Thursday, February 28, 2008
A Sense of Place
I apologize to Cathy for taking so long to post this honor. The world (my world) has rather gotten away from me lately! But, I appreciate this award in a special way, truly, because it's the last one I would have expected to get!
I'm contentedly provincial, very untraveled, especially planted in one spot. The farthest I have ever traveled is Spain, and that's only because I was a Navy baby, born where my Dad happened to be stationed at the time. I was back in the states again before I was two years old, lived between Maryland and South Carolina for the next twelve years, and ventured west with the family when I was fourteen, when my Dad retired.
Many happy memories and many of our extended family members still live in the southeast, but I consider myself a Coloradan. I love this place. I love it because it's where I learned to drive a car, where I grew to be an adult, where I met my husband, where my children were born. I love it for its rugged history and I love its incredible natural beauty. Anyone who's ever been here knows that Colorado is God's country.
Or, well, at least it's my country.
It's become a part of my identity, being a Coloradan. So, if a sense of place makes you a Blogger of the World, I think that might be something I do have. Thank-you, Cathy!
And, I pass the baton on to:
Ann at A.R.T. Servant, because, as a military Mom, her heart is all over the world,
Margaret at Minnesota Mom for her sense of place,
and Marie at Big is Beautiful because she lives clear around the world from me in Australia, but her concerns are close to home.
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
I thought for sure I'd be green...
What Color Sharpie Are You? (25 Different Colors) Updated Again!
Navy Blue Sharpie
Element: Water
Sense: Sound
Gemstone: Lapis Lazuli
Some Qualities: Strength, Creativity, Intuition
Fact: Strengthens total awareness, creativity, ESP, skeleton, thyroid, helps to expand viewpoint.
Take this quiz!
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Monday, February 25, 2008
The Wide Wide World of (Prairie) Sports
Welcome to Tarp Sailing, Eastern Colorado Style!
Number of participants: Two small children at "kittycorners" ~ up to four all the way around
Equipment: One large tarp, one windy day
Goal: To feel as airborn as possible
- Scoring:
- Style points for getting entire tarp flat and airborn, without anyone dropping a corner
- Squeals for being dragged down the driveway
- Whoops and Hollars for being lifted, even momentarily, off your feet
- Big smiles and pink cheeks from a rousing afternoon of exercise
Sunday, February 24, 2008
A Good Day in a Nutshell
It was a packed house, basically all Moms, a choir of really cute, gurgling babies, a couple of priests, and one or two awkward looking husbands. The conference room at the Spirit of Christ Church is to die for ~ soaring cathedral ceilings, beautiful wood and brick in an amazing complex of buildings. The staff went out of its way to make us moms feel pampered: roses, mints and matching rosaries on lace covered tables; special soaps and lotions in the bathrooms; delicious, beautiful catered breakfast and lunch. (I would LOVE to have their recipe for the tuna salad! It was amazing ~ with apples, grapes, some kind of nuts... Oh my goodness, good!)
Fr. John Budke, L. C. opened the day, encouraging us in our Mission of Motherhood, and expounding beautifully (and humorously at times) on the relationship between love and sacrifice, explaining Our Blessed Mother as the perfect role model.
Friday, February 22, 2008
Guess What I Get To Do Tomorrow!?
But, here's a really important question ...
What do I wear??
Try This One!
How smart is Your Right Foot ?
Try this. It is from an orthopedic surgeon.....
1. While sitting where you are at your desk in front of your computer, lift your right foot off the floor and make clockwise circles.
2. Now, while doing this, draw the number '6' in the air with your right Hand. Your foot will change direction.
I told you so !!! And there's nothing you can do about it !!!!
You and I both know how stupid it is, but before the day is done you are going to try it again, if you've not already done so.
(I can just see all those wiggling feet!)
Hug and Hat Tip: my ABJ
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Anna, Personal Prayer Coach
What I love is how Gabe gets it totally wrong that last time, and Anna turns and puts her hands on her hips in exasperation. What's a big sister to do, anyway?
(Notice how Gabey is using the wrong hand the whole time?)
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
I'm Home
While I was gone, my wonderful husband: changed out our two broken refrigerators with one unbroken refrigerator, totally cleaned out the mudroom in preparation of new four-footed friend(s), and fixed the door on the medicine cabinet. All this while taking care of our youngest five children and nursing a bit of a stomach bug himself. IS he superman, or what?
While in Omaha, I got the chance to record some of the boys' singing. I hope you don't mind if I share some with you. I'm very proud of them. It's a blessing I can't even begin to appreciate I think, that our children so joyfully lift their voices to God. Because, let me tell you, they love to sing! They sing at the drop of a hat, at the slightest hint, anywhere, any time. But, here's where I love to hear them best:
The Stabat Mater at the end of early Mass the Second Sunday of Lent.
(First Mass attendance was really light Sunday, but second Mass was so crowded, I had to squeeze into a corner of the choir loft!)
Breakfast after Saturday morning Mass with a great group of kids, the members of the Boys' Choir ~ plus Michelle: (L-R) son Dominic, son Jon, friend Julian, son Kevin, friend Isaac (in place of his brother Caleb, a seminarian, who's in the choir, but couldn't come to breakfast with us), daughter Michelle, and friend Tim.
