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Showing posts with label green harbor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green harbor. Show all posts

Thursday, March 01, 2012

Down to the Wriggly Bits

hyacinth

When you love someone deeply—down to the wriggly bits, the twiggy bits, the very tips— that love occupies forgotten territory in your spirit. There are little fingerling leaves and rootlets we very often forget. Deep love seeps into these. This is sometimes love-of-your-life stuff, the partner with whom you’ll spend your final days. But very often—perhaps MORE often—it’s a friendship or fellowship tangling its way into the places God knows need nourishment.

I’m very lucky to have good friends. I’m very lucky to have a good man. I’m very lucky to have a spiritual community that crosses several belief systems and communities. The support, prayer, and fellowship I find with these people is a pearl of great price. We support one another in pain and sorrow, take joy in the blessings and successes. We feel each pinch and pleasure down to the wriggly bits.

This month I am losing a friend to what I hope, for him, will be greener pastures. The greening of the world came, this year, out of joint and season. My snowdrops, which always poke up through a blanket of white, are bobbing in an Ides of March rain that washed away February’s Leap Day snow. But my tulips, daffodils, and crocuses are threatening an early bloom that has left the tips of their green shoots yellowed and thin. I always worry when this happens—a warm winter tinkers with the natural order of things, and threatens my bulbs and flowering bushes. Lilacs, forsythia, quince… will they be okay?

They will. And so will my friend, Father Mark Ballard, who has been the Pastor at Our Lady of the Assumption for these past few years. OLA lost our beloved Father Donald Clifford to retirement, and will lose Father Mark to re-shuffling at the command of the archdiocese. Nobody is happy about this, but we have nothing to say about it.

When Father Clifford left it felt like spring was gone forever. He has stayed close, but parishioners missed him terribly, and still do. Father Mark was a warm breeze in a community gone cold and damp, a parish struggling to find its way without the leadership upon which it had come to rely so casually. Assumption had a temporary pastor, meandered a little, and felt the seasons tipping out of order. But the thing about nature is that it simply IS. Anything alive, anything wriggling its way through the earth toward the sun, can’t be UNNATURAL. Life itself is natural, however it manifests. It is a product of nature, which is a mercurial beastie at best. Cold ground gave forth new life with Father Mark.

I find myself hoping, as my nephews make their way through the religious education program, that Father Mark’s best and most-missed legacy will be his family liturgy masses. He called the kids to sit on the floor in front of the altar and spoke directly to them. He took a new-school attitude to underscore old-school ideas and beliefs. He created a wonderful atmosphere of trust and love for God, and made it easy.

I don’t really understand the changes taking place in parishes on the South Shore at the moment. I’m a webmaster for Assumption, and someone with family and friends marrying, learning, and being buried in this community that has survived—literally—fire and destruction. Changes are coming regardless of what the parish wants. I worry that priests being displaced by the new plan—whatever it really is—will lose the sense of extended family, connection, HOME that so often makes a good priest great. Will people want to talk to a rotating pastor they don’t see every day? None of that is for me to say, but it does make me think about Catholics who will be living with the changes.

And it makes me think of those struggling buds, tips gone yellow. Perhaps we must look to Robert Frost and see the gold, “nature’s first green.” Because this is, after all, New England. We have wacky winters and chaotic springs, but the seasons come just the same. My hyacinths will appear, in a few weeks, with somewhat twisted and sparse blooms. While I regret that they will not show in bold, lush, thick brushes of purple and rose, I will celebrate the color and fragrance, and be grateful to have them.

Father Mark is leaving us too soon. We’ll miss him here in Green Harbor. I hope we see him on occasion. No person who gives so deeply to a community should disappear completely. That’s what harborfests, Irish nights, and pancake breakfasts are for: old friends, new friends, people who love down to the wriggly bits getting together. That kind of love goes deep, through the veins and roots, into the very earth. It stays, enriching us, always.

I hope Father Mark finds new blessings in his new home, and is appreciated by his new family… all the way down.

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Green Freakin' Habah, 30 Years Latah

30years ago there was a little storm, not forecasted to do too much, here in New England. Of the communities hit hard by the Blizzard of 78, my own was among the most devastated. Green Harbor and Brant Rock flooded. My own home, right by the harbor river and marshes, sits high enough on a knoll of sorts among the antique apple trees to be spared the floods, winds, hurled boulders, and ocean damage that wiped out many of our friends.

My Labrador retriever, Charcoal, was kind enough to deliver 11 puppies at the zenith of the thing. The horse, my chestnut mare Becky, was spared any trauma. We broke through the ice on her drinking bucket every morning for a while. We all put coolers on our back porches and let mother nature keep our perishables safe. We offered our gas stove to cook for anyone who lost theirs to electricity. We checked on, and delivered to, friends, neighbors, loved ones, and even strangers stranded among the powdery drifts as we waited-- some for weeks-- to dig out and have power restored.

Things have changed, but not much, in Green Harbor. There are more houses. Many were rebuilt after that very storm. But a significant chunk of this old Yankee neighborhood-- working class people with homes worth more than their retirement, many passed down through generations-- are the same faces. We are a quiet, tough little neighborhood. Townies, most of us-- Marshfield born and bred, but prouder of GREEN HAHBAH than of anything else. Many of us will never leave, not even for the more affluent northern borders. We'd rather eat dirt than cross the borders to Duxbury. We're not budging. We didn't evacuate when the world came down upon us in '78, and we're not leaving now, either. We're in a class by ourselves. You are welcome to visit, but please take your crap with you when you leave-- it spoils the beach. We'll see you this summer.

For it takes a particular brand of stick-beat mean to survive in Green Harbor year round. The same people who will load a sleigh or fire up the snowmobile to make a grocery run for a dozen snowed-in neighbors will give you wrong directions come June if you have the nerve to pull up as we walk OUR sidewalks with the obnoxious question "whayah is tha beach?" Feel free. We send those people to Duxbury, where they can pay to park and visit the snack stand. The beach sucks, though. It has been eroding for ages. Guess where all that delightful powder ends up?

Yup. We dredge the harbor every season to scrape Duxbury's overpriced sand out of our gullet. Have to keep it nice and tidy, you know. And guess where all the sewage passing through Brant Rock University ends up?

Enjoy those hot-dogs, tourists! I hear they boil them in very special water.

Anyway, it's 30 years later. The tide, this morning, was ridiculously high as it generally is this time of year when the moon starts pushing full. That was the special ingredient for that perfect storm long ago. It hit just as the moon was full, and followed the various harbor rivers to sit waiting for the tide to turn... then rather than blow out to sea it came right back with the tide again.

But it didn't beat us and nothing ever will. This is Green Freakin' Habah, not Mahshfield Hills, baby. We can take anything you got!

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Silent, O Moyle


This time of year the swans who live here in Green Harbor and around the surrounding areas start showing off for passers by. The males become more noticeable and the females less so, as lady swans are more often squatting over nests and the men of the... err... bog are standing about looking nervous. It has always astonished me a little bit that those who live here are so tolerant of my frequent invasions into their privacy. Sometimes I think they are a modern incarnation of Lir's children.

Today, while the weather held, I took a few photos of this grand lad: