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Family Affair

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I haven’t written in a while. The whole retirement thing is still a work in progress for me. I keep thinking of Freud’s answer to what is mental health—the ability to work and love. I would always tell patients that meant meaningful relationships and productive activity. I have the relationships with my wife, children, grandchildren, family and friends. I am missing the productive activity.

I started to attend a Men’s Group at Church. The guys in it were very nice and also very devout. Right now I am not and the group had some Opus Dei like flavorings that left me more disturbed than inspired. There was a very pious psychiatrist at the clinic who kept trying to convert me to his way of belief and prayer. I had to keep telling him that his way was not my way. One time in a staffing meeting with other psychiatrists he got down on his knees and started to pray out loud. The very Jewish chief of staff had to tell him “There will be none of that in here”. I would not be a good evangelist. I still am trying to understand myself and my relationship with a higher power. I don’t think I can share that with anyone else until I understand it myself

Right now I am again thinking of the Jesus of history and the Christ of faith. Since this is the beginning of the Christmas season, I am thinking a lot about the Holy Family. The two major interests in my life (apart from baseball and football) have been family dynamics and religion. I think of the stages of family development. The first task of any couple is to establish their relationship apart from their family of origin. This can be very difficult. There can be conflict over finances, careers and premarital friendships. There can be much conflict over which of the couple’s family of origin is more important. The next stage involves the birth of a child if a family desires to have children. Both can be very excited, but almost every male will feel some jealousy as his wife turns most of her attention to the baby. There then has to be some agreement over who has the most responsibility for the child. Who gets up if the baby is crying or sick? Who stays home, etc? Families can work thru this and then it can start all over again with the birth of another child.  The family then presents their children to the outside world when it is time to start school.  This goes on until it is time for the children to leave and the couple has to renegotiate their own relationship. This is a very broad outline and can have many variables (divorce, illness, death, etc.).

 I can read the early chapters of Matthew and Luke and see a young family experiencing a lot of stress. However there is really not much there. Jesus suddenly appears in his early 30s and is dead a few years later. What about before that? I have seen families raise children and have personally experienced raising two wonderful sons. However every family struggles. How did Joseph and Mary support themselves? Joseph is described as a “tekton” which commonly means craftsman or artisan. He is thought to have been a carpenter and Jesus is described as a carpenter. What kind of work did they do? There were no power tools so the work was probably physically very demanding. Joseph would come home and be very tired.  The family had to eat. Was Mary a good cook? Usually in Jewish villages there was a communal oven. The women would stand around and talk while their food was cooking. What would they talk about?  Did the family have friends? Would they celebrate the holidays with other members of their village? After Jesus left on his mission, how would Mary support herself? Joseph, who was supposedly much older, is presumed to have died before Jesus left. Was Mary so revered in her village that the village took care of her? The more I read about the scriptures origins, the more confused I get.

I wonder how much of this is true. The scriptures have a common theme, but some of the details are different. How many were put in just to enhance the faith of the early Christians?

I will probably keep struggling with this until my own end. Even after that I can picture myself in a session with Joseph just trying to get some answers. The advice just to pray and accept isn’t working right now. It probably never did for me.

Memento Mori

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Mother’s day has always been kind of a strange holiday for me. Flowers, candy, a nice card, etc,etc, and then it changed.  My mother died on Mother’s Day in 1979. I hadn’t thought of her for a while and then this week brought a lot back. I have a friend whose mother has been on life support in the hospital for over a month and that is probably the trigger for thinking of my Mom. She was born in 1919. It amazes me to think that she would have been 100 this year. She was the youngest of an Irish immigrant family. She went thru the depression and WWII. She married my Dad before he went overseas and waited and worried the whole time he was gone. She became a widow at 47 and only lived until 59.

When I think back she really went thru a lot. She was left with three children. I was mostly gone from the time I was 18, but she still had two young girls to raise. My sisters were 14 and 16. She had a difficult year and never really got over my Dad’s death. She then got a job and worked almost up until she got sick. She laughed a lot, loved gossip, and drank too much. We all loved her and it’s a shame she didn’t get to see all of her grandchildren.

