Flowers, Flowers Everywhere

It didn’t take too long to realize

That I had begun to fantasize,

And I was forced to carefully apprise

The situation before my eyes.

My time had come, that much was certain.

I stupidly stared at the white curtain,

After my legs had stopped their dartin’

And my poor heart had ceased its hurtin’

The doctor, a diagram he traced

Of my heart: at me he boldly faced

And now declared, as my eyes gazed

At my demise. I was sorely fazed.

Later that day, I died, my heart hurtin’

Sad I was this good world to be partin’

I’d never again be smellin’

The flowers everywhere they be placin’

Name Confusion

            I taught for thirty-three years, everything from preschool to seniors in high school. When I worked with younger students, I often had close to forty students in a class. It might take me a few days to learn everyone’s name, but after that, I never made a mistake when calling on someone.

At times my high school classes were packed with thirty-four! I usually taught four sections per day; two AP ninth graders and two Resource Students. Thankfully my special education sections were smaller, perhaps ten or twelve.

That meant learning approximately eighty-eight names within the first week of school.

Now add in all the years I taught, and the numbers are in the hundreds.

When my own children were young, I coached soccer teams and volunteered as scorekeeper for baseball. Then there was swim team, with over 100 swimmers each summer.

One strategy I used to learn students’ names was to make a seating chart. I didn’t assign seats, but once students had settled, I didn’t let them move for at least one week.

The younger kids were cute, at that age, and then they’d move on, to be replaced by another thirty-four or more. I’d see former students out on the playground, a constant refresher, helping me recall names and personalities.

After they moved on to higher grades, I seldom interacted with them.

Years later I’d run into them shopping at the mall or grocery. Or maybe at a high school swim meet, or while out on a walk.

They always recognized me.

“Mrs. Connelly, how are you doing?”

“Do I know you?” I’d wonder silently as I tried to decipher where or when I had met the child, or now, adult.

While my mind ran through the various possibilities, I attempted to appear poised and confident in my knowledge of who they were. I’d engage in nondescript conversation, hoping they’d drop in a clue to help me recall their names.

It was with great relief when they’d say, “You were my favorite teacher,” or even better, “You taught me how to ….”

The most difficult to sort were kids I’d had in my preschool classes, or, as I moved up in grades, in third grade.

Those cute little baby-faces and tiny bodies now stood before me as teenagers, sometimes sporting facial hair. They resembled the adults they would soon become.

How badly I wanted to ask, “Do I know you?”

Instead I’d smile, nod, and look for an escape, a way to gracefully bow out of the uncomfortable situation.

Another day awakens

A new day begins,

Promising calm winds

Sunny skies

A touch of clouds

That guide me through

The hectic times of my life

I stretch, drawing in

Energy to replenish

My weary soul

To revitalize desires

And strengthen interests

A healing, needed balm

The day beckons me forth

Greeted by the early

call of morning birds

Filled with bounteous joy

That fills my soul

With unbounded joy

I burst into expectant smile

The day is mine to conquer

I shall vanquish foes

Destroy doubts

Eliminate naysayers

While rising to the peak

Of my talent

Ah, the dreams of a new day

A day of joyous victory

To fill my sights.

I rejoice.

Fire!

We knew we would soon be moving from Ohio to California.

Our dad was an avid Cincinnati Reds fan, but had never attended a game in person. My brother played on a team, the worst team in the league. I was the better player, but back in the 60’s, girls weren’t permitted on boys’ teams, and there were no teams for girls. This irked me, to say the least.

Since my brother and I loved the sport, and we knew this was our last chance to see our beloved Reds play, we decided to earn enough money to take our family to a game.

Our neighbor, Mrs. Riddenhoure, had several fruit trees in her backyard that were overloaded with fruit. With our parent’s permission, Mrs. Riddenhoure allowed us to pick as much fruit as we could, knowing we intended to sell everything.

Our mother gave us a basket of tomatoes and another of green bell peppers.

We put everything in our rusty wagon and headed up the gravel road, knocking on doors. Each time we’d sold our load, we’d return home, pick more fruit, then head out once again.

