BACK YARD

BACK YARD
Watercolor Painting of my back yard in Northern California

Sunday, January 15, 2023

SAINT ITA OF KILLEEDY, LIMERICK, IRELAND - JANUARY 15

 


Saint Ita of Killeedy
Foster mother of the Irish saints
475-570


Saint Ita of Killeedy is one of those remarkable female saints that we in the West do not typically hear of on a regular basis. As far as Irish saints are concerned, we are familiar with Saint Patrick and Saint Brigid (if that) and not much else.

Catholic.org has an extensive write-up about her, so I won't reinvent the wheel, but I will just give you an idea of what an incredible and unique person she was.

First, it was said that she was the daughter of two noble lines, one of which (her father's) linked back to Felim the lawgiver, King of Tara. I am also descended from him, so she and I are distant cousins, which is something I am happy to hear, because I would hope that she would be praying for her extended family and I might ride her coat tails thereby! (Hey! I need all the help I can get!)




In the Codex Kilkenniensis, her mother was said to be descended from Saint Brigid's sister! Saint Ita was born into an incredible spiritual powerhouse, it seems to me. It is almost as if this woman was destined to become a very holy woman, based upon the bloodline and other factors.

Decorated page from the
Codex Kilkenniensis


She was baptized as Deirdre, raised in County Waterford, and was purported to exemplify the 6 essential virtues of an Irish woman: wisdom, purity, beauty, musical ability, gentle speech, and needle skills. Ita had much stronger recommendations than these, to be sure.

She was given the name "Ita" which means "thirst for holiness," because of her obviously saintly qualities. (The more I hear about this woman, the more I wish I could have met her, that's for sure.)




Early on, Ita rejected the idea of marriage, and received agreement of her father to remain unmarried. I will stop here and point out that, one of the main jobs of a father in those days was to find a proper husband for whatever daughters were in his household because women had little or no method of self-support. The responsibility for the upkeep of a woman would pass from the father to the husband upon the daughter's marriage.  For a daughter to remain unmarried, it meant that the father had to agree to support her. I am not sure what would happen if the daughter joined an already extant convent, but I would bet that the father would be required to turn over a dowry to the convent upon the acceptance of the daughter.  Saint Ita, however, wanted to do her OWN thing.  What a woman!

She eventually ended up in Killeedy and started what appears to be a double monastery, one for women and another for men, as well as a school. Saint Brendan, the great "navigator" saint,  was one of her pupils.




Incredible miracles are attributed to her, and I'll let you read about those on the links I provide at the end of this blog.

What I always find remarkable about saints such as this is that they were very sure of their vocation, from an early age. I had a sense of my destiny, as I was strongly attracted to religion from a young age, about 7, as I can recall, but because I came from a wretched family with no religious education and precious little ethical life, it was a long time before I got focused.

Ita, on the other hand, was nurtured in an intensely religious environment, and the fact that she knew so soon and with such conviction the course of her life is a testament to the spiritual strength of her family.




It is stories such as hers that convince me of how very beneficial it is to provide solid religious education to one's children - and you can't do that if you have no religious life yourself. The old cliche that a family that prays together stays together simply can't be dismissed. Not all families are ABLE to do such a thing, due to divorce, differences in religions between the parents, and all sorts of impediments, however.

I am terribly grateful to have lived as long as I have, so as to have the time to get focused on the religious path that is right for me and which gives me such unmitigated joy. It does not matter that the circumstances of my health and finances and other conditions are not ideal. When you have The Lord, you have everything. Yet, at the age of 68, I feel as if I am still at the entrance of the road to holiness. I've just stepped through the gate, and there is so much to learn and do!




Ita had a very independent character. She was no shrinking violet, and it looks to me that her strength gave others confidence in her abilities. Soon after she struck out on her own, the local chieftan, offered her land for her monasteries and school. She only took PART of what was offered. I imagine that she calculated what she could reliably handle and then refused the excess.

Women saints who strike out on their own are of keen interest to me because I am also alone.  I like to hear about their philosophies.  In the case of Ita, St. Brendan once asked her what three things God loved best and she replied: "True faith in God and a pure heart, a simple life with a religious spirit and open-handedness inspired by charity." Of course, in her answer, we all recognize the two essential things that Jesus told us are necessary: to love God with all our hearts and to love our neighbors as ourselves. In Ita's philosophy, she kept both of these principles hedged about by the simple life. I imagine that, when faced with any dilemma, her advice would be to "keep it simple."


Saint Brendan the Navigator


Ita dedicated herself to prayer, fasting, simplicity and cultivating a gift for spiritual discernment.  She was also endowed with the gift of prophecy and is considered the "foster mother of the saints of Ireland," who, along with many women, looked to her for guidance on the holy path.

Legends that have been passed down to us from her time place emphasis on her austerity. In addition to the miracles attributed to her, she created an Irish lullabye for the baby Jesus.




It is posited that she probably died of cancer, as she had a growth in her side that was the size of a pig by the time she passed.

