Monday, May 31, 2010

Simple Woman


Outside my window...
It is gorgeous weather for Memorial Day!


So can you stand one more Soccer picture. I love to see my boy run!
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I am thinking...
about the homeschool high school dance we had on Saturday night. It was really awesome. We had Catholic homeschool high school kids from all over North East Ohio (and one from Michigan!) come together for an evening of food and fun. Some of these kids were good friends. Some of them barely knew each other, but for the most part everyone participated in the "swing dance" class that was taught beforehand and then everyone worked to fill up their dance card so that they would be eligible for great door prizes.

And the most amazing thing? The girl from Michigan, who didn't know most of the people there, won the doorprize! She filled up her dance card and even danced with a few of the chaperones. Very impressive!


I am thankful for...
the Catholic homeschool group in this area. We have been pretty inactive over the past four years after a major falling out, but lately I have felt called to get back on the steering committee and get the group more active again. Another former leader of the group is joining me. Looks like we're putting the band back together!



From the learning rooms...
We homeschool all year. So come Tuesday, we're hitting the books again. But don't let my kids whine about it too much. Homeschooling all year allows us to take the time off we need for illness or other emergencies that come up. It's a lot more stress free and we DO try to do more fun things inthe summer.

From the kitchen...
Turkey Brauts on the grill!

I am wearing...
Pink T-shirt and black shorts.

I am creating...
Last week I created little pianists who did great at their piano recital!
PIANO RECITAL 2010
I am going...
clean my wood floors with Murphy's oil soap today! I love the smell of that with the summer breeze going through the house.

I am reading...
I am re-reading Real Learning


I am hoping...
Battle of the Bands goes well on Saturday night.

I am hearing...
the humm of the air conditioner Mr. Pete kindly put up. 



Around the house...
just enjoying the holiday and putting in some Marigolds.

A few plans for the rest of the week:
My birthday, Rosie's birthday, Battle of the Bands! That's enough!


A picture I am sharing:  
The theme of the dance was a Beautiful Night in Paris!
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A mother and two daughters at the dance.

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And as a photographer, this was my best shot of the night!
larry C







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Friday, May 28, 2010

My Domestic Church Daily Clips 05/29/2010


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Another year older

Next week is my birthday. It's not a milestone birthday; that was last year. On the day commemorating my 50th year on the planet, I went to visit my mom, who as it turns out, was on her death bed. "Oh thank goodness you're here!," she said in a surprisingly loud voice considering her frail state. "Happy Birthday!" I smiled. It was an odd situation. Yes it was my birthday, but watching my mother slipping away from me every day was anything but happy, however,  it was amazing and even courageous that she should say that. But that's what most moms do isn't it? Wish happiness for their children.

Her death last June has haunted me every day since then. Neither the hospice people  or the nursing home staff had called to let me know that she had taken another turn for the worse. I dropped my son Sam off at church to practice the organ and went in for my daily visit and was startled by what I saw. Her legs were turning a deep bluish color, the wound they had been carefully tending for months had gone from a hopeful pinkish color of healing color to the black of necrosis, and her eyes were wide open and looked "glassy." I don't think "glassy is a very good way to describe them, although that is what every site about death I ever read has said about them. They were more of a whitish opaque, as if heavy cataracts had formed over her brown eyes. Her mouth was open wide, she was breathing heavy and turned on her right side. I tried this out at home after wards and I think this was because her body was trying to force as much air inside of her lungs a possible. When you open your mouth, arch your neck and lay on your right side you can force a tremendous amount of air into the lungs. Mom's body was on auto pilot/survival mode.

I called the nurse for assistance. "Look, I know oxygen won't prolong her life, but it seems to me that she is really struggling for air. Why can't we give her some oxygen?" And the nurse was agreeable. We had an oxygen tank in the room, so after checking mom's blood oxygen (which was only 80%), she put the nasal cannula on and left.

My mind reeled at what I was seeing. The weeks of research into what to expect at the time of death told me that this was it. She was in active death. But there was another part of me that said, "This isn't good. It's going to take a long time to recover from this." Denial. I know. And I also had it in my mind, despite what I was seeing before me that this was going to take hours and hours and perhaps days, so if I wanted to be with her, I needed to pick up Sam, take care of things at home, and then come back. I don't know why I thought this except that I didn't accept what was happening. I always thought there would be more time.

