Tuesday, June 26, 2018

On Self-Giving (or, What Is Love?)


Sonya: aaaaaaaa*plplplpl*babappplapla?
[Translator's note: Since leaving the womb, Miss Toner has naturally been exposed to dialectal influences from her own misguided generation, necessitating minor edits for clarity. For instance, "bro" and "dude" have been replaced with the preferred usages of "old sport" and "daddy-o."]
Sonya: What is love, old sport?
Me: To love is to will the highest good of another.
Sonya: That seems glib.
Me: Merely terse. I don't have room to cut and paste The Brothers Karamazov. But I grant you that there are nuances.
Sonya: I should say so. For example, I believe that I love you and Mother.
Me: We hope so.
Sonya: But with my ratiocinative powers being at such an early stage, I can scarcely be expected to understand the concept of your good as distinct from my own. I love you because you feed me and do silly things to make me smile.


Me: You do have a wonderful smile. But I take your meaning. Of course you can't yet pray for us or help with laundry or tend me in my age.
Sonya: Especially as you're so full of youthful vim.
Me: Why thank you.
Sonya: I get an allowance eventually, right?
Me: Well played. Point is: our highest good is to live out our vocation as your parents. So for right now, you love us by letting us love you. You keep eating and packin' chub onto those little legs, and figuring out speech patterns and all that stuff. Nothing makes us happier, or holier (funny how that works), than taking care of you. Now, since we're all equal creatures of God, there will no doubt be times when we can fully depend on each other, fully need each other, and truly sacrifice ourselves for one another.
Sonya: No greater love than this.
Me: Zackly. And before long, you'll be able to love actively, and give back to us in whatever way best suits the woman you're becoming. But remember that ultimately, none of us can give back to God. Everything we have is given to us by Him. So we're all in the position of loving Him solely by accepting His love. And of course by serving Him in one another. But like your mama said last week, what return shall we make to the Lord for all His gifts? We accept the cup of salvation and call upon His Name. And all the other loves flow from there.
Sonya: Trickle-down love-o-nomics!
Me: Was that a Reagan joke? Nicely done, old sport!
Sonya: Thanks, daddy-o.

Tuesday, June 19, 2018

MAMA CHIMES IN: A Mother's Consecration

by Ellen RM Toner

So. I’ve got two “holy” siblings: a nun and an almost-priest. Which is great, because not only do I never have to worry about getting myself to heaven (talk to me—I can hook you up), but every so often I get little custom-made bits of real spiritual wisdom from the two people who were nearest and dearest to me all through my childhood.

Something Sister Louise Marie said to me once was that suffering is the kiss of Christ. Sounds all very romantical and idealistic and kind of mushy on the surface, but it’s something that’s stuck with me because, at its heart, it’s deeply profound. As Jesus was the most innocent and holiest victim there ever was, when he chose to enter into suffering, it was of the acutest nature because it was so, well, unjust. But he made that choice, and so, in calling us to follow in his footsteps, to pick up our own crosses, he became the elixir. And suffering, when undertaken with our sights set on him, is our gold. So, in my words, what my Sister sister means is not that we should all go be a bunch of masochists, but that each time suffering is offered to us, or asked and even demanded, it is Jesus saying, hey, here are my shoes! I think you can walk in them. So, stand up, and show me what you got. Expect the Lord; do manfully.

Before I dive into this, I feel like I need to say something: I know I’ve talked a lot over the last couple years about how hard some things have been. While sympathy is helpful, and acknowledgement is healing, I hope that by sharing difficult personal things that the primary end is to share what I think are insights gained and to help other people to understand stuff that they’re wrestling with, or at least to know that they’re not alone and that it’s okay to suddenly be having a rough time of dealing with something that was “supposed” to be easy. One of the most helpful things for me in processing what happened the night Sonya was born was a conversation I had with a friend a few months ahead of time. Our labor stories, and our individual perceptions of our “performances” in them, are strangely similar, and so have helped me to put some things in perspective and not be so angry at myself. And though this is shared in a somewhat less personal arena than a living room couch over a cup of tea, I hope it can be just as helpful for some of you.


I want to talk about two things, both of which are front and center in my mind each time I go to mass these days. The words of the Consecration have gotten so much deeper over the last year, taken on a personal resonance that I didn’t know I was missing: This is My Body, which is given up for you. This is the Chalice of My Blood. Take, and drink. And I feel a bit like a little kid who thinks she’s jumping so high off the couch that she hollers for her daddy’s attention, and also, yes, like I’m putting on his shoes and clumping around, thinking they actually fit. But there’s only one way to grow up; little kids are ingenuous enough to reach for the stars and think they’ve actually touched them. That’s the only way to eventually get there.

