Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Wonders Never Cease

The Twenty-ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time was anything but ordinary at our chapel last Sunday morning. Mass was celebrated by our recently arrived parochial vicar, formerly pastor of a downtown parish and spiritual director of American seminarians in  Rome. His sermons are always interesting, doctrinal, edifying, and often quite amusing. This Sunday's was no exception, and even included an anecdote about the Lutheran exegete (and pupil of Bultmann) Ernst Käsemann, under whom our priest had studied. Good enough, but the best was yet to be.

The final "hymn" was "The City of God," which I dislike for both its sappy music and its even sappier theology. As I ground my teeth, I noticed that Father had remained at the entrance to the sanctuary, facing the congregation. What's going on? I wondered. Is he staying there so we won't leave before the song is over? Did he forgot to make an announcement?

When the hymn was over, Father interrupted the postlude to tell us that we were all Pelagians; "Let us build the city of God," the song had us exhorting one another; we'd do it all ourselves. After a brief explanation of Pelagianism and the observation that St. Augustine must be rolling over in his grave, Father took up his station at the chapel entrance, and we all filed out. I was flabbergasted—and overjoyed.

I hope Father continues to comment on the musical fare. If he needs some examples, I've got a little list . . . 

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

The Transitus

In all things
he wished to be conformed to Christ crucified,
who hung on the cross
poor, suffering and naked.
Therefore at the beginning of his conversion,
he stood naked before his bishop,
and at the end of his life,
naked he wished to go out of this world.
He enjoined the friars assisting him,
under obedience and charity,
that when they saw that he was dead,
they should allow
his body to lie naked on the ground
for the length of time
it takes to walk a leisurely mile.
O, he was truly the most Christian of men,
and strove to conform himself to Christ
and to imitate him perfectly—
while living to imitate Christ living,
and after death to imitate Christ dying,
and after death to imitate Christ after death
and he merited to be honored
with the imprint of Christ's likeness!
—St. Bonaventure, The Life of St. Francis (Legenda maior)
translated by Ewert Cousins in Bonaventure, Paulist Press,
1979

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

October 1: St. Therese of the the Child Jesus and the Holy Face

I know, I know, I'm a day late. I should really head this post "Yesterday's Saint." Now, it's certainly true that I'm lazy, but I really, truly, tried to post this yesterday. The trouble is, though my  regard, and even devotion, to St. Thérèse has grown  over the years, it's been a struggle.

The "Little Flower"—even her nickname was off-putting. The talk of spiritual childhood, the simpering, too-perfect-for-words little girl in the Catholic Treasure Box stories I read to the kids, the saccharine holy cards and statues, all that devotional froufrou repelled me. Little did I know.

Two things changed that. The first was reading about the "trial of faith" that Thérèse underwent amid the protracted,  intense physical suffering of her last illness. She lost her certainty of the goodness of God, of the value of her religious vocation, of the reality of heaven; she was haunted by the thought that, awaiting her on the other side of death was, not the God whom she loved with all her being, but—nothing. In place of a veil, there was now a wall between Thérèse and the heaven she had longed for. As with another Thérèse, Mother Teresa of Calcutta, she learned to persevere in the works of faith even when that faith seemed to have deserted her. There was nothing simpering or childish here.

The second happened in 1999, when the relics of St.Thérèse visited New York. I joined a group of pilgrims for an hour of prayer, late in the night, at St. Patrick's Cathedral. In the silence, I realized that Thérèse's "Little Way" was not childish at all. And it wasn't the froufrou that had made her, by orders of magnitude the most beloved saint of modern times. After walking down the aisle to kiss the small casket of relics in the cathedral crossing, I received a postcard-sized prayer card with a photograph of saint to take home with me. The face that looked out at me from that photo had nothing sentimental or sacherrine about it; there was nothing at all simpering about those eyes.

St. Thérèse of the Child Jesus and the Holy Face, help me never to confuse simplicity with naïveté and to persevere no matter how deep the darkness.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

September 30: St. Jerome

Today being a Sunday (the twenty-sixth in Ordinary Time), the memorial of St. Jerome is omitted this year, which is a shame. I have a devotion to St. Jerome, even though he's the father Protestants tend to trot out when they're trying to deny the difference between bishops and priests or disparage the Septuagint canon.

