Mary’s Got My Text

Part of the Mary Moment Monday series.

The unthinkable has happened.

It started with an upheaval that changed some things in our family life.  When my 12-year-old niece Ree showed me her collection of her dad’s pictures on her phone, and then asked if she could text me, I said yes.

I mean, I have the right kind of phone (it was a free upgrade, what can I say?), even if I didn’t particularly like anything about texting.

How could I not respond to this precious niece, who was once a three-year-old girl calling me “Aunt” Sarah (long before I was actually her aunt)?  How could I say “No, sorry, I don’t like to text,” when what she was asking was really so much more?  How could I not try my hand at this newfangled technology?

Since Ree left for home, we’ve texted at least once every day.  I’ve had a little insight into her life, a little glimpse into her days, a little hug sent over the airwaves with my favorite medium, words.

Then, yesterday afternoon, my mother-in-law called me from New Orleans.

“Ree just texted me,” she said, rather breathlessly.  (Was she excited?  Who was this woman, using that word as a verb with such familiarity?)  “Is that OK?  She wants to keep texting me, every night before bed.”

My first thought was that it must have frozen over down there in New Orleans.  How else could my mother-in-law, one of the most technologically challenged people I know, be texting?

At 2:18 AM, when the dog woke me up, I heard the beep, and wondered if Ree had sent me a little message when she went to bed.  (Too late, I thought, because I stayed up past what should have been her bedtime.)

No, as it turns out, she didn’t.

My mother-in-law did.

She was letting me know that their late night flight arrived safely and she was home.

Trudging back up to bed with the uncooperative, way too awake dog, I laughed to myself.

And, wouldn’t you know, I thought of Mary.

(If you’re rolling your eyes at me, you can just stop.  Right now.  I always think of Mary.  It’s just part of being a Mary geek.)

I’m looking forward to the little gems I’m sure I’ll receive from my mother-in-law now, the little love notes that she’ll text me.  Because she will.  She’s the kind of person who makes you your tea (or coffee, depending on what you drink or, if you’re like me, when you drink it) just the way you like it, with a little hug thrown in for no extra charge.  Just as I’ve been sending my sister-in-law, Ree’s mom, little encouraging notes for the last few weeks, my mother-in-law will send them to me (and to Susie too, I’m quite sure).

It’s not so different from the little hugs I feel through my day, the times I send a desperate little prayer “text” up to Mother Mary.  If I was keying it, it might read:

HM, help b4 I kill kids or self ASAP! Thx. ILU

(That’s “Hail Mary, help before I kill kids or self as soon as possible! Thanks. I love you.”)

From the challenges of the upside down schedule we’ve had for the last few weeks to the juggling act I’m always imposing on myself (I like the circus), I find myself turning to Mary as a comrade-in-arms.  I picture her, not as the pristine statue in our church, but as a frazzled mom of a toddler.  Oh, I know she handles it all with grace and dignity (unlike me), but I also need to picture her as real, as someone I can talk to and turn to, as someone who really cares about me.

You know, like my mother-in-law.

Would Mary send me a text message to the effect of “Stay strong ILU” on a day when I really need it?

She already does. It might not be in the form of a text message (yet), but how many times does my phone ring with a friend whose sympathetic ear is just what I needed?  How often do I open my inbox to find an encouraging comment or promise of prayer?  How many hugs did I receive, in real life and virtually, during one of the roughest months of my life?  (A lot.)

It could all just be random kindness.  Or Mom could have a hand in it.

As I sit her drinking tea lovingly prepared for me by my mother-in-law, I’m inclined to think it’s the latter.

How have you felt Mary’s touch as a little message in your life recently?

Odds n Ends

1: A thought for today

“A most important means of acquiring interior mildness is to accustom ourselves to perform all our actions and to speak all our words, whether important or not, quietly and gently. Multiply these acts as much as you can in the time of tranquility, and so you will accustom your heart to gentleness.”

St. Francis de Sales, A Year with the Saints (from today’s Mary Vitamin)

2: Keeping an eye on Joseph

Next week, come barking preschoolers or creamless coffee, I will share my thoughts about a phenomenal book that I can’t wait to reread, Go to Joseph, by Fr. Richard Gilsdorf.  I couldn’t put it down, and it made me feel such a conviction — dare I call it a “call”? — to write about Joseph, to read more about Joseph, to deepen my devotion to a saint who has long been a favorite of mine.

3: The Twitter Conundrum

To post my tweets as daily updates here on the blog or not?  It was annoying, at least to me as I puttered around on the back end of things, and so I stopped posting them and decided to try a weekly update.  I bring it up here in case anyone has any great ideas for this sort of thing.  There are a few people (ahem, the grandparents, for one!) who don’t read my Twitter or Facebook.  Arguably, they’re not missing much.  I put them back into the sidebar, but…but…that part of me that wants everything organized and tucked into one place protests.  Your thoughts?  (Am I over-thinking?  Yes, I probably am.)

4: I can’t make this stuff up (a sampling of tweets)

  • 5yo to me: “Watch out! [2yo] is going to act sick so she can ride in an ambliance.” (“Ambliance” ride a few weeks ago made an impact!)
  • Wait a minute! You mean it’s NOT normal to have ketchup (only ketchup) for breakfast? My kids DO NOT know this.
  • The past month’s stress melts away in the warm breath of a pony and the squealing giggles of my girls. :)

5: The Tolkien Professor

If you’re a fan of J.R.R. Tolkien, then you should check out The Tolkien Professor, a podcast that is, in a word, AMAZING. It’s done by Professor Corey Olsen, a tenure-track professor in the English Department of Washington College, where he teaches courses on Chaucer, courtly love, Arthurian literature, the Bible, Greco-Roman mythology, and a full-semester course on the works of Tolkien.  It’s well-done in terms of audio quality and the content is both easy to listen to and thought-provoking.  I’m still at the very early beginning of the series, but this is completely worth downloading all the way back to the beginning.

6: My introduction to texting

When my 12-year-old niece Ree was here last week (was it only last week?), we found out that we both have texting.  She has unlimited texting; I do not.  (But she could be the reason I invest in it.)  Since she’s gone home, we’ve texted every day.

In the past, I’ve always been annoyed by texting.  In the last week, I have realized that I was just approaching it wrong.  Texting with Ree has been fun.  My goal:  to make her really laugh out loud.

(A rant about the overuse and abuse of LOL as a substitution for “uh huh” in the English lexicon will be forthcoming, be warned!)

I love how I can send her a little message — one she gets pretty immediately — to let her know that I love her, to share a thought (yesterday: “Scientists assert that wasps are useful. I disagree.”), to let her know in real time (without the investment of a phone call, where she’d just stay silent anyway) that I’m thinking of her.

This morning, I woke up to a goodnight text from her.  It made my day.

7: TWO giveaways of some of my favorite books

Regina Doman’s Fairy Tale Novels are some of my favorite books.  I do not say that lightly.  Here’s your chance to own them…TWO chances.  At CatholicMom.com, we’re giving away one each of the four books to four winners.  At Faith & Family Live, we’re giving away three complete sets to three winners.  So go.  Enter.  And please add the family to your prayer intentions.  These giveaways are inspired by a desire to help raise awareness for the family.

You’ll find the full collection of Quick Takes over at Conversion Diary.

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