First thing: what do pregnancy and childbirth have to do with Jesus, and, more specifically, the Consecration? Well, this is from a letter I wrote to a friend, shared with permission.

You’re allowed to hate being pregnant, you’re allowed to not be excited, you’re allowed to be angry and resentful and even a little shocked and horrified by how hard it is. Before I got so sick, I hadn’t really processed the fact that I was pregnant, and after I got sick there was only one day in my whole pregnancy that I felt all glowy and happy about it. One day. The rest, as I’m sure you know, totally royally sucked. Did I tell you I even prayed for a miscarriage? That’s how much I hated being pregnant. And I don’t think that means I’m a crap mom, and I know it doesn’t mean I don’t love Sonya loads right now. It just means that I felt trapped and foreign and so sick of being incapable. Pregnancy felt endless; I felt weak and tired, couldn’t sleep, got the most intense leg cramps, had a horrible shooting pain in my left side for the last half of the pregnancy, and Jamey trying to kiss me literally made me throw up. Being so incapacitated is absolutely the worst thing I’ve ever had to deal with, and I cannot tell you how many times I wanted to escape my own body/life/circumstances, and how many times Jamey and I talked about how we could never do this again.

About labor… I’m going to be straight with you, because one of the reasons it was hard for me is that I felt like no one had warned me about how brutal it could be. I went in thinking that I knew what it would be like, because I’ve seen it so many times before, but I was utterly, absurdly caught off guard, and I was super pissed at all the women in my life who had kept it a secret. Irrational? Yes. Because obviously there was no conspiracy to keep me in the dark, but still, why hadn’t they told me?! Maybe because there are no words. The only words I can think of to really get at the heart of it are from the Consecration: This is my Body, which is given up for you. I definitely thought a lot about those words during the pregnancy, for obvious reasons, but now each time I’m at mass I think about giving birth, and how everything hurt in ways I didn’t know existed, in blinding, searing, consuming pain that pushed every thought and image out of my head except the Crucifixion. At the very end, where they talk about feeling the ring of fire, I felt it all the way down to the soles of my feet. They were in the water, and they were burning. In between contractions I was alternately shaking, hyperventilating, whimpering and crying, and when each one started I was pleading and panicking to escape it. I felt trapped, cornered, outmanned and outgunned, and I didn’t have anywhere near enough time between them to gather myself and try to meet the next one. Cindy told me later that they were sometimes only 30 seconds apart. Labor started with my water breaking, and even then they were 2 minutes apart. It is unusual for them to be so close, especially for a first-timer; it’s very likely that you will have more breathing time.

After transition they did slow down, so much so that I kept falling asleep for a minute or two between them, was even having short snippet dreams, and I remember as each one pulled me back into reality I kept hoping against hope that the dreams were real and the contractions were a nightmare.

I was talking with M. about it, and she reminded me that even Jesus, before his Crucifixion, was in agony over what was to come, that even he begged and pleaded and prayed that he wouldn’t have to do it. It was really helpful for me to be reminded of that. One of the things that I’ve had a hard time with since the birth is looking back and feeling like I didn’t handle it well. I yelled and threw an ice pack across the room at one point because I was so mad at the whole damn thing, and I was hoarse for days afterwards because I bellowed and screamed so much. I felt like I didn’t do well with it at all, that I was a coward and honestly kind of a p**** about the whole process. Remembering the whimpering, panicking and wanting to hide is especially, well, shameful. But even Jesus himself didn’t want to do it. He gave up his Body, asking for a way out, though he did it anyway. And I didn’t really have a choice, and I couldn’t have gone back, and maybe my body was taken, not given, but at the end of the day it wasn’t mine and neither was his. Body and Blood painfully, atrociously surrendered, all for the good of another who has no conception of the astounding and terrific depths of the sacrifice made for them.

You want to know what went through my head when I held her for the first time? Never again. Never, never, ever in a million years will I ever do this again. And then, yes, I was mad again, super angry in my exhaustion, because the whole world had lied to me. It wasn’t worth it, and they were all hateful, idiotic, cruel deceivers.


