Deep In Your Bones

It stands majestic up on a hill at the edge of my town.  I seldom have a reason to go to that side of town, but on occasion I find myself on the winding road that leads past this retreat, Carmel Retreat.  Each time I pass it there’s a familiarity about it, like I’ve been there before.  Turns out I have been there before, almost 50 years ago. Could it be?  It was a retreat sponsored by CYO (Catholic Youth Organization) and that’s about the extent of what I remember about it.  I remember CYO even more vaguely.

It’s for sale now, the Carmelites couldn’t keep it up, and mostly abandoned so on my way home the afternoon winter light was so good I had to poke around to confirm this might be the place.  When you’re thirteen years old everything seems so far away how could this be it, right around the corner?

Driving through the arched entrance to the priory parking area seemed intrusive. As I looked around the sense of familiarity grew, things started to feel the same, like walking down the stone stairs and poking around the abandoned greenhouse.

Each of the doors had a cross etched into the window so looking in was obscured just a bit.  The large building housed the guests, but the small building across from it nearly sent me to my knees. Looking to the side of the etched cross into the wood paneled room left me speechless for two reasons, the light shining through the opposite window and the reflections from behind where I stood converged and I was back in time.

This was the room where the retreat came to a close, where transformations became apparent and young people were lifted by God, I wasn’t one of them.  I was transformed but not by the closing ceremonies.  I was transformed from the night before.

Each of us was paired with a roommate, mine was to be one of the counselors. The rooms were actually the size of my bedroom at home and set up the same way with two twin beds.  There were no sheets on the bed and I distinctly remember the mattress ticking fabric.  On each bed were envelopes addressed to us.  There were maybe a dozen on my bed and there were maybe a hundred on the counselor’s bed.  I’m sorry I don’t remember her name, I never saw her, she never showed up, I spent the night in that room by myself.

By myself.

By myself.

I have no recollection of what I felt other than alone.  And that feeling settled right into my bones, I would feel it again and again throughout my life and it would become familiar.

There is so much I don’t remember about this experience, how did I get there?  Was it my idea?  My mother confirmed some memory of my going and having to write one of the letters.  Was I being punished for something, was I that bad a kid, out of control, destructive that I was sent there?  She says no it was something she thought I’d enjoy.  I didn’t.  She remembers me not saying anything about it when I got home. I never spoke of it.

Apparently the combination of the teachings and the letters received was enough to bring many of the people attending to their nirvana, I wasn’t one of them.  In the paneled room the next day I marveled at the shine of the wood and the smell of the room.  Murphy’s Oil Soap which I didn’t know then.   Later when I lived on my own I would use it on my floors and I remember the smell was familiar but I didn’t make the connection until I looked into that window the other day.

I also connected with the memory of those kids, overcome with joyful tears, vowing to devotion and sacrificing pieces of themselves to the altar, their brother’s watch, their mother’s ring.  There were moving, cathartic heart wrenching stories of loss or transformation and each of us needed to speak, to tell our story.  The most poignant among them was nurtured and adulated by the priests and counselors.  I told a story, it was a lie.   I don’t remember what the story was, there was no adulation but I do remember it was a lie.

There are so many things that I don’t remember about that weekend, what did we eat, what did we learn, who was there, the names of anyone.  I do remember hearing that one of the counselors had been killed in an accident on the Turnpike a few weeks later but I couldn’t tell you his name or what he looked like.

What I remember now as an adult is that it shaped a part of me at the bone level; deep enough so that all the ensuing years and experiences and pivotal moments couldn’t pry it loose. It was instrumental in forming my character and directing some of the decisions I’ve made along the way.  Phillip Brooks said that character may be manifested in the great moments, but it is made in the small ones.

I remember it was the end of religion for me, not God but religion.  I have always known that “God ain’t mad at me” as I’m so fond of saying. I never went back to CYO and I never spoke of that weekend again until this weekend with my mother and sister.