This is where I think the hospice folks let me down. What I clearly needed was someone to tell me the end was very near, not platitudes such as "In God's time" which they gave my sister earlier in the day. Surely people who are around death professionally must have some kind of idea about death time tables. Not an exact science but at least some idea. (A few years earlier my brother-in-law who is a physician, was able to predict my mother-in-law's time of death with great accuracy!  So I know it can be done.)  I needed someone to guide me through this to perhaps suggest, that someone else could pick up Sam, and that I might want to just stay nearby. Just a reality check like that would have done it for me. But there was not a single person from hospice around her room then and the nursing home folks walked around like they were avoiding - death. Which of course they were.

I reached over and tried to close mom's eyes so she could rest, but she wouldn't close them. I left, and she died before I could get back. Stupid, stupid, stupid, stupid.

When I did get back I was met at the door by my sister who told me that mom had passed. She too had missed it. When we got to the closed door of my mother's room, we could smell the strong stench. Ovarian cancer had been messing with her lower GI system for weeks. She never ever did get control of her bowels back, and despite not being unable to eat for days, her body emptied all that was in it when she died.

The nursing home's response to this was to send down a big tray of cookies and punch that we could share with each other over my mother's corpse?  I think was this was a well intentioned gesture but at the time it was the epitome of inappropriate. And who could eat with that smell anyway.

When Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm. the hospice nurse arrived it all seemed like too little too late. I even had to help her find the number for the funeral home - I could have done it myself.

I've had a lot of anger towards the hospice people since then. I have come to the conclusion that having an outside hospice come into the nursing home is bad idea, because the hospice people think the nursing home people are doing the care, and the nursing home people think the hospice has it covered - so the ball gets dropped. About the only thing hospice was good for was making sure mom got enough pain meds, but as I recall on the last day of her life some lady from the office was coming down every hour or so to put drops of that in her mouth, which still seems odd to me.

For a time I thought I saw the hand of God in this. Perhaps, I reasoned, mom's death was so hard to watch that my sister and I were kept from seeing it. I don't know if I believe that any more, at least for me, because I have regretted not being there ever since. I also have wondered why my mother had to suffer so much at the end. Was this a final test for her? Was this last bit of suffering what she needed to avoid purgatory? I don't know, but as I approach my birthday and her first anniversary this month, I wonder if part of her suffering and death was meant to test and challenge me. 




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The meaning of it all

This week I went to the funeral of a lovely woman, who was the mother of a good friend of ours. She was also the Catholic mother of six children, so I felt as if I had a great deal in common with her, and  I wanted to be there to give support to my friend.

It was a good sized funeral, of course with all of that family and there were lots of friends of the family too.There were also six priests at the altar which is something that I had never seen before except perhaps at the funeral for another priest.

This dear lady had a good full life, but her later years had been one of steady decline that required the ongoing 24/7 support of her husband, children and grandchildren. Being a caretaker is an enormous, exhausting job, but her family cared for her with devotion and love.

The priest who gave the homily said something that really made me think. In our culture, so influenced by Hollywood and celebrity mores, being in love means pleasure and happiness. Consequently, when hardship sets in and pleasure is at a premium and perhaps happiness is too, we mistake that to mean the love is gone. We mistake those things for love. But true love really is doing the daily stuff that isn't necessarily fun or pleasurable and sometimes is just damn hard.

For this dear lady, I guess the end of her life was a challenge for her family and friends, but they were able to do so with great love because she had shown them how through the type of love and care she gave them through the years as a Catholic wife and mother.  She surely left an example for other women like me, to follow.



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Thursday, May 27, 2010

My Domestic Church Daily Clips 05/28/2010


  • Best answer I've read to the complaint of Sister McBride being excommunicated so, "what about the pedophile priests?"

    • “I assume that people who abuse children also “automatically excommunicate” themselves from the Church. I also assume that the Bishops where these people live (or work) also take the time to inform them of the fact.”


      Why do you assume this? Because the sin is severe? So is murder, but that doesn’t automatically excommunicate either. The seven sins resulting in automatic excommunication are:


      1. Apostasy, Heresy, or Schism

      2. Desecration of the Eucharist

      3. Physical force against the Pontiff

      4. One who actually procures an abortion and all accomplices

      5. Priest who absolves a partner in adultery

      6. Priest who directly violates the sacramental seal of confession

      7. Both parties to the consecration of a bishop without a pontifical mandate


      Your second assumption presents logical problems. Abuse cases are not performed in public. It would be impossible for a bishop to notify of an excommunication for an act that he is not aware. When a case is made public, an investigation must done as well. Allegations alone are not proof of guilt.