This was hard work. Pulling a full wagon up hill was not easy. It bumped and rattled along, frequently coming to an abrupt halt when stones blocked the wheels. After we’d visited all the neighbors’ homes uphill, we headed downhill.

If you think going down was easy, you’re wrong. Imagine trying to keep a heavy load from crashing into the backs of your legs, or walking while bent over, gripping the and of the wagon, attempting to keep it from breaking loose and taking off, on its own.

We had no concept of how much tickets would cost, but after selling out, we’d return home and count the proceeds. After a couple of days doing this, our dad declared that there was enough to pay for both of my parents, plus my brother and I. Our sister stayed with another family, probably a good decision as she was only seven and held no interest in any sport.

Off we went to Cincinnati, a long drive from our rural home in Beavercreek. At first, we took single-lane country roads, then two-lane roads, then eventually a highway. (This was before freeways had been built.)

Since it took so long, I worried that we would miss the game, but, no, we arrived in plenty of time.

Our seats were on the second deck, along the third base side. I was in awe of the stadium. The lights, the signs, the excitement in the air stimulated me so much that I was trembling from joy.

I was intrigued by the perfectly mowed grass, the smooth infield dirt, the seemingly huge pitchers’ mound, and the umpires in their black uniforms.

On the ride home, my dad talked about our team, how well they played, the fact that they won. I couldn’t recall a single detail, other than the colors of the uniforms.

After we finally got back home, I went straight to bed. I couldn’t sleep because I was over stimulated.

I’m not sure exactly when it happened as I was only a naive fourteen-year-old, but a storm moved in. Later my mom told me that the weather person on the radio (which she had on in the car) had predicted a massive thunderstorm coming our way.

Anyway, as I was comfortable under my covers, a loud crack of thunder shook the house. I was used to thunderstorms as they happened frequently, but nevertheless, each one terrified me. Well, having this one so close, shook me to the core.

Minutes after the crack, my mom opened the bedroom door and told me to get up, get dressed, in that no-nonsense tone of voice. I changed quickly, for I sensed something had gone terribly wrong.

As I entered the front room, my mom handed me the leash, and told me to take the dog to Mrs. Riddenhoure’s house. The neighbor didn’t allow dogs inside, so I sat on the step to her kitchen, unaware of what was happening outside, until daybreak.

I smelled smoke, heard additional bursts of thunder and rain beating the roof of the garage.

My brother came for me, telling me it was okay to come outside.

By that time the excitement was nearly over. Later I learned that the volunteer firemen had arrived within minutes of my dad’s call. Hoses still snaked across our front lawn, now empty and useless. Steam arose from the ashes of our garage and across the fragments of roof still standing.

Before we’d gone to the game, my dad was in the process of installing a new, more powerful, TV antenna. It looked finished to me, but apparently, he had yet to complete the last step, the most important one in a thunderstorm-prone area: grounding the antenna.

Well after the firemen had left, a man from down the hill arrived with a photo he’d taken: an image of a ball of fire descending from the sky/

That’s what had hit the antenna. The firemen, when they saw this, returned. They attempted to follow the path the lightning had taken, as it traveled inside our house.

Every window had aluminum siding. The lightning was attracted to the metal, finding it in every room on the east side of the house. After setting the garage on fire, the lighting had erupted from one side of each window, then created a hole on the opposite side, so as to continue its journey north.

It burst free out of the north side of the house, sending the boards flying and leaving behind a gaping hole.

Now my bedroom was on the east side. If I had gotten out of bed to look out the window, the lightning would have hit me, setting me on fire. It was thanks to my mother that the four of us made it safely out of the house.

What remained was piles of ash and molten remnants of bicycles, tools, and all kinds of detritus stored there. Sifting through the ash, my mom discovered that most of her canned foods had survived. We depended upon them to get us through the winter, so that was a blessing.

The only other salvageable item was the manger from the nativity set.

How did that ceramic Jesus survive, intact, with no scorch marks?

