Sunday, December 14, 2014

Remembering Mary Jane



On December 16th, it will be 10 years since our classmate, Mary Jane Sassone Jarkowski, left this earth for a higher realm.  She was one of a kind.  The mold was discarded after she was wonderfully made.  I think of her often and remember all her antics.  She was  marvelous combination of spirituality and sexuality and sensitivity.  She was probably the most dramatic person I have ever known. The last time we walked together in late November 2004, she leaned over to hold on to a large rock.  I felt she was hanging on tightly to a piece of the earth so as not to leave the people, and the sights and sounds of the earth that she loved so well.   On that last visit with her, she had me dye her roots.   I felt she was too ill that particular evening, but she insisted that the dye job be done.  I imagine she wanted to look "just so" when she was laid out in her coffin.  But we didn't really acknowledge that fact.  Oh, for sure she knew that death was approaching, but she wanted a little more time and she tried her best to keep it going.   Who could blame her?  She was way too young as far as I was concerned.   But sometimes death creeps up on us even though we are not ready to go, and in spite of what we do,  or how we feel about it. 
I often ask, "Mary Jane, are you near?  Do you watch from afar?"  I often say, "thanks for planning that 6 week trip through Europe for Eleanor, Susan & Me."  I also add, "thanks for always listening to my woes, for never being my judge, for sharing your deepest thoughts and dreams with me and for giving me unconditional love. 
 Here is a poem Mary Jane wrote about her feelings surrounding Nursing School.  I am certain many of us can relate!
                                                               "Nursing School"

Saturday stretches out ahead of me
Like a delicious
7 cent caramel sucker
The kind to be savored all day
As I curl up in my dorm bed

Terror strikes suddenly
As I awakedn fuzzy headed
Remembering
A black hole awaits me
Where I labor over the pitiful sick
While the birds of prey
In starched white linen
Peck their blue capped young
And I am 
A particularly appetizing fledging

I bolt upright
Journey 40 years in a flash
Find myself home
In my own bed
It's long over
But
For the nightmares
By Mary Jane Jarkowsky, 2002

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

" Lakeside" near Friendsville

My Mom wrote that this was the home of Christopher Byrne & Mary Anne Welch, parents of Hannah Colemen.

Really Old Family History Darius Coleman, Sr.



This was extracted from a book entitled, "History of Susquehanna County Pennsylvania" by Emily C. Blackman originally published in Philadelphia, 1873.  It was gotten from the Susquehanna County Historical Society and Free Library Association Regional Publishing Company by my mother, Rita O'Donnell Fries who seemed to live and breath and love genealogy.   I plan to bring the book back to Montrose, Pa and donate it to the Historical Society unless a family member claims it quickly!
Darius Coleman, Sr's son, Darius Coleman, Jr married Margaret Curley and they had a son named Frank Coleman who married Hannah Byrne who then had a daughter named Margaret Coleman who had a daughter named Rita O'Donnell who then had a daughter named Mary Beth Fries Buchner, i.e., me.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Rita

16 years ago today my Mother died.  That is the word we use when the heart stops and breathing ceases.
But although her heart stopped beating and her spirit left the flesh and blood space that we knew as Rita Mary Agnes O'Donnell Fries, she continues to exist for me.  She isn't gone.  She lives on in all the journals she wrote. She lives on through my arms and hands as I stand at the kitchen counter and prepare "Apple Pan- Dowdy" or as lament about "what should I do with my hair?'  or as I enjoy the people and activities in my life or as I prepare, with joyful anticipation, for this or that next social get-together.   I know where I learned all these things.  I know that she remains with me in  immeasurable ways as I walk through my days on this earth.  I know when I fill up with love for the people in my life that she is the one who gave me this most marvelous gift. 
Thanks Mom, for loving me and showing me the way.  