      Still, allegations are serious enough. In Denver any “credible allegation” results in the immediate removal of priestly faculties as happened twice with in the last month to two priests for acts that allegedly took place more than 30 years ago. Any priest who is found guilty has priestly faculties removed permanently. This is more severe than excommunication, which is intended to be a temporary state with the ultimate goal being to return the person to communion with the church.


      It doesn’t sound if excommunication would really be the solution that you desire.



      • Working through this process helps us to ensure that neither the intent nor the direct effect of the action proposed is morally evil. In the case of uterine cancer, the intent is to treat a dangerous disease. The direct effect of the action is to remove the mother's diseased organ. While the life of the unborn child is lost, the child is not directly targeted and killed; nor is the death of the unborn child the means by which the mother's life is saved. While this is true for certain diseases (for example, server preeclampsia and premature rupture of the membranes with infection) and treatments, it is not true for all. In the case of pulmonary hypertension at hand, it seems it was the intent of the health care providers to end the life of the child rather than to treat an organ or condition of the mother. And, the means chosen to promote the health of the woman was to abort a viable pregnancy.
      • While moral theologians, physicians, nurses, and hospital administrators may struggle with the complicated clinical and ethical details of a case, it is the role of the bishop of a diocese to teach with authority on faith and morals. The bishop has the authority to accurately apply the principles of Catholic moral teaching in his diocese. Hopefully this can be done prospectively, to avoid any violation of moral law. But it can and must be done retrospectively to protect the faithful, the integrity of the Catholic health care ministry, and the dignity of human life.


    • PHOENIX, Arizona, May 19, 2010 (LifeSiteNews.com) - The Catholic Physicians Guild of Phoenix has come out in support of Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted, who expressed outrage that a nun administrator at a Catholic hospital in his diocese permitted a direct abortion. The bishop had said that those who were formally involved in the abortion were automatically excommunicated from the Catholic Church.
      "The Catholic Physicians Guild of Phoenix fully supports the Most Rev. Thomas J. Olmsted with respect to matters of life of a mother pregnant with a child in her womb," stated William H. Brophy, M.D., president of the Guild, as published in the Arizona Republic Wednesday. "The Guild stands by the church's teaching that is guided by the Holy Spirit in ordering life toward truth and love."
      Brophy continued: "An action which is in and of itself wrong, in that it lacks goodness as discerned by the light of human reason, is never justified by circumstances or intended end. Such is the case of abortion. A medical procedure, where the direct intention is the termination of pregnancy, is an abortion."
      Echoing the sentiments of the Phoenix Bishop, Brophy reaffirmed that "medical treatments are appropriate for the direct purpose of curing a proportionately pathological condition of a pregnant woman, when they cannot be safely postponed until the unborn child is viable. When an unborn child attains viability, labor may be induced."





    • By Catholic News Service


      PHOENIX – A nun who concurred in an ethics committee’s decision to abort the child of a gravely ill woman at a Phoenix hospital was “automatically excommunicated by that action,” according to Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted of Phoenix.


      Mercy Sister Margaret Mary McBride also was reassigned from her position as vice president of mission integration at St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix after news surfaced about the abortion that took place late last year. The hospital did not say what her new job would be.


      The patient, who has not been identified, was 11 weeks pregnant and suffering from pulmonary hypertension, a condition that the hospital said carried a near-certain risk of death for the mother if the pregnancy continued.


      “If there had been a way to save the pregnancy and still prevent the death of the mother, we would have done it. We are convinced there was not,” said a May 17 letter to Bishop Olmsted from top officials at Catholic Healthcare West, the San Francisco-based health system to which St. Joseph’s belongs.


      But the bishop said in a May 14 statement that “the direct killing of an unborn child is always immoral, no matter the circumstances, and it cannot be permitted in any institution that claims to be authentically Catholic.”


      “We always must remember that when a difficult medical situation involves a pregnant woman, there are two patients in need of treatment and care, not merely one,” Bishop Olmsted said. “The unborn child’s life is just as sacred as the mother’s life, and neither life can be preferred over the other.”


