Wednesday, June 22, 2016

And now for something (almost) completely different

I haven't been a reporter for a week and a half now, and I do not miss it.

For a while, reporting, I was content with actually being able to write every day, but over the past -- too many -- years, it has become increasingly more obvious that it isn't the type of writing I wanted to do and was, in fact, keeping me from being creative very much at all. For the few who've read my sporadic posts at all regularly, I'm always wanting to write more, but haven't done very well meeting that goal. I've just been stagnating...

But I digress.

I'm not unemployed, and I'm still with the paper, but I'm doing something almost entirely different: layout and page design. And before I started on the copy desk last Monday, I had no idea what I was doing or whether I would even like it.

First, a quick(ish) recap:

Back in mid-February, my editor took a public information officer position with a nearby city, and pretty much everyone (coworkers, the high school principal, Chamber of Commerce executive director...) expected me to be moved into her slot, especially since I've basically been an assistant editor for six-plus years. Well, that didn't happen. They hired someone from outside, a man from Indiana (with whom I have no beef). I was a little deflated, even though I hadn't considered it a lock. A few weeks later, my friend Nathan, our copy desk chief, offered me a job on the desk that would come with a small but significant raise (i.e., larger than anything I'd received in nearly 11 years as a reporter).

I was skeptical. "I have no idea how to do that," I told him. He countered with the fact that since I already knew how the paper looks, what goes where, can proof on the fly and already write good headlines, that I'd learn quickly.

Being me, I vacillated and over-thought it for more than a month. Part of me felt that taking it would be almost a cop-out, a giving up on pursuing something elsewhere in another area. I have wanted to leave, so badly, for so long, but am too practical to just quit with no job/safety net, and have made too little to have any savings of note. I have applied for so many jobs and mostly heard nothing. In March, I scored an actual, in-person interview for a job I really wanted, as an internal senior writer at Valencia College in Orlando, but didn't get it (obviously. Maybe someone else needed more than I did?). I was frank with Nathan about the fact that I've been with the paper and in Port Charlotte too long, and want to leave. His reply was practical: "Why don't you learn a new skill and make a little more money before doing it?"

I made pro and con lists, and prayed about it, prayed some more, and while the pros outweighed the cons, I still couldn't seem to decide. What really clinched it, finally, was a chat with our executive editor (about whom I have many opinions but which I'm too polite to share). He had heard about the possibility of my leaving editorial, and "wanted to know where my head was." I told him I was seriously considering it, and not just because of the money. When he asked how much of a raise I would be getting -- small though it is -- he sort of dropped his head and basically said "we can't do that for you in editorial."

The moment I really decided, and told Nathan I'd accept the job, I felt so light.

I agreed to stay as a reporter until the middle of this month, when I would complete the special graduation section I've produced for the past six years (the new editor was beyond relieved he wouldn't be stuck with it). My last story for the paper wasn't some spectacular piece, but a rather anticlimactic advance of a free community education event about an archaeological site in the city. Cleaning out my desk was strange. My coworkers bought me balloons and flowers.

And so, I started on the desk last Monday.

It has made for a change in schedule, too -- it really only dawned on me the Thursday before that I'd basically be working second shift, going in around 12:30 p.m. or 1 and then working til about 9 -- and I was a little trepidatious about learning InDesign. I did a fair amount of observing my first day, but picked up on some of the basics pretty quickly, even flowing in a story and a photo or two, editing copy down to fit the space and helping with proofing before the pages were sent to be plated. By day four I was doing photo pages. I haven't messed up anything too badly, and I'm moving a bit faster than last week, although I still have lots to learn, and am definitely slower than those who've been at it for a while. It's not second-nature yet.

My view these days. On day one, I designed the page on the left.

I'm getting used to the new personalities I'm working with, too. Everyone's nice (both our proofers, two women, tend to wear hats, oddly. They favor fedoras -- a nod to newspapers of old? -- and trilbies). Yesterday, one of the other copy deskers brought in cheesecake. Speaking of the proofers, I take pedantic pleasure in finding errors in copy they miss. :) Even more of a change is my commute, now 10 minutes in the opposite direction, as opposed to about 25 before (although I don't have enough time to say my morning rosary while I drive now, so I'm saying it earlier in the day), which is sure to save me buying gas so often.

More of a night-owl anyway, one thing I am enjoying is easing into my days. I'm still up at 7ish (the dog won't let me sleep in much beyond that, lol), but can take more time with morning prayer. I'm washing the dishes in my sink more promptly, and cooking more frequently (I stewed tomatoes down for sauce the other morning, and can't even remember the last time I did that).

And I'm writing in the mornings. Nothing noteworthy, as yet, but last week I journaled four days in a row, something I haven't done regularly in too long. Hopefully, not spending my days writing about scintillating topics like school district budgets will save up brain power for an idea I've been kicking around in my head for a bit -- disparate thoughts that keep whispering at me to connect them. I'm trying to persuade myself to get back to the gym regularly after too long an absence, and want to go to daily Mass several times a week now that I'm able.

Do I love it,? The jury's still out, but I don't dread going into work every day. That's obviously a change for the better, and learning something new is always a good thing. I can't see into the future, or know how I'll feel in six months, but I can say without a doubt that, while not a drastic alteration, it's a challenge I needed.

Tuesday, February 09, 2016

For Lent this year

I decided several weeks ago that I won't be giving up anything particular for Lent this time around. Instead, I'm going to chose something a bit more active.

Or, to be more precise, something more contemplative.

My parish, not terribly long ago, established a small perpetual Adoration chapel. I've been wanting to go, but haven't made it thus far. I ask and whine at God for a lot (this past week, I actually found myself angry with Him, which is unusual for me -- it was possibly the first time ever -- and a topic for another post), but need to be better about just listening and being present in His grace. 
from "A Month of Sundays: The Foolishness of Father Brown," Msgr. John J. O'Connor

Lent seems like a good time to establish that as a routine (it worked really well a few years ago when I started praying the Rosary on my morning commute; if I don't go into my workday having said the Rosary I actually feel off). So, I've decided I'll go to Adoration least once a week to start and, since I'm off work on Mondays, well, that's the plan so far.
Also, donating things. I've been slacking in the corporal works of mercy area, and the least I can do is donate some of the many items I'm not wearing to St. Vincent de Paul to help "clothe the naked."

Saturday, February 06, 2016

Stumped, with a deadline.

I have a slight conundrum.


Probably six months ago, my former roommate Pam and her fiancĂ©, Adam, asked me to give one of the readings at their wedding, and I was, of course, honored to say yes.

But it has turned out to be more of a challenge than I anticipated. If it was a Catholic wedding, there would be no issue (couples select from a list of suggested readings for a first and second reading, psalm and Gospel), but it's not: Pam's Episcopal -- although a large portion of her family is more on the Evangelical side -- and not a frequent church-goer; and Adam's mom is Jewish and dad is Catholic. I think he was baptized, but that's about the extent of it; he was neither confirmed nor bar mitzvahed, and while he'll go to church with Pam's family, doesn't attend a temple. They've apparently agreed to raise potential kids in the Episcopal church, but their wedding ceremony is being performed by a friend who is a notary, and is taking place outside at a gorgeous historic Florida house (The Burroughs Home. Love the wrap-around porch!) along the Caloosahatchee River in Fort Myers, which, while beautiful, isn't a house of worship.


Which is where I come in. One of Adam's sisters is giving a second, non-religious reading, but basically it's my job to lend a note of spirituality to the proceedings (no pressure, right?). The only direction I was given was "I'm sure you'll pick something that's just perfect!" (from Pam) and, laughingly, "Nothing from the book of Revelation," (from Adam), which was a downer, because that was totally going to be my first choice. ;)


I started looking at potential options before Thanksgiving. I knew from the start that I didn't want to chose the (in my opinion) always overused 1 Corinthians 13 ("Love is patient, love is kind," etc...), and it seemed obvious to go with something from the Old Testament, which would cover all the bases for everybody's families, Jewish or Christian. If I had my druthers, I'd pick Sirach 40: 17(b)-27, which I find so lovely (I've always wondered why Sirach 26, although also great, is one of the pre-approved Catholic wedding reading options and 40 isn't), or Colossians 3: 12-17, but since this isn't my wedding, and more importantly as the Episcopal church doesn't recognize the book of Sirach, that put the kibosh on that. The "set me as a seal" verse from Song of Songs is great, but it's so short. I'm partly tempted to cobble together something from Proverbs 3, 4 and 5 which, while the passages I'm considering are actually about wisdom and not about marriage, could still potentially be taken that way. Psalm 128 is a solid contender, and of course there's always Proverbs 31, but I'm not sure if the latter wouldn't be too much, since I want to find a happy medium between a good reading for both of them and being not-too-preachy.


