Saturday, August 16, 2014

Le Morte d'Elvis

Another “Dead Week” has come and gone.  “Dead Week,” as it is referred to by “ordinary” (those citizens who somehow do not share the lingering grief and angst as others), is the annual week long collection of events throughout Memphis marking the death, of Elvis Presley.  Elvis died on August 16, 1977 reportedly of a heart attack while sitting on the toilet in his Graceland mansion.  The real cause of death was probably an overdose on a cocktail of prescription medications, but we don’t really talk about that in Memphis – it’s bad for tourism.  Of course, there are those in Memphis and across the country who insist that Elvis is not dead, frequently tickets are left at the “will call” window for Elvis at sporting and music venues.

Each year, thousands of visitors from around the world descend on Memphis, many come year after year, to participate in a week long montage of Elvis movie reruns, multiple Elvis impersonator (excuse me, that should be tribute artist) contests, tours of Sun Studios (the tiny recording studio where Elvis made his first record), tours of the 
Elvis Presley Statue Near Beale St. in Memphis
Graceland mansion, tours of his planes, and tours of just about any other place Elvis ever went to in Memphis.  The streets are filled with tour busses.  As the throngs wait to get into the Graceland grounds, they write their names and remembrances on the stone wall that surrounds the estate.  The Graceland Wall may actually rival the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem, literally and figuratively.  The week culminates in the night-long candle-light vigil which begins at the gate of Graceland at sunset and wanders through the grounds past the site, in the backyard by the pool, where Elvis and his parents are buried (for the record, I have never participated).  For a look at these “events” click here for the Elvis Week 2014 Survival Guide.  You may want to start planning your 2015 trip now!


So, another dead week has come and gone.  School is starting, the pennant races are in full swing, football season is only a week away, and the local TV stations have resumed regular broadcasting. Lest I seem ungrateful for all of the tourists who descend on our fair city and spend their money; as a tax paying citizen, I say, in the words of Elvis himself, “Ah, thank you.  Thank you very much.”

Well I gotta go and get ready for January – that’s “Birthday Week!”

Friday, June 27, 2014

There Goes Jesus . . .

Like all families, we have a long list of humorous, endearing, and enduring (at least to us) family colloquialisms.  Like the time when the upstairs toilet was overflowing through the vent into the kitchen and 4 year old Kate rounded the corner, took one look at the puddle and the cascading water and exclaimed, “I guess I better get the hell outta here.”  Then there’s the time 5 year old Charlie asked, “Dad, who’s George?”   “What are you talking about,” I asked.  He responded, “You know at the baseball game when the trumpet goes ‘da-da-da-da-da-duh’ every one yells ‘George.’”  I laughed so hard I almost ran off the road as I explained that everyone was yelling, “Charge.” To this day, almost 20 years later, the Marczynski’ s  still yell for “George”  at  baseball games and whenever something breaks, someone will remark about “getting the hell outta here.”  We can also recite almost the entire scripts of “A League of Their Own” and a “Christmas Story,” lines of which pepper our everyday conversations, but that’s another story.

Rainbow over the Tennessee River by Charlie Marczynski
One of our more poignant family sayings came to mind the other day, when a couple of ambulances flew by me on my way to work.  When an ambulance would go by us we told the kids, and reminded ourselves, to say a little prayer for the people who hurt - “Jesus help those people.”  Like shouting “George” at baseball games, this little prayer has now become a habit.  One day, when she was around 5 or 6, our daughter Sarah announced, “There goes Jesus.”  Not paying much attention and forgetting all about our little prayer, I asked her, what she was talking about.  She replied, “Jesus just drove by in an ambulance on the way to help someone.”  It was one of those “out of the mouth of babes” moments.  We ask Jesus to perform all kinds of miracles in our lives, but sometimes we do not see him in the very people who are already trying to help us and others.  As far as Sarah was concerned, that really was Jesus driving that ambulance.  I was the one who didn’t see him.