      Sister Margaret, who has declined to comment on the controversy, was on an ethics committee that was called to decide whether doctors could perform an abortion to save the mother’s life. Catholic institutions are guided in making such decisions by the “Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services.”


      Bishop Olmsted cited a section of the directives that reads: “Abortion (that is, the directly intended termination of pregnancy before viability or the directly intended destruction of a viable fetus) is never permitted. Every procedure whose sole immediate effect is the termination of pregnancy before viability is an abortion.”


      But the Catholic Healthcare West officials, in their letter, asked Bishop Olmsted to clarify the directives, citing another section that reads: “Operations, treatments and medications that have as their direct purpose the cure of a proportionately serious pathological condition of a pregnant woman are permitted when they cannot be safely postponed until the unborn child is viable, even if they will result in the death of the unborn child.”


      In a letter to the editor of The Arizona Republic May 18, Dr. John Garvie, chief of gastroenterology at St. Joseph’s, called Sister Margaret “the moral conscience of the hospital” and said “there is no finer defender of life at our hospital.”


      “What she did was something very few are asked to do, namely, to make a life-and-death decision with the full recognition that in order to save one life, another life must be sacrificed,” Garvie said. “People not involved in these situations should reflect and not criticize.”


      According to a brief biography posted on the hospital’s website, Sister Margaret “has 34 years of health care experience in both for-profit and not-for-profit health care management.” She holds a bachelor’s degree in nursing and a master’s in public administration, both from the University of San Francisco.


      Bishop Olmsted said in his statement that any Catholic who “formally cooperates in the procurement of an abortion” is automatically excommunicated. “The Catholic Church will continue to defend life and proclaim the evil of abortion without compromise, and must act to correct even her own members if they fail in this duty,” he added.


      The diocese also posted on its website a two-page statement by Father John Ehrich, medical ethics director for the diocese, on “Catholic morality and pregnant mothers who are at risk.”


      “The unborn child can never be thought of as a pathology or an illness,” the priest said. “That is, the child is not that which threatens the life of the mother, rather it is the pathology or illness (cancer, premature rupture of membranes, hypertension, preeclampsia, etc.) which threatens the mother’s life.”


      Adding that “no physician can predict what will happen with 100 percent accuracy,” Father Ehrich said, “What we should not do ... is lower risks associated with pregnancy by aborting children. ... When we try to control every possible situation in life, we end up playing the role of God.”
Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

My Domestic Church Daily Clips 05/27/2010

  • tags: abortion, Catholic

  • Letters and e-mails ins support of Bishop Olmsted. I note that "Catholics" for choice is encouraging support for Sister McBride, so it is important that the Bishop hear from authentic Catholics.

    tags: abortion

    • ALL launched a new web site that allows supporters around the world to sign a letter to be sent to Bishop Olmsted.


      The controversy in Phoenix erupted after Sr. Margaret McBride, an administrator at St. Joseph’s Hospital authorized the killing of a preborn child in the Diocese of Phoenix thereby incurring automatic excommunication from the Catholic Church by virtue of Canon Law 1398.


      Bishop Olmsted, an expert in canon law, confirmed that Sr. McBride had excommunicated herself by her actions. He has come under fire from pro-abortion proponents and even some Catholics for the move.


      Text of the letter Brown is encouraging others to sign can be found at www.supportolmsted.com


      It says: ”We are writing to assure you of our continued support and prayers as you persist in the battle with the culture of death in Phoenix.


      “We stand with you in the solidarity of the Catholic Faith and are truly grateful for your clear teaching on the dignity and personhood of every human being.


      “The secular news media and even many dissidents within the Catholic Church have positioned themselves to oppose your clear propagation of the Faith. We pray you take solace in the words of Our Lord in the Gospel of St. John (15:18) “If the world hate you, know ye, that it hath hated me before you.”


      “We the undersigned stand with you at the service of the Gospel. Please be assured of our constant prayers on your behalf and on behalf of the souls — both born and preborn — in your care.”


      Brown is urging all Catholics to sign on to the letter. “Now is the time for all faithful Catholics to come to the defense of this steadfast shepherd,” she said. 


      © All Rights Reserved, Living His Life Abundantly®/Women of Grace®  http://www.womenofgrace.com


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

My Domestic Church Daily Clips 05/26/2010


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

YouTube - LOST Where are They Now?

