Last year my colleague Jim Manney shared with me the Foreword of a book that he had just finished editing, The Best Catholic Writing 2007 (a series that Loyola Press publishes annually). Brian Doyle, who wrote the Foreword, tells of his experience with the Sisters of Mount Angel. Loyola Press graciously granted me permission to reprint the story for you here at A Nun’s Life. The story will be done “serial-style” with a few paragraphs each day during the Christmas holiday. I’ll be interjecting occasionally to comment and to converse with you. Enjoy!
Some time ago I gave a characteristically rambling talk to a group of Benedictine nuns at their monastery in Oregon. As usual I set out to tell stories and sing prayers and tell jokes and draw tears and foment cheerful chaos and try to connect at some deep, inexplicable level that has everything to do with laughing and weeping, and as usual I was granted more epiphany and delight than I could ever have delivered, which happens to me all the time, which is one of the reasons I feel like the richest man on earth, even though my back is sore all the time and my wife is a confusing country and my children never make their beds and it rains so much here that everyone gets a little mossy come winter.
Anyway, I arrived early at the monastery and wandered around the grounds for a couple of hours, out of respect for my hosts, trying to see and sense something of their lives and loves: their salty days, the way the wind slid through their fir trees, the geometry of the gravestones in their tiny cemetery, the way the hop fields and vineyards stretched away in corduroy rows beneath their little hill, the keening of hawks overhead, the secret words that dragonflies and damselflies spelled in the air among the old stone buildings. I wandered and wondered. I walked the simple stations of the cross that someone had carved in trees along a path. I examined the old washhouse, where millions of prayers had been murmured over socks and frocks during the last century. I sat in the tall grass and prayed quietly for all sorts of things, even for the one-eyed cat glaring at me balefully from the brambles, and then I went to give my talk.
First there was a meal, of course, and before the meal were prayers, and the three nuns offering prayers were a microcosm of the monastery….
Check in tomorrow for the continuation of The Sisters of Mount Angel.
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{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }
I’ve been there on retreat a few times. Beautiful grounds, and wonderful women.
Thanks for sharing part of this book with us, Sister Julie! What a nice gift to all of your readers. And I am already intrigued!
I hope you have a very happy and blessed Christmas!
Jackie
Hello! This message may be conceptually indecipherable to you; we may speak completely different languages and live in two different worlds– but I shall try. I would sincerely enjoy connecting with you, but it is highly likely that you will feel unable to connect with me.
I have an interest in, and respect for, nuns. I could see some part of myself as a nun. I visited the Benedictine order on Shaw Island in Washington state in 2000. I prayed with the nuns and swept their barn and fed their animals. It was a beautiful experience.
My mom was a nun in a Dominican order in California, from age 18 -26. She left before her final vows, feeling that she had had a rich experience. A year later, her friend — a priest– set her up with my dad, and their first (blind) date was attending mass together. My mom taught elementary school during and after the convent, and after she had me and my brother, went to graduate school and became a psychotherapist. I was raised Catholic, but my parents left it up to me whether or not I wanted to be confirmed, and I chose not to.
I am an artist, a wife, and a mother. I am also gay, and happily married to my wife. I started reading and writing blogs while pumping breast milk for my son, who is now a healthy 7 month old, but was born three months premature.
So, why would I willingly escort myself into rejection by writing to you? Because there is the chance that you are open-minded, while still a nun. (Or is there?) And perhaps there is the chance that you, also, would be interested in connecting with someone in a different world, and perhaps learn that we aren’t as different as we thought.
Well I am done pumping and it is Christmas Eve!
May this season hold new light for you.
Susanna