Saturday, March 24, 2018

On a Whim and a Prayer


Jeff—Saturday  

I’m not a stream of consciousness sort of writer.  Talker yes, writer no. But since it’s approaching the witching hour, and I have yet to write anything for tomorrow’s blog, I’ve decided to risk it, and let the stream take me wherever it chooses.  Hopefully, not anywhere near tragic mudslides once again threatening California, flooding in the heartland, or another Nor’Easter out this way. 

Thank God there’s no such thing as climate change.

Speaking of thanking God, I’ve got a big thank you out there for some good news I just received about a dear friend.  Sometimes the good guys (that’s gender neutral) do get a break.  YAY!!


I’m slowly getting back to typing—it’s almost five weeks since my rotator cuff shoulder surgery—and so far so good (puh puh puh).  I’d like to say my typing is of the sort likely to yield a new book, but alas it’s tied into an IRS audit, and preparations to moderate a panel at CrimeFest in mid-May, just before my return to Mykonos.

Sadly, I had to miss Left Coast Crime this year—it’s going on in Reno as I type this—but my doctor said a definitive NO on traveling so soon after surgery.  Oh, well, hoist a few rounds for me, my friends, you’re sorely missed by Barbara and me.

Another thing I sorely miss is Fred Rogers. 

It’s the 50th anniversary year for Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, having debuted nationally on February 19, 1968 on WTAE public television in my hometown of Pittsburgh (actually, it originated locally in 1963, with roots back to 1953).  He was a fixture on local TV, though I was a bit too old for his target audience. Later, after I’d moved away and had children, my kids fit his demographic perfectly, and from time to time I’d watch with them, reminiscing about how I remembered him from earlier days. 

Like one of his trademark cardigan sweaters, Fred Rogers became more comfortable with wear.  His ever-calm demeanor brought his seminal message of love and understanding to bear on bitter issues others feared addressing, and he did so in a way that made you feel good about yourself for sharing the world with someone like Fred Rogers.

In the mid-1980s, I was walking home from my law office on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, when for some unfathomable reason I felt compelled to stop outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral. Anyone who knew me would have assumed I meant to go into the building just south of it, Saks Fifth Avenue.  But they would have been wrong.

I felt drawn to leave the hustle and bustle of the day and street, and go inside. Permit me to pause and offer my compliments to the Cathedral’s architects for having created a structure that achieves its purpose of luring in the heathen.

As I stood inside the sanctuary I noticed a man sitting alone a few rows from the back, staring straight ahead.  Even from behind I recognized Fred Rogers instantly from his distinctive head, neck, and shoulders.  I sat at the very back, not wanting to disturb him, and we each sat quietly thinking whatever we were.  I left before he and we never spoke, but I felt as if I’d gained a spiritual soul mate in that time we’d shared together in Saint Pat’s.

I know that sounds hokey—at best—but in this world of suppressed hopes, bartered faith, and a paucity of good examples for our children and grandchildren, I feel blessed to have that personal memory of a simple good man (gender neutral again—Fred would have wanted it that way). He passed away in 1997.

And oh yes, my father’s name was Fred, and he too was good man. Also from Pittsburgh.

As for thoughts about Greece, I’d prefer not to think about that situation.  Between Turkey holding two Greek soldiers hostage and making claims to Greek islands, Greece’s Prime Minister in a brouhaha over the use of the name “Macedonia” by its neighbor to the north (FYROM) while pressing corruption charges against his immediate predecessor Prime Ministers from rival political parties, worsening economic situations closing in on many, and continuing horrors faced by refugees—one set himself on fire today in the Moria Relocation Center on the island of Lesvos (the focus of my latest book, An Aegean April)—it’s enough to make one lose heart.

Thankfully, things are all wonderful back here in America.

I think it’s time to get out of this stream and make myself a hot chocolate.

God Bless, and March for Life.

—Jeff

15 comments:

  1. What a lovely post. I have always loved the architecture of churches and cathedrals. Religious or not, they are wonderfully calm, quiet places to find εσωτερική ειρήνη.

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  2. Thanks LJ, this post just took me where it wanted to go. I had no say, only typing responsibilities, but thankfully up popped Mr. Rogers. As for your well-put observation, religious structures certainly are places for finding internal peace...as we drift inexorably (and hopefully slowly) toward our shared eternal peace.

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  3. What are you talking about? Based upon your lovely self-portrait, I'd say you've just about reached the perfect age for Fred Roger's target audience.

    At least I don't feel QUITE so bad about missing LCC, knowing that you and Barbara won't be there. Small blessings. I takes 'em as I can gets 'em.

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    1. EvKa, I suspect you're right about my fitting Fred Rogers' demographic, considering that the "self-portrait" I used was one taken during a FaceTime mugging duel with my almost-five-year-old granddaughter. And Barbara and I miss you too.

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  4. Glad to see that St. Pat's gave you some peace, well-needed today.

    Between my secular, scientific-minded upbringing and my Jewish family, I can't get peace in a cathedral. I run.

    But anyone should take anything they can get now to hide from world and U.S. developments. Everyone will be taking valium soon if not immediately at what's going on in Washington.

    I hang in there with fiction, movies and enough chocolate. And I watch MSNBC for awhile, but am no longer glued to it.

    And I'm now very sad to read about the migrant in Lesvos; what a desperate situation those refugees face. And more war may be coming and more devastation.

    If religion helped, I'd think that the time of Easter and Passover would be a time for peace -- but not so.

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    1. Kathy, some places are just inherently spiritual...without regard to their religious significance. I feel that way about Delphi, for example. It's hard to go there and not feel a sense of something larger than the place itself. For different folks it's different places. Some I suspect would find it in Willie Wonka's chocolate factory. :)

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  5. Your doctor was so right. My car accident was 2-8. The aches I had from traveling were many. My right arm has knots in it again from hauling the luggage. LCC is a good good Conference.

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    1. It's so encouraging to hear my doctor was right, because I truly hate missing LCC. But it's downright discouraging to hear you're having problems with the arm, Carol. Dallas needs you at 100%---though come to think of it, you at 60% equals most of us at 120%. Feel better.

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  6. Annamaria unable to sign in says:
    My brother, St. Pat’s used to be a place of peaceful contemplation for me, until I was married to my first husband in the Lady Chaple behind the main altar. It’s more like a crime scene in the aftermath.

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    1. Now you know how I feel about my place of circumcision. BTW, that's "place" as in venue.

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    2. Now I know what you were thinking about in that selfie at the top.

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  7. I had a wonderfully religious experience at Delphi many years ago. The absolute silence was alive with some sort of spirit. I was horrified when a bunch of tourists started climbing all over the Temple of Apollo foundation and shrieking at each other. It seemed wildly sacrilegious.

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    1. When I first went to Delphi, Donis, I was transfixed at the thought of how the ancients must have felt upon discovering such serenity along a mountainside staring down a valley toward eternity itself. I wonder how they'd feel today, with cell towers sprouting in the distance and (ugly) concrete slab platforms easing the walk along the ancient stones leading up to the Temple of Apollo.

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  8. I loved Mr. Rogers - I watched his show every day, even though I was a little old for it - I claimed to be watching "with my little brother" but the truth is, I loved that Mr. Rogers made the world feel safer, and friendlier, and offered ways of coping with the parts that weren't. I love this story. Thank you so much for sharing it.

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    1. We're never too old for Mr. Rogers, my love. Especially you!

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