Tag Archives: Bible

Online Memoir Chapter Fourteen: The Other Side of Life in My Hometown

In the summer semester of the 2021 2022 school year I took two classes at the University of Louisiana of Lafayette. One of the classes was Education in a DIverse Classroom. The other was Diverse Families. In the DIverse Families course I used the fourteenth edition of the book The Marriage and Family Experience: Intimate Relationships in a Changing Society by Theodore F. Cohen and Bryan Strong. It was another important text in a very long line of texts about sex and family in my life.  Sex has been an important concern in my life for a long time, However, I am  very far from claiming to be a great lover these days or to have become an expert on family or sex. But I have built a body of knowledge that has a great deal to to with the time we spent living in the Sticks (or the Styx) neighborhood in Abbeville, my home town. In that small set of blocks in my hometown there were not large estates, privacy fences, gated communities and a host of lawyers and bodyguards. If one was a very intelligent child in early adolescence it was hard not to notice a variety of happy families with traditional values, young people pregnant well before emancipation and struggling, all kind of pimps from abusive gangsters to benevolent gangsters as well as those who used religion as a cloak for prostitution or child abuse and those right near them who were religious and having connections with  prostitutes and abused children for the purpose of helping them. Promiscuous girls and trafficked teen prostitutes lived together. Violent drug dealers had money and supported their families and others in the same block did the same thing and blew all their ill gotten goods on bad things only.There were people practicing music for high school band. There were openly gay men and men who came to visit them from more respectable neighborhoods that might or might not have paid them.  Sex  in the neighborhood was like music in the neighborhood, the sexual climate was diverse and obvious but not publicly celebrated.Our family was involved with people making music about redemption from sin that involved sexual misbehavior. There were no concert venues but there were still other musicians practicing in their yards and on their porches for gigs in bars and dance halls that would be few and far between for most of those guys – nobody I knew made it big. In music from that crowd. One kid got a music scholarship from a university, but he was the exception. It was a place with music and yet not defined by music, the  mix of rock, choir music, marches, Cajun and zydeco music I heard was sometimes beautiful but was not celebrated communally very much. A little made it to the nearby brothels and clubs but very little. Open Door Community and the Christian Service Center had worship with instruments and voices regularly and that was the most regular organized celebration of music in the neighborhood. I learned a great deal about how other people had sex and defined themselves sexually. I also learned that there was nobody I could safely talk to about most of these sexual matters and the experiences that we had being lived out around us. The neighborhood also had stores in people;s homes with no signs, a real and regular laundry and drycleaner. It ran to a street with bars and a graveyard on one border, to a nicer neighborhood on another two sides and to a large middle school, high school football stadium and a vocational and technical community college on the remaining side. I could leave the neighborhood on my bike on many  routes and I did. But when I was there I lived in a very sexualized place where people felt like they were tolerated but sort of on the edge of what made up  our legal and accepted way of life.     

This chapter is not mostly about sex but without a discussion of sex it would have little to do with my experience.  I will visit it from many points of view before we get out of this and on with the stories of the next chapter.   . `

In Virginia, at the cabin in Brown’s Cove I had taken my attachment to the Bible to a new level and really drilled down on Bible reading.  I had been reading the Bible regularly for years but in the quiet and isolation of the cabin, I had been able to devote a great deal of time to reading the scripture and to studying it with the tools I had at my fingertips. I personally owned a Jerusalem Bible Study Version and a New American Bible Study Version. I am not sure that they were called study versions anywhere but each of these translations came in a version with stipped down appendices, footnotes and marginal cross references. The kinds I had were the Bibles with all the works. A basic start to scripture study was to read the same passage in both of my translations then to try to imagine what original text might have been translated in both of these ways. Then I looked up all the parallel of referential texts cited in the cross references to other scripture passages in both Bibles. Next I looked up every word I thought might be in the McKenizie’s DIctionary of the Bible. After that I would read articles I thought were relevant in the  Jerome Biblical Commentary. Then I would pray for insight and write down a few notes.  

My Parents had several other Bible translations and we had access to a few study aids when we visited the Church early and left late for  Sunday Mass, sometimes I discussed my reading with my parents, some of our more religious guests and also with a priest at church. But mostly I kept my thoughts to myself. We had  pretty good access to Biblical texts. and resources despite our lack of possessions

My biggest topic of Biblical study in VIrginia was KIng David.  David remains a very powerful and prominent figure in my thoughts about a great number of things.  Here are a few things I remember about that study of David:

