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Donna Spencer's avatar

Thank you for sharing this.

Every year I go back to this passage from the late Brian Doyle's essay "Leap":

A couple leaped from the South Tower, hand in hand. They reached for each other, and their hands met, and they jumped.... I try to whisper prayers for the sudden dead and the harrowed families of the dead, and the screaming souls of the murderers, but I keep coming back to his hand and her hand, nestled in each other with such extraordinary, ordinary, naked love. It's the most powerful prayer I can imagine, the most eloquent, the most graceful. It's everything we're capable of against horror and loss and tragedy. It's what makes me believe that we're not fools to believe in God, to believe that human beings have greatness and holiness within them like seeds that open only under great fire, to believe that who we are persists past what we were, to believe, against evil evidence hourly, that love is why we are here.

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Andy Alexis's avatar

I love this poem by Joey Garcia, former advice columnist for our weekly free newspaper which sadly has gone online now. She also was a theology teacher at a local Catholic high school that one of my daughters attended for a while.

https://www.capradio.org/news/insight/2016/09/09/insight-090916b/

This is intensely meaningful for me; in late July 2015, we distributing the ashes of my dear mother off the central coast of California early one morning; the stiff onshore breeze blew those ashes right back at us and we couldn't help but breathe them in.

"Call it communion"....I'll take my holy communion in any way it is offered...

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