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A lovely review for ‘holy cards’

Holy Cards: Dead Women Talking
by Penny-Anne Beaudoin (Goodreads Author)
13571642

Lynn Cheechoo‘s review

Jan 18, 13
5 of 5 stars false

bookshelves: currently-reading

There was never a moment of doubt that I was reading the very words of these holy women and visionaries. With searing insight, loving compassion and uncanny depth Penny-Anne Beaudoin has pierced the psyche and tapped the soul of heroic and devotional women such as St. Joan of Arc, St Barbara, St Ebba, St Irene and St. Columba of Sens, many of whom were terrorized raped and martyred for the sake of their Beloved, not only by the Romans and Church officials but by family and community members who could not comprehend such uncommon states of ecstacy, and by those who professed love and devotion to a common Diety.

As time evolved these women were canonized and elevated to sainthood, ironically by those whose ancestors had once reviled them.

Holy Cards: Dead women Talking is a poetic testament to the absence of the divine feminine in medieval Christian traditions which has prevailed to this day, and how this oversight has led to tragic unjust and unworthy ends for women of faith through-out the centuries.

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Why I never had children

…because I couldn’t remember to take care of my houseplants!  I took that as a clear sign from God motherhood was not for me.  (I kept having this recurring nightmare of looking up after completing the last chapter of my latest bestseller, and seeing the gaunt starving faces of my children gathered around my desk pantomiming the universal sign for ‘Feed us, you miserable excuse for a mother!”  and I’d think, “Oh right.  The kids!“)

Friends used to give me their houseplants if they wanted them done away with, but didn’t want the guilt.  No problem!  In about a week, the deed was done, and a tidy sum of cash would appear in one of my off-shore accounts.  Plant after plant bit the dust, and no amount of tender loving care on my part could save them.  Not that they got a lot of tender loving care from me to begin with…or even ever.

Watering was the biggest problem.  If God had wanted us to remember to water the plants, why couldn’t He have made them give an audible gasp at the appropriate time?  Or perhaps a lovely little chime?  Or teach them how to drag their pots over to the sink and water themselves!!  But I digress.

A couple of years after the Mister and I jumped the broom, I read an article on clear air plants and thought improving the oxygen saturation of the air in the house, especially in winter, would not be a bad thing.  Best of all, many of these plants were drought resistant!  “Were these plants not made for me?” I breathed holding the article to my chest, raising my eyes heavenward.  “Why yes, yes I believe they were!  Thank you God!”

So we bought one, a lovely little green thing with the unpronounceable name of “aglaonema.”  I have only ever transplanted it twice, and it is still growing and blooming quite happily after more than 20 years!  (That’s gotta be a record, right?  Sure is for me!)  And what’s more, I had to abandon it for MONTHS at a time when my mother was ill, but all I had to do was pour a little water on the thing when I got home and no harm done!  WOW!

Over the years, I’ve acquired more plants, and it seems I no longer have the touch of death (or so I thought until recently).  I’ve had to change locations for some of them – actually found a couple that prefer the basement! – but they all seem to be happy with my care of them, and even tolerate my lapses with forbearance.

Until this Christmas.  A dear friend gave me a cyclamen as a gift, beautiful green, with a spray of white flowers that look like falling stars.  Just lovely!  And it came wrapped in this pretty gold paper (and then in plastic wrapping) and looked ever so Christmassy.  Since it was doing so well, I decided it was happy and proceeded to ignore it until after about a week I noticed it seemed a bit limp.

“Needs watering!” I thought and I gave it a good dousing, not realizing the flower shop does not include a saucer with the plants it wraps up so prettily.  So the poor thing sat soaking in this water, unable to make me understand it needed a diaper change…badly!

I didn’t clue in until I transplanted it early in the New Year.  Ah well, new pot, new beginning, and an important lesson learned about saucers or the lack thereof.  After cleaning it all up, I placed in a south-facing window where the sun just comes blasting in, and smiled, knowing in my heart that I am indeed a good mother.

Turns out, I did everything a person should do if they want to kill a cyclamen.

You don’t transplant them until they go dormant.  You do not water them from the top down, but rather let them soak in water for 15 minutes.  Any longer and the tuber could rot. They prefer a moist environment and should be placed in a tray of water lined with pebbles to keep the pot above the waterline.  And you never EVER put them in a south-facing window because they can’t take the bright light or the heat and prefer much cooler digs.  I learned all this on line after the poor plant failed to thrive…and now I know why.