I find it fascinating that, although she died about 1500 years ago, we know the location of her grave, which is in the ruins of Cill Ide, a romanesque church at Killeedy, where her monasatery used to stand. (The original monastery was destroyed in the 800's by Viking invaders, unfortunately.) The Romanesque Church that was built over the ruins also failed to survive, yet the site is nonetheless a popular pilgrimage spot. But another reason why I wish I could have gone to Ireland in my lifetime!



Ruins of Cille Ide


In addition to being the patron saint of Killeedy, Ita shares patronage of Limerick with St, Munchin, so many people crave her attention! There is also a nearby small town by the name of Kilmeedy (Cil M'Ide = Church of my Ita) that also has some history with and attachment to this saint.

It is helpful to me today to read of Saint Ita's emphasis on simplicity because my life, as a disabled person, requires it.  I can't afford the luxury of complex spiritual disciplines because my body and station in life are not suited to requirements. It is necessary for me to focus on the simple essentials, because I can do little else, as The Lord well knows! This reminder brightens my mood.




Both Catholic.org and wikipedia bear a long list of references for information about this truly inspiring saint.  I provide links here.

CATHOLIC.ORG

WIKIPEDIA

I will pray for you all, as I hope you pray for me.

God bless us.

Silver Rose

Saturday, January 14, 2023

SAINT PAUL OF THEBES, THE FIRST HERMIT - JANUARY 15

 


Saint Paul receiving bread from the raven
that was purported to keep him alive to
be more than 100 years old


In a couple weeks, I will be celebrating my 20th anniversary as an urban hermit, so the topic is on my mind.

You know, I am always fascinated to read about the lives of these saints who were hermits, and there are quite a few of them in recorded history.

Paul is considered the first Christian hermit. We know about him because Saint Jerome wrote about him and Saint Anthony the Great, who had a connection later in life.  Paul is said to have lived to be more than 113 years old, kept alive by a raven that brought him half a loaf of bread every evening. I don't know what to say about that. I don't think I could be kept alive by only half a loaf of bread every night!





Paul did not initially intend to become a hermit. His brother-in-law wanted to grab his inheritance, so he was about to report Paul to the authorities for being a Christian. Paul went out into the desert to escape being imprisoned and killed but he eventually realized that hermit life suited him.





Obviously, he could not benefit from his inheritance ANYWAY, living in the desert like that, so it appears that he was not that attached to money to begin with, and his brother-in-law needn't have conspired to rob him of it. I find it interesting that I was also robbed of my inheritance and, although I was originally distressed about the injustice of it, considering the level of my needs as a result of my numerous disabilities, I have come to see that it might have turned out to be a curse, if I had not been written out of my father's will after he got Alzheimer's. I would likely have been hounded by people who were intent on grabbing what they could. Money is not the solution some people imagine it to be.  

I DO wish I wasn't a burden on friends, though. That is the one regret. On the flip side, I believe that The Lord has personally sent these kind people to me as his emissaries of love.





The person who robbed the inheritance will have to pay the price instead of me, I suspect. Anyway, the lack of the inheritance provides more opportunity for suffering that I may then offer to the Lord, and I should be grateful for the grace to endure it. I know it sounds backward to some people, but suffering is a type of spiritual currency. It is just ONE of the many ways that God brings all things to the good for those who believe.

Hermits, though they live alone, are normal human beings. They do have friends, but the nature of the relationships are not frequent or typical. Saint Paul became friends with Saint Anthony the Great during two days in Paul's 113th year!



Saint Anthony the Great and Saint
Paul of Thebes, the first hermit

Anthony and Paul only spent a day and a half together, and the next time Anthony went to see him, Paul was dead. There is a charming myth that two lions helped Saint Anthony dig Paul's grave.

I would have loved to have heard the conversation between those two holy men. I can only imagine!





There have been times, when considering my hermit life, that I have thought I should give it up because I am "doing it" imperfectly, but except for the rare moment of loneliness, I still feel that this life suits me, even if I am not a saint thereby. It is good for the ego for a person not to be too "successful," especially a religious person, it seems to me.

So I will slog along in my pathetic representation of a religious hermit, do the best I can, and be grateful for it all. When I celebrate my anniversary on February 3rd, I will be suitably humble before God.





The lives of the hermit saints bear little, if any resemblance to my life, but then the life of the typical resident of Thebes at that time looks nothing like the typical American in 2023! In addition to the differences connected with living a modern life, my numerous and growing disabilities also interfere with the aceticism one would usually expect from a hermit, so I do the best I can. The constant chronic pain is my offering and may be a more painful sacrifice to give than the more austere lives of these early saints. We all do the best we can within the conditions that are provided and the parameters of our own abilities.