  1. David was born into the tribe of Judah:Judah was a tribe set aside for leadership and royalty above most, but it was not the only tribe set apart for a role of leadership.. Levi was a holy tribe set apart for worship and ritual leadership. But the tribe of Judah and the two half tribes of Joseph  that passed under the names of Joseph’s sons Ephraim and Manasseh (especially Ephraim) had the most kingly roles before Israel had kings.  Saul on the other hand was from the Tribe of Benjamin, which would have ranked just below these other three in claims to a Kingly role. David was not born rich but he was born with a certain claim to nobility.
  2. David was a shepherd boy who killed lions and bears to defend his sheep.
  3. David was a musician and this would play a big role in the Bible, his life and Jewish History.
  4. Dacid was a hero who killed the giant Goliath of Gath and became a great warrior.
  5. David was a courtier in the COurt of KIng Saul, the first King of Israel and he married Saul’s daughter and became close friends with Jonathan the KIng’s sone.
  6. Prophets anointed and encouraged David as King while Saul as still king. Ln time David became an outlaw leading an outlaw army hunted by Saul.
  7. David was extremely polygamous,
  8. David was prayerful and found religious reasons to give himself to practicing mercy, worship and humility unlike anybody else in his sphere.
  9. David saw himself as a repentant sinner.
  10. David loved his children. His son Absalom led a revolt against him and as killed, his first son by Bathsheba died to punish David for his sins.
  11. David conquered Jerusalem and brought the Ark of the Covenant and prepared for Solomon’s Temple to be built by his son.. 
  12.   David was called by God “A man after my own heart”.
  13. Jesus was descended from the House of David, and was often called the Son of David.
  14. David knew how to lead, plan and administer.

It was clear to me at the time understanding David was vital to understanding the Bible and all things associated with the Bible. I also realized that  I was going to have different ideas about what was important when discussing scripture than many people around me. I remember that we were seeking to hear the Word of God in scripture. That belief in the Bible as the Word of God  was true of the people at Mass talking after church about the readings we had all heard.  It was true of my parents and their close associates. It was true of the Protestant missionaries and preachers I had come to know and it was true of the people in Charismatic prayer groups and communities. I did talk about scripture with learned nonbelievers as well, doing that made me appreciate the historical, geographical, linguistic and cultural information I had gained from my Catholic Bibles and study aids. But before I got  back to Abbeville, I was predisposed to see the many ways in which people related to Chrisitanity and religion in a manner that didn’t blind me to reality.  

My life is perhaps like many other lives in that there are times of distinct success and times of failure. There are times of joy and times of sorrow.  Perhaps also like most humans if one dialed in or zoomed in on the times one would clearly designate as  bad there would be good times relative to the general bad time I was experiencing likewise if one were to zoom in on the good times, one would find there were bad times  compared to the generally good time I was experiencing.  I think that that is pretty well accepted to be the human condition. It is not a new observation, one of my favorite treatments of the theme is in the Bible.  

   Ecclesiastes 3

A Time for Everything This title is from the editors)

1 There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens:

2 a time to be born and a time to die, a time to plant and a time to uproot,

3 a time to kill and a time to heal, a time to tear down and a time to build,

4 a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance,

5 a time to scatter stones and a time to gather them, a time to embrace and a time to refrain from embracing,

6 a time to search and a time to give up, a time to keep and a time to throw away,

7 a time to tear and a time to mend, a time to be silent and a time to speak,

8 a time to love and a time to hate, a time for war and a time for peace.

9 What do workers gain from their toil?

10 I have seen the burden God has laid on the human race.

11 He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.

12 I know that there is nothing better for people than to be happy and to do good while they live.

13 That each of them may eat and drink, and find satisfaction in all their toil—this is the gift of God.

14 I know that everything God does will endure forever; nothing can be added to it and nothing taken from it. God does it so that people will fear him.

15 Whatever is has already been, and what will be has been before; and God will call the past to account.

16 And I saw something else under the sun: In the place of judgment—wickedness was there, in the place of justice—wickedness was there.

17 I said to myself, “God will bring into judgment both the righteous and the wicked, for there will be a time for every activity, a time to judge every deed.”

18 I also said to myself, “As for humans, God tests them so that they may see that they are like the animals.

19 Surely the fate of human beings is like that of the animals; the same fate awaits them both: As one dies, so dies the other. All have the same breath ; humans have no advantage over animals. Everything is meaningless.

20 All go to the same place; all come from dust, and to dust all return.

21 Who knows if the human spirit rises upward and if the spirit of the animal goes down into the earth?”

22 So I saw that there is nothing better for a person than to enjoy their work, because that is their lot. For who can bring them to see what will happen after them?’ (New International Version).

My mother tells her version of our return to Louisiana from Virginia in her second book about our family’s lives, Our Family’s Book of Acts: To Love and to Serve the Lord published in 2012.  In the chapter, “News From Home – An Open Door”  She tells of the trip from Virginia. 

“Soon after we left the icicles in Virginia. In early November, we arrived in Louisiana by train. To experience the tail end of a summer not yet retired. The Atchafalaya Basin’s sultry swamp showed few signs of fall. The trip had taken about a week from Charlottesville to New Orleans. We stopped briefly  at the Summers home in uptown New Orleans, borrowed a car and headed out to Cajun Country. We loved the drive over the Basin. It was so pristine; some said there were places in the vast waterways that man still had never seen. Tall, straight cypress trees hovered over the stretches of idyllic scenery.  The “knees” dotted the smooth surface looking like miniature sentries dutifully standing their ground. The skies were incredibly blue, Spanish Moss swayed in the breeze. Yep, we were home, home in God’s country.” (Summers, Acts  page 4).   