He was a holy monk, an accomplished Hebraist and translator, a revered spiritual guide and collector of traditions, a great defender of the perpetual virginity of our Lady, and the possessor of a bad temper and a vitriolic tongue, which I find comforting now and again. But lately, and especially in this wretched election year, it is his lament for the Roman Empire that comes to my mind:
Oh wretched Empire! Mayence, formerly so noble a city, has been taken and ruined, and in the church many thousands of men have been massacred. Worms has been destroyed after a long siege. Rheims, that powerful city, Amiens, Arras, Speyer, Strasburg—all have seen their citizens led away captive into Germany. Aquitaine and the provinces of Lyons and Narbonne, all save a few towns, have been depopulated; and these the sword threatens without, while hunger ravages within.
   I cannot speak without tears of Toulouse, which the merits of the holy Bishop Exuperius have prevailed so far to save from destruction. Spain, even, is in daily terror lest it perish, remembering the invasion of the Cimbri; and whatsoever the other provinces have suffered once, they continue to suffer in their fear.
    I will keep silence concerning the rest, lest I seem to despair of the mercy of God. For a long time, from the Black Sea to the Julian Alps, those things which are ours have not been ours; and for thirty years, since the Danube boundary was broken, war has been waged in the very midst of the Roman Empire. Our tears are dried by old age. Except a few old men, all were born in captivity and siege, and do not desire the liberty they never knew.
    Who could believe this? How could the whole tale be worthily told? How Rome has fought within her own bosom not for glory, but for preservation—nay, how she has not even fought, but with gold and all her precious things has ransomed her life...
    Who could believe that Rome, built upon the conquest of the whole world, would fall to the ground? That the mother herself would become the tomb of her peoples? That all the regions of the East, of Africa and Egypt, once ruled by the queenly city, would be filled with troops of slaves and handmaidens? That to-day holy Bethlehem should shelter men and women of noble birth, who once abounded in wealth and are now beggars?    "The Fall of Rome" EyeWitness to History, www.eyewitnesstohistory.com (2007).

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Back at It

My, time does fly, whether you're having fun or not.

No excuses. But let's give it another try.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

The Spectre of a Rose

It's a rainy Tuesday here in upper Manhattan as Yours Truly awakes from his dogmatic slumbers to put fingers to keyboard once again. As usual, there's a lot of bile and only a smidgeon of edification waiting to burst into digital obscurity. But first . . .




May 15, 1993, was a Saturday—a warm, sunny, mid-spring Saturday, a perfect day for a wedding. A bald, bearded, and very anxious man in his mid-forties, neither affluent nor prepossessing, dressed for the first time in his life in a morning coat, stood before the altar of a Brooklyn church. Next to him stood a young woman in a white wedding dress that had been her mother's. After exchanging vows and rings—hers had been his mother's—kneeling for blessings and for the Blessed Sacrament, the two of them turned and walked up the aisle hand in hand, into a modest but loving reception and then into a future that turned out to be very different from the one he, at least, had been able to imagine

But for that man, at least, now balder, still bearded and anxious, less prepossessing and even further from affluent, that day and all that followed from it—five children, days and nights of laughter and of tears, of caresses and of coldness, of fleeting dreams and persistent nightmares—has shown him the richness of the house of God.

And for the woman, who has borne the consequences of his fecklessness and bad judgments, saddled with making up for his shortcomings as a husband and a father, how does she remember that nineteen-years-ago day?

The devotees of Madame Blavatsky sought to evoke the spectre of a rose from its ashes. I am no magician; I can only pray that even now, somewhere there is a bud that, with time and nourishment and love, can burst into blossom again.

Happy anniversary, Julia.


Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Saint of the Day: John Bosco, Priest

I guess this is really the Saint of the Afternoon or Evening. Sorry.

Today the Roman calendar commemorates St. John Bosco, founder of the Salesian order, whose apostolate was the care and education of boys who were orphaned, abandoned, or trapped in poverty.
He was born in 1815 and died on this date in 1888. His ministry, like that of the Protestant George Mueller (see here) was marked by miracles of provision, and his dreams were believed by many to be prophetic. A life of St. John Bosco may be found here.





