E-Mail Wisdom

Thanks to Annie! 🙂

“When God leads you to the edge of the cliff, trust Him fully and let go, only 1 of 2 things will happen; either He’ll catch you when you fall, or He’ll teach you how to fly!”

A New Semester Begins!

This year, Lindsay, Terry and I are studying Jeff Cavins‘s Adventures in Matthew, part of the Great Adventure series.  I am so excited to be starting Bible study again!  I have really missed it since last year.  We started off the “school year” right, with Lindsay bringing a delicious dinner of lasagna with home-grown veggies, and grapes to snack on during class.  I thought it was hilarious.  Less than 2 years ago, I wasn’t even thinking of joining the Church.  1 year ago, I was just starting going to daily Mass and getting more involved.  Now, we are taking over the social hall dining room/silverware for our dinner — we are moving in!  🙂

Here is the scene this morning, as I have taken the day off to **finally** have my dryer delivered (Yay!  I can actually do my laundry at home!  Read more on the laundry saga here):
A New Semester Begins!
As you can see, I have my Bible (kind of important, you know, for a Bible study), my Catechism (hiding under the Matthew binder), the binder for Adventures in Matthew containing the Questions and the Answers (promise, I won’t cheat — except if you count it to be cheating to answer your questions in front of the Tabernacle), paper/notes, and the ever-necessary Starbucks!

 Yippee!  I’m so excited to see what we will learn this year!  Last year’s Great Adventure Bible Timeline was a great, great course for me, and really helped me to understand the stories of the Bible and to get some idea of the history (coming from no background at all, it gave me a MUCH needed foundation).  I highly recommend this series to anyone wanting to get to know the Bible better. 

Meme of the Day

Thanks to Ironic Catholic, who has saved me from bludgeoning my head against “Confessions” for another 10 minutes while I try to figure out what kind of person I am.  I call it Remote Spiritual Direction….  🙂

You are a Dynamic Leader.

Dynamic Leader

about you

You are a Leader

 
  • Your solid grounding in the practicalities of life, along with your self-assuredness and your willingness to appreciate new things make you a LEADER.
  • You’re in touch with what is going on around you and adept at remaining down-to-earth and logical.
  • Although you’re detail-oriented, this doesn’t mean that you lose the big picture.
  • You tend to find beauty in form and efficiency, as opposed to finding it in broad-based, abstract concepts.
  • Never one to pass on an adventure, you’re consistently seeking and finding new things, even in your immediate surroundings.
  • Because of this eagerness to pursue new experiences, you’ve learned a lot; your attention to detail means that you gain a great deal from your adventures.
  • The intellectual curiosity that drives you leads you to seek out causes of and reasons behind things.
  • Your confidence gives you the potential to take your general awareness and channel it into leadership.
  • You’re not set on one way of doing things, and you often have the skills and persistence to find innovative ways of facing challenges.
  • You are well-attuned to your talents, and can deal with most problems that you face.
  • You do your own thing when it comes to clothing, guided more by practical concerns than by other people’s notions of style.
  • Generally, you believe that you control your life, and that external forces only play a limited role in determining what happens to you.
  • If you want to be different:

     
  • There’s more to life than the practical – take some time to daydream and explore the aesthetic sides of things.
  • how you relate to others

    You are Dynamic

     
  • As someone who is DYNAMIC, you do not have a hard time meeting new people, and you have a bunch of close friends.
  • You are not overly concerned with what others may think about you, which leaves you free to be thoroughly involved in the world around you.
  • There are those who find being around people exhausting—but not you! Interacting with others, whether at a party or in conversation, gives you energy.
  • You have a strong sense of what the world is like and how it should be.
  • You have enormous respect for those who have earned their success, and have little patience for those who try to bend the rules or ride on the coattails of others’ hard work.
  • Believing in the importance of integrity and hard work doesn’t stop you from believing that people will do the right thing—you know that people are good at heart.
  • You sometimes have trouble understanding why others feel the way they do, but it doesn’t stop you from having faith and trust in those around you.
  • Part of what makes engaging with people so interesting for you is that you occasionally learn something new about yourself or about a problem you’re having when discussing things with others.
  • Your strong worldview leads you to believe that people shouldn’t rely on their emotions so much when making decisions.
  • If you want to be different:

