Get a Life, Mom!

941214_521544237908496_334151744_nWhen it comes to yapping up vocations, we so often have a poverty of imagination.

On occasion we have the chance to discuss the possibility of vocations with the college students we know.  Though interested, their first response is often a vague, blank look.  Religious life?  Who-wha-who-huh?  What do sisters or brothers do?  Pray all day?  I don’t want to be a hermit!

Well (we say), as it turns out, they do a lot of things.  Religious orders have different charisms and apostolates, and within the structure of an order, each brother or sister has their own devotions and assigned tasks, in obedience to a superior, according to their spiritual gifts, strengths, abilities, and interests.

But (they sometimes respond), I thought you just pick one and they tell you what to do.  Meaning, I thought religious life = self-annihilation.  As if who I am or what I’m like has nothing at all to do with religious life.

Sometimes I feel like this is the way people approach parenting.  You get a baby, you read the book, and you check off the “How To Be a Good Catholic Parent” checklist (whichever variation of that list you have in your possession), which invariably involves you giving up sleeping, eating without someone in your lap, hobbies, and talking about anything other than poop, multiplication tables, and the Blessed Virgin Mary, and voila! Perfect, holy, doing-God’s-will parenting.

But, here’s the thing:  No one would ever want to join an order with which they don’t jive.  Some people thought St. Francis was the bomb-dig-diggity.  Some people (ahem, St. Dominic) thought the guy was a little… hmm.  Holy, yes, but talking to the birds was just not their thing.

Is the Dominican way of being a religious the “right” way?  Is the Franciscan?  Is the Benedictine?

Yes.  Yes to all.  They are all different, and they are all the right way of being a religious.

But whether or not this or that person should be a Dominican, or a Franciscan, or a Benedictine – here there is a “right” and “wrong” answer that only the Holy Spirit can provide.  Making the “right” decision has everything to do with the individual person, with their personality, their needs, their talents, their interests, and their virtues and vices.  The content of a religious vocation – the day-in, day-out activities, both contemplative and active – will look different for not only each religious community, but for each religious.

Why?  Because a vocation is precisely not about self-annihilation.   Dying to ourselves does not mean denying who God made us to be.

Guess what?  Same with the vocation to marriage.   Consequently, the same is true about parenting.

I know.  You’re tired of hearing about “being your own person” and “taking care of yourself”.   But would we continue to hear this advice if it were not a common and ongoing problem for so many of us?  And I believe it’s a huge, huge problem in faithful Catholic circles, especially for us moms.  Somewhere, somehow along the road of mommying, many of us have swallowed the Catholic Parenting Checklist Kool-Aid and have given ourselves over the restless chase for vocational perfection(ism)…

…which often leads to co-dependency.  And co-dependency leads to death.  Death of the soul.

I know.  I’ve been there.  Before my son was born and for several months after, I honestly believed that all that lay before me was being a mother.  Being a mom meant being a mom and nothing else.   Thank God, He allowed me to be miserable as – well, hell! – in order to show me how wrong this attitude is. And it was hell – I was restless and bored, with a creative itch I did not understand, and I was more than ready to pout and complain and point fingers.  Sounds just like a ring in Dante’s Inferno.

“I’m-My-Kid’s-Mom” did not work for me. Neither did its counterpart, “I’m-My-Husband’s-Wife”.  Nope, nope, nope.

On their respective blogs last week, Jennifer Fulwiler (“The Anonymous Stay-at-Home Mom“) and my friend Colleen Duggan (“Motherhood Isn’t Indentured Servitude — We Make It That Way“) both touched on this theme.  Fulwiler’s cocktail party experiment of introducing herself as a stay-at-home mom for the first half of the party, and then as a writer for the second half, yielded the expected results:  People had more to say to Jennifer the Writer than Jennifer the Stay-at-Home Mom.

Unexpected, however, is Fulwiler’s explanation of this phenomenon:

I used to feel insulted by this kind of thing. I felt anonymous and overlooked when I received blank stares in response to saying that I stay home with my kids, and I interpreted people’s reactions to mean that they thought I must not be interesting enough to talk to or didn’t see the value in my work. But over the years I’ve come to believe that the problem isn’t that people don’t respect my answer that I’m a stay-at-home mom; instead, I think the problem is that my answer doesn’t give them the information they were actually seeking

…I know that a lot of moms who are out of the workforce feel that their vocations are undervalued by society, and there’s certainly plenty of truth to that. But I think that at least some of the time, the negativity that we at-home moms sense surrounding our work is not due to people looking down on us as much as it is due to the fact that we live in a society has come to use people’s work as their primary social identifier, and being a stay-at-home mom is a catch-all kind of job in terms of personality types.  (emphasis mine)

“Yes!” my husband said when I shared Fulwiler’s point with him. “I’ve had that experience.  Someone tells me they stay at home, and I tell them how great that is–” (and he means it) “–but then, I’m not sure what else to say.”