Don't get me wrong. I have given it a lot of thought and wondered if I "should" give up the idea of the hermit life, but, although my religious practice is not perfect and, in some superficial ways, I appear to be a fairly typical senior lady of my time and place, I have no strong desire to have any other kind of life goal. I kept trying to see myself doing anything other than what I do now, and I just could not rustle up the interest! If I had wanted a more "normal" life, such as the other women I know, I surely would have tried for it long before my 20 year anniversary, don't you think?





Whatever defects remain in my daily practice must be battled and subdued, if possible, but in any case I will not give up the goal of gaining a more perfect union with The Lord through giving myself to Him alone, even if I fail in the attempt.  Please wish me the best and pray for me.

In the meantime, if you are interested in Saint Paul of Thebes, the First Hermit, and his contemporaries, or you are curious about early hermit life and lore, please take a look at the following links:









At some point, I believe that, such as with Anthony and Paul,  I would also like to develop a friendship with at lease one other hermit - especially an urban hermit. We have much to share with one another, I think - especially after 20 years of doing this. I also wonder if it would be a good idea to find a regular confessor, especially now that Covid is not as much of a problem as it was - but I suspect that I may wait another year before risking spending too much time outside the hermitage. God will bring what He wants for me.

I hope you will all pray for me, as I pray for you.

God bless and keep you!

Silver Rose











Saturday, January 7, 2023

NO GOOD DEED GOES UNPUNISHED

 


Our Lady of Lourdes

Because of my religious and philosophical nature, it has been my customary habit, throughout my life, to serve others, in concert with a search for God in several religions. None of it was grand and no one will be writing books about me, but I have done my best to be of service to my fellow humans, within my limited range of abilities.

HOWEVER, my health and financial conditions have worsened over time, and a few years ago, I reached the point where I myself need some serious help which is not being provided by the agencies whose job it is to provide that, nor did I ever have much family, and the few I had were not loving people. My needs overtook my desire to be of service to others.

I am grateful to have a couple friends who behave like loving family members, but they already do much more than anyone could expect of them, and I owe it to them not to drain their resources by increasing my needs due to efforts I make on the behalf of others. It would not be fair to these generous people who have adopted me.

I am no longer able to help every neighbor that has a need, and it has become obvious that I may never again be in such a position to do whatever favors I was able to do previously. I don't believe that situation is unique, since many seniors are in the same position.

In fact, since every step brings with it considerable pain and instability, despite pain medication, and since I have had several falls as a result, I had to start being very careful with all my activities, and have endeavored to explain this to the people who come to me for favors during the last couple of years.

Unfortunately, when I tell them I can no longer assist, I have been surprised by the anger I have received in response. They refuse to understand I am not able to do these things any longer. It is puzzling to me, but I never have understood human psychology.




PRAYER CORNER

In addition, I have a prayer schedule that is inevitably disturbed when I have someone calling me frequently to come and assist them. Up until this time, I have chosen to look upon these calls as calls from Jesus himself, but I doubt Jesus would ask me to hurt myself so someone else who has more resources than I do could benefit.

When I first tell them "no," some of these people have tried to pressure me, but when I stand my ground, they realize it is pointless and just stop speaking to me. The friendship is over.  Evidently it is and always was, for them, an entirely utilitarian relationship. To be clear, I was the one that was to be of use to them, otherwise they literally had "no use for" me.

Sometimes a person will pretend to be a friend until they get their hands on a large piece of furniture or something else of value, and they stop speaking to me, as soon as they get the big thing they had their eye on before they started to make overtures of friendship.

Because I am on the autistic spectrum, though very high functioning, I tend to be very trusting of others' intentions and motives, and I am still trying to learn how to protect myself and differentiate between a true offer of friendship and something else. It has been a difficult but educational 18 years at this apartment complex where I live.

A close neighbor, who is senior and has a serious neurological syndrome, has started pressuring me to give her personal services. When this neighbor's friend had to move out of state to stay with her relatives because of her own health concerns, the neighbor turned to me and suddenly began to treat me as if I was responsible to then take up the duties of her friend who had left town.

I don't think she realizes how jarring and sudden the change was for me. I have been unable to get her to understand that I am not able to take on these responsibilities, nor was I asked if I was willing. She goes mute when I tell her, as if she has not heard me. When I try to get her to engage, she goes silent.



PRAYER CORNER


Because of my Asperger's, it often takes me some time to "catch on" to what is happening with other people. Soon after my neighbor's friend moved out, before I understood the nature of the situation, my neighbor asked me to hold onto a set of her house keys for her. I thought it was a sign of trust and an insurance for rare emergencies between 2 friendly neighbors. But when I reciprocated and attempted to give her a set of my own "emergency" keys, she refused to take them! This threw me off, and it would be several months before I comprehended the full situation.

Up until that point, I had told her many times, "I am not going to be able to help you on a regular basis, since I am disabled myself, but when I make something yummy for dinner that I think you will enjoy, or some soft dessert you can eat, and I am well enough to bring it to you, I will offer, otherwise you can't ask, because I am generally not able." 