What made the difference in my life between here and there, this and that became less clear when I calculated all the things that made my life different from the lives of other people.My parents had found a way to live in the town we all called home.I was very uncomfortable at school. I felt it was just more than I could do to be simultaneously the person everyone remembered ( who was not that popular in the first place) and the new person equally out of the norm. School was hard for me under any circumstances and spending large amounts of time in the busy structures, regulated and conformist environments of a school never came easy. But these new circumstances were more than usually difficult. I never felt that I handled the stress very well.

I had a few obstacles that I did overcome. I had a class largely devoted to reading when I got back to Mount Carmel Elementary School. WhenI first arrived and enrolled we all had streamed drills in groups who read at our speed. I was tested in the slowest group first, my scores showed I far surpassed this group.. Then I was tested in the second to slowest group and the same result occurred. Next I was tested in the second to fastest reading group. I excelled and surpassed that standard as well. FInally, I was tested in the last and fastest group and I was one of the fastest readers in the group and still able to get perfect scores on content comprehension and analysis test on the content I read a t breakneck speed There at least I was back in line with  the top group of students in my class. Mostly they were the same people I had left behind  to go to Tonga. In other areas I struggled. Living as the kind of missionary my parents wanted us to be and going to my old school seemed impossible to me in many ways.

In the stress of the situation, I did not always behave well. I lied to cover up the things I did not have and the paying job that my father did not have. I found solace and joy in the prayers and Bible studies  in religion classes. I had always found schools to be difficult places to be but the behavior of students when no adults were around became harder and harder to tolerate. I got into a fight with a few boys who I thought were severely bullying a boy who was the closest to  openly gay of anyone at our little school.. FIghting seemed to clash with my very religious persona in those days. I didn’t  “approve” of homosexuality but I was less approving of bullying. That fight and other conflicts only exacerbated the bullying that was inevitable given the conflicts in my mind, thee fact that I wore a cross– all of which made it impossible for me to reconcile my new identity in the small intimate school with my previous one. The wear and tear of relationships at school was not my only source of problems but it was a significant one.       . 

“Investigations into teacher exoduses in prior years, including a poll from the Policy Exchange, found that over 70% of teachers identified student behavior as a major cause. Data on the current teacher flight are harder to come by, but a poll from the National Education Association found that 90% of teachers say that burnout is a serious concern; 76% identify student behavior as a driver of it. Local reporting in states like California confirms that many teachers are citing student behavior as a major reason behind their decision to quit the profession.”. (Daniel Buck, The Abolition of School Discipline, National Affairs number 54, WInter 2023; page23)..   

In lives where disordered behavior at school has not been important it is hard to recognize how intense a problem it is for many others.  I was trying to find a way to reconcile too many things and I began to feel that perhaps I was going to have serious issues with fitting in and even more problems controlling my emotions at school. There were days when I walked around in a kind of haze that was different from the way I had always kind of marched to a different drummer than was the ideal at any school I attended. 

One of the highlights of that half year in 7th grade at Mount Carmel Elementary School was getting to the top stream of Miss Clancey’s Reading Class, another was catching up with the class in math where I had already begun to fall behind. But the brightest highlight was when we were all asked to make a presentation on a skill for my homeroom. I listened respectfully to the other students. But then when my time came and  I gave the presentation I  had scheduled, I chose  “How to Read the Bible.” I got a hundred percent even though my teacher had discouraged me from picking it. I discussed commentaries, dictionaries, cross-references, diglots, translations and hermeneutics. I gave examples and I discussed the  Second Vatican Council document on DIvine Revelation. Afterwards, the teacher said “ Beau. Your presentation was so good that I will give you a hundred because I have to give you above one hundred percent in all the categories except connecting with the audience. You never smiled and you almost never made eye contact with your classmates. Everyone appreciated your work, all these people are your friends.”

When she was finished speaking there were tears in my eyes. I don’t remember my report card that year,  but I felt  lucky and successful to have made it that far and gotten back into a decent position in the class. I was not happy and I felt like the burdens I was bearing was more than I could take. Yet I also felt that if I could somehow find peace with the changes that had gone on in my life, I might find a path going forward in school. At some point I lost those records but for many years I kept them and any others I could find in a special file at my Dad’s parents second home in Abbeville, I had a single slightly relevant document from Tonga Side School and another from The Lord’s School. That first half  year, I began to organize some of the local boys into a sort of informal company. We moved things for people, trimmed a few hedges and by the end of the school year we cut a few yards. I made the sales and connections and bought or borrowed as much equipment as I could.  I did do the physical work, but less than  an equal share.  I divided the money among the participants and they all seemed happy. It was a chance to lead and I felt good leading something. Once that year we took a bicycle ride to a place called the Woodlawn Bridge. It was a number of miles out of town and we went as fast as we could and held together to fight off the loose dogs that attacked us. My guys all knew how to swim but had little access to pools. The public pool was closing down more and more or had closed down – I can’t remember. But on the way home we stopped and swam at the pool behind my mother’s parents house on the bayou. They accepted my crew from the Styx and we prayed and made promises in the shrine in the woods. When I was in town we would try to keep things together and grow it into anything we could find.

