Take a Hike!

I was really filled with gratitude to the Lord on Sunday and Monday.  We were blessed with gorgeous weather here in the Northeast.  On Sunday, I celebrated Mass and then enjoyed a beautiful afternoon at the Scituate Art Festival with good friends, followed by a great dinner, and topped off with a New England Patriots’ victory.

On Monday, I, along with three teachers and thirteen students from La Salle Academy, spent the day in New Hampshire hiking Mt. Monadnock.  I just felt so blessed over those two days: beautiful weather, good friends, great young people, the invigorating feel of standing at the summit after a hike.  I experienced the Lord’s presence in all of these people and moments.  God is so good!

Here’s a short video I took with my iPhone.  I hope you enjoy it.  You’ll notice that the wind was blowing pretty strongly!  I pray that you, too, can get out in nature and experience the Lord’s presence.  Remember: live with gratitude!

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDjM1I7CHo8&feature=channel_video_title]

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My Little Black Book

In my life, when it’s comes to journaling, I’ve been inconsistent at best.  Over the years I’ve filled a few journals, but if you were to look at the entry dates you’d see my inconsistency.  For example, you’ll see a March 3, 2005 entry and then the next entry is June 5, 2005.  You get the point.  Don’t get me wrong, I think journaling is a wonderful tool for our personal and spiritual lives, but I’ve just never been very good at keeping a daily journal.

But I think I’ve found a way to keep a daily record of my life without feeling that I need to write paragraph after paragraph for twenty minutes.  For the last three weeks I’ve been keeping what I call a Presence and Gratitude Journal.  It’s not a journal in the traditional sense of the word; it’s more like several bullet points that I write each day.  At the end of the day, I settle into my living room and sit in the chair that I use exclusively for prayer.  There, I recollect myself in God’s presence, I review the day, and in my little moleskine notebook I write bullet points under two headings: 1) God’s presence, love, and action, 2) Grateful for.

My purpose in writing these brief bullet points is simple: to recount where I experienced the Lord’s presence, love, and action and to give thanks to God for the blessings He’s given to me.  I wouldn’t call it journaling in the traditional sense, but it works for me.

Here are some examples from my own journal:
God’s Presence, Love, and Action:
– In being patient with someone with whom I could have gotten aggravated
– In trying to be more focused and prayerful during Mass
– In making good connections with La Salle students at tonight’s wrestling match

Grateful for:
– The person who told me after Mass that he prays for me every day by name
– The joy I brought to my nieces when they received the teddy bears and flowers I sent them after their tonsillectomy
– An enjoyable dinner with friends

What I like about this method is that it doesn’t take long.  I can take three minutes or ten minutes; it’s up to me.  The important thing is that I do it.  In three weeks, here are the benefits that I’ve experienced from doing this:

1) The very fact that I know I’m going to write in my little black book at the end of the day focuses me more on God’s presence and helps me to be more grateful.  Just today as I was walking back into my office after a meeting I thought about my little black book.  That very thought prompted me to recollect myself for a moment to remember God’s presence.

2) It’s a good way to quickly review what God has been doing and to look at the blessings He’s given me.  I can look back over the previous day or the last few days and review where God acted and where I experienced His love and blessings.

3) It helps me to focus on making tomorrow better than today.  When I’m done writing my bullet points, sometimes I’ll jot a word or a phrase at the bottom of the page: “be more attentive to people”; “selfless”; “foster deeper peace and patience.”  These words or phrases are reminders to me of what I believe the Holy Spirit is asking me to focus on.

It’s not a perfect method.  Some days I feel that I don’t have much to write at all; but this feeling is good, because it helps me to realize that I need to be more mindful of God’s presence.  Some days I feel that I can fill a couple of little pages, but I try to keep it to one small page.

So I share this with you as one tool that you might be able to use to help you to grow in your relationship with the Lord.

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What tools besides prayer help you in your relationship with God?  Do you journal?  If so, how does it help you?

I’d like to do some vlogs (video blogs) based on questions you have about the spiritual life.  Email, facebook, or tweet me a question you have about the spiritual life and I may use your question as the basis for a vlog.

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How to Deal with Disappointment

On Monday evening, our priest-seminarian basketball team played its first game against St. Patrick Academy students and alumni.  It was a great event and quite an intense matchup.  Both teams fought to the finish, with the “Padres” (that would be us) prevailing by one point.

