Thursday, January 26, 2012

Picnic guests

Who doesn't love a picnic? What better way to share time and food with friends? In my opinion, it's much better than a restaurant or even eating at home. It seems like a dream come true that my friend Alex and I are starting to meet up for picnic lunches once a week. On our second weekly picnic, we were attacked by dogs as usual and one of them was a Jack Russell Terrier! I thought it was hilarious that while most dogs run up to us and then politely sniff from a short distance, the terrier (puppy!) went right for the food and I had to hold him back! Luckily, he was small.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

La paix de coeur (peace of heart)

   In trying to make decisions in my life, I remembered a little book I bought two years ago that was suggested to me by an American who said it was a book to be "read and reread" several times. It's called Searching for and Maintaining Peace: A Small Treatise on Peace of Heart by Father Jacques Philippe.
   It really is very good, but only when I had a specific problem now and reread it did it REALLY make sense. It has a great introduction about the importance of peace, then it has several chapters about the things that commonly make us lose our peace and how to react to them and finally it ends with a few writings from the saints about this topic. "The first goal of spiritual combat," he says in the introduction, "that twoard which our efforts must above all else be directed, is not to always obtain a vitory (over our temptations, weaknesses, etc., rather it is to learn to maintain peace of heart under all circumstances, even in the case of defeat." (p. 12)

The chapter called "Unrest When We Have Decisions to Make" really helped put things in perspective for me and I'd like to share a few quotes of it with you:

   "The last reason that we are going to examine and which frequently causes us to lose our sense of peace is a lack of certitude, the troubling of conscience that is experienced when it is necessary to make a decision and we are not able to see clearly. We are afraid to make a mistake that may have disturbing consequences, we are afraid that it may not be the will of the Lord.
   Situations of this type can be very painful and certain dilemmas truly agonizing. The general stance of abandonment and confidence of which we have spoken, this approach of putting everything into the hands of God which enables us to avoid 'dramatizing' anything (even the consequences that our errors might engender!) will be particularly precious in these situations of incertitude."
   "The first thing to say (and this is in complete harmony with what we have said up to this point) is that, faced with an important decision, one of the errors to avoid is that of being excessively hurried or precipitous. A certain deliberation is often necessary in order to properly consider things and to allow our hearts to orient themselves peaceably and gently toward a good solution."
   "In this regard, we must know that everyone will encounter, above all in the spiritual life, certain situations where one would not have sufficient light, would be incapable of making a necessary discernment or of making a determination in peace, without recourse to a spiritual advisor. The Lord does not want us to be self-sufficient and, as part of His pedagogy, He permits that sometime we find ourselves in the impossibility of finding enlightenment and peace by ourselves; we cannot receive them except through the intermediary of another person to whom we can open up."
   "Having said that, it is important to know one thing. Whatever the precautions (prayer, reflection, advice) that one uses to obtain enlightenment before making a decision and in order to be sure of doing God's will (it's a duty to take these precautions, because we do not have the right, above all in domains of importance, to decide lightly), one will not always receive this light in a clear and unambiguous manner. Confronted with a specific situation, we ask ourselves (and we must always do this!): 'What must I do? What is the Lord's will?' We will not always have a response!"
   "When the Lord leaves us thus in incertitude, we must quietly accept it."
   "Often we torment ourselves excessively regarding our decisions. As there is a false humility, a false compassion, we can also say that, concerning our decisions, there is sometimes that which one could call a 'false obedience' to God. We would like to be absolutely certain of doing God's will in all of our choices and never to be mistaken. But, there is, in this attitude, something that is not exactly right for a variety of reasons."
   "We want to be released from having to decide for ourselves. But, frequently, the will of the Lord is that we do decide for ourselves, even if we are not absolutely sure that this decision would be the best."
   "He [God] asks of us goodwill, the right intentions, but in no way does He demand that we would be infallible and that all of our decisions would be perfect! And additionally, if all our decisions were perfect, this would, without doubt, do us more harm than good! We would quickly take ourselves for supermen."
   "Perfectionism doesn't have much to do with sanctity."
   "When one is far from God, the adversary tempts him with evil: he attracts him to bad things. But when one is close to God, loves Him, desires nothing but to please and obey Him, the devil, while he tempts him still with evil (this is easy to recognize), he tempts him even further by good. This means that he makes use of our desire to do good to trouble us. He does this by making us scrupulous, or by presenting us with a certain good that we must realize but which is beyond our present strength, or which is not what God asks of us - all to discourage us or to cause of to lose our peace. He wants to convince us that we are not doing enough or that what we are doing we are not really doing for the love of God, or that the Lord is not happy with us, etc. He would make us believe, for instance, that the Lord is asking such and such a sacrifice of us that we are incapable of doing, and this will trouble us greatly. It creates all sorts of scruples and worries in the conscience which we should purely and simply ignore, while throwing ourselves into the arms of God like small children. When we lose peace for reasons similar to those we just mentioned, let us tell ourselves that the devil must be involved. Let's try to regain our calm and, if we cannot do it by ourselves, we should open up to a spiritual person. The mere fact of speaking to another person will generally be enough to make our confusion disappear completely and to bring back our peace."