Between school and this little business I had my own life. But in addition I was part of the Open Door Community and the emerging Christian Service Center.  That was  a complicated time. Our family was very involved with people who were severely mentally ill and others who were marginally mentally disabled. There were people who rented a room in our home who suffered from hallucinations and severe behavioral issues. There were others who came by and got meals at Open Door Community and still others who went by the CHristian Service Center for help. Beyond these people were those who were truly desperate and those who were needy. I would meet child prostitutes, rapists and others who were involved in the life of the neighborhood. The girl I liked and hung out with in the neighborhood  lived next to her grandmother. I am not sure exactly when her grandmother, who liked to go to the dancehalls on the weekend was raped, beaten and left for dead. But we had stolen one real kiss over a long time and once or twice in the dark had held hands. But the day they brought her grandmother out in a stretcher we were a couple for all the world to see. She cried first in my arms on the street and then with her head on my should while we sat on the porch swing of our house. We were never really a couple but there was always a bond. Somehow that day froze everything for us in some way.   A lot of times merge from varied trips and I can distinguish them by where we were living in the same neighborhood that was  to be our base in Abbeville for many years. The Bordelons from Abbeville and Navajoland were back with us in the neighborhood for a while one summer and I found it harder to maintain my friendships with them than when we lived on the farm. We rode about on bikes in the sweltering heat and tried to figure out if any of us would end up back in the missions or not. 

It was going to be a variety of times that blended together but we would live in the house across from the Christian Service Center, a different house across from the  Seton Elementary School that had just been abandoned and then in the school itself. I try to separate the jumbled memories by remembering whereIi woke for any particular event that I remember or where I went to bed after such an event.. Often during those first months we shared a common meal at least once a day and all did after dinner chores in the former rectory where the Bernards and Listis lived. It was a convivial and television free environment. We shared prayers, chores and conversation. 

There was a common library besides the ones each family had and the majority of the books belonged to the Listi family. But some belonged to the Summers and the Bernard families. They had books on the Bible and Classic comics both of which I claimed to read and actually did read. But there was also a section of books on marriage counseling. I received much of my knowledge of sex not from the questionable sources most boys used on playgrounds and in dark parts of the neighborhood. I read a number of  books from there and added others:Letters to Karen: A Father’s Advice On Keeping Love in Marriage, Charlie W. Shedd  and Letters to my Philip:On How to Treat a Woman I also read Larry Christenson ‘s The Christian Family, that were written by white Protestant Christian Americans in the twentieth century who had a conservative view of family life. A brand new book by Dr. James Dobson that came out in 1975 would be the basis of a conservative family values movement. It was called Dare to Discipline and was published in 1975..  A book more challenging to American culture was another thing I got my hands on; Raymond and Dorothy Moore’s book, which was discussed whenever my checkered education was discussed. That was another book that hit the mass market in 1975:Better Late Than Early : A New Approach to Your Child’s Education. The Moore book was part of the homeschool movement that was gradually coming to play a significant role in my life, even though I had been in seventh grade to the finish and still was not sure if I would ever formally homeschool.   I am so aware that the future would. The Joy of Natural Childbirth by Helen Wessel published in 1963 made me aware of all the things I didn’t know about sex and women’s bodies. It also answered some of the questions it raised.. I could list many other books, but this reading sort of helped to accentuate a sense of a split between the ideals of a stable and monogamous family centered in Christian spirituality and the other sexual influences and also my own thoughts about sex which were not of a single piece and were still forming. I was a middle school kid, but I did not feel like I was ordinary in any way  –good or bad.

Chapter Nine of Online Memoir: Over the Border in Many Ways

Today is Palm Sunday and it follows on an election day. Those are both things more readily understood than stories about miracles and personal revelations of God to a family seeking to find a path to Holiness and effectively bringing the Kingdom of God into new parts of the modern world. In El Paso in the ministry with Father Rick there was a new level of hearing God speak to people in person prayer, interpretation of Sacred Scripture and in signs and wonders. But all of this went on as we came in from a life spent praying for healing and having testimonies of people that they were healed quicker than ever before with their medical treatments or before they could seek medical intervention. People who had been enslaved by alcohol, drugs, and other addictions found in faith in Jesus, life in the church and personal and shared prayer dramatic freedom and restored jobs and marriages. People who had been trapped in bitterness and despair found in the Bible as the Word of God a map for hope that gave them joy. Prayer groups founded in the Charismatic renewal in the Catholic Church and the Pentecostal movement in Protestant churches often established soup kitchens, clinics, missions to very distressed communities and lots of other things that could be called both Charity and Social. Minor and major miracles were reported and written about by many in and around those movements.  But  in our journey to El Paso at that time there was another level both of intensity in ministry and in the number of reports that were circulating about the miracles that came with following the gospel of Christ and the move of the Holy Spirit in our times..    . 