But, the thing is . . . I can’t even describe to you how much I love her now. I look at her and want to eat her, hug her so tightly it hurts, and sometimes I start crying because she’s so beautiful. I could—and do—stare at her face for hours, learning her character, watching her learn the world around her, seeing Jamey and my siblings flitting across her face as she makes her crazy expressions. I have discovered that I don’t mind getting poop on me (at least, not much), because I’m so proud of her for accomplishing it, as it’s such an undertaking for her little person. A lot of the time I don’t mind getting up in the night for her, and I love it when she wakes up in the morning, because the first thing she does is coo and smile and wave her arms to show how much she loves us.

Everything is so intense. The stakes are just way higher than I ever thought they could be, but because we have to get on with life we sort of get used to it and move right along. Every couple days or so, or maybe a couple times every day if it’s that sort of week, the enormity of it all, good or bad and oftentimes both tangled up together, comes roaring through the surface and leaves you crying and overwhelmed and astounded. People say you forget, once the baby is born, the difficulties of labor and pregnancy. I have not found that to be the case, but I do feel like I have two overflowing glasses now. The intensity of the joy and wonder at my daughter, whose very existence I resented and wanted to run away from, has risen up so high that it’s met the tribulations head-on. I’m still not able to say, yes, it’s worth it, with full confidence. But what I can say is that this little girl makes me happier than I ever thought I could be, and I think I do want to have another one. Just not anytime soon!

I don’t really have much to add to all that, expect to say that I’ve never before come close to being able to empathize with Jesus. And not to say that I can do so now; but, I have scaled a foothill that I thought was The Mountain, and now I feel like, from far away and at the very bottom, I suddenly have some nebulous notion of the magnanimity of something I didn’t even know existed. Some people offer each contraction in labor for a different person, an individual need, a special intention. I admire them immensely for it, and have to say that I have no concept of how that is even possible. There were two moments in particular where events occurred that made the pain tear through me in a roar; during one of them my arms were stretched out on either side of me, fingers stretched in an effort to not tense them into fists, and my head was thrown back. And though the words did not form in my head, there was only one image I knew: Eloi, Eloi, lama sabacthani? And, all at once, Calvary has become personal.



The second thing I want to talk about is trying to feed Sonya, which I hope is a far more straightforward illumination of the Eucharist. Something I’ve talked about somewhere before (I don’t remember where; don’t ask!) is that prayer the priest offers in between receiving the Body and receiving the Blood of Christ. What return shall I make to the Lord for all He has given to me? I shall take the Chalice of Salvation. How do we thank God for giving us one enormous huge out-of-this-world gift? Well, by taking another one, as often as it’s offered, as often as we can! He wants to feed and nourish us with his own person, just as a mother feeds her baby; he wants that personal, physical, intimate connection, and the best way to show him we’re grateful for it is to keep coming back for more.

Sonya didn’t take to breastfeeding, to put it mildly. She couldn’t at all when she was born, like, physically was not able to, because her poor little tongue was tied all the way down to the very tip. She couldn’t lift it even the least little bit, which meant she couldn’t get any milk from me, and also that she couldn’t “tell me” that she needed milk, which meant I never made enough for her. So we fed her with syringes and tiny little tubes and bottles and supplemental nursing systems and snuggles and galactogogues and shields and formula and pumps and frustration and tears (from her and us) and determination and confusion. Every single time I tried to feed her without any of the training wheels, she would choke and cough and spit on me, making faces like she was tasting something sour and bitter, and would invariably start screaming.


Finally, after almost 12 weeks of the struggle, Jamey and I were talking over the pros and cons of continuing to try to breastfeed, and we just didn’t know what to do. So we said, let’s pray about it, and hope that it comes clear. Two days later, I sat down to feed her, and she would. not. eat. I tried to breastfeed her three more times that day, and again the next several days; she made it clear that she was absolutely done with me and it. And, happening when it did, it was so clearly the answer to our prayers, and our life is so much more sane with bottles and formula, but oh the rejection. I was literally bruised, bleeding and lacerated for her, crying for her to accept. And she still didn’t want me. Here, Sonya! Here is my body! I’m giving it to you! Eat! Drink! And instead she coughed and spat and beat me with her little fists, with no conception of what she was rejecting or how much anguish she was causing.

What is that, what does that mean, if not the most clear illustration of what Jesus offers to us, and what we have given him in return? How can we recover, make it better, try to fix what we’ve broken in ourselves and heal the hurt we’ve given him? All we have to do is say yes and accept the help he wants to give us along the way. We can’t scale The Mountain without Lembas.

As always, I’m here if you want to talk.


