We’re probably all familiar with prequels and origin stories as tropes in popular media. It
seems these days any story worth telling is worth telling again from the beginning.
Our personal origin stories might not be star-studded big-budget blockbusters, but they
carry significantly more meaning. For better or worse, we are the result of our individual
experiences. We can try to reboot the story, try to recast the characters, and maybe even come up with some new plot twists, but we can’t fundamentally alter the story while still being true to ourselves. What we can and should do is try to engage with our past and understand what it means for us at different stages of life.
As I age, I see new meaning in my past to which youth, immaturity, or inexperience left me blind. The story didn’t change, but the point-of-view of the reviewer did. UUCG has an origin story. Unitarian Universalism has an origin story. You have an origin story. I have positive feelings about my family of origin, the experiences of my youth, and the constellations of people, places, and things that led me to who I am today. Maybe you do and maybe you don’t.
Whether your past shaped you in positive ways or you overcame adversity and feel that you’ve made it in spite of your history, we are still connected to our origins. Let this new year be a season of understanding and acceptance even if it can’t be one of celebration and embrace.
~Ian Van Sice