Sunday, February 1, 2015

Deflecting Rude Behavior 101 During "Edible Etiquette"

Yesterday, a girlfriend of mine,  mother, a feminist, a career girl turned home school mother (for a season) invited our daughters to attend what she called "An Edible Etiquette". She was the hostess for 12 young ladies ranging in age from nine years old (my youngest) to almost seventeen years old, driving, (her oldest) and every age in-between. It seemed the perfect number and guest list. Some of these girls had never met. Some were just acquaintances. In other words, these were not 'best friends' in the cultural vernacular. Nor did they truly share a common interest (sports, fashion, school, church, fine arts, family, etc.). I'm guessing the hostess carefully controlled the guest list, though. And, it worked. What a delightful afternoon. What delicious time well spent. I won't dwell on the details of the event, just to suffice it to say, it was a teachable moment and learning opportunity for all of us to share proper mealtime etiquette at a dinner party or restaurant from soup to nuts.

I felt it was especially appropriate and timely, because our girls and I have been actively talking about Downton Abbey's (Season 6) dinner table conversations, especially those comments and conversations going around the table between Lord Grantham, the village schoolteacher, Sarah Bunting, and Lord Grantham's Irish by birth, son-in-law, Tom Branson. I might add, how those conversations are affecting, Lady Grantham, her marriage, the Dowager Countess Grantham, Violet, Lady Mary, and don't get me started with the Below Staff Dramas unfolding as a result of these conversations. Dinner table conversations in the manor houses of England in the late 1920s started the conversations to class struggle, educational reforms, child labour laws, emancipation, a Woman's Right to Vote, The Land Acts, Free and Equal Pay equality, so many topics in the conventions of Post-Victorian Society. But, Primarily, we are talking about what classical education prior to 1979 (some say, even before that as early as pre-WWI) used to teach: Joining in and Participating in The Great Conversation. The Blue Print on how to do that. Our girls have been dialoguing back and forth what they think about village schoolteacher, Sarah Bunsing, pursing conversations--whilst worthy--she is going about them in all the wrong ways. And, the havoc that they wreak once baited. Specifically, when one is invited to one's house (manor or hovel), one does not attack, bully or aggressively seek out a wrong. Especially at the host's dinner table when one is 'invited' to sup or dine. Regardless of how, one is 'invited', there are rules of engagement to that dinner table. And, they are, or should be, universal. Not survival of the fittest. One reaches out in love, truth, integrity. One practices and employs one of the Ten Commandments: Love Thy Neighbour As Thyself....it is a journey worth taking and a journey, I fear, my be sadly lost. The Fine Art of Dinner Table Etiquette.

I will follow up that, prior to "Edible Etiquette" 101, our girls have grown up around our dinner table in the European or French way, where every member is respected and expected to pursue the Art of Table Manners. The older two girls regularly attend The Great Dance (a program of social dancing, etiquette and modern day social rules for young ladies and young men ages 11 - 19 alternate Fridays for three or four hours),so they are well-versed in dinner table conversations and etiquette. But, our daughters enjoyed the very real fact that other girls and adult women (who were once girls and perhaps may draw on their own adolescent experiences) may need 'toolbox skills and coping mechanisms' on how to carry on polite, respectful conversations without marginalizing or 'taking down another human being'. That was, I think, their BIG takeaway moment yesterday when the hostess interceded and talked about "Deflecting Rude Behavior" ['without honouring, condoning or supporting it, either,] without the girl allowing herself to be a doormat or becoming a shrew. That is so hard to teach, let alone model (if it's not in place: how can we model the behavior; or more, accurately, if the 'socialization' taking place does not support appropriate behaviors as the majority behavior (there's your classical Greek, Socratic thought carried through to our 21st digital technical age). My friend skillfully wove this thread through the dinner table as seamlessly as she explained the proper etiquette to butter one's bread, so-to-speak--literally--teaching that smearing community butter from any individual's knife directly to the bread and back again and again (crumbs...germs...saliva...unsanitary...disease) is a faux-pas. But, the bigger faux-pas, remains, how we treat each other. And, that was really what the dinner table etiquette was all about for these girls.

