this morning’s fortune cookie message

Listen to life, and you will hear the voice of life crying, Be!

Don’t worry, I wasn’t eating take-out for breakfast. 

I wonder what I’m going to “be” today. I think I’ll go for Xena, Warrior Princess, but in a suit.

the writer’s life

The birds are going totally nuts in the back yard. We just used some heavy machinery to move around dead trees and lots of earth, so everything is a little torn up and fresh. It’s really brought out some wildlife in a big way. The yard is full of rabbits, if you can believe that. First, the deer, now rabbits. I suppose it beats field mice (yeah, we had some of that a few tears back). I like to say field mice. It’s code for rats. Ew. Sorry, my little Cinderella moment just shifted to Enchanted.

So back to Cinderella: the birds are happily chirping away and flying about. The hummingbirds are back. It’s a sunny day. And I am home, enjoying a cup of coffee and looking out my window, my journal in my lap, pen poised pensively.

I even wrote a haiku. Here it is:

my morning is a haiku

birds chirping happily outside my window

and coffee warming my heart

I can’t help the streak of post-modern self-awareness of this post, but I’ll wash down the irony in my voice and just enjoy the moment.

For now, things are as they should be.

what an amazing memory

One of the things that I have learned from 25 years in education is that there are many different kinds of intelligence and giftedness. It’s easy to put students, especially young ones, in nice neat little boxes so they can be easily “managed.” On the one hand, the need for order is paramount, especially as classes get bigger and bigger. On the other hand, that order sometimes comes at the expense of creativity (and tragically, at the expense of human dignity). It’s particularly sad when that quest for order fails to acknowledge the gifts present in students with special needs.

Stephen Wiltshire is a young man with an astounding gift. He’s called the living camera. He’s probably called some other things, too:  some mean and hateful, and other labels that try to classify him or peg him into a “category” so that we can better understand his needs.

I’m just calling him an amazing artist.

more than just some shiny beads

I jerked open my car door and sat heavily into the front seat, slamming the door shut in spite of the oppressive waves swirling around the overheated interior. It felt good for a moment but eventually it competed with the heat rising in my head, an unfortunate by-product of a bad combo of high blood pressure and an angry exchange moments before leaving the office.

What can I say? It happens when you deal with people all day. And to think that yesterday I was bemoaning the fact I had locked myself in my office and not spoken a word until lunchtime.

Days like today try my patience, for sure, but they also become opportunities for grace. Let me say that five years ago, heck, last year, my response might have been quite different. I may have a long fuse that sputters out before it gets to the end and explodes, but every once in a while if it gets lit real well…um…it runs its course.

I got out of the office when I saw the warning signs and stewed a bit in my car before putting the key in the ignition. I don’t really know how long I sat there with the A/C blasting, but it was long enough for me, and the car, to cool off. Lucky for me I caught a glimpse of the rosary in the console, and I absentmindedly picked it up. The transformation in my attitude came gradually.

Now I’m a nice Catholic lady—that means I have rosaries stashed all over the place. This particular rosary, a gift from a dear friend who went on a pilgrimage to Rome several years ago, has medals of the basilicas in the place of the Our Father beads, which is a shame, really, because the Hail Mary beads are quite beautiful. They are sky blue that give off a swirling illusion if the light hits them just right. When I hold this rosary I can feel it in my palm.

It clinks and clacks and makes all those sounds I associate with the old ladies in Mass during the sixties. I always thought that serious prayer, the kind that made God sit up in appreciation, required a furious working of those beads. I must have been praying hard in the car because I was pretty furious. I didn’t have any words, but frankly, what are words to God when he knows my heart anyway?  So there I was, just holding the rosary in my hand, moving the beads into a tight little ball and then letting it spill out of my hand so I could gather it back into another tight ball. It was like a slinky: Catholic edition. And it calmed me.