There is an old story/joke that illustrates our inability to recognize everyday miracles.   The river was rising and the sheriff cars rolled through the town telling everyone to evacuate, but one man told them he was not leaving because God would protect him.  Soon the water reached the man’s house and the sheriff came by with a boat to save the man.  “No, no the man cried, I believe God will save me.”  The water got so high he finally had to crawl out on his roof, and a helicopter circled overhead with a life rope dangling down, but the man insisted, “God will protect me.”  Soon the flood waters rose so high that the man was swept away and drowned.  When he got to heaven, the man addressed God, “You put the rainbow in the sky and told Noah you would never let another flood destroy everything and I believed you, so why didn’t you help me during the flood and save my life?  God smiled and replied, “Who do you think sent the sheriff, the boat and the helicopter?”
So, If we go looking for miracles let’s make sure we don’t let the people who bring them to us drive right by.

Gotta go, I have to pull over, I hear Jesus coming down the street.

Thursday, June 12, 2014

It's FATHERS' Day - Period

Kate, Sarah and Charlie - The Reasons I am Proud To Be a Dad
We are driving into Father’s Day this Sunday and I thought I would share a few random thoughts on the meaning of this day in this postcard.  I may excite some folks, but that is not my intent.  My intent is to simply protest  attempts at redefining the day as anything else than a day to honor FATHERS (step-Fathers, single Fathers, divorced Fathers, unwed Fathers etc.) with the only caveat being, the honor should only be given to  men who are devoted to the care and nurturing of their children.

I recall when my children were younger and in pre-school and beyond, FATHERS’ Day was watered down, as are so many things, to designations such as “Special Guy Day” or “Great Guy Day.”  I was, and am, offended by these designations.  I want MY day.  I want a day that honors FATHERS.  My own father passed away when I was 5 years old and while I had the guidance of uncles, brother-in-laws, neighbors, etc.; all honorable men, all special guys, all great guys; they were not my father. My sisters and I missed not being able to honor our father in person. Often, the day meant a trip to the cemetery.   I was fortunate years later to have the honor of celebrating FATHERS’ Day with my step- father, who has served in the capacity of being my father for over forty years.   My point is simply this, a good FATHER is unique and deserves at least one day of the year to call his own – FATHERS’ DAY period.
And by the way, why do all the commercials knock ties as gifts?  Let it be known that I would be happy with a tie.  Of course the ultimate gift for any father, any time, is Old Spice.  I always ask for it and tell my daughters that if they ever date a guy who wears Old Spice, I remind them to subtly tell their suitors, “Oh, my dad wears Old Spice,” just to plant a seed!  Although one of my favorite gifts is from my son Charlie.  While all of the other kids were crafting pottery crosses, or boxes and the like for their fathers, Charlie made me a beer mug!!  It can hold two beers and keeps them ice cold! 
I think of him every time I use it.

So, to all of you uncles, brothers, neighbors, etc. – thanks for what you do, especially if the kids you are helping out have somehow lost their fathers.  I hope Hallmark and the powers that be will someday designate a “Special Guys’ Day.”  But as for this Sunday, let me say, HAPPPY FATHERS’ DAY to all the good, caring, and nurturing men who have been given the honor and privilege of caring for offspring!  To Sarah, Kate and Charlie, thanks for letting me be your Dad! And don’t forget the Old Spice.  To Henry Marczynski - thanks for giving me life and sharing your's albeit much too short.  And to Charlie Smith - thanks for being my dad. 
Gotta go!  One of my “adult” children needs something – so much for “empty nesting!”

Thursday, April 24, 2014

I Love You Like Jesus Does . . .

