just the loss of my grandfather — a hero, a giant, an embodiment of God's love. I'm grieving all relational brokenness. I'm grieving human death for the first time, yes, but I'm also grieving everything else that separates humanity. Divorce, war, disagreement, misunderstanding, vitriol. Friends who aren't friends anymore.

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I'm Tired.
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

I'm Tired.

I just attended the second Revoice conference in St. Louis. Several of my fellow authors from Your Other Brothers also attended, and we'll have a full recap/conversation coming to our site next week. But for now, I wanted to shed some more personal thoughts on the conference and my life-on-the-road at large. The main one being: I'm tired.

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Waking Up from a Thousand What Isn'ts
Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga Wanderings Thomas Mark Zuniga

Waking Up from a Thousand What Isn'ts

Being present. I find it so difficult. Perhaps my greatest challenge. I entertain a thousand fantasies on any given day. Many of them "harmless." Or maybe not. A move to this city. A quick wandering to that one. Staying here in the Blue Ridge the rest of my life. Leaving tomorrow. Old friends, new friends.

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