Although I missed many more shots than I made, I still contributed six points.  I grew up playing basketball, so it was easy for me to get into the competitive spirit of the game; and that spirit really roared with one minute left.  The ball was loose and I started to chase it.  My Jack Bauer mentality kicked in as I tried to outrace a 14 year-old to the ball: Who does this kid think he is?  Surely this 36 year-old can out run him!

Then it happened.  As I dove for the ball I felt a POP!  And then pain. I immediately winced and grabbed my left hamstring.  For a moment I thought it might just be a cramp, so I tried a slow trot.  No good.  It was a pulled hamstring.  I was done.  Dejected, I limped off the court.  The first thought that came to mind was, I can’t believe I’m not going to be able to run that half marathon.

I had been training for the Hartford half marathon to take place on October 9, and I knew immediately that the injury would take at least a couple of weeks to heal.  I had just run eleven miles on Sunday and was feeling more and more confident about the race.  Running a half marathon has been a personal goal for quite a while, but now that goal is going to have to be put on hold as my hamstring heals.

Yes, I was frustrated and disappointed; but in the grand scheme of things, it’s really not a big deal.  In a few weeks–hopefully–I’ll be back to running, and there’ll be more half marathons in the future.  I could have made a big deal out of it and really let my frustration get the best of me.  But is it worth it to get frustrated over things that we can’t control?

So, here are a few effective ways that I believe we can deal with disappointment:
1) Ponder the blessings in your life.  There are so many people with problems much bigger than a pulled hamstring.  I think, for example, about two young people I know who are dealing with the reality that a parent has cancer; or the 14 year old girl I know who just had a brain tumor removed.  When we experience a setback in life, we can take time to think about the blessings that we have and the fact that many people are suffering more than we are.

2) Believe that God’s plan is better than your plan.  I don’t know why the Lord allowed me to pull my hamstring, except maybe to teach me that I’m not as young and agile as I used to be.  But I do believe there’s a reason for everything.  There’s a reason I’m not supposed to run that half marathon.  I may never know what it is, but I trust that God’s plan is better than mine.

3) Keep going! When we experience disappointment, we need to make sure we keep moving forward.  Things are going to happen that we can’t control, but we can’t let those things keep us down.  Think of Jesus on the road to Calvary.  He fell many times, but he kept getting up out love for us.  Stay united to Him, and He will help you to keep moving forward.

How do you deal with disappointment?  Feel free to share your insights.

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Golf and the Spiritual Life

Now that the warm weather has arrived, my golf clubs are back in the trunk of my car.  In this video blog (or “vlog” as they say), I share with you the spiritual lessons learned from my first round of golf of this new season. Forgive some of the camera motion; I didn’t use a tripod.  Enjoy, and please feel free to comment.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=spChwSmens8]

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Praise Him in the Storm

It’s not very often that little ol’ Rhode Island makes the national spotlight, but if you followed last week’s news you learned about the devastating floods throughout our state. It’s ironic: in the past, when I’ve heard about floods occurring in different parts of the country, I’ve always thought, “Thank God nothing like that could [...]

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Here’s Some Inspiration to Keep You Going!

In our walk with the Lord, we often fall.  We sin every day.  I don’t know about you, but sometimes I get discouraged by my own weaknesses.  However, the Lord wants us to keep going.  His desire is that we begin again and again.  He wants us to focus on His love, not on our [...]

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The Gift and Fragility of Life

In the past two days I’ve been reminded of both the gift and fragility of life. Yesterday, I received an email from a friend asking for prayers because her daughter suffered a miscarriage. What a tremendously painful experience a miscarriage is for parents and the whole family. This morning, I administered the sacrament of the sick to my dad. He’s having surgery on Monday. Granted, it’s minor surgery, but any time your being put under anesthesia it involves risk and certainly can be frightening. This afternoon, I received a voicemail from a friend asking me to pray for a man who was rushed to the hospital when a brain aneurism burst. I know this man. He’s married and the father of two young adult sons. This evening, I received an email from a friend asking me if I would be able to go to the hospital to anoint her mom who was about to undergo emergency surgery. Life is a gift. Life is fragile.

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