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Hannah Byrne Coleman's Parents, Christopher & Mary Ann Welch Byrne- 1898



This photo was given to me by Mary Bahan who was a first cousin to my maternal grandmother, Margaret Mary Coleman O'Donnell.  Her father, Patrick, was a brother to Hannah, making Margaret & Mary Bahan first cousins.    This photo was taken in approximately 1898 and I can only assume that it was taken in the farmhouse in Friendsville, PA.  The house is no longer there but it was on the right side of the dirt road when you take the road in Friendsville that leads to Carmalt Lake where the O'Donnell children and other family members went swimming in the summertime. In 1994 my mother, Rita O'Donnell Fries, used some of the money she inherited from her sister, Anne O'Donnell to reprint the poetry books, "Idyls of Lakeside" (copyright, 1909)by the O'Byrnes (the O'Brynes dropped the "O" and became known as the Byrnes.  She also reprinted a small book by the same authors entitled, "Susquehanna and Other Poems" (copyright 1914).
My mother told me that there was a little "ditty" or small poem about her great-grandmother, Mary Ann Welch.    It was a play on words that went like this - "She got her M.A. at Oxford",  and then the reader would assume that Mary Ann went to Oxford University in England and got her Masters Degree there.  But the last part of the ditty told the truth of the matter when the verse read, "when they baptized her there "Mary Ann".   You see, the truth of the matter was that she was baptized Mary Ann (M.A.) in a little town in upstate New York known as Oxford.
My mother was very proud of her ancestry and was thrilled by poetry.  My sister, Meg, read some of these poems to our dear Mother as she lay on her deathbed and hearing them once again, this  familiar poetry brought a smile to my mother's face.
In case you are wondering, I don't have any photos of Christopher and Mary Ann's parents!!

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

May Coleman Geary & Margaret Coleman O'Donnell

I have no idea when this photo was taken but I am guessing this was when May & Margaret were still Coleman's.  It is in rather bad shape but the faces are clear.  I wasn't sure this was May since I always remember my great Aunt May as a rather thin woman and she is a bit robust in this photo.   But my mother wrote on the back of the photo" Mother & Aunt May".  For those who may not know the history, Margaret was the oldest daughter and then came May.  Their parent's photo was sent out awhile ago - Hannah Byrne and Frank  Coleman.  

Geary's Valley Rest, Route 106, Lawton, Pa


I'm not sure if I ever sent this photo out on my Blog before but will do it again anyway since the Geary Family is so receptive!!
My Mom and Dad loved this place and told many stories of arriving from the heat, hustle and bustle of Brooklyn, NY to the fresh air and open spaces of my Mother's Aunt May Geary's little get-away.  It seemed from my parent's tales that this spot was a little bit of heaven for them.
By the way, I'm suppose to be cleaning out my computer room and instead I am drawn right into this photo and other photos, letters, postcards, etc.  Why am I like this, I wonder?

Monday, November 3, 2014

Messed up My Blog

I can no longer click at the top of a blog entry and attach an alert & link to my Boomerfrontrunner Blog on my Facebook page.   I have no idea why or how this change occurred.  Does anyone have a clue what I did or why this happened or more importantly, how I can correct it?  Actually, in a nutshell, this is an indication of my computer skills or rather my lack of computer skills.  I love to write and use my blog as a motivator but do not know enough regarding all the other stuff.   It can be such a frustration and time waster, especially for someone fast approaching 70, who understands quite clearly that their isn't much sand left in the hour glass.   

Sunday, November 2, 2014

Sweetness Personified at Mike & Shelby's Wedding



These two little girls brought such joy as they walked down the isle at Mike & Shelby's Wedding.  It never ceases to amaze me at the wonder and joy that radiates from children.   No matter what else is going on in a person's life, children make us happier and put a smile on our faces. 