Feelin' The Love at the UT-Chattanooga Homecoming

I used to think the best compliment I ever heard was in the movie “As Good As It Gets, when Jack Nicholson tells Helen Hunt, “You make me want to be a better man.”  A close second is a headstone which reads, “Here lies John Doe.  Although he is dead, it can be truthfully said, ‘His sins were scarlet and his books were read.’”  However, not long ago I heard an even better one. To share this new one, I must “come out of the closet” to reveal that after 33 years of living in Memphis, I have become a country music fan!  I am not sure; maybe it’s Memphis’ proximity to Nashville, or just great lyrics like “My eyes are the only things I don’t want to take off of you,” or the fact that no matter where you are you can always seem to tune in a country music station on the radio.  I bet you can tune one in on the far side of the moon.

Well now that it’s out, I can come clean and say that the best compliment I have ever heard comes from Eric Church in his song entitled, “Like Jesus Does.  Church (no pun intended) sings in the chorus:
All the crazy in my dreams,
And both my broken wings,
Every single piece of who I am,
Yeah, she knows the man I ain't,
She forgives me when I can't,
And the devil, man, no, he don't have a prayer,
'Cause she loves me like Jesus does.
When I first I heard those words, “she loves me like Jesus does,” I immediately thought, “Wow, that is not only the best way to feel, but it is the best thing to think and/or feel about someone else.”  I thought about these words and this sentiment in church on Easter Sunday.  I know I have crazy dreams, I can feel my broken wings, I have done things I cannot forgive myself for, and I could always be a better man; but fortunately I have someone (in fact a whole family) in my life that make this earth like heaven by loving me like he does.  If  I truly believe that Jesus’ life, death and resurrection is the epitome of love, then I have no choice, but to be that someone for others – I must love all of the other crazy dreamers with broken wings, unrealized potential and unforgiven sins – just like Jesus does.
Gotta go, time to tune in to a new station.

Friday, March 28, 2014

Meditation On Doin' the Hokey Pokey

"This Is What It's All About At The Marczynski's"
Today’s postcard is about The Hokey Pokey.  There is a story, I am not sure of its veracity, that when the author of The Hokey Pokey, Larry LaPrise, passed away the undertakers had a difficult time putting him in the coffin.  They would put his left leg in and then his left leg would come out; his right arm would go in and then it would go out . . . . But seriously, just maybe there is some deeper meaning to The Hokey Pokey.

After seeing the question, “What if The Hokey Pokey really is what it’s all about?” in a decorative frame in a psychologist’s office I began to wonder what if The Hokey Pokey really is what it’s all about?  Here are a few of the questions I invite you to ponder with me:  
Why do the lyrics never instruct us to “dance” The Hokey Pokey, but rather to “do” The Hokey Pokey?

The lyrics don’t tell us, so how do we know to form a circle when The Hokey Pokey music begins?

How do we know that “doing” the Hokey Pokey means to raise our hands in the air and carelessly twirl all around? Again, the lyrics don’t tell us.

Why is it that when we “do” The Hokey Pokey, we drop all defenses and pretenses and no one ever stops to notice how foolish the whole thing looks?

Why is it that when we get to “put your whole self in and shake it all about,” we do so with wild abandon and, like lemmings marching to the sea, we just do it, because the lyrics tell us to?

Given all of the personal angst these questions and observations have caused me and after spending way too much time thinking about them, I have come to believe that The Hokey Pokey contains a deep secret and lesson for life – "Sometimes The Hokey Pokey really is what it’s all about."  There are things in life that we are asked, or told, to do that don’t make a lot of sense, just like the lyrics of the song.  Sometimes we just have to do stuff without having to be on an endless pursuit for meaning or a never-ending quest to find “what it really is all about.”  Sometimes life is simply about carefree abandonment.  This doesn’t mean surrendering to a life devoid of meaning and purpose, but every now and then we have to appreciate life as simply being something to enjoy without thought and explanation.  Maybe that’s why kids are so good at doing The Hokey Pokey.

So, wherever you are and whatever you are doing, stop right now, close your eyes and start doing The Hokey Pokey, and for at least the next few minutes let “shaking yourself all about” really be “what it’s all about.” 

