As I have mentioned previously, I’ve always been someone who openly questions authority. Even though I never really had a punk rock phase, there is an aggro part of me that gets riled pretty easily when someone else tries to impose their will. I didn’t like it in school and I still don’t like it on the playground today (you know who you are, judgy moms). The “my way or the highway” moms who adhere to a particular parenting philosophy or educational philosophy or WHATEVER and if you do not adhere to the same, you are obviously not a good parent. I tend to align myself with the “we’re wingin’ it” philosophy of parenting. I greedily co-opt pieces of parenting philosophies that I like, but I’m ruthless in cutting out that which doesn’t line up with our style, as loosey goosey as that style may be.
So I think on some level my long-term ability to fit my square peg into the round hole of organized religion was doomed from the start, whatever the dogma. I feel guilty about leaving my Catholic roots behind when I start to think about how it impacts my ability to create traditions for our family. It may be a lazy way to think about things, but that sure would have been a no-brainer way to go. Literally, ALL of the structure in place. Filling in the gaps will require some creative thinking.
I hope I haven’t seemed too hard on the Catholic Church in these posts. As I have mentioned, I got a lot out of my own Catholic upbringing. I don’t miss anything at all about the teachings surrounding sexuality and science not to mention equal rights, but in terms of teaching me how to treat others in a general “golden rule” sense? They did a bang-on job. They taught me so well, in fact, I started to see the disconnect between the cushy lives of the upper echelon in the church and the devout folk who worshipped at their altars. When I’d see ladies pulling cash from their Louis Vuitton monogrammed bags, I’d mentally do the math on what kind of help they could offer if they put the bag itself into the offering plate and just kept the cash out of it. There are a few things I DO miss about being Catholic:
1.The ritual of the Mass – I love the chanting, the kneeling, the rote nature of the whole she-bang. Even 20+years later, I’ve got mad Mass muscle memory and can follow along with the priests reciting all of the prayers and songs. I was never someone who thought the Mass was particularly beautiful, but there is a comfort for me in knowing that you can walk into any church in any place in the world and pick up right wherever you left off, just like an old friend.
2.Confession – People always blather on and on about Catholic guilt, but I never suffered from it. I’m pretty sure the main reason for this was Confession. No matter what sort of sin you commit, as long as you are willing to share with an anonymous priest in Confession, you are absolved of your wrong-doings. This might be the coolest and/or most disturbing fact of life as a Catholic. You can do ANYTHING and get absolution. It is up to the priest what sort of penance they assign for the sins you’ve committed, but in my childhood sinning experience (vanilla as it was) I usually garnered some combination of Hail Mary’s and Our Father’s. Like an actual number. You lied to your mom and cheated on a test? That’ll be four Hail Mary’s and two Our Father’s, please. Hit your little brother and pretend to be sick so you could stay home from school? Please say two Our Father’s and three Hail Mary’s. It made you wonder. What if I had done something truly horrific? “Thank you, Mr. Bin Laden. For your sins please say four million Hail Mary’s and a bazillion Our Father’s. Now you may go.
Most of us knew our parish priests pretty well and they us so if I ever did anything truly heinous the temptation would have been to skip over to another parish where they didn’t know me at all. Around the time I was growing up priests were also holding confessions in the more consultative, but less mysterious face-to-face manner. I was a complete coward, so I never took the plunge. Why would I want to be sitting knee to knee and eye to eye with my confessor? Talk about a buzzkill. In matters of Confession, I went strictly old school. You’d step into the confessional booth, a tiny, dark (soundproof?), decidedly womb-like chamber with a padded kneeler and a tiny window directly in front of your face. In my memory it all felt very secure and cozy and velvet-lined. After you had come into the Confessional and knelt down, the little window would slide open to reveal yet another, more porous screen. The priest was behind here. You could usually see him in profile, but a slightly pixelated version of him. I was just ditzy enough to usually not remember my list of sins so at this point I was often in the awkward position of having to manufacture bad behavior just to participate and keep the ritual going. Which, technically speaking, meant that I was sinning in the process. I was kind of a weird kid. But good times! There was nothing like the feeling of strolling out of church after confession. Free as a bird, light on your feet. Conscience clear and ready to sin again.
