Showing posts with label joy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label joy. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Smoke Rings and Whisky Stones

I had been sitting outside watching the sun set for a good hour as the thoughts began pouring through me. I had a cigar and just enough scotch left to last through it. I was left with enough sunlight to write down a few of those thoughts, and this is what came out.

When I first sat in the chair to wind down the evening I had lit the cigar only to find that I did not care for it. It no different than the others I had smoked before but I guess I just was not in the mood yet. I allowed myself to continue smoking. It was lit after all. I put on some happy music. I tend to gravitate towards Irish folk music because it can be happy and sad at the same time. I like that. After I managed the first few smoke rings my demeanor changed and I began to let the pressures and stress float away with them.

I let my mind wander to thoughts of the great minds that I have admired. Tolkien, Lewis, and Chesterton. I have often wondered what it would be like to sit with them, and just listen. Their words that I have read floated through me and my mind came to Mr. Chesterton, whose birthday is today. I don't consider myself adept in his writing mostly because I have not read (or reread) enough of him. He seems to be the flagship apologist from another time, likely because he is just so darn quotable. One of my favorite pieces by him is an essay on what he found in his pockets while stuck in a train station. Another favorite is an essay on chasing one's hat in the wind and why such a thing should not be regarded as silly. If an inconvenience rightly considered is indeed an adventure then I regarded these thoughts as a challenge to be written down and made sense of. So here you are Mr. Chesterton. See what you have sown.

The thing about smoking a pipe or cigar while drinking one's preferred whisky is that it creates a sense of ritual. Doing so at sundown and in bare feet only beckons the thoughts of hobbits saying farewell to their day of eating 6 meals and making mischief. If it is good enough for Bilbo Baggins then it is good enough for me! I wondered if my smoke rings would impress the Grey Wizard who visits the Shire from time to time. Maybe he would laugh. It was indeed a ritual and ritual is lost on our culture. The smoke rising from my chair was the smoke of worry being burnt away. It was the incense being burnt unto the Lord. Prayers rise as smoke to heaven. My thoughts were with them. Contemplative and ritualistic I let those puffs of smoke rise away and to a place that need not concern me because I was here. I was sitting at the center of Creation. I sat alongside those minds that I had admired. The music carried me so some lost tavern as the raucous melodies were chanted as I sat among a throng of men who all came before and after me the same way. I was joined by every man who watched the sun go down and that small part of him wondered if it would rise the next morning but with the faith that it would like some ambitious encore. I was with every man who ever wondered about his fate and how to get there. Ritual joined us together.

At times the smoke can become too much but that is what the whisky is for. They hold each other aloft. Two Pillars of one great moment. Two Pillars to one great faith. I felt grateful for both because I needed both.

Pondering further what the drink and smoke were telling me I thought that the old alchemists would be rather jealous of this. The whisky, the fire of the cigar, the air of my lungs, and the stones I used to chill the glass were bringing the base elements they strained over together. It was not their precious stone that I found though. Gold did not matter to me I thought. And the cold irons that weighted me down were transmuted into something far more precious and light: joy. Joy lightens the heart but only when there is room for it. We often don't realize the space we have for it until the space is made. Joy, that wonderful treasure that is gained only when that which we valued over it has gone missing.

I wished I had another cigar but sometimes you can make more out of less.


I cannot say why I was compelled to write these thoughts down. If for any reason but to recommend watching the sun set with your shoes off, your drink of choice, and a nice pipe. I once pondered the health risk of smoking. Depression kills too. Moderation doesn't. Let yourself float with the smoke rings. That may be the best way to climb to Heaven at times. Float, because after all: “Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly.” G.K. Chesterton whose birthday is today.  

Monday, September 10, 2012

Will I Stand?

The town of Alexandria, Louisiana boasts several characteristics that make it the most charming little bubble to live in since Mayberry but one thing it will forever stand out for to me is the Stage Play Cast of characters that make up the Diocesan Priests of Alexandria. My fellow altar servers will know exactly what I mean. What is great about such a fine cast of priests is that there are bound to be great stories with this one being one of the more inspiring:



The man took a bullet in the stomach as a group of cowards thought to take advantage of someone who they knew is in service to their community. He stood with a gun to the back of his neck and who knows what running through his mind and looked Death in the eye and told it to get out.