In the early days, I DID often call her when I made a soft dessert or a meal that I thought she might like. She does not have any teeth and her dentures cause her pain. Because of the bare gums, she is sensitive to any amount of spice at all, and I would make an effort to leave out the spice when cooking so that I would add it to my own portion after making her a plate and bringing it to her. But I cook less and less these days, as I am usually not able to do all the standing necessary.

Still, I tried to maintain a "normal" friendship with the woman. When there was a holiday or a birthday, I would gift her with one of my craft items that I have spent many hours making these things especially for her - sometimes a lace shawl I had made with thread the color of a Monet painting she loved, other times a piece of silver and gemstone jewelry I made.  I ignored the imbalance in the relationship. I don't know why. It probably has to do with my Asperger's and my uncertainty in divining the meanings behind the actions of other people. I also resolved, some time ago, to think well of others.



"Nothing is Sweeter than to think well of others"

Saint Therese of Lisieux


My neighbor began to call upon me more often to ask for personal services to her, acting as if she had not heard me each time I explained that walking in my own apartment, even to answer the door, brings with it a certain amount of pain with every step and that I have to ration out my steps in service to my own needs and cannot spend that ration on her needs because I do not have money to hire anyone to come care for me and my own growing needs,  nor do I have a  loving family that will step in.

She would just go mute and refuse to acknowledge me when I explained my limitations.

I understood, of course, that she was feeling panicked, as her own illness, after nearly 3 decades, had taken a frightening turn for the worst. I also began to see that her difficulty speaking in an understandable way had more to do with cognitive decline than problems with her dentures. The whole situation threw me off and I did not know what to do.

The thing is, in addition to personal financial resources, she has friends, a cousin, a sister who lives in this state, as well as other relatives who live elsewhere. I have none of that, but apparently I look like a convenient option because the relatives don't know what to do for her. I think they have been surprised by the fact that there are just no services for most poor people when they grow old and feeble.



PRAYER CORNER


At one point, my neighbor called me, in a panic, and said she was having an emergency, I asked her what was going on, and our call was dropped or she hung up.  So I dragged myself over there to help her. She had forgotten to take her medication and was having trouble getting out of her chair. She wanted me to render personal services to her, including bringing her water and medication and re-arranging some article of clothing she was wearing. This is why she was so insistent that I have her keys. She expected to use me as a personal caregiver, yet, for me, every step and movement caused me pain. 

Adjusting her clothing on her body caused my back to go into spasm, and my back was "out" for more than a week after that incident. It doesn't take much to throw my back out, since I have had chronic back problems for nearly 5 decades. In any case, however, the things that she was asking me to do are in the realm of what is expected of an in-home caregiver.

Two years ago, I was approved for an at-home caregiver through Medicaid, due to my own health issues, something that my neighbor is well aware of.

I tried to explain to her, again, about my health, and she again went mute, as if she had not heard me.  She just would not respond.  It was bizarre. So I told her that although I was not able to help her, I would try to help her get some services that would make her more independent. 

During the next two or three weeks, I put in at least 40 hours making phone calls for her, making arrangements for her to have a medic-alert system and bracelet set up for her, as well as obtaining for her a free lock box to hold her house keys around the outside of her door knob for those times when she fell and needed the paramedics to come and lift her from the floor. Going back and forth to her apartment so she could be present for these phone calls cost me a lot in time, physical pain and suffering, but I was making what I thought was to be a last ditch effort to provide her with methods to independently get herself some help. 

I also suggested a rolling cart to house her medications or a bag she could wear around her neck to hold them. But when it came right down to it, she did not want to use these methods. She wanted me to do it.



VIEW FROM THE HERMITAGE

She did not like the bracelet. As soon as it arrived, she complained to me that she had worn it into the bath and broke it, she did not "like" it, would not use it and intended to send it back. She complained about the lock box, saying that "everyone in the apartment complex" knew the combination, which was not true. She said that a stranger came into her apartment using the keys from the lockbox (not true.) She claims that she has mice living in her bed and even giving birth there while she was in the bed!(a fantasy.) Clearly, she was having some cognitive issues, which REALLY complicated this situation for me.

I did not want to abandon my neighbor because she IS alone in her apartment, but ALL of the hours of work I did to help her do as much as possible for herself were rejected, and she continued to call me and say she was having an emergency, but it was usually because she had forgotten to take her medication and wanted me to come over and do various personal tasks for her.

Several years ago, I gave her the phone number of the agency that helps disabled seniors get onto Medicaid, but I had trouble getting her to follow through with it. At one point, she said she had been approved, but she did not sign up with the agency I told her to pick to administer the Medicaid funds, and the one she picked may refuse to pay any of the doctors that this woman uses. 

I don't know why she chose the other insurance agency, but she will either have to pay her own doctor bills or will have to switch doctors - not an easy feat during Covid in a town that has lost a LOT of medical practitioners. I mention this because this is a perfect example of why her family needs to either step up and organize these things for her OR a guardian needs to be assigned to her to help smooth the way.