3. Freaky Apparitions and miracles – Ok. Let’s call this Visions of the Virgin Mary or Jesus or the Saints. There is a long historical precedent for normal folks getting visits from God in the form of visions, bushes, and what not going all the way back to the beginning of the Old Testament. In recent years, however, these sightings have taken a turn for the absurdly food-related. Jesus has shown himself in tortillas, Mary in grilled cheese, there’s even been a sighting of Mother Teresa in a cinnamon bun, better known as the “nun bun.”.
I think due in part to my own literal leanings, I liked these sightings. They seemed in a way less crazy to me and more corporal, which is what I was lacking in my own belief system. Yes, yes, yes all of this talk about the Holy Spirit was fine and dandy, but I needed to see it to believe it. I was (and am) a Doubting Thomas if I can’t put my hand out and touch something.
A few years ago, I was working in Central Europe and was spending about a week a month in Croatia. Croatia is very close to Bosnia and Herzegovina, which is home to one of the most recent modern sightings of the Virgin Mary. In a tiny town called Medjugorje, since 1981, the Virgin Mary has been appearing to six citizens and speaking to them. When this story started, they were children. Now of course, these kids have all grown up. In any event, the hill on which she appears to these folks is a huge pilgrimage site for Roman Catholics and I wanted to get a rosary for my mom. Like everything these days, there is a cottage industry built around the event, so I was very easily able to book the “Our Lady of Medjugorje Bus Tour” and I headed over to Bosnia with a bunch of other Americans and Irish (mainly). On the bus ride, I was surrounded by eager pilgrims. I buried my nose in a book and crossed my fingers that I could avoid any and all conversation (much as I do on any plane ride). I am not a chatty traveler.
I wish this story was more colorful, but the fact is that I rode in relative silence to the town alongside my fellow pilgrims, and as expected, there were a lot of vendors selling souvenirs outside. The actual pilgrimage site, which is a hill outside of the town, has become a Stations of the Cross site (which is both a series of physical representations of the walk Christ took to his Crucifixion, and the devotions performed by Catholics everywhere to commemorate that event). I decided to make the “hike” up this hill, which was how I saw it – a nice way to get some exercise and participate in another ritual. I was initially disappointed by the hill’s size. Puny, in my estimation. This would be a short hike. But then when I looked around, about 20-30 of the people with us were making the trek ON THEIR KNEES. Here is a photo of the rocky outcropping called a hill.
Now, if my mom were along, I’m
quite sure she would have seen this activity for what it was – an act of
sacrifice and prostration in front of God. I just thought it seemed over-dramatic,
pointless and kind of loopy. I’m not the target demographic for this particular
move, obviously. After we all reconvened at the summit (me in my hiking boots
and some other folks with their bloody knees), we headed back to town for the
traditional Mass. On the way, our tour guide pointed out one of the “original 6”
driving my in his little Skoda. The shrieks and rubber necking that went on in
our bus was behavior you might expect to witness at a One Direction concert
from a bunch of 12-year-old girls, not the motley crew of mostly middle aged
and elderly westerners that we were. Cray cray. Back in town, my most revelatory
moment (I’m always able to seize on the point that is simply not the point)
were all of the languages you could have your Confession told in. There were
placards next to a very long line of confessional booths and as a priest would
walk out to his booth, he would grab the placard of his language. Of which
there seemed to be about 50. I did the mental math again. That meant there had
to be at least 30 or so priests (I think that is even a conservative estimate)
ready at the gate to offer Confession in English or Polish or Swahili or Thai. That blew my mind. Leave it to me to
come to a pilgrimage site and find the wonder in linguistic logistics!
4.Lastly, I do admire “faith.” I wish that I had a singular belief in a God. But to me, too often people who believe they have the answer are too quick to believe everyone else is incorrect. And that doesn’t sit right with me. I like to think there are many paths to the truth. The most devout and honest believers will tell you there is no true faith without doubt, and that has often been the carrot I find most appealing at times when I wonder if my path is the correct one for me. My doubts can be harnessed and mastered! But then I realize that I’m kidding myself. I've got to rely on myself and I've got to follow my own path, however twisty it gets.
Whew! I'm exhausted. Tomorrow I’ll wrap this baby up with a lesson I’ve
learned from having kids and what it has taught me about life and death and teeny tiny little miracles.