There is no doubt (no doubt -- please feel free to throw something in my general direction or figuratively smack the back of my head) that I'm over-thinking this, because it's what I do. Both of my best friends have told me to stop. One suggested reading the Beatitudes. And I suppose I could always fall back on Genesis 2/"This one at last is bone of my bones, flesh of my flesh."

Of course, because I wasn't totally satisfied with my Old Testament options (I keep wondering if there are wedding/marriage related scripture passages in the Old Testament I might not have considered) just last night I decided to open myself up to the New Testament for possibilities. As a result, I'm now finding myself -- quite unexpectedly -- leaning towards Romans 12: 1-2, 9-13.


Must. Choose. Something! The wedding is in three weeks!

Saturday, January 16, 2016

Reading and reality

I'm reading two quite disparate books at the moment. One is Dante's Purgatory (so much lighter, tone-wise, than the Inferno, which I suppose should be expected, really. I like the symmetry, too, of his having cast off a belt in hell and being gird again at the foot of the seven-storey mountain with another belt, this time of humility. I'm making all sorts of fun notes as I read. An English major is always an English major. :) But I digress...), and the other is "Career of Evil," the third in the Cormoran Strike series written by J.K. Rowling under her nom de plume, Robert Galbraith. It was a Christmas gift from my brother Daniel.


As I was reading along last night, Strike, the one of the two main characters, has to follow a lead to Scotland. He takes a train to Edinburgh and then a car borrowed off a friend to Melrose, which is an hourish south. Strike arrives and "deposited the Mini in a car park beside (Melrose) abbey, with its dark red arches against a pale blue sky."

I parked our rental car in that same lot during the trip Mom and I took to Scotland in June, 2014, and the abbey ruins are, indeed, stark and bold against the sky.

The beautiful ruins of Melrose Abbey

Walking through the Wynd, Melrose.
In the book, Strike sets off in search of a house which is addressed on the Wynd. He wanders up the high street "to the central square, where a unicorn-topped pillar stood." When he misses it, he doubles back on the High Street and found the "narrow entrance in the walls to his right, only large enough for a pedestrian, which led to a dim inner courtyard. ... (the) home had a blue front door and was reached by a short flight of steps."

And I knew exactly where he was, because the Wynd is a small alley that cuts through from Bucchleuch Street, where our B&B was, to Melrose's High Street. And in the middle there really is a small courtyard, with a shop, and a museum and that house -- which when I was there, had pots of red flowers on the steps -- that are only accessible from that courtyard.


Toward the end of the chapter, Strike also walks "to Millers of Melrose, a family butcher he had noticed on his troll around the town" where he buys some meat pies for his return journey.

I even have a picture of Millers' butcher shop. Why would I take a picture of a butcher shop, you ask? Well, as my mom and I were walking off our dinner the night we got to Melrose(amazing food at the King's Arms, and banoffee pie for dessert that I still want to try and recreate sometime), we went to the center of town, home of that unicorn-topper pillar, and then wandered a bit before turning in for the night. Close to the center of town was one butcher's shop which bore a rather hoity-toity sign that declared it was owned by "Martin Baird: High Class Family Butcher." It was only when we reached the bottom of the same street that we spotted Miller's. Mom and I were a little tired, still, and in a goofy mood, because I said something about it clearly being the low-class butcher of Melrose, and we both just dissolved in giggles. Maybe you had to be there to find it funny...
Snobby butcher

Millers: butcher to the people.



















Anyway, maybe it's because I haven't traveled terribly extensively, but there is still a strange thrill for me reading about places I've now been. It happened after Rome as well, a sense of wonder and of somehow being in on something, in the know because you're not just imagining it, but have seen it and experienced it for yourself. And even, as in this case, when the book is fiction, you know the author (Rowling, although of course she's Scottish herself, so it makes sense) has been there, too. It's a tenuous connection, really, but I also know what it's like to see or experience something, even something tiny, and then include it in something you're writing. It just makes writing, and reading, all the more real.

Saturday, January 02, 2016

What I carry

This is a long one. I could probably have edited it more than I have, but to be quite honest, I didn't want to. Some I wrote over the last few months. Some was written, well, years ago.


I have been thinking a lot about death recently. Maybe because, not too long ago, I read a book about praying for those in Purgatory. Also, in November the Catholic Church makes a point of praying even more for the souls of our beloved dead.

Work plays into it, too. In early October at the paper where I work, we covered the case of a missing infant, an 8-week-old baby named Chance who, we in the newsroom felt the more we learned about his parents, was likely dead. It sadly turned out to be true: the father beat the child and then suffocated him -- the mother doing nothing to stop it -- leaving him in his crib for eight days before burying him in a shallow grave in an undeveloped part of the city and fleeing to another state. It is appalling and sad to read about these things as well as to write about them  -- murders, accidents, child molestations. You don't dwell on them, can't really -- and not what you envision writing when you go into journalism. At least I didn't. And while I'm not the cops and courts reporter, we're a small staff, and all of us wound up writing several stories on Chance's death. I covered a candle-light memorial vigil for baby, and the sorrow of his grandparents and of complete strangers in the community was palpable. Of course I cried for this little one, who deserved far more -- a life -- from those entrusted with his care. It was only later that I remembered his drug-addicted parents -- who appeared stone-faced in mug shots and first-appearance videos -- needed my prayers, too.

There was a lot of anger in the community toward the parents, who are in jail awaiting trial, but also toward their families, whom strangers felt should have done more to protect the baby. A lot of that vitriol was unleashed on social media, a laying of blame and criticism, and it got me thinking about how grateful I am that my own family's tragedy played out in the days before the Internet was as ubiquitous as it is now (the fact that I am now, by writing about it, putting it out there doesn't escape me, but as it's a matter of public record for anyone who does a little digging, and as only about five people read this, and two of them know already...).

My father's death -- sad as it was, the cancer taking him so quickly -- was, of course, not the first I'd ever experienced. A favorite teacher died mid-way through my sophomore year of high school. One of my grandfathers died when I was 2, my great-aunt Rose when I was 14, Granny-B in 2006. But those weren't catastrophic. I'd try to sugar-coat it if I could, but there is no casual conversational segue in existence that will soften the fact that my uncle murdered my grandparents.

Yeah.

To say it was devastating to my entire extended family is a gross understatement. Two lives were ended prematurely, but there were so many reverberations, so much more long-term damage. The sorrow tore holes in relationships. It sparked my father's undiagnosed but completely real depression that never healed fully, and contributed to a rift between him and one of my brothers; they had barely spoken for six years before Dad died, although my brother came home in time to see him, but only at Mom's request. I pray he will be glad, someday, that he was there.

The sharpness if the pain is gone, of course, but the gap left by their deaths will always be felt a little. I've certainly processed it, over the last 21 years. I don't know about other members of my family, but I've forgiven my uncle, something I wasn't sure I'd be able to do. But it was one of those situations where you pray to hopefully, someday, maybe, have the ability to forgive, then find one day you have done it unconsciously. Quite frankly, while I had always prayed, I see that teenage hope to one day reach forgiveness as the first time I really trusted God with something as, at least ostensibly, an adult -- making the concrete choice to believe that, through His grace, everything would somehow be alright.
My uncle is serving two consecutive life sentences, without possibility of parole, and no one in the family has contact with him. He and Dad wrote letters for a while, but once my uncle realized Dad wasn't going to try and help him get out -- did he seriously thing my prosecutor father would? And with the sentence he received? -- my uncle stopped writing. I pray he has sought forgiveness and found peace, but he no longer deserves to know how our lives are going. If this makes it sound like I haven't forgiven him fully, well, I'm not a saint yet. 