(first four stanzas)
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Thursday, February 14, 2008
Valentines
He made salmon eggs benedict! Oh, my goodness, was it good!
A shot of the candy tins from their aunt (to be eaten on Sunday, as they all gave up sweets for Lent) and all the cards and paper toys the children made. When Michelle was tiny, her Daddy started the tradition of getting all the girls Valentine's cards on St. Valentine's Day. We all got him some, too.
Two of our Valentines...
And here are Mickey and Minni having a look at my Miraculous Medal,
Update
Well, he was mad as a wet hen throughout the procedure (Picture Jack Jack at the end of the Incredibles), but once he got over his mad, he was almost immediately back to his old self. Laughing and playing and wanting "crackas" every ten minutes. You seriously wouldn't have known that he'd had anything unusual happen yesterday. The bleeding even stopped almost immediately. Amazing! We attribute this to all the prayers on his behalf.
Thank-you!
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Just a quick request for prayers today, dear friends...
BTW: You Have to Check Out This Really Fun Link
H/T: Nutmeg from Danielle
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Prayer Life
Before schooltime
The Morning Offering
The Angelus
The Angel of God prayer
Prayer to St. Thomas Aquinas
Salute to the Saint of the Day
Sometimes the Acts of Faith, Hope, and Charity
At lunchtime and at dinnertime
- The Angelus
- The Prayer Before Meals (said, of course, before all meals)
- "May the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in Peace. Amen"
- The Rosary
- The Divine Praises
- Each our own individual bedtime prayers and "God Blesses"
- Our family Litany of Saints
- Salutation to Our Guardian Angels
- A short hymn fitting to the season, if everyone's still awake at the end
Miscellaneous Prayers
- When passing a cemetery or byway cross marking a fatal accident: "Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them. May they rest in peace. Amen." Or the short version: "Lord Jesus Christ have mercy on them."
- When passing a Catholic Church: "O, Jesus, I love Thee in the most Blessed Sacrament." Or, "O Sacrament most holy, O Sacrament divine, all praise and all thanksgiving, be every moment Thine." Or the short version: "Lord, Jesus Christ, have mercy on us."
- Prayers for travel: "St Raphael, guide us. St. Christopher, protect us. Our Lady of the Highway, be with us on our way," followed by the Angel of God prayer. And the rosary is an essential, especially for longer trips.
Our Rosary Method
If we have more than five people home, we each take a Hail Mary; Dad always leads if he's home. Any time Dad's not here, the children take turns leading. If there are less than five people praying, each person will lead his or her own decade, with the over-all leader taking opening and closing prayers. We will often go on rosary drives or rosary walks and pray as we travel, too.
Our family Litany of Saints happens at the end of the rosary. Each member of the family chooses three or more saints, and after stating the name of each, as in most litanies, the rest of us say "pray for us." This is a wonderful way to reinforce the children's learning and loving the saints. It's also a kind of barometer for me; I can tell by the saints they choose what reading they're doing, who they're thinking about, what they're concerned about. A special call to St. Anthony is as telling as a call to St. Jude, or the mention of the patron saint of a friend or relative, for instance.
After our family litany, we each salute our Guardian Angels. It's a pious custom to pray for the name of your Angel. One after another, we say thank-you and hello each evening by saying, "I salute thee, Matthew. I salute thee, Dorian. I salute thee, Louis." And so on. When everyone is home, it's a delightfully long procession of Angels!
In addition to the prayers we say together, each of us, in particular the older children and us parental types, will have our own particular devotions ~ periodic ones like novenas and special "hellos" on a daily basis to special heavenly friends we each have, as well. Michelle and I said the St. Brigid prayers together a couple of years ago, for instance.
Gee! This sorta sounds like a lot when I write it all down, but it's really not at all. It's part of our daily routine, and no harder to fit in than checking our e-mail or text messaging friends. There is no such thing as praying too much!
Now, I know I could end this post right here and sound like a terribly pious mother of a very holy family. But, well, I gotta come clean. Half the time we're praying we're shooting our toddler in and out of the action like goalies. We try hard, but our attention is not, how-shall-I-say, 100% focused a good part of the time. For one thing, I can't just leave the nightly rosary routine as it stands up there, so simple, so straight-laced, so conventional, so pious-sounding. I've got to fill you in on the...
Rosary Time Shenanigans
You see, it's just that we have never, ever not had toddlers in the family. Need I say more? Once a toddler has figured out that he (or she) has a rapt (or should I say trapped?) audience, he gladly takes the floor. The fact that we're trying to pray is more an incentive than a discouragement, I think. Even the most laid back of our children, come rosary-time, morph into slapstick comedians.
And, in the midst of pious practice, do we laugh? Oh, you bet! Over the silliest things the little stinkers do ~ and over nothing. There's something about the stillness and structure of prayer time that makes gigglefests inevitable, anyway, even without goofy two-year-olds in the picture.