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Peace and productivity

Which comes first, finding peace or doing things that make you peaceful? I think it's finding peace. As Ann from A Holy Experience is always saying, it's not good communication that brings about communion, but when you're in communion you communicate well.

This week I'm a lot more peaceful than the last weeks and this week has been very productive so far. When I'm not okay, I waste time and never get up early. Yesterday though I cleaned the house, went grocery shopping, washed two loads of laundry AND made lunch for my sister and I! It was amazing. Of course, my favorite part was lunch with my sister, which is becoming a routine and one of my favorite parts of the week. We had Italian torta verde (spinach and potato pie) and salad with beets, goat cheese and walnuts from my favorite cookbook.

“Oh no, I never do much ironing, except the outside clothes. We must not iron out the fresh air and sunshine, you know. It is much more healthful not to, the doctors say. Seriously, there is something very refreshing about sheets and pillow slips just fresh from the line, after being washed and dried in the sun and air. Just try them that way and see if your sleep is not sweeter. ”
Laura Ingalls Wilder

Monday, January 23, 2012

Seeing that she has loved much...

I went to a Frida Kahlo photography exposition this weekend with my sister. It's so nice to have someone interested in that to go with me, and extra nice to go with someone that studied Latin-American literature and can explain things about the Mexican revolution to me.

It really helped me reflect on what's important in life and helped me with decisions I've been having to make recently. Frida was someone that loved and lived very intensely. Her love might have been unhealthy/messed up but it she never gave up until the end of her life loving Diego and life with the same intensity as ever. I loved how she kissed her letters with red lipstick.

It made me think how lucky Diego was to have someone that loved him so unconditionally and intensely his whole life. Isn't that what all lovers want? The other's heart. It made me think that's what God, the divine lover, wants from me too. He pursues me and loves me intensely and unconditionally my whole life. He doesn't want me to follow him or worship him just out of obligation or because it's "the right thing to do". He wants my heart and my passion. He wants me to be completely enchanted, head and heart, by him. Even if that means faithfulness when the passion comes and goes, but it still has to be there. Frida's life was messed up, but it reminds me of Jesus's words "So I tell you, her many sins have been forgiven; hence, seeing that she has loved much." (Lk 7:47).

Friday, January 20, 2012

Why I love Jesus and religion

Have you seen or heard about the "I love Jesus but hate religion" video on Youtube?

Even though I don't watch news, it's been all over the blogs I read and it is interesting and great to see all the responses and videos made. It was especially interesting for me, seeing as I went on a long journey last year where I personally discovered this for myself. I used to think that Jesus was most important and that you could "sell" Jesus by himself, without his Bride. However, I realized that while Jesus IS most important (for us), it's true, that's only an incomplete version of the story. Now I hold three important facts as tested and true.


Trinity icon by Rublev

  • Jesus is not alone. He is ONE person out of THREE. He is one person in the Trinity and that's important. It means God himself is a community of persons, an exchange of love... and Jesus wants us to be part of that. He wants to include us in that community (John 17). So Jesus is most important for us, because He's our door and bridge to salvation, but you can't say He's more important than God the Father or the Holy Spirit.

  • 
    Nashville Dominicans
    God has a family, He chose to have one because He is love and love overflows. Being saved by Jesus isn't just an individual thing, it's about being adopted into a family: God's family. We are His children, but we also discover that we have a mother (as Jesus says to John at the foot of the cross, this is your mother John 19:27), brothers and sisters. The Church is a reflection of that, we're called to live as a family here on Earth but we're also destined to be a family in heaven (and we call those who have died brothers and sisters go have gone before us). So when we are "saved" we are part of something, it's not just about us alone. We are part of a mission and we belong to a universal and transversal (through time) family. This leads to the concept of vocation withing the Catholic church, where you are called to a mission and a relationship at the same time within this family (you are called to be a father, mother, husband, wife, sister or brother). 