They say that familiarity breeds contempt, I don’t believe that’s entirely true.  The familiar moments are for examination especially when you feel you can’t quite put your finger on something.  When something gnaws at the bone it needs to be examined or your decisions will hinge upon something you may not be aware of.

It was hard to look at this but I’m thankful I did. What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us…Ralph Waldo Emerson What lies within our bones is even bigger.  It equals our truth, it truly sets you free.

Turning Point…Community

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It’s hard to believe I’ve been writing Ordinary Legacy for five years. Five years of pouring my heart out onto the page and into your lives with as much humor as I could stand or as much grace as I could muster. It’s been quite a journey through the moments in time that stopped my heart and restarted my life. I am so grateful for the day that started it all, sitting around a table with two women who, to this day, are dear to me in so many ways. The way they hardly knew each other but who knew me well enough to prod me on to just begin. And begin I did, and continue through I did, and now I feel I’ve reached a turning point. And isn’t that the way all changes begin? At some turning point, whether it’s a tragedy, a triumph, a loss or a gain? Ordinary Legacy is growing up and as almost all people and things mature they must evolve to stay relevant. They must become about something other than the original, something more.

More, more than me. Ordinary Legacy is transforming into a community. As defined by Dee Hock: “The essence of community, is heart and soul…Community is composed of that which we don’t attempt to measure, for which we keep no record and ask no recompense. Most are things we cannot measure no matter how hard we try.”

In the past few weeks I’ve learned so much about people and how they see themselves. I’ve learned to listen more closely to how they want their story told. I’ve learned that people tend to run up and over themselves in the day to day. As Gretchen Rubin is fond of saying, “The days are long but the years are short”. Is there a way to stop the years, no probably not. Is there a way to make them count, I’m sure of it. It’s been said that thinking just one minute beyond what’s happening now can both create or prevent outcomes. Just one minute.

I am finally awake to the fact that everybody has and is a story, all of them worth telling in their ordinary yet extraordinary way. There are people like my Father who, now that he’s gone, can only live on through my sister and me and on these pages. When we are gone there is a chance that no one will ever say his name again, the thought of that is one of the reasons this blog exists.

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My mother has a very different story, her nieces and nephews have passed on Aunt Marie stories over and over. Those stories are irrevocably linked to their grandmothers. The kids we grew up with will be telling the Rere stories to their kids too. My mother has spread herself far and wide and will continue on in the stories told about her for generations. She is an extraordinary legacy because she’s living her life the way she wants her story told. Does she realize it? Probably not, imagine if she did…

We all live in several different types of communities, there is our actual home community, our spiritual community our work community. All of these communities are rich with personal stories. At every turn there are people you will always remember, whether they know it or not. For instance, I was hired by a man nineteen years ago who will be retiring in October. I have a million stories that could be relayed here, some of them good, some frustrating, some funny, some not so much. The fabric of this relationship has a strong thread of gratitude through it, nubby in places where we don’t see eye to eye, smooth in the places that we’ve laughed so hard we couldn’t breathe and the tears were running down our faces. The sheen is one of respect, the strength admiration, the color vibrant. It’s my guess that after he retires I might not see him again, but I will remember him my whole life. He is living his life the way he wants his story told. I believe he is well aware of it. “Integrity is a powerful force, keeping you alive to others long after you’ve left their presence.” ― Mollie Marti

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I believe that most of us fall somewhere in the middle, I believe that given the right forum one might really catch on to the possibilities that small things can make a difference and that those small things we change today will define the stories that are told about us. I believe I have the super power of listening and actually hearing beyond the words and that it honors me to be able to tell someone’s story. I believe that I can teach. I believe that I can learn.

I know like I know that I can create a place where stories can be told just like at the kitchen tables of old. I don’t know exactly how I’m going to do it but I want to try. I hope you’ll stick with me as I sort through the zillion thoughts in my head about round tables and discussions. About creating a place where legacies, like my Father’s, can reside safe in the body of work that will be yours, mine and ours. Give me your thoughts, tell me your stories, and let me be your voice. Together this community will come alive and stay alive through moments in time and lives well lived. Come on…