Monthly Archives: June 2025
A Possible Beginning for my Memoir
A Journey from Need to Love.
“Lord, thank you that my baby made it safely. If you want me to come now, I trust you know best. But do I have to die in a scene from the Three Stooges?”
At the age of thirty-three, I had just had my fifth Caesarian Section when my uterus tore. Spouting blood was hiding the source of the hemorrhaging. I felt like life was draining out of me. Hearing the crunch of hurrying feet on broken glass, I realized that someone had knocked the IV pole over in the panic. I could see the frightened looks on the observing medical students as my normally soft-spoken doctor shouted for milk to show where the blood was coming from. Then the heavy metal bar holding the sheet that blocked my view of the surgery got knocked over onto my nose.
I remember thinking “Oh well, according to Mom my birth was a Three Stooges act too.” The Doctor had still been on his way as the top of my head came into view, as the intern tried to stop me from coming out. Mom kicked him solidly in his face. As he grabbed his nose, Mom pushed, and I popped out as one nurse caught me while another staunched the blood spouting from the intern’s nose.
Obviously, I didn’t die either time. However, the Three Stooges act has been a recurring theme throughout my eighty-eight years. Fortunately, the Love of God expressed in Jesus exploded into my life when I was thirty.
I had gotten my first clue that nobody had a monopoly on God when I was a first grader in a Catholic school and worriedly told my Methodist mother that Sister Rose said that only Catholics got to go to heaven. My mother bent down to eye level with me and informed me emphatically, “You and your dad are going to get into heaven on my Methodist prayers.”
Methodist or not, Mom was our very involved room mother and became good friends with Sister Rose. So, when Sister Rose laughingly told her that when she had scolded some of the boys for fighting, telling them that she knew all our parents and none of them would fight, I had piped up, “Mine do. I saw my mother throw her shoe at my father.” Mom just laughed and said, “Yes, I did, but it was my soft silk bedroom slipper and not nearly as hard as those chalkboard erasers she says you throw at the boys when they misbehave.” I think they called it a draw.
Though she didn’t go to church with us, Mom was very supportive of our Catholicism in every way except one. Back when it was supposed to be a mortal sin to eat meat on Fridays, she served us bacon for breakfast every Friday morning. When dad demurred, she insisted emphatically that it was a worse sin to waste food than to eat meat on Fridays. I don’t know about Dad, but I happily bought into her logic.
At that time, we were renting the third floor of a private home in St. Louis, Missouri. It had a wonderful yard with good climbing trees and even sidewalks for roller skating. There was a washing machine in the basement. I helped to carry the wash up and down the three flights sometimes. But, the basement was dark with yard tools and furniture stored there, so I was strictly forbidden to go into it alone. Then one day, after school I had been having so much fun climbing trees and chasing butterflies outside that I waited too long to climb all the stairs to our bathroom. I was desperate enough to brave the dark, forbidden basement to pee in the drain there. To my great relief, I managed it undetected. Unfortunately, that night, as I was saying my prayers, I remembered that I was scheduled to make my first confession early the next morning. I panicked. It would be humiliating to confess what I had done. I considered just saying, “I went in the basement.” The nice young priest might settle for that, but would God?
After a sleepless night, I nervously waited for my turn. When I got inside the dark confessional, I blurted out, “Bless me, father, for I have sinned. I peed down the drain in the basement.” There was no response. Finally, after what sounded like a coughing fit, he said in a strangled voice, “Say three Hail Marys and don’t do it again.” I got out as fast as I could, but as I rattled off my three Hail Marys, I couldn’t help wondering, if there was a book with all the sins and their appropriate penances, would peeing down a drain in the basement be in it?
Years later, I was pretty sure that my first confession had become a story to be passed down to new priests.
My story is about my journey from making religion my God and throwing God and Jesus out when my religion, totally controlled by men who didn’t marry or have children, told me I had to die having Caesarians. After years of ignoring the issue of God, then several years of searching, Christian friends helped me begin a relationship with Him through His Love fleshed out in Jesus.