     
  • Taking some time to explore others’ perspectives could make spending time with people even more compelling than it already is.
  • Making an effort to see the complexities of situations might open your eyes to alternative perspectives of how the world works.
  • Those who are as outgoing as you are often need to remind themselves that time alone can be just as fulfilling—take some time for yourself and you might find that there are many things in your inner world that are just as compelling as the world outside your window.
  •  

    Just Which Jane Austen Character *Am* I?

    Of course, I am not all that well versed in Jane Austen, but well, sometimes I like to do these little memes anyway. Thanks to Kasia, for posting the link on her blog.

    I am Catherine Morland!

    You are Catherine Morland of Northanger Abbey! You love a good Gothic romance – so much, in fact, that you’ll fool yourself into thinking you’re living one! You are imaginative and naive, which is at once endearing and perplexing. Perhaps your heart is TOO pure…but it is adventurous. After all, you love a trip to Bath or a stay at an ancient Abbey.

    Racking Up Time in Purgatory, I’m Sure….

    Okay, those screams you have been hearing for the past two weeks?  The screams of frustration?  Those have been mine.  I’ve been reading St. Augustine, and he’s been driving me absolutely bonkers.  Yup, that’s right.  I’m having issues with a saint.  So, obviously I’m going to get some extra time in Purgatory for that.  I’m pretty sure I “yelled” at him, and it’s quite possible that there may have been some banging of my little fist.

    What, you ask, has been irritating me so much?  Well, okay, I get that he used to belong to the Manicheans and that they had this whole dualistic good/bad soul/body thing going on.  And, somehow, this ties in with matter being bad and the spirit being good.  For a lot of the book, St. Augustine keeps going on asking about how God can be matter and is He matter and maybe He can’t be matter, since matter is by nature finite and he is infinite, but that maybe in a non-matter way he surrounds and permeates all of creation.

    I’m like, “What does it matter?!?  Get on with it already!”  It doesn’t do, for me, to keep questioning the same thing over and over if you never seem to make any progress with the question.  (And he *knew* there were going to be people reading the book, he even says so at one point.  So, you can’t say that it was his personal thing — I mean it was, but he also knew he had an audience.)  Now you know that I have very little patience for repetition, especially repetition that I don’t find to be personally useful.  (What was that?  Pride and no patience?  Getting lower on the Purgatory food-scale by the minute, you say?)

    At this point, I’m more than halfway through the book.  And I’m thinking that St. Augustine is really going to need a good pool-noodling, that is if I ever manage to make it into Heaven.  THEN!  He starts talking about memory!  Again with the matter and substance.  I’m not sure why everything has to be a tangible object with him, but he starts off with talking about memory in these concrete terms.  Okay, so he’s trying to conceptualize this.  I can give him a few pages to work this out, all right, but I’m still irritated about the whole God/matter/substance issue, so my patience is thin.

    One particular passage which irritated me was:

    “When, therefore, I remember memory, then memory is present to itself by itself, but when I remember forgetfulness then both memory and forgetfulness are present together – the memory by which I remember the forgetfulness which I remember.”  — St. Augustine, “Confessions”

     He kept talking about the paradoxical nature of remembering an absence, and to me, the answer was so simple, the fact that he didn’t think of it was irritating.  Me:  “It’s not that you are remembering an absence of remembering, but that you are remembering the awareness of the absence of remembering, which is an entirely different thing, and one which does not cause a paradoxical event.”

    It’s so simple!  Why doesn’t he get it?!  Well, I’m sure he’s sitting up there in Heaven saying much the same things about me….

