With my most recent trip West, I took Big Bro to Breakfast one morning. Not feeling so good, he wasn't sure about going, but he went, if only to please me. Before we dug into our plates we prayed. As we bowed our heads, the entrance door opened,with a waft of cold air and light arriving with the murmur of pouring rain. I looked up. I noticed the people at the next table were not looking at the door, but rather, at our table, either the gun on the hip of my dark blue pants, or our prayer. Should either be considered that unusual in public?
I was born to a Catholic mother, Mary-Brigid being the name I was first given. I was taken in from the Children's Home Society and later adopted by an older couple in a small lumber town that was probably 80% Scandinavian. Their family came west via Minnesota or North Dakota after arriving in America, and homesteaded in Montana. My Mom's mother was from Sweden, her Dad form Norway so the Lutheran church is what we were raised in. And so, I spent my early early years with the stories of Lutheran Basement Church Women, creamed peas and toast, and that bastardized offspring of a can of cream of mushroom soup and leftovers, the Lutheran Supper Hot Dish.
We didn't have the Saints of my birth, but in a Scandinavian town we had stories of the Nordic Gods -Frigidaire- god of ice fishing, Lesfse, the goddess of unseasoned food, and Inclement, the god of school closures due to all the snow you betcha. The homes were warm, and full of the scent of coffee cake. On the kitchen walls were brightly painted plaques with sayings in Swedish that probably translated to "Keep making fun of the lutefisk and we'll ship Socialism over there".
It was a good place to grow up, community both inside, and outside of the church. I remember Sunday service, the Communion cup glinting like a newly minted coin, the people around me that loved me like my own family, as from above, the bloodied and life sized Christ crowned with thorns looked down on us with forgiving eyes that had seen too much, his face, smooth and impenetrable. I'd take a sip of the cup, taking in the blood that contained an indomitable spirit which came from the fire that exists in us all, looking up at Jesus there on the cross with a conspiratorial nod and a silent thanks, having no other words.
I was raised with meals taken as a whole family, except for one night a week that we ate on TV Trays, just the kids, in front of the TV, a special treat on Friday if we'd behaved and performed well in school that week. It was always the same meal. A small piece of steak (from the steer we'd butcher each year), oven baked french fries, buttered toast, green beans and milk and a few slices of orange for dessert. I'm not really sure why we always had buttered white toast with our steak, but it would have seemed wrong if it was missing.
Even for those meals, as we set about to watch cowboys or spies save the world, we said Grace.
"Why pray?", someone asked, "you did, and look at everything bad that's happened to you, people you loved whose days were numbered too few?" Can I say I never questioned God, in anger, wishing that he felt the same pain that I did, shoving my fury into the sky like a fist.
When I go back to my hometown now, I return to that same church I was raised in, with my Dad. The people who loved me as a child, for the most part, are still there, though elderly. My piano teacher, in a nursing home now, but always open for a visit, my best friend's Mom, now widowed, another woman who sat by my Stepmom's bed for days with Dad and I as she struggled in her last days, the people that drive my Dad to his doctor's appointments when we can not. There's comfort there in that community of saints.
As I sit in the pew, I look at my Dad, who has lived a life of total love, service and honor, sensing how his heart will soon fail him. It's a strong heart, a good heart, a railway station of life and blood, blue lines in and red lines out, switching tracks flawlessly for nine decades until one day there will be a derailment and the tracks will be silenced. He sees me looking at him and puts his hand on mine as we bow our head in the silence that is not silence but is innumerable.
Is that fair? Yet, he's had nine decades more than his first daughter, born in extraordinary perfection, simply too early and too small, the awful perfect prayer of his firstborn, who breathed only days, my mom rendered barren from the travail of the birth. Yet from that death came life, adopting children no one wanted, and soon the table was filled, with small hands, small hearts and much laughter. "Bless us, O Lord, for these Thy gifts. " and ""Mom he took my garlic bread!" and "May I please be excused?"