My Father Sat in Back of Me in Church Today

Was this just a coincidence?!
So, today is my father's 99th birthday.  It is also "All Souls Day".  We rarely ever go to the 9AM Sunday liturgy.  Almost always we attend the 4PM Mass on Saturday afternoon.  But we were lucky enough to be invited to dinner at our friends' - Joanne & John's - home in Greenville yesterday and we waited until today to go to Mass.
Now, ever since my father died on September 11, 2013, I noticed an elderly man at the 4PM Mass who had a striking, uncanny resemblance to my Dad.  I honestly never saw him in church prior to my Dad's death.  It has been a great comfort for me to look over my shoulder and get a glimpse of "my father"when I am at Mass.    I look for him every time we are at the 4 o'clock Mass.
Today when we walked into the hall (our church proper is undergoing renovations), the seats were just about full. Bob and I went to sit in chairs along the wall, when one of the ladies of our parish, said, "grab a chair and pull it up alongside of me".  So we did, and I sat down.  I was feeling a bit lonesome, thinking about my Dad on his birthday and remembering how many Masses we attended together.  I started to slip my arms out of my coat when I felt the person behind me reach up to help me.  I turned around to acknowledge the help and low and behold it was my "Dad".   He is always at the 4PM and he never sits directly behind us.  This morning he was at the 9AM Mass and is seated right behind us and he reaches up to help me.  I honestly cannot help but believe my Dad had something to do with this coincidence.  Even my practical, down-to-earth husband was astonished.
So, yes, I got your "hello" Dad and thanks for the wink.  I love you too and hope your birthday is going well wherever your Spirit resides.
I never ever saw this man again after this encounter!

Sunday, October 12, 2014

Connor's Question

I didn't realize that a 9 year old boy could be such a "deep thinker".  This morning we are driving Connor home after he slept over with us (his Mema and Papa) when he asks, "what is the purpose of life, if we're all going to die anyway?"
Wow! I certainly was surprised to hear such a question coming from a child.  I felt so sad.  Does a person have to deal with the reality of death at such a young age?  Won't there be plenty of time for this in years to come?  I felt a bit overwhelmed as I scrambled to find a satisfactory answer. 
I told him that death is a birth into another life and it isn't the end of us.  I told him that when a baby is in the Mommie's womb, it probably doesn't want to to leave because it is so at home there, but then when it is born, it is happy that it entered this new life.  I said that when people have to die, they don't want to leave this world because they are so at home here, but then when they do die and leave this life, they enter the next life and they are very happy that they entered this new life with God.
I wonder if this was a good thing to say.  I don't want him to be too eager to go to the next life. 
And, as you probably know from my previous blog entries, I really just hope and pray for the realities I shared with him today since they are none too clear and concise in my own mind.   Even my faith-filled father had uncertainty.  I was trying to offer some comfort to him as he lay dying by saying, "Daddy, you'll be seeing Mommie and Charlie and little Joseph and your Mom and Dad and he answered me a bit too clearly, "I sure hope so".  
 Still I want Connor to have hope.  I also wonder what he is being taught about life, death and infinity at St. Pius X School?  
Tonight I'm trying to fall asleep and I start thinking of the Baltimore Catechism answer:
"God made us to know Him, to love Him and to serve Him in this life and to be happy with Him in the next".  I'll also have to tell Connor that the purpose of life is to Love God with his whole heart, his whole soul and His whole strength and to love his neighbors as himself.   I think this is the very best answer.  I sense this at my core when I experience love.  I don't doubt that, I just don't have a clear, concise mental picture of what the next life will be.   I also think the word Him is not the best description of a Being who is beyond description. 
The photo was taken this morning shortly before we drove Connor home.  He is standing with Nancy Krueger, a woman we know from Ridgewood, Queens.  She was visiting for the weekend. We have known Nancy since 1973 when Bob & I taught her in a "religious ed class" at St. Matthias Church.

Friday, October 10, 2014

How can I take this Synod Seriously?

 I can barely stand to read anything about the Synod going on in Rome.  It makes me so upset to hear what some of these "celibate" man are preaching.  Don't they understand that God is love?
  
