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jamie tworkowski.



Last Updated: 8/4/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 29
Sign: Aquarius

City: Satellite Beach
State: Florida
Country: US
Signup Date: 1/27/2005

Blog Archive
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Wednesday, April 01, 2009 
i grew up watching this guy on MTV News so it was an honor to spend a few minutes with him during SXSW. Huge thanks to SPIN for making it happen.
SPIN - SXSW 2009: To Write Love on Her Arms
Currently listening:
Kingdom of Rust
By Doves
Release date: 2009-04-07
Wednesday, March 18, 2009 
by jamie tworkowski
Written for Catalyst Monthly

I've been listening to Ray Lamontagne for the last couple years. Ray is a brilliant songwriter who delivers stories in something like a deep smooth whisper. He has that golden voice but I think it's his honesty that I connect with even more. His songs seem to be born from questions and pain, and if I myself am honest in saying more, I think I connect with this because I am a person who thinks a lot about pain. I wrestle with the broken stuff in my own life and in the lives of the people around me. I have a lot of questions.

It is for all of the reasons above that some friends and I drove 500 miles from Florida to Atlanta to see Ray Lamontagne play on a Saturday night a couple months back. We parked and made our way excited to the door, and as we took our place in line, I heard it:

"You're going to Hell."

The man's voice was loud and not kind and he added his thoughts on fornication and homosexuality, angry answers to questions that no one was asking. In the first moment I was shocked and I then I was sad and then I was walking towards him.

"Do you think this is working?," I asked.

I figured he would be excited that someone actually wanted to talk to him, and he certainly seemed prepared for an argument. Instead, the yelling guy told me that I would need to talk to a different person, pointing toward the younger man to his left. (The yelling guy needed to keep yelling.) Now, this whole thing surprised me because I had no idea that these people had assistants. I guess the kid was learning the ropes, hoping to be prepared to yell on his own within the next year or two...

I told the kid that they needed to stop, that they were only doing damage, offending everyone. i told him that people respond to love, and that I could hear no love in their shouted judgments. His response made me more frustrated, and after a brief back-and-forth, I rejoined my friends in line and entered the show.

It took a while to calm down and let it go. In theory, the yelling guy and I believe some of the same things. "We're on the same team", you might say. But I believe in a God who maybe doesn't scream at people the first time he meets them. Evangelism aside, screaming at strangers seems a horrible marketing plan to me. I believe in a God who places a great emphasis on love, a God who loves people and asks his followers to do the same.

By the time Ray took the stage, I was able to enjoy the show. The best music is the kind that moves you, reminds you you're alive, takes you on a journey. I smiled through the opening "You Are the Best Thing", imagined during "Empty" and remembered during "I Still Care for You". I had been hoping all night to hear a song called "Jolene" and so I smiled again when it's opening chords arrived as the encore.

The song is a story song about a man lost and looking back on a broken relationship. You can see it from start to finish and the chorus echoes the words "I still don't know what love means". It is a confession, something like a question, and something in me stirs when I hear it. There is freedom in honesty and those are words I can sing myself.

And it hit me during that encore that I wished the shouting man could have heard Ray Lamontagne sing those words. I wish he could have attended this show he chose to protest. I don't know how hearing happens - how certain things move and change us, but I wished it could have happened to the guy outside.

I think I went back to him in my mind because he is also the reputation of The Church. We are known to the world as something like the guy outside. We tell people how to vote and think and live. We shout our judgments. We are quick with our answers and slow to confess our questions, maybe slower even still to meet other people in theirs.

A shouted "You're going to Hell" is an awful introduction to a God who desires to love and know His children. Ray had my attention with "I still don't know what love means." I can relate to that, and I can't help but think that a lot of other people can as well.

And it's interesting that all of this happened on a Saturday night, because Saturday nights set up Sunday mornings. Some people stay out late, hunting for meaning and answers in songs and bars and a thousand other places, because they're certain that our Sunday mornings would only be more like shouting strangers. But what if we were known as a people in true pursuit of love, a people committed to representing it well? What if we were known for constantly showing up to wrestle the needs and questions around us, and what if we took it so far as to be honest about our own?


Currently listening:
Trouble
By Ray LaMontagne
Release date: 2004-09-14
Monday, March 09, 2009 

but do i really have to wait until july?
Currently listening:
No Line On The Horizon
By U2
Release date: 2009-03-03
Saturday, January 24, 2009 

Currently listening:
Prospekt's March
By Coldplay
Release date: 2008-11-24
Saturday, January 24, 2009 
My friend Damion was hanging out at the bungalow (office) today. We sat on the front porch and talked for a while and then we ate pizza on the back porch and then we threw the football in the back yard - it was all pretty great. Damion may have the brightest blue eyes in human history and he was born to sing. It was good to hear the hope back in his voice and i really hope he'll keep coming by, because i think we're all better for it. The years just fell away as we talked, and i suppose that's how you know that you've been found by a friend.

