Like the Newlywed Game, but Catholic

Last week Dennis and I received an intriguing proposition from Brian Caulfield, editor of Fathers For Good, an initiative for men sponsored by the Knights of Columbus. He invited us to be the “Valentine couple” and offered to feature us on the FFG website, but there was a hitch: We had to answer a series of email questions about our marriage without discussing it beforehand or looking at each other’s answers after the fact. Blind trust was required here. We could come off smelling like roses, or we could end up looking very silly. We like a good challenge, so we said yes. I am happy to report that the outcome couldn’t have been better. In fact, if I hadn’t been there to witness it, I would have thought we cheated, but we did not.

Reading Dennis’ answers and realizing how much we are still in sync — or are even more in sync — after all these years took me back to our first Valentine’s Day, when we bought each other the exact same card. Back then we spent the day at the Cloisters at the northern tip of Manhattan and finished with dinner at Dominic’s on Arthur Avenue in the Bronx. That may have been a perfect Valentine’s date, but the results of our separate interviews is the perfect Valentine’s gift any wife could ask for. Click HERE to read our interviews. Talk about synchronicity.

A trip to the mall goes awry

Today over at OSV Daily Take, I’m sharing a true story that you just won’t believe. Here’s a snippet:

A friend of mine was checking out the iPhone with his 13-year-old son and 9-year-old daughter at the Apple store at a local mall recently when he looked up to find hard-core pornography playing from a nearby widescreen computer monitor for all to see — adults and children, including his own. And when I say “hard-core,” I mean really, really hard-core. He turned to put his body between his own kids and the screen and managed to turn it toward a wall as quickly as possible before heading over to talk to a manager. Meanwhile, over near the offending computer, a group of teens snickered…Continue reading.

Hitting life’s pause button

Events this past week have really given me pause, which is something I don’t do often enough. Usually I’m flying from one thing to the next, rarely taking time to savor things or reflect. And when you do that, you run the risk of forgetting how blessed you are. This week, however, a writing colleague’s loss and her subsequent posts about the raw grief she is experiencing really made me stop and take a hard look at what’s around me. You know what I found? Blessings, joy, love, and, yes, some little annoyances, but that’s the beauty part. The annoyances are really insignificant when you take in the sweeping big picture. I am very lucky, something I don’t tend to dwell on.

You may recall that last week I asked you to pray for Catholic author and blogger Amy Welborn Dubruiel and her family because her husband, Michael Dubruiel, an author and blogger in his own right, died unexpectedly. Although Amy and I have never met in person, we have spoken by phone a number of times for stories and such. I feel a kinship with Amy, not just because we are Catholic writers, but because we are moms closing in on 50 with a preschooler still at home. Because we are wives with husbands “in the business,” so our marriages have incorporated not only our personal relationships with our spouses but professional partnerships that are grounded in and driven by our faith lives.

When Amy posted notes on Facebook this week, I could easily imagine myself in her place, and I didn’t like what a I saw. Not just because I was trying to imagine her grief and the sorrow of helping her young children come to grips with their own grief, but because I was thinking of all the times — many times per day, I would say — that I let those little annoyances I spoke of get in the way of truly and completely loving the people I live with. I think we all experience those moments when we realize we don’t say certain things often enough, don’t do certain things often enough, but an event like this really brings it crashing home. What would I wish I had done if I knew that Dennis or I might head to the YMCA tomorrow morning and never come home? It’s a sobering thought.

Amy wrote about planning Michael’s funeral Mass and choosing the music. She mentioned that she wanted the Litany of the Saints to be played as the entrance hymn, and I thought: How beautiful. I told Dennis to file that in his memory bank for the day when my turn comes. Today, at 11 a.m., when Michael’s funeral Mass is scheduled to begin, I will play the Litany of the Saints, which I happen to have in iTunes because Dennis downloaded it when I was in the midst of a church-music buying frenzy. In the haunting echo of that litany, I will try to unite myself with Amy.

That is the beauty of this faith of ours. We may be hundreds of miles apart, worlds apart. We may hardly know each other or not know each other at all. But our faith in Jesus Christ allows us to lift each other up in our suffering, to try to take on a piece of that suffering. We may not be able to be physically present to assist Amy on her journey, by we can be spiritually present, not only by offering prayers but by allowing the suffering to touch our own lives and transform the way we live.

None of us will be spared the cross. It will find its way to us in one form or another. We fall back on our faith and on the prayers and spiritual strength of those around us. We cannot walk this journey alone. We were not meant to walk this journey alone. And so we continue on our path, hoping and praying that a kind soul will come along and offer to help shoulder our burden.

Blog radio interview

I had the opportunity to be on Catholic Radio 2.0! last Saturday with host Commander (Brian) Craig. If you missed it, never fear. You can download the show and listen at your leisure. Click HERE and scroll down until you see the Featured Episode: “The Complete Idiots Guide to The Catholic Catechism.”

Who’s at the controls?

Here’s my February Life Lines column. Enjoy.

Every once in a while, something happens to shake a person to his or her core. Maybe it’s the death of a loved one or a the loss of a job or even something that appears minor to those on the outside but feels catastrophic to the person in the midst of it. I’ve been stuck in the middle of one of those seemingly “minor” moments for a few weeks now, and the fallout has, in fact, shaken me to my core. Continue reading…

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