Appreciating Fall

This year, I’m appreciating fall in a new way. I credit my sister-in-law, the one who has moved back to Ohio after seven years away from our version of fall, with this heightened awareness of the beauty around me.

I usually notice it, mind you. This is one of my favorite times of the year. But I can’t help doing a double take more often when I pass a tree with flaming red leaf tips or a particularly brilliant patch of orange. I spy a combine in a field or a tractor pulling a load of grain down the road, and I think of how she’d be pointing her camera without a second’s hesitation.

Her enthusiasm for the changing leaves and the many forms of harvest all around has me smiling. On her way to take her daughters and our nieces and nephew to school, she’s bound to stop and take a picture. They laugh, but she challenges them to look around and see the loveliness they have taken for granted.

It’s so easy to take things in life for granted, from the exquisite fall fashion show right outside my window to the people who pepper my life with blessings. In this season of things dying and gorgeous color, I find myself reflective. As a foot edges into my ribcage, proof of new life within, I think of the life we can’t forget and the grief that hovers on the edge of our days.

I find myself wondering if there were flowers blooming on the path winding to Golgotha, if there was evidence of hope even there, in the desolation surrounding the Cross. I clutch my rosary this month, in the midst of rainbows in trees and cerulean skies and apples everywhere, and I think of how it took the Cross to achieve the Resurrection.

There’s some comfort in that, but it’s distant somehow. The fact that there’s a host of shocking color and breathtaking splendor everywhere I drive feels more concrete, more like evidence of God’s love and His hand in the working of things.

Fall is a time of things dying, and the dying is beautiful. How can this be? When I examine it closer, I struggle to apply it, to make it more than a theory that applies only to agriculture and nature.

These pictures I found on my camera, evidence of a passion that can’t be dampened even in the face of heartache and tragedy, give me hope the same way that meditating on the crucifix gives me hope. They speak to me of so much more than Ohio autumns and someone with an eye for my taste.

There is hope. There is always hope.

I think this must be the way that Mary, even as she faced the incredible pain of the Cross, comforted the disciples and those around her. I think of my sister-in-law, facing her own struggles, as my very own Mary, living proof that God not only loves me, but that He will reach down constantly and touch me through every aspect of my life.

Maybe, in fact, that’s what we are to each other, each of us, as we face the uncertainties of life and the hurdles in front of us. Maybe we have Mary beside us to guide us in how we are to minister to each other, how we are to, most importantly, love each other.

For that, I’m thankful. With a dose of apple butter and a bright streak of maple leaves on top.

Mary in Tears

Another in the Mary Moment Monday series

This week, on September 15, we celebrate one of my favorite feasts of Mary, the feast of Our Lady of Sorrows.

She’s a special Mary to me, one who’s close to my heart, who knows my heart, who speaks to my heart. She’s the Mary who holds me when I let my guard down and just sob, when I shake my fist and God and ask Him what in the world He could be thinking, when I throw tantrums and stomp away and then curl up in a heap.

Suffering unites us in a way few other things can. Being able to picture Mary wracked with grief, torn apart with pain, clinging to a scrap of hope despite the torture of continuing to live…somehow, this makes her approachable in the midst of the turmoil of my life. I see her there, at eye level for once, and I recognize the tears hovering, ready to fall. She comes closer, offering me her shoulder: not advice, not an admonition to toughen up, not anything more than just herself.

I haven’t suffered greatly, not really. But I have watched, many times helplessly, as others have suffered. Maybe that is its own special kind of suffering, the suffering where you watch those you love and the only help you can offer is turning your tear-streaked face to God.

This week, when I see evidence of the many ways in which my life is filled with blessings and not filled with suffering, I’ll be reaching out to my Mother of Sorrows. When I see horror in my world, injustice and unfairness, or just plain mean “life ain’t fair”-ness, she’ll be the one I ask for help. I’ll greet my old friend Mary, Our Lady of Sorrows, and we’ll hug through the tears that will inevitably flow.

In that vein, if you have any special intentions you’d like me to remember this week, feel free to let me know. Maybe I can take them to Mother Mary on your behalf.