When we moved to California, Baby Jesus rode with us in the car, wrapped carefully so as not to be damaged. Once we had a place to live (we were homeless for a bit), every Christmas, it was with awe that we held that manger, placed it inside the creche, and then told everyone why it was so precious to us.

I had two regrets: one, that I had missed all the excitement dur to my confinement in the garage, with the dog, and, two, that many years later, when my parents were both deceased, that my dad’s second wife disposed of the manger without consulting me.

Mindless Scrolling

How did I manage before social media? I read the daily paper, watched the news on television and discussed topics with my husband and friends.

Then I got an iPad and discovered the joys of social media! At first, because I was working full time, I only checked it once, at night. Then it jumped to twice per night.

After I retired, however, I found myself looking more often. And since recent events, beginning with the campaign of the misogynist, the adulterer, the liar-in-chief, my obsession grew exponentially.

I absolutely had to know what he’d said, what he did, what he was pledging to do.

I survived the first four years with my sanity intact. Even so, every time I heard his voice, my heart sped up, my breathing became labored and I fell into a terrible panic.

When the Senate refused to impeach him, twice, I feared a comeback. After all, there was nothing to stop him, no rule that a convicted felon couldn’t become president. (I sure hope that’s changed whenever we get him out of office!)

When he ran a second time, against Joe, I shook my head. I like Joe. I felt he did a good job as president. He took care of people suffering from disasters. He signed Executive Orders to help college students plagued with debt. He visited factories, various communities, organizations and attended events that had nothing to do with him. Joe exhibited a caring heart.

Yes, he stumbled, physically and mentally. But he was smart enough to surround himself with individuals who knew, who understood, who offered advice that sometimes Joe might not have wanted to hear, but he listened nonetheless.

By the time elections season rolled around, Joe was four years older. It showed in his hesitant step (after breaking his foot), in his mumbling statements (due to fatigue and his speech impediment) and in his overall fitness to carry on another four years.

He obviously hadn’t read the negative comments. Folks asking who was really running the country. Folks questioning his mental acuity. Folks blaming him for things a president can’t control, such as the price of eggs.

He stepped down well into the primaries. The VP, Kamala Harris, took over the campaign, angering many.

Despite there being only 100 days before the election, other candidates should have been encouraged to run. If she came out on top, at least folks would have said that she wasn’t an heir apparent.

I personally might have voted for someone else.

We saw what happened to Hillary. She had years of experience in some of the highest offices in America. But…emails!  But…her husband. But…her pantsuits (which Kamala also wore). And…she’s a woman, an African-American woman who also has Indian descent.

I don’t believe that America is ready to elect a woman. My incessant scrolling on social media reinforces my belief. Women are often demeaned, ridiculed, humiliated. Many still see women as “less-than’ despite remarkable achievements in education, science, exploration and military service.

I see what’s happening under the felon’s second term. Women in positions of authority are called DEI hires, meaning they lack the capability to perform as a comparable male.

They are bullied by the felon, told they aren’t showing proper respect. They aren’t showing gratitude. That their states or colleges or law firms or companies will suffer economically unless they bow down and kiss the ring.

How do I know all these things? Because of endless scrolling on social media.

I try to restrict myself, but there’s a compulsion inside that demands I take another look, see what new has happened. That reinforces the belief that I might miss something, and so I scroll and read so more.

Endless scrolling is like a pandemic. Once it takes root, it’s hard to stop. There’s no medicine that can help, no bit of advice except for stopping cold turkey.

I’ve never been addicted to alcohol or drugs, but this feeling like I can’t go on unless I check, over and over, must be what it feels like.

I tell myself that I won’t look, and then I do.

I sit down to write, and then start scrolling as time flies by.

Endless scrolling. My personal addiction.

Faith Formation

            I raised in a Catholic home. My dad was baptized as a baby, but he never spoke about attending church. He did receive the sacraments of Communion and Confirmation, but as far as I knew, if wasn’t that important to him.