Anyway, Damion told me that i should have a twitter (or "be on twitter"), so now i do/am.

i sat next to Brad Pitt at a movie a few weeks back - it may or not have been Benjamin Buttom and it may or may not have been the premiere and yes i realize that is highly not normal. Anyway, Damion used this as an example of something that i could share via twitter. i agreed that it was a strong example as it would likely make people say "oh wow", but if i'm Brad Pitt and i'm trying to watch myself in a movie and the dude next to me is typing "i'm sitting next to Brad Pitt" into his telephone, i would probably get annoyed and want a different seat. So i decided to sit on this information until now, and i decided to wait to join twitter until now.

Come along on future adventures: twitter.com/jamietworkowski

i think the main reason i'm doing this is because i'll probably write more if i can do it two sentences at a time, while not sitting still.

: )
jamie

PS: Brad Pitt was very kind. We were faced with a "two drinks, one cupholder" scenario, and he insisted that i take it.
Currently listening:
Some Are Lakes
By Land Of Talk
Release date: 2008-10-07
Thursday, December 11, 2008 
Invisible Children guys showed me this yesterday. It seriously rules...

Head Sways and Hands to Chest Galore from Behind the Scenes on Vimeo.
Currently listening:
Viva La Vida
By Coldplay
Release date: 2008-06-17
Saturday, December 06, 2008 
i had a conversation with a pretty girl called nicole today in new york city. CNN was nice enough to show it live on the internet and you can watch it HERE.
Currently listening:
Saturday Nights & Sunday Mornings
By Counting Crows
Release date: 2008-03-25
Thursday, November 06, 2008 
My friend Jeremy emailed me some questions. i started typing the answers at a coffee shop called Fido in Nashville. i think it used to be a pet store so that's where the name came from. i finished the answers at this little wooden table by the window in my room in Satellite Beach. Satellite Beach is a funny name for a town and i guess they call it that because the satellites launch just up the coast from us. i'm not sure if it's accurate to say that "the satellites launch" - it might be more true to say that shuttles and/or rockets launch and they give the satellites a ride to space (?) i have a lot to learn. i wonder what they used to call this place before the space program?

One thing i forgot to mention in the interview - i forgot to list Counting Crows as one of my favorite bands. They are. If you go to Fido in Nashville, you should listen to the Counting Crows second album, which is called "Recovering the Satellites". i graduated from Satellite High School and i believe our class song was "Satellite" by Dave Matthews, but i'm not positive. Dave Matthews seems like a nice guy.

We don't talk about any of these things in the interview.

: )
Currently listening:
Recovering the Satellites
By Counting Crows
Release date: 1996-10-15
Saturday, September 20, 2008 
josh moore is one of my favorite people. it is my opinion that his music is important and that he should stand on stages and make it more often. sidenote: this video was shot at six something in the morning, which makes it even more impressive. if you haven't already... meet josh moore.

myspace.com/joshuamoore
Tuesday, August 26, 2008 
Donald Miller was asked to pray (the closing Benediction) at the Democratic National Convention tonight in Denver. i'm pretty proud of my buddy Don, as in many ways, this is a brave move. Regardless of what you believe or who you plan to vote for, Don's prayer is pretty hard to argue with. i hope you'll take a moment to read it:

"Father God,

This week, as the world looks .. the leaders in this room create a civil dialogue about our future.

We need you, God, as individuals and also as a nation.

We need you to protect us from our enemies, but also from ourselves, because we are
easily tempted toward apathy.

Give us a passion to advance opportunities for the least of these, for widows and orphans, for single moms and children whose fathers have left.

Give us the eyes to see them, and the ears to hear them, and hands willing to serve them.

Help us serve people, not just causes. And stand up to specific injustices rather than vague notions.

Give those in this room who have power, along with those who will meet next week, the courage to work together to finally provide health care to those who don't have any, and a living wage so families can thrive rather than struggle.

Help us figure out how to pay teachers what they deserve and give children an equal opportunity to get a college education.

Help us figure out the balance between economic opportunity and corporate gluttony.
We have tried to solve these problems ourselves but they are still there. We need your help.

Father, will you restore our moral standing in the world.

A lot of people don't like us but that's because they don't know the heart of the average American.

Will you give us favor and forgiveness, along with our allies around the world.

Help us be an example of humility and strength once again.

Lastly, father, unify us.

Even in our diversity help us see how much we have in common.

And unify us not just in our ideas and in our sentiments—but in our actions, as we look around and figure out something we can do to help create an America even greater than the one we have come to cherish.

God we know that you are good.

Thank you for blessing us in so many ways as Americans.

I make these requests in the name of your son, Jesus, who gave his own life against the forces of injustice.

Let Him be our example.

Amen."
Currently listening:
For Emma, Forever Ago
By Bon Iver
Release date: 2008-02-19