‘Petition to Mary’

“Petition to Mary’ was written in Mom’s hand and with her things after she died. My sister, Janet, and I believe she wrote it after Bob’s death from polio. Mom was very literary though she only had an 8th grade education. She had a worn rosary, and often said it was what helped her deal with her grief. She would just keep it in her hands, wearing the beads thin as she said her prayers.

I remember she kept a lock of Bob’s hair and a Lone Ranger bullet along with a few other mementos of him. She often compared him to Little Boy Blue, a child from a nursery rhyme. His sleep may be the sleep of death. Shakespeare referenced the rhyme in King Lear.

Little boy blue,
Come blow your horn,
The sheep’s in the meadow,
The cow’s in the corn.
But where is the boy
Who looks after the sheep?
He’s under a haystack,
Fast asleep.

“Twilight — the pause spanning the arch from day to night. We are alone, at last, my son’s dog and I. An unfamiliar silence rushes to engulf us.

The dog whines. Now, he is trotting off hopefully to search each hiding place again.

My beads lay cold within my hands. With heart colder still my lips begin the ancient prayers.

‘Hail Mary’ – Oh! Lady of Sorrows, you will understand, for you too have a son.

Mine left me today. Running down the long road he turned and smiled a last farewell.

Like a shaft of sunlight suddenly blotted out by a passing cloud; his stay with me is done. His eager spirit is returning home to God and you.

Perhaps, even now, you can see him running breathlessly toward you, among the windswept clouds, free and unafraid.

If he is restless, Mother Mary, please let him change from his ‘dress up’  suit of brown into faded jeans.

And, if he is a little late, please hang out a twinkling star to guide him. He was ever unmindful of passing time.

Down here, the ways of little creatures held a never ending interest for his searching mind.

Perhaps along the way, back to you, he has found a dove, needing care that gentle, grimy hands can give.

But gentle Mother, I know he will come. To him a promise was a sacred thing.

At bedtime when the quiet moon hangs breathless in the dark sky you will see the same quick wonder reflected in his face.

It has been two long years. Long years? To me, his mother, it was but a Rosary ago.”

This is the original Mom wrote:

 

2017 – Holiday Reflections

We  traveled to Bhutan and Thailand in March, a trip of a lifetime. Fortunately, for me, my second trip to that part of the world. It was not yet monsoon season, late winter, so not as green in Bhutan in October when I previously visited. As compensation, though, the skies were clearer, so we saw Mount Everest and the high Himalayas as we flew. We took a long hike one beautiful day and watched a farm family preparing and planting its fields with potatoes. This was physically hard work, done only with a tiller and by hand labor, but harkening to a simpler, happier time. Bhutan, its emphasis on Gross National Happiness, is a lesson for America where Gross Domestic Product is everything. I heard at a retreat years ago, “What you value is your God.”

We retired, giving us time for travel to Brevard, North Carolina, and Charleston, South Carolina. Lots of concert music and sights to see! It also gave us time to visit and spend more time with family. We enjoyed kayaking, Indian artifact hunting, and the total eclipse with granddaughters, Olivia and Mya.

We ended the year with one more trip – Costa Rica. I had visited there about 15 years ago, but was able to enjoy more of the country, including a side day trip to Nicaragua with its volcanos and colonial history, so beautifully on display in Grenada on the shores of Lake Nicaragua. We saw its dry and rain forests, each with its own flora and fauna. The wildlife included crocodiles, caimans, sloths, coatimundi, monkeys, and an incredible variety of birds.

Costa Ricans enjoy a much better life than many other Central Americans, but there is still a great deal of poverty compared to the rich life we enjoy. Nicaragua is even poorer. Many work in Costa Rica even though the lowest paying jobs. It was evidenced by the border traffic as people traveled home to spend Christmas with their loved ones. We saw several horse drawn carts filled with hay and one team of oxen pulling a cart laden with firewood. This was along the Pan American highway, a major roadway. Bicycle travel was common, dangerous with the proximity to traffic.

Nativity scenes and other Christmas decorations were everywhere. A highlight was Mass at Iglesia Catolica de Playas del Coco on December 17. The themes of my life have become focused on richer spirituality and trying to become less materialistic. Materialism is such a disease of modern America. It leads to selfishness and shallowness.  The rich family life of the Costa Ricans and Nicaraguans, despite there material poverty, is enviable. In many ways, they are richer and happier than we.