            His father died when my dad was around five years of age. His mother remarried shortly after, and gave birth to a goodly number of half-siblings. My dad tormented his brother and sisters and aggravated his mom to the point that she’d chase him around the house, threatening to spank him with a wooden spoon.

            If a sibling was on the phone, my dad would disconnect the call, without warning, so he could call a friend. Not Christian-like behavior, that’s for sure.

            After he graduated from high school, his mom kicked him out of the house. My dad had a job setting pins in a bowling alley. After a player had knocked down whatever pins the ball happened to hit, my dad would jump over the wall, clear away the downed pins, then jump back before the next ball could be released.

            His salary wasn’t enough to support an independent lifestyle. By that time the United States had entered WWII, so my dad enlisted.

            I don’t believe he attended church during that time period. He met my mom at a USO dance in Dayton, Ohio. He convinced her to bring him home, a small apartment that my mom shared with an older sister. When there, he’d rummage through their cabinets and demand she fix whatever food he saw. At times, it was the only food my mom and her sister had.

            But, my mom loved him. He was handsome, with a rakish smile. She was petite, slim and gorgeous. They married in May, in a hastily arranged ceremony in a local Protestant church. Eight months later my brother was born.

            I followed along a year and a half later, my sister when I was seven.

            There came a time when my parents wanted my brother and I to attend the Catholic elementary school in Dayton. To enroll, however, my parents had to show that our family were practicing Catholics.

            That’s when I was Baptized and the family began attending Mass on a regular basis.

            I loved the atmosphere of the church. Instead of paying attention to the service, which was in Latin, a language I didn’t understand, I’d stare at the stained-glass windows, telling myself the stories depicted.

            The lives of the saints intrigued me. The maintained their devotion to God despite horrendous torments. They’d die rather than denounce their faith. They’d walk through deserts in search of God. They’d walk on water if God commanded, despite believing, rightfully so, that they’d sink.

            Such stories enthralled me, for my own life was a living hell.

            To think that I was growing up in a supposedly Catholic home, yet knowing that nothing my parents did or said was holy. I was spanked with hands or belt for doing stupid things, like farting in the family room or not eating creamed corn. My brother tormented me, kicking me, punching me, pinching me, treating me the way our dad treated him.

            My sister did the same, adding additional torments since we shared a room. She’d leave her side a mess, then tell our mom that I had rumpled her blankets or dumped her clothes on the floor.

            In terms of worship, we did attend Mass, except when it snowed. I understood that the drive could have been dangerous. We’d gather in the front room, missals in hand. Dad read the Mass. We responded appropriately.

            I hated it.

            There was nothing holy in it for me: I saw it as an excuse to pretend to pray. To imitate the Mass, but without reverence. How could people who seemed to hate me sit in a circle and recite passages of the Mass, a sacred worship service, after having tortured me the rest of the week?

            During my eighth-grade year, our class was led into the church, where various religious orders gave talks about what serving with them meant. I still remember the joy I felt when I learned about a monastic order of nuns that lived in silence, offering work as a prayer to God.

            I wanted to join. Imagine living in peace after years of being tormented by my siblings and parents. Imagine not being forced to talk out loud, imagine listening to the call of birds and the whisper of the wind. Imagine living in harmony with other women who sought out that life.

            My parents wouldn’t let me, saying that I’d regret not having children. Considering how often my mother reminded me that the only purpose for my existence was to serve her for the rest of my life, I didn’t relish the idea of marriage or childbirth.

            I’d dated, some. None of the boys interested me. I hated being touched by them, based upon the fact that the only touch I’d felt was in the form of punishment. I despised googling eyes and their breath on my skin. I hated holding sweaty hands and being forced to sit thigh-to-thigh.

            I didn’t see myself sharing a home with a man, let alone bearing his children.

            To join the convent, I needed my parents’ permission, until I turned eighteen. That opportunity never arose, as after my freshman year of high school, we sold the house and drove across country, eventually settling in South San Francisco, California.

            Because I was no longer attending Catholic School, my parents enrolled me in CCD, the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, a program that laid out what religious concepts were taught for each grade.