Anyway, I don't generally ever talk or write about my grandparents' murder and uncle's imprisonment. Why? Well, it is a heavy thing with which to entrust and, dare I say, burden someone. I can remember clearly exactly where I was every time I've told someone about the murders, and can practically count those instances on one hand. I've spoken about it publicly exactly once, during a retreat talk to high school students on forgiveness. There are people I have known for a very long time -- some close college friends, for instance -- who have no idea. My coworkers don't know, either, although there have been plenty of situations where I could have brought it up. But I also don't want to be like a past coworker who, having lost her husband while in her 30s, brought it up his death in practically every conversation, even on the phone with sources, 20-plus years later.
Part of me has always felt, too, that it's no one's business. I remember, sometime after the murders, going with Dad to Walmart. We ran into someone he knew slightly, and Dad started talking about it. It was almost certainly more than this person had anticipated going into a check-out line chat, and I almost wanted to sink into the floor. Why was he sharing all our sorrow? Mom said it helped him to talk through it, but I have never thought I needed to....although perhaps, having had the urge to write about it for years, perhaps I do, after all.

It's ironic, then, that I sometimes find myself writing about murder cases, although fortunately I've never had to bother the family of a murder victim -- I'd refuse, anyway. I will never hound a devastated family for quotes. I know, too well, some of the things they're experiencing. Being hassled by reporters was the last thing we would have wanted at the time, and the only time any of us were quoted in the press was when Dad actually had to testify at my uncle's trial.

Why now, then? That's a good question. Partly because, while on vacation over Thanksgiving, I  helped my Mom clean out a spare room in her house, and there were many things that brought my grandparents to mind.

But also, portions of the story, in one form or another, have been sitting in my drafts folder -- not to mention in my head; how I'd couch it, the way I'd phrase things -- for years. I've wanted to write about these events. I've just never done it. Fear of opening up too much, perhaps? Probably. Even though it's hardly my fault and I have nothing to be ashamed of, there is that worry that people will judge, somehow. After starting several drafts, and more maybe editing than a lot else I've ever written, I've over-thought it time and again (me, over-analyze something? Pshaw!), and done nothing. Most of this post was written ages ago and, yet I kept prevaricating. "Why am I writing this?" I kept asking myself. It isn't meant to be a treatise on living through grief, an exploration of bad things happening to good people or an it-can-happen-in-anyone's-family sort of lesson. I suppose you could say it is entirely selfish.
I have built it up in my head as something so major (which of course it was) to reveal, but nothing has ever come from being locked away. As small as it might seem to some, even though I won't be sharing this on social media anywhere, it is a big thing for me to just hit the "publish" button. What, in fact, am I risking? That it will go viral? Unlikely as that may be, the thought is a bit intimidating. But it is a new year, after all, too, and with the goal to write more in 2016, I feel like I shouldn't shirk telling this story anymore. I recently I came across a quote from St. Catherine of Sienna, "Start being brave about everything," and realized that if I've wanted to write something for years and haven't done it, that only makes it more obvious that I should.
We all have scars that we carry. This is one of mine.
***

So, we need to talk about "The Lion King." This isn't a non sequitur, I promise.

The first time I saw it, I didn't like it at all. I really couldn't stand the crazy bright colors and harshly geometric, unrealistic looking crocodiles during the "I Just Can't Wait to be King," number, especially.

I know this would be tantamount to sacrilege to some people, as it's so beloved. But, it wasn't so much the movie itself that bothered me (it's great, actually -- loosely based on Hamlet, and beautifully drawn (minus those crocodiles), filled with subtle historical references like goose-stepping hyenas, and it's funny) so much as the circumstances surrounding when I saw it. I was 16, and it was July of 1994. I saw it in a nearly empty (or so I remember it) theater with all my first cousins (including Sam, who was still in the womb at the time) sitting together in one row.

Meanwhile, my Dad, Aunt Marilyn and Uncle Joe were buying caskets. Mom and Aunt Jean had taken us to the movies as a distraction. In retrospect, taking 10 children to see a film where a character plotted and then took the life of a family member might not have been the most enlightened choice, given the circumstances, although ultimately I don't think any of us were scarred by it (in fact, my cousin Carrie didn't even remember where she first saw the movie until it came up in conversation and I reminded her). In fact, we never really talk about that at all.

Anyway, my uncle had some mental issues, but was fine when he took his meds. By way of backstory, he'd graduated from high school, and started college, but decided he needed space, and went traveling. There were years of time where he was living off the grid, with no contact with family. He spent some time working an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico. At one point, he fell in love and proposed to a girl, but she said no, which apparently caused some sort of break -- he was arrested on stalking charges -- and he spent time in the state mental hospital in Chatahoochee. A little odd sometimes, but up until that summer, he'd never been violent. After he returned, my grandparents did all they could to help him out. They supported him in between low-paying jobs, gave him a car and he lived rent free in my late great-grandparent's small home. They didn't make too many demands of him. Partly, I think they gave him so much leeway because of Nana -- he was their youngest, and she didn't want anything to happen that would drive him to the point of leaving and cutting off communication again.

But it had reached a point, in 1994, where a line had to be drawn, and my grandparents gave my uncle an ultimatum: they would either pay his tuition to go back to college, or help him find another job, but if he chose neither, they couldn't continue to support him indefinitely. Apparently, that's what caused him to snap. Not taking his meds, in the week or so leading up to their deaths, he left several angry messages on their answering machine (messages Dad would find later and eventually testify about). Then, on the night of July 11th, my uncle asked my grandfather, who loved to fix things, to check out something seemingly wrong with his bike. While he was looking at it, my uncle attacked him from behind, hitting Grandpa with some sort of blunt object -- never found, it could have been any of the hundreds of tools my grandfather had. Grandpa was a big man, and my uncle, who was intending to burn the bodies, could only manage to drag his body into the side yard and cover it with a tarp. 

Nana, cornered in their bedroom, fought back. When police went to inform my uncle of their deaths, he apparently answered the door without a shirt on, his chest covered in scratches she left behind as she tried to fend him off while he was choking her. He wrapped her in a sheet and carried her body to the compost pile in the back yard where he planned to start a fire. She wasn't yet dead, only unconscious, however. But when she came to, and started to stir, he beat her to death as well.

It couldn't actually be determined which one of them died first. 

After they were dead, my uncle calmly went back into the house, washed his clothes and hosed off the driveway. Because he tried to cover his tracks, knowing what he did was wrong, he was found psychotic, not insane

If the above narrative seems dispassionate, or in any way cold or unfeeling, please trust me, it is not. But they are facts I have lived with for a long time, and you certainly become able to deal with things more pragmatically as time passes. To gloss over them seems disingenuous.

I remember snapshots of the day we found out, just flashes really. It was a Tuesday, and I was going to paint my bedroom blue. All my things were boxed, borders were taped off and all the really big furniture was crammed together in the center of the room. A month and a half later, when we came home, we pulled into the driveway at around 3 a.m. the first day of my junior year of high school. I put my room back together in the days and weeks that followed. That room, to this day, is still white. Only in cleaning out my parents' garage after Dad died did we finally get rid of those two rusted cans, never opened and still full of pale blue paint.

Anyway, it was still early that Tuesday when the doorbell rang. And officer told my Dad to call Pensacola Police Department. He thought maybe something had happened to my uncle. I then heard my father on the phone, and his cry of pain and anguish is one that I couldn't possibly recreate. Calls were made, to Uncle Joe in Tennessee, to Aunt Marilyn, across the world in Japan. A coworker from Dad's office came by at some point to get his files. Fr. Sheedy arrived from church, called by someone, and prayed with us. I remember, at one point, hugging a wall clock Nana and Grandpa had given me when they were down visiting just three weeks before and, later, standing at the end of our hallway, and my brother Daniel, 11 at the time, holding my hand. That night, finally on the road to Pensacola, driving up 471 through the Green Swamp, my brothers slept in the back of the minivan but I was still awake, wanting to hear and yet not listen to my parents, numb and speculating.

The funeral itself is also a bit of a blur. Little Flower was packed, and mostly I remember squeezing Carrie's hand hard as we walked down the aisle behind the caskets, telling myself not to cry as Dad gave a eulogy. At the graveside service at Barrancas National Cemetery, I was so far in the back that I couldn't hear what the priest was saying. Instead I took huge comfort from the two Navy jets that flew over -- Grandpa was a retired Navy pilot -- and even then, not knowing what signal graces were, I couldn't help but think that those planes meant they were okay. Most people would think nothing of it -- Barrancas is on base at the Pensacola Naval Air Station, and jet planes are common; pilots train there -- but you will never convince me otherwise.

