It was my
dad’s wedding anniversay yesterday. And on the 14th of January it will be his birthday. He would have
been 112, probably a little too old to enjoy life. He did live until he was 76 – not really bad
in today’s world. Strange little sayings
of his stay with me. “Nothing is fair.” Catherine quoted him when she spoke in
Sacrament meeting last week. He told her
this saying when he was a teen-ager and she has her own words to describe how
she felt about it. From what I can
remember, she resented it, railed against it, wanted to deny it, etc.
I was
thinking of another of his sayings today, also thinking of it in connection
with Catherine. Doral would say that if
you just let a cold go, it will take 2 weeks to cure it. Or you can get medicine for it and the cure
will take a fortnight.
Catherine
has been sick. Really sick. The kind of sick where many times in the day
a person has to decide if they should stay standing or hit the bed. Now I get to make that decision many times a
day, even if I am not sick. But back to
Catherine? She has stayed standing.
I didn’t
mean for my post to go in this direction this morning, but now that I am on a
roll, here it is. Catherine and Eric
spoke in church last week. It was a
diminished congregation. Many people had
gone home to their families and so those of us who were left were a small
group.
I had
practised a few hymns during the week.
That is because the week before, there was no one to play the
piano. Catie came down and asked me to
do it, but I haven’t played for years.
No exaggeration there. I said no.
She stood up when the opening hymn was
announced to lead it. Still no one at
the paino. I got off of my pew and went
to do the honours. I estimate that I hit
the right notes at the beginning of most bars, but I couldn’t do much more than
that.
Well, back
to last Sunday again, where the piano player did appear so all I had to do was
rest on the pew.
Catherine
rose to a height that let me know I was present during a sacred moment. Most mothers might say that about their
children, but not me. I am a brutal
critic. I actually just shouldn’t go to
church at all, because I can’t leave that function at home. At any rate, I was there, she did her talk,
only choking up at one phrase. The rest
of it was as though Dr. Patterson had coached her for the festival.
I actualy
felt sorry when she stopped. Sorry for
Eric who had to follow her.
He was
riding a different train. I thought he
was giving honest, pravtical advice from his profession. Useful. In fact, on a different day, I would have
been taking notes. Then he used two
examples from his own life, ones that had happened so recently that the truth
of them was still present, at least one of them for me. He used an example of a phone call from his
brother, and he used an example of trying to parent Hebe.
Both,
exquisite, both in pain and beauty.
Time for
me to go to church. Anyone who wants to
know more will have to saying something in the comment section and I will go on and on and on and on ….
Arta
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