This is pretty funny!
YouTube - LOST Where are They Now?

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Simple Woman


Outside my window...
Very lovely!
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Although I'd say lose the sweater - we have now entered summer time temperatures!

I am thinking...
about the seasons of life. I remember when all my friends were going to college, and then getting jobs, and then getting married, and then having babies... etc. All the stuff that we were "all doing" at roughly the same time. It seems I am now in the season of life where my friends and I are losing our parents. The generation that nurtured and protected us is dropping away, and we are the next generation up. Tomorrow we are attending such a funeral for the mother of some friends of ours. She has been sick a long time requiring constant caregiving that they have provided for her expertly at home. I have a cousin who is also doing this for his own mother. It's just a very tough part of life.


I am thankful for...
all the time I had with my mother and my uncle and grandparents. Really for all of the family and teachers who mentored me throughout the years.

I am also grateful for my children who continue to bless and challenge me each and every day.



From the learning rooms...
Pushing through with Izzy's new math book and reading book and continuing with everything else June will be a difficult month to continue homeschooling. There will be swimming lessons and a music camp. Sam will also start driver's ed. I hope to spend more time on the funner subjects that get neglected, like history, during those times where we have more limited time.

From the kitchen...
I'm thinking meat loaf to go with the potato salad that Mr. Pete spontaneously whipped up last night!

I am wearing...
My 20-year-old Tweetie Bird oversized T-shirt that I bought when I was pregnant for the first time, while I wait for the dryer to finish up!

I am creating...
I'm not creating as much as nurturing my little pianists this week as they prepare for their piano recital. Then I can nurture my little rock band as they prepare for their Battle of the Bands!

I am going...
to be sure to take Rosie to the park this afternoon because she's been begging me to. I'm going to try to also do some upper body tape this afternoon to start back into the fitness routine I had to give up while my back healed.

I am reading...
I am re-reading Real Learning


I am hoping...

my kids do well.

I am hearing...
the humm of the air conditioner Mr. Pete kindly put up. 



Around the house...

I'm going through stacks of papers my sister brought over of mom's old stuff!  Found my grandpa's old check book and titles for cars he had decades ago!

A few plans for the rest of the week:
piano recital and then get the garden in.  I also have to coordinate a wedding this weekend that will be a little sad because the father of the bride just recently passed on.  I am also calling this my "birthday weekend" which tickles my kids, that I wouldn't just take a birth DAY but pronounce the whole weekend as mine!

of course the truth is that next week is also Rosie's birthday and she will be a big #5!


A picture I am sharing:  
Some awesome soccer pictures if I do say so myself!
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The Nun, the Abortion and the Bandwagon

Earlier this week I got an email from my friend Cecily asking me about the case of the Arizona Nun, Sister Margaret McBride, who was VP of Mission Integration (whatever that is)at St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center.

Apparently, a woman in her late 20s and 11 weeks pregnant  was admitted to a Catholic Hospital in Arizona (which seems to be the epicenter of the controversy universe these days) with pulmonary hypertension.  We know that she was advised to abort the pregnancy and that this advice was put before the ethics committee person on call, Sister Margaret McBride.  As NPR or MSNBC tell it, Sister McBride held the power of life or death in her hands and decided that she could ethically approve the abortion citing the U.S. Bishops’ Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services directive #47

Operations, treatments, and medications that have as their direct purpose the cure of a proportionately serious pathological condition of a pregnant woman are permitted when they cannot be safely postponed until the unborn child is viable, even if they will result in the death of the unborn child.

while stepping over #45

 Abortion (that is, the directly intended termination of pregnancy before viability or the directly intended destruction of a viable fetus) is never permitted. Every procedure whose sole immediate effect is the termination of pregnancy before viability is an abortion, which, in its moral context, includes the interval between conception and implantation of the embryo. Catholic health care institutions are not to provide abortion services, even based upon the principle of material cooperation. In this context, Catholic health care institutions need to be concerned about the danger of scandal in any association with abortion providers
So word gets leaked to the press and Sister McBride is demoted (although I'm not sure if that was before or after the story hit) and the bishop is asked for a statement, which he doesn't give until the hospital decides to give one.

Then of course the bishop is in a damned if you do/damned if you don't situation but of course the headlines at places like CafeMom and NPR run along the lines of, "The Big Mean Bishop wants to kill women so that more babies can be born for pedophile priests and Sister McBride is a hero." or something like that.