Perhaps even more important in our little domestic churches for our tweener and teenage brains, (apologies for succumbing to materialistic, consumer and advertising labels) regardless of gender or role, is to know that it does happen. Rude behavior, does and will happen, every day at every moment. And, Rude Behavior Hurts. Marginalizes. Destroys. Breeds, Fosters...Misunderstandings. Dr. Seuss knew that. He wrote about it when he explained The Butter War in The Butter Battle Book (1984). His theme, similar to the war between Lilliput and Blefusca in my countryman's, Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels which was nominally based on the correct end to crack an eggButter side up/Butter side down. Really! War? The song, "Butter Side Up" from "Seusical, The Musical", says it all (look it up) about our petty, human squabbles. It's hard to imagine.It's toast, folks. But, if one thinks about it with intention. It's easy to see how a war, or minor skirmish, could and often, does start at the dinner table, especially the dinner table of everyday life. One only needs to come from a family to know that. It is up to each individual to draw the boundary, boundaries, in appropriateness and even harder still, to do so in such a Universal way that is not-offensive to anyone group or individual but respects the whole-hearted human being without regard to other dynamics. And, to teach and do and continue to learn before the Line of Scrimmage is drawn. To take a seat at the table of every Great Conversation and to know before you go, what is expected of you. Not high expectations, as our culture lies to us, but appropriate, right, just, expectations. I don't think, I KNOW, that our hostess accomplished THAT "Little Way"at least for and in our household yesterday. And, it's up to me, as their mother, and my husband, as their father, to carry it out in a logical, consistent, appropriate, lasting way. Day by Day. Because the culture doesn't want whats right for our girls (as Matthew Kelly continually points out). The Culture wants to sell them, us, something. I'm a mom. I Can Do This. I Can Do The Right Thing. Today. At my own dinner table. Everyday. Every day. Every. Day. That's it. That's the secret: Nobody but a family. Nobody but a mother. And, a father, can do THAT. Everyday. Consistently consistent. Consistency. No other institution even can try. And, they secretly know this. Build Me Up Here. Support me./Support Them. 'Cause I need your help. I have little or no support system. No raft. No gondola. Throw me a line. I got Jesus. He's Got me. But, I still need a few good peeps. God's Dream Team. And, believe it or not, it's really not about building me up. It's all about Building Us Up. Together. 'Cause consumer culture wants to make sure they have multiple families to peddle their products. And, around 1979, they decided that they could 'split' a nuclear family, divide it, manipulate and feed the hurt, multiply the hurt, quantify the hurt, and build an algorithm on those wounded, bleeding needs and wants and push their products onto us in massive quantities. 

It helped to know that our girls were not alone. Those rude conversations, inquiries, comments, thoughts, snips, snide remarks are felt by a plethora of people, and NOT JUST THEM PERSONALLY. What to do when it's not about you, kinda things. As STING, Gordon Sumptner, says in one of his lyrics, "You're Never Alone". Those God moments for the atheists and agnostics around us that Sting attempts to capture and lasso  in through pop culture.   And, I have to thank that hostess-with-the-mostest because very often, mothers need other mothers, women need other women, to model that behavior to our own girls.

On Super Bowl Sunday (which we will NOT partake with 40 million people around the globe this year), I pray for the day(s) when we all reach an understanding that competitionworthy competition, has its place, but Cooperation is what builds, strengthens, maintains, and endows, a healthy, firmly planted, rooted whole-hearted human race. You and I have already started the process through our 'little ways' . So let the Dinner Table Games Begin!

United in Christ's Ways

Saturday, January 24, 2015

Bridges out of Poverty

Individuals leave poverty for one of four reasons: 1) a goal or vision of something they want to be or have; 2) a situation that is so painful that anything would be better than the current situation being lived 3) someone who "sponsors" them, be it an educator, mentor or role model who they truly believe, 'believes in them', who shows them a different way or convinces them that they can live differently; 4) or a special talent or ability that provides an opportunity for them.

I believe that it is actually harder for people NOT living in poverty to grasp these concepts than those folks currently afflicted by their dire circumstances. They realize, at some point, that these are the only avenues available to them. They painfully realize through trial and error what they truly need and what they truly want. But, increasingly, these avenues are more and more shut out to them because those traditional avenues are no longer available to them in a myriad of reasons and ways in our fast moving, dehumanized, corporate, big brother is watching, technology-driven cutthroat culture.


Four Simple Practical Ways Encouraging (Catholic) Christians to Share Their Faith

Everyone needs encouragement: Notice how this really has nothing to do with religion, faith, or spiritually. It has everything to do with us, as human beings:

1) Praying for Those we Know are Far from God;

2) Showing them Christ-like Care & Compassion

3) Initiating Faith-Sharing Conversations;

4) Inviting Them to Join Us at Mass & Parish Events;

My Daybook For Post-Holiday Season

Outside My Window...the world is at a state of heightened alertness. I feel both the tension of the headlines and the lack of energy from others post-holiday, post-stress, pre-sickness of overdoing and overindulging. I feel the winter doldrums and the lack of love and the time being spent by others in all the wrong places. Not me! I'm of the opinion that me and mine celebrated the Advent, Twelve Days of Christmas and Epiphany in just the right measure and in all the life-affirming, life-refreshing, life-enhancing ways. I hope that in the future, I look back with fondness and gratitude and when I am experiencing loss, pain, injustice or ingratitude, I will remember that even if it is 'done to me' I have the 'free will choice' to put the focus right.

