While I was walking along the one mile path around one of the lakes of Twin Lake Forest preserve in DuPage county, there he was just about 50 feet from me, a mink. He was gamboling across the walking path at lunch time. Approximately two-feet long with the characteristic sinuous gait that he shares with the smaller weasel, looked at me, and then scampered into the high grass and brush along the lake. (I think it was a male since females do not usually reach the length of the one I saw.)
With short dark fur, this mink was definitely long and built close to the ground. In a lifetime of walks and runs through fields and forests this is the first mink I have ever seen.
Mink are hard to mistake for any other animal. A river Otter comes close but they are much larger than mink and spend most of their time in the water.
Mink are land predators who love mice, rats, rabbits and even squirrels. They make their homes underneath rock piles or brush and close to water.
Two days ago, on the same path I saw a full-grown coyote, the second one I’ve seen in this locale this year. Within 300 yards of this spot is a McDonalds and a Wal-Mart.
Illinois wildlife is adapting quickly and beautifully to our presence.
Praise the Lord for all creatures great and small!
Luke’s Gospel tells us that Our Lord sent out his disciples two by two. (Lk 10:1-9) He sent them out in pairs because He knew how easy it is for us to get discouraged. You and I need a companion along the way to help bear the burdens of preaching the Gospel. Yes, sometimes the Gospel demands more energy than one man has.
Remember Peter who denied three times that he even knew who Jesus was? Even John, likely the youngest disciple ran away when Jesus was bound in chains and led away by some soldiers. Fearful that he was next, he ran away naked.
That night there was Peter, without his brothers in the Gospel, standing and warming his sinful hands at the fire of the pagans in Pilate’s courtyard. Timid, alone and frightened.
Judas distraught with no where to go, fashions a noose, throws the rope up over a strong branch and with his traitorous hands pushes himself off into the air. He dies unsupported and alone.
We all bear the effects of original sin, especially pride. If I think that because of my preaching or my example that I am somebody, leave it to a companion to set me straight. My friend along the way will see when I need understanding, will see when I need to be left alone for awhile.
How satisfying it is to have my companion walk with me on the Gospel journey and to feel a supporting hand on my shoulder.
“A brother who is helped by his brother is a strong city.” (Proverbs 18:19)
I can’t believe I’m writing this. It hurts to say that I now know what it means to be disregarded, to be overlooked and ignored. Waitresses don’t see me sitting there alone, waiting, reading –or pretending to be reading– a book. Young people don’t ask me questions or comment or treat me as a person. I’ve been told: “I saw you over there, some old guy. I didn’t know who you were.”
“You ought-a bust his butt,” a five year old challenges his dad, when we nearly bump in an aisle at Walmart. The child sees an older man, not an elder.
What does aging look like socially? When moms pull their children toward themselves in Barnes and Noble as you approach a discount table of books, as if aging were contagious .
Even my friend sheds me like a dead leaf in the fall. Nothing more to contribute to his life.
At least one, I’ve offended by my anger so that even though I told him of my regret and sorrow at my actions, something friendly has disappeared from the warm relationship we once had.
Sometimes, it makes me want to curl up in my room, and avoid everyone, my door closed.
However, I am not dead yet. I know there are friendships still to be made, books and articles still to be written. Paths to be walked in the morning. Things to be seen. Things to be heard. Things to be felt. I’ll be darned if I will let other people’s attitudes toward my aging affect how I live my life. And, hey -maybe a lot of what I have been experiencing is the result of how I present myself. In other words, I’m projecting.
I might not have patience anymore for an extended period of pastoral activity. I know I’m not as fast as I once was. Occasionally, my intellectual process just steps down after a period of intense thought. But, I can still preach, preside at the Eucharist, be useful as a brother in networking, I still love music, classical and, jazz. I still can walk and visit and learn and be in other countries with little fear. In fact, I almost never want to go home. (By the way, another definition of home: “When someone knocks you have to let them in.” (A variation of “Home is where when you go there they have to take you in (Robert Frost?).