Getting services in place for disabled seniors takes a lot of work in the form of telephone calls, mainly. It is complicated if you are trying to assist someone who is a little paranoid,  intensely independent of mind,  or just not dialed into reality all the time.

In an attempt to offload some of these duties onto her relatives, and to be of service in the only way I am really able, I several times asked one of them to come have a chat with me about it and I would give them all the information, but it just never happened. The one relative to which all this has fallen appears to be overwhelmed with it all.

The neighbor has gradually been calling me more and more frequently because she has become temporarily paralyzed in her chair or has fallen in her apartment. I kept telling her there was nothing I could do for her and instead of calling me, she needed to call 911 so they could lift her off the floor. This is why I had gone to such effort to get her a medic alert bracelet. But when she called, if it was 2 in the morning or 2 in the afternoon, I would call 911 for her and get them to come over.

It finally became apparent to me that she was calling on me so that I would organize every aspect of each rescue effort. In her mind, she would call me, and then I was supposed to handle all the aspects of the operation. I was to call 911 and her relatives, open the doors for the paramedics, and assist her at her apartment and keep her company, bring her water and medication, adjust her clothing, gather her papers, telephone, charger, and other personal effects she wanted to bring with her, pack things for the ride to the hospital, etc.

If this happened once a year, maybe I could manage it, but she has been falling almost every month, in addition to getting stuck in her chair and unable to reach her medications nearly every week, something that I believed could have been easily rectified but which she refused to cooperate with!



RELIGIOUS DECORATIONS

Eventually, I had to resolve to just start saying "no," and simply refusing to go over there AT ALL so that she would be forced to either use those things I had arranged for her independence, or one of her relatives would take her home or put her in a nursing home. She also has some savings and could pay for someone to come in and care for her for a little while but it looks like she did not want to use up her small nest egg. (No one does, but most seniors end up doing that when they become seriously ill.)

Even on my good days, when I was feeling better, I would restrain myself and refuse to go there because, on those few occasions when I HAD acquiesced and gone over there, she would immediately start calling me all the time again. As soon as I got near her, it was like Velcro. Once, she invited me to dinner, but when I got there, I had to prepare and serve it.  It is an exhausting and painful round of unwanted duties.

After I started to say "no" to her, she apparently told her cousin that she was mad at me, which I was surprised to learn later on, since I had worn myself out doing all sorts of things for her while ignoring my own needs. It did not matter that I had told her dozens of times that I am not physically able to take care of her. She would interpret it as something else.

The phrase, "no good deed goes unpunished" rings a bell, doesn't it?

Several of her people asked me if they could call me whenever they can't rouse my neighbor on the phone so that I can "go over there and check on her."  I told each of  them definitely NO, and explained to them everything I have explained here. I reiterated it several times, but I could never get the full attention of anyone I tried to talk to. They routinely interrupted me, and one actually waved me away with a hand gesture that communicated dismissal. They would say they understood and refuse to let me finish a sentence.

After all this, one of her relatives called me yesterday, woke me from a much-needed nap, saying she hadn't been able to reach her for 24 hours and she wanted me to "go over there and check on her." Just a few weeks earlier, she had asked me if she could do this and I had told her definitely NO. I was flabbergasted.

How many times must I say the same thing before SOMEONE hears me?

It also makes me sad that none of these people seem to care in the slightest about how much all this has cost me in personal time, pain and exhaustion - while my own needs go unmet, although I have told them many times.

As most of you are aware, I am physically disabled; mobility challenged; in constant chronic pain; I have auto-immune conditions that are worsening over time; I have lost most of the vision in my left eye while the right eye that suffers from the same disease has to get injections in order to slow the progression of the disease so I don't go blind sooner than I have to; I suffer from PTSD resulting from childhood trauma and 3 close personal brushes with death, as well as other violence that scarred me and made it difficult for me to negotiate my way around life. Underneath it all is the slight case of Asperger's Syndrome, which contributes its own challenges.

Meanwhile, the two friends who have kindly helped me over the last couple years are already older than I am, with health and family challenges of their own, and I myself am trying to find ways to be more independent so that I do not stress these friendships. I am feeling really squeezed by all this and definitely NOT HEARD.

I suppose this woman's relatives are ALSO feeling very squeezed - but they are trying to offload their family duties onto someone who is not related and, though not as sick as their relative, has serious health issues of her own and fewer resources to handle them.



JEWELRY PENDANT I MADE FOR SALE


I am concerned about my OWN future care, so the last couple years have found me scrambling to try to sell some crafts and to finish a novel that I hope will make me enough money to hire people to care for me in my old age. 

I am loathe to ask for favors so that I will not be perceived as too much of a burden by friends. It is only when I absolutely cannot do without something and I have done everything in my own power to satisfy my own needs, to no avail, that I will ask anyone else to step in. 

Usually, I gratefully accept whatever is offered without my asking for it and live without whatever does not come naturally. I would never dream of trying to force anyone to supply my needs. 