I think most of us deny death until we have to face it. It always happens to someone else, or someone else’s family until it happens to us. The fact that there is a beginning with a tiny, beautiful baby is wonderful. The fact that there is an end is difficult to accept. When someone you love dies, it really does feel like the end of the world. You don’t think you will ever get over it, but then you do. Unfortunately some people never do. However most us go thru periods of intense pain and sorrow and gradually life goes on.

I hadn’t really thought of my mother, or my father, for a long time. We used to go fairly regularly to the cemetery where they are buried, but I haven’t been there in probably at least 20 years. When my sister died eight years ago I would go weekly to her grave, even bringing flowers to place there. After a while I even stopped going there and since we have moved it is a much greater distance.

I still think of my mother and my grandmother going weekly to the cemetery. Even years after the death of my father and grandfather, they would still want to go. It is strange how the dead reappear. A word, a song, a picture and it all comes back.

I heard someone say that cemeteries are for the dead; we need to focus on the living. Yet cemeteries are for memories. They are also reminders of our own mortality.

I am thinking more lately about the reality of death. What do I leave behind? I can look around and see possessions that I don’t want to get rid of. Furniture, pictures and books (lots and lots of books) that I know my sons will not want. Will they just try and sell them or donate them, of just throw everything out?

I have pictures of my mother and father and pictures of my own childhood. I have some strange things from my father, but really not that much. Maybe that is why I don’t think of them much.

Funerals used to include wakes, ceremonies, and burials. My grandfather was waked for three days, my father for two. There would be a ceremony at the grave and the family would be offered condolences. Now this has evolved to a ceremony at a cemetery chapel and the body is buried later. There is now often a cremation instead of a burial. A ritual of scattering the ashes often replaces the burial. Stories of ashes being scattered in ball parks, beaches or favorite parks are fairly common. There are also stories of people keeping the ashes at home. One of my old patients kept her husbands ashes under the bed for years. She had difficulty explaining this to her young son, especially as he entered adolescence. There are other families who keep cremains in a place of prominence in the home. Maybe that would be a way to keep the memory of a beloved family member more present. Right now I don’t know what is right. Every family has to decide that.

I just know that sometime this summer I am going to the cemetery and revisit some memories while I still can

“You’ve Got That Magic Touch”

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I am a touchy feely person. I wasn’t always. When I was a child and early adolescent religion was more magic than faith to me. I was raised with idea that I was always being watched. Someone was always judging me and if I screwed up and made the least little mistake, I could be condemned. If I stayed on the right path I would be rewarded, but the path was very narrow and dangerous. Somehow I got the idea that if I wore enough medals and scapulars I could bypass this and be guaranteed a quick entrance to heaven. In grade school I would wear three or four scapulars at the same time. Then I would wear medals until they turned green because of cheap metal and my sweaty little adolescent body. I think what reminded me of this was a recent Mass where there was a lot of talk about sacred relics etc.

I recently read a column in the Washington Post about Christians need for physical objects. The author was interviewing the rector of Union Theological Seminary. He believes that Christians have a need for physical objects because God made his son a physical being. We need to be able to touch things. Interesting idea but I am not sure about this.

When I was growing up the idea of sin was ever present. There were venial sins, which were about minor transgressions involved with all of life. Even thinking about doing something wrong was a sin. Then there were mortal sins. These were bad things that could send you right to hell. They were about murder and other crimes, but an awful lot were about sex. I think back about this and think about how it affected me. For a very long time I was not comfortable being touched or hugged. As an adolescent I really didn’t even want my mother to hug me. I know this was normal for any adolescent male. However I just wasn’t comfortable with that level of contact from anyone.

It wasn’t difficult when I was dating or with my wife, but casual hugging with strangers was not OK. I remember hearing one of my early patients talking to another. She was asked if I hugged her at the end of sessions. She said, “No Jim isn’t the hugging type”. I would often be called to consult on the adolescent unit at the hospital re substance abuse. One time they were being taught how to give appropriate hugs to each other.  I had a lot of questions about this. Some one told me to read books and articles by Leo Buscaglia. He thought that people needed a number of hugs each day.

