Friday, September 12, 2014

Rochester, New York...

Michelle
 R.E.S.P.E.C.T.

Carole
     As I drove across New York State this summer, historical markers drew my attention to some national issues that erupted around the Rochester, New York area, "The birthplace of women's rights" (visitrochester.com).  How is it that with my open driving eyes, I never saw the markers before?  Why do I continue to be blind to oppression in all of its forms, and what is it about tonight, when my eyes should be shut, that I am haunted by all they represent?
     Sometimes, The Women's Movement seems far away from me in the year 2014, even when I open up the evening paper and read the front page headlines about the Ray Rice case.  It's too horrible to imagine, and I haven't watched the video.  I can't.  But at the same time I insulate myself from this harsh reality, I thank God that I have been given every opportunity in my life to voice my opinions without fear, and I can succeed in the goals that I set.  How complacent we can get when we lose the opportunity to struggle, and it's times like these that I remember my friends Carole and Michelle.               
      Carole, a classmate and Michelle, a colleague were both smart, beautiful and vivacious women in the prime of their lives when they were killed by their husbands.  Sometimes I feel guilty on a night like tonight when our family is sitting around the supper table talking about our adventures, our brokenness and misadventures really, and just laughing.  We are far from the picture perfect family, please don't get me wrong, but I think about what dinners must have been like for Carole, Michelle and countless other victims who are terrorized in their own homes.  I recognize how I could very easily have gone down so many different paths during the "search and rescue" phase of my life, than the one that led me to my beloved husband and partner.  

     Michelle and Carole's legacy to me each day is to embrace my own brokenness, help others to heal, try to empower those with whom I come in contact and find joy in the life I have been given.  I joined the Amazon Smile program in honor of Carole so that with each purchase I make- some of the proceeds go to our favorite Essex Junction High School Class of '83 charity, "Women Helping Battered Women, Inc."  Frankly, it doesn't seem like enough.  October is Domestic Violence Awareness month, and The National Coalition Against Domestic Violence sponsors a "Remember My Name" project, a national registry to increase public awareness of domestic violence deaths (http://www.ncadv.org/programs/RememberMyNameProject.php).  Their motto is "Every Home A Safe Home."  Safe home... now that seems to me to be a basic human right, male or female.      

(Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton fromhttp://nysparks.com/historic-preservation/heritage-trails/womens-heritage/default.aspx)

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Hartington, Nebraska

Monsignor Werner Activity Center- Dance Team Practice




      When our CCHS Dance Team coach asked for faculty and staff members to volunteer to dance with the team at the Homecoming Pep Rally next week, I hesitated.  Always one to volunteer, I quickly recognized that dancing... really coordination of any kind, is not one of my gifts!  (My friends and family members may remain silent at this point and time and may not recall those times in the past when I have, in fact, gotten my groove on... These instances are best left ... how shall I say ...unrecalled.)  
     The more I prayed about this, I felt the Lord was calling me to participate.  Not just to bask in the warm laughter engendered by my abject humiliation, but to be real... maybe real bad, but real.  After all, every day I try to challenge my students to learn, grow and stretch outside of their comfort zones.  I ask them to put themselves out there, and I guess now I need to do the same.     

Monday, September 1, 2014

Des Moines, Iowa



Just the map overwhelmed me...

Kendall's cheering section...

...and switch!  It's hard to smile with your jaw wired shut, folks...

The kids are going to do what?

Flooding is where?

I say let's call the whole thing off!

Heavens to Betsy!

Kendall is ready... I am not!

Faster than a speeding bullet and my camera, she was in the water...

I think I was crying at this point...

Don't they get a break first?

Who's the I state photobomber?

Does she get a break now?

6th fastest senior (13 - 15 year olds) in the Nation, folks!

Coach Ian adds his two cents...

We are so proud of you, Kendall!

Everything's a competition for us... even racing back to the handicapped parking! 