Truthfully: I am baffled by all of these experiences with this neighbor, but as I said earlier, she is not the only one.  

When I think back over my experiences since I dropped into a lower socio-economic bracket, I see a trend:

LIVING IN LOW INCOME HOUSING:

As soon as I moved into my first lower-income apartment complex in this town, about 20 years ago, I was shocked by the number of neighbors who approached me like pan-handlers, within days of moving in. In fact, THE day I moved there,  I was accosted at my car by a raggedy, jail-tattooed wretch. I was just parking my little car across from my new apartment, when his hairy and unwashed self appeared in my window.  He was asking for something before I could roll up my window. Months later, he was shot in an alley and left to die there.

I had never been exposed to this kind of thing before, and I am definitely out of my element. Although I now live in another low-income apartment, I remain the target of resident thieves. Several residents have stolen from me, one of them conned me out of a practically unused, expensive piece of furniture (long story), another has some unknown grudge and is spreading destructive lies to anyone who will listen, another stole from me (and others) while I was paying her to clean my house. 

I watched from my living room window, as one neighbor strolled into my garden on a dusky summer eve, picked up a plate I was using as a saucer for one of my potted plants, examined it, then walked away with it.  Bold as brass. That person still lives here.

I bought a small angel sculpture and nestled it into a large potted rose bush. The "landscapers" came, and when they were gone, so was the statue. A generous friend gave me a very large and heavy angel statue that I placed in my garden, facing my main window. One night, I went to sleep at about 2:00 in the morning and it was still there. By the time I woke at 10:00, it had vanished.



LARGE BROWN CERAMIC ANGEL
STATUE NEXT TO WALKWAY
STOLEN IN THE WEE HOURS


One night, I heard a noise outside my secluded foyer, and by the time I was able to open the door to check it out, I saw a large white truck zooming away, with my (expensive) seated walker stashed in the back that I had forgotten to bring inside.

One new neighbor got angry when I reported their children for bullying me and blocking my access to my mailbox, so they sent me hate mail through the U.S. Post Office - mentioning this blog! The neighbor that spreads rumors about me to anyone who will listen, got hold of her. (She has tried to cause a lot of problems for me over the last 16 years by spreading lies. She used to be Christian, but I believe she gave it up during her divorce.)

Someone who used to work here, to whom I had ALSO been very kind, watches this blog and informs residents whenever I mention anything having to do with problems here. (I know who you are, and so do the police, by the way.)

A couple years ago, some young toughs moved into my building. One of their cars has emblazoned across their windshield the motto, "F - - K THE POPULATION," with the whole thing spelled out. One day, 4 of them came streaming out of their apartment to attack me and keep me prisoner in my car for 20 minutes because I had told their visitor that she could not park in front of my garage door and block me from using it. 

Later one night, the big white truck stole the traffic cones that management had given me to prevent further encroachment. That was the second set of cones. The first had been stolen by another next door neighbor the night she moved out. I had seen them moving out, in the dead of night, and it was about 2 in the morning when I heard them dragging the cones, throwing them into the vehicle, and speeding away for the final time.  I had been very generous to that neighbor, especially when her cat was dying, taking her to my favorite vet and advocating for a discount rate for her.

You see, it does not matter if you do favors for these people. If you are kind and generous, it just makes you a "sucker," and they push you and push you to give them more and more until you say "no," and then they steal whatever you won't give them willingly while spreading untrue rumors about you to others.

All my years of living in Los Angeles never prepared me for a small town that has so many poor people in it, they routinely steal from one another and have a very laissaz faire attitude toward criminality.



PRAYER CORNER


Due to these experiences and the many others I have not mentioned here, no one should be surprised that I am feeling conflicted about loving and serving my neighbors.  I have come to the conclusion that The Lord would not want me to facilitate the sins that some of these people will do in response to my helping them.

I am on good terms with several people, but it is long past time to say "no" to others. I do not have the money to move or to pay an elevated rent, so I need to retreat into my apartment and be a little less available to everyone here. I will be polite. I long ago stopped putting things in the garden that my neighbors could steal, and I am not going to invest any more of myself than I have to out there. I will just have to endure their spite resolutely and offer this peculiar suffering to God as a sacrifice. 

I will be returning my neighbor's keys to the apartment manager, since the neighbor is currently in a nursing home or a hospital (as a result of the most recent emergency) and her door requires a key to lock it from the outside. I can't just drop the keys inside the apartment and leave them there.

When one takes an airplane trip, they always tell you that, in case of emergency, put on your own oxygen mask before attempting to help others.  I am stopping now to put on my own mask.

I will continue to pray for all concerned, and especially to ask for the assistance of Our Lady of Lourdes for healing. That is all I can do.

May we all be blessed.