I think that another part of the process that helped me thru this was the birth of my sons. Infants and young children need this type of loving contact. As I progressed as a therapist I became more comfortable hugging patients if they asked. Sometimes I would offer a hug to provide additional support. I never did it for my own pleasure. However now I have begun to think about this again. The MeToo made us all aware of the harassment women have been subject too.  Joe Biden has recently been criticized for his contact with women in that he was violating their space. I recently saw a guy wearing a tee shirt with “I Don’t Hug” on it and maybe that is the answer. You have to be clear about what level of contact you are comfortable with. Sometimes people really give off clear warnings about their boundaries. Some others don’t and need to be asked what they are comfortable with. I know there is a lot of conflict in the field about this right now. I know a psychiatrist who won’t even shake hands with new patients.

A friend of mine who shared some of my views about hugging patients was fired because of hugging a patient who he had a long relationship with. The patient was very comfortable with this and most sessions ended like that. It was a purely platonic hug, but was now against policy. Sometimes political correctness interferes with what is really correct.

There are so many areas like this now. Relations between men and women have always been confusing. What was OK is now not. Years ago on the old Homicide TV show one of the main characters said “I remember when Co-dependent relationships were the way it was supposed to be!! “. Well no longer.

Perhaps modern technology can help. With my new car I get warning beeps if I begin to swerve from my lane, or if another car is to close. Maybe someone will develop a “Personal Boundary Alert” if you are violating someone’s space. It would be interesting see how people would respond to a loud siren going off when you tried to touch someone.

Right now I continue to question my own life about what is Ok and what isn’t.  I don’t know if I would use the word sin anymore except for big things that hurt other people. I still have to try and stay open and clarify my own boundaries. My wife says that she likes to know things. She has an insatiable curiosity about life. I have always said that my goal in life is clarity. I just want to understand. It was a lot easier in my 20s than it is in my 70s. It will probably get harder each year. I hope I can keep trying.

“Gimme That Old Time Religion”

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No Religion has now overtaken Catholicism as the most popular religion. This was in the Wall Street Journal last week.  This an interesting fact as Holy Week begins. I don’t think many of the younger generations realize how important the Church was to us. Most of my extended family attended parochial schools. Most had at least some experience of being taught by nuns. When we were growing up it really was a badge of pride to be attending a Catholic school. We were so much better than the “publics”. When someone asked you where you lived, you didn’t tell them the neighborhood or town. You told them the parish you belonged to.

The religious holidays were really a part of life. There were individual ceremonies to mark your growth from baptism to first communion to confirmation. Every first Friday there was a special liturgy. There was a real honor to have the traveling statue of the Virgin Mary come to your house. The neighbors would come over and a group rosary would take place. If you moved into a new home, it was important to have the priest come over to bless the house. 1954 was designated as a “Marion “ year dedicated to the Virgin. In Chicago this was a very big deal. I remember there was a huge procession down Lake Shore Drive to Soldiers Field for a mass there.

There were also the religion classes where you had to memorize the Baltimore Catechism. There was no real room for argument about this. There   was right and there was wrong.

I think a lot of this started to change in the early 1960s.  A Vatican council was called to modernize the Church. Since then the Church has lost much of it’s power. The abuse scandals of the last 10-15 years have also hurt. However I think that as many of the people in my generation became better educated, we began to think for ourselves rather than have the clergy and religious do it for us.

This is both good and bad. The good is that we realize that our lives really are our responsibility. We need to take responsibility for the decisions we make and accept the consequences of those decisions. The bad is that we have lost some of our history.

We have now lived here for two years. When we moved we belonged to a fairly modern parish in Naperville. We enjoyed the liturgy there and the social activity. There seemed to be a real sense of community. Since we moved we have been attending the parish here. This diocese appears to be much more conservative. There are references to saints and relics and observances that were popular when I was in grade school. There is a definite effort to go back in time. I think that door is closed for me. I now question everything. I still go to Mass, but I now tend to fall asleep during the sermon. I told myself that this was because I had to listen to people professionally for so many years that it hard for me to listen to someone just talking.

The importance of some type of spiritual experience is still there for me. Now I question where it is and wonder if I can ever find it. It really is easy to criticize the Church. I can think of so many ways to do so. However I also realize that somewhere along the way I did lose something. I am not ready to discard everything and begin worshiping the sun or sacrificing virgins. I am not a total materialist. I just am not sure where the truth is.