I am Thinking....about the Global and World implications for the Paris Terrorist Attacks. I'm thinking about GirlPower (4-Star U.S. Naval Commander is First female, first black-female); always thinking about the next presidential election (US); what the future holds for our daughters (career-wise, heart-wise, mate-wise); the world moves so much faster than I want it to move. There is so much that I want to do and experience. I'm thinking that a human being leaves too much of a carbon footprint.

I am Thankful....Advent Season this year; Hanukkah (particularly, The Hanukkah Project, Christmas Eve (set the tone perfectly); Christmas Day; Feast of the Holy Family; Twelve Days of Christmas; Epiphany;

From the Kitchen.....enjoyed the Christmastide festivities. Learned that our youngest daughters LOVE ham for Christmas. We made homemade pizza a couple of times. Yule Log and Kings Cake to celebrate the birth of baby Jesus and the Three King! But, I need to get some great Winter Menus together. Breakfast casserole was a hit this year. I took a few years off. Still favor natural, healthy food.

Learning at Home....we are starting on another language journey...Monday with French! Musically we are learning lots of things. Owning our responsibilities.

Living the Liturgical Year At Home.....St. Andrew, I learned is the Feast Day that starts off Advent. The closest Sunday to the Feast of St. Stephen is the First Sunday in Advent. We celebrated Gaudette Sunday in a fun, learning way. I implemented the Jesse Tree and O Antiphons Tree. The Hanukkah Project and friends of ours reciprecated with The Twelve Days of Christmas Project. We celebrated taking up the Gifts for the Feast of the Holy Family (10th year for Harvey family) and I have become Vocations Cross Minister for St. Michael's the Archangel 2015. Epiphany Open House for St. Elizabeth's. We celebrated with our Catholic Home Schoolers at Cathedral Christmas and Dinner and St. Ambrose (Beeswax/Beehives/Candles) I also learned this year that the Nine Day Novena originated for one day representing one month for each of the nine months of Mary's Virgin Preganancy. Ordinary Time is well...ordinary! I'll prepare for Lent soon...

Noticing That...I'm calmer, more self-assured and refreshed. Most other people are not. They are stressed and sick from the Holidays and Ramping Up Post-Holidays.

Towards My Personal Self-Care...I've called a trusted friend, of long standing, who used to take H2O Aerobics from me and now is a personal trainer herself. We are going to map out a plan to get fit(ter) in 2015 and shed some of these unwanted pounds. Since I'm over 50 it will be tough; the tough part is that I am comfortable in my own skin now. I don't want to shed these pounds. But, I do like fashion and my old clothes still don't fit (I mentioned this before; if anything it's gotten worse....). I've also mapped out some areas where I squander time and will try to use those minutes for positive exercise. It's also too cold. (I know its an excuse). But, I still don't want to go to my gym and work out with people who overwork out; work out for the wrong reasons; use workouts as an excuse to do more or improve other areas of their lives...etc. I shouldn't let "other people drive me away" but there it 'tis. I'm on it. At least working on it and identifying it and calling it out for what it is. My mental health is great though. Particularly for a woman over -50+ who usually is in mid-life crisis. I have so many, many great, good powerful things working in my life, especially Our Lord, Blessed Mother, Jesus Christ, my husband, our three daughters and lots of really virtuous, character-driven non-strategic, superficial friends!

I am Creating.....my book and now, a screenplay. The book has been renamed, No Algorithm on the Human Heart; screenplay of the same title. And, even better this time, the screenplay at least is...wait for it...Optioned. I just need to get it, "Operational" It is a multilayered account of our modern-day culture with the global themes of a middle-aged, fifty-something (read: baby boomer born in the middle of the last century) career woman, business-woman who worked on Wall Street, Passionately Artistic (theatre, films, art, books, music, symphony) and creative; a world-traveler who has moved to Suburbia in Virginia, married a Filipino and raises up three daughters in our technology-driven, fast-paced, retail, institutionalized GLOBAL culture and what happens to the feelings experienced of herself, her daughters (each one different), her husband, their marriage, and the swirl of their society (and in many ways, the society's "Death" when she elects to simplify and home school her family and continue with the Back-to-Basics philosophy of life) when she is the last surviving female family member of breast cancer in 2009 to present day. More a reflection of our modern times and not just the woman or the family itself.