Here are some of William's (2) favorite pranks during the rosary:
- He likes to stand right up in his sister's face (he knows which one this is most effective on, too) and stare at her, without blinking until she laughs...
- He stands on the backs of kneeling siblings' calves , holds them by the arms and leans backward..
- He will go from person to person giving hugs and kisses, making little unintelligible comments to each...
- He will back up to get a running start and fly at his older siblings from behind, tipping them forward onto their faces...
- He will play a game of tag, in which he is the only player...
- He will step off the couch into thin air to see who dives to catch him...
- When all else fails, he will kneel down and fold his hands to pray, very piously, but turned to face us ~ with a little smirk on his face...
We do laugh, I admit it. But, honest-to-goodness, we don't encourage this behaviour, really! And, it's not that Yuyum's the spoiled youngest child, I'm sure, because we've battled this same laughing-during-the-rosary problem for (Goodness!) almost twenty years now! The little anklebiters just have an instinct... They know they've Gotcha! You can't get screaming mad at them during the rosary!
And, I wouldn't want to, anyway. We've always tried to make prayer time nurturing time. We connect the rosary with bedtime read-alouds, gab-sessions and general silliness. It's important that our life of Faith is something that the children always remember with a "warm, fuzzy" feeling. After all is said and done, and the allures of the world have had their go at our children, we really believe it's the deep contentment of home life, intertwined with prayer and laughter that will keep them close to their Faith.
That's the prayer, anyway.
And, I can't help but think that Heaven laughs at silly William sometimes, too.
Loss and Acceptance
Monday, February 11, 2008
Choices meme
Thai or Mexican
bubble bath or back massage
boots or sandals
the 90% “pro-life” good chance or the 100% pro-life long shot
a cruise ship or a mountain cabin
Rome or Paris
Ordinary or Extraordinary
Rosary or Stations
surf or hang glide
Regal Cinemas or Netflix
sweet or salty
pen or pencil
how-to book or fantasy novel
crossword or sudoku
lose a leg or lose your sight
North or South
a power outage at home or a dead car battery at Cosco
classic rock or country
wool or linen
lots of good friends or a few great friends
soup or salad
Merlot or Chardonnay ~ Neither, Guiness!
Picasso or Da Vinci
charades or trivial pursuit
Evangelical Protestantism or Orthodox Judaism -Do I have to choose? Neither!
stone age or dark age
Steven Spielberg or Ken Burns
Thermopylae or Alamo- huh??
Big Foot or Loch Ness Monster
babies or teenagers- Either, Neither; it's a love/hate relationship...
(My 12 year old disagrees with at least half of my choices, she tells me, but if I were 12 years old, I would probably disagree with at least half of them, myself.)
HT: Maryan
My Nameday!
Today celebrates the 150th anniversary of the apparition of Our Lady to St. Bernadette in Lourdes, France!
St. Bernadette, though chosen perhaps for her extreme simplicity to carry the message of the Immaculate Conception, struggled like we all do to perfect her soul during her short 36 years. The critical eye of the public and the skeptical eye of the Church were harsh upon her from the first moment the world heard of the apparitions. Hers was also a naturally stubborn temperament, and Bernadette often battled to keep her temper against the constant distracting onslaught of curiosity seekers.
On April 16, 1879, after a long and painful fight against tuberculosis, Bernadette died in the odor of sanctity and passed easily through the rigorous trials and examinations of the canonization process of the Church at the time. She was beatified in 1925 and canonized by Pope Pius XI in 1933.
Where Our Blessed Mother Appeared to St. Bernadette
View more pictures of St. Bernadette here.
Sunday, February 10, 2008
The Basilica of the Immaculate Conception
In front of the crowd that was asking "Do you think that she is mad doing things like that?" she replied; "It is for sinners."
This trickle of water grew into a miraculous spring and public acclaim along with the numerous healings in the waters of the spring convinced a prudently skeptical Church to investigate the apparitions.
After many years of questions and investigations, in particular surrounding Bernadette's strange relaying of the words of Our Lady: "I am the Immaculate Conception," the Church consented, for a church to be built at the grotto. Work began on the original shrine around 1862 and was completed and blessed in 1866. It is now known as the "Crypt Church." It lies above the grotto on the rock known as Marsabielle where Our Lady appeared to St. Bernadette. Directly over the Crypt Church was built the magnificent Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, still a place of pilgrimage. Miraculous healings of body and soul are still recorded at the spring that St. Bernadette dug at the command of Our Lady.
You can read here a list of the documented cures from the water at the spring. And here are the details of 67th cure which occured in 2005.
Friday, February 8, 2008
100 Things We Learned the Hard Way
52. When you're getting rid of the carpeting, go with tile or save up for hardwood. Laminate flooring is not nearly as "bomb-proof" as advertised.
afternoon to himself and a couple
old wooden canes to play with?
He figures out every conceivable way to use the cane to climb up on everything he can find. He hangs the canes on limbs and poles. He measures the depth of the snow.
He points out birds. He goes on a lion hunt.
And he suffers his mother following him around until he's finally had enough and anounces that she's taken "plenty enough pictures."
"Mommy, don't you have something else you need to do?"
Nothing better than this, Gabey!