Gotta go, time for my Hokey Pokey Anonymous meeting – it’s a place to help turn myself around!

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Jesus On Ice . . .



Crucifix in the LA Cathedral - R. Marczynski
About 20 years ago I made a Cursillo (meaning "short course"), part of a Catholic movement started in Spain to help Christians “revive” and recommit themselves to their faith.  The movement has spread to other denominations, referred to as “The Walk,” or “The Great Harvest.” 
In very simple terms, a Cursillo is an intense 3 day weekend retreat with a series of talks and activities given, for the most part, by lay leaders. I noticed, and was struck by the fact, that as each leader spoke, he held a Crucifix.  It seemed as though by clutching that Crucifix the speaker gained a greater sense of confidence, purpose and peace as they spoke.  At the close of the Cursillo weekend each participant is presented with a small Crucifix.  I carried mine in my pocket where I could feel it throughout the day (I swear sometimes it “poked” me when I was about to do something wrong!). 

A few months after making my Cursillo, a close friend faced a very serious personal and professional crisis that was breaking him.  I told him the story I related above and gave him my Crucifix to carry, hoping it would give him some peace.  My friend and his family made it through the crisis stronger than ever.  I bought another one and we traded, but each of us continued to carry our Crucifix daily. 

A couple years later he told me that it was his habit that when coming home from work each day, he would empty his pockets and put the contents in a little “letter holder” they kept on the top of their refrigerator.  One morning when he went to get his stuff, he noticed his Crucifix was missing.  He and his family looked around on top of the refrigerator, on the floor, in his pants, in his closet, but could never find it.   A few months later, they were cleaning and defrosting their freezer and there it was - the ice covered Crucifix buried in the back of the freezer.  Obviously, it had somehow fallen out of the letter holder and into the freezer without anyone noticing.  We referred to the experience as putting “Jesus on Ice.”

In a similar vein, one day on a family outing, I reached into my pocket and I couldn’t feel my Crucifix.  It was strange, but I became panicky.  After I made the whole family look for it for about a half an hour, we called off the search.  I took some solace hoping that maybe someone who “needed” it more than I did would find the Crucifix and it would help them through whatever struggles they were facing.  I simply bought another one. 
Over the years, I have lost several Crucifixes and have given some away.  After a while it can be expensive, and time consuming since there isn’t a Crucifix store on every corner, so I took to hooking one on my key chain, but somehow it just wasn’t the same.  So I went back, as often as I could, to carrying one in my pocket.  If I lose one I always hope that whomever finds it will gain the confidence, purpose, or peace that they may need. 

Even though I don’t spend my days paying much attention to it, simply throwing my Crucifix on my desk with the rest of my pocket trash;  it is nice to know that, like my friend,  I have “Jesus On Ice.”   I just need to remember that when I need a little extra boost, I just need brush off the lint from my pocket or let it thaw out and He’s still there – just for me. 

Next time you see a crucifix, think about this postcard and always remember, “Jesus loves you, but He still likes me best!”
Gotta go, I have to look for something.

Monday, March 10, 2014

I Got a Hole in My Soul, but Jesus in My Pocket . . .

Cross Atop Chapel at Franciscan Retreat Center by R. Marczynski
I did not mean my postcards to take necessarily take on a spiritual tone, but it seems that the times I feel I have something worthwhile sharing have been after some “spiritual” experience or insight.  I guess that is a good thing.