Yesterday, Saturday, March 23, 2024, there was a Commissioning Mass for a class of intake members  from Family Missions Company. That is the outgrowth of the ministry that brought us to El Paso and flowed from El Paso. Today, Mome took Clara and I to eat lunch at a nice restaurant in Abbeville. Clara and I took a little time out to try to rescue a well groomed dog which had gotten loose and appeared to be in distress. Mom also told us how beautiful the Mass was and how moved she was by all of it. She talked about remembering the early days of the ministry. “I really wished you, Beau and Clara would have been there because I knew that at least Beau would have remembered the beginning of all of this.”

“What you all did was a lot. In terms of lifetime achievement it ranks pretty high in my book.” Clara said.

“But I don’t think of that in my life day to day. “ My mother answered, “But I know it’s true.”

“You don’t rest on your laurels.” Clara volunteered.

“I don’t think of laurels. “ Mom replied.

So yesterday there was a celebration of a company where one can still freely discuss supernatural experiences and I was not there. Clara and I were each involved in doing more mundane things. This story is  that I am writing is a narrative of mundane and ordinary things as well as personal secrets. Then it is also a story with some parts that fall outside the purview of normal events and into the realm of events that require some kind of extraordinary response. 

  . 

The Crest of the Carmelite Order which operated the Mount Carmel Elementary School I attended.

I am writing a memoir in which I will ask a theoretical reader to really view with their mind’s eye, understand to the limits of their experience and intelligence and empathize to the edges of their compassion with some extraordinary experiences the theoretical reader would normally dismiss. But I am writing not from the heights of success with great incomes, security and property. I am also not writing from a homeless shelter or a prison.my life is in many ways caught up in the flow of normal mainstream things. It is Palm Sunday, March 24, 2024. Like many millions of Cristians I am remembering the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem amid the cheers and acclimation of the crowd. My wife and I woke up later for us and I made coffee and a bigger than average breakfast. She went to pick up our dogs Abbey and Bella from the dogsitters – who are also our friends. We slept in late for  and were very tired when we went to bed after working as commissioners at two different precincts in an election for the Louisiana Republican and Democrat  Party Presidential Primaries. We also had a parishwide Parcel Fee referendum. The turnout for the Republican Primary in Vermilion Parish was 18.7% of registered voters and 94% voted for Donald Trump.   The other item on the ballot across the entire parish was  parishwide parcel fee proposition to fund the Vermilion Economic Development Alliance, the turnout for that  was 12.4% of registered voters and 91% of those who voted in the election in our parish voted down the proposal. The turnout for the Democrat Primary had a turnout of 8.4% of registered Democrat voters and 63% voted for Joseph Biden. It is also a fact that almost three times as many voters voted in the Republican Primary. Non party voters can vote in most of Louisiana primaries – that are held in an open primary or jungle primary format. The primary elections become full elections if someone get more than fifty percent of the vote. If not then top two finishers will engage in a runoff. With two options one is bound to have more than half the votes. If there is a tie (as happens in small town and village elections sometimes) then they run again. However,  every four years for the presidential primaries, we have closed primaries. Then voters can only vote for their own party and are blocked out of the other party primaries. Governor Jeff Landry has declared his intentions to seek more closed partisan primaries and fewer jungle primaries.  It is notable that Jeff Landry running for Governor from his position as a Republican Attorney General beat a field of twelve outright in the jungle primary for Governor and was immediately elected with more than 50% of the vote in that first election. There was no runoff.          

The Wednesday March 20,2024 issue of the Abbeville Meridional came in the mail instead of being delivered by the newspapers own delivery systemI am still getting used to this being the way that I get my hometown newspaper in the mail. I am also getting used to only getting two copies a week instead of five. I have been covered in the newspaper and had my byline in it many times and it is one more milestone of a life moving into unfamiliar territory as I age. This goes with the theme of having applied for disability as I began  writing this online memoir. It is also a fact that there is a very long obituary for James Alexander RIch on page two. I worked for Jim as a sales manager at his company, Catfish Wholesale in the early nineties. We had some success together in those months and not only in sales, we also had a successful buying trip to the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico. Jim’s life of adventure, SCUBA diving, piloting airplanes and his passion for hunting and fishing are recounted. But so are the struggles and ups and downs of his life. He died on February 17, 2024 but I did not find out about it until I read the newspaper’s long obituary. I haven’t kept in touch with Jim and I will be missing his funeral on Saturday March 23, 2024 to serve as an election commissioner in the election that includes the Louisiana Presidential Primaries and the parish wide election to determine if a parcel fee on properties will be assessed to support the Vermilion Economic Development Alliance. This will hopefully support the prosperity of the civil parish in which I live. 