Released from the hospital that morning and not days later Fr. Scott was presiding over a beautiful wedding for one of the most on fire for God couples I have ever known. As Fr. Scott gave his homily his words reached a place in my heart that I dared not go for a very long time. It was that special place where doubt and fear reside, that place where the thought is: “Are you really there? Do you hear me?” Father’s words struck like hot iron to an anvil and sparks illuminated the dark room. “You have overcome so much in your relationship. Your have conquered every obstacle, until this week. Hurricanes fizzled, and bullets were blocked.” Applause met this simple comment which carried so much in it. I realized that this was not just the joy of a beautiful wedding of two holy souls but it was the joy of Life.

It is that Joy that exstinguishes doubt.

I saw Father’s joy at marrying these two and his joy of being alive as he said “I know we are all happy to be here but no one happier than me.” I saw the holiness and pure joy in the entire image of couple, priest, and Sacrament. All I could think of is what joy and faith in the Lord a soul must have to be able to joke about what happened just days later in the midst of such a happy occasion! It was such a powerful moment to see all of this and be just overwhelmed in such spirit.

It had me thinking about that small place of the heart where the doubt lives, where the cowardice of our minds sometimes wins over our judgment. Can I have such trust in my heart to stand with death at my neck? Can I kindle that joy and fire in the face of such darkness? I like to think so; at least I like to think it is possible for all of us. There is living proof in what I saw that day. I saw everything that could matter: Love, Joy, and Faith all contained in one image. It is an image i will carry with me so that when the storm is rising and there are enemies at my gate or even towering over me with my life in their hands, I’ll stand.

Monday, April 16, 2012

The Shadow Proves the Light




Humans like to feel good. Humans like to feel happy. Humans are silly creatures.
There is a difference between living joyfully and feeling happy. Joy springs from the well of the divine, from our hearts. Happiness is a reaction, and can be shaken. Joy is a cause. All too often are we torn from happiness by some great cataclysm of life but it is in our darkest times that we are never closer to the Light.

Darkness and despair is a tricky subject to tackle, but here in the Easter season we are to be joyful at the victory of Christ’s Sacrifice and what happens when that feeling fades? Ol’ Clive Staples had it right as he described the Christian life as a series of waves that rise and fall. We have an experience and it elevates us to an almost manic state of happiness and elation in the light, and then we and dipped back into shadow as we come down from that mountain, like Moses returning from meeting God only to come back to his people worshipping a cow. We all experience this of course. The funny thing is we tend to know that good times do not last forever but we tend to assume the bad will. It is our nature to yearn for those feelings of happiness and to see beauty in life again and so when the going gets rough we tend to chicken out.

I find myself thinking should we be just as grateful for dark times in our lives? They do provide opportunities for growth and to strengthen ourselves. The truth is the dark and hard times should be uplifting. The shadows cast on the wall only prove the source of light. The bad things that happen in this world can leave us broken and weak but all we have to remember is that it ends, that we can see it through. 

We have such a richness of faith, and the Sacraments that provide us with such grace to lift our hearts out of darkness but we must act. Robert Frost’s “Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening” gives us the image of a man standing between two images: A frozen lake and a snow filled woods on the darkest night of the year. I see every one of us in that image; standing between God’s endless forest and Hell’s Frozen Lake in the darkest hour, contemplating the journey ahead. 

Our Dark night of the Soul comes to an end eventually but it always seems like Winter in Narnia: “Always winter but never Christmas.” We can see each other through a harsh winter. We can Love our neighbor and our enemies. Like campers in the cold night in the wilderness we are drawn closer to the light of the fire. I believe we can stay joyful in the dark times and that is what makes the love of God shine in the world. We should be grateful for our winters because we are never closer to God or to each other. Eventually, somewhere in Narnia the snows start to melt, the sun breaks the clouds, and you might even hear sleigh bells in the distance. (Dibs on the Sword.)

Also give this song a listen: Even the Winter by Audrey Assad