Had my parents closed off their hearts in that original loss, that table would have been silent.
I believe that the Divine, force and free will are all intertwined. I have to bite my tongue when I hear of someone who left us by other than natural causes, "it's so bad the Lord took him early" when all I can think is "you know, if he hadn't intentionally busted several laws of the State and physics he'd still be here, the Lord notwithstanding". I don't dare say such things out loud but it makes me remember why Darwin was not made a Saint. God may watch over us, but he doesn't direct our every single thought and move. We make choices through our own free will, the bad ones we get through and carry with regret, hopefully still intact. God did not force those choices, he simply forgives them.
I've certainly had to ask for that forgiveness in my talks with God. For I talk to Him regularly, in the woods, hunting with my Browning, when the light has a weary quality to it, like a backwater pool of light lying low, winter's light is crisp, clean, illuminating everything so clearly. The words are less than wishes and more than regrets, and even if I didn't state them out loud, I could hear them with my breathing as they gathered within the intent of breath and came forth in a rush of cold air, invisible words going up to an invisible God.
Sometimes He and I talk as I'm sitting in a vehicle in the middle of an open field, ash in my hair, red smeared on my boots, as bold as if painted on a door frame, a sign, that for tonight, I was to be spared. Perhaps this one time I did not save His sparrow which He perhaps neglected to mark, but I am here to reconcile the remains. It's just talk, but it's still a prayer; prayer being more than the order of words, the conscious calling of the mind that is speaking, or the sound of the voice praying. I do not expect to hear anything back, the communication between us tongued with fire beyond the blaze that is dying next to me. But it's comforting, words spoken into the void, penitence and belief, as all around hope is falling into embers. He may not respond, but He is there, Never and Always.
So I do not care if someone looks at me oddly if I bow my head. I only smile when someone says, how can you do that with all that you've seen, the pain that man can inflict on one another.
But I can, for I have come to realize that the same God that seemed to sit silently while hearts ceased beating, also blew life into everyone else around me that I love deeply, now shaping their strong hands and putting spark in their vision. So it is, I don't clench my hands in anger in all that I've witnessed, have borne, but simply give thanks. God writes death on all our hearts, just as he writes life, our story penned as much by our actions as His creation, our heart a journal that only we keep, it's entries scribed by both man and God, it's ending as much as a mystery as we are.
I, for one, am thankful for the words.
It's time for a call to Big Bro. He's gained 4 pounds, even with the chemo and I can usually pique his appetite with a photo of some supper. Tonight, a small steak sounds good, maybe some toast (though I'm so going to pass on the creamed peas). I look at the table on which rests my pistol, sitting quietly, waiting to protect me and others, when higher powers can not. I am blessed that I live where my God given right to have that protection is recognized. But then again, I am blessed in so many ways.
With the meal I will say a prayer, of thanks for that and many things. For my Dad and his brave heart. For my brother, for healing, or comfort if that is not to be. For forgiveness of sin, for the blessing of friends, those near, and one very far away.
Bless us oh Lord for these thy gifts. . . .




27 comments:
Brigid,
How beautifully written.
You are not alone. My family and I pray whenever we are out and have a meal, and yes, everyone looks at us. I wonder sometimes if we should do it in a manner that no one notices, but this is the habit we have taught our family, and I know no other way now.
Please know that your brother will be in our prayers now, and you also.
God's Grace, and Blessings B
Lots of dust on the internet tonight. Thanks for your reflections.
Amen, and beautifully said!
As always, my friend, your writing sets my mind drifting.....
Brigid, I love reading your written words. It's not only little glimpses into your life, but mine as well. And introspection doesn't suck. Thank you.
From us to you and yours...hope it helps.
If you sometimes forget to pray until after you've had a few bites, there's an app for that:
"Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless His holy name." (Ps. 103:1)
(/preacher humor)
Excellent, B.