2014 HyVee Triathlon National Championships at Gray's Lake Park

     With Colin's wreck not fully gone from our rearview mirror, it was time for Team Fallon to hit the road.  Cousin Kendall had qualified for the Triathlon National Championships so she was heading from Chicago to Des Moines, Iowa and we were hoping to meet her there and cheer her on.  With our cooler filled with Boost and smoothies of every variety (just what the doctor ordered for broken jaws) and a wheelchair in the way back of the Silver Bullet, we were off, but I wasn't sure we were ready.  Honestly, I wanted to stay back at the parsonage for the long weekend and nurse my anxieties while tending to Colin's wounds.  Instead, God was calling us out into the world to stretch outside of our comfort zones to love, serve and cheer Kendall on.  Quite frankly, I wasn't sure we had it in us...
     Luckily, we did.  I love how the feeling of family takes over me when we are together.  Watching Kendall with her older cousins the night before her big race, I knew then that it had been the right thing to do, despite all of my fears and insecurities about bringing a broken Colin out into the world again. Then it hit me.  When did Kendall grow up to be such a powerful young woman? Sitting under the gazebo behind the hotel, safe from the rain, eating spaghetti and meatballs, I listened in awe to her speak about her 13 year old life.  In my mind, Kendall will always be this little girl (see picture below) who plays the piano, writes poetry and I get to read with once a year when I drive cross country in June.  We make our Dunkin Donuts runs (and by that I don't mean we actually run for the donuts, but we drive there... together), and now she is placing at triathlons.  When did that happen?
     She placed 6th on Saturday at Nationals and here's the thing...I almost missed it.  She is growing up, and in reality, if she is doing triathlons at 13, I can only imagine what she will be doing at 33 or 53 or 103... and I want to be there cheering her on through it all...the good, the bad and the ugly.  Now, I could tell you how I think watching Kendall and the other triathloners compete will inspire us in the days, weeks and months ahead as Colin faces his own healing and rehabilitation, but I think that my wise husband probably said it best in his sermon on Sunday, "...when we give ourselves away in love by bringing Jesus' love and life to others, we often find new life in return.  In losing a bit of ourselves...in losing life we somehow gain it.  In giving ourselves away to make a difference in the lives of others, we find ourselves and we find life..."  Thank you, KK. We are so proud of you... always!



Prayer of St. Francis of Assisi

Lord, make me an instrument of Thy peace;
where there is hatred, let me sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
O Divine Master,
grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console;
to be understood, as to understand;
to be loved, as to love;
for it is in giving that we receive,
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
and it is in dying that we are born to eternal life.
Amen.

    

Sioux Falls, South Dakota

Then...


now...


God's Not Dead
 
Here's a picture of Colin's Mimi, Mary giving him a bath.  Lots of junk can cloud our Vision!

