the song of the family: winter

This was a fun one. Partly inspired by an Exhale Taylor Swift writing prompt and partly from Steinbeck’s The Pearl, I wrote it with my nine year old in mind. She has asked to read my poems but as she firmly believes a poem must rhyme, I didn’t feel like sharing any of my recent ones with her. So it was fun to read this one aloud to her! Got some laughs.

cheerios crunching underfoot
magnatile towers crashing down
vroom of the roomba making its rounds
look! look at this! can we read a book now?

wails, cries, as Daddy is leaving
someone is always earnestly singing
the same line over and over again –
the toddler’s still determinedly grieving

tinkering on the piano, the same tune
splashing in the sink – there’s no more spoons!
can I have more? can you get a bowl?
almost done with this, I’ll be there soon

falling hush of nap mid-day
burrowing under blankets to read
the tiny clicking of perler beads
savoring the silence each of us needs

then a barrage of noise and backpacks
can you sign this and give it back?
can I go ask them to play with me?
Dad’s home! dinner’s ready! – no more snacks!

evening sounds like teeth being brushed
I’m sorry, will you forgive me, family prayer
peace be with you, finding pj’s to wear
goodnight, I love you, slowing the rush
now one final song, and one final touch

2024 in books

As I’ve been getting back into writing again, I’ve been thinking about what I read and how it feeds me. In September I read a poem by Benjamin Myers and a thought he had about poetry, something along the lines of how poetry feeds a particular part of the soul. I was struck by this and his poem “Field,” and felt how I have been malnourished in this regard for a while. Anyway, my list is pretty much the Well-Read Mom book club list, that’s about all I can usually keep up with. So, shout out to Well-Read Mom! This is my fourth year in it and I love it, highly recommend. It’s nation-wide so maybe there’s a group near you! I especially like when it gets me to read and love books I wouldn’t pick up on my own.

January:
-Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin 
-Summa Domestica by Leila Marie Lawler 
-The Four Quartets by T.S. Eliot (was surprised how much I loved this, and discussing it and learning more about Eliot)

February:
True Grit by Charles Portis (picturing the movie in my head the whole time. A fun one.)

March: 
Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh (liked it, then loved it after discussing it)
Good Inside by Dr. Becky Kennedy (helped me navigate some new parenting things this year! some good mantras to keep in mind – “This is a good kid having a hard time. I am a good mom having a hard time.” )

April:
Works of Mercy by Sally Thomas (“On Monday mornings I cleaned the rectory for the good of my soul.” one of my all time favorite novels. Like, the kind of novel I would want to write. Has some gut punching moments of grace.)
-A Severe Mercy
by Sheldon Vanauken (a reread for me but didn’t finish it this time)

May:
-The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis 
reading parts of Anne of Green Gables series with Evangeline 

June:
Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard (didn’t finish but enjoyed)

July:
The Mysterious Benedict Society Books 2 and 3 (summer reads with Evangeline)

August/September:
Helena by Evelyn Waugh 
He Leadeth Me by Walter Ciszek, SJ (a friend lent to me for my retreat and it was exactly what I needed. my mantra all fall was, “For what can ultimately trouble the soul who accepts every moment of every day as a gift from the hands of God and strives always to do His will?” powerful words from a man who spent 20 years in Siberian prison camps)
Peace Like a River by Leif Enger (was suprised by this book! loved the narrative voice, how disarming it was, how deeply Christian a novel it is for a popular audience. and the ending is amazing)

September/October:
The Risk of Education by Luigi Guissani (still reading slowly)
Hannah’s Children, The Women Quietly Defying the Birth Dearth by Catherine Ruth Pakaluk (surprisingly cathartic/encouraging to hear these women’s stories and really enjoyed discussing this with other college educated women in my neighborhood who have lots of kids)

November:
The Aeneid by Virgil (glad I read it, enjoyed learning more about it and Virgil, how many people and works have been influenced by it in the last two thousand years – crazy!)

December: 
My God and My All by Elizabeth Goudge (biography of St. Francis. soooooo good. highly recommend. makes me want to visit Assisi someday. And read more of her novels.)

And that’s a wrap!

the school of love

it’s on the days when I can be on hands and knees, cleaning a bathroom, or bent over mopping a floor, and contemplate how it took almost a decade for my edges to be softened, for my selfishness to be peeled back just enough to be ready to welcome that stranger, that fifth child, who always wanted to be held, who cried so much, needed so much of me.

or how it took over two years of knowing that woman, inwardly rolling my eyes at her repeated stories, her outdated ideas, until I found myself one day asking for her advice, realizing I aspire to be like her in forty years.

it’s thinking I’ve arrived in the spiritual life because I can clean a bathroom without being consumed by rage, when it’s really just what You want for me on this particular morning. a glimpse that what You offer me is always, always better than what I grasp for myself.

a prose poem for ya, from the same monday in november when the cleaning of the house and writing poetry went hand in hand.

this Christmas tree had a lesson for me in humility as well

the trial of desire

the trial of desire

it is the squirrel above me
on the thinnest branch
it is the rainbow over
the school this rainy morning
it is the floor swept
unasked, by that child
it is you, rising in the cold
to hunt for the one beeping
smoke alarm while I
remain in the warmth

it is our tiredness softening us
so that when beauty breaks in
and moves us to tears –
we can see it is this we are
actually seeking – our
daily bread –
and why my poems all seem
to be love poems

a poem from a monday morning in november when poetry just seemed to pour out as I went about my chores. I receive it all as grace, really enjoying this slow slow process of creating and sharing poems again. photo by my neighbor Mary 🙂

that time I ugly cried at a poetry open mic

I recently had an experience that I think could be described as mystical, in that it felt like a sudden and unexpected outpouring of grace. I’ve been trying to process what happened and why it happened ever since, because although I am very grateful, it was also extremely embarrassing.