Monday, June 11, 2018

On Pain (or, The Spirit Drove Him Into The Wilderness)

Imagine being eaten by wolves. After they rip out your hamstrings, you can't run or hope to fight, so they leave your throat intact so you're fresh for as long as possible. Then it's just red snarling teeth tearing the cheeks from your skull, munching and yanking at your braincase, burrowing, tugging the entrails out of your stomach yard by yard. And the whole time you're shrieking and begging them to stop, but they don't understand and they wouldn't care if they did, and God won't make it stop because apparently that's not how God works. Now imagine being eaten by your own mouth.

Sonya's teething this week. How that works is, we have rows of teeth tucked up in our heads like manticores, and at a certain point they just start descending and pushing their way out through the flesh of the gums. The skin doesn't retract or soften or anything like that; the teeth just chew their way through our own faces. So at the age of three months, with no concept of self or time or this too shall pass, nothing but PAIN IS HAPPENING RIGHT NOW, she's tossed into a tiny Hell, a universe with nothing in it but suffering, and left there for days at a time. You rock her, feed her, wash her, give her Tylenol, and some of it helps for a while, but ultimately you stand in the kitchen at three in the morning and just hold her while she cries and flails and claws at your chest and screams.

Ever notice when you're praying the Joyful Mysteries that by midway through they're already turning sorrowful? Contemplate the funeral spice at the Nativity. The Presentation at the Temple comes with Simeon helpfully pointing out that a sword will pierce Mary's heart, and the Finding of the Child Jesus comes with Mary's own remark that "for three days we have sought you, sorrowing." It's hard to find pure joy; it can't not come with the inevitability of loss. But pure agony? Take a look at a teething baby.

After the Baptism in the Jordan (mind you, I can't fully approve of the Luminous Mysteries; they throw off the three-act structure), Jesus goes to the desert to be tested. But there are two translations of Matthew 4:1. One goes, "The Spirit led Him into the wilderness." The other one says the Spirit drove Him. Seems like kind of an important distinction. Sometimes we can choose to accept our suffering, offer it up, learn from it. Sometimes we can't choose anything because it's so intense that the person disappears and there's nothing there but a human shape filled up with pain. My last several posts have been about the importance of being in the moment, good or bad, living it, not just holding on and waiting for it to be over. But God knows there are days when even just holding on is almost more than we can do. I suppose those are the times we have to let the Spirit drive.

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Come Back Down

Peter said to Jesus, “Master, it is good that we are here; let us make three tents, one for you, one for Moses, and one for Elijah.” But he did not know what he was saying.

- Luke 9:33

a trudge of slobs—loans, budgets, jobs—
to nudge at knobless doors of faith
a cross and quest of bosses, stress,
kids flossed and dressed and pooped and bathed
a test of dross (caressed, then tossed)
by blast and frost of tepid wraiths
a mob of drudges—hobbling, crutched—
till Abba judgeth and He saith
WELL DONE, O DAUGHTER, SON, WELL SOUGHT,
WELL RUN, WELL FOUGHT BEYOND ALL HOPE
and looking back, the crooked track
we took, to hack and flail and grope
our way, is a perilous narrow stair rising through mountains,
through clouds and suns and nebulae, through the curve of time
at every point intersecting every point of every narrow stair
shaping or misshaping every step and turn and landing
where every foot must tread, from the first man’s fruit
to the last man’s interceding breath for Adam in purgation
each mercied act flinging out a cable into the abyss
for the rope-walkers from the storehouse of grace
each meanness sending out a lash for the back at the pillar
and from beneath
claws clutch at ankles from between the rickety stairs
and what missteps and stumbles we are spared
by the sufferings of those who walk the ropes
we may discover only in our own purgation
but what our anguish spares our fellow farers of the steps
we, and they, shall learn together at the peak
beyond both sorrow and gratitude
where the desperate loves of all the days shall merge,
and the one at the pillar shall turn to us,
and we shall be whole enough to see him as he is.
hell's shackles, hooks, false tracks, false books,
attacks that shook us on the slope,
those throttling tons of rotten scum,
have taught us gumption past our scope
to face the rays of Grace's gaze,
embrace the blazing heart of Charity
in His time, when this vision ends
and is a memory of clarity.
Now then, dismissed from trembling bliss,
descend with this Petrine celerity
to daze our race with brazen grace
and raise the chase for Final Verity!


