The sea, the pools, the silver jewelry – everything shimmers here

I really hope the Immigration Service does not check the form I dashed off as the plane set down, b/c I had NO idea what to write for “your address while in Mexico.” I knew only that my friend Peggy would be there with her Jeep, as I exited the airport. I thumbed through Lonely Planet, or tried to, but couldn’t get the Nook to get there soon enough, so I ended up with “Tulum” and wrote in the name of the first hotel (a hostel, actually) I saw.

I exited the airport, passed the hawkers of taxis and limousines and time shares…and there she was, with her open-air wonder.

Peggy's Jeep, windows inserted for the evening.

The Beach this morning:
Undoubtedly I am not the first person to have practiced meditation on these white sands, not the first one to have said, “Breathe with the waves…” but I’ll say this: I really was the only person as far as the eye could see across our stretch of the beach.

As far as the eye can see...

The Day: Mercado 28

Listed by Lonely Planet as 95th of 105 Things to Do in Cancun, the place is nevertheless great fun. It is a warren of shops selling textiles, ceramics, and brilliant, heavy silver jewelry. I was alone for about 4.5 minutes, during which time I wandered off and returned with some brilliant, heavy silver jewelry…

The Holy Family also visited Mercado 28

Mercado 28 Barbershop. Peggy - my 5 children know her as Master Barber & Master Barber Teacher, as well as Mom's friend - is saying, "Do you have any idea how many times I've had my picture taken in this place (JUST SMILE)?"

Amazing Crema Gloria VeraCruz. How do you say Sugar High?

Back home.

CAME to CANCUN

Came to Cancun

The View.

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***ADVENT***

 

And the world cannot be discovered by a journey of miles,

no matter how long,

but only by a spiritual journey,

a journey of one inch,

very arduous and humbling and joyful,

by which we arrive at the ground at our feet,

and learn to be at home.

 

—Wendell BerryImage

Days 3-4-5

The Trappists of Gethsemani are in choir seven (7) times a day.
Retreatants – there were about 30 of us this week – just join in, mumbling, as the monks chant.


All these decades later, Thomas Merton’s description in Seven Storey Mountain
still resonates:
“I was amazed at the way these monks who were evidently just plain…Americans from the factories and colleges and farms and high-schools of the various states, were nevertheless absorbed and transformed in the liturgy. The thing that was most impressive was their absolute simplicity. They were concerned with one thing only: doing the things they had to do, singing what they had to sing, bowing and kneeling and so on when it was prescribed, and doing it as well as they could, without fuss or flourish or display.”

Speaking Thomas Merton, once I found the right cemetery, this was my third try, his grave was hard to miss:

Summing IT UP:
I’m going to revert to Merton again, partly because the experience of this week is so fresh, but mainly because he does it a bit (!) better than I ever could.
After his first visit to Gethsemani, he wrote:
“The logic of the Cistercian life is, then, the complete opposite to the logic of the world, in which men put themselves forward, so that the most excellent is the one who stands out, the one who is eminent above the rest, who attracts attention….the monk in hiding himself from the world becomes not less himself, not less of a person, but more of a person, more truly and perfectly himself: for his personality and individuality are perfected in their true order, the spiritual, interior order.”
Back in New York after that visit to Gethsemani, Merton was struck by the busy-ness of a place he thought he knew :
“And how strange it was to see people walking around as if they had something important to do, running after busses, reading the newspapers, lighting cigarettes…”

Day 2: Silence Spoken Here

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Louisville with a Twist

Father Louis (Thomas Merton)at his typewriter.

When I return to Louisville this week, it will be to stay at Merton’s Abbey of Gethsemani.

DAILY SCHEDULE


3:15 am Vigils
5:45 am Lauds
6:15 am Eucharist
7:30 am Terce
12:15 pm Sext
2:15 pm None
5:30 pm Vespers
7:00 pm Rosary
7:30 pm Compline

 

(Lauds, probably, but don’t look for me too often at Vigils)

LOUISVILLE: 2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike, 26.2-mile run= 226 kilometers

Waiting to glimpse Dad as he transitions from swimming to biking (his bike is among the 2,500 in the photo)

Son-in-law Chris has done more than one Ironman, but this weekend was the first I’d ever seen. Correction: first I’d ever EXPERIENCED. If I’ve learned anything these days in Louisville, it’s that there are no Bystanders for an Ironman. Teresa’s pedometer read 13.65 miles at the end of the day, and she was not in the race! If I’d worn a pedometer, it would have been less than half that: she made several runs across the bike and running courses to get views of Chris, while I gallantly stayed with the children. In the shade. With beverages and food.

Terms like splits and staging ,aero (helmet/bars),   transition, and  nourishment – all mean something different to these athletes than they do to me. All are part of the vocabulary  employed and enjoyed by this Fraternity-Sorority, this Band of Brothers-Sisters.
These rare athletes, most of them with amateur – not professional – status,  go on   training runs at 4, so they can be behind their desks by 8, or for training swims at 5, so they can get kids off to school by 8. What’s more, they don’t do it for ten weeks – the length my annual re-dedication to the gym – but for ten months.

IRONMAN DAD after 140.6 MILES
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Reason #2 for Louisville!
It involves the man whose typewriter I saw (and touched!) this weekend while I was in Louisville.

I visited Bellarmine University’s Merton Center. I’ll return to Louisville after Thanksgiving for a stay at Thomas Merton’s abbey – Gethsemani.

[Some of] Summer at The Cape

I could begin and end with this…and really, I might!

The roses are out and everywhere this week.

The beaches are there for the taking (as well as the sitting-and-reading).

Mac's Seafood Place, the Beach at Wellfleet


By the time the ritual coffee at Joe’s was over on Wednesday, we were in the midst of a sort of Hong Kong (Lamma Island) “spit-rain” without the heat. Consequently, instead of doing another day at the beach, we headed into Wellfleet, well aware that we were a season away from the Wellfleet Oysterfest, but knowing we would find something.

One road lead to the ocean, so we took it, did a quick-read in Frommer’s, and found Mac’s, where we lunched on the picnic tables by the water, near some 50-something French cyclists. No oysters, but scallops – breaded lightly, fried even more lightly, and lobster rolls with a dash – no more – of mayo.

Still hunting for the oysters, we took yet another turn, found another place, which was food for the eyes, if not the body:

Looking for a space to turn around, we had driven down and around a road on Main Street for about a hundred feet; realizing “The Salty Duck”was actually a pottery shop, we got out to look around. Owner and potter Katherine Stillman’s work is said to have “a free and easy way” about it, and so it does, but even freer and easier is her honor system. If she is not there – and she wasn’t this morning when we visited – you simply write down what you liked/took, then leave the money or fill out a credit card slip.

We left The Salty Duck, poked around a few stores on Main and Commercial, were deciding between the ice cream shop and a fudge shop, when we saw Winslow’s Tavern; upstairs in the Billingsgate Bar, we played Trivia (don’t ask) and ate, yes! Bivalve Molluscs.

Ananda: My Hut

Earlier tonight, Ceci (6 years old) found this video on my iPod. I had taken it my first week at the ashram, and when I watched it this evening, I was transported. I suspect, however, that not everybody seeing it will feel as I do.
Proof Positive: as I turned out her light, my wise granddaughter called out to me, “About that hut…? I don’t think it looked very fun.”

Just Video

ANANDA WALK: Where I lived for 4 weeks.

BLESS SCHOOL: After Snack

Puja, Ashram (all-women) near Shantivanam

Old Delhi: Marriage Market Area

Post-Connaught Lunch, thru Karol Bagh Mkt

Post-Repook’s Spice Mkt

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