Silver Rose


Thursday, January 5, 2023

HOLY POVERTY DOES NOT WORK FOR DISABLED PEOPLE

 

PACKING TAPE COVERS THE HOLE THE
THIEVES LEFT WHERE THE WINDOW USED
TO BE

"Holy poverty" is something one learns to live with and, for the most part, I have adjusted to the limitations, but it would be a lot easier if I was not also variously disabled.

I have lived alone as a disabled urban religious for the last 20 years, surviving on my Social Security retirement income that I accumulated over more than 30 years of working as a secretary and office manager, something I did between stints in a Hindu convent. I also wrote for television in my early 20's, but the environment did not suit me and I left it behind.

Throughout my working life, I was battling poor health, mostly from what I now know to be inherited arthritic conditions, until I finally could not work any more and I had to stop. (In addition, I was suffering from long-term complex PTSD from several near-death and violent experiences, on top of Asberger's syndrome.)

My life has never been easy, but I have offered it up for the glory of God and, while I am happy to do that, it is still necessary to SURVIVE, something that is very difficult to do if one is disabled, mobility challenged, and does not have close family.

For some years after becoming disabled, I anticipated the inheritance my father had willed to me, but after he got Alzheimer's, someone took him to an attorney friend of theirs who did not know him, instead of the attorney he had used for decades who knew me, and that third person had me written  out of my father's will in favor of herself and her relatives. Shortly thereafter, he died under very suspicious circumstances. 

I was not notified that my father had died until after his body had been cremated. Shortly thereafter, the man who signed my father's death certificate went to prison for writing bogus prescriptions for people he had never seen. It is fairly obvious what happened here.  

I was even conned by another estranged relative who called me out of the blue and promised to get my inheritance back for me, but it turned out to be a conspiracy on top of a con job so that I could be pushed aside in favor of HER. That was more than a decade ago. There was nothing I could do to right these injustices. I had to acknowledge that I am too trusting and not nearly as clever as these people who were willing to lie, cheat, steal, and more, in order to grab money.  I had to just bless them and release them, knowing that The Lord will deal with them in His own way and I had to just move on.


A painting I did of our Blessed
Mother and Baby Jesus


Ever since that time, I have tried to supplement my retirement income by working at several types of crafts to sell, but without help to market and sell these things, I was unable to do it. One woman from church offered to sell things at a table during one of our church events, then she backed out after I had made a large supply of silver earrings because she realized she had misinformed me about the type of craft items that were allowed to be sold. A local store agreed to see my work, but when I finished producing the line to show her and/or sell, she backed out because she had gotten an influx of "vendors" into her shop and she did not even want to see what I had made for her! She had "too much stock." Recently, a very good friend generously offered to share her yearly craft table at a local fair, and I prepared a large number of things for it, but the day before the craft fair, her husband came down with Covid, and of course the whole project had to be scrapped. Between the tools and supplies, I had spent a good deal of money  - all for naught. I gave up on those projects and am donating everything to charity.




There are two creative projects left, both of which have generated some income for me in the past. One is a set of paintings I have designed, along with hand-made matching frames,  and the other is a novel I have been struggling to write. I was unsure if The Lord was wanting me to continue to strive forward with these, so I asked him recently, "Lord, please tell me if you want me to give up the creative projects and just devote myself to prayer alone" and within a minute, I had my answer. He gave me the introductory scenes and the denouement of a novel that had eluded me for two years! It was as if he handed me the entire project timeline from Heaven!  He just laid it on me in one fell swoop! My own personal miracle. I still have to write it, mind you, but He gave me those essential plot points that I've needed for so very long. Thanks be to God!


"Lady of the Stars"
watercolor I painted


The really wonderful thing is that the novel has an underlying spiritual dimension that could speak to nearly everyone. The story is realistic without being negative, uplifting without being saccharine. I will continue to work on it and hope to finish it this year.

IN THE MEANTIME, the recent upsurge in prices at the market, as well as incredibly expensive heating bills over the fall and winter, have left me absolutely "skint," as my British friends would say. Combine this with the deficit created by the money spent on the creative projects I was not able to sell, and you have a real disaster waiting to happen. I was robbing Peter to pay Paul, all the while hoping to somehow catch up.

That disaster happened today, when I had one more emergency than I was prepared to handle. My car's battery has died for the last time. It is not holding a charge. The battery was failing, and the recent freezing weather killed it. It is almost 30 years old, however, so I am grateful it lasted as long as it has!



To make it even more pathetic, the
car also has a flat front tire.


Batteries, along with everything else, have increased dramatically in price. The last time I had to buy a battery, it was $30. Now they are, at minimum, about $140. That does not include the labor to install them.

In addition, the back passenger window is still missing, the hole covered with tape. The front driver's window is permanently in the "closed" position because the mechanism broke some time ago and we did not generate enough money to fix it properly, so a friend of a friend opened up the door panel and tied the window in place. Now, whenever faced with a drive-through of any sort, I have to open the entire door. This is not a SAFE arrangement, but it will cost about $500 to install a working mechanism to lift the window up and down.