Tuesday, May 29, 2018

On Being Here Now (or, Adventure? Excitement? A Jedi Craves Not These Things)

One of the guys at Ace Hardware back in the day was on cashier duty, and business must have been slow. He tied a small metal nut to a piece of string two or three feet long, tied the other end to a hook on the impulse-buy candy rack by the exit door, and attached a magnet to the same rack, two or three feet higher. Then he adjusted the length of the string such that the nut couldn't quite reach the magnet, but was so close that it literally hung in midair, levitating, maybe a quarter of an inch beneath its goal. Four years I worked at that store, and our little magnet display never stopped being cool. Thing is, though: if anybody jostled the candy rack, even a little bit, the nut instantly fell. Hard not to be reminded of the spiritual life.

I've got problems. At the end of a good day, I can look back and only check off half a dozen of the Seven Deadlies. But I wonder sometimes if my greatest failing mightn't be my tendency to coast through the work day, waiting for it to be over, instead of engaging it, living it. Rarely is my mind on where I am, what I'm doingand if it is, I resent the necessity of focus, the intrusion on my private thoughts. My favorite tasks are ones like pulling weeds or stacking chairs, that draw no cerebration. And sometimes that's okay! As long as the work gets done, it's not awful if you happen to be composing goofy couplets in your head at the same time. But.

"Whether you eat or you drink or whatsoever you do, do it all to the Glory of God" (Corinthians 10:31). Any task, every task, becomes holy if one simply remembers to consecrate it. At the beginning of the day (on a good day) I say a prayer that goes like this: "O Jesus, through the Immaculate Heart of Mary, in union with Your Most Precious Blood poured out on the Cross and offered in every Mass, I offer you today my prayers, works, joys, sorrows, and sufferings, for the praise of Your Holy Name and all the desires of Your Sacred Heart, for the conversion of sinners, the union of all Christians, our Holy Father the Pope, and our final union with You in Heaven." It's a beautiful prayer, and it starts the day in a beautiful way. Except then something horrible happens. I have to get out of bed. And when I'm petty or petulant during the day, I fear that it's worse than it would be if I hadn't dedicated my actions to the Lord. Aspiring to the height always means a longer fall.

A Christian should look forward to death. It's a bad thing in itself, but it's been transmuted into a doorway to all Good. And I do look forward to it. But I don't want to find myself in a nursing home (like the place where I spend every working day) looking back on a life spent looking forward to the grave. When He finished writing the world, God looked on all that He had made and found it good. It's not a place we should be coasting through.


Tuesday, May 22, 2018

The Quotidian Mythic

I am a maintenance worker at an upscale retirement home. It's a good job and I'm very blessed to have it. Before this I was a maintenance worker at a Catholic church and K-8 school; before that I was a maintenance worker at a grocery store, and before that I was sort of an all-around "go do something useful" employee at a hardware store. Easy enough to see how I've ended up in my current job, but there's a funny twist.

Over the years, I've known some extremely intelligent people who suffer from dyslexia. I'm grateful that I don't have that particular affliction; but I don't need to use my imagination to empathize. To read the same passage over and over, have someone explain it, read it again, and still just not get it: I know what it's like, because that's how tools and machines are to me.

I can read the instructions, listen to the explanation, watch my coworker do it. Plug it in. Hit the on button. Bam, it turns on. He leaves the room. I plug it in, I hit the on button. Nothing happens. I do it fifty times, harder and harder, till I gash my hand on the corner. Then I call for help, he comes back in and pushes the button, and it turns on.

Then I do whatever I'm doing for as long as I can. Pray I can finish before I have to go to lunch or help someone move a shelf or recalibrate the capacitor or whatever. But eventually I have to turn it off, and I'm not quite done, so then I have to turn it back on. Please, just this once, let it work. Please, God, please, just this one time. Plug it in. Hit the button. Nothing. I try very hard not to blaspheme, but these are the moments when I fail.

So how have I wound up working with tools and machines for the last twelve years? Dunno. I'm really hoping it's some kind of installment program to help me get through a big chunk of Purgatory while I'm still on Earth.

When I was young, I wanted so badly to live a life of adventure. I wanted to jump away from explosions, swing over pits on well-placed ropes, rescue attractive and interesting people from villains who were deeply committed to nunchuck-based villainy. So I went looking for those things, and because a lot of good-hearted people were looking out for me, including my insanely badass Guardian Angel, I never happened to get knifed or imprisoned or raped. But I did, very slowly, get huge red nails of knowledge and understanding pushed through the sockets of my eyes.