 From the Roman Missal, 3rd edition

O God, who raised up the Priest Saint John Bosco
as a father and teacher of the young,
grant, we pray,
that, aflame with the same fire of love,
we may seek out souls and serve you alone.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Saint of the Day, Ecumenical Edition: Charles I, King and Martyr

Today marks the 363rd anniversary of the beheading of King Charles I (1600–1649). In my Anglican days, I formed a great devotion to the Royal Martyr. I remember vividly attending a showing of the film Cromwell in a Times Square theater with a group of friends, booing the title character and applauding when the King, played by the incomparable Alec Guinness, made an appearance. That devotion has continued, though more informally, since I returned to Catholic unity. It is only to be hoped that this devotion will be permitted to the Anglican ordinariates established by the Holy Father. In honor of the day, I offer a florilegium to his memory.


It is all I have now left me, a power to forgive those that have deprived me of all; and thank God have a heart to do it, and joy as much in this grace, which God hath given me, as in all my former enjoyments; for this is a greater argument of God’s love to me than any prosperity can be. Be confident (as I am) that the most of all sides, who have done amiss, have done so, not out of malice, but misinformation, or misapprehension of things.
. . .
Farewell, till we meet, if not on earth, yet in Heaven.
—From the last letter of King Charles to his son


                                                                                        
  He nothing common did or mean
Upon that memorable scene;
      But with his keener eye
      The axe’s edge did try:
Nor called the gods, with vulgar spite,
To vindicate his helpless right;
      But bowed his comely head
      Down, as upon a bed.
                                     —Andrew Marvell




 O Lord, we offer unto thee all praise and thanks for the glory of Thy grace that shined forth in thine anointed servant Charles; and we beseech Thee to give us all grace, by a careful studious imitation of this Thy blessed Saint and Martyr, that we may be made worthy to receive benefit by his prayers, which he, in communion with the Church Catholic, offers up unto Thee, through Thy Son, our Blessed Saviour Jesus Christ.
                            —Brian Duppa, Bishop of Salisbury and Winchester

Saturday, January 28, 2012

Saint of the Day: Thomas Aquinas, Priest and Doctor

I had the good fortune during my college days to have been taught logic, anthropology, and metaphysics (in a public university) by a genuine Thomist—an old-fashioned, twenty-four-Thomistic-theses Thomist.  If, over the years, I have strayed from the Thomist path in this or that particular, my love of the Angelic Doctor (the Common Doctor of the church) remains. If I have chosen his fellow-mendicant as my alter ego, it is more because of what moves my heart than what moves my mind.

Indeed, it's the mystic Thomas, the Thomas of the Corpus Christi liturgy, the Thomas who put down his pen before finishing his second Summa to whom I am most attracted.




In his general audience talk on June 2, 2010, Pope Benedict XVI said:
The last months of Thomas' earthly life remain surrounded by a particular, I would say, mysterious atmosphere. In December 1273, he summoned his friend and secretary Reginald to inform him of his decision to discontinue all work because he had realized, during the celebration of Mass subsequent to a supernatural revelation, that everything he had written until then "was worthless". This is a mysterious episode that helps us to understand not only Thomas' personal humility, but also the fact that, however lofty and pure it may be, all we manage to think and say about the faith is infinitely exceeded by God's greatness and beauty which will be fully revealed to us in Heaven.

From the second lesson at the Office of Readings for today, a conference by St. Thomas:
Why did the Son of God have to suffer for us? There was a great need, and it can be considered in a twofold way: in the first place, as a remedy for sin, and secondly, as an example of how to act.
It is a remedy, for, in the face of all the evils which we incur on account of our sins, we have found relief through the passion of Christ. Yet, it is no less an example, for the passion of Christ completely suffices to fashion our lives. Whoever wishes to live perfectly should do nothing but disdain what Christ disdained on the cross and desire what he desired, for the cross exemplifies every virtue.
 From the Roman Missal, 3rd edition:
 O God, who made Saint Thomas Aquinas
outstanding in his zeal for holiness
and his study of sacred doctrine,
grant us, we pray,
that we may understand what he taught
and imitate what he accomplished.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.