I am forced to create a GOFUNDME campaign to get the car worked on. I could actually use a couple thousand dollars to fix everything that is wrong with it, but I thought it better to ask for as little as possible, thinking it may encourage folks to donate, if it does not look like an impossible goal. I am actually hoping for more than we've asked for, but at the very LEAST would like to get a new or reconditioned battery.

I realize that my situation my not seem pathetic enough to some, but my survival actually depends on getting some help. I have done everything I can to help myself, to no avail, and I hope that my readers may find it in their hearts to contribute.

You can find my GO FUND ME CAMPAIGN HERE.




If you are unable to contribute, I ask that you to pray for me.

God bless us all

Monday, January 2, 2023

NEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS - 2023

 



While every year I tend to make spiritual resolutions, this year is particularly significant for me because, early in the year, I celebrate 20 years as a religious hermit.

The overarching goal is to become more faithful to my Catholic vocation. Any monastic type person who lives independently, without supervision or authority over them has to be exceedingly careful about this. It is SO easy to become slack in some areas and overly attentive to others. Avoiding the temptation of riding a hobby horse is as important as the virtues and practices we give short shrift.  Balance is key.

For example, we currently have the case of Father Pavone, who became so enamored with the political push to criminalize abortion that he justified some terrible things, such as keeping the bodies of aborted infants for use in dramatizations of the Holy Mass, where he put the body of at least one infant on display, using that human person in a way directly opposed to the teachings of the Catholic Church about the proper respect to and care of the bodies of human persons.

That poor man rejected the instructions of his superiors, and his individualistic and renegade behavior, including "blasphemy" on social media posts, led to the Vatican finally defrocking him last November 9th, after many years of trying to coax him into obedience. Fr. Pavone refused to obey the orders of his superiors and slandered them on social media - many examples of which I was surprised to see on Facebook and elsewhere, that caused scandal to Holy Mother Church.

Excising one narrow aspect from an article of faith  and pushing it into the political sphere is a perfect example of the tendency for independent religious to ride that hobby horse into the sunset. In Pavone's case, making abortion illegal is only one proposed method by which some people imagine that they will eliminate abortion, which is only a part of the pro-life orientation of The Church. 

In addition, that method has never worked before. Abortions have always been available. Lately, they have been legal, but I remember the days of illegal abortions, and they were freely available. Anyone that imagines otherwise is fooling themselves. Making abortion illegal does not stop abortion. It stops safe abortions.

I notice many people celebrating the Supreme Court's recent actions to make abortion illegal again, but I believe this will backfire.

I am fairly sure that abortion will not disappear until we evangelize the culture - which is a lot more demanding and challenging a thing than making abortion illegal. But it is obvious that if Americans were to become evangelized to Christ and His Holy Mother Church, they would not WANT to have abortions. Abortions exist because people want them or feel they need them - not because they are legal. 

In this point, we have an example of the violation of one of the tenets of classical logic. The cause of abortion has been wrongly attributed to it being legal. Correlation is not causality.

Pavone abandoned Christ's call to evangelize the faith and traded it in for the political path, with a side of illicit masses, and the body of a dead baby on top of the whole mess, like a cherry on top of a nightmare cake. It is tragic, really. 

I bring him up as a cautionary tale for myself. I do not want to end up like him - so individualized and hyper-focused on a "holy cause" that I imagine that The Church has to follow me rather than the other way around. This is exactly how the Angel Satan fell. 

So, this year, the first thing I will do is put some effort into finding a spiritual director who has more than my 20 years under his or her belt, so to speak. That's the first thing.

Secondly, I think it is time to return to the basics and do a major review.  I am taking a "Bible in a Year" class, and a "Catechism in a Year" class. I have also begun the preparations for re-consecrating myself to Jesus through Mary.  In addition, my ascetic practices have gotten flabby - along with my body. I will be tightening up my diet and simplifying it.

My customary daily prayer commitments have also suffered over the last 10 years or so. I've decided to program them into my telephone and get back onto a schedule. I am battling some awful insomnia and have to address that so that I can adhere to that schedule.

In case you have interest, my daily spiritual practices involve:

  • At least one hour of meditation, in two 30-minute segments, morning and evening.
  • Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary
  • The Rosary
  • The Angelus - 3X daily
  • The Divine Mercy Chaplet
  • The Holy Mass, streamed live from Santa Fe
During the re-consecration to Jesus through Mary, there are at least three daily prayers that are prayed in conjunction with this.

As my readers are aware, I am disabled, mobility challenged, in chronic pain, and going blind - so taking on all this extra work and study will take a lot of my limited energy, and I will have to simplify a LOT of my activities and eliminate some unnecessary ones.

If any of you want to follow along with me in any of these spiritual disciplines, just let me know. We can be companions on the journey together. Just message me by commenting and leaving your email address. I won't publish your message. 

In the meantime, please pray for my continued conversion, as I pray for yours.

God Bless us all!

Silver Rose