Thank God this Cardinal said something I can agree with:

Cardinal Walter Kasper said  “A Church without women is like a mutilated body,”  He also said that  “Without them, parishes would close tomorrow.”   Kasper remarked that it was “absurd” that women did not hold “high-level” positions in the Roman Curia.  He added that women should also be included, as consultants, in major discussions at the congregations dealing with education, saint-making, doctrine and consecrated life “since 80 percent of Religious are women.” (The Tablet, 03/08/14)

On the other hand, Cardinal Raymond Burke states: 
“If homosexual relations are intrinsically disordered, which indeed they are — reason teaches us that and also our faith — then, what would it mean to grandchildren to have present at a family gathering a family member who is living [in] a disordered relationship with another person?” asked the cardinal.

How can he say that an all-loving God creates people who are "intrinsically disordered'?    Why would an intelligent human being, in this day and age, make a remark like this???    It is so absolutely frustrating to hear someone who is in a decision making position in my church say such a ludicrous thing? 

I am so discouraged by this group of men in Rome!

Monday, October 6, 2014

Honesty and Truth

This blog entry is dedicated to my feisty red-headed cousin, Judy.  Her thoughts and insights are amazing.  Maybe this is egocentric on my part since she describes my feelings and thoughts about the official Catholic Church so precisely.
Her dialogue is honest, open and challenging.
These are some of my thoughts she has brought to the forefront:
 If there is a Supreme Being ( I say "if", not to offend anyone but because this belief is really a matter of faith) than there is also an ultimate truth. 
The word "supreme" by its very meaning is the "top" or the "best" and it is singular.  There is only one since if there were two than the fist one would no longer be supreme.  The second one would be the second best or the next best.  If there is one Supreme Being than it really doesn't matter what we name this being, it is still the one and only!
Our human minds search the truth about, but never really fully understand, this Supreme Being since we aren't that Being.  Also it doesn't really matter what we call this Being because, in essence, we are all referring to the same Being since there is only One.   Therefore it doesn't really make sense to fight or argue over what we name this Being.  It is and always will be Supreme.  I guess!  I say "I guess" because anyone who pretends to know for certain is, I believe, arrogant.
Discussing truthfully can offend a lot of people.  I know from personal experience that you can't ask certain questions or state your "truth" without causing an uproar.   This is too bad since finding the truth (as best we can) about this Supreme Being appears to be an ultimate goal of existence (at least to me and possibly Alfie). 
There is a new expression floating around a lot lately - "speaking truth to power".   Power doesn't like the truth because it may show them to be fraudulent.   Also truth can be painful.  I know that from personal experience also.  When I was an adolescent I asked my cousin, Susie, if I was pretty and she said, "your average" and this hurt since I really wanted to be gorgeous and a famous singer. In many ways it is a lot more comfortable to live in fantasy.  Oftentimes I  like to hear lies, "beautiful" lies.   Oftentimes I don't feel strong enough to hear the truth.  But when someone speaks the truth, they challenge us and they make us grow.   Hopefully the truth can be so lovingly given that we don't block it from getting into us.

Friday, October 3, 2014

AWAKE!

So it is now 5AM and I have been awake since approximately 2:30AM.  I lie in bed and my mind starts wandering to this thing and that.  I wish I could put it, i.e., my mind, to sleep so I can be rejuvenated in the morning when most normal people are getting up and moving.  But, there is always so much to think about.  Does anyone else have this problem?  Typically I think about some deep issues such as love, relationships, the meaning of life, the truth about an Almighty Being, Eternity, etc, etc.  Then I think about everyday things - "my to do list" - deciding what should be done first and the most effective means to get the job done.   I think about the people I haven't called in awhile, the people I miss seeing and/or talking to.  I think about
deciding what to pack for Mike and Shelby's wedding;
what to include and how to organize the slide presentation for the Friends of Fontaine Annual dinner on Oct. 18th.    I think about people from my past - people who helped form me into the person I am now - good parts and bad.  I remember lessons I learned that never left me; for example when I was 17 years old I went to speak to our pastor at St. Michael's Church in East New York, Brooklyn, Father Owen Shelley.  I was in my first "serious" relationship with a guy named Jerry and I was beginning to see things weren't going to work out for us.   I remember that Father Owen said that as difficult as it would be for me to change and become like him, that was how difficult it would be for him to change and become like me.   That bit of advice has stayed with me throughout my life.  It is a very powerful statement and I have thought of it and returned to it in many circumstances throughout my life.  Change does not come easy for anyone.  When we are strong in a belief and it has been ingrained over many years, it takes a huge amount of desire and then effort to change - even a tiny little change.
Another lesson I learned by experience, is that love is profound and unconditional love is nothing short of a miracle so when a person really loves you, you are changed forever by that love.  It leaves me with a great sense of gratitude. 
It is now 5:22AM and I will attempt to go back to sleep for a little while.  Lucky for me I am retired and I have no appointments this morning.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