I am Watching.....Nelson Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom; Into The Woods: Downtown Abbey: Season Five; 

I am Praying.....for our world, in light of the Paris Terrorist attacks that could have been avoided (see previous post on Jews in Paris, July, 2013); the tenth anniversary of the Bryan, Kathryn, Stella and Ruby Harvey Family (RVA's first well-known home invasion that ended in the death of an average family); Governor & Maureen McDonnell and family; my 'church' friend, Kathleen, who was a juror. Special Prayers for the health, prosperity and safety of our family and that of my in-laws, my husband's parents, Leonardo San Miguel & Marietta Quesea Dulog who will celebrate 50 years of marriage on June 26, 2015 and 80 years of birthdays on July 3 (Leo), 2015. We pray we are delightfully together to celebrate and beyond.

I am Wearing.....my new black boots that my husband bought me for Christmas! They go with everything I wear (right now...) and they are warm and comfortable this winter. What more could a girl want in a wardrobe.

I am Reading....The Thorn Birds by Colleen McCullogh (reread) and Falling Up by Richard Rohr. Hope to reread, A Woman Of Substance by Barbara  a true favorite.

I am Listening....to The Thirsty Catholic. A new-to-me rock group from the Pacific Northwest. The Lead Singer and Guitarist, Dave Ortleander, stopped by our Parish to have a concert on his way home. Our girls love to hum one of his Title Tracks: "Come Hold My Son!". Not Your Typical Catholic Music or Rock Group, for that matter. I love The Thirsty Catholic's take on "Hail Holy Queen" (Salve Regina!). It makes my parochial Catholic School Girl Days very, very tame, even for Billy Joel, I imagine!

Around the House....is a mess and I'm grateful to Father Dan for both saying and printing in our bulletin, The Defender, that a happy family is a holy mess after Christmas Season. Find Joy in that!

My Plans for 2015 January 

My Plans for the Rest of the Week.....enjoy my children and spouse. Enjoy Forbidden: The Emperor & Empress of China. Enjoy Legend of the Poinsettia. Love the Message and the Eucharist from our Catholic church. Enjoy Luci's Violin Recital. Enjoy The Golden Globes with popcorn, Sangria and my family.


My Plans for Next Week....my sister turns fifty on Sunday, 11 January 2015. It's also my granmother's celebration of life birthday. Work on my house. Work on my workout. Workout on my menus. Teach French. Teach well. Find Joy. Have my students (3 daughters) love French and love me teaching them. Work on Share-the-Fun and my Celtic Project for 4-H in March. Sing.


Headlines this Week...Governor McDonnell is sentenced by Judge Spencer for two years of jail; two years of Probation and is required to start to serve his sentence on February 9, 2015 at a Petersburg prison (Haiti Mission was denied). His legal team will appeal. Paris, France in lockdown after an 8 am shooting at Charlie Hebdo Headquarters (satirical magazine that abuses everyone business) kills 12 people by Muslim extremists. Michael & Shannon Pirron and I have been discussing the anti-Semitic behaviors all summer. This is no surprise to us. The surprise is that others are shocked (and numbed) and that they had no idea this all could have been, should have been avoided.  Golden Globes come up this Sunday, 11 January 2015 and I expect Tina Fey and Amy Poehler to 'bring it' in a fair, just way on the Freedom of Speech (because of Paris). Mitt Romney may run for President; Boston, MA is in the running for the 2024 Summer Olympics. North Korea still on the 'list' for The Interview.





SUPERBOWL XLIX or I'm Older than the SuperBowl; Hubby is Younger Than the SuperBowl

 Ever since Nixon's Resignation at the end of that fateful Summer in the mid-1970s, anything associated with dishonesty or discrepancy or 'cheating' ends with -GATE, from the infamous WaterGate Scandal. Our children continue to ask us, "What is WaterGate? What are ;they' talking about?" It's so much more, isn't it? It was certainly the end of my childhood innocence, that summer, in more ways than many. It continues to define not only my childhood, but I think to a great extend, the end of the United States of America's infancy, maybe even, it's own childhood, not as a country, but as the emergence of a Super Power at the close of WWII (does that also mean that just as I cross the line from middle age to the Great Second Act, that our country, America, enters her Second Act. Because Lady Liberty has certainly had some growing pains, even menopause, if you will. 