Friday, January 27, 2012

Saint of the Day: Angela Merici, Virgin



St. Angela's birth date is traditionally given as March 21, 1474. Today is the anniversary of her death in 1540. She is remembered mostly as the founder of the Ursulines, the first order of religious women devoted to teaching. Her body, clothed in the habit of the Third Order of St. Francis, reposed in the Church of St. Afra in Brescia, which was completely destroyed by Allied bombing during the Second World War. The statue pictured above is in St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.

From the Roman Missal, 3rd edition:
May the Virgin Saint Angela never fail to commend us
to your compassion, O Lord, we pray,
that, following the lessons of her charity and prudence,
we may hold fast to your teaching
and express it in what we do.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Saints of the Day—Timothy and Titus

All most of us (me, certainly) know about Sts. Timothy and Titus is that they were disciples of St. Paul and the addressees of three letters, two to Timothy and one to Titus. These Pastoral Epistles, as they are called, witness to the development of the church and its ministries. I'm afraid I can't say anything very profound about them, though First Timothy 2:4 does tell us that God "desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth." I take comfort in that when the specters of hyper-Augustinianism and Calvinism flit around my brain. (I do read a fair number of Reformed blogs.)


From the Roman Missal, 3rd edition:
O God, who adorned Saints Timothy and Titus
with apostolic virtues,
grant, through the intercession of them both,
that, living justly and devoutly in this present age,
we may merit to reach our heavenly homeland.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.


Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Feast of the Day—The Conversion of St. Paul the Apostle

What can I say about St. Paul? In the bookcase on my left as I write this are more than a dozen books devoted exclusively to the Apostle to the Gentiles, and that's probably only a tenth of a tenth of a tenth of a tithe of of the books that have been written about him (the WorldCat lists 14,124). He's one of my principal patrons (Paul is my middle name), and as a convert myself, I'm particularly drawn to this feast.

My conversion was nothing like St. Paul's: no horse, no vision, no monitory blindness, no sudden 180-degree change; Forty-two years out of the font, it seems like I'm not very far down the road, and sometimes I'm not too sure in what direction I'm walking.

The second lesson for the Office of Readings (what used to be Matins) for today is from a sermon by St. John Chrysostom. Here is an excerpt:
The most important thing of all to him, however, was that he knew himself to be loved by Christ. Enjoying this love, he considered himself happier than anyone else; friend of principalities and powers. He preferred to be thus loved and be the least of all, or even to be among the damned, than to be without that love and be among the great and honored.
To be separated from that love was, in his eyes, the greatest and most extraordinary of torments; the pain of that loss would alone have been hell, and endless, unbearable torture.
I'm still trying to learn how to love Christ, and I'm still trying to know, in my heart as well as my head, that he loves me.

From the Roman Missal, 3rd edtion:
O God, who taught the whole world
through the preaching of the blessed Apostle Paul,
draw us, we pray, nearer to you
through the example of him whose conversion we celebrate today,
and so make us witnesses to your truth in the world.
Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,
who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, for ever and ever.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Saint of the Day—St. Francis de Sales, Bishop and Doctor

My personal associations with St. Francis de Sales are few. Though his Introduction to the Devout Life had a certain vogue among Anglicans, I have never been attracted by its piety, which seems to assume one has the lifestyle and the leisure of a (female) member of the sixteenth-century French nobility. I must admit to having an unread copy of his Treatise on the Love of God on my bookshelf. (Since he is a doctor of the church, I suppose I ought to be more responsive). But I have long admired his evangelistic efforts as Provost and then Bishop of Geneva (in exile). And one day, while I was browsing in the late lamented bookshop at St. Francis of Assisi on Thirty-second Street, the lady behind the counter told me I looked like our saint, pointing me to the picture on the cover of a volume of his Lenten sermons. In so far as we were both bald and bearded, there was a resemblance.