Mine is also a story of a personality made vulnerable by responding to life from emotion first rather than logic, and also having a mind that questioned a world full of many rules that made no practical sense.
It is also about the journey through the self-centeredness that comes from feeling inadequate, but with grace from a loving God, visibly active in amazing ways, which includes healing and spiritual growth.
The Treasures of Old Age are its Many Diverse Challenges that at Least Keep it from Being Boring, But Only If You Have a Sense of Humor.
It’s been ten years since my back surgery. In spite of what I’m about to recount, I promise you that I had been off all pain meds, except Tylenol, for two weeks. I am highly motivated because pain medicine makes my coffee taste terrible for a couple of months after I quit taking it and I am definitely addicted to my coffee. But as usual for someone who loves wondering about conundrums or wonderful possibilities, instead of paying attention to the actual world around her, peculiarities happen.
I got to my doctors for my follow up appointment and as the nurse was taking my blood pressure, I realized I had my blouse on inside out. Of course, me being me, I didn’t keep quiet and just take my first chance alone to turn it right side out. The nurse swore she hadn’t even noticed. Which worried me a bit, because I like my medical support people to be aware of what’s in front of them, particularly when I am it.
Then a few nights afterward when I was still wearing my back brace at night, I awoke to make one of my usual trips to check out the plumbing. But I couldn’t get up because I was unable to move my arms. As I was starting to panic that my arms were paralyzed, my attempts to move my arms made that noise peculiar to Velcro being tugged loose. It happens that the Velcro on the two wrist braces I wear for Carpal Tunnel Syndrome is the same as that on my back brace. Somehow, I had Velcroed my arms to my body. I finally managed to get my arms free after laughing helplessly for several minutes.
I admit that the down side is a major challenge because getting old is sort of like being born again. As your physical strength dwindles and remembering words becomes like a game of Whack a Mole, you struggle to keep on being who you’ve been all your life. Slowly you have to face that the self of all your years is gone. At the same time, you realize that best friends of many years have either “left the building” or no longer are able to share memories or even to make new ones.
Parents, spouses, often even siblings are gone. Past accomplishments don’t play a part in who you are to younger people. And everyone around you now is younger. Lonely days and nights stretch out before you, as you try to find a purpose for whatever years remain. The tiny minutia of life devours days broken only by trivial pursuits of fleeting pleasures or paradoxical efforts to stay healthy.
However, in the scheme of things, Old Age is for letting go of ego, pride, pretense, and delusions about both ourselves and others. If as Micah says, we have sought justice and loved mercy, we now begin to learn to walk humbly with our God and the least painful way is humor. If you can laugh at yourself, you will have plenty to laugh about.
My favorite old person story is about a woman at a nursing home who had dementia. The aide who was helping her into her nightgown was still struggling with her own mother’s dementia diagnosis the day before. The woman turned to her and said, “Can you tell me my name. I can’t remember it.” As the aide started to reply, the woman pointed to a picture of Jesus on the wall and said, “Never mind, He knows who I am. That’s all that matters.”
Battles with Perfection
Do not let the perfect be the enemy of the good.
Being loving is more important than being right.
Natural gifts do not bear spiritual fruit unless empowered by the Spirit.
Accepting dependency on God yields the fruit of humility.
Need prevents love.
Sometimes our need to be valued limits our ability to love.
God drops “breadcrumbs” in our lives to show us what He is working on in us now.
Humility frees us to forgive ourselves for failures and to not envy other’s successes.
What is the difference between a value and a goal? A value puts what is important first in our choices. A specific goal may sometimes limit recognizing our value’s priorities.
Many of us have sought justice and valued mercy, but in our old age struggle with new dependencies that call us to walk humbly with our God.
Sex and the Different Generations
OK, it’s time to write about sex. At 88 I’ve lived through decades of change in our general attitude toward sex. I’ll share my own early1950’s sex “education” which as I’ve aged, I’ve discovered was pretty much the norm for that time.