I serve as a “Minister to the Sick” and on the second Saturday of each month.  Today, March 8, was my turn to hold a Communion Service at a near-by nursing home and to visit with and distribute Communion to those unable to come to the service.  On some visits it can be a pretty dismal and depressing experience. Yet, I always leave a little more refreshed, if not grateful, and a little more faith-filled.  For these folks, receiving the Eucharist and praying with someone is truly the high point of the week.   It is humbling when someone grabs my hand and looks me in the eyes and keeps repeating, “Thank you for coming. Thank you.”   Their anticipation, joy and the peace that seems to come over them makes me feel a little embarrassed by my personal struggles with my faith and my doubts.  They never take someone coming to pray with them for granted.  For some residents, it literally may be the last time.   In fact, the first time I visited a patient at a nursing home, I found out that the man I visited died that night – I thought I killed him.  I thought, this Ministry to the Sick thing wasn’t starting off too hot.  It was truly humbling to know that I may have been the last person to say a prayer with him.

A Pyx
During the visits the consecrated hosts are carried in a small gold holder called a “pyx” that opens like a pocket watch or a brooch.  I usually go from room to room with the pyx and the consecrated hosts in my pocket.   I was visiting and joking with one of my favorite 95 year-old “girlfriends” one morning before giving her Communion.  I asked her if she was going dancing that night because she looked so good.  Mind you, she can barely get out of bed.  She laughed and said, “Oh, you’re just a big liar.”    I smiled back and asked her, “Now how could I be lying to you with Jesus in my pocket?  That just wouldn’t be right.”  We said a prayer, I gave her Communion, and told her I would see her next month and in the meantime not to go chasing any of the male residents.  She just laughed and waved me out.
As I left one day I thought about having Jesus in my pocket.  Sounds like a line from a country song, “I got a hole in my soul, but Jesus in my pocket!”  I wonder what I would be like and if my faith would be stronger, if every day, I had Jesus in my pocket.  

Gotta go, I have a hole that needs some mending!

Friday, February 28, 2014

“There Ain’t No Big Bang”


Desert Cross by Rob Marczynski
This postcard may be a little long and preachy, but after 12 years working at a parish what can you expect, and after all, Lent starts this week. 

My son Charlie thinks it is funny that you can tell Lent is coming because McDonalds starts to feature their fish fillet sandwiches.  Lent is one of those "special" seasons when we become resolved to shake up our ordinary lives.  We eat fish sandwiches, we sacrifice, we pray, we give to the poor, we go to church; but I wonder if by doing all this extra stuff (albeit good stuff which we should probably be doing all the time) we are missing something - "We fail to see the tree in our own backyard because we're too busy looking for the forest."  Maybe Lent should be more about making the ordinary, extraordinary.


I love to go to baseball games.  That first glimpse of the brilliant green grass contrasted against the dark brown and red of the infield punctuated by the white bases literally takes my breath away. I stop in the tunnel for a moment just to take it in. Throw in an ice-cold beer and a hot dog and life doesn’t get much better. It is a moment when all is right with the world and God is in His heaven.  For me, moments like that are the times “God pulls back the curtain,” like in the Wizard of Oz, and finally everything becomes clear. In My Monastery Is A Minivan, Denise Roy describes these moments as:

[Times] when life shines a spotlight down upon you, illuminating that moment as a holy moment. . . .  A moment when you live half in and half out of time, when you know utterly and completely that this is a wonderful moment.  A moment when the music is so magnificent that you heart fills to the point of breaking open, when a note hangs in the air and all eternity is, just for that moment, made manifest . . . A moment that is so achingly beautiful your heart pleads for a time-out so that you can hold on to this moment and place and sense absolute wholeness.

We crave these moments to lift us up out of the ordinary and the mundane.  Remember Peter in the Gospels; he goes up the mountain where he sees Jesus gloriously transfigured chatting with Elijah and Moses.  A priest one time referred to this as Peter’s mountain top experience, and like any of us, didn’t want that moment to end.  In fact, he wants to set up tents and settle in.  He gets to see behind the curtain.  Yet, at the very instant Peter tries to capture this Kodak moment (remember Kodak moments?) he finds himself back in the “real” world at the bottom of the hill.  Another moment like this is the story of Martha and Mary. In Having A Mary Heart In A Martha World, Joanna Weaver points out that having Jesus in her home is something so out of the ordinary, Mary forgets all about helping out Martha.  She shuts out everything else, and for that rare moment Jesus is transfigured for her. 

