It’s one of those things you just can’t ever quit— save a traumatic experience. The Catholic Church is so rich in ritual that after a few decades of immersion, you can’t quite shake it. Innate Catholic guilt? Perhaps. Or is there really something that happens to you in that weekly hour and a half?
The smokey chandeliers. The rustling of a nun’s habit. You catch a glimpse of her rosary within the folds of her skirt and can’t take your eyes off the stereotypical round glasses she wears. The booming baritone of the presiding priest. The twelve altar boys— yes, twelve! What can they all possibly be doing up there? The haunting organ, the radiant choir voices intoxicating your senses, calming you to the point of courage when you foolishly let your weak voice join in. The symmetry of the ushers, the variety of reverence on the faces of those assembled. Two sisters wearing matching floral skirts and identical cowboy boots, a young wife cradling a newborn, a diverse gathering of thick-rimmed glasses and antique pearls. The detailing in the stained glass windows— the intricacy of heaven’s towers and castles, the lines on an old man’s face, the cascading curls of an angel’s hair. Hello Jesus. Your constant presence each week is… reassuring?
I don’t think the Catholic Church has all the answers— but then again, maybe they do. This particular strain of Catholicism is the only bit of southern conservatism I embrace; strict guidelines on who receives communion, an interpretation of the gospel that wouldn’t fly north of the Mason-Dixon. Would I relish an opportunity to experience a synagogue, a temple, to learn the names of each Hindu goddess (can anyone recommend a comprehensive history of Hinduism, please?), to visit a yogi retreat? In a heartbeat. But something keeps pulling me back home to Mass and I cannot deny the weight that lifted off my shoulders the day I plucked up the courage to go to confession…
Hello. It's me
“Hey!” I yell from my car window to the man sitting on the porch. “How are you?”
I got kicked off my porch today. Yeah, I know it sounds weird, me being kicked off my very own porch.
I move to get a better shot, and the bluebird thinks its funny.
i'm just sitting here in the late morning. the grass is green, but it's an overcast day and clouds are rolling fast. i suspect heavy rains by early afternoon, but the weather channel says there may be hail. it doesn't matter. i can get a few shots in before anything strikes. the event may actually be done by then. i'm not sure. i'm just sitting here right now all by myself. away from the crowd that hasn't shown up, just photographing anything i feel. there's birds and trees and lots of other little things to fill the space. it's just a simple process anymore, filling the void that is. there's even a thin river running by that's right over there. and here's my tree. i didn't see it at first. i'll admit my mind didn't see it at all. i just breezed right by, but as my thoughts were wondering in the spring air, my eyes keep coming back to the sensation standing right there. I just like this tree. it's magical. it's a wizard with hands flying around. but it can't seem to hold on to all of these great ideas. even if none are truly great, they're all its own, and it wants to share them with us -- you and i. so hold onto your seat. we're going for a ride. it's the day i met a magical tree.
The sun is shining. So I am writing.
I can't sleep in the dark anymore.
Annual mother's day anxiety...
They say that sometimes, walking out the door is the hardest part...