     I didn't take any pictures, but when our son Colin was in a car wreck on his way to work on August 20th, we knew that, if he survived, we would have a lot to be thankful for without the photos as reminders.  From the moment the Nebraska State Patrolman and I arrived at the scene until Colin was transferred to the Avera McKennan Hospital and University Health Center in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, it all seemed surreal.  Thinking back now, I remember watching the Crofton Rescue workers crawl across his 1984 Buick that looked, to my unsophisticated eye, to be straddling a ravine.  They popped the windshield out of its socket, and then passed Colin out through the gaping hole...  It's strange to think, but even harder to say as the images continue to replay in my mind.  As I watched, I felt like he was being born again, being ushered from death into LIFE.  I knew that I was witnessing a miracle, not just in that all of these people came from their lives at the scream of the siren, to save his life, but a realization that Colin's life would never be the same-  could never be the same.
     The miracles didn't stop there, if anything, they were just ramping up.  Amazing doctors and nurses met us at Avera Sacred Heart Hospital in Yankton, South Dakota and without any notice my dear friend and colleague Sister Jane was there, cocooning us in prayer.  She thought that she was there for another call, but we were there instead... needing her prayers, her ministry and her love.  When they transferred Colin to another hospital in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, I was already in full-throttle mamma bear mode by the time they wheeled him into the Emergency Room there.  Wanting to do everything and able to do nothing, I stared astounded as the two nurses who worked diligently on Colin adjusted their name tags...Mary and Joy.  What would have been such a small thing to anyone else was everything to me.  To me, this was an affirmation that everything was going to be okay.  I think I cried then and in prayer turned Colin over to my Blessed Mother, Mary.  Not just my Vermont mom Mary or my Massachusetts mother-in-law Mary, both of whom I knew were already knee deep in prayer and supplications, but my heavenly Mother.  Later, when Colin was in surgery, I went into the chapel.  There was a statue by the altar of The Blessed Mother holding baby Jesus, and my prayer was that She would take Colin in her arms and guide the hands of the surgeons and nurses who were putting his broken parts back together.
     It seems like when we returned to the room after the surgery (or I could be mixing up my times now because it was all a blur) Colin had a new nurse from out of nowhere.  In walked a nurse who introduced himself as Gabe.  Startled, I asked him, "Gabe?  Is that short for something?"
     He replied, "Yeh, my name is Gabriel."  Hmmmmmm.
     "Like the angel?"
     He chuckled and said, "That's funny... the lady next door just asked the same thing.  Yeh, like the angel."  Game.  Set.  Match.
     Ya know, I could give you a long list of really bad things that have happened as a result of Colin's accident, but the bottom line is that he is alive.  He lives to fight another day and will hopefully heal in all of the right places.  Our friends and family around the world have lifted him up in prayer while, I know in their own lives, they are suffering with their own sagas.  All I'm saying is that God is present.  He is present in the miracles.  He is present in the tragedies.  Life goes on.  It's kinda like walking on water... I believe only the fear and doubt drag us under.  God's not dead and Colin's not either...thanks be to our God!
     
"Jesus is more than a great teacher; he is our salvation. He is not just an idea; he is a person. Jesus himself is the very foundation of our faith" (Word Among Us, September 1, 2014).


Monday, August 11, 2014

Yankton, South Dakota

(from The Mount Marty College website)
Mount Marty College


    "It's the most wonderful time of the year" is both an old Christmas carol we all know and a song that I am often found singing this time of year as I skip through the halls of Cedar Catholic.  Indeed, it is a wonderful time... The new school year doesn't loom-  it winks, it promises and it encourages me to dream again. As students are out shopping for school supplies, we teachers on the North (a.k.a the Wild) side are moving back into our classrooms, unpacking boxes and revisioning our learning environments-  our classroom communities where we live, grow and dream.  To help in the process, our faculty and staff have the opportunity to bond together while on a retreat.  Today was that day at Mount Marty College in Yankton, South Dakota.  We pray.  We discern.  We share.  As teachers, we dream and we brainstorm ways to authentically love, serve, teach and inspire our students, their families and each other.  We block out the noise from our lives and come together to whisper as Samuel did, "Speak, for your servant is listening"  (1 Samuel 3:10).  

                                                                     Happy New Year!

eek! (from cedarcatholic.org)






Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Olean, New York

CUTCO KA-BAR
Visitors' Center... Who Knew?


     For as many times as I have driven cross country over the past nine years, how have I never seen the CUTCO Visitor's Center advertised before?  It's been two years since CUTCO came into our lives through our son, Colin, and I have to admit I got a little excited when I saw the brochures as I was traversing the great state of New York!  CUTCO's website (http://www.cutco.com/company/visitorsCenter.jsp) explains everything inquiring minds would ever want to know about this company and probably even more!  The Visitors' Center boasts a store, museum and free sharpening and repair.   That's worth the price of admission right there, which happens to be free by the way.  Now, I know that won't necessarily help all of Colin's faithful customers who have cut themselves during their culinary pursuits with this outstanding, American-made cutlery, but I couldn't help but share this REMARKABLE information!  Go CUTCO!

Friday, August 1, 2014

Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, New Hampshire


Mom


     It's almost like God prepares me for stuff.  