  • We really aren't smart enough and certainly not holy enough to reach the truth on our own. It's a gift and it's given to us.In fact, it's a person and He's the truth, the way and the life. And yes the Holy Spirit speaks to each person individually, but we are very broken vessels and many times (if not most of the time) get it wrong. How could we reach any decision if the only system was democracy? You just have to look at how many different churches and opinions there are even within the same Church. So it was amazing to discover that there is a system other than democracy for something as important as our salvation: the Holy Spirit's guidance. And that's what guides broken vessels and people that mess up over 2000 years continually to the truth... through the Church. Dogma, Church teaching, saints' writings, how to interpret the Bible aren't LIMITATIONS, they're a starting point for creativity as Flannery O'Connor said. In a world where everything is fallible and relative, it's essential to hold some things as true. You choose what and where to receive from. So it's not surprise Jesus gave authority to his Church (Matthew 18:18; John 20:23) and promised it would survive all attacks (Matthew 16:18). And it's a gift.


Links about the debate (in my order of preference):

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Making it routine

Thursday is the day I go to the market. It took me a year to finally discover the benefits or going to the market instead of the supermarket and quite a while to finally get up the courage to go. I don't know why, I'm just "scared of my own shadow" as they say here and things like going to the market scare me. Although it's scary (you have to pick the right stand, not get cheated, start building a relationship with the person you buy from... or at least have them start recognizing you), it's definitely the best option. Not only because buying locally is always better, but it's cheaper than the supermarket! Anyway, taking my little shopping cart for my bags and joining the old ladies that walk to the market in the morning is becoming a routine for my Thursdays.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

A feast for two

I've discovered I really like making food for other people. Yesterday I planned a mini-feast for my sister and I from my favorite cookbook and it was très bon. On the menu was tamale pie, my new favorite salad (walnuts, blueberries, avocado, fresh cheese) and a GREAT new chocolate chip cookie recipe I found here. I finally found the secret for chewy cookies: cornstarch. My sister was nice enough to bring me gifts from her New Year's trip to Prague, including a gingerbread cookie.


“The homemaker has the ultimate career. All other careers exist for one purpose only - and that is to support the ultimate career. ” ― C.S. Lewis

Monday, January 16, 2012

Weekend retreat

This weekend I went on the diocese youth ministry retreat: I had free delicious food I didn't have to cook, very hospitable nuns serving us, healthy conversation and lots of playfulness. I'm still in a lot of confusion/discernment/worry, but I know I am well accompanied. And I know I have to have courage, pray and not worry... now for the actual doing it.


"Pray, hope, and don't worry. Worry is useless. God is merciful and will hear your prayer."
“Have courage and do not fear the assaults of the Devil. Remember this forever; it is a healthy sign if the devil shouts and roars around your conscience, since this shows that he is not inside your will.” Padre Pio

Friday, January 13, 2012

Don't hurry the bloom, you'll destroy the bud

I've been having a hard time these past couple of weeks, trying to discern and decide things in my life. Luckily, I have friends that send me wonderful things like the following that help along the way:

Prayer for Patience

Lord,

Teach me to be patient with life, with people, and with myself.  I sometimes try to hurry things along too much, and I push for answers before the time is right.  Teach me to trust Your sense of timing rather than my own and surrender my will to Your greater and wiser plan.  Help me let life unfold slowly, like the small rosebud whose pedals unravel bit by bit, and remind me that in hurrying the bloom along, I destroy the bud and much of the beauty there in. 

Instead, let me wait for all to unfold in its own time.  Each moment and state of growth contains a loveliness. Teach me to slow down enough to appreciate life and all it holds. Amen


Have a slow and appreciative weekend!

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Italian birthday dinner

Yesterday I was so proud of my BF who threw his own birthday dinner for 10 people and cooked all by himself! Okay, so he had some help from the guests when they arrived and it was running hours late. But it all turned out great! I didn't try any of it unfortunately, not even the cake, because I had eaten something the day before that made me very, very sick. Thankfully, I'm better today. And drinking tea.

The menu was Italian: spaghetti, pizza, salad, garlic bread. The guests were all very different: all ages, backgrounds and personalities. Some go to really fancy nightclubs in Madrid for fun and others maybe have never been to a nightclub or couldn't afford it. I think it's a very good sign when you are friends with different types of people.