The old Catholic Encyclopedia says of St. Francis's ministry among the Genevans:
From the time of the Reformation the seat of the Bishopric of Geneva had been fixed at Annecy. There with apostolic zeal, the new provost devoted himself to preaching, hearing confessions, and the other work of his ministry. In the following year (1594) he volunteered to evangelize Le Chablais, where the Genevans had imposed the Reformed Faith, and which had just been restored to the Duchy of Savoy. He made his headquarters in the fortress of Allinges. Risking his life, he journeyed through the entire district, preaching constantly; by dint of zeal, learning, kindness and holiness he at last obtained a hearing. He then settled in Thonon, the chief town. He confuted the preachers sent by Geneva to oppose him; he converted the syndic and several prominent Calvinists. At the request of the pope, Clement VIII, he went to Geneva to interview Theodore Beza, who was called the Patriarch of the Reformation. The latter received him kindly and seemed for a while shaken, but had not the courage to take the final steps. A large part of the inhabitants of Le Chablais returned to the true fold (1597 and 1598). Claude de Granier then chose Francis as his coadjutor, in spite of his refusal, and sent him to Rome (1599).
I am a bit skeptical about Beza's near-conversion, however.

Because of his pamphleteering, he is the patron of writers and journalists (not of editors, though that saint was a Salesian, St. John Bosco), and therefore one of mine. Because he taught the faith to a deaf man through sign language, he is also patron of the deaf.

From the Roman Missal, 3rd Edition:

O God, who for the salvation of souls

willed that the Bishop Saint Francis de Sales

become all things to all,

graciously grant that, following his example,

we may always display the gentleness of your charity

in the service of our neighbor.

Through our Lord Jesus Christ, your Son,

who lives and reigns with you in the unity of the Holy Spirit,

one God, for ever and ever.







Sunday, January 15, 2012

Spleen—Ecclesiastical, More Music Edition

For Part 1 of this series, see below.

After last week's post, I thought I was done venting about church music, but I was wrong. So here I am, bile ducts aquiver, ready to fulminate again.

4. Stuff That In Your Peace Pipe and Smoke It. Today at church we turned from the Christmas/Epiphany repertory back to the usual stuff; you know, the stuff that hardly makes it to mediocre. Here's the lineup:

  1. Entrance "hymn": "Gather Us In"
  2. Offertory: "At the Table of the World"
  3. Communion: So lame I can't remember which, but I think one of them was by David Haas. 'Nough said.
  4. Parade to the door: "They'll Know We Are Christians by Our Love"
So after working up the "courage to enter the song," we ask the Holy Spirit, "hurricane and breath," to "take us on a journey of love." I can't say that hurricanes have much sacred resonance for me; the journeys they usually take folks on are often detrimental to their health. And anyway, going on a "journey of love" is about as meaningful as entering "the song."

But, as is so often the case, the best (or in this case the worst) was saved for last: the incomparable "They'll Know We Are Christians by Our Love". The passage of time has not dimmed the luster of this 44-year-old classic. I remember commiserating with a friend (now a priest) about the horrors of this one back in the day, when it was fresh from the composer's pen. I think of it as "The Tom-Tom Song." It is the sort of thing that used to be sung in those Hollywood horse operas so unfair to native Americans. Remember them gathering around the fire, tomahawks in hand, and dancing with up-and-down arm motions to the beat of the drums? Its relentless rhythms, its breathtakingly banal lyrics and its rather smug self-satisfaction (after all, it's all about us, isn't it?) make it a strong contender for Bonaventura's Worst Liturgical Song Award.

Some Sunday, when I haven't taken my meds, I'll bring a headdress and a rubber tomahawk to church, just in case. And if and when the organ introduces The Tom-Tom Song, I'll be ready.

To be continued, but not, I hope about music. . . . 



Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Spleen—Ecclesiastical, Music Edition

I've been meaning to write this post for quite a while. Almost every Sunday afternoon I come back from the 11:00 am mass in, at the best, a mood of resigned unhappiness and, at the worst, a simmering rage. Many's the time I've vowed never again to darken the door of the local chapel-of-ease where we usually go on Sunday mornings. So far, I've thought better of it. The congregation is made up (mostly) of people from our neighborhood, and it's good to be able to greet people on the sidewalk or in the subway with whom you've worshiped on Sunday; the kids are used to it, and besides, it's impractical to schlep them around town on Sunday morning (been there, done that); and we usually aren't scandalized by what we hear from the clergy. This Sunday, though, was different. I won't go into much detail because (1) I don't want to embarrass anyone, and (2) I'm not sure I entirely followed what was being said. But suffice it to say that Father's take on the mystery (or, to use his word, "legend") of the Epiphany was somewhat out of the ordinary.