Despite all the numbness and anguish, there was still laughter, seeing cousins again, the boys playing video games together, sitting with my then 99-year-old great-grandmother, even taking photos and enjoying food as a family during a post-funeral reception at a family friend's home.

We ultimately spent three weeks after the funeral in Nana and Grandpa's house, cleaning, sorting. It wasn't a ghastly crime scene, if you're wondering. My grandparents just had a lot of stuff. It took years before the house was ready and finally sold (my uncle wasn't convicted for four years, due to a number of issues including his competency to stand trial, and the medical examiner's deployment to the Middle East with his reserve unit. It was also nearly a decade before my dad, their executor, could close their complicated estates -- a fact which certainly contributed to his depression).
But what I remember about those three weeks spent with my family and cousins is, strangely, joy. None of us, during those weeks, cried: Carrie and I camped out in the music room, sleeping  in sleeping bags on the floor stretched beneath the baby grand pianos because there were no other bedrooms to spare between our parents and all our respective brothers; laughing over the 1970's era paisley jumpsuit that Nana had saved, laughing again when we found a photo of the Navy wives fashion show she'd worn it in; Grandpa's stashes of photos everywhere, -- many never seen, decades old ones of them courting, or of parties with people we'd never be able to identify; joking with my cousin Matt about things Grandpa could have jerry-rigged or fixed up if he was still alive. It always felt like they were on vacation and would walk through the door at any moment. I will never forget the smell of their house -- a mix of mothballs and coffee and whatever it was that gave their home, always a happy place, its character. Every now and again I catch a whiff of something similar, and it never fails to make me smile.

In writing this, I find myself wondering if my reticence to share this part of myself has to do with what happened when we got home. It seems strange, now, to think that none of us went to any sort of counseling. We probably all could have used it at some level, my father the most. But -- and I deplore this about his former workplace -- he would have been judged negatively for having any kind of counseling on his record, so he got none beyond talking to the priests at church, which was better than nothing, but still insufficient.

And like I said, we got home about 4 hours before the start of a new school year. Besides a few teachers, who hugged me when I checked in at the office, none of my classmates ever said anything, not even an "I'm sorry for your loss." For a long time, I thought they might not know, but news of any kind typically traveled my tiny Catholic high school like wildfire and I realized, belatedly, that everyone knew, but probably had absolutely no idea what to say. No one treated me with kid gloves, so things were seemingly normal. I went to class, and got mostly good grades, went to dances and sporting events and got my driver's license and life carried on. And since I wasn't breaking down in tears in public, I guess everyone assumed I was fine. Which I was, although I was certainly sad. But since Dad's emotions swung wildly for years -- sometimes I think my Mom alone held him together through force of will and faith; as an adult, talking with him about it once, he had no memory of his sometime rages -- we all basically kept a check on ours, and it wasn't until nearly three years later, in college, that I even mentioned the murders to someone other than family.

I know my Dad struggled with the why of it for years, but I have always known there was some reason God allowed this to happen. I don't know that reason, or what it means that I never belabored it too deeply. Talking it over with a very good friend in college once, I remember her saying that I was so strong to have survived all that, and to still be "normal." It surprised me, then and now, to think of myself as some sort of survivor compared to say, someone who has suffered sexual assault, lived in a war-torn environment, or experienced a terror attack first-hand. But these events are part of who I am and, I think, led me to cling closer to God, a fact for which I am abundantly grateful.

I will always miss my grandparents. I continue to pray for them and ask them to pray for me, too. I carry them in my heart. And despite the recitation of the facts above, I do not dwell on how they died, but remember them for who they were: her a talented, classy, gentle, prayerful woman, a classically trained pianist, artist and teacher who had a strong devotion to Our Lady, let me try coffee for the first time and would share her toast on early mornings when we were the only ones awake; him a retired Navy pilot turned Real Estate agent who could fix anything, loved photography, told ridiculous jokes and liked to sometimes buck the rules, teaching me to drive (illegally, at 14, on abandoned Naval base runways) and fish with live bait. Neither were, of course, perfect, but both of my grandparents, especially Nana, who was a convert and prayed the Rosary daily, had very strong faith.

I have tried several endings for this post, but all seemed too trite, or too abrupt. What does feel right is to close with the prayer given by Jesus to St. Gertrude the Great, which I pray daily:

"Eternal Father, I offer Thee the Most Precious Blood of Thy Divine Son, Jesus, in union with the Masses said throughout the world today, for all the Holy Souls in Purgatory, for sinners everywhere, for sinners in the universal church, those in my own home and within my family. Amen."

Thursday, December 31, 2015

The year ends/the year begins



The highlight of 2015 for me had to be seeing Pope Francis in Washington, D.C. during his first trip to America.




I was fortunate to be able to worship with my cousin Carrie, friend Kim and about 25,000 fellow Catholics — not counting clergy, seminarians and religious — at the canonization Mass of St. Junipero Serra, the first Catholic saint to be canonized in the U.S., celebrated by the Holy Father during the first stop on his U.S. visit.

The word "catholic" means universal, and nothing demonstrated that more than this Mass: We were part of a crowd of young and old, pilgrims of all races and from all over the country. The Mass was in Spanish, with portions also in English, Korean, Tagalog, Italian, American Sign Language and Chochenyo, the language of the Native American Ohlone people.

Carrie and I waiting for the canonization Mass to being on Sept. 23, 2015

I was also on the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol for the Holy Father’s address to the joint session of Congress the next day — it’s the first time that’s happened too — watching the speech on large screens, along with a crowd of thousands, then cheering the pope and receiving his blessing when he came out afterward to greet us. People chanted for "Papa Francisco" and "Viva El Papa!" on the Capitol lawn. Some had traveled all the way from California and Hawaii to be in D.C. while Pope Francis was there.

It wasn’t only Catholics who were excited. While walking from Carrie’s apartment on Capitol Hill to meet her near the White House — she’d been able to get a ticket to the ceremony held for Pope Francis in the White House Rose Garden, and we were joining up to Metro to the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception for the Mass — I found myself walking a portion of the way with a stranger, a woman named Kathy, after she’d asked me for directions (I actually knew where she needed to go, too!) and we struck up a conversation. While she wasn’t Catholic, and didn’t have tickets to events during his visit to the nation’s capital, Kathy said she really admired Pope Francis, and wanted to take pictures (she even took a selfie of us together in front of the Canadian embassy before we parted ways) of the crowds, just to say she was there.

I totally get that. Going into the trip, I hadn’t been sure we’d be able to attend any of the papal visit events, and I was going to be completely happy just being in D.C. and seeing friends and family while the pope was in town. But everything had worked out — not only the stunningly cheap, nonstop flight to D.C. from Fort Myers and a place to stay with Carrie — but also the generous gift of tickets to the canonization Mass, given to Kim courtesy of Father Carter Griffin, vocations director for the Archdiocese of Washington; and the lawn tickets for the Congressional address.

In the week-long trip, Pope Francis’ visit made for two back-to-back, prayer-filled, marathon days, requiring predawn wakeup calls, lots of standing, lots of waiting, and for security checks provided by TSA — ergo, lots of patience! — but they were so amazingly worth it. To be present for such faith-filled, historic, joyful events was an extraordinary gift and a grace.



***
My youngest brother, Ethan, proposed to his girlfriend Nesa right before Thanksgiving. I'm not surprised, honestly, that Ethan is the first of the three of us to become engaged. He's always been more of a dater than Daniel or I. He's really happy, and smiles around her (at least in the pictures I've seen of the two of them together) the way he typically only smiles with family: goofily, and without self-consciousness. I haven't met Nesa yet (she was supposed to come to Florida for Christmas, but couldn't get off of work), although she seems really nice via our Facebook messenger chats and the Skype session she had with us as we opened presents on Christmas. They haven't set a date yet, but it seems my wish childhood for a sister will finally come true. :)




One ridiculous thing his engagement did bring to mind had to do with a certain family recipe. As I helped mom prepare our family turkey stuffing over both Thanksgiving and Christmas, I found myself thinking about how Ethan doesn't really like it, and Daniel, who has celiac, can't eat it at all. My Aunt Marilyn makes it too dry, and my Uncle Joe's wife, my Aunt Jean, makes it too crunchy...leaving my mom and I as the only ones who make it the correct way. Silly girl thoughts regarding the fact that I'll need to marry someone and have kids in order to pass the recipe on and, ergo, make sure it doesn't vanish in its true form, were quickly quashed.