I like my life well enough to feel something good about it as I recount this version of my life’s events. I am also aware that I have not created a record that will appear to demand a very impressive set of obituaries. My Dad had a huge funeral and my grandfather, Frank Summers the first, had many impressive obituaries and reports in the media. My life appears fairly small and getting smaller at the moment. This chapter is in part an analysis of how the life I lived has conspired to place me where I am. So, before getting to my time in El Paso, I will discuss a little more of my life as it is just now. What I am now is largely a creature of compromises and a a union of what is left over from various adventures. I had tried to be more for my new wife, aiming at relatively modest kinds of success. But I am probably drifting back into a place of not really making things work very well.         .        

It is the Lent of 2024 and the last Friday before Good Friday as I write the main draft of this chapter. There are no deadlines for this manuscript as it may never be read anyway. However, there are deadlines in my life I am taking my turn at getting supper on, that is more common now as I am now unemployed. This morning Clara and I went to Walmart to pick up an order of groceries in the parking lot pick up section. The land had lots of standing water. The rain that had brought the water had the dogs that share our lives with us a few times during the night. It was a pretty powerful thunderstorm. We had already shared coffee and I had the bowl of cereal that was my breakfast before we went to pick up the groceries. I put the groceries into refrigerator and pantry while CLara changed into athletic gear. I simply picked up my gym bag and used the shower and lockers at our club. Then we went to the Healthworks club near where we live. Today I swam and Clara worked out in the gym section of the club. Then I took our recycling to the dump and went to donate plasma at the older of the two plasma centers in Lafayette. On the way there I received news of where I will be serving as Election Commissioner tomorrow. The ride back saw me stop to buy tickets for tonight’s Mega Millions and tomorrow’s  PowerBall drawings. Clara had lunch ready when I got home and we enjoyed a good meatless meal in accordance with Catholic practices during the Fridays of Lent. Shortly afterwards we took a nap.Clara is preparing the dogs to stay over with our dogsitter as we work tomorrow. It is not a very thrilling sort of day to recount.       

My mother’s chapter from Go You are Sent: An Incredible Odyssey of Faith. quoted in my last chapter is the same chapter that covers our time in the El Paso area. That chapter is called “Navajos to La Cueva”. She discusses the move to El Paso in a continuity with our time in the mountains of  New Mexico. 

“We were led in prayer to write Father Rick Thomas, S.J. at Our Lady’s Youth Center in El Paso, Texas. Another thing God taught us in those early years, is that Jesus, the Lord of all the Earth, is also the Lord of the mail. We didn’t expect to get a quick response from Father RIck. We knew he had a pretty demanding apostolate to the poor.

He had preached a Day of Renewal in New Orleans in 1974 (my note: just days or weeks before we left for Tonga.)  There he boldly proclaimed that, “Just tithing doesn’t fulfill the Christian’s obligation, as it did in the Old Testament. A Christian Is expected to give everything” (Summers, 182).

It is important to realize that the first book written about this ministry that I became aware of was called Miracles in El Paso.  A miraculous multiplication of the food in a Christmas dinner served to the poor in a dump was at the center of the living memory of the community. Prayers for healing that had been answered when there was little hop were common memories of many. Such stories were common enough in the days of the large and expanding Catholic Charismatic Renewal. If there were many readers for this text I realize that many of them would not believe in miracles.I realize that some dismiss any story of a miracle as simple deceit. My mother’s autobiographical books have miracles in them and so does her earlier play; A Sort of Miracle in Loreauville. But what I think about in terms of her reliability is that she made a living as a journalist in a small community where people had many ways to affirm or deny the facts and conclusions that she published in the local paper. A more recent book about Father RIck, A Poor Priest for the Poor describes in detail with documentation how another family was the first family at a ministry called La Cueva. That is a bald-faced lie because we were the first family assigned to that ministry. Life is crap and sources are unreliable but it is not a simple matter of eliminating reports of events we don’t understand.       

My next chapter in my life story relates to Mexico and Miracles most of all.  It relates to some other things as well. There are many other connections as well that include thoughts about borders, boundaries and poverty. But to understand how I related to these times in my life it is necessary to map out something of who I am. I am aware that the chances I take are not those which everyone else would always understand.  I am aware that there are many reasons why I am writing this memoir without compensation or a readership of any significance. However, it is important that I describe the way that I live my life in terms that have some kind of lucidity.  I have in my waste paper basket,  a set of three Powerball tickets for Wednesday,  March  20th drawing. The jackpot is $687,000,000 in annuity or $327,300,000. In cash. Those are $9.00 in real money (it would be $6.00 but I got the powerplay option that multiplies the prize short of the jackpot. I used $4.00 won from matching Mega Ball in the inflated Mega Millions drawing for  the last Tuesday drawing. I will be buying tickets for the Mega Millions drawing tomorrow. It is not about the fact that there will be a likely reward, the odds are terrible. But when the jackpot of the two largest lotteries is over $250,000,000 I really am pretty committed to buying tickets. This is an opportunity that my society offers me to potentially solve many of my problems. Although the odds are worse than 250,000,000 to one they seem pretty good compared to the rest of my life experience. In the process of playing this long odds game I sometimes win 4 or 8 or 24 dollars. I rarely gamble as much in a year as I do on this very constrained gambling on these large lotteries. I have been buying a ticket that I split with my mother every time the jackpot is over $250,000,000 and when I  am at the drawing in the country and able to buy  the tickets – i have been doing this  for decades. In addition I usually buy an additional two for my wife and I only (or in the past for many single years, two more tickets for myself). . I am less fanatical about the Mega Millions. The odds are long, but if I were to win something big, even a million dollars, then it would be enough to rewrite a good bit of my life story going forward.  