So, in order to purge my choler, I'm presenting an omnium-gatherum of the things that have grated on me through the years. I'll start today with music. Here are my first three rocks of stumbling. I know many others have been bothered by these or similar things for years, but, hey, it's my blog and I'll whine if I want to.

1. Sing along with Ms. Mitch. Complaining about Catholic church music goes back a long way. I'd hoped that Thomas Day's Why Catholics Can't Sing, twenty years old this year, would make a difference, but in these parts, at least, things haven't changed. A cantrix looks out meaningfully over the congregation, tells us that the melody of the psalm refrain isn't the one in the book (often with an unnecessary explanation) and goes on to warble a tune that makes Milton Babbitt sound like Gounod. She instructs us (twice) on where to find the hymn (or "worship song"), and which two out of five verses we're going to sing. (Why do Catholics assume that only as much of a hymn should be sung as is necessary to get the priest to and from the altar? Aren't we singing to worship God?) I reached my limit last Sunday when her instruction on singing the acclamation broke through the midst of the Eucharistic Prayer, taking with it whatever recollection I'd managed to attain. Has it never occurred to anyone that having someone standing in front of you singing at you through a microphone is not the best way to encourage your participation? And our parish is by no means the worst. At least there's no arm-waving, and the gain isn't pushed up to ear-bleed levels.

2. Gather Me Out. Let's face facts, people: No one has written a good hymn since Ralph Vaughan Williams. What passes for hymnody today are ersatz folk songs, campfire favorites, pseudo-Broadway showstoppers, and Las Vegas lounge numbers. Every time our organist sits down at the piano to tickle the ivories for a David Haas classic, I always look to see if there's a brandy snifter set out for tips. And in addition to the inappropriate-to-worship and unsingable melodies (the funereal accompaniment and wandering cantorial pitch don't help), there are the words.Why do we spend so much time telling the Lord who we are and what we're doing/going to do? Why do we exhort and/or congratulate ourselves in persona dei? Why do we ask for unintelligible things ("Give us the courage to enter the song")? Why are even the old standbys defaced with politically correct maunderings and awkward changes in diction. I can picture the offices of OCP, WLP, GIA, etc., with row upon row of eagle-eyed former nuns in Birkenstocks, blue pencils in hand, ruthlessly removing masculine pronouns from the church's hymnary (sorry, I mean personary).

3. Cue the Applause. Our parish is overwhelmingly Spanish-speaking and working class. e have two choirs, one for the Spanish masses and one for the English masses. It is very difficult to recruit people for the English choir, and most of the singers have had little musical training. The choir sings on alternate Sundays in our chapel and in the parish church. It has a limited repertory; besides the hymns, the choir usually sings one of its four or five pieces (which range from "I Come to the Garden Alone" to "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring") after communion. Aside from the fact that a choir piece is better placed during Communion, with a hymn after Communion when people can look at their "worship aids," the singing is more performance than prayer. As such, it's usually followed by applause. Now, my Much Much Better Half likes to cite Miss Manners on the impropriety of applause in church: Everything in church is done for God, and He'll applaud if He wants to. (Sorry. Make that "Everything in church is done for God, and God will applaud if God wants to." Feel better now?)

To be continued.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

On the Cusp of Ordinary Time

A belated merry Christmas and happy New Year to all.

The twelve (or fourteen, according to the US ecclesiastical calender) days of Christmas have been busy ones at the Bonaventura household. Not much progress on the soul's journey, I'm afraid (though that long Christmas Eve confession was a step in the right direction). The Eldest Oyster, who hadn't been home for Thanksgiving, came down from college for an all-too-short visit (she's going home tomorrow). The in-laws arrived on Boxing Day and headed home on the 30th. Christmas dinner was wonderful, thanks to my Much Much Better Half and Daughter Number Two, who's the queen of desserts and made a chocolate, meringue, and mint chocolate chip ice cream Bûche de Noël. My only regret is that I had but one piece.

Last week was taken up with an intense, frustrating, and as yet unresolved struggle with the healthcare bureaucracy. More on this (maybe) anon.

All told, 2011 was a tough year chez Bonaventura. And while there's an uncertain and probably difficult road ahead, I, at least, am glad to be done with it. May there be sunnier days awaiting us!