    Enough with the memory issue.  Now…let’s move on to time!  Oh yes, we can really irritate Jenn speaking about time!  And how past and future cannot exist, since we only exist and can act in the present.  He makes this statement, “The past increases by the diminuation of the future until by the consumption of all the future all is past.”

    This is now irritating me so much that I am squawking about St. Augustine to everyone:  Fr. John, Lynn, my boss, coworkers, friends….  An excerpt from an e-mail discussion, me speaking, “Here he is more stating the phenomenon of how the future becomes the past, through the passage of the present.”

    Donny:  “You are probably right since I don’t have the context. I think now I will check my college for the book. Then we can discuss it properly.  It is astonishing! I think it it one of the most extraordinary phenomenon that we can direct, and ceaselessly, experience. I like the word diminuation (great choice here) meaning decline: change toward something smaller or lower (after I looked it up).  But it still seems to me that he is indicating a resolution in time, that it is not cyclical (a big bang to singularity over and over, although another theory is that space will expand and never contract) or infinite.”

    Me:  “I think he is more to questioning the paradoxical question of how can time be ever turning from future to present to past, when we can ever only be in a present, for a past has already happened and a future is yet to come, and how, in that manner, can we come to measure either time, since time is a subjective reality and unable to be measured in a finite quantity since every fraction of ‘now’ can only ever be experienced ‘now’.”

    Donny:  “Well put. I think he is, like all of, trying the grapple with the concept of time. We have had to give time measurement to give greater relevance to the passage of our lives. Birthdays, a good example. This is fine for us but does not explain time. Although what phenomenon can be considered explained. We have only theories about those observations.”

    It does help me a lot to have someone to bounce ideas off of, but St. Augustine is still really irritating me.  Now that I have been irritated by matter, memory and time, those plate glass windows behind me look awfully tempting for smacking my head into in frustration.  When expressing my vexation to a coworker, she kindly points out to me the location of the paper shredder and suggests that maybe I would like some nice Eastern religion books on metaphysics.

    Well, that’s not going to help!  I’ll still be frustrated, and moreso that I didn’t make it through the book! 

    Then, at the height of my vexation, I read this,

    “And I shall not have to endure the questions of those people who, as if in a morbid disease, thirst for more than they can hold and say, ‘What did god make before he made heaven and earth?’ or, ‘How did it come into his mind to make something when he had never before made anything?'”

    WHAT?!?!?  How can he be irritated at other people’s questions when HIS questions are so irritating?!?  I can almost hear him snortling at me.  Is it funny that I’m getting so upset?  Probably.  🙂

    I’m now really hoping that Fr. John will be able to help me with this, because I can’t think that being so irritated with a saint can be a good thing, and I really don’t like being irritated.  In the meantime, I’ve prayed for understanding.  One night, I decided to put down the book, and I picked up “Spe Salvi” instead.  And here I found:

    “Saint Thomas Aquinas, using the terminology of the philosophical tradition to which he belonged, explains it as follows:  faith is a habitus, that is, a stable disposition of the spirit, through which eternal life takes root in us and reason is led to consent to what it does not see.  The concept of ‘substance’ is therefore modified in the sense that through faith, in a tentative way, or as we might say, ‘in embryo’ — and thus according to the ‘substance’ — there are already present in us the things that are hoped for:  the whole, true life.  And precisely because the thing itself is already present, this presence of what is to come also creates certainty:  this ‘thing’ which must come is not yet visible in the external world (it does not ‘appear’), but because of the fact that, as an initial and dynamic reality, we carry it within us, a certain perception of it has even now come into existence.”  — Pope Benedict XVI

    Okay, this helps a little with the irritation.  Perhaps he is so wrapped up with the substance of things because of this notion of faith as a stable disposition of the spirit — a substance, so to say, in which we can let the Truth of eternal life take root in us and grow.  Even though St. Augustine goes about it oddly for the purposes of my own understanding, perhaps his struggle with the substantial or unsubstantial nature of God is more to the point a struggle with understanding how it is that a God who is infinite interacts with us who are body/soul mixes in a concrete way, speaking to us as he made us.  In short, sacrament.