Weaver, also share the story of Brother Lawrence, a member of a 17th century French Carmelite community.  He spent his days cooking and cleaning in the monastery kitchen and in his book of reflections he writes that his kitchen work was a time of prayer, no different than the time he spent in adoration of the Blessed Sacrament.  “What a goal,” concludes Weaver, “To be so in tune with the presence of God that washing dishes becomes an act of worship.  That the moments of our lives, no matter how mundane, become aflame with the divine.” (Weaver, p.86) She goes so far to suggest that if we do not experience God in these ordinary times of our lives or if we use these times as excuses for not having time for God, we are guilty of sin because we allow ourselves to be separated from God, “the very definition of sin. . . .(Weaver, p. 105)   

A friend from college would often remind me, “It’s not who you are present with, but who you are present to.”  Her reminder mirrors the words of Father Ronald Rohlheiser in his book of Lenten reflections entitled DayBreaks – Daily Reflections for Lent and Easter Week.  Father Rohlheiser writes, “We don’t pray to make God present to us.  God is always present everywhere.  We pray to make ourselves present to God.” (Rohlheiser, p. 29)  So, if God is everywhere, we don’t really need to go very far or do very much to find Him.  Kathy Cofey, in her book entitled Experiencing God With Your Children, writes:

             “In the routine we take for granted simmers a holiness that knocks our
              socks off. . . . .  We who are busily craning our necks into tabernacles
              and tomes may well miss the dazzling brilliance of the ordinary.  If we
              aren’t alert to the fact that God visits us at home, then we are likely to
              be unwelcoming hosts and hostesses, gawking elsewhere.”  

As my mom would say, when we couldn’t find something, “It’s right in front of you.  If it were a snake it would bite you.”

Like Peter and Mary, we all want and look for, or wait for, the “big bang” - that miraculous, transforming, extraordinary moment when God fully reveals himself to us. However, as a friend once said, when it comes experiencing God in our lives, “there ain’t no big bang!” We realize that even if we have one of these “take your breath away moments,” we ultimately have to return to our ordinary lives - Peter’s got fish to catch and Mary has to help with dinner. My glimmering baseball field becomes scarred and the game will end with the last out in the bottom of the 9th. Even that quintessential moment of our salvation, the crucifixion and death of Jesus, which we cling to each Lenten season, has to end with His body being lowered from the cross and placed in an ordinary tomb before there can be any resurrection.

So, maybe this Lent  I’ll  try to make it a little more ordinary. I’ll spend more time looking at that tree in our backyard, marveling that the crocuses have come up even though its only 28 degrees, acknowledging that leftovers are pretty good compared to not having any food, being thankful that Beth brings me coffee and irons my shirt in the morning, relishing the accomplishments of my three great kids, and simply enjoying McDonald's fish fillet sandwiches, which somehow taste better during Lent.

Gotta go, I got a fish fillet with my name on it.

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Ola Mae . . .


Stormy Sunset by Charlie Marczynslo

In the mid 80’s BB (Before Beth) I had a girlfriend who had an aunt and uncle living someplace along the coast of Florida.  I don’t really remember the uncle’s name, so we’ll just call him Jasper; but the aunt was Ola Mae, who could forget a name like that?  The story goes that a hurricane was on the way, so Ola Mae and Jasper boarded up the house and did everything one does when a hurricane is coming and then they went to bed.  Jasper fell asleep almost immediately (typical man), but Ola Mae tossed and turned and paced the floor.  Finally an exasperated Jasper asked, “What in the world is wrong with you?”  She answered, “Well, the storm is comin’.  Can’t you here the wind and the rain?  What are we gonna do?”  Jasper sighed, rolled over and very calmly replied, “There’s not a damn thing we can do about it now Ola Mae!”
Sometimes along our pilgrimages, unpleasant things happen.  Uncle Jasper’s, “Not a damn thing we can do about now Ola Mae,” sounds like pretty good advice.  It has become the mantra at our house.  Check bounces – “not a damn thing you can do about it now Ola Mae.”  Kids wreck the car - “not a damn thing you can do about it now Ola Mae.”  Flat tire - “not a damn thing you can do about it now Ola Mae.”  You get the picture. 

