Mar 18 2010

A Different Way to Give

Category: CatholicismLindsay @ 6:46 pm

Alas, I am not at the beach this week. This does not, however, mean that I can’t have been up to some spring break antics of my own. To celebrate St. Patrick’s Day yesterday, I wore my lime green ACE shirt, I kept my feet warm in the green striped “Irish for the day” socks that D’s mom sent me, and I made green pancakes for dinner. (Well, I made the pancakes because I love pancakes; the green dye just made them festive.) I took a picture of the pancake pile on my phone’s camera, but since I didn’t have the software on my new computer, and my computer won’t work right with it, I gave up. Trust me, despite the first few practice ones (read: mistakes), they were yummy and very green.

Today, I decided to do something I’d never done before: give blood. I’ve been following BustedHalo’s FastPrayGive calendar throughout Lent. I even won a mini-tin of BustedHalo M&M’s last Wednesday for entering the daily/weekly giveaway contest. I’m not going to eat them until Easter (I took my cheat day on Saturday/Sunday in Savannah), but it feels so awesome to win. That’s actually my second BH prize; the first was a signed copy of A Jesuit Off-Broadway from about two years ago. (Review here.) The candy came in the mail today with a free copy of the March and Holy Week editions of Magnificat. Bonus!

On Thursday, the Give challenge was to give time or blood at a local blood bank. I live right up the highway from one, so I promised myself to take the plunge…and today, I did it!

I’m glad I went on a day when I had unlimited time. It took about an hour from when I first walked in to when I walked out. I was almost ineligible (I lived in Germany during a couple of mad cow outbreaks, but after the ones that still make donors unacceptable), but it worked out. I found out part of my blood type, but I have to call back for the Rh factor. The guy working with me had to get a small needle from another building (I have terrible veins) and keep stripping my tube so the blood wouldn’t clot from flowing so slowly. It was such an odd feeling to think that I was bleeding profusely on purpose. I got apple juice and a ice pack to help keep my blood sugar up and the weird queasiness in my chest down, and everything went off without a hitch. I even got a cool hot pink stretchy bandage to wrap up my arm.

After I left, I treated myself to lunch at Jason’s Deli. I helped save three lives today; I deserved a yummy sandwich. Donating blood brings a whole new meaning to Lenten almsgiving.


Mar 14 2010

Oprah Hearts Nuns

Category: CatholicismLindsay @ 11:53 pm

From Dymphna’s Well comes the news that The Oprah Winfrey Show featured a segment on the Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist! I was at Dymphna’s blog catching up on the Catholic Carnival, but I did a little exploring. I am so glad to see how balanced and fair the article is. It seems like the best reporting: asking questions and genuinely listening to the answers, no matter how odd or countercultural they seem.

Tonight, in addition to finding that article, I read one about finding a spioritual director. I am also on spring break this week, and not far from Nashville, where a friend of mine entered the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecelia. There are no coincidences, only God….


Feb 27 2010

The Fight Over Silence

Category: CatholicismLindsay @ 11:30 am

I like silence. My love of silence, like my love for the Church, is a fairly relatively development (compared to, say, my love of Harry Potter, which is a different passion yet still passionate). I prefer to go to Mass by myself on Sundays because I like to get to the church early for some quiet prayer and reflection before Mass and to stay after for more of the same. I also usually write in my spiritual journal during that quiet downtime. Lately, I’ve been so strapped for time and rest that I haven’t had as much silence as I used to, and I can tell that it has affected my spiritual life.

A few weeks ago, I read George Weigel’s column “Rediscovering the sounds of silence” in my local Catholic newspaper. I agreed with his overall message that we need to embrace silence more in our parishes. Sacred Heart Parish in Bowie, MD, where my friend Lyzii was married two summers ago, has a big sign in the back of the church to encourage the practice of silence. It says, “‘My father’s house is a house of prayer.’ (Matthew 21:13) Please maintain silence while in the church.” It can’t hurt that there is not so much a narthex as a breezeway, so there’s no place to stand around and talk noisily after Mass, but the existence of such a sign is noteworthy. Sacred Heart is also one of the most love-filled, physically beautiful, oldest, and most orthodox parishes I know back home. Those people appreciated silence.