The life I live has been tied to very long odds, to very unlikely events. It is a very negative perspective on life much of the time – but some of the wins along life’s road have been pretty amazing. What remains of my life may not be very appealing  if I am not able to earn a living but I am not unaware that my life has had some high notes to balance out some of the lows.  

As I wrote part of the  this draft of this chapter at 7:15 on Thursday March 21, 2024  I was back in a familiar space of relative lostness. I had  scheduled a meeting on Zoom at 5:00 that I organized for and which I set aside time for – because it mattered and because the people I was approached by the people I almost met  with. I was hoping that the outcome, which was a very significant compromise from my plan A, B and C for the day and the time.I actually set aside for meeting with them. But they did not respond to the Zoom meeting. I will try again tomorrow, but it is a bad sign and not an unusual one in my life. My wife is out at a meeting and I am missing my window to get to the gym and/or pool where I work out on a regular basis  –but I know that this day was just one of many in my life that are similar. I woke in the morning, made coffee for Clara and I, then I went to the dump and dropped off our recycling to the various bins. Then I went to the plasma center where I donated 892 milliliters of plasma and was compensated $50. On the way home, I shopped and made us both lunch. After lunch Clara and I napped together and then we woke up to an alarm on Alexa,  mostly so I could take the meeting that did not happen. The meeting had not been easy to get excited about but it was still depressing to have it disappear.   . 

When we left for Tonga we had sold a car and let go of the camp that my Dad’s family sort of owned together. Giving up the life of a  family where my Dad was a lawyer married to a small town journalist and paid case manager for a poverty assistance program as well as a playwright in my mother. For me there was the kid who had traveled a lot and attended our small town Catholic School. For me it was not at all clear that I would feel safe again in my hometown and I was never someone who felt very safe.  

As the days passed and we were planning to leave the Navajoland missions, I was praying with Mom and Dad about where we would be going. I had mixed feelings, part of me wanted to go back to Abbeville and see my relatives, especially my grandparents. But on the other hand, It seemed like it would be great if we could establish ourselves in some kind of ministry and basic sense of community and residence somewhere – and then possibly go back home for my mother to give birth to my new sibling. It would be wonderful for Sarah (or whoever the baby was going to be) to be welcomed into our extended family and community there. But I sensed even then that there was not  a way to know exactly what going home would be like. Furthermore, we would not be taking a break for the baby to be born if we did not have a big enough connection to any place for us to go back to after the baby was old enough to travel. I was processing all of this  even while I was sincerely praying and seeking to practice a kind of mysticism that seemed to be vitally connected to my whole life.   

The time we spent in El Paso with Father RIck Thomas started with him meeting us at the bus station. We were dressed in a mix of tropical and New Mexico clothes. My father was an attorney turned missionary and my mother was visibly pregnant now, though not really showing a big bump. Everything we had with us was wrapped in a large bundle in a Tongan mat. It was all that there was of luggage. I rode in the back of Father Rick’s pickup truck with the dog and the possessions in the Tongan mat. The dog was named Fe, the Spanish word for Faith. We spent the first night in a nice place, a Jesuit house which I believe was on Altura Avenue. My room was in the basement with a substantial library. I read a good number of books written by Jesuit priests for teenage boys at their high schools. That was my first introduction to Jesuit spirituality. During our first days there we involved ourselves in a number of ministries including the ministry to the Dump where the miraculous Christmas DInner had occurred. We saw the Lord’s Ranch, a booming and growing ministry of prayer, sanctified work, growing food for the poor and caring for animals. They were developing a fish pond the fish in  that pond interested me. But I never fished in that pond or anywhere else while I was there.

It was during that early time that we met some of the families and some of the consecrated religious that were involved in the ministry of Our Lady’s Youth Center. Bowie  High School was a major focus of the ministry of Our Lady’s Youth Center. The focus of the ministry there was in a new building, that ministry was called la “Cueva del Oso”. The “Cave of the Bear” in Spanish. The ministry was focused on the students at Bowie High School.  Bowie Bears were the teams and the student population was largely Hispanic. Our family would move in and work with the kids and their families in a number of ways. We would also try to connect the young people with the ministries in El Paso and the Mexican city of Juarez just across the border. I made some friends among the older kids and a few of those relationships with those kids kept going for a long time. One remained my friend for decades although we were not in continuous connection over the years.