***
Speaking of Ethan, I had one of his dogs for the first five months of the year while he was away on various military trainings. I have to say that, living alone, it was nice to come home to Cassie's wagging tail at the end of the workday, despite the tumbleweeds of Husky fur that abounded in my house as a result. I am putting serious thought into adopting a (short-haired!) dog in 2016.




***
I read 57 books in 2015 (unless I manage to finish my current read before the clock strikes 12). The most recent I finished was Dante's "Inferno," which took me longer to complete than I thought it would (due to work and life, etc...), but was well worth it. I found myself pulling out my copy of the Catechism and looking things up as I read. I hadn't read "The Inferno" since high school, or, more precisely, I thought I'd read it all in high school. However, as I made my way through the book, I discovered I didn't remember a lot of the journey Dante takes through Hell. I think "The Inferno," then, might well be the only case of assigned school reading I never completed! I've really enjoyed Anthony Esolen's translation, and because of some of the appendices, have now managed to read more of St. Thomas Aquinas' "Summa Theologica" than ever before. On to Purgatory, next!




***
Several coworkers and I (Team Mighty Pickles - so named for a play one coworker's brother once starred in) began going to a weekly trivia night at our local Irish pub this summer. It's nice to finally get a chance to use some of the random knowledge floating around in my brain!




***
I am praying for so many as 2015 comes to a close, and for will continue to ask God that 2016 to be filled with blessings for all those on my intentions list.




As for myself, I'm not making a slew of resolutions, but do have some goals:




I applied for a number of jobs this year, trying to escape the newspaper, but nothing bore fruit. Plans call for perseverance in 2016. I have been here too long and have little to show for it.




That leads me to one of my few real resolutions in the New Year: while still working toward something better, I also want to make gratitude and peace a focus. I can sometimes fixate on what I don't have, or what I want or think I need, without realizing how blessed I am in so many ways.




Another goal for 2016 includes cooking more. I love to cook but so rarely cook fun recipes just for myself, choosing instead to go for something semi-homemade at best. I'm going to make an effort to try at least two new recipes per month in the New Year.




I have been pretty bad about writing in 2015, as evinced particularly by the low number of blog posts. I haven't journaled much, either. I intend to remedy that in the New Year. This includes letter writing. I owe a nun friend a letter in the worst way, along with several other friends who have sent cards to which I need to respond.




I'm hoping to travel some in 2016, too. Right now the only trip that is looking really likely is one to Southern California in late May, when my brother Daniel will graduate with his master's degree in cinematography from Chapman University in Orange, California, just outside of L.A. I'm very much looking forward to celebrating his accomplishment!




The last of my 2016 goals is to get rid of some of the things I've accumulated, especially when it comes to clothes. I have a lot that I don't wear, or am holding on to for when I drop a size again. Some is worth keeping, but I know there is a lot I can part with. I'm even going to go through and get rid of some books, too, I think, especially those that have been in my TBR pile for ages and I've never touched, or others I don't foresee myself ever re-reading.




Happy and Blessed New Year!

Tuesday, December 01, 2015

People, Look East

Now that we're in Advent, we're moving swiftly toward Christmas, which is my favorite liturgical season (sorry Easter, although I love you, too). And on Sunday, at my Mom's parish in Lakeland, the choir sang the wonderful Advent hymn, "People, Look East." The song has been running through my head off and on (along with Dean Martin's "Volare") ever since.

As much as I'm fond of "Oh Come, Oh Come, Emmanuel, "People, Look East" is just such a joyful song about preparing and making ready to celebrate Jesus -- the guest, the rose, the bird, the star -- even and despite the fact that sometimes in the struggles of life it can feel like "earth is bare" "wings are frozen" and "night is dim." 

I could only find one version that wasn't dirge speed. They don't sing all five verses here, but it's still just beautiful:


The Lord is coming!

Wednesday, October 07, 2015

"We are wound with mercy round and round as if with air..."

Sometimes the beauty of language just halts me flat -- causing eyes and brain and heart to pause at a turn of phrase, a paragraph or, in this instance, practically the entire poem -- and veritably begs that whatever it is be read aloud, even if only to the empty room.
And as it's the memorial of Our Lady of the Rosary...

The Blessed Virgin Compared To The Air We Breathe, Gerard Manley Hopkins

Wild air, world-mothering air,
Nestling me everywhere,
That each eyelash or hair
Girdles; goes home betwixt
The fleeciest, frailest-flixed
Snowflake; that's fairly mixed
With, riddles, and is rife
In every least thing’s life;
This needful, never spent,
And nursing element;
My more than meat and drink,
My meal at every wink;
This air, which, by life’s law,
My lung must draw and draw
Now but to breathe its praise,
Minds me in many ways
Of her who not only
Gave God’s infinity
Dwindled to infancy
Welcome in womb and breast,
Birth, milk, and all the rest
But mothers each new grace
That does now reach our race—
Mary Immaculate,
Merely a woman, yet
Whose presence, power is
Great as no goddess’s
Was deemèd, dreamèd; who
This one work has to do—
Let all God’s glory through,
God’s glory which would go
Through her and from her flow
Off, and no way but so.
I say that we are wound
With mercy round and round
As if with air
: the same
Is Mary, more by name.
She, wild web, wondrous robe,
Mantles the guilty globe,
Since God has let dispense
Her prayers his providence:
Nay, more than almoner,
The sweet alms’ self is her
And men are meant to share
Her life as life does air.

If I have understood,
She holds high motherhood
Towards all our ghostly good
And plays in grace her part
About man’s beating heart,
Laying, like air’s fine flood,
The deathdance in his blood;
Yet no part but what will
Be Christ our Saviour still.
Of her flesh he took flesh:
He does take fresh and fresh,
Though much the mystery how,
Not flesh but spirit now
And makes, O marvellous!
New Nazareths in us,
Where she shall yet conceive
Him, morning, noon, and eve;
New Bethlems, and he born
There, evening, noon, and morn—
Bethlem or Nazareth,
Men here may draw like breath
More Christ and baffle death;
Who, born so, comes to be
New self and nobler me
In each one and each one
More makes, when all is done,
Both God’s and Mary’s Son.
Again, look overhead
How air is azurèd;
O how! nay do but stand
Where you can lift your hand
Skywards: rich, rich it laps
Round the four fingergaps.
Yet such a sapphire-shot,
Charged, steepèd sky will not
Stain light. Yea, mark you this:
It does no prejudice.
The glass-blue days are those
When every colour glows,
Each shape and shadow shows.
Blue be it: this blue heaven
The seven or seven times seven
Hued sunbeam will transmit
Perfect, not alter it.

Or if there does some soft,
On things aloof, aloft,
Bloom breathe, that one breath more
Earth is the fairer for.
Whereas did air not make
This bath of blue and slake
His fire, the sun would shake,
A blear and blinding ball
With blackness bound, and all
The thick stars round him roll
Flashing like flecks of coal,
Quartz-fret, or sparks of salt,
In grimy vasty vault.
So God was god of old:
A mother came to mould
Those limbs like ours which are
What must make our daystar
Much dearer to mankind;
Whose glory bare would blind
Or less would win man’s mind.
Through her we may see him
Made sweeter, not made dim,
And her hand leaves his light
Sifted to suit our sight.
Be thou then, O thou dear
Mother, my atmosphere;
My happier world, wherein
To wend and meet no sin;
Above me, round me lie
Fronting my froward eye
With sweet and scarless sky;
Stir in my ears, speak there
Of God’s love, O live air,
Of patience, penance, prayer:
World-mothering air, air wild,
Wound with thee, in thee isled,
Fold home, fast fold thy child.

Monday, September 07, 2015

Overbooked

A friend posted the above to my Facebook page several days ago, and -- while it is a bit of an exaggeration -- I had to laugh at how accurate it is. I almost always pack more books than necessary whenever I travel, inevitably overestimating how much reading time I will have and (apparently) forgetting that when I go somewhere I will be doing other things besides sticking my nose into books. For my recent week at the beach, I packed four and read one, for instance.