What you won't find in those articles are any explanation of what mortal sin or excommunication really are, or a truer more thorough teaching of what Catholic teaching really is or what canon law really says. You will find a lot of drama and emotion, especially in the NPR piece.

And yet, there are some more balanced pieces out there. The National Catholic Register has a good piece by Jimmy Akin about what was known and about the actions of the bishop.
My guess is that what happened here is that the Bishop wanted to deal with these matters privately, but someone at the hospital tipped the press, which then asked both the Bishop and the hospital about the matter. When the hospital confirmed, the Bishop felt obliged to respond as well, but of a desire to protect the reputations/privacy of those involved, he responded only in general terms, acknowledging that an abortion had taken place, that he was horrified by this, and explaining the Church’s position on such matters.
 
Scarcely the “Cruel Bishop vs. Victim Nun” narrative. No thundering public denunciations of Sr. McBride; no attempts to publicly shame her—quite the opposite!
and 
One might hold that only the woman who has an abortion and/or the one who pays for or arranges for it “procures” it, but canon 1329 makes it clear that the penalty of automatic excommunication also applies to accomplices “if without their assistance the delict would not have been committed.”
So one can either argue that by voting to approve the abortion Sr. McBride fell under the provision of “procuring” the abortion or that she functioned as a necessary accomplice under the provision of canon 1329 §2.
In either case, she would have incurred automatic excommunication.
Thus Bishop Olmstead would have been simply doing his pastoral duty of informing her of the fact that she had excommunicated herself and needed to take steps to reconcile with the Church.
This article at First Things also delves deeply in the theology of the situation. The comments are worth reading as well. I found this one by Chuck particularly good:

So many people are making the incorrect assumption that this woman would have certainly died without the abortion. This is not correct, and no one, not even the doctors and ethicists involved in the case, could know such a thing.

I have seen cases where doctors make serious prenatal mistakes in judgment, and then call for "termination of the pregnancy" based upon those faulty judgments. In some of those cases, the mother and father decided against the will of the doctors, and their baby was born perfectly healthy - even though the doctors warned that the baby would be born with serious or life-threatening deformities.

There is another article on this site that references a doctor in Wisconsin that has a 100% success rate treating the issue this woman suffered with. That is enough to show that it was NOT certain that this mother, or her baby, would have died without the abortion.

I agree that it is a difficult issue, but life is full of difficult issues, and when they arise, we must grapple with them. Catholics, and Christians of all stripes, should not be siding with the secularists who are denouncing the decision of the Bishop. We should put out thinking caps on and try to understand the philosophical and moral position of the Church on this matter. If we cannot understand it, we should give those in authority over us the benefit of the doubt until we can come to a better understanding.








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Monday, May 24, 2010

The Lost Finale

My household was very excited for the "LOST weekend." We relived the first episode, watched all of the recaps, and then hunkered down for the 2 1/2 hour main event...that left me with more questions than ever before.

Apparently, the parallel universe that we were privy to all season was actually the afterlife? An after life with extras? Because in that life, Jack had a son (a very skilled pianist by the way) with Juliet, and was practicing medicine in a LA Hospital. Charlie was still wasted and working with his rock band, Benjamin Linus was a respected teacher and his "daughter" was alive and well living with her real mother Danielle, and Claire was still pregnant with baby Aaron. But last night we were kind of lead to believe that this was a big fantasy that only a few were privy to. As each one of our beloved Losties came to "remember" their past life on the island and each other, it just made me wonder if nurse #3 or pedestrian in the fourth scene were in their own little worlds waiting to be re-awakened to their own kind of reality.

In the end Christian Shepherd (Kate points out the irony of that name) leads his son Jack to the realization that he too is dead, and that all of the friends waiting for him outside are also dead, including just about everyone on the island except for Michael and Walt - I guess we'll never figure out what was up with Walt's special abilities. And I guess Benjamin Linus wasn't dead yet, because he opted not to go into the church with the others, although he was invited by Hurley.

I still can't figure out the island. Put the rock cork in/ pull the rock cork out, earthquakes and thunderstorms. What did any of that mean? and why should I care any more?

And now that Richard has a gray hair, is he mortal? What happened to the plane that left the island?

