Celtic Spirituality in Kentucky

Monday, September 28, 2015

THE LEXINGTON HONOR FLIGHT EXPERIENCE: TWO VETS REPORT



THE LEXINGTON HONOR FLIGHT EXPERIENCE: TWO VETS REPORT

The experience of our military Veteran is intense, emotional and most personal, therefore unforgettable. Through boot camp, drill, training of all sorts, one arrives at a close sense of being comrades, a brotherhood or camaraderie that is strong and binding, truly unforgettable. When combat experience, with all i its dangers, and fear , with memories of our lost brothers, is added to this strong sense of brotherhood, the intensity is magnified.
"Never have I felt as close to my wife or kids as I did with my brothers in combat," confided one Vietnam Veteran to me. The fact is there is nothing like this sense of closeness in civilian life.

Thus, there is a loneliness in the civilian life of a Veteran which is inescapable, which no civilian can understand. This may be one reason there are so many suicides of returning Veterans today. The disconnect and emotional transition is a chasm, hugely challenging.

Recent research shows the disconnect is so strong it can be buried for 30 years and then severely emerge as PTSD, to overwhelm., as has happened with one Vietnam Veteran friend.
Our return on the Honor flight was not only one of emotional and physical exhaustion. We also return with a reminder of the profound disconnect of our military experience with our current civilian life with a renewal of long forgotten memories. The contrast can be overwhelming. The intensity of our military experience cannot compare with the ordinariness of our civilian lives ever since.
We just experienced the Honor Flight of the Lexington Chapter this past weekend, September 26. What we remembered when we visited those war memorials in Washington, were the memories of our buddies of long ago, with the host of memories and emotions we shared. That was deeply moving and heart wrenching, not just for us, but also for Veteran friends we were privileged to be on the flight with.

The range of emotions in that day of visiting those war memorials is too rich and varied to be broached here. Let us say only that the day was an awesome experience, deeply moving as we remembered the pain of buddies lost. The underserved gift of life now which we survivors have was also constantly present.

Now we want to tell something which is hard to express. We are still stunned by its intensity, overwhelmed by it, choking at the memories.

Remember there is a long loneliness in the life of the Veteran. Ask most any person "What is a Veteran?" 
Most will answer "Someone who served our country in the military."

Excuse me. This puts our service on the same level as anyone serving our country in government or politics.
"A Veteran is someone who signed a blank check to Uncle Sam to put his life and limbs in harm's way, risking everything, to protect and preserve our freedoms.": We surrendered total control over our lives to join a great and awesome brotherhood.;

What we have returned with is a profound sense of the loss of lives, buddies whose lives were cut short, the enormous cost of freedom, and gratitude that we are still alive and here. What is overwhelming for us is the profound sense of loss as well as gratitude, pain and wonder.

Therefore to arrive back at the Lexington airport to such an enthusiastic warm welcoming, long ranks of adults and children wanting to thank us for our service, was and is simply the most powerful experience of our lives. Someone, right now--here, appreciates what was the price we paid.
One Veteran friend said: "I never felt so loved in my life."

We both can say: "My heart has never been so deeply moved as going through that human tunnel of welcoming and cheering humans, of all sorts, shapes, sizes and ages. Awesome".
Whoever organized this day , and helped make it happen, can scarcely imagine what it means to the long loneliness of us Veterans. Unless they happen also to be Veterans. We are forever indebted to such awakening and generous response of so many persons in making this happen..

Thank you, Lexington. Thank you Honor Flight chapter organizers and volunteers;, Thank you our assigned guardians for this trip, all, in helping make this day such a deeply moving unforgettable experience .
We know, deep in our hearts, that we are the lucky survivors, To have someone, indeed, whole rows of people, hundreds,, thank us for the price we and our brothers paid for our freedoms, is moving beyond words.



P.S. Four days later.
Now we realize in our report, we omitted two powerful aspects of our Honor Flight experience. The hundreds of welcoming people at the airport Saturday night still overwhelms four days later.

But "Mail Call," at the airport before leaving Washington must be reported. A large envelope containing scores of messages and letters from adult and children expressing gratitude for our service is very moving. Paschal's wife , because he is blind, says she can read only about three each day, which is fine. Both of us intend to respond to each letter which had a return address. That thoughtfulness and planning to give us a great welcome also made the day extraordinary.

Before we run out of superlatives to say about this experience, we both want to brag on our assigned "guardians." They were most caring, solicitous, generous, and wonder-filled in the life experience each brought to their day long chore of accompanying us. Each guardian made the day a very special experience and each person remains unforgettable in our lives. We remain grateful beyond words.