Eventually the hypnosis wore off and I could start to put thoughts together in my mind. Now that I was thinking clearly I could contemplate the crucifix, and look at the details of Christ on the cross. I turned it over to look at the backside, where the nails go through. I don’t remember where I learned that the back of a crucifix has those marks to remind us of the horror of crucifixion (as if the corpus isn’t enough), so I kissed the cross before going back to my game of squeezing and letting out the rosary beads.

By now the heft and feel of the rosary changed a little bit as I became accustomed to its feel in my hand.  I found comfort in its weight.  The beads have substance, the metal workings that keep it together are sturdy and strong and I became more and more entranced by the workmanship.

It occurred to me that the rosary got heavier as my tension and anxiety got lighter.

As I shifted away from the self-absorption of my anger I was able to better focus on the rosary – away from the craftsmanship and onto the immensity of what it represents.

Pope Pius XII called the Rosary “the compendium of the entire Gospel.” The mysteries contain the story of our salvation, and in that moment of grace when I understood, albeit fleetingly, time stood still.

I am nothing. My petty grievances, forgotten now, pale against the enormity of that truth.

blessings in unexpected places

You know that sit-com cliché where the main character goes to the dentist because a filling is picking up a radio signal? Yeah. That’s not me. But I do have a lot of noise in my head and I wish it was as easy as replacing a filling to fix it. In fact, I’d succumb to a root canal to get rid of some of the static.

Before you think my mental health is in peril – let me just say that it’s not. Or at least, not too much, anyway. I heard somewhere that if you think you’re going crazy then you probably aren’t. I hold onto that comforting thought. It’s … comforting.

Because you know, there’s a lot of noise clamoring for attention in my head. On a good day I’ve got Leonard Bernstein conducting a delightfully disciplined orchestra with lots of soothing strings and soulful woodwinds. It has to be Bernstein for his theatrics – is there such a thing as a head-banging orchestra? Because on a bad day I have Sid Vicious and the Sex Pistols. That’s not even music … just noise. It makes me want to run away.

I find peace in a rather odd place. When Sid bumps Lenny out of the spotlight, I generally head for Taco Bell where I grab a burrito or a couple of tacos and eat my lunch across from the back view of Stone Mountain. Don’t read anything into that view, although in retrospect it’s probably nice to just see the mountain and not the sculpture – let’s call it a little more natural (and a little less political).

It’s not a particularly splendid place, this parking lot with a view, but it’s quiet and away from the hustle and bustle of my busy day. I enjoy my faux-Mexican meal in peace — after all, it is peace that I am seeking.

I’ve been doing this for exactly five years.

Let me just say that I am absolutely blown away by that realization. A lot of things have happened in five years. Holy cow! A lot of things have happened in five years. I’d say the majority has been good, and some bad, but I’m thankful for it all. The thing is this, I’ve been so focused on getting away from the noise, which by the way is made by people, that I totally ignore people in my escape.

That was part of my realization today. I’ve been working at the same place for five years, and getting lunch from the same place for five years. From the same person. For five years.

I was going to get depressed that I was in the very same position I accepted years ago when I realized that the woman who always takes my order has worked at a drive-thru window for at least five years, if not more, and I’m going to say, it made me a little sad. I suppose she trumps me in the lack of upward mobility department.

I’ve seen this woman at least 200 times and I don’t know her name. She’s friendly and courteous, and I am polite to her and always say please and thank you, but I’ve never really seen her. I just go through the motions on my way to what I think is going to give me some peace in the middle of the week.

Not today. For some reason, today I decided to be present in that exchange. It went the same way the last 200 or so transactions have gone. I asked for a #3 with Baja Blast and she asked me if I wanted mild or hot sauce.

And then I paid attention to something she has said to me every time she hands the bag of food to me: Enjoy your meal and God bless you.

This woman whose name I do not know, whose smile I return absentmindedly, has given me this blessing every week since I started eating there.

I always find some peace in my busy schedule when I have lunch at what I’ve nicknamed the Rock. I’ve always thought it was because I managed to escape the throng of humanity making its insistent demands upon me.

It turns out that perhaps the peace I received came from the very segment of humanity I was running from. How’s that for a moment of truth?