    So, maybe it’s not an empty question to wonder about the concrete nature of God, but perhaps in so doing we delve deeper into the mystery of the sacraments.

    And this post can now be re-titled, “Why I Am Not (yet) a Saint.”

    Quote of the Day

    “The Greek world…was nonetheless deeply aware that man’s real sin, his deepest temptation, is hubris — the arrogant presumption of autonomy that leads man to put on airs of divinity, to claim to be his own god, in order to possess life totally and to draw from it every last drop of what it has to offer.”

    — Pope Benedict XVI, “Jesus of Nazareth,” pg. 98

    This is exactly how I was raised.  Of course, if there is no God, then it makes perfect sense.  Utilitarian ethics, among many others, are not horrible ethics, they just lack Truth.  If there is no purpose to our lives, no ultimate authority, then Utilitarianism, (among other codes of ethics) appear to be a fine way to live, in order to get the “most out of life.”

    But what a freeing thing it is to be Catholic and understand the Truth.  And, by no means, do I have all the answers — I don’t even have all the questions! — but, I want to get there and I’m working in that direction.  So, with His help, maybe I’ll keep making progress.  🙂

    Adventures in Baking

    For those of you who don’t know, I have issues with food.  Not only do I have issues with food, but I am not a very domestic female.  However, for people whom I love, I will venture into the kitchen occasionally.  🙂

    This latest foray is to bake a cake for our pastor at St. Anastasia, Fr. JJ.  His birthday was actually last week, but he asked that I delay a week, so that he would have the cake when he was entertaining his parents for the Labor Day holiday.

    So, being me, I avoided any planning of the cake until the last minute.  I knew he wanted a chocolate cake with white frosting, but I hadn’t looked up any recipes until the 9th hour.  Armed with my trusted web browser, I Googled it (as any wise cooking-impaired person would do), and found this recipe at All Recipes.  For the frosting, I found this one, at the same site.

    I was pretty excited, because although I do not have a very well stocked pantry, I did happen to have all the ingredients for both recipes on hand.  That was amazing.  The only thing was that I didn’t have the required 3 9″ baking pans.  So, (I *did* say this was a last minute thing, right?) I headed to Meijer’s at 11:45 pm Saturday night for the proper dishes.  While I was there, I picked up some white fondant (because it looked amusing and I’ve never worked with fondant before), and some cake decorating thingys (what is it?  colored frosting?).

    The cake portion went very well, and I was pleased with their outcome.  While they were cooling, I decided that since it was already 1 am on Sunday, and my race day had begun (more on that later, maybe), that I would start my 10K now (since I only had to log it electronically with my nifty little Nike+ shoes, I could race any time of the day).  So, I ran my 10K and got back home at about 3 am (yes, yes, I know…my time sucked).

    I decided then to head to bed, since Fr. JJ had the 10:15 am Mass.  I got up early (well, okay about 8 am) and started making the frosting.  I don’t know if it’s something about the recipe, or something about my execution of it, but I couldn’t seem to get all the little bits from the milk-and-flour mixture to get smooth, so there were little bumpies in the frosting.  Maybe next time, I’ll whisk the flour into the milk before I start the burner; or put the mixture into the rest of it before it cools, since the cooling made a kind of hard crust on the top; or maybe I’ll put the whole thing into the blender after I’m done with the mixer.  I’m not sure, but there has to be a solution.

    So, now I have frosting and 3 cakes.  And while I did buy an additional cake-carrier while I was at the store, I realized that it still would only allow me to carry 2 cakes — I couldn’t squeeze a third, not even onto the larger carrier.  Hmmm….  What to do?