This Cardinal Disappoints Me





As a thoughtful Catholic, I am once again embarrassed and disappointed to hear that Cardinal Gerhard Mueller, head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith continues his attack on American nuns.  In order manage my bitterness and rage; I prayed the words uttered by Christ, “Father forgive them for they know not what they do”.   Why does Cardinal Mueller continue to press ahead with this nonsensical, wasteful investigation of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious (LCWR)?    When Cardinal Mueller accuses the nuns of thumbing their noses at the Vatican, I can’t help but picture an immature, arrogant, vindictive man stomping his feet in a futile attempt to maintain his position of power.    Cardinal Mueller made a special point of criticizing the LCWR’s decision to honor Fordham University Theologian, Sister Elizabeth Johnson at their annual assembly this summer in Nashville, Tenn.    This criticism makes me question if Cardinal Mueller actually took the time to read any of Sr. Elizabeth Johnson’s many scholarly works, and if he did, did he fail to comprehend them?  For if he had read, listened to, and understood her enlightened message, he, too, would be praising her as one of the most saintly individuals of our era.   
Photo is my classmate, Pat, from St. Vincent's Hospital School of Nursing greeting the Guest Speaker, Sr. Elizabeth Johnson, at the St. Joseph Provincial House here in Latham, NY  in April 2013

Thursday, September 18, 2014

September 18, 1971

43 years ago today, i.e., September 18th 1971, at St. Michael the Archangel Catholic Church on Jerome Street in Brooklyn, NY was the scene of this life changing event.  I said , "I do" and Bob said it too and here we are all these years later married still.  I don't think we had a clue as to what we were in for- does anyone really know what they are signing up for when they say those words, "For better or for worse for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health until death do us part".  Bob was pale and clammy, I was on a Equinol (thanks to my dear Daddy)and we made it though the day.   Bob was truly the best man for me and I hope I was the best woman for him (he always wanted to marry a nurse and I always wanted to marry a man who was stronger than me).  I think we both got what we wanted.  He told me long ago that our love was different than other loves - you know the loves that eventually dissolved, gave up and fell by the wayside.  He said our love would survive the test of time.  He promised me that and I cherished that promise through thick and thin.   It hasn't always been a bed of roses but it certainly was worth it and I would do it again in a heartbeat.  After all, anyone who knows me well, knows I looked far and wide to find the "best" man for me and with the help of God, I found him.  Besides, I always loved his voice and his sense of humor - what more could a woman ask for!
The Mass was con-celebrated by Fr. Godfrey Leuchinger, OFM Cap, Fr. Owen Shelly, OFM Cap and Fr. Al Varriale (of St. Rita's Church  and counselor extraordinare.

Thursday, September 11, 2014

One of the Lucky Ones - Article that appeared in the Times Union



My cousin Glenn drove Engine 54  for a firehouse in the theater district in midtown Manhattan.

At age 50, Glenn was a senior member of his company. Not too long before 9/11, my husband and were in Manhattan to see a show on Broadway and we decided to walk over to Glenn’s firehouse to say hello.