As I rushed it down the basement steps, I kept repeating, “Sorry baby, sorry, sorry, sorry,” and “Please don’t die, please don’t die, please don’t die!”  I set it up in a tray with pebbles and the water, in indirect light, in a cool corner of the basement where a couple of pothos plants are flourishing, hoping this might inspire it thrive, or at least not give up the ghost.  And, so far, so good.  I’m kind of afraid to touch it now, but the leaves are lifted, very little yellow, and a couple of buds actually opened up.

So my plant is in rehab.  We are guardedly optimistic about its prognosis, but so far the signs have been good.  And I do talk to it every day…mostly apologizing.

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His eye is on the sparrow

The mister and I had a visitor this morning as we were sitting down to breakfast. A little bird flew into the window, then tried to perch on our neighbour’s fence, but clearly dazed, it fell into the snow and stopped moving. Now my mister is of a kindly disposition and couldn’t bear to see the little thing freeze to death, so before I could say a word, he was out the door, trudging through the snow to the poor wee beastie’s side. Once back inside, we found a box, lined it with a towel, carefully put the bird inside, covered the box with another towel and left it in a quiet corner of the kitchen ’til the bird could recover its wits.

After breakfast it is our habit to read aloud from some book on spirituality. Lately we’ve been reading about the Tao te ching, and the balance of all things. “Little sister,” I called to the box, “are you one with Tao?” The mister made a face and replied, “More like one with Ow!” And it’s true – every time we peeked in the box, the bird was holding very, VERY still, eyes half-closed, looking for all the world as if it had the worst hangover in the the history of birddom.

After about a half hour, there were scratchings and scramblings coming from the box, and it was clear little sister was ready to be on her way. The mister took the box outside, and as I watched from the window, slowly pulled back the towel. But the bird shot out of the box with surprising vigour and even gazed his cheek with her wing. “Well that’s a fine howdy-do,” the mister hollered, “a slap in the face!” “No no,” I replied, “a kiss of gratitude.” It perched on our neighbour’s fence again to get its bearings and then flew off as I burst into a spontaneous chorus of “I Believe I Can Fly.”

So one little bird was saved from a premature death – rather insignificant in the grand scheme of things perhaps, but oh! the effect it had on us. Our early morning squints were replaced with smiles and tender looks of concern, and our cynical hearts grew warmer, more fleshy and human.

Really not a bad way to start a new year.

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On the cusp of a New Year

A few days before Christmas, I was chuffing away on the treadmill, my mind on something else, when I noticed I’d gone through the first five minute part of the pre-set program at the top speed of 4 mph, instead of adjusting it downwards, as is my custom. I felt pretty good, so I thought I’d try maintaining that speed through the next five minute section. That worked fine too, so I did it again for the third and last leg.

Wow! Completed the whole program at top speed. Perhaps though, I was just having a particularly good day, so I tried it the next day, and wow again! And now I’ve done it every day since then…except for Sundays (day of rest, yo!)

This may not sound like a big deal to the more athletic among you, but for me it borders on the miraculous. This past January, I suffered a flare-up of what my doctor calls, for lack of a better term, chronic fatigue. It’s a condition I manage extremely well, unless I get over-extended, and then I’m in trouble. It takes months to fully recover, and of course my work-out routine had to be discontinued altogether for awhile, and then slooooowly reconstructed one tiny bit at a time. It took eleven months to get back to this level, so you can understand why I’m so excited about this.

I’ve been reading some of the posts of my athletic friends listing their fitness goals for 2013, and I so admire them, even maybe a little jealous of them, maybe more than a little. I can never aspire to such goals, but as I stand on the cusp of a New Year, I find my aspirations are not so much for new fitness records, but for health – that I might do whatever I can to achieve and maintain the best health of my life. Diet and exercise, sure, but CF has taught me to watch my energy expenditures, pull back when necessary, and get the rest I need. And then there’s the mental work too – letting go of the past, forgiving those who harmed me, cultivating positive thoughts and conversations, and developing hope-filled attitudes.

Maintaining my health means I can be there for others, and be a positive influence in a world that is sometimes so dark. Jim Palmer said, “The world is in too big a mess for us not to be at the top of our game.” So I have taken that to be my new mantra as I’m chuffing away on the treadmill: Fear not world! Help is on the way! Help is on the way! Help is on the way!”

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