Along my own pilgrimage this past week, I experienced the unexpected death of a close friend of over 30 years.  Every now and then it hits me that I will never see Eddie again and that, as strange as it seems, he is no longer on this earth.  I know such things are bound to happen and are completely out of my control. Yet, despite boarding up the windows, battening down the hatches and deciding to ride out the storm, and knowing there’s nothing more I can do, I still feel totally unprepared, like Ola Mae.  I toss and turn, pace the floor and get all worked up.  It angers me (to put it nicely) that he is gone, and I hear Uncle Jasper cajoling and nagging me, “there is not a damn thing you can do about it.” 
The writer of the Book of Ecclesiastes in the Old Testament reminds us and complains that despite everything that happens to us, tomorrow will still come, “The sun rises and the sun sets, and hurries back to where it rises.” (Ecclesiastes 1:5) I have heard one preacher opine, that while life does indeed go on in spite of, and completely oblivious to our travails, we should take comfort in knowing that we can indeed count on the sun rising again.  Life goes on, we pick up the pieces and continue on our journey.  The faith that the sun will rise and set may not help with the cleanup, but it will get us through the storm.

Gotta go, I think I hear another storm blowin’ in.

Monday, February 10, 2014

In the Beginning . . .


Desert  Labyrinth at a Franciscan Retreat Center Outside of Phoenix
In this digital age of email, Facebook and Instagram, people do not send them as much as they used to, but I remember what a thrill it was as a kid to get a postcard.  Even if you did not know who it was from, or even care what it said, it was nice to look at the picture.  The messages were usually dribble, “The weather is beautiful, wish you were here” – as if they really did - or they offered some explanation of the picture on the front as if whoever sent it actually took the picture themselves.  Sometimes they would tell you all of the wonderful things they were doing and the places they had seen, while you sat at home bored out of your mind.
Yet somehow, the senders felt it was necessary for them to chronicle their vacation pilgrimages in words and pictures.
A few years ago, I served on a national board that provided grants to low income community organizing and economic development projects.  Sponsored by the US Catholic Conference of Bishops, the board was made up of Catholics from all over the country, all walks of life and all political and social positions.  There was even a Catholic Indian!  Imagine that.  Part of the meetings were dedicated to a spiritual activity.  During one of these activities, the Native American member performed a Lakota “smoking ritual” (a kind of incensing to cleanse away one’s sins and evil natures) and explained how he integrated his Native American and Catholic spirituality.  The one thing I remember was his description of the Indian’s concept of starting out as a heavenly beings on an earthly pilgrimage in contrast to the perception of the “white man’s” vision of starting out as an earthly beings on a heavenly pilgrimage.  Even though the ultimate destination is the same; what you pack and carry (and throw away), what is important to you and what you notice along your pilgrimage, is totally dependent upon where you see yourself starting from.  That vision of being a heavenly being on an earthly pilgrimage has stayed with me.  Not that I have managed to
So, after completing over half of my pilgrimage, I decided to chronicle some of the points along the way – send out a few postcards, if you will.  Thus the title of my blog, “Postcards from the Pilgrimage.”  And just like those postcards you use to receive, the message may be dribble, but you can hopefully enjoy the pictures, most of which were taken by my family and me.  Feel free to add your own comments to this digital postcard.   You won’t get them on any regular basis, so they will be a surprise, just like those postcards you got in the mail.
So in the words of Jimmy Buffet, “The weather is here, I wish you were beautiful!” 
 
Gotta go, I got places to see!