At fourteen, which today would be much too late since ten-year-olds now have periods, my mom attempted to explain how babies get here. Her take was to explain that babies came from a husband and wife physically connecting. She said it was a beautiful act to create new life.
I took this as meaning this was something we did only when we wanted to have children.
But I went to a Catholic all-girls high school where we had yearly retreat days where a priest would talk about not letting a boy even put his arm around us because it would give him sinful thoughts and urges. I couldn’t imagine why a teenager would want to have babies, so I began to suspect there was more to sex than just getting pregnant.
Me being me, I became curious about this. As a sophomore I started going steady with a nice Catholic boy who was also having retreat talks about sex at his all-boy high school. He was fortunately either better informed or not of a curious nature and took these warnings seriously, though he did put his arm loosely and carefully around my shoulder at movies. He eventually kissed me goodnight at my door, but it was a very sweet short, closed mouth kiss. I thought it was nice, but it didn’t make me want to have babies.
He went away to college and I started college at Rice in our hometown so we agreed to date other people. Rice was an all-scholarship school.( It cost me $200 a semester for books! That was all since I lived at home.) It happened that it was mostly a science and engineering college so at that time there were 4 boys for every girl. I dated quite a few boys my freshman year and kissed one good-bye at the end of the year when he was graduating and going into the navy. Again, a sweet, closed mouth kiss. I remember one good looking football player who, when I demurred kissing on our first date, told me I was never going to have many dates that way. I was reasonably good-looking and outgoing, so I thought that was funny, but figured that since he was a freshman and a football player, perhaps he hadn’t figured out the boy-to-girl odds at Rice. My high school steady came home for the summer and we picked up where we had left off with sweet, closed mouth kisses at the door. In the second half of my sophomore year, I began to date another football player who was a senior and not playing after the season. We were snuggled on a school bus coming back from an out-of-town basketball game with a throw around us. He not only started open mouth kissing, but touching my upper body in ways that suddenly made me understand what the big deal was about sex. I’ll be honest…I never actually had sex with anyone before I married. But I really enjoyed dating that guy. But at the end of the school year, when he asked me to marry him, I realized I didn’t love him in the same way I did my high school boy friend. It really was just about sex. I don’t think I can claim the moral high ground on sex because of what havoc many of us so called “good” girls in the fifties caused the guys we dated for any length of time.
God cleverly made sure humanity procreated by having sex be very, very pleasurable. When people were marrying at fourteen and fifteen, that may not have caused as much havoc. Having more than one wife probably helped on one level also. But times changed. And society’s attitude toward sex has gone back and forth between extremes ever since. And I don’t think the illusive far-off possibility of hell ever stopped anyone. The total life changing shame my generation of women experienced from pre-marital pregnancy limited me to just torturing my football player for the pleasure and not because of love. I’m pretty sure, I wasn’t in the minority.
One of the problems with the changes in society from one generation to the next is that as parents, we didn’t recognize that the next generation would be living in mixed dorms with the freedom to make out in your own room, and movies and books making it look like everybody’s doing it, so our attempts to teach them the hazards are insufficient for the new freedoms and temptations.
More to come on the changing issues of each generation and our difficultly preparing the next to find solutions that don’t turn sex into a toy or make women the only gatekeepers or gays/lesbians being the only ones that don’t make mistakes and have abortions or divorces with children who end up the losers in our social attitudes toward sex.
A Wake Up Call to Wholeness
~An Excerpt from a Blog by The Geriatric Pilgrim
I find more blessings to count,
more for which to be grateful,
after having been broken open
by the deaths, destruction, decay around me,
some of which I’ve caused,
some of which I haven’t deserved,
and some of which is just life
Without looking at my grief,
I’m not able to recognize my joy.
And I don’t mean glancing at loss
the way I rubberneck
at an accident on the highway.
I mean reentering the suffering,
scrutinizing the fears,
which means talking
and writing about them.
~My urge to create begins in loss,
my gratitude begins in fear,
my compassion begins in pain,
and my joy begins in sorrow.
~All of which, I guess, is to say:
I’d rather be whole than happy.