I pray differently. I am called to more meditation, centering prayer and adoration but I have to get used to this because for so long there was little time for this in my day and less room in my heart with all its file cabinets full of things to do, things to regret, things I’ve done, things I’ll never do. I’ve got to remember that anytime is a good time for meditation. And, each day, now, it is a must.
I have to have projects. Writing, yes, but also there are other things I can do. Preaching each week is, I must admit, not a joy. I approach each sermon with a sense of dread. My mind says: You’ve got nothing to say. You do believe what you are going to say, right? By the way, why not tell them what you actually believe? I am certain that temptation to evil is also in the midst of this. I am battling myself, the flesh, the devil when I preach. No wonder I’m tired.
I go through this angst each weekend that I preach. Each week, the homily turns out more or less fine. Each week I’m reminded to trust Him. I tell Him: Use me as a channel of your mercy, even if the substance of my conduit is full of cracks, and leaks. He can use anyone, even me.
Yeah, yeah. It’s embarrassing but I have always wanted a quicker mind, an intellect that could find the seed in a mess of leaves, broken branches and fragmented bark. Instead, I see the whole dam
mess and I see it as a whole. When I try to parse it out to its essentials, I lose track of what I am looking for in the first place.
I have wanted a skill at writing that is more facile, that pours out of my heart in logical
constructed sentences and paragraphs. Instead, I write and then perform surgery on my work. Out go extra words, adjectives –plucked, just because as Mark Twain said, they exist.
I have sat in a room with bright guys who speak rapidly, grasp things just as quickly, and move on. I’m lost in their dust. I would love to have that kind of intelligence. But, I am aware that I have ways of knowing that are not necessarily logical but still authentic paths to truth.
I have known brilliant people who really have a tough time relating to the rest of us. I do not want to be like that.
I just have to use the gifts that I have.
I admire the logical progression of paragraphs to support a main theme. I know most writers have an idea, then, make up a beginning, middle and end. Eventually, they build up an outline and stick to it as they write.
My mind works instead, like a sous-chef preparing a salad. I start with ripping up some lettuce –that is the passionate part. No trouble there. Then I cut up some tomatoes for color and add some celery (facts)– as much as I have. And finally, something to cry over, the onions.
I cut all this up, mix it up and hope that I can bring it all together with some palatable dressing. Viola! My salad appears with its unique dressing on life.
What else can I do? Life is what happens when I am planning to do those big things in life that I’m gonna do someday.
I am very happy how the details of the show for Kathryn is working out –far better than I thought possible. It’s because I have people who actually like Kathryn’s art. Bruce, the artist, appreciates her
soulful expression and Susan sees proportion and pattern that perhaps only a designer could appreciate.
There’s a certain whimsy in Ks art that I never really noticed before. Along with the drama of her chronic depression which appears in her paintings, there was always a bit of wow here and there. Adlai Stevenson’s “The life of an egg-head is difficult” shows his head rolling around as a chicken egg would, eccentrically. Her pieces of flotsam and jetsam from the lake and from the sand dunes hang from her banner prints like little jokes, wry comments, happy serendipity.
I want to believe that there is still time to encounter those I would like to know and those who I, if I would let them, could experience me.
I’ve had a few relationships with those people –nothing lasting but with some intimacy.
I think I better make more of this happen.
Four years ago, Barack Obama promised a new dawn for America and the world. What exactly was to change and how that change would take place was not too clear. On the eve of this presidential election president Obama stays the course with change and hope. The people of Libya, Mali, Egypt and Yemen are not on board.
Libya borders Mali. Maommar Qaddafiwhile he was dictator in Libya used his power to build an opulent, sprawling government complex for Mali in the heart of its capitol, his gift to this desperately poor people. Even in death the dictator of Libya represents more positive change to the people of Mali than Obama can imagine.
