Sunday, July 28, 2019


July  28, 2019 


Thought for today: 

“Each prayer has its own proper meaning and it is therefore the specific key to the door in the Divine Palace, but a broken heart is an axe which opens all doors.”  


Rabbi Israel Baal Shem-Tov 
(1700-1760),  Judaism.

July 28, 2019

13 WAYS  OF  WONDERING  
ABOUT  A  TISSUE  


A dad saw his brother in
a casket that day - and it
was such a sudden death -
and he reached for a tissue.

A mom saw her oldest - whom
she thought was so selfish - give
her youngest - the last piece of cake
and she reached for a tissue.

A family were at the airport
waiting for their grandmother
whom nobody has seen in 25 years
and each reached for a tissue.

A grandfather never cried in 25 years -
but he did cry at his grandson’s one
year anniversary  of sobriety in AA
and he reached for a tissue.

A great grandmother was at the baptism
of her first great-granddaughter and
she didn’t think she’d make it
and she reached for a tissue.

A guy went to confession for the first
time in 38 years and told it all and
the priest was great and he came out
and he reached for a tissue.

A dad was handed the first chocolate
chip cookie his daughter ever made
and it was burnt and horrible
and he reached for a tissue.

A 55 year old man received
a kidney from a total stranger -
but they were a perfect match
and his wife reached for a tissue.

A son gave his dad’s eulogy
and nobody had a clue how much
he loved his dad till then and
everyone reached for a tissue.

A mom and dad who never went
to church - did this time because
their daughter was the reader and they
sat there and each reached for a tissue.

A brother was at church and the gospel
that Sunday was the story of the prodigal
son and he realized he was the older
brother and he reached for a tissue.

A  dad saw his daughter graduate
from Princeton - and she was the first kid
in the family who went to college
and he reached for a tissue.

A garbage man got his first book
of poems published and at the
book signing at Barnes and Noble
his wife reached for a tissue.

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019


Saturday, July 27, 2019

July 27, 2019


A  TISSUE

A garbage man, 
yeah, one of those guys 
who pick up trash and toss it in the back 
of a garbage truck picked up a tissue
that fell from a big blue plastic garbage can -
a tissue he was about to ignore and just
leave  on the macadam street - but instead
he picked it up and pocketed it. After all,
isn’t this what garbage men do?
They pick up thrash.

A garbage man,
yeah, one of those guys
who pick up thrash found the
tissue in his pocket when
he got home and was about
to flush it down the toilet - but
instead - his imagination took
over and he wrote a poem
about 13 people who might
have tossed that tissue.

A garbage man,
yeah, one of those guys
who pick up thrash loved
to sit down at night and
write poetry - especially
about what he saw that day.
And he always liked  
Wallace Stevens poem:
Thirteen Ways of Looking
at a Blackbird.
  

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019


July  27, 2019 

Thought for today: 


“The experience of guilt feelings is of crucial interest  both to psychiatry and religion.”  


Jack Dominian, 
Psychiatry and 
the Christian, 1962

Friday, July 26, 2019

July 26, 2019


ONCE

Once I ran a half-marathon ….

Once I won a spelling bee ….

Once I got a great compliment ….

Once I saved a friend from embarrassment ….

Once I helped grill over 100 hamburgers ….

Once I bowled over 200 ….

Once I told God I thank YOU  for ….

Once I put down everything and ….

Once I released a mosquito into the night ….

Once in a while it’s nice to be positive ….

© Andy Costello, Reflections 2019


July  26, 2019 

Thought for today: 

“No one can find out except by trying whether he needs prayer once an hour, once a week, or less often.”  


Richard Cabot, 
What Men Live By, 1915


SOME QUESTIONS:
DOWN TO THE THIRD
AND FOURTH GENERATION?


INTRODUCTION

The title of my homily  is, “Some Questions: Down To The Third and Fourth Generation….” 

The main thrust of this homily will be questions - as opposed to answers. 

When it comes to grandparents and great grandparents,   I have a lot of questions. How about you?

Today’s first reading from Exodus 20: 1-17 talks about punishment on past sins going down to the 3rd and 4th generations.  Does that really happen?

Today - July 26th - we look at and celebrate the feast of St. Anne and St. Joachim - the grandparents of Jesus on his mother Mary’s side.

Their names are not in scriptures - but somewhere along the line - a tradition grew up that Mary’s parents were named Joachim and Anne.

We have their statues here at St. Mary’s - up there on the top  corners  of our old main altar - facing out - facing you.

What are your thoughts about Joachim and Anne?

And St. Anne’s novenas abound - and end today. I did the one at St. Anne’s in Erie, Pa. a few times.

SOME  QUESTIONS

What are your thoughts about your grandparents - and their parents and their parents?

What are your questions?

I like homilies that give me new questions.

What are your questions about your grandparents?

I only met one grandparent - my mom’s mom - but it was only on one occasion. The rest of the time she lived in Ballynahown, County Galway Ireland. She was wrinkled and wore heavy black shoes.



There is a book entitled, It Didn’t Start With You: How Inherited Family Trauma Shapes Who We Are and How to End the Cycle.

The author Mark Wolynn is not a psychologist  but he probes this question of how past stuff affects us now.

The asks the question: does past stuff from our grandparents sculpt and shape us.

I only heard someone talking about that book - but it got me thinking. Reviewers say it’s nonsense - but it will get you thinking.

Is there a psychological and emotional type DNA?

Years and years ago, long before this book, I’ve heard people say if you want to change someone you have to change their grandmother.

I’ve always heard that suicide can be intergenerational.

If we read the scriptures we know this question comes up. In the 9th Chapter of John,   people asked Jesus about a blind man.  Who caused his blindness, his sins or his parents sins or what?  Jesus said to that one, “Neither….”  Then Jesus healed him.

Next I would add the reality of example: good and bad.

We pick up on both.

And I believe reflection on that can get us thinking the following: “I  better be giving good example.”

I believe reflection on that can also get us grateful for all the good example that has been passed on to us.

I believe that is the value of saints: people from the past - who still give us good example.

I believe that is the reason there are statues and biographies and studying history.

I believe that is the value of autobiography

I know my mother’s mother went to Boston as a young lady - made some money - loved it - got manipulated back to Ireland to get married and ended up stuck there for life.  As a result, she made it her dream to get my mother and her 3 sons to America.

So yes, those in the past had some influences on our lives.

I think that’s enough for now:  what are your questions about your past?