Exactly Fulwiler’s point, and from someone who does value motherhood.  How many of the world’s population are mothers?  A lot.  Like she says, the Mom label doesn’t tell us a whole lot. What we really want to know is what’s special about this mother – a unique person fashioned by the artist-Creator, gifted with this spouse and these children, who loves these causes or those callings or that interest.

Perhaps you not only parent your beautiful children but love to contemplate the means and meaning of parenting.  Great!  You’re a Philosopher of Motherhood.  That’s what makes you unique.  That’s what makes your eyes sparkle and your mind churn.  That’s what you have to share with the world.  “Hi, I’m Susie-Q.  I’m a stay-at-home mom, and – I know! I’m a bit crazy – one of my favorite hobbies is reading up on parenting and education methods.  Ever read any of that stuff?  I especially like the way Montessori folks work with little ones – so insightful, early potty-training, blah blah blah blah blah.”

Of course, this doesn’t happen without taking the time to be yourself and take care of yourself.  Which brings me to Colleen Duggan’s post:

She [another mom Colleen met at the park] didn’t answer.  She’d made her point, maybe unintentionally, but one which communicated she, a martyr in her family’s cause, had no time for self-indulgent frivolities like reading or any other enjoyable activity.

I resisted the urge to roll my eyes but the conversation left me wondering:  when did the warped Puritan work ethic seep into Catholicism?  When did Catholics–and women in particular– accept the idea that we must slave away in life in order to earn our salvation?  It’s like we’ve bought and played some distorted tape recording that says:

“Have lots of kids, cook, clean, and labor and by God–don’t have any fun while you’re doing itDon’t enjoy your life.  The true and good example of an honest to goodness Catholic is one who toils, sweats, and sheds lots of tears.”

Puh-lease! …

Catholic moms, we don’t have to be martyrs.  We don’t have to be women so burdened by our lives, we can’t take time to do things for ourselves.  That isn’t true martyrdom anyway–it’s garnering attention through complaining so others will feel grateful and/or sorry for us. (emphasis mine)

50s-cleanerPreach it, sistah.

As Colleen says, our attempts at (or succumbing to) self-annihilation in the pursuit of being the Perfect Catholic Mom can actually be attempts at (or wallowing in) self-aggrandizement and false humility.   This is not Deny Thyself, Take Up Thy Cross and Follow Me.  This is ME-ME-ME-ME-ME.

I’ll tell you, it was and continues to be hard – very, very, very hard – to ask others to watch my son so that I and my laptop can slip away to a coffee shop for a couple of hours.  I think I don’t deserve it.  I think I’m being selfish.  I’m afraid of putting others out.  I’m afraid of being offensive.  I’d rather try to figure out some other creative solution so that I don’t have to ask for help.

Do you hear it?  ME-ME-ME-ME-ME.

Asking for help – even for “me time” – is denying myself and taking up my cross.

I hate it. Oh, but it’s so necessary.  So very, very necessary.

When I write, I am happy.  My husband is happy to give me time alone to write, because he sees this happiness translating into the rest of our life together.  Writing makes me happy, which makes me a happier wife and mother.  My vocation to marriage consists of being a wife to this man, a mother to these children, and a woman who loves God in this way, feels a special affinity for these suffering people, and perks up when reading, thinking, and writing about this and that.

The content of my vocation has everything to do with who God made me.  And who God made my husband.  And my children.  And so on.

Self-annihilation?  Not on your life.  Thank God for that.

I Am Not Goat Dung Covered Over With Whitewash: Thoughts on Pentecost

Happy Solemnity of the Third Person of the Trinity!

This year has been the year of the Holy Spirit for me and I’m feeling especially joyful this Pentecost.   I want to share some musings from my journal, having meditated on today’s second reading (option 2 – Romans 8:8-17) this morning:

“…children of God, and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ” (vs. 16-17) -

This continues to be an astounding and radical statement – and this is what the Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit.  Here is a CHILD!  A CO-HEIR!  Here is one who is being transformed into ME!

I am not goat dung covered over with whitewash.  I – ME – the core of who I am, the echo of His “I AM”, His image, His “deep calling unto [my] deep” – is being transformed into God Himself – a little Christ, one of His Body.  I am what I eat. The Holy Spirit burns with love within and so far as I am willing – and as grace allows – He changes me into the Image of Himself.

I still don’t get this mystery, Lord.

Giotto, Pentecost

Giotto, Pentecost

I’ve been thinking a lot about the mystery of theosis, or deification.  My husband had been doing some scholarly work on it a while ago, and then I began a program of spiritual formation at our parish where the leader, Michael Fonseca, has focused heavily on this mystery and its living reality in our lives. Theosis is nothing less than the idea that God transforms us into Himself – literally.

Before anyone chucks rotten lettuce at me for being a heretic, in defense of theosis, it’s a common enough theme in the New Testament, in the Church Fathers, and beyond.  But the idea sounds blasphemous. When my husband first told me about theosis, I thought he’d gone off his rocker.

Theosis has to do with how salvation works.  What do we mean when we say God saves us?