            The students in my class disobeyed the teacher. They talked when they should be quiet, refused to answer when called upon, chewed gum despite being told to throw it out, and wasted my time.

            By this time, I’d become somewhat jaded about faith. Catholicism had lost meaning for me ever since I wasn’t permitted to join the convent.

            After each time my dad beat me or my brother pinched me, I lay awake at night trying to come up with a way to approach a priest to ask for help. I was too afraid of what punishment would befall me if ai did such a thing, for I knew the priest would tell my parents everything I had said.

            Shortly after settling in South San Francisco, my dad began shopping around for the shortest Mass. The closest church to us was beautiful, built in the Hispanic style out of stucco and red tiles on the roof. Inside it was airy, with high ceilings coming to a point. The altar was a huge edifice, painted white with gold trim.

I loved attending services there. Something about the atmosphere enticed reverence and prayer.

However, my dad deemed the Mass too long, so he began driving us all over in search of the shortest Mass.. We attending services in Pacifica (where the priest preached fire and brimstone), Half Moon Bay, Daly City, and Burlingame. Most of the priests seemed indifferent to our presence and not one parishioner approached in greeting.

When the Mass in a San Bruno church only lasted thirty minutes, my dad declared that we would only attend service there. The church was a squat building, seeming more like an extension of the strip mall out on the El Camino Real. The inside was rather plain: it had the requisite statues of Jesus, Jospeh, and Mary, but the windows were ordinary glass. No colorful scenes depicting important stories from the Bible. No organ music swelling to a crescendo.

By now the Pope had declared that services were to be held in the vernacular of the people, so every word spoken, either by the priest or the congregation, was in English.

That part I liked. The time spent provided no respite, offered no consolation, didn’t fill my soul with a sense of awe of calm. It seemed to be a waste of thirty minutes of my life.

            By now I was seventeen, looking forward to going away to college.

            When I finally escaped my family after enrolling in the University of Southern California down in Los Angeles, I intentionally did not attend Mass.

            I told myself that I didn’t miss it, that it meant nothing, that Sunday was a time to study.

            One day I was walking back to my dorm room and heard beautiful music coming from a small, one-story building. Out front was a sign declaring it the Neumann Center. I didn’t know what purpose it served, but the familiar songs invited me inside.

            Toward the front of the building a folk group strummed guitars and pounded drums. They sang joyful songs, the entire congregation joining in. Everyone in attendance looked like me: college students of varying ages. I sat near the back, and soon found the joy returning.

            I went back the next Sunday, and then the next. A retreat was announced. I had no idea what that was, but a weekend in the woods sounded fantastic.

            On the assigned day, I boarded a bus with about thirty other people my age, plus a few adults as chaperones. The drive was joyous, with lots of singing and praying Halleluiahs. It didn’t feel artificial at all. My fellow travelers rejoiced in the Lord, in praising Him and speaking of the many ways He filled their souls.

            Our destination was a log cabin deep in the forest. When I got off the bus, my heart sang. When I looked up, the tips of the trees touched the sky, pointing to heaven. The bark was rough, an imitation of my life so far, but I felt warmth, the heat of life within.

            The needle-strewn path was soft underfoot. It comforted me, much like falling into a mother’s arms might have been, if one had such a mother.

            God came to me. He entered my very being. He made me feel loved, special, cherished.

            When time came to return to the chaos of Los Angeles and college, part of me cried inside. I wished I could have stayed in that forest, feeling the power of God’s love day after day.

            That weekend opened my eyes. I knew that I was loved, that I had a place in the church. I didn’t yet know in what shape my calling would arrive, but I knew it was out there, waiting for me to come home.

            People talk about having a come-to-Jesus moment. That weekend retreat was mine.

            I knew that I’d never be that frightened little girl ever again. That my life would turn out okay if only I was patient and let God direct my path.

            This is the story of my faith formation.

            How I went from being a child in awe of the material things of a church: the windows, the silence, the altar. How I discovered the pure joy of celebration. How it changed me forever.