“I see Africa as a fundamental part of our interconnected world –as a partner with America on behalf of the future we want for all our children.” (Obama, speaking in Acera, Ghana, July 11, 2009)
I’ve pretty much stopped following the Cubs. These days it’s a minor league franchise playing with the big boys. The little boys are outclassed and outmatched.
The arrogance of Theo Epstein and the owners of the Chicago Cubs is beyond reckoning. They seem to think that the fans will hang around loyally while they charge us the same ticket price to watch minor leagurers play major league teams.
There used to be a time when the minor leagues were for apprentices, talented young guys who
learned how to field and hit and run. Now, these guys are in the majors making dumb base-running gaffs and swinging at balls already in the catcher’s mitt.
The manager, a dour and clueless former player, relentlessly talks about how he, we, have to have patience with these young players while they learn the craft of baseball. Well, opposing pitchers make the Chicago Cubs look like fools as they flail at pitches outside the strike zone and miss hit-and-run signs like high school kids. Learn how to run in high school! Learn how to hit in the minor leagues!
Who says that the building plan of Mr. Epstein will work? Most players who have potential don’t work out. Felix Pie? Mark Prior? Those that do learn how to play on a team and they learn from seasoned players whom they interact with game after game.
The magic of a team has to involve seasoned players who know how to play at a major league level and engage younger players in the art of winning baseball games. It’s not just teaching and honing individuals until you can insert them into a team.
The Cubs have been in countless building programs over the century of futility. Chicago Cub fans have suffered for long decades but now we are being taken for granted. The owner seems to think that Cub fans will pay to see whatever inept team shows up at Clark and Addison.
I’ve had enough. I love Wrigley Field. I even warm-up to the Chicago Cubs as lovable losers. But, enough is enough. I hate what is being shoved down our throats in 2012: a team made up of kids who should be in Iowa learning how to hit, pitch and play on a team.
I’m not going anymoreChicago Cub games and I’m not watching them, either. Wait! I take that back. I really enjoyed the Little League finals. Great baseball.
Nuremburg, Germany, 2012.
It’s late July and I am on a European river cruise with two friends. I like cruises but hat boring tour guides, so I usually go off on my own whenever I’m visiting some place new. Today at 6 AM I carefully make my way down the gang-plank and begin walking along the canal which links Neuremburg to the Main and Danube Rivers.
Although there is only the occasional cyclist at this early hour, I skip the bike path and opt for one of the dirt paths which radiate away from the bike lanes. I take one of them and meander toward a forest, lush and still. It’s mostly dark, though the tall evergreens are letting in some light already. Scrub brush grows up along the path and areas of sparce green grass are spaced among the groves of trees.
On my left, just ten minutes into my walk I see a figure standing still in a field maybe seventy feet from me. It’s a lone deer. She appears mature though smaller than individuals of our white-tailed species. She’s hiding from me right out in the open. She is sure that I won’t notice her. (I decide it’s a “she” simply because this deer has no antlers. I actually hope she’s a she.) Her long ears are erect and turned in my direction and her fur is dark grey and the morning light is just touching her head and haunches. Her large eyes are glistening and steady as they regard me.
The deer is a microcosm for me. I look at her for who she is and she looks at me for who I am. In that mystery, I find God. Who says He can’t He come to me in the glance of a deer, in red-bird song in mid-winter or in a wild orchid under a sycamore tree in April?
We look at one another for some minutes. No one else is around. It’s very quiet. I make a move to continue down the dirt path and instantly the deer bounds once, twice and enters the darkness of the thick forest.
This is why I go places, often by myself. I think about how miraculous it is that wild deer still survive here in Bavaria after industrialization, two world wars and extensive habitat destruction. This European deer is a new species for me, the Western Roe Deer (Capreolus capreolus).
Our guide this morning will miss seeing this deer and so will the rest of our tour group. Maybe they wouldn’t care to experience a wild deer in a Bavarian Forest.
If I do not see anything else on this journey that is new, I will remember this morning, and the lone deer outside of Neuremberg Germany on a hot summer morning in July.