Meanwhile I went with Dad to the Lord’s Ranch, The Lords’ Food Bank, The Lord’s Clinic and prayer and classes at the Our Lady’s Youth Center. I soaked up what I could and read a lot and watched Mom setting up the logisitcs of the La Cueva ministry.. While this was going on I was not in school and was interacting with students in school in a school ministry. I was a middle schooler and they were high school kids. My last time in a formal school was in fifth grade. The world was a complex place and everywhere I had been I had learned something. Among other things, I had learned that in EL Paso a dust storm could plow in under  a rain storm and drops of mud could fall from the sky onto anything below. I understand that this is fairly rare, but it happened twice in our time there.

We had no been there very long before a new school was organized. It was called The Lord’s School. We started with prayer and bible study every day..We did volunteer work with a ministry in the complex of ministries for a few hours each week. We went on one major field trip every week in which the teachers might teach or an expert might be included for that particular outing.

We had about three hours a day where we worked from math workbooks, literary readers,and social studies work books under the guidance of trained and certified teachers who had retired. Several parents had some background in education but had not taught for a long time. My parents had a hard time supporting my efforts to fit in at the school but overall I was pretty happy there. I am not sure. I enjoyed the company of the guys in our group of twenty kids from upper elementary through high school. One family were part of major clothing dynast and had huge amounts of money, Another family was poor and underprivileged. I was attracted to at least one of the girls in our little school and wondered what the future might be like with those kids in this new kind of school.

About our fourth field trip was just after we had been told we would start developing  food plots and food preservation systems on the Lord’s Ranch. We went out on a field trip to some of the wilder and more natural desert that we could reach. On the field trip we all did listen to talks about dry land ecology and the biology of desert plants. “In Tonga Side School, I used to go on field trips around the school and gather samples of the local plants and so forth. Everybody did and then we would measure and discuss them and look them up in books.” That was what I said when we all discussed our vision of the trip.

.. 

Then we read Bible passages about the desert and discussed them. Later we hiked up a hill and I raced several of the kids to the bottom of the hill. I lost control and ran into a Spanish Dagger plant that sunk a three inch needle of a thorn into my knee and broke off. I would limp, bleed, swell and get sick with infection and despite prayers it would take two times for a doctor to remove the entire splinter thorn. I missed some school and limped on the first field grip when I came back. Then before I knew it we were leaving to go home for Sarah’s birth. However, it did not seem like we would be coming back to the La Cueva ministry. We had seen close up large numbers of people volunteering many hours in the ministries of the renewal that we all believed in and we were hoping that we would live out our lives in dynamic and energetic ministry. There was a lot of talk there about avoiding social injustice, creating opportunity and hope for the poor. The Dump had been controlled by violent gangs of super poor people hurting each other. Not long before we had got there the factions had made an agreement to accept aid but also to work with the ministry to coop the sale of recycled products and some more profits and better working conditions were emerging. I myself worked on creating better shelters, water systems and transit in the town of trash. Burning toxic trash pits we still used but less and they were better managed. I was reminded of my own little business recycling soft drink bottles.  

Ernest and Esther were the couple who took over La Cueva and we were packing up as they were settling in and we were headed back towards Louisiana for the birth of my coming sibling. We took a train which I thought was much more comfortable than a bus. The Amtrak train on the bicentennial year as the Independence Day of July 4, 1776 was drawing near seemed very much an American way to travel. Mom was big and pregnant and we were going home. It was exciting and scary and we still believed we would be working with Our Lady’s Youth Center Ministries in Juarez in a few months. I might be in the Lord’s School in August. I loved the view of Javalina and deer from the windows and the chance to eat a meal in the dining car and stretch my legs on the train. I have loved trains ever since. I knew some words and songs in Tongan, Samoan and Spanish and I hoped that we would be able to find a good way to be in our hometown. I also was excited to meet my new baby brother or sister. But I was also aware that life would be complicated and wondered what the future would be like when school started in the fall if we were not back in EL Paso and I was not in the Lord’s School. I felt like going back to Mount Carmel elementary would be tough. I liked some kids pretty well. Among the kids I liked and respected was a girl named Clara Duhon. What I felt about the kids I spent time with were relationships I expected to be troubled. I had never really thrived there and the years had gotten less positive..

Christmas Story: The first chapters of a working draft of my New Novel of Jesus’s life

An image showing the basis of all this Christmas celebration.

An image showing the basis of all this Christmas celebration.

This has to be read in linked portions or it might crash this site. Here is the first chapter.  Then the second  chapter, the third chapter  and the fourth chapter as well as the fifth chapter are here in links. This is as you can see a bit of Christmas longer than this little passage. If you are still reading then continue with the sixth chapter, the seventh chapter, the eighth chapter, the ninth chapter, the tenth chapter and the eleventh chapter. You will becoming in for a long home stretch now with chapter twelve, chapter thirteen, chapter fourteen, chapter fifteen, chapter sixteen and chapter seventeen. Merry Christmas and Happy Feast of the Epiphany.

My niece's early Christmas can be remembered but not recaptured.

My niece’s early Christmas can be remembered but not recaptured.