Saturday, April 27, 2013
Saturday, April 06, 2013
Daisy went to Preschool
A few weeks ago Daisy and I payed a visit to a preschool classroom when it just happened to be be "Pet Week". The kids were so cute and listened as I explained that Daisy "worked" with me. Then I opened it up for questions, something that you should never do in a preschool setting, since they all have statements more than questions. A little girl raised her hand and said, "why does she gotta work?" so I explained that Daisy was a special dog and was a good helper. The little girl didn't buy that story and raised her hand again and said, "ya, but why does she have to go to work?" Finally, the fact that I should never work with preschoolers bubbled over and I said "Miss Judy sometimes feels bad and mistakenly thinks that buying things will fill the void in her soul that really only God can fill but at the end of the month the bill still comes and THAT is why Daisy has to work, so she can pay the bills!"
To which the little girls said, "OK" and was satisfied and then went on to listen to the little boy next to her "ask a question" about his hamster. Praise Jesus for letting me be a comedian and not a Preschool teacher, Amen.
A few of the Pope's favourite things
A few of the Pope's favourite things
Pope Francis gestures as he arrives to lead his general audience in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican April 3.
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CNS photo/Paul Haring
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VATICAN CITY - Here are a few of Pope Francis' favourite things, which he revealed in a series of interviews granted while he was archbishop of Buenos Aires.
-- Favourite sports: When he was young, the future Pope played basketball, but he loved going to the stadium to watch soccer with his whole family to see their favourite team, San Lorenzo. He lamented that the fan scene is not what it used to be. At the worst, "people would yell at the referee that he was a bum, a scoundrel, a sellout ... nothing in comparison to the epithets they use today," he said.
-- Favourite city: "I love where I live. I love Buenos Aires." He has travelled in Latin America and parts of Europe, including Ireland "to improve my English." However, he said, "I always try to avoid travelling ... because I'm a homebody" and got homesick easily.
-- Favourite way to stay informed: Newspapers. He said he turned on the radio only to listen to classical music. He had thought he'd probably start using the Internet like his predecessor, the late-Cardinal Juan Carlos Aramburu of Buenos Aires, did — "when he retired at 75."
-- Favourite mode of transport as cardinal archbishop of Buenos Aires: The subway, which he would always take to get around "because it's fast; but if I can, I prefer the bus because that way I can look outside."
-- Favourite pastime: As a boy, he liked to collect stamps. Today, "I really like reading and listening to music."
-- Favourite authors and books: "I adore poetry by (Friedrich) Holderlin," a 19th-century lyric poet; Alessandro Manzoni's The Betrothed (I Promessi Sposi), which he said he has read at least four times; Dante Alighieri's The Divine Comedy; and anything by Fyodor Dostoevsky and Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges. The Pope recalled that even though Borges was an agnostic, "he'd recite the 'Our Father' every evening because he had promised his mother he would, and died with a sense of 'religious comfort.' ”
-- Favourite music: "Leonore" Overture No. 3 by Ludwig van Beethoven conducted by the late-Wilhelm Furtwangler, "who, in my opinion, is the best conductor of some of (Beethoven's) symphonies and works by Wagner."
-- Favourite dance style: tango, which he said he loves "very much. It's something that comes from within." He said he danced the tango when he was young "even though I preferred the milonga," which is an older form of tango with a faster rhythm.
-- Favourite movie: Babette's Feast because it shows the transformation of a group of people who took denial too far and didn't know what happiness was, he said. The sumptuous meal helps free them from their fear of love, he said. He also likes Italian neorealism films, which often confronted the social, economic and moral consequence of the Second World War, but added that as archbishop he didn't have much time to go to the movies.
-- Favourite painting: The White Crucifixion by Marc Chagall. The scene "isn't cruel, rather it's full of hope. It shows pain full of serenity. I think it's one of the most beautiful things Chagall ever painted."
-- Favourite person: His grandmother Rosa, who helped raise him when he was little, taught him his first words of Italian and passed on her deep religious sensibility.
-- Favourite saint he turns to in time of need: St. Therese of Lisieux. He kept a photo of her on his library shelf with a vase of white roses in front of it. "When I have a problem I ask the saint, not to solve it, but to take it in her hands and help me accept it."
-- Favourite virtue: "The virtue of love, to make room for others with a gentle approach. Meekness entices me enormously! I always ask God to grant me a meek heart," he said.
-- Worst vice to avoid: "The sin that repulses me most is pride" and thinking of oneself as a big shot. He said when it has happened to him, "I have felt great embarrassment and I ask God for forgiveness because nobody has the right to behave like this."
-- Typical reaction to unexpected announcements: He freezes. When Pope Francis was elected Pope and appeared at the central balcony, many noticed he looked rather stiff. Turns out that's how he reacted when he was named auxiliary bishop in 1992 and how he reacts "to anything unexpected, good or bad, it's like I'm paralyzed," he said.
-- Things he would rescue in event of a fire: His breviary and appointment book, which also contains all of his contacts, addresses and telephone numbers. "It would be a real disaster to lose them."
"I'm very attached to my breviary; it's the first thing I open in the morning and the last thing I close when I go to sleep."
He also keeps tucked safe between its pages his grandmother's letters and her last words to her grandkids before she died. She said that in times of sadness, trouble or loss, to look to the tabernacle, "where the greatest and noblest martyr is kept," and to Mary at the foot of the cross so that they may "let fall a drop of salve on the deepest and most painful wounds."
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