Opie’s father in the series “The Andy Griffith Show” is remembered as a kind and just single parent who let his son learn life’s lessons well. There were no “time outs,” no lame excuses accepted and no physical punishment, either. When Opie did something wrong, his father would try to teach him how to make it right, or at least how to avoid making the same mistake in the future.
Once Opie killed a nesting robin with a stone from his slingshot. Andy asked the boy how the little ones in the nest were going to survive with no mother to feed them. Father and son agreed that since Opie had taken the life of the adult bird, he would have to feed them. Opie kept them in a cage and fed them until they were ready to fledge. Later, fully grown now, the young birds fly away as Opie lets the cage door swing open wide.
The series went on year after year. Opie like all young boys made mistakes as he grew up. But he always recognized that his father was wiser than he was. Andy, on his part, never gives in to a zero tolerance policy. How can a child learn a lesson if we don’t allow for mistakes?
I once mentioned to my father that a friend of mind was thinking about becoming a carpenter but he was afraid of making mistakes. My father answered quickly: “Why if I were afraid of making a mistake. I could never have become a carpenter. Everyone makes mistakes. You just have to learn from them.”
The part Andy Griffith played in his series reminds me that there was once a standard for learning that was nearly sacred to parents. It wasn’t inflexible rules, nor was it tolerance for misbehavior. The golden rule of parenting was use common sense. Andy applied common sense with such skill that those of us who watched each week felt confident that life itself ought to be the greatest teacher of all.
Are you as unsure as I am about the American bishops’ response to President Obama’s health care plan? He is insisting that Catholic Church institutions pony up to pay for access to contraceptives, abortion services and sterilizations for all their employees. But wait a minute! Mr. Obama goes on to explain that the Catholic Church will not have to pay for health care which goes against the Church’s ethics. No. Their insurance companies will pay for whatever the Church objects to on moral grounds, not the Church itself.
My question is: Who pays the insurance premiums? If the Church pays the insurance company premiums which funds the things the Church objects to, how can the Obama administration not see that it is forcing the Church to act against its core values? Many of the Church’s agencies are self-insured and could not be expected to pay for health care it considers immoral.
The bishop’s response to all this is to throw down the gauntlet. Two weeks of prayer and polite demonstration and expensive full-page ads in national newspapers should do it, they seem to think. However, reaction of Catholics to this approach seems fairly tepid. Most of us priests would not be able to mount a good argument against the disputed provisions of the bill so you won’t be hearing much from most pulpits, either.
The bishops have not made their case clear. On the street it feels like this: Here’s the bishops of the Catholic Church trying to throw their ample weight around again. While the poor suffer for lack of access to health care, the bishops continue to defend their positions and fight the embarassment of the sex abuse crisis emenating from its shepherds. Many women in particular are furious because the big shot men in the Church want them to be satisfied with second-class health care. Something is rotten in the state of the American Catholic Church.
I don’t, of course, agree that our Church wants the poor to suffer more or that poor women should not receive health care. But I am concerned about contraception because it separates sexual relations from love. I’m concerned about abortion because it ends an innocent human life. But, I understand that others do not come to the same conclusions that I have.
We have to stay in dialogue with our neighbors. I read the graffiti (some of it) and bumper-stickers which reflect the mood of our culture. A recent sighting: “Pray Your Rosary and Stay Out of My Womb.” What’s wrong with this picture? Dialogue it’s not. Somehow we have provoked this kind of a response because the official American Church looks like a big bully.
Our bishops should be able to come up with a better plan to get us through these rough days without compromising our Catholic values or appearing to force those values on others. We Catholics deserve better leadership.
Good Friday. Hey, the New York Stock market will be closed in observance of the day of our salvation. So, we get a day without a display of public corporate and individual greed. One day a year. A good start. Our Christian memorial day, a Friday to beat all Fridays.
Holy Saturday. Baptisms and new life for all.
Easter! Mary Magdalene: “I have seen the Lord!”