My latest column is over at Faith & Family Live:Turning to Mary in Suffering.” I share a few favorite devotions and some reflections that came out with tears, no extra charge. This ranks as one of the more painful pieces I’ve written, and I’ll admit to you…I tried to avoid it. I attempted to write a more sterile, less personal piece. What came out, and what just would not go away, was the start you’ll read over there. (Because, yes, I have more to say. I just couldn’t get it all out.)

Last year, over at Today’s Catholic Woman, I wrote a feature about Our Lady of Sorrows. If you’re interested in the history of the title and a bit more of my own take on this title, you might stop over and give it a peek.

image from Marian Mantle

Battling My Worst Fear

I don’t think I appreciated fear or the concept behind the admonishment to “Be not afraid” until this year. This has been a year of watching a person I love go through a trauma that has shaken our entire family. It’s been a year of wondering how I would react in her shoes, of battling “what if,” of changing priorities and internal compasses (ones I didn’t know needed changed).

Have you ever faced your worst fear? I haven’t, not really. I used to think that burying a child must be the worst thing a parent could ever have to cope with. Then I thought it must be the premature loss of a spouse. After this year, I don’t know.

During a long conversation on a dark porch, one of the people I admire more than almost anyone else told me that she has seen the good that has come from one of the hardest challenges she’s ever faced, burying two of her babies. I should have been shocked: it seems so counterintuitive that good can come from that kind of tragedy. But, the thing is, I’ve seen the good too, even if only in the corner of my soul that has become softer and more open to life.

It’s this experience that has her, through the anguish of losing her husband unexpectedly earlier this year, convinced that God loves her, certain that He’s holding her, persuaded that He’s running the show. As she faces what she calls her personal hell, I can’t help but shake my head at her rock solid faith.

She pulls her car to the side of the road to cry. She hides the sharp pangs during family gatherings. She puts on a brave face for her children, her mother, her siblings, her friends. She notices the absence, the empty space, the changes that wouldn’t have been necessary if he were alive. Underneath it all is a grief so deep that I think only Mary really knows it. Only Mother Mary can comfort her, really. With each new pain comes the memory of the old; with the passage of time and the slow healing it brings comes a new wound of guilt over forgetting, over moving on, over living.

On that dark porch, huddled in sweatshirts and talking theology and heaven, I was once more humbled by this woman beside me. Given her suffering, who was I to encourage her? Given her year, who was I to offer her anything other than love? Given her grief, who was I to laugh or correct or do more than pray?

From her example and unwavering faith, I’ve had a firsthand glimpse of the truths of our lives as Catholics. Our lives on earth are not complete or fulfilled, and they never will be. We will suffer mightily. Through it all, though, God loves us. He never stops. He never gives in. He never hesitates.

God loves me.

Facing that worst fear, whatever it is, doesn’t seem so bad when I have a mentor who is going through a personal hell and is sharing the walk with me. Her brave forging forward makes me think of the saints, of Mary, of the great women of the Bible. That worst fear of mine, seems, indeed, to be a bit of a smokescreen, a ploy to scare me away from living as I should, a distraction from the importance of the life of tangible faith.

I don’t need to battle my worst fear. I just need to hold on to His hand and jump into His arms as needed.

The Assumption This Year

On Sunday, we celebrate the Feast of the Assumption. It’s a Holy Day of Obligation here in the United States, and one that I’ve always struggled to understand and internalize.

I’ve written about it at Faith and Family Live, but it remains something strange to me, something I’m just not used to. It’s hard to explain how I’m drawn to it — it’s a feast of Mama Mary, after all! — and how I’m confused by it, how I want to celebrate and how I struggle to justify my joy, how I tear up and how I look heavenward.

I think it’s lovely, don’t get me wrong. It’s an example of how God loves me personally and all of us individually. He thinks enough of us to make sure we have a heavenly mother! He is sharing His Own mom!

This year has been a whirlwind. It started with a death that rocked our world and continued with terrifying health problems with our oldest daughter. It has included news of a pregnancy and watching the ongoing health struggles of Poppa Gene.