Glenn wasn’t there that day, but the younger guys on duty were more than happy to laugh and socialize with the family of one of their brothers. It was obvious they were a close-knit bunch of guys who loved to taunt and mess with each other.

We left the firehouse with a smile on our faces and a bounce in our step. These young, handsome, cheerful and robust bunch of guys had that kind of effect on you.

As fate would have it, Glenn’s firehouse was one of the first to respond when disaster hit the World Trade Center on that beautiful morning in September 2001.

He was on his last day of vacation. Shortly after the planes hit, all the off-duty firemen were called in to work. As they stood somberly awaiting their assignments, one of the men asked the question on everyone’s mind, “Were any of our guys lost?”

The answer they heard — “everyone” — was too horrifying to fully comprehend.

Everyone from Engine Company 54 who happened to be on duty the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, was gone — 15 men in all.

In a state of disbelief, the survivors started to ask about the men in surrounding firehouses.

The word — everyone — was repeated over and over again. The shocking truth was that almost all the firehouses in the nearby communities had lost all the men who were at work that morning.

At 1 a.m. that night, the guys from Engine Company 54 were down at the World Trade Center site, digging through the rubble, desperately hoping to find their brothers alive. As dawn approached, the full impact of the devastation came into focus — 50,000 desks, chairs, file cabinets and computers, as well as the steel and concrete of the world’s most majestic pair of skyscrapers, were reduced to white ash and unrecognizable rubble.

The surrounding buildings contained massive gaping holes and furiously burning fires.

The area was promptly labeled ground zero, a term previously used to describe the devastating destruction found at the epicenter of a nuclear attack.

Because Engine 54’s firehouse is in the center of one of Manhattan’s biggest tourist areas, typically the doors are left wide open. After Sept. 11, people from all over the world came to the firehouse to show their support and pay their respects.

My cousin told me, “I feel like I’m at an unending wake; I’ve never been hugged so much in all my life. Even the hugs are pulling me down; I just can’t stand it anymore.”

He described a pervading sense of numbness, as if the firemen had been anesthetized. He knew more than 60 firemen who died and he asked, “How can you lose so many friends in one swift swoop?” I had no answer for him.

There was no relief from the sorrow. Funerals and memorial services occurred in a constant stream. After many weeks, the wife of one of his comrades spoke as if her husband might still be found alive. My cousin told me how painfully heartbreaking it was to hear her clinging to this hope once he’d been to ground zero and had seen firsthand the minuscule particles that remained.

Because the word “off” was penciled into my cousin’s schedule for Tuesday, 9/11, most people defined him as one of the lucky ones. Yet, I know firsthand that he never recovered from this devastating loss. It appears that his life blew up along with those majestic towers. The overwhelming anguish he suffered led to severe post traumatic stress syndrome and his mind still contains an indelible picture of a hell known as ground zero.

Mary Beth Buchner lives in Latham.

First Anniversary in a Place called Heaven

One year ago, in the early morning hours of 9-11, my father left his body and went somewhere else.  People tell me how lucky I was to have my Dad for 68 years and I know they are completely correct.  
My father was a brilliant man and he grasped certain complex concepts that others couldn't "touch".    I loved to hear him talk about the stars and the galaxies and the many principles of physics that influenced our daily lives.  He seemed to know certain things innately and he retained countless facts without any effort.  If it was a subject that was "up his alley", it was a pleasure for him to read and study and remember.   He even got in trouble in pre-seminary school at  Garrison New York, for reading books that weren't part of the assignment.  These books were not "girly" magazines or frivolous fiction; they were books on the working of electricity!  He always needed to know why things worked the way they did.  He understood anatomy and physiology better than many doctors and nurses.  And when we were young children, he built us - his kids - a recorder player from scratch - things he had laying around his house.  How many kids can say their father did that?!   I didn't even realize it was home-made until years later. I thought every kid had a 3 foot high rectangular wooden box for their record player.  
But the most important lessons I learned from my Father had to do with love.   One quick story will illustrate my point.  One time when I was a child, the front doorbell rang and when I went to open it with my father quickly following behind, there stood a woman with a strap around the back of her neck from which hung a box of trinkets - thread, pencils, and other little inconsequential things.  She asked if we wanted to buy anything - obviously she was going door to door, trying to sell her wares.  My father, with a wave of his hand, dismissed her rather abruptly.  She turned and looking dejected began her descent down the long flight of stairs at 62 Interboro Parkway.   A few minutes later my father ran down the stairs and up the street after her.  I followed close behind to see what was up.  I had no idea what he was doing and why.   He called after the woman, she turned and waited.  When my father reached her side, he apologized for his harsh response to her.  He then rummaged through her container and found something he probably didn't need or want, paid her more than it was worth.  She thanked him and we turned and walked back home together.  He never explained his actions to me, but what he did that day taught me more about love and the type of person he was than any elaborate words he could have spoken.
So, today, on the first anniversary of his passing, I have to believe he is somewhere good, surrounded by love.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