     When my dear cousin Asa had a stroke at 42 years of age, even though he was on the other side of the world, I felt like I went through it with him.  He taught me about many things including the warning signs of a stroke, the various stages of recovery and how humor is essential to life and healing.  So when I sat down to lunch with my mom on a warm Tuesday in June and her words were jumbled and slurring, I knew something was wrong.  She complained that her arm was numb, but having just gotten out of bed, maybe she had leaned on it wrong as she was saying her rosary?  Someone once said that "the eyes are the window to the soul", but honestly when she started to speak- it was her voice, her speech that illuminated the problem.  All that followed was a blur of medical people, tests and a lot of prayers until after she was admitted, two hospitals later, at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, New Hampshire.

That night from the chair bed next to my mom, I watched her face register all of the emotions she seemed to be feeling… even as she slept.  The irony of the situation didn't escape me.  I watched the doctors and nurses come and go.  They would be the ones to help my mom find her voice again.  And I watched… helpless.  Even though, I spend a good portion of my year in Nebraska coaching speech and I pray- helping students to discover their individual voices, never could I imagine that my mom’s voice, her speech could be damaged by anything, let alone something that they were calling a “mini” stroke.  She has been so strong for so long… 14 years on dialysis… every Monday, Wednesday and Friday for 3 ½ hours a day, she has fought to stay alive.  As in Hebrews 12:1, she has “run with perseverance the race marked out for…” her, but that racecourse keeps twisting and turning and sometimes, oftentimes, it is scary and disheartening to watch.  But then (using the Northeast Kingdom of Vermont vernacular) I am forced to remember whom I am dealing with.
                When I moved Mom back home to her home three days short days later, I stumbled upon a scrapbook I had assembled for my Mom and Dad’s 40th anniversary back in 1995.  Anyway, I had written to all of their dear friends and family asking them to write down their favorite stories about my Mom and Dad, and then I compiled this  and presented it to them.  In this book, I found an old and yellowing letter dated 12/21/94 that I had addressed to my parents for this very occasion, but I began to realize what it had to teach me 20 years later... 

Dear Mom and Dad,
                I saw a six year old girl walking down the street today;  she was crying as she tried to carry two big bags of empty beer bottles to the corner market.  I stopped to help, but of course the situation was truly beyond what I could fix.  I drove her to the market, carried the bags inside and then was instructed to leave her behind.  My tears choked out of my eyes onto my cheeks, as I climbed down those market stairs and got into my car.  I could not breathe. 
                In the midst of my tears today, I found deep, deep joy in thinking back to growing up in St. Johnsbury.  I remember walking through our neighborhood and town with a strong sense of security.  I remember my first trip alone across Portland Street bridge;  certainly, I was much older than six.  By the time I reached Hovey’s, I was breathless with the thrill of freedom.  I walked, oblivious to any evil.  I remember thinking that being half Letourneau and half Kenney was the absolute best, most powerful thing to be.  I remember feeling very independent, but now I realize that the feeling of independence came from a very strong dependence on you.  I had walked that bridge a million times before with you and Tina, Pattie and Wayne.  I knew you were back home waiting, perhaps breathless for my return.
                Now as I look at our two sons, I think that is exactly what I want for them.  They say, “Hold me, Mommy,” and I hold them hoping that I don’t smother them.  I want to give them space to grow, be independent and strong, but at the same time I want to shelter them from, while not blinding them to, the evil that can be a part of life.  I want them both to be independent people, self confident because of the loving dependency we all share, not isolated or angry, lost souls.  I want them to recognize suffering in the world and do what they can to ease it, without succumbing to it.  I want them to look back on their childhood and feel that being half Letourneau and half Fallon is the absolute best, most powerful thing to be.
Love, PJ

     I had forgotten about that experience.  I had forgotten about that scrapbook, but I found it just when I needed it the most.  It was then that I realized that being half Kenney and half Thomas made my mom just about the strongest person I have ever known.




 
















Stroke Signs:
F Face Drooping
A Arm Weakness
S Speech Difficulty
T Time to call 911

Additional signs of a stroke may include:
  • Sudden numbness or weakness of the face, arm or leg, especially on one side of the body
  • Sudden confusion, trouble speaking or understanding
  • Sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes
  • Sudden trouble walking, dizziness, lack of balance or coordination
  • Sudden severe headache with no known cause  (source:  http://www.strokeassociation.org)