The Old Testament and the New Testament often seem in opposition. The Jesus of the New Testament presents a loving, forgiving faith. The way this has been interpreted over the years is part of the problem. There is still an effort to say there is one right and many wrongs. I think there is a desire to go back to the memorization of the Baltimore Catechism.

I once had a very devout patient. He and his wife were members of an evangelical Church. They were very active in that Church. They didn’t trust society as a whole so they even home schooled their children. They were very unhappy yet they decided to stay together. The wife would verbalize that her husband was the leader of the family and she should subjugate herself to him. She would say this and yet continue to sabotage his relationship with their children on a regular basis. They would have sex because he wanted to and then she would try and make him feel guilty. Any recommendations or interventions I made almost had to be biblical according to their understanding of the bible.

I think I saw them five or six times. I recommended that they might be better working with their pastor or a Christian counselor. They didn’t want to change. I have often wondered what happened to them and what happened to their children. They could be very satisfied that they were bringing their children up in a religious home, but what message were they really giving. This is not just true of the Christian religions. I think any organized religion that insists on absolutes and negates individual responsibility creates the same difficulty.

There is a need in me and probably in all of us for some contact with a higher power whatever that might be. I don’t want to be like Diogenes and, rather than searching for an honest man, be continually searching for the true religion. I just want to have some belief that touches me and continues to help me heal.

“I Dont Want To Grow Up”

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My father died when I was 20. I was asleep in my dorm room and a priest knocked on my door to tell me. He was very gentle and drove me to the hospital where my mother and sisters were waiting. I remember them asking me to go in to say goodbye. I walked in to see my father’s corpse.

I don’t think many of us picture our parent’s death. We think they will live forever just like we will. When Jacqueline Kennedy died there was an interview with her son where he said that you don’t really become an adult until your parents die. Over the years I have thought a lot about that. I don’t think that’s true. You become and adult when you become responsible for your life’s choices and the consequences that ensue.

I think before my father’s death my life was pretty well scripted out. I was in the seminary and it was my destiny to become the priest that my entire Irish extended family wanted. I don’t think I really thought much about it. I would see friends of mine leave the seminary and I felt sad at their loss. I didn’t think I would ever leave. I remember one of the chaplain priests that we had telling me that he thought I was just drifting without any real thought about the future.

After the funeral I went back and drifted some more. I finally decided to leave when I was a deacon, the last step before the priesthood. I was assigned to a parish that had three priests and was the bishop’s primary residence. It was a very busy place, but all thru the summer I was there, all I could think of was the incredible loneliness of the life. I remember telling my mother that I was going to leave. She was very supportive. It really wasn’t until recently that I found out how much she had cried when I left.

I moved back home for about eight months and then moved out with some friends. My decision to leave still haunted me. I really didn’t know what the future would hold. I began to date a very nice girl, but part of me felt guilty for doing that. I was not supposed to date. I even broke up with her because of this confusion that I felt.

I had let down not just my family, but also all my friends from the seminary and the entire Catholic Church. Thinking back on this time I don’t know how much of it was because of my self-centeredness, my immaturity, my naïveté about life, or the really limited and focused culture of the seminary. One day we were helping some friends move and I saw the girl I had been dating. We hadn’t seen each other for about four months. We began to talk and we went out to get a coke at a fast food restaurant and I proposed. I don’t think I had any real plans to do that, it really just happened. She said yes and we have been married for 46 years. After I asked her I couldn’t believe the words came out of my mouth, but they may have been the first real adult words I had ever spoken.

When do you become an adult? What does that really mean? I know that over the years I still at times wonder if I ever really grew up. Virginia Satir, one of the early pioneers of family therapy, wrote about this. She said that often when dealing with a difficult case she wondered when the real adult, the real therapist would come in the room.

This is not all negative. The importance of laughter, making jokes, and just playing is still part of my life. Adulthood is not always somber responsibility, but it is being responsible for the choices you make. I think there is always some event that triggers this. The event can be a death or something that no one else would even think important. It can be something tragic or something really trivial, but whatever it is, it is life changing. It might not even be recognizable until years later.

For many years after my father’s death I would have dreams that he was still alive. The dreams would be rather bizarre in that he came back and made everything right again. The dreams stopped after we got married. I don’t know if they were really encouraging me all along to take responsibility and make a life for myself. The past was over and couldn’t be redone. It was time to shape my own life.