Paschal Baute and Charlie Eyer.
Paschal served on and off over 24 years, 1948-1972, with all four branches mostly as a Navy Chaplain. He now serves as Chaplain to the Lexington Blind Veterans Chapter.
Charlie was a medical lab tech attached to 121st Evacuation Hospital, near Seoul, Korea.

Paschal is a blind Veteran with a diagnosis of "Catastrophically Disabled."
He is using his Hines VA Blind Rehab training in computers to write books for his Veteran family adn others,  in coping with setbacks and loss, learning resiliieince inch by inch. His latest is a children's story for special needs kids, Lot6tie Mae, the Turkey "Who Could Not Stop Dreaming. He has used his VA computer training to create some 22 books on kindle and ten on Amazon.  Charlie Eyer is his regular editor as well as his storytelling buddy in delivering folk fairy tales to many school children for ten years..
see link: www.paschalbaute.com/resilience

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

"WHY" is an impossible question in suffering.

"WHY" we want to know when bad things happen, when disaster of some sort strikes. Neither Jesus ,nor Paul, nor any Christian philosopher or theologian has an answer.
In the face of suffering (see the book of Job) to ask "why" sends one on an impossible search. The only answer is an incomprehensible mystery.
Actually, only the Buddha had the answer.
"to be human is to suffer" 
Thee is no escape.
Therefore
the highest human value is compassion,
-both for oneself and for others.

Saturday, September 19, 2015

Faith is most creative in darkness.



Faith is most creative in darkness.
If it weren't for my legal blindness starting five years ago, I would not have qualified for the VA training in computers for blind Veterans, undertaken at Hines Blind Rehab Center in October of 2012. 

If it were not for that training, I would not have stated writing my first book, my spiritual memoir in 2013. If not for that, I would not have produced a guide for learning resilience in dealing with my own dark places , both growing up and as an adult.  Resilience of a Dream Catcher, written for my Veteran brothers and sizes, would not have been conceived, and even if conceived, not enabled.

If not for that practice in using Zoom Text on this new laptop, and learning to format for kindle and print, I would not have written he books not available on kindle and in print, on CreateSpace and
Amazon. 

If not for that striving  in using stories, while continuing in Spellbinders storytelling, I would not have conceived my children's book.  Without my grandkids serious health issues and setbacks, I would not have conceived a story for special needs kids. Without my own blindness, I would not have also designed the story for adults.

Therefore ,  my blindness has both allowed and spurred my heart to, hopefully, reach many with a message of hope, courage and resilience.
Faith is most creative when it finds itself in darkness:  Celtic Grace: Thin Places.  "Life is not a problem to be solved. Life is a mystery to be lived.
"Out of the depths, I cry to Thee, O Lord…My soul waits for the Lord s the night watchman waits for the dawn. Ps 130.

Friday, September 18, 2015

Pay Attention to This Pope



Pay Attention to This Pope
Pope Francis may be the first pope ever not to think "from the top down," but from the bottom up, from the point of view of the poor and the outsider. He will not change doctrine (some needs changing) but he is changing the TONE, to one of mercy, forgiveness and non-judgment. He is inviting dialogue and to actual LISTENING.
Even the atheistic humanists like him, as well as many Protestants. The rich, the Republicans and some conservative Catholics will not like him as he is attacking the Capitalist idol of money and our blindness to the social gospel. (see Matthew 25)
We are grateful to have this leadership. We can hear Jesus through him, speaking for the many who have no voice..

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Let me count the ways--underserved all.

Let me count the ways
My Lord has loved me, so undeservedly all.
In my conception and life in the womb; in my parent's love, in my birth and family circumstances; in each of my siblings, in early childhood.
In my lost innocence due to Roman Catholic training in fear and sinfulness; in the loneliness of my childhood; In my father's bullying and anger; in my mother's love and care; in my all my teacher's in grade school, and especially in Sister Mary Philippa Henderson, my 8th grade teacher, Sister of Loretto, who more than anyone saved my hope and spurred my courage.
In my boarding school experiences, classmates, teachers, opportunities and sports.
In my loving to push myself in running, and later sports competition, and in life.
In my parents failed marriage, in my father's failures and in my own many failures;

In my encounter with Soviet Communism ism at the beginning of the Cold War, which changed my life;
In all my experiences at the University of Notre Dame which also greatly shaped my life;
In my U.S. Army experience on the island of Guam and that of a Navy Chaplain for nine years; 
In my giving myself to this mystery we call God in the monastic life for 16 years, in all that happened, including the long continued bullying of the Abbot also experienced by many other monks;.
In my faith and hope and courage, somehow sustained;
In my being born in these United States, in gratitude for well over a million of my brothers and sisters who paid the ultimate price for our freedoms
In my experience at Loyola of Chicago and many persons and choice of research;
In my discovery of a fellowship and scholarship allowing the pursuit of a doctorate;
In my agonizing decision to follow Christ outside organized religion, in the trenches;
In my coming to Kentucky and meeting Janette and our incredible love and adventures and life an family together;

In the sustaining friendship of Rick Reckman and our ten years of association with the OPA annual retreat on spirituality;

In the courage and resilience of my daughter Michelle and her husband Joe.

