Open Letter to Graduating High School Seniors
I’ve spent the last 4 years as a catechist to high school seniors. Before that I spent 4 years with confirmation classes and middle school students, but focusing on sending students out to college and beyond high school has been some of my most fruitful experiences. I would like to...
22
May
2013
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Mary’s “Lectio on Life”
In her Magnificat (Luke 1:46-55), Mary says, “He has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty.” That line used to bother me. It sounds mean. I have often asked Our Lady what she meant by it exactly. I love the way she answered. Some years...
22
May
2013
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Dominican Sisters and The American Bible Challenge
As you might be aware of the Dominican Sisters of Mary have been contestants on this season’s “The American Bible Challenge” and will be appearing in the final at 9 p.m. ET/8 p.m. CT Thursday, May 23 on The Game Show Network. We had the opportunity to ask Sr. Maria Suso some questions about...
20
May
2013
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Fighting for LIFE on Facebook
We’re touted as the pro-life generation. I have no doubt of that, but how are we still losing to a popular culture of death? Let me give you some background information. I attended a Christian university in Texas with deep roots to Baptist traditions. Last week, I was on Facebook...
20
May
2013
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Faith is Love in Action
Praise the Lord, I’ve survived yet another year of college! It wasn’t pretty. There was a lot of caffeine and a lot of hair pulling and a lot of wanting to drop out of school, but by the grace of God I survived. Unfortunately, this means that I am getting...
18
May
2013
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Two Guys a Girl and a Catholic Podcast Episode 95: Revolution in Austin
Episode 95 Feedback: From The Bartlett Here is a possible topic to discuss. Competition – is it a virtue or a vice? If Jesus lead a sports league, would all the kids get trophies? What about in the free market, many demonize the free market and a key catalyst in...
17
May
2013
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The Continued Misadventures of a Catholic Politcal Advocate
Today I got another lesson in political advocacy. You might recall- Wanted Concerned Catholic Voters Mr Henrichson Went to the Capitol About a month ago I was blessed with the opportunity to represent my fellow Catholics in front of the staff of Eddie Rodriguez. You may also recall that, that...
17
May
2013
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The Best Me
Last week marked the premature end of an all-too-short era in the Williston house when, after a remarkable temper tantrum by my son, Lincoln, we decided to sell the Wii and Xbox on Craigslist. It all started, as most family crises do, with a father/son matchup in Mario Super Sluggers,...
16
May
2013
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Confession and Pentecost; Grace and Power
Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and do not rely on your own insight. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths. -Proverbs 3:5-6 This verse is not like Confession; this verse is Confession. Four things happen. I entrust myself to God...
15
May
2013
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Ten Beautiful Books For Summer Reading {for all ages}
This isn’t a list of THE ten books you should read, but just ten of the thousands of books you should read. I do not dare suggest that I know everything about literature. But I do know that: 1. My life has been changed by the books I’ve read 2....
15
May
2013
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Meditations on Mama Mary (Review: “The World’s First Love”)
Oh, May: the month of flowers, of the fullness of spring, of mothers, and especially of the Blessed Mother, Mary, the Mother of God. I must confess that I didn’t quite realize the convergence of these annual symbols when I selected my next book for this column; the Holy Spirit...
14
May
2013
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Growth in Sober Consideration
“As high as the heavens are above the earth, so high are my ways above your ways and my thoughts are above your thoughts.” (Isaiah 55:9) There often seems to be a subliminal attitude, which originates in Protestant circles but pervades many Catholic parishes. Because Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection have...
14
May
2013
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You know that moment when you realize that you’re wrong? You’re looking at someone, or maybe you’re by yourself in the car or at work, and it hits you: you messed up. You made a mistake. You did or didn’t do something, and as a consequence, you’ve hurt someone else. As the reality hits you, your stomach twists, and if you verbalize all of your internal experiences like I do, perhaps you even say, “Oh no… Oh man oh man oh man.” Or something of the like. It’s a painful moment, one that I’m not particularly fond of finding myself in. Fortunately (or unfortunately), I tend to avoid conflict pretty readily, so I’d like to say I don’t find myself in this situation often, but when I do, oh boy does it hurt.