On Wednesday night last month, Chris told me that the after-party for the Thursday night prayer service led by the seminarians would be a poetry open mic, and asked if I would want to read one of my poems. I immediately said no. But then, the next day when his classmate texted me asking if I would read a poem if she did, I reconsidered. Two invitations? I decided I would read my villanelle, but I would also read a very good villanelle.

This prayer service is held in the chapel of the seminary on campus, which has the acoustics of a huge bathroom. The seminarian leading the singing doesn’t need a microphone, his voice carries easily. And the response from the pews is thunderous. It is a beautiful time of candle-lit prayer, most of it sung, with a couple short readings and a homily. The last line that closes the evening is the seminarian singing, Let grace come and this world pass away. And the response is, Amen. Come, Lord Jesus. 

This last line, the chorus of voices echoing around me, got me. I had this sudden, deep longing for everything to be made right, a strong desire for Jesus. And the way I experience this kind of longing is through crying. (I’ve mentioned I refer to it somewhat jokingly as having the gift of tears, which is a thing, I just don’t know if I really have it). I teared up but quickly pulled it together because everyone was starting to leave and head downstairs for the open mic part of the evening.

After grabbing tea and scones, Chris and I found seats right in front and sat chatting with his classmates, waiting for the poetry part to begin. I was nervous because as it started, it seemed most people were reciting poems they had memorized, or doing original spoken word poems. I firmly planned to just read the two poems I had brought. Some were funny, some were funny and high energy, and mine were neither. But when it was my turn, I stood up, put on the designated “poetry scarf,” and began.

The first poem went fine. I did a little introduction about villanelles, said I’d be reading a really good one for them first, and read it. Then I turned to mine and felt it deserved a little introduction, too. I think I made the mistake of being rather vulnerable. I shared that this poem was about the Visitation, and that as I was a fairly new convert to Catholicism, I was still getting to know Mary. I like this part of scripture because it shows us Mary from Elizabeth’s perspective, and gives us another glimpse into her life. By this time, my voice had started shaking. I realized that I had just opened up a lot of myself in front of about forty people, most of whom I didn’t know. But I took a deep breath and started reading my poem.

As I was reading, it was the strangest thing, it was like I was surprised by the poem. It’s about two women, two mothers with babies in their wombs, and I suddenly thought, I’m probably the only mother in this room. I read, “Already she faced her share of the sword,” and thought, who am I to be writing this about this woman? By the time I got to the line, “Blessed one! With your yes you moved us toward/the home we long for, and all things made right,” I had totally lost it. I was full on ugly crying in the middle of my own poem.

I garbled out the last two lines, muttered, “Sorry,” and tried to sink as quickly back into my seat as I could. I could not stop crying.

I was so embarrassed and I had no way to explain to all these strangers why I was crying. I wasn’t really sure why either. I tried to dismiss it – it’s just because I’m really tired. But as I tried to block out everyone around me and how ridiculous the situation was, I remembered that God usually does speak to me in deep ways through tears. And this had felt like grace – just much more publicly humiliating and therefore bewildering than I would have chosen.

Two days later I went to a lecture on campus about Chiara Lubich, who founded the lay movement, Focolare. I had no idea who she was but for whatever reason I wanted to go hear this talk. The professor spoke about Chiara’s focus on Maria Desolata  – Mary desolate.

275px-Michelangelo's_Pieta_5450_cropncleaned_edit

He said that Mary, at the foot of the cross, sees all of the misery and suffering of the world, and holds it all. That Maria Desolata was an icon for Chiara for looking unflinchingly and lovingly at a world in pain. Chiara wrote, “If Jesus forsaken seemed to us to be the pupil of God’s eye open onto the world, we can say that Mary desolate seems to us a kind of camera obscura taking in all that is negative in the world (Essential Writings: Spirituality, Dialogue, Culture, p. 299). And the professor commented, “The Mary who holds the disfigured Christ is also the one who can gaze objectively at the world in all of its disfigurement. Just as a photographic image is developed from a negative, Mary can hope for redemption of a fallen world in the midst of her and the world’s most complete agony (“Chiara Lubich: A Saint for a New Global Unity,” Casarella).” 

And I started to cry again. Was that what I had experienced, a tiny glimpse of this? Was that the grace?

Professor Casarella went on to say that Mary desolate also offers “an icon of knowing how to lose.” He summarized Chiara’s thoughts on this, saying, “Apart from her Son, Mary had very little. When she lost him in his Passion, the loss was total and decisive. But she saw this loss for what it really was. The one who prepared all her life to be alone, became Mother to each of us, to the whole of the world (Essential Writings p.302)… Her love, her capacity for giving is human, real, and maternal. It consists of a unique capacity to bear the sorrow of the world in one’s heart. According to Chiara, when a mother hopes all things for her child and puts up with all the troubles involved, she sees further than others. (“Chiara Lubich: A Saint for a New Global Unity,” Casarella). 

I was sitting next to one of Chris’s classmates and when she turned to me at this point to whisper something, she saw that I was crying. She looked concerned and asked,”Are you okay?” I nodded and whispered, “Yeah, I’m fine, I just had this mystical experience the other night and I think it’s making more sense to me right now.” She accepted this as a reasonable explanation (you’re the best, Jackie).

I’m still reflecting on all this and will be for a long time. But in the meantime, St. Therese of Lisieux said, “Everything is grace.” It took ugly crying in front of strangers but now I think I have some idea of what she meant.