However, I disagree that parents with noisy children should be forced into cry rooms or encouraged to attend separate Masses. I believe that removing children from situations where they act out will never encourage them to learn to behave. It will just teach them that all they need to do to escape enforced quiet is to be noisy. When I make a threat to my students (“Do that again and you’ll get time”), I always follow through. Always. The first time I let something slip or try to be lenient, I lose my credibility entirely. The best way to teach children to behave during Mass is to keep taking them no matter how badly they misbehave, with appropriate consequences for such misbehavior. When they are old enough, they’ll learn that they just have to be good. There is no other option.

Obstinate children, therefore, should be taken to cry rooms or out of the main church. No parent should be forced to start Mass in the cry room. It’s not called the child room; it’s for crying children until they stop crying. The associate pastor at my old parish in Alabama told a story from his previous parish of a family with children over ten years old who came to an evening Mass, went straight to the cry room, and proceeded to eat a fried chicken dinner in that room throughout Mass. Cry rooms are supposed to be a concession to parents who want to respect the congregation’s right to a peaceful Mass but don’t want to miss Mass themselves, not a segregated space for all parents, all the time.

Similarly, children who fuss or coo briefly should not be taken out of the main church immediately. Such interruptions used to bother me until I reordered my emotions. When I hear a momentary noise, I pray, “God bless that child.” I wasn’t taken to church as a baby, but I used to be one, and I might have one (or more!) someday. Children aren’t silent all the time; they haven’t learned that behavior yet. Until they do, we would do better to show compassion toward them than to reject them altogether.

Child noise complaints aside, we would all do well to embrace silence. It’s harder to hear God when there is constant noise crowding him out of your heart.

(written with reflection on a similar reaction post at the blog Fumare)

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Feb 21 2010

Fasting, Praying, Giving

Category: Catholicism,LifeLindsay @ 5:21 pm

I missed Advent last year. I’m still not quite sure how it happened that the religious Lindsay I used to be was completely pushed to the wayside, but there she went. The closest I came to my old ways was using Christy Nockels’s “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel” for Song Prayer Friday. I used to pray all the O Antiphons with gusto before Evening Prayer on the nights leading up to Christmas. I had even considered giving something up for Advent. (Liz did that; I found it highly admirable.)

This year, I’m almost going to miss Lent. I gave up sweets, as is my custom. Graham crackers and rosé wine is about as close as I have come so far. I also took up reading a booklet of (undated) Lenten reflections from the writing of Henri Nouwen that Sarah’s mom sent us last year. (This reminds me that I missed my trigger, which is changing clothes. Pause for prayer…and I’m back.) Finally, I decided to do Stations of the Cross on Fridays and follow BustedHalo’s FastPrayGive Calendar.

Lenten resolutions 1 and 2 have gone well. The latter two have not. They crashed and burned in one day: this past Friday. Having successfully fasted from rushing through my day (On Wednesday, I stopped during my planning period to examine one of the student paintings in the hallwayl it was lovely) and from self-pity (I think I complained during lunch on Tuesday; I usually commiserate with the other teachers), I headed to check Friday’s fasting challenge as I conquered my daily bowl of cereal. “Fast from dairy today.” On cheese pizza Friday, this was an epic fail. Some of the calendar’s other devotees made similar slip-ups (most commonly over morning cups of coffee), so I wasn’t alone. To add insult to injury, I completely forgot about going to Stations after dinner because I had to finish my lesson plans and got caught up in dinner conversation with Brogan, D, and D’s sister. I atoned by donating the cost of two gallons of milk to my FPG bowl.

Yesterday morning was somewhat redeeming, though. The prayer challenge was to pray in a new way to be closer to God. I took one of my favorite Bible verses (Psalms 51:10), one I previously had as an LJ icon during Lent, and created some word art.

Somehow, just asking for help made me feel like I’d received it.

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Feb 04 2010

Grammar Fail

Category: SchoolLindsay @ 7:52 pm

School is taking over again, but this was too egregious an error not to post.

Nope. Word 2007: 0. Well, 1 for making deleting tables easier. But in that case, Lindsay: 2 (+1 for awesomeness).


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