Image courtesy of Stuart Miles / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
I rediscovered recently that these scenarios are worsened when the situation involves your significant other. Nothing fills me with dread quicker than realizing that not only have I screwed up, but now I have to make amends with someone I’m trying to impress and love. In order to make amends, I have to first get over myself. You know that whole die-to-yourself thing? Yeah, I have to do that. Fun stuff, really.
And it’s not a pretty process either. It looks something like this: I shut down, either fuming or confused, and stop talking. This is generally a red flag for those people who know me, since they know that I talk in a pretty steady stream. Despite my loquaciousness, I tend to be an internalizer (thanks psychology for another made-up word), and can’t process things out loud, including pride. Again, this translates to me looking pensive at best, and at worst? Like a sulking, angsty-emo teenager. I sulk this way until my frontal lobe can quiet the irrational emotions – unrighteous anger, injured pride, pouting silliness – and I accept my faults with a heavy sigh. Then with what seems like a herculean effort, I apologize and ask for forgiveness.
Oh, the agony…
Though I’ve gone through this process frequently since I was actually a sulking, angsty-emo teenager, I had not re-experienced it in quite some time. Since there was such a lapse of time between inner ego battles, I had fooled myself into thinking that perhaps my ego had shrunken, or even withered away completely. I was on my way to sainthood! Alas, that is not the case, as evidenced by a recent argument I found myself stuck in.
It happened like this: my boyfriend and I were having a discussion, he said something that made me angry, and I immediately fell into my default ego mode – defenses up, internal processing turned on full throttle. Since this happened on the way to a social event, I had no where to fume privately. I had to swallow my pride and put on a happy face until our fight could be resumed. By the time our fight resumed I realized that his concern was valid, and I was in the wrong. I made a mistake and – gasp! – needed to apologize.
It took what felt like an eternity to speak across the quiet room, to finally say the words that put my pride to rest: “I’m sorry.”
Let me tell you, that was the last thing I wanted to say in that in that moment! I wanted to be right. I wanted to be held, I wanted to be happy and coddled. But that’s not what our relationship needed. That’s not what was fair. I had to die to my need to be right. I had to die to my need to feel comfortable. I had to die to myself so that I could get out of my own way and love the person in front of me.
Image courtesy of bigjom / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Dying to self is not pretty thing. It’s not easy or fun or something I like to list as a “hobby”. But what my stubborn self is slowly learning is that dying to self is the way to true love, the love that God is calling us to every day. True love is mutual self-giving, denying the self for the good of the other, with the hope that they will do the same and our needs will be fulfilled. How can we do this if we get in our own way? How can we serve if we’re thinking of ourselves first? Love is given freely, without expectation, without ego saying, “Hey, what about me?”
Now don’t get me wrong – there’s a difference between dying to self and not taking care of yourself. It’s healthy and normal to practice self-care, to nourish the bodily vessels that God has given us (“Do you not know that your bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God?” 1 Cor. 6:19). It is good to have appropriate boundaries in relationships, that allow us to stay healthy and capable of doing God’s work. Having needs and desires is not bad; being controlled by them to the extent that we are blind to the other is bad. When our wants and desires become so big we can’t see around them to serve in the way we are called, that’s when ego needs to be shut down. We can’t let ourselves get in the way of our true calling.
It’s a truth that I still have much to learn about, and that I need much more practice in. I have committed to both because deep down, underneath my vanity and pride, I do want to truly love those around me. And if history is anything to go by, my battle with ego is going to be an ongoing one. Good thing I don’t have to go it alone.
“I can do all this through him who gives me strength.”
Philippians 4:13










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