Thanks for sharing :)
Oh Brigid....would that I could write even half as well as you...
Beautifully said, and interspersed with humor.
Prayers sent for your Bro.
Vic303
We always pray whenever we are out for a meal, as is our custom at home.
We also thank others for praying publicly.
Bob
III
I had suppress my evil giggle, reading about "you know, if he hadn't intentionally busted several laws of the State and physics he'd still be here, the Lord notwithstanding" which will now cross my mind along with the thoughts of "you can't fix stupid" or "Call ServePro, like it never even happened," when I observe a steaming, leaking, recyclable hulk of former speed and sex appeal wrapped around a tree.
I had suppress my evil giggle, reading about "you know, if he hadn't intentionally busted several laws of the State and physics he'd still be here, the Lord notwithstanding" which will now cross my mind along with the thoughts of "you can't fix stupid" or "Call ServePro, like it never even happened," when I observe a steaming, leaking, recyclable hulk of former speed and sex appeal wrapped around a tree.
I had suppress my evil giggle, reading about "you know, if he hadn't intentionally busted several laws of the State and physics he'd still be here, the Lord notwithstanding" which will now cross my mind along with the thoughts of "you can't fix stupid" or "Call ServePro, like it never even happened," when I observe a steaming, leaking, recyclable hulk of former speed and sex appeal wrapped around a tree.
Pardon me if there was more than one post, my appologies
You are such an inspiration with your written words Brigid, While I don't attend services these days I try to spend time just talking? Thinking? Communing with God. I want to thank you for reminding me about saying grace too... Thank you once again for all you do by simply writing for us to read.
Amen.
With all that we've lived through, I've found myself asking the same questions. And then, I take a few minutes to look back, and the hand of God forging tragedy and heartache into love and life is blatantly obvious.
(And, Rev. Paul, we use that same prayer in our family. With three hungry kids, sometimes a bite or two goes down first.)
Thank you Brigid for reminding me again of what is and what is not important...
A goal i've strived for is laid out in the Good Book for me... and it sounds as though your father has met it well...
"I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith: Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day: and not to me only, but unto all them also that love his appearing."
~2 Timothy 4:7-8
God bless your father... he is obviously a truly good man...
Dann in Ohio
Amen. Wonderful as always.
Just maybe if I prayed before meals, I'd be a better man. Maybe if those people weren't so shocked that someone would pray in public, we'd be a better nation. Anyone notice the new dollar coins don't have "In God we Trust." on them?
Lady B, Not much I can say that others or I haven't already said before, except continued prayers for you & all your beloved. God Bless your big ole pretty lil' heart!
Good news on your brother. Lu and I will be keeping him and your entire family in our prayers.
Well said. Still sending prayers for you and yours.
For me, sometimes just the act of praying gives peace. Like articulating the burdens in my heart can help to lift them. Change my perspective. Or maybe it's just that I release my grip and let God lift them.
I lost my mom in June of 2011 and dad passed away 4 months later. It hurt but it also opened my heart to God more than I thought was ever possible. I will eternally be grateful to the Lord, my God for the opportunity (even at a loss) that I was given and I am thankful for the catholic teaching that saw me through that time.
Listen to the wind and your dreams and your heart. The Holy Spirit is calling you to the Sacraments, 'fore the storm hits.
I have enjoyed your writing for a couple of years. I should stop by more often. My apology.
Terry
As an EMT, ER nurse, cardiac floor-- at times I've seen my share and wonder, after that, how one could NOT pray. He has helped me in ways big and small; in finding my way to Him and reminding me that without, I am tossed about. Thank you, Brigid, for sharing this; my prayers for you and your loved ones.
Brigid is the patron saint of sailors.
Seems fitting, somehow.
After attending the recent funeral Mass of a good friend's beautiful and talented wife, it occurred to me that from God's perspective, death is not the worst thing that can happen to us. After all, it is the way He brings us home.
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