There have been a lot of tears this year, more in eight months than I would have thought an entire decade could hold.

And so it is that we come to a major Marian feast, the Assumption.

It is on this day, as the Church celebrates the Mother of God and her glorious entry into heaven, that my sister-in-law will come “home” to Ohio. She and her girls are coming in a caravan of Reinhard brothers.

She’ll be surrounded once she’s here, and yet I know that she’s going to feel more alone than ever. She’s going to have family at every turn, and yet I know that there will be a glaring absence, one that, though healed by time, is always present. She will smile and cry and hide what she can. She will muddle forward, do her best, get through it and over it and around it.

There’s something beautiful about this painful day being on a feast of Mary. I have felt, over the years of watching this sister-in-law hero of mine, that she has a very special place in Mary’s heart. From her openness about her story to her unwavering faith, she continues to show me the path to Mary, the way through the sorrow and the heartache. She shakes her fist and throws things across the room, but she also drinks a beer and laughs heartily. She picks the splinters out of her feet and tosses them in the face of the one tempting her to give up.

She’s spunky, this sister-in-law of mine, and it does all of us good to have a taste of that in our lives. I’d carry her cross for her if I could, I’d hold her head in mine. I’ve watched her mother sob, unable to help her daughter more, wanting to take the pain and make it go away, and I’ve felt utterly and completely helpless.

Sometimes, when I’m paying attention, I get a glimpse of God’s grace. This year, the Feast of the Assumption feels like one such grace. It feels like Mary reaching down and letting us know that Allen’s regaling her with stories and playing ball with his boys.

A Birthday Not Celebrated

A Mary Moment Monday post

(Yes, I realize this is the second Mary Moment Monday post today. But this is for Susie. I wrote it yesterday and asked her permission to publish it. I hadn’t heard from her this morning, so I scrapped it. She just wrote me, and told me she was touched to have me reflecting on Allen’s birthday. And so, for Susie, here is the second post for today…an exception made for an exceptional hero of mine.)

Dear Allen,

It’s your birthday, but it won’t be a day we’re celebrating. To call you and wish you a happy day, we’ll have to kneel and fold our hands. This is a birthday that you’re celebrating in heaven.

I’ve been thinking of you a lot lately, though I always feel a little guilty admitting that. I’m just the sister-in-law, after all. It’s not my grief. It’s not my cross to bear. It’s not my problem.

Or is it?

I know there were plenty of people who grieved with Mary when Jesus died on the Cross. They surrounded her, held her, and while she probably comforted them as much as they tried to comfort her, it was a shared experience.

As I consider this birthday, the one we won’t celebrate so much as commemorate, I can’t help but look heavenward.

I don’t want to know why. It doesn’t matter. (Well, maybe it does, but I have a feeling I wouldn’t understand anyway.)

But I’d like to be able to offer more than just a shoulder to the people who will most need it today. Today’s going to be hard for Susie and the girls. It will be a day when you’re more gone than usual, when your absence is glaring.

Allen, pray for and comfort them. Send an angel or two their way today, would you?

Image source

Hard Change

An installment of the Mary Moment Monday series.

I was going to title this post “Change SUCKS,” because that’s just on my mind today, and has been for a few weeks.

Change is fun in many ways, invigorating even.  I’ve come to realize, though, that change causes me a lot of stress.

Whether it’s a new life situation or a different room arrangement, I don’t often choose excitement as my first reaction to change.

Usually, I pout and stomp and say things like “Change sucks.”

I used to work with an annoyingly upbeat guy who had a mantra, “Your feelings are not reality.”  He’d pipe up with this at about the time I was croaking “Change SUCKS” from beneath the piles of ideas on my desk.  He was like a little bird singing a happy song and all I wanted was to lounge under the storm clouds of my bad attitude.

I’m having one of those Mondays where Bad Attitude + Low Self Esteem = Change Sucks Mentality.  All day, his voice has been in my head reminding me that my feelings are not reality.