I loved all the reunions. It was great to see Shannon and Boone again. I was hoping to see Walt but didn't. But the "we're all dead" seemed like an easy way to end the show without going into a seventh season or a feature film. To me it seemed like an easy way to converge the two story lines and it didn't even do that very well, at least not to my satisfaction.

I'll bet someone on line is going to write a better different ending. I just hope I find it and get a chance to read it. Right now I'm kind of thinking I want to avoid getting attached to any more long serials - this Lost adventure was just not very satisfying.



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Friday, May 21, 2010

My Domestic Church Daily Clips 05/22/2010

  • tags: abortion, mothersloveyourbabies

    • The cardinal, when asked by reporters about abortion in the case of rape, said that rather than helping the victim of rape, an abortion actually adds a second victim – the unborn child. “The child is not responsible for how he was conceived, it is the aggressor who is responsible. We can see him (the child) as another victim.”

      Morlani has responded to the backlash against the cardinal, relating how she was conceived when her mother was 16 years old and was sexually assaulted while on a date, and how grateful she is that her mother chose life.

      "When she found out she was pregnant there was no doubt in her mind that I was her little baby and she was going to keep me and ensure that no one hurt me like she was hurt. She always felt very protective of my life while I was growing in her womb and throughout my childhood," Deborah explained.

      "My Mom made a doll named Suzie for me shortly after I was born and I still have her to this day. This little 12" handmade cotton doll has meant a lot to me over the years; she reminds me that I was a baby worth loving no matter how I was conceived. She reminds me that all babies are worth loving, no exceptions."


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

7-quick takes

Join Jen and the other Quicktakers over at the Conversion Diary.

1. Sam and Gabe, along with the rest of the church choir, participated in the Jubilee Church Choir Competition last night in Cleveland.

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It was broadcast live! Tonight is the second half of the competition and the winners will be announced.
may 2010 0652. The competition was in St. John's Cathedral in Cleveland. I think I have only been there once in all the time I have lived in Ohio, so it was very nice to see it again with the children.

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3. Of course while we were killing time before the competition was to start, we walked down towards Lake Erie, not far from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

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It was a beautiful evening.

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4. I think I have been a sports mom too long. I'm use to cheering loudly for my players and high fiving every success. I felt very constrained last night at not being able to do that for the choir!!


5. When I got home last night, I couldn't go to sleep right away, so I stayed up and watched the O'Reilly Factor. Meagan Kelly was on giving her analysis of the Arizona Law and in her opinion, Federal Law, already on the books, is TOUGHER than the new state law - so I'm not understanding what all of the fuss is about? you can read the full text of the bill yourself here.

6.  We had a shooting in the neighborhood this week. A mom and her jr. high aged son found a man dead in his car parked by the side of the street.  She said she heard loud music the night before and then a gun shot but didn't go out to investigate because we hear guns and loud noises around here all the time. Yesterday Mr. Pete was listening to a discussion of this on the radio and the commentator said, "What kind of a neighborhood is it where you get use to hearing gun shots?"  Well, it's not as though we have fatalities all the time, but between the discharge of fire arms and the use of illegal fire works, there are a lot of shots and pops going off and it will get worse as the summer gets going.  But one thing I know, when you hear a gun shot YOU DO NOT GO OUT TO INVESTIGATE!  You look carefully out the window and maybe peek out on the porch.

7. Arizona has also been in the news because of the brouhaha over the abortion in a Catholic Hospital.  Joining the cacophony, of course was NPR  Known for their severe list to the left, I wasn't surprised when they found an equally left-leaning Catholic "expert" to shed more shadow on the subject. 
"They were in quite a dilemma," says Lisa Sowle Cahill, who teaches Catholic theology at Boston College. "There was no good way out of it. The official church position would mandate that the correct solution would be to let both the mother and the child die. I think in the practical situation that would be a very hard choice to make."
Having studied this in depth some years back on this blog, I know the official church position is that both mother and child are patients and both should be treated with dignity.  Leave it to NPR to leave those subtleties out of it. 





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Thursday, May 20, 2010

Small Successes

FaithButton

1. My boys- helping to provide support with the bass and drums for the contemporary youth group mass.

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2.  Izzy finished her math book, Noah finished his math book, and Izzy graduated to the next reading book!


3.  Despite not working out for two weeks, I managed to lose 3 pounds - go figure!

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