But, that's not all. With the emergence this week of "DeflatGate" and ten days 'till SuperBowl Touchdowns, I reflect on what American-style football used to be. And, those reflections can be summed up: It Ain't....

It's hard for me to believe that I'm OLDER than the SuperBowl, the NFL Phenomenon that has become an institutionalized machine. A monster that this year showed, it's out-of-control. I didn't want to watch it last year; I REFUSE to watch it, support it or condone it this year. It is quite possibly the worst day of my year, all things being equal. It represents everything that is wrong with our culture and yet, even those wonderful homo sapiens that have fond memories of what American-style football used to be, must be reeling after this weekend. It is not just it's own industry; it is it's own nightmare. And, shows no signs of stopping. 

I was looking at photographs, pics taken by former NFL photographers, the select few that have made it to each and every SuperBowl, (I think it's three old men. Of course, it would be men) affectionately termed, "Keepers of the Streak" I, myself, vaguely remember meeting Joe Namath in Miami (New York Jets) when our family was on the beach during one especially snowy (by European standards) winter break to Florida to visit the grandparents in West Palm Beach. It had to be late January and we were on the empty skyline of Miami Beach. There was very little urban sprawl, if any, back then and it seemed to me that all the hotels, were really, motels, concepts still leftover from the drive-in motel with a pool overlooking the Atlantic Beach. I remember this, because I could not understand in my youth, why all these women, even housewives, not just the Bunnies, but especially  THE MEN, could be so interested in such a HAIRY man in madras beach trunks (thank God, for me: I don't think Speedo togs for men had been invented...yet. At least, I hadn't seen them on the European beaches, France, Monte Carlo, St. Moritz or St. Tropez!). I couldn't fathom why anyone would be so interested in this dark, (did I mention, he was really...HAIRY!) man enough to ask for his autograph or photograph with him (this was before the Selfie...way before).

After that, I remember football. The innocence of the game. The salaries probably weren't...HUGE. The armour wasn''t Gladiator-like, quite. One could still identify their player without memorizing their Jersey number. Games were still in the daytime. That's a thing that I miss. It was truly....dare I say it....outdoors; if not in nature, then at least one could see the changing colors of the sky! It was still human, or elements of humanity. It was not in a SUPERDOME yet, under artifical light or artifical turf. Games had not moved to the evening. It wasn't the machine it has become. 

Another thing that I've noticed is that the Super Bowl almost builds a demarcation line between generations of homo sapiens: before the Super Bowl and after the Super Bowl. There is, to my unprofessional mind's eye, a clear line of ethics between those individual's born before the Super Bowl and those born after the Super Bowl started. My husband being one of the few exceptions and probably because as a military brat, and a naturalized American citizen, that has something to do with it. 

But, serio. It has become something altogether than what it used to be. And, those that have grownup on the Scrimmage Line know what I am talking about. The Good Old Days are Gone. For Good it would seem after this week. In recent years, since OJ captivated us in the 1990s at his Trial of the Century, the NFL has consistently gone South, Down Hill, and Down at the Heels from head injuries and traumas, to player retirements in poverty and even worse, player's bad behavior to esculating drug and alcohol abuse, domestic violence and child abuse. But, this past year, 2014, it pushed past the Line of Scrimmage and Off the Field, Off the Front Pages and onto elevator cameras, cell phones, computers and selfies. Everybody knows about NFL politics (or lack thereof) disclosures, coverups, discrepancies and player bad behaviors. It would seem they can't do anything right anymore. No wonder Tim Tebow has left the game for good. I'm sure he's thinking he Did The Right Thing, no matter what really happened. It doesn't even matter anymore if players are bullying players or the NFL and Football Teams accept and tolerate homosexual team mates. It can't get any lower or can it?

I just don't want to know. I'm done. Take the proverbial fork out. The NFL and the Super Bowl and the Whole Institution smacks of the heights of Materialism, Consumerism, the consumers are literally being Consumed. Trouble is, the Couch Potatoes are so obese with comforts they can't even roll away from their television sets, excuse HD screens. The monolith. The beast. The unwieldy institution that it is today. It was before OJ Simpson, or at least the only thing he was running away from was the parking lot to catch his plane, leaping through airline gates after he'd had his own OJ. Life and times were simpler then. People were honest. People were homo sapiens. People were still...people. Like I said, the only gate we talked about was, "Did you see the funny commercial with OJ trying to make his connection by jumping through the Gate". I don't know how the NFL and the Network Powers that Be will make a connection the First Sunday in February, but my goodness, I PRAY it will be back to the Human Connection. Beam me up, Scottie, there, truly seems to be no intelligent life here after all...