    Well, I took the one cake and frosted it as I was going to, and stuck it on the smaller carrier.  Done.  Excellent.  Then, I had a thought.  (Yes, be scared….  It’s okay.)  Why not try to make a layered cake?  So, I put one cake down, slathered it with the remaining frosting, then put the remaining cake on top.  Like this:

    World's Largest Oreo -- DSCN3821

    Then, a horrible thought occurred to me:
    “I’ve just made the world’s largest Oreo!”

    And, you should know, I’m scared of Oreos.  Especially of marshmallow fluff, but Oreos are terrifying themselves.

    And this sucker was huge!  See:

    Really Big Oreo -- DSCN3823

    So, I decided to hide its Oreoness with the fondant.  The fondant was…interesting.  Doesn’t taste like anything, really, but it does cover the cake well.  Next, I tried to “decorate” the cake.  Let’s just say that I’m not going to quit my day job.  So, I added a little disclaimer, right on the cake itself.  In blue.  At the bottom.  And the final product turned out like this:

    Fr. JJ's Birthday Cake -- DSCN3826

    I am so glad that Fr. JJ is such a kind man, since he seemed to be happy for them, even though they were not the most elegant things in existence.  🙂

    Ah, well.  It was a labor of love, and not a display of skill.  🙂

    100 Books Meme

    I stole this from The Ironic Catholic, who I think stole it from someone else.  Ah, well, that’s the nature of these things.  🙂

    Bold–I’ve read it.
    Underlined–I want to.
    Nuttin’–I don’t care.
    Dripping with blood–you give it to me, I’ll burn it instead.