Speaking of goat dung, one Protestant understanding (not universal but common enough) of salvation is that salvation is a “covering up” of our sinfulness through the Blood of Christ.  His sacrificial act on the Cross justifies us, through faith.  The price of sin has been paid, we assent to this, and therefore we get to go to heaven.  But this does nothing to change our fundamental nature – we are still, well, piles of dung, but piles of dung whose guilt has been covered over with Christ’s Blood (“covered with snow”, I think they say – my “whitewash” is me mixing metaphors again) so that we appear as righteous before God.

Catholic understanding is, as you probably guessed, different.  For us, salvation is being drawn into God’s covenant family not just through the justification of the Cross but also through transformation of the Resurrection.  Instead of being covered piles of dung, we are diamonds covered with dung, and God washes away the dung and fills us so that we are resplendent with His light.  We become children and co-heirs in the literal sense of our natures being both purified and elevated.  “May we come to share in the divinity of Christ who humbled Himself to share in our humanity.”

God does this to us, by means of His grace, and through the work of the indwelling Holy Spirit, without either His ceasing to be the Creator or our ceasing to be the created.   We are the iron in the fire of the Holy Spirit, purified and shaped, in a sense, by becoming that fire itself.

Connected to this is the Catholic understanding of the Sacraments.  Sacraments, for Catholics, are direct conveyances of God’s grace via physical means.  Most important is the Blessed Sacrament, the Holy Eucharist, in which the bread and wine become Jesus Christ’s Body and Blood – not only symbolically, but actually – by the working of the Holy Spirit, in the Church (also “the Body of Christ”) through the words and person of the priest.  And when we eat (gnaw, to paraphrase the Greek word Jesus uses in John 6, thank you, Scott Hahn and Co.) His Body and Blood, we become what we eat in a very real way.

Christ’s Body is now a part of my body.  Christ’s Blood is now a part of my blood.  But because Christ, as God, is the stronger element, we are taken up more intimately in His Body.  As we consume the Eucharist, we are consumed, we course through Christ’s veins, so to speak.

Jesus’ death on the Cross and Holy Eucharist are together the signs of the New Covenant.  Whenever God formed a covenant with the People of Israel, two acts occurred:  a sacrifice and a meal.  Think of the Passover Meal:  the lamb is sacrificed, yes, but then the lamb had to be eaten.  Protestants miss this.  For Christians, Jesus Christ is our real, actual Sacrifice, and He is also our real, actual Meal.  The Sacrifice was a real sacrifice of a real person, the Lamb.  The Meal is a meal eating that real Lamb.   To reduce one or both to a symbolic act is to shortchange our understanding of God’s saving work on our behalf.

This is what the Holy Spirit bears witness to with our spirits.  The Holy Spirit is the effectual fire in our lives, bringing about this transformation as the very Love that proceeds from the Father and the Son – the Love whose essence is joyful self-sacrificing – confirmed upon us through (you guessed it) the Sacraments of Baptism and Confirmation.  We are temples of the Holy Spirit – and, again, not figuratively, but actually, because that’s what Sacraments do.

As the Holy Spirit “hovered over the waters” when God the Father, through Christ the Word, spoke the world into being, so too the Holy Spirit hovers over us and within us, bringing about our re-creation.

How does this work?  I don’t know.  It’s a mystery.  It comes through the Church.   But it’s a beautiful mystery to celebrate today – the working out of our salvation.

Mary and the Mystery of Theosis

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My latest article is up at CatholicMom.com:

Mary and the Mystery of Theosis

Image Credit:  WikiCommons

For My Aunt, on the Eve of Radiation Therapy

The last time you fought cancer, Aunt, I was away from home.   I wasn’t under the cloud perpetually weaving through the hills, watering the moss growing on Oregon rocks, Oregon trees, and (sorry to say) Grandpa’s roof.

No, I was in DC, and, like most everyone living in DC, I was preoccupied with staying alive while driving on I-495.

Coming home after many months away, though, does have its advantages.  I sometimes notice changes the others do not.  After arriving home for Grandpa and Grandma’s 50th anniversary party and seeing you for the first time in months, I knew right away that you were different.

Sure, there were physical changes, both positive and negative – I think I made a comment about how nice your hair looked and you laughed at me for not recognizing it as a wig – but the change I sensed went deeper than physical change.

You were happier.  You had confidence.   You know, you may have even had moxie.

Cancer is beastly.  Yet you took its beastliness and turned it to beauty and strength.  You knew yourself better.  You knew what you didn’t want out of life, and, even better, you knew what you did.   So you have done something about it.  You applied to college.  Smarts aren’t exactly in short supply in the Fox family, and you want to cultivate your share of them.  You have furnished a home and planted a rose garden.  And you loved and cared for Grandma as she fought her own battle against cancer.

In short, you have walked the path of the cross of Christ.  He entered into our suffering not to eradicate it but to transform it into hope.  How?  Who knows. It’s a mystery, and yet I think you know something of it.  Your life is evidence of it.

And, spitfire that you are, we all know that life ain’t over yet.

Godspeed to you as you begin these next few weeks of radiation therapy.  Mary, Mother of God, Our Lady of Sorrows, pray for us all.

Image Source: Wikimedia Commons

 

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