In the amazing  26 years of personal sharing and collaborative interfaith ministry of the members of our Spiritual Growth Network of Kentucky and our mutual sustained energy for this project.
In the blessing of awesome friends: John M, John G, Charlie E, Charlie T,  Moe, Cait, Joe, Ann, Ed, Aileen, Patricia adn Oscar, Walt and Atha, Guido and Doris, and Betty,;
In the digital graphic genius of Grant Aumiller and Peggy McAllister for  my Lottie Mae story;; 
In the striving of 20,000 grandmothers and grandfathers back to the beginning of the human race;
In being born at this particular time in our history with all its technology and chaos;
In my ability to reach and touch many persons in my counseling practice and community undertakings'
In three beautiful grandchildren:Adam, Quinn and Chloe;
In my blindness which has brought via VA training, many blessings and the tools to keep on loving others now through writing.
I live in gratitude, joy and ongoing surrender to Mystery despite my own dark places

Having been the recipient of so many undeserved blessings, is it any wonder that I must spend the rest of my life giving back?  Noblesse Oblige. (to whom is given much, much is is expected)


Do you, perhaps, have a similar litany of grace and praise?

"My soul magnifies the Lord,. My spirit rejoices in God, my Savior, for He who is mighty has done great things to me." (Luke 1:46 f)
.

Monday, September 14, 2015

Let me count the ways



Let me count the ways
My Lord has loved me, so undeservedly all.
In my conception and life in the womb; in my parent's love, in my birth and family circumstances; in each of my siblings, in early childhood.
In my lost innocence due to Roman Catholic training in fear and sinfulness; in the loneliness of my childhood; In my father's bullying and anger; in my mother's love and care; in my all my teacher's in grade school, and especially in Sister Mary Philippa Henderson, my 8th grade teacher, Sister of Loretto, who more than anyone saved my hope and spurred my courage.
In my boarding school experiences, classmates, teachers, opportunities and sports.
In my loving to push myself in running, and later sports competition, and in life.
In my parents failed marriage, in my father's failures and in my own many failures;

In my encounter with Soviet Communism ism at the beginning of the Cold War, which changed my life;
In all my experiences at the University of Notre Dame which also greatly shaped my life;
In my U.S. Army experience on the island of Guam and that of a Navy Chaplain for nine years; 
In my giving myself to this mystery we call God in the monastic life for 16 years, in all that happened, including the long continued bullying of the Abbot also experienced by many other monks;.
In my faith and hope and courage, somehow sustained;
In my being born in these United States, in gratitude for well over a million of my brothers and sisters who paid the ultimate price for our freedoms
In my experience at Loyola of Chicago and many persons and choice of research;
In my discovery of a fellowship and scholarship allowing the pursuit of a doctorate;
In my agonizing decision to follow Christ outside organized religion, in the trenches;
In my coming to Kentucky and meeting Janette and our incredible love and adventures and life an family together;

In the sustaining friendship of Rick Reckman and our ten years of association with the OPA annual retreat on spirituality;

In the courage and resilience of my daughter Michelle and her husband Joe.

In the amazing  26 years of personal sharing and collaborative interfaith ministry of the members of our Spiritual Growth Network of Kentucky and our mutual sustained energy for this project.
In the blessing of awesome friends: John M, John G, Charlie E, Charlie T,  Moe, Cait, Joe, Ann, Ed, Aileen, Pat and Betty,;
In the digital graphic genius of Grant Aumiller and Peggy McAllister for  my Lottie Mae story;; 
In the striving of 20,000 grandmothers and grandfathers back to the beginning of the human race;
In being born at this particular time in our history with all its technology and chaos;
In my ability to reach and touch many persons in my counseling practice and community undertakings'
In three beautiful grandchildren:Adam, Quinn and Chloe;
In my blindness which has brought via VA training, many blessings and the tools to keep on loving others now through writing.
I live in gratitude, joy and ongoing surrender to Mystery despite my own dark places

Having been the recipient of so many undeserved blessings, is it any wonder that I must spend the rest of my life giving back?  Noblesse Oblige. (to whom is given much, much is is expected)


Do you, perhaps, have a similar litany of grace and praise?

"My soul magnifies the Lord,. My spirit rejoices in God, my Savior, for He who is mighty has done great things to me." (Luke 1:46 f)
.