    1. Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen
    2. The Lord of the Rings – JRR Tolkien
    3. Jane Eyre – Charlotte Bronte
    4. Harry Potter series – JK Rowling
    5. To Kill a Mockingbird – Harper Lee (AP English)
    6. The Bible (Working on it….)
    7. Wuthering Heights –Emily Bronte
    8. Nineteen Eighty Four – George Orwell 
    9. His Dark Materials – Phillip Pullman (Although, maybe I’d peek at it, just so I can argue against it.)
    10. Great Expectations – Charles Dickens (Read a tiny portion, then got bored.)
    11. Little Women – Louisa M Alcott
    12. Tess of the D’Urbervilles – Thomas Hardy
    13. Catch 22 – Joseph Heller
    14. Complete Works of Shakespeare (Select things — some sonnets, some plays, etc.)
    15. Rebecca – Daphne Du Maurier
    16. The Hobbit – JRR Tolkien
    17. Birdsong – Sebastian Faulks
    18. Catcher in the Rye – JD Salinger (Can’t remember if I read this in AP English, or if it was just presented by a classmate — memorable book, evidently….  😉
    19. The Time Traveller’s Wife –
    20. Middlemarch – George Eliot
    21. Gone With the Wind – Margaret Mitchell
    22. The Great Gatsby – F Scott Fitzgerald (AP English hits again!)
    23. Bleak House – Charles Dickens
    24. War and Peace – Leo Tolstoy
    25. The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy – Douglas Adams (At the husband’s suggestion, this and the other Adams books.)
    26. Brideshead Revisited – Evelyn Waugh
    27. Crime and Punishment – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    28. Grapes of Wrath – John Steinbeck (I liked Steinbeck.)
    29. Alice in Wonderland – Lewis Carroll
    30. The Wind in the Willows – Kenneth Grahame
    31. Anna Karenina – Leo Tolstoy
    32. David Copperfield – Charles Dickens
    33. Chronicles of Narnia – CS Lewis (I’ve read the first 1.5; I’ve had the complete set for years and years.)
    34. Emma – Jane Austen
    35. Persuasion – Jane Austen
    36. The Kite Runner – Khaled Hosseini
    37. Captain Corelli’s Mandolin – Louis De Bernieres
    38. Memoirs of a Geisha – Arthur Golden  (I liked the movie.)
    39. Winnie the Pooh – AA Milne (Saw the moviesssss….)
    40. Animal Farm – George Orwell
    41. The Da Vinci Code – Dan Brown
    42. One Hundred Years of Solitude – Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    43. A Prayer for Owen Meaney – John Irving
    44. The Woman in White – Wilkie Collins
    45. Anne of Green Gables – LM Montgomery
    46. Far From The Madding Crowd – Thomas Hardy (My husband had this book.  Never managed to read it.)
    47. The Handmaid’s Tale – Margaret Atwood
    48. Lord of the Flies – William Golding (AP English)
    49. Atonement – Ian McEwan
    50. Life of Pi – Yann Martel
    51. Dune – Frank Herbert
    52. Cold Comfort Farm – Stella Gibbons
    53. Sense and Sensibility – Jane Austen
    54. A Suitable Boy – Vikram Seth
    55. The Shadow of the Wind – Carlos Ruiz Zafon
    56. A Tale Of Two Cities – Charles Dickens (I think I read this in grade school.)
    57. Brave New World – Aldous Huxley (Of course, I would read this one.)
    58. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time – Mark Haddon
    59. Love In The Time Of Cholera – Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    60. Of Mice and Men – John Steinbeck
    61. Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov
    62. The Secret History – Donna Tartt
    63. The Lovely Bones – Alice Sebold (I kinda liked this one, despite its gruesomeness.  I liked her personal story, Lucky, too.)
    64. Count of Monte Cristo – Alexandre Dumas
    65. On The Road – Jack Kerouac
    66. Jude the Obscure – Thomas Hardy
    67. Bridget Jones’ Diary – Helen Fielding
    68. Midnight’s Children – Salman Rushdie
    69. Moby Dick – Herman Melville (Started it, didn’t finish.)
    70. Oliver Twist – Charles Dickens
    71. Dracula – Bram Stoker
    72. The Secret Garden – Frances Hodgson Burnett
    73. Notes From A Small Island – Bill Bryson
    74. Ulysses – James Joyce
    75. The Bell Jar – Sylvia Plath
    76. Swallows and Amazons – Arthur Ransome
    77. Germinal – Emile Zola
    78. Vanity Fair – William Makepeace Thackeray
    79. Possession – AS Byatt
    80. A Christmas Carol – Charles Dickens
    81. Cloud Atlas – David Mitchell
    82. The Color Purple – Alice Walker
    83. The Remains of the Day – Kazuo Ishiguro
    84. Madame Bovary – Gustave Flaubert
    85. A Fine Balance – Rohinton Mistry
    86. Charlotte’s Web – EB White  🙂
    87. The Five People You Meet In Heaven – Mitch Albom
    88. Adventures of Sherlock Holmes – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (Started it, didn’t finish.)
    89. The Faraway Tree Collection – Enid Blyton
    90. Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad
    91. The Little Prince – Antoine De Saint-Exupery (Read it, in French.)
    92. The Wasp Factory – Iain Banks
    93. Watership Down – Richard Adams (For some reason, I loved this book.)
    94. A Confederacy of Dunces – John Kennedy Toole
    95. A Town Like Alice – Nevil Shute
    96. The Three Musketeers – Alexandre Dumas
    97. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory – Roald Dahl
    98. Les Miserables – Victor Hugo (I want to read it, both in English and in French.)
    99. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – Mark Twain
    100. The Outsiders

    Guess I’m just not all that well read when it comes to “the classics.”  🙂

    Prayers Needed

    I just heard about a woman who could really use your prayers.  Her name is Christina and she is 1 1/2 weeks past her due date.  She went into the hospital for a C-section, and at some point perioperatively, the baby was noted to no longer have a heartbeat.

    I haven’t heard any further updates on the condition of either the mother or the baby.  Please pray that both are well and healthy and strong, and pray for a good outcome.  Please pray to ease the anxiety of the parents.  Pray for the wisdom, skill and attentiveness of the attendings, residents and nursing staff who will care for mother and child.

    Please Lord, do not let Christina know the pain of losing her baby.

    Update:  Lily Anne was born weighing 8 pounds, 3 ounces!  Both mother and daughter are doing well.  Thank you so much for your prayers!  🙂