My Fortune Cookie


My Fortune Cookie said, "Find release from your cares, have a good time."   Was that a coincidence or did someone know that a boulder was lifted from my chest earlier in the afternoon when Dr. Chang shared the biopsy results with us.  I can't remember when I heard such good news.   There is NO cancer in the lymph glands - the malignancy appears to be confined to the prostate gland which is out of Bob's body!!  Good-bye you terrible disease!  Stay away, we don't like you.
 We celebrated over lunch at the Pearl of the Orient toasting each other with some Chinese Tsingtao Beer.  It was a marvelous day.   Praise God.  Thank you, Dr. Theodore Chang, and all the scientists and engineers, etc. who came up with this marvelous Robot.  By the way that horrible bruise is almost gone.  Some people have drains placed during surgery which likely eliminates the terrible bruising  but, the other side of the coin is the fact that this exposure to the outside could be another potential source of infection.    Thank you for all the prayers and good wishes.  The next step is continued recovery and periodically checking the PSA levels which should be and continue to remain 0 now that the prostate is gone  

Monday, September 8, 2014

Me & M. Geraldine

This weekend, I am preparing a salad for my fellow Maryknoll Affiliates and I decided to make a recipe that my friend, Gerry, made for Bob and Me when we visited with Gerry and Bill at their home on Long Island. We went out in their boat on the Long Island Sound on a gorgeously beautiful day - I can still feel the warmth of the sun on my face.  Later that evening we went upstairs and sat on her bed, opened a large box and went through some old photos.  Together we reminisced over old times on Arcadia Place as we looked at pictures of her handsome brother, JC,- on whom I had an enormous crush (he even escorted me to our St. Vincent's Hospital School of Nursing Capping Dance in 1963)- and her feisty "little" sister, Kathy, and their warm and welcoming parents with their smiling Irish eyes and lovely brogues. 
For dinner that evening on Long Island, Gerry prepared this great salad recipe and I think of her every time I make it and frequently in between.    I hope Gerry doesn't mind that I diverted a bit from her recipe but then again, she was used to my ways.  She knew I was a bit of a rebel rouser and behind that sweet, gentle exterior, she could be rather spirited herself.     M. Geraldine Crowley was a tremendous blessing in my life and I thank God for her.
Here is the Recipe:


Pasta with Tomatoes and Basil from my dear friend, M. Geraldine Crowley Fahey
4 ripe large tomatoes cut into ½ “ cubes
1 lb. Brie Cheese- rind removed- torn into irregular pieces
1 cup clean, fresh basil leaves, cut into strips
3 gloves garlic minced
½ cup (or more) best quality olive oil (original recipe says 1 cup + 1 TBL olive oil but I find that is too much for me)
2 and a half tsp salt
½ tsp fresh ground black pepper
1 and ½ lb. pasta (original recipe says linguine but I like to use bowties – little or big)
Add Parmesan Cheese at table before serving.
Prepare, i.e., mix at least two hours before serving (at room temperature) and set aside covered.