I don’t think Mary ever looked at her life and declared that change sucked. Faced with an unexpected pregnancy, she went to share the news.  When she realized she was going to give birth — to the Savior! — in a crude stable, I’m betting she didn’t start sulking and refuse to talk to Joseph for the rest of the night.  Given the the order to flee to Egypt with only what she had on her back, she probably didn’t moan about the timing.

Seeing her Son on that dusty road in Jerusalem, back striped from the scourging, stumbling and looking terrible, I don’t think she shook her fist at God…or at Pontius Pilate or the soldiers.  I don’t think she blamed a bad day or let it get her down.

On that very worst of days, Mary was facing change in a way that was hard indeed.  I’ve been at the foot of the cross a few times.  Talk about hard and life-altering.

We have all been at the foot of the cross.  We have all suffered greatly (though we may not think so).

What’s this have to do with change? In Mary, standing at the foot of the cross, I have my call to action about my resistance to change.  In Mary, toiling through everyday life, feeling frustrated and keeping her smile, I have my reason for fighting past this attitude.  In Mary, I have my mentor in how to approach change.

My soul magnifies the Lord,
And my spirit rejoices in God my Savior.
For He has regarded the low estate of His handmaiden,
For behold, henceforth all generations shall call me blessed.
For He who is mighty has done great things for me, and holy is His name.
And His mercy is on those who fear Him from generation to generation.
He has shown strength with His arm:
He has scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts.
He has put down the mighty from their thrones,
and exalted those of low degree.
He has filled the hungry with good things;
and the rich He has sent empty away.
He has helped His servant Israel, in remembrance of His mercy;

As He spoke to our fathers, to Abraham and to His posterity forever.
(Luke 1:41-45, New Revised Standard Edition)

Finding Mary at the Mardi Gras Parades

This Mary Moment Monday, I’m sharing my Mary Moment from last week’s Catholic Moments.  Call it the easy out.  I need it today, so I’m taking it.

I have never been a big fan of parades. They’ve always been sort of, well, disappointing.  Maybe it’s that I know I can go buy all the candy I want WITHOUT having to sit all day and fight the person next to me for it.

Then I came down to Mardi Gras in New Orleans.

Being here, in what I will forever think of as Parade Central, I have had some moments to reflect on Mary in ways I haven’t before.

It seems unlikely, doesn’t it?  Here we are, beads flying through the air and songs about Who Dat blaring everywhere, and I’m thinking about the Blessed Mother.

What’s SHE got to do with this?

Well, here’s the thing.  At the parades, I noticed who was NOT there.  As my sister-in-law held my two-year-old and laughed with my five-year-old, I thought of Mary at the foot of the cross.

These parades have been a special sort of cross for my sister-in-law.  The Mardi Gras celebrations were their family’s THING.  They made a week of it, reveling and cooking out and doing all the things that we Ohioans associate with Buckeye Football.  In fact, my late brother-in-law had gotten so into things that he was even riding on a float.

As we watched that float go by, everyone cheering and laughing and reaching up, I looked over at my sister-in-law.

Suddenly, I was at the foot of the cross, watching the Blessed Mother.

Did the women with her wonder, as I do looking at my sister-in-law, how much more she could take?  Did they feel their grief as a stab, a cold reminder of life, faced as they must have been with the enormity of her misery?  Did they see her tear-streaked face and see the next day would hold for her?

What was that next day?  What did it hold?  Where did that grief go?  Who wiped up the tears?

It’s so easy to distance myself from the tears that threaten to drown my loved ones when I’m a thousand miles away.  It’s so easy to move on with my life, to offer a quick prayer and not have my SELF moved or changed.

But here, beside the dry eyes that hide grief torn depths, here I find myself standing beside Mary.

And I’m looking at her, and I’m wondering, HOW MUCH MORE CAN SHE TAKE?

Let’s start Lent there, at the foot of the cross, together. Let’s stand at the foot of the Cross and let Mary comfort us with her tears, let her guide us with her trust, let her teach us with her ongoing Yes.

And while we’re there, beside her, let’s not forget the Son who brought us all together.  May she hold you close and lead you to her Son this week.

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