 
Homemade yogurt cake and coffee brigadeiros

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Femininity

If you're interested, check out my article today at IgnitemToday:

http://www.ignitumtoday.com/2012/01/11/femininity-and-nurturing/

It's called Femininity and Nurturing and is based on John Paul II's Apostolic letter, Mulieris Dignitatem.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Why men love "good girls"...

"'And the spouses approach each other,
I sleep, but my heart is awake.
Listen! my beloved is knocking.
Open to me, my sister, my friend,
my dove, my perfect one.' (Song 5:2)
The search-aspiration has its interior dimension: 'the heart is awake' even in sleep. The term 'perfect' on the lips of the bridegroom belongs to this dimension. The male aspiration born from love on the basis of the 'language of the body' is a search for integral beauty, for purity free from every stain; it is a search for perfection that contains, I would say, the synthesis of human beauty, beauty of soul and body. And if the words of the bridegroom just quoted seem to contain the distant echo of the 'beginning' - that first search-aspiration of the male man for a being still unknown - they resound much nearer in Ephesians where Christ, as Bridegroom of the Church, desires to see his Bride without 'spot', desires to see her 'holy and immaculate' (Eph 5:27)." Theology of the Body 112:2-3

Monday, January 09, 2012

Nighttime

My friend Catia says she loves nighttime because there's a certain spirituality about it. Sometimes when I come home and everything is dark and quiet, I know what she means. Every now and then I remember to look up at the moon and the stars and wish I could spend more time doing that. Yesterday I got home from a weekend of stressing out about a whole lot of nothing, but it finally ended in peace. While panicking and trying to make all the decisions in my life all at once, someone wise told me, "But do you think you'll only have peace after making those decisions or do you think you have to be at peace so that you can make those decisions?" I decided it was the second. And nighttime really expresses peace. I'm reading the book Memories of Sister Lucia and I'm impressed by how the shepherd children of Fatima really knew how to contemplate nature:

"The little one also liked very much to go to a field we had in front of the house at night, to watch the beautiful sunset and the starry sky that followed. She would get excited about the beautiful moonlit nights. We'd see who was able to count the stars and we'd say they were the lamps of the angels." (Memorias da Irma Lucia, p. 40)
 
The moon and the branches reflected on the ground at my house

Friday, January 06, 2012

Theses

Yesterday was a special day. I returned to my alma mater to watch my friend Catia, the only other girl my age in my classes in college, and a very intelligent and interesting person, defend her thesis. I loved seeing people I hadn't seen in a while, hearing beautiiful things and being really proud of her. One of my favorite thoughts of the things that were said was that God took the people of Israel to the desert to save His marriage. To purify them of their idols and to romance them. Here is Catia drinking water in front of the jury...
They were tough on her! But she responded brilliantly and humbly. There were at least 30 or 40 people there, a record in these types of things. Here she is in the group picture at the end, you can barely see her...
It was pretty different from mine, which was a year ago. They were nicer to me. I had just a few people, but they were incredibly special and having each on there was so meaningful. It was really the culminating of a long journey. From left to right: my friend and colleague Dora, my #1 supporter and BF Daniel, me and the three professors on my jury, a friend and colleague that once led a Bible Study with me (João), my goddaughter and friend Mary John and my sister.

Happy weekend!

Thursday, January 05, 2012

On opening up

I've been having a hard week: getting back to everyday life in Lisbon, feeling lost and confused about decisions I have to make, not knowing what I really want or like. Last year at about this time I was also feeling this way, I remember. One thing I realized yesterday, after having coffee with a friend, was that there is one important thing that is different this year. This year I have people I trust and can talk to. People that know me and love me and that I've come to appreciate more this past year. And really it makes all the difference to have people to talk to when I'm feeling down, even if they all have different opinions.


"Julie, next time you feel sad and like shutting yourself in a room, pick up the phone and call me or your mom or someone else" - Marta, my friend whose mom was recently diagnosed with cancer but she is handling it like a true fighter and is an inspiration to me

"Suffering is redemptive only if you don't close yourself in on your suffering. It's redemptive if you open yourself up to others, sharing your suffering with them and sharing in their suffering. It's something that unites us." - A bishop I heard speak at World Youth Day Madrid

Tuesday, January 03, 2012

Azorean architecture


I'm back in Lisbon, but on this trip to the Azores for Christmas break I was able to take pictures of one of the things I find most endearing about the Azores... the architecture. I love the simplicity but incredible diversity. I love the bright colors and verandas with colorful flowers. Here are some examples for you...

Let's start, of course with my parents' house and their YELLOW:


And now for some other colors...