I visited my parents this afternoon. They live in an apartment complex. When we were sitting at the dining room table, my father pointed to a red sports car parked right outside, outside, a red, Nissan 350X. My father told me that the car hasn't been moved in ten years. The man that lives next door lost his son ten years ago, and it was the son's car. Every weekend the father vacuums his own car and then vacuums his late son's car. He also starts the son's car and lets it run for a while. My father told me that in the winter, when there is enough snow to need plowing, the superintendent asks everyone to temporarily move their cars to the other side of the complex so that the plows can clear the snow better. But the superintendent has never asked the man to move the 350x. My father also said that on the rare occasions when the town has declared a snow emergency, if you don't move your car, the police will give you a ticket, but the police have never ticketed the 350x.
Sunday, August 4, 2013
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Communion - Lindo Mexico
COMMUNION:
On Saturday afternoons, my son Michael does volunteer work at a hospital in
Brick, NJ, an area that was hit badly by Hurricane Sandy. This past
Saturday, my son asked if we could eat supper in Brick, after he was done at
the hospital, and he asked if we could have Mexican food. It just so happens
that we always pass a small Mexican restaurant in Brick, called Mexico Lindo.
The place looked a
little rough around the edges, but we went in anyway. The woman who greeted us
told me that they were having a surprise birthday party for her daughter's 24th
birthday. In Spanish, she told an
elderly woman with a small child who were seated at a particular table to move
to another so that we could be seated there. It turns out the woman was her
mother. I felt awful that we were usurping them, and I apologized.
My son and I were the
only paying customers. The others were there for the party--the birthday girl
hadn't arrived yet, and family and friends kept arriving in advance of the
surprise. There were balloons all over and several of the guys were drinking
Mexican beers. The girls were all talking, smiling, and clearly enjoying the
warmth of familiar company.
No one seemed to mind that
my son and I were present. The menu was a mystery of things Mexican, most of
which neither my son nor I had never heard of before. So we picked an appetizer
and two main courses at random. The salsa sauce that came with the freebie taco
chips sang and danced with joyous flavor. I know what fresh cilantro tastes
like because we grow it in our backyard-- and this was fresher than any that I had
ever tasted. The chile itself, or whatever, was awesomely flavorful. It only
served to stoke our appetite in anticipation of what was to come, and we were
not disappointed. Overall, the appetizer and main dishes were a memorable
eating experience. My son and I were both struck by how good the re-fried beans
were. My son loved the red rice.
Look--I know it was a
birthday party--but as I looked and listened and absorbed the atmosphere, I
could not but see and hear that these people--in this town that is just
beginning to recover from the devastation of Hurricane Sandy--were all happy
and joyous.
And I'm thinking that
these people are probably all Catholics, like myself. And I know intellectually--because
we study this stuff in the Communion and Liberation Movement and in C.S. Lewis,
etc.--that Christians are supposed to be joyous. But most Catholics that I know
(of Irish/German/Italian/Polish extraction) including myself, are more often
miserable creatures. At the birthday party, it dawned on me that this is what
Christian joy looks like.
These Mexican-American
Catholics have something important to teach us repressed Irish-American Catholics.
After I went home, I thought to myself, if this is what Mexican culture looks
like, then sign me up.
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