In fact, I usually start a trip book pile before I even begin the packing of clothes. I found myself doing just that today, building a stack for my six-day D.C. trip, which is still 12 days out. Thanks to a crazy-cheap flight, I'm heading up to visit my cousin Carrie, friend Kim and others and, hopefully see Pope Francis during his visit -- tickets are required for the Mass where he will canonize Bl. Junipero Serra, and two of the three Kim, Carrie and I need have been acquired. I'm not sure what will transpire if we can't get a third, but I'm sending up all sorts of prayers that we do; tickets aren't needed for when the Holy Father is scheduled to appear after he speaks to Congress. But even if we only manage the latter, how amazing would that be?! I'm beyond excited to possibly see (and potentially receive a blessing from) another pope, not to mention catch up with family and friends.  

Anyway, I'm currently reading two books, one a thriller/art heist mystery and the other on praying with the saints for the Holy Souls in Purgatory, so I'm not sure what exactly inspired me to begin book planning (especially when I haven't even thought about pre-trip laundry), although part of me thinks that we'll have to arrive early to places where the Pope will be, so I might as well have some reading material with me just in case, right?

I have a rather diverse group of potentials going so far: science fiction ("The Martian"); a bibliophile's humorous recollections of working in the rare-book trade ("Tolkien's Gown," which was among the books I bought in Scotland); St. JPII's "Love and Responsibility" that I've wanted to read for a while now; a reprint of an 1897 history of Catholic nuns who worked as battlefield nurses during the Civil War; and a book of natural history essays that I picked up at a local library book sale for next to nothing.


Of course, I could decide to read one or more of these before I leave. Or I could decide to bring Dante with me, once Amazon delivers "The Divine Comedy" (I haven't read the whole thing, just the Inferno back in high school, and for the last several weeks have had a yen to read it in its entirety) to my doorstep.

I tend to buy books on vacation, too, whether or not I run out of the reading material I bring with me. Last summer when mom and I went to Scotland, we visited so many used bookstores (which I should write about at some point, shouldn't I, seeing as how it's been more than a year now?), we found such amazing and fun books that, between the two of us, we had to buy extra luggage to bring the books back. There's apparently quite a nice used bookstore not terribly far from my cousin's place on the Hill in D.C., too... :)

Wednesday, September 02, 2015

Beach break


I recently returned from a too-short but much needed week at the beach. I had, not intentionally, waited until the end of August to use the first few days of my 18 days worth of vacation time, and I never should have held out so long. It actually took me two of those five days to really relax.

But once I did, I began to feel so much more peaceful than when I arrived at the small pale blue cottage one street off the beach. There is just something about being by the water that is rejuvenating. Regardless of what I really look like while I'm there: salt-sticky, sweaty and covered in sand with crazy wind-blown hair, hardly the most glamorous woman on the beach whether I've shaved my legs that morning or not, I still always feel more beautiful when I'm by the sea. Stronger, too, from all the walking, the sand rising up beneath the high insteps of my feet.

My mom and I rose before the sun and watched the beach brighten or, conversely, darken at the end of the day. One morning, we even were able to catch some volunteers excavate a sea turtle nest (they count both the hatched and unhatched eggs and rescue any living hatchlings that haven't managed to dig their way out of the nest). Another evening, we watched a storm role in, and I even managed to catch a photo of distant lightning striking.

See it? Waaay far out there to the left of center? Nevertheless, I am inordinately proud of my first lighting capture.

The multi-faceted beauty of God's creation was all around.

We shelled on the beach early and late, collecting cockles, augers, scallops, pens, Florida fighting conchs, turkey wings, whelks, calico clams, sharks teeth and so much more (I found four cents -- mom found a dime -- along with a nearly foot-long bird's skull bleached by the sun), all of which appealed to the teenage me who (briefly) wanted to be an oceanographer.  Although I found some truly pristine shells, what fascinated me most this time were the worn ones, or those that had holes bored in them by other creatures, perhaps barnacle-clad or spiral shells halved somehow so the typically secret inner whorls were visible
.

I kept finding live things, too: purple-green sand dollars; more occupied conch shells than I could count; a gray, geometric-patterned fancy brittle starfish; and even a live scallop about as big around as a silver dollar, one side covered in barnacles, which opened slightly in my hand, just before I tossed it (as I did all the live things) back into the sea.

We barely turned on the TV, only a few times to check the weather and then one night when we watched "Casablanca" and "Gaslight" while cooking spaghetti. I re-read "Sense and Sensibility," the daily Mass readings and prayed morning and evening prayer.

I did manage some writing, although not that which I'd originally intended. Instead of the two fictional themes I was hoping to expand on, I found myself reflecting on shells, both literal and then figurative ones, on forgiveness and beauty and brokenness and strength. And I finally at least started a letter to a friend who is a nun (which I still need to finish and mail soon).

Part of every day but one was spent on the sand, alternately walking the shore and cooling off in the waves. Like a kid, I stayed in until I was pruned -- fingers and toes and hands just completely wrinkled. Floating in the bathtub-tepid Gulf, the only sounds in my ears my own breath, gentle waves rocking me and the occasional mechanic hum of a boat or jet ski farther out to sea, was blissful. If I believed in signs of the Zodiac I could say it's my Piscean nature coming out, but more likely it's all the vitamin D I soaked up (this is the first decent tan I've had in a decade. No, really, I actually look like I live in Florida for the first time since 2005, when my cousin Matt and his wife were married in Hawaii 10 years and, for them, four kids ago).


Verre eglomise of the Annunciation
The one day it rained pretty much all day, we went to the Ringling Museum, checking out both the circus museum -- I loved circuses as a kid, too, and the combination of that with some displays including, posters, costume sketches and the models used in the great train wreck from 1952's "The Greatest Show on Earth" ticked both my classic movie and circus boxes -- and the more classical works, including some really inspiring religious pieces, many of which were totally new to me.

I am so grateful for the time away. I need to do it more often, or at least earlier in the year! Also, to  head over to the beach for an afternoon on a random weekend, if only to keep up my tan. ;)

When can I go back?

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Staycation all I ever wanted

Five days stand between me and a week at the beach, and I can't wait. The last time I went to the beach was for about two hours on a cloudy March day. March 2014, that is.

I grew up less than an hour from Disney, and many people, when then learn that, typically say, "Oh, you must have gone all the time!" Nope. It's the same with the beach. Every now and again, I'll pack up stuff and go by myself for an afternoon but, despite the fact that being by the sea is just good for the soul, I don't often go until I have someone to go with me.

Cue my mom. Earlier this summer, she spent a week with my brother Daniel just outside L.A. and then another week with my brother Ethan in Oklahoma City. Then she surprised me by saying since she'd spent time with them, she figured it was only fair she spend time with me, too (even though I live less than two hours away). So she's rented a cute cottage on Manasota Key, which has some of my favorite beaches in the area. It's the beach I'd take her and dad to when they'd come down to visit, and mom often mentioned wanting to rent some place and spend time, just like she did every other summer growing up, when my grandparents took her and my late Uncle John to alternately either the beach or the mountains. But it never happened, until now.

Needless to say, I am so excited for this little stay(ish)cation. Even though it's so close to my own place, I won't have to think about work for five days. I can wake up watch the sunrise and take a morning swim, say morning prayer on the beach and maybe catch some dolphins swimming by. I hope to read, and write (there are two story ideas fermenting that I've jotted down some notes for and want to explore further) and color (yes, I have a coloring book of Impressionist paintings. Don't mock. It's relaxing.). Mom and I will undoubtedly play some Scrabble, and spend part of at least one day at The Ringling

I'm just hoping Hurricane Danny doesn't interfere.

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Some thoughts on "Watchman"

Well this has certainly been languishing, hasn't it?

Anyhow, I've just finished Harper Lee's "Go Set A Watchman," and felt the need to write some things down.

First, I have to confess that this book had my Alabama roots showing: I read the whole thing (including some parts aloud to myself) -- without even a glimmer of conscious thought, really -- in what my Granny B liked to call a "refined Southern lady" accent, where, as she once told me, "You pronounce the H in every word whether there is an H in that word or not." And every bit of Atticus' dialog was, naturally, in the voice of Gregory Peck. :)

First of all, the fact this book even exists is wonderful. Despite the various hints at nefarious lawyers and whatnot involved in its discovery, simply being able to read another Harper Lee novel was a joy, the chance to revisit a loved, familiar place, but at the same time, glimpse it in a different way.