All of thisthe labor, the lostnessthis is my adventure. I don't get to punch ninjas or vault over velociraptors, because you don't get what you expect or what you think you want. You get what will get make you into a saint. I see now that being a super action hero would have made me arrogant and insufferable, stone-deaf to the weakness of men and to the still small voice of God. My hero's journey is no less arduous than (say) Frodo's to Mount Doomand neither is yours, friend readerbut we may not get the fireworks on this side of the Vale of Tears. It's okay. They're waiting for us, just across the way.

This small, humble, day-by-day adventure story of the common life is what I'm trying to accept as my own legendary quest, my own long quiet crucifixion. I call it The Quotidian Mythic, because I find it validating to make up pompous names for things. And if you, good friend, should ever feel that Christian life is boringjust remember that the excruciating dullness is all part of the trial, and therefore part of the quest. Schlepping across mile after dreary, dusty mile of Mordor was not exciting for the schleppers. Being a hero, being a saint, is not about you and me having a cool, exciting time. It's about saving the fucking day.


Tuesday, May 15, 2018

On Qi (or, If It's True, It's Christian)

Sonya has begun to coo. She's coming up on three months outside the womb now, and apparently cooing is a normal part of vocal development; but to me it feels like God saying, "Here's a gift for all the hard times behind you and before you. Remember how very worth it she is." Upon reflection, I think I can say definitively that it's the sweetest sound I've ever heard. It's so beautiful that it's almost physically painful. I keep finding myself hugging my own stomach as if to keep it from bursting. It brings to mind my old friend Anthony Giacoma, with whom I've sadly lost touch, who used to say that Beauty wounds the heart. I don't think I understood what that meant before. I mean, I grasped it intellectually, by way of analogy with (go ahead and laugh, Jes) Goldschlager Cinnamon Schnapps, which contains flakes of gold that allegedly make tiny nicks in your stomach lining and thereby let the alcohol into your bloodstream faster. Likewise, the little flakes of Beauty we encounter in the world cut our hearts and let in graces from the world beyond. But not till my daughter's first few trusting coos did I truly, viscerally understand.


I am a martial artist. For many years, my self-definition was, "Catholic, writer, martial artist." When I married Ellie, it became "Catholic, husband, writer, martial artist," and now it's "husband-and-father." But the new does not diminish the old; rather, by the action of Providence, my capacity has been enlarged. If you have a cup of gold and a cup of silver, and someone gives you a cup of diamonds, then the silver constitutes a smaller percentage of your treasure but remains as precious as ever. And, as with all good gifts, each of these things enriches the others. I am absolutely better at writing because of my fightingand that brings us to the main topic.

It's about time, young man!

Qi is variously translated as blood, breath, energy, spirit, and other English words that hint at a concept we don't exactly have. I'm partial to "life-force," myself. It's pronounced chee by the Chinese and kee by the Japanese; I spell it with a Q to allow either pronunciation, and also because it looks cool. It is undisputedly a pagan belief. But in the words of Justin Martyr, "If it's true, it's Christian." Our task is to recapture neglected truths that have fallen into heathen hands. As Chesterton said of two of our greatest saints, "St. Francis of Assisi used Nature much as St. Thomas Aquinas used Aristotle; and to some they seemed to be using a Pagan goddess and a Pagan sage." But pre-Christian thinkers and worshippers were not wholly forsaken; they had Reason and Conscience, and God must have treasured their strivings to find Him, even though it wasn't yet the fullness of time. It is even conceivable that they held onto fragments of grace or wisdom that the West lost sight of after we were given the whole picture of which they fought so hard to catch glimpses.


Back when we started training, Sensei kept telling us, "empty your teacup." People (mostly men, actually) tend to come to the martial arts thinking that we already know everything, because of all the movies we watched and all the backyard scuffling with our older brothers or whatever. But the master can't fill your cup if it's already full. First you empty yourself. If you're the Bible-thumping sort, that phrase might call to mind St. Paul's remark about Christ emptying Himself and taking the form of a slave (Phillippians 2:7). In a similar way, when life is ended, if we've managed to accomplish the work of a lifetime and scrape out all the selfishness within ourselves, then God will fill us up with light. And here's how this all ties in.



A certain kind of powerful joy glows in the pit of your stomachexactly where the qi resides. I think when we get to Heaven, that joy will be so strong that it will fill us with the Qi of God. "We know that we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is" (1 John 3:2). And our sleeping bodies will shake off the grave-dirt and rise like rocket-ships with Qi for everlasting fuel.