And that's where a lot of people seemed to have problems. Even before the book came out a week ago today, there were all sorts of reactionary blog posts about a chapter released in advance. I didn't read the chapter then, because I didn't think it was fair to read the chapter out of context. But other people don't share my patience, apparently, and quickly were up in arms about how it made Atticus Finch sound like the most bigoted of racists, and how dare he be that way? I didn't read the blog posts either (because spoilers, sweetie), especially the one titled, "This is not the Atticus Finch I named my son for." Honestly, if you think a different side of a fictional character is somehow going to change your son, you're nuts. Also, you named your son Atticus, so I'm not sure I can take you seriously. You might as well name your child Demosthenes or Polycarp if you wanted something ridiculously original (sorry St. Polycarp).

But I was not offended by Atticus. Yes, he is different, yes, the sad realities of racism in the Jim Crow South rear their ugly heads, but some of his attitudes (which pale in comparison to that of several other characters) are actually imagined as worse than they are by Scout. Ultimately, the fact that I'm not overly bothered by it probably has a lot more to do with the fact that Mockingbird, while a book I very much enjoy, isn't and never has been my Favorite. Book Of. All. Time. as it is for some, who have put a person they apparently forgot was fictional up on a pedestal. No doubt there will be a number of scholarly dissertations contrasting "To Kill a Mockingbird" and "Go Set a Watchman," and picking the latter apart.

Anyway, I very much enjoyed the book overall. It's a rare thing to be able to see characters we think we know at a time 20-plus years on. They have changed, certainly, but so has the world. The Jean Louis we see here seems, at least to me, to be a natural progression  and completely the product of the prickly tomboy Scout. I found myself at some points wondering how much of Nell Harper Lee was in her and, in a way, too, comparing how the reactions and responses of the now grown Jean Louise reflect the sad and offended nature of many of the people who have been so riled and even betrayed by how her father is different than their expectations...but I also wonder whether, like Scout, who grows in understanding as the novel progresses, other readers will be able to see beyond their own knee-jerk reactions?

The one thing that really did bother me was Jem's fate, which was more surprising than anything else. The flashbacks to the children's childhoods were fantastic, though, as were the additional history of the Finch family. I loved the character of Uncle Jack and his penchant for Victorian literature, and Aunt Alexandra with her tendency to speak emphatically in All Capital Letters. The scenes from the Coffee Zandra throws are brilliant, and I have decided that from now on, whenever I have to fill out a form that asks my marital status, I will instead of "Single," record myself as a "Perennial Hopeful." ;)





Sunday, August 10, 2014

One year later

Not too long ago, I was cleaning out my voice mail and, as I went through them (there were something like 21 just hanging out; clearly the chore needed doing), I found messages from my Mom and both of my brothers, but not one from my Dad. At first, it made me a little sad that his voice wasn't there. But then I got to thinking (and laughing), Dad wasn't a big leaver of voice mails. He'd call (this happened typically after he was retired and had a question about something -- usually computer related -- in the middle of a workday), and not leave a message. Then, two minutes later, he'd call again. Sometimes, he'd even call a third time, say 10 or 12 minutes after that. I can't tell you how many times I told him, exasperated, "Dad, just leave me a message the first time. I'm not ignoring you, there's a reason I'm not answering the phone." He'd say ok, but then of course do it again, although after the third (or, miraculously! sometimes after the second) then would leave a message. It was usually very short and along the lines of, "Hey, Anne, it's Dad. Can you call me?" Hence, why I probably didn't save any of them.

Somehow, today marks a year since he died. It doesn't seem that long ago, truly.

Ironically (fortuitously?), a year ago this morning -- but several hours before his death -- Mom and I had visited the funeral home to make arrangements while my Uncle Joe sat at the hospital with Dad. We also had an appointment at the church later in the afternoon to discuss the funeral mass, at that point not knowing when it would be.

Leaving the funeral home (my brothers were at the house), Mom returned to the hospital, Joe went and got lunch and I went to my friend Michele's to pick up a food basket. She'd baked all sorts of things and put them into a care package with fruit and snacks we could grab on our way out the door to the hospital, since we didn't know how long Dad had. I was sitting at her kitchen table when mom called me just after noon to tell me he was gone, sooner than anyone expected. Despite the suddenness, Mom said she was ok to go ahead and keep the church appointment. After I hung up, Michele held on to me as I cried, then, being a practical Louisiana native, poured me a fortifying shot of tequila, the only liquor she had in the house at the time. She then (also practically) made me a turkey sandwich so I wouldn't be driving with only liquor in my belly. I'm pretty sure I was a bit stunned, because it wasn't until I was in the car, driving to the church, that I remembered to pray for Dad's soul.

Anyway, in picking out readings and music (which went smoothly), there was one song I wanted in particular, "The King of Love My Shepherd Is." The priest and deacon didn't know the tune, so I pulled out a hymnal and sang the first verse. My Uncle, who had joined us (Daniel was manning the fort at home and Ethan, who had actually been on the way to the hospital when Mom called him with the news, stayed with Dad's body until the funeral home came to collect it. It was a three-hour wait, and I have always been grateful he kept that vigil), suggested I sing it at the funeral. Reticent to do it alone (although I love to sing and have sung with choirs, I'm fairly self-conscious about singing by myself. I don't think I'd sung a solo in church since high school), I persuaded Joe to sing it with me for the presentation of the gifts.

I'm so picky about liturgical music, and a lot of people tend to play the cadence far too slowly. I suppose they're being reverent, but it's a Celtic tune and should be somewhat lively, to my mind, especially as the funeral mass is one of resurrection, and I didn't want it to be dirge-like. Fortunately, Bill, the retired music minister who played at the funeral mass (and who traditionally played everything super slowly), played it perfectly, without my even having to ask. This man, too, gets it just right:


 ****
 A couple of weeks ago, the date of Dad's death had actually slipped my mind. I was driving home from work and trying to remember, and it took driving past my doctor's office to jog my memory, "My doctor's appointment was the 5th, and then he died five days later." I wasn't sure if it was incredibly lame that I couldn't remember, or a (sort of) good and healthy thing, in that I wasn't completely fixated on it.

There are days when things he would like surround me, days when I can hear his voice, so clearly in my head, reacting to some sort of news item. There are days when I mourn with tears, and then there are days when I barely think of him at all, so caught up am I in work and preoccupied with my own thoughts.

But part of that last, too, is my confidence in the Father. Though we none of us can really know the fate of those who have passed, I know as surely as I type this that Dad is with God, and there is no need for worry, only continued prayer. As I pray for him, I hope he prays for me.

May the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.

Monday, July 21, 2014

Daring to dare

It seems I have yet to find a way to balance journaling and blogging, because it seems while I'm perfectly capable of doing one (to the detriment of the other), I can't manage both. I blame my pesky job. ;)

I did spend the majority of last Wednesday writing, though, and I have six and a half pages of fiction to show for it. I was off work that day, having worked the previous Monday in the absence of two coworkers, and it was rainy, windy and a bit grim all day: absolutely perfect writing weather. I'm not saying it's particularly brilliant prose, but it's more creative writing than I've done in a while, and I am not dissatisfied with it. In fact, I felt ridiculously proud of myself afterwards. I often feel like my creativity has atrophied, and the fact that it hasn’t gone completely gave me a sense of victory (and, after a lazy reading day yesterday involving nothing beyond that and mass, today between laundry and yard work managed some more. I've even written out a timeline, which is something I NEVER do).

I have a motivating factor now, you see and, as a procrastinator by nature, deadlines are helpful. :)

Early last week, my mom called me up. She subscribes to the Florida Humanities Council magazine and noticed an ad for the Eckerd College writers' conference, which will be held in for a week, mid-January, in St. Pete. She thought maybe I'd be interested, and gave me the URL.

I went to the website and checked it out. As I was reading over the FAQs page, I felt my heart beat a little faster, and not just because of the (quite expensive) associated cost, or the fact that applicants have to submit a 25-page draft of an unpublished manuscript - fiction or non, and applicants can submit both - for review before they're accepted. It dawned on me that I was not only nervous about the prospect, but downright terrified of even trying.

Do you know what my very next thought was?

I have to at least apply.

I came across a Maya Angelou quote recently where she said, "I believe the most important single thing beyond discipline and creativity is daring to dare." While I think there are, in fact, some things more important (faith, hope and love come to mind), I agree about the daring. I haven't dared much in too long.

I have become stagnant, complacently. Yes, I've said it before. Yes, I write here, but I am completely aware of the limited number of readers who visit it. And, too, I write every day for work, but the majority of the stories I write are completely lacking in challenge and require little to no creativity. But I think, too, about my dad, who always talked about writing novels, who dabbled in poetry, who came up with sometimes brilliant plots but never did anything about them, and I know he regretted it. I'm not trying to be vainglorious when I say I know I have talent. I don't want to waste this God-given gift, to lament efforts unmade, to leave the field, as it were, unchallenged. And while there is another writers' conference being held closer, and sooner, for cheaper, I don't have enough vacation time to go this year and still have time for the holidays.

So, last Wednesday, I pulled out a quasi-comedic mystery story I'd started in 2010, added a bit to in 2012 but hadn't touched since then. I thought I'd had about 10 or 11 pages, but there were nearly 19! The story still stands up, too, in terms of not being dated at all. So now that I'm very close to the 25-page requirement (not that I'm going to stop at 25...or not edit it), I'm also contemplating writing something in the non-fiction category as well. There are several incidents of family history I've wanted to write about for a while now, and I think this might be the place to start with at least one of them.

Or maybe that's too ambitious and over-reaching. :)

***
And yes, there will be a Scotland post forthcoming...

Friday, June 20, 2014

A brief note on writing and photos


I wrote 70-plus pages in a journal during the two weeks Mom and I were in Scotland (despite our breakneck pace through the country and essentially staying at a different B&B every night), and nary a word (minus stories FOR work, naturally) since I've been back in the office.


But I think I've come up with the solution to how I can generally get more (creative) writing done: I just need to find someone who will support me while I write... ;)


And I have so much to write about from the trip. Hopefully I will get to some of it this weekend. Inevitably, I think of observations I still need to write down about Scotland while I'm either driving or in the shower, so more will be done eventually.


Oh, and the photos! There are more than 5,000 (though, to be fair, since I've started sorting through them, some are blurry, at weird exploratory angles or a second -- or third -- version of the same shot, or things I took that I knew likely wouldn't turn out, and then didn't), and people are already clamoring to see them on Facebook.


I will not be posting all of them. I'm not that obnoxious. :)



Sunday, June 01, 2014

Leaving, on a jet plane...

And that's just one side...

Departure day, T-minus 5 hours and 10-odd minutes, give or take. The reality that Mom and I are leaving for Scotland today, despite the silent witness of the packed suitcase and carry-on backpack sitting at the foot of the bed, it still doesn't seem quite real just yet. I'm about to head off on a trip that will check off one of my childhood (or teenage, to be more precise) dreams off my bucket list (>>> Not it. My bucket list has far fewer crossed off items!) just hasn't sunk in...but since we leave for the airport in about two and a half hours, it probably will shortly. :)

"Faith is the realization of what is hoped for and evidence of things not seen."

Everything is done, both at work and on my personal to-do list. >> Ok, not exactly everything. I didn't get around to vacuuming my house, but I think it will survive until I return.

I have quite probably over packed (even after subtracting two pairs of jeans, an extra pair of PJ pants, a third pair of shoes and several pairs of socks from my suitcase last night).

I'm taking three books (five if you're counting the guidebooks), instead of my previously decided on two, mostly because my old paperback copy of "Persuasion" weighs next to nothing, and because I haven't read it in a while (the Amanda Root/Ciaran Hinds movie version is a fairly loyal adaptation and generally satisfies my craving for the story). My other books are "The Four Loves" by C.S. Lewis, which I've wanted to read for a while, and the collected Lord Peter Wimsey short stories by Dorothy L. Sayers (who I only recently learned was friends with C.S. Lewis and also wrote on some Christian themes when she wasn't writing mysteries. I'm looking forward to investigating that more at some point). I've very much enjoyed the Wimsey novels (including the witty byplay between him and scrappy Harriet Vane; their characters eventually marry), and I figured short stories would be easy to digest, so to speak, while on the move.

I'm also taking a laptop, as some of our B&Bs offer free Wi-Fi, although I'm not planning on hitting email and Facebook too often (just often enough to appease and reassure people (*cough*BestFriend*cough* that I'm still alive. She texted me this morning "Omg, what am I going to do without being able to call you for two weeks???!!!!!!!") that we're still truckin.'). I'm going to try and do some writing while we're there, and will be christening a new journal for the occasion.

It's looking a little cloudy out now, so I'm hoping the early evening storms that have been rolling in lately won't delay our take off at all, since we do have a layover in New Jersey before crossing the Atlantic. It's also the celebration of the Feast of the Ascension today, which seems like a nice day to take off into the sky.

(insert rim shot here).

Ok, yes, that was ridiculous, but I most certainly prayed for safe travels at Mass this morning.

Mom is super-excited, too. She keeps saying things like "pinch me, and "I can't believe we did all of it (the planning) ourselves." I hope everything goes according to plan, or at least that nothing gang agley, as Robert Burns would say. We're really doing this!



Renewed... and a reading recommendation

It had been far, far (vastly!) too long since I was last on a retreat, and so last (Memorial Day) weekend's Florida State University Catholic Student Union alumni reunion retreat (the group holds them every two years), held in Orlando, was so needed. I feel centered and so spiritually refreshed (or, as my friend Marie said, "It's like spiritual Draino."). I was so blessed to have this community when I was in college, this group of people who prayed for and guided me, who do so still.

Mass daily with plenty of adoration and praise and worship time, talks and fellowship with nearly 200 other CSU alums and multiple children (It was an amazing witness to life. One of the hotel employees asked one of us if the group was at the hotel for a baby convention) who attended from all over the country was priceless.

Having just been on the retreat, I found a neat connection in the book I'm almost finished reading. It's called "These Beautiful Bones: An Everyday Theology of the Body," by Emily Stimpson. I read her other book, "The Catholic Girl's Survival Guide for the Single Years," when it came out two years ago and really enjoyed both it and her smart, relatable writing style, so when I found this one, it seemed like a no-brainer for several reasons. First, I still can't seem to manage to get beyond the first 125-odd pages in ToB and, secondly, Stimpson's book takes Saint JPII's work and (while not neglecting the sexual aspect) filters it toward practical, everyday behaviors to show how our manners and how we treat others, our work and how we do it and how we eat and dress also reflect the theology of the body: the body's ability to communicate who we are and who God made us to be.

Anyway, at the end of Chapter 3, which addresses ToB and work, Stimpson tacks on an addendum called "The digitalization of leisure," which talks about how the way we relax has changed. "A century ago," Stimpson writes,

"a good day of rest for the average American would have involved a long walk, a fine dinner, some neighborly conversation, and perhaps ... some music on the piano or fiddle. There might have been dancing. Or storytelling. Or perhaps and outing to a museum or play. ... and enjoyed in the company of others."

She goes on to say that today the opposite is often true. That we come home from our jobs and spend time watching screens, and our leisure time has become more passive than active and often spent along. I'm guilty of it, certainly, of dropping on the couch to watch a movie after work instead of challenging myself to be more creative or tackle postponed projects.

Not that she says all this technology is bad. Far from it:

"... although those technologies can lead us to encounters with the true, the good, and the beautiful, they are, by their nature, mediated encounters, not embodied encounters, with sonatas, paintings and evening chats ... Our greatest experiences of joy are never mediated. They're always experienced from the body. ... Media technology is at its best when it facilitates rather than replaces embodied experiences of truth, beauty and goodness, and when it helps us become creators rather than consumers during our leisure hours. ... Media technology can never give us the same kind of joy that comes from being on the mountaintop or hearing our favorite band live. It can't forge the bonds of love and friendship forged over a good meal and equally good wine. It can't mediate the glory and love and presence of God to us that being with someone or at some place in our bodies can."

This lengthy end note on the book's chapter struck me because I'd just spent a weekend rekindling some old friendships usually maintained online, but also because I'm about to embark on vacation with my mom to Scotland. It's a place I've wanted to visit for so long, have read so much about. You can look at all sorts of pictures of a place in books and online, but I'm beyond excited to have the opportunity to really experience it, as Stimpson say, in an "embodied encounter" shared with my mom. Like the movie "Up," "Adventure is out there!"

As for Stimpson's book, it's only 160-odd pages and a quick read packed with goodness, and I encourage you to read it.