Halbrook.net
29Aug/080

As an aside

After some time for discernment (and a nap) on the flight home, and some advice from someone who's helping me on a long-term project, I'm not going to be as outward as I had earlier thought with some of my deeper thoughts on our current political state.  There will be more to come... it will just be more discerned and will more slowly emerge over time.

For now, good night!

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29Aug/080

The next VP of the US of A

palin.jpgGod-willing, my friends, we're seeing a major shift in politics in America - a shift that's going to motivate me to finally step out on a limb and share some personal hopes and prayers that I've had for quite some time.

So that's all coming soon.

But for now, as I sit hear and wait to get on a plane home after a delay - and another delay - and another delay - I just thought I'd think back on what an amazing week it's been.

Sunday, Speaker Pelosi opened her mouth and royally inserted her foot when she tried to explain away her support for abortion rights as something mysteriously not quite totally decided (or very recently decided) in what the Church (her Church, she claims) teaches in the arena of faith and morals.  She mis-quoted and mis-used the writings of a saint and Doctor of the Church.  And she did it - GASP - in the week when his feast day and that of his mother are celebrated in the Church's general calendar.

That was followed by a week of bishops across the country having the guts and smarts to come out and help teach her just how wrong she is on the issue.

Oh yeah... and it just happened to be the week that the DNC was having the DNC in Denver, and I suppose that they really wanted all eyes and minds on Obama rather than on Pelosi and her relationship with her bishops and the teaching of the Church on one of the issues they surely didn't want in the headlines at this moment in time.

And today, we find out about Gov. Palin, a brilliant choice and seemingly remarkably genuine woman.

Something tells me there was some major intercession going on upstairs, and now we have someone who seems to be a splendid VP candidate on the presumptive Republican ticket.  A real American woman and pro-life mother of five.

Robbie... just the other night at dinner I made it clear to you that I vote first and foremost on the issue of life.  Maybe we're finally at that turning point back to the reality of the natural law, of our true humanity, and of respect for life in our American culture.

What a great week.  God bless America and all her children!  This is going to get exciting.

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28Aug/080

A better way to honor Dr. King

king.jpgWell... here we are, on the anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King's speech on the D.C. Mall (funny, that I drove by there today in the bus on the team outing and saw it across the Potomac in the fog and rain.)  And our country has taken a major step forward in our honorable progressive history and nominated the first black American to the presidency.  That's awesome, and I'm proud of our country and how far we've come.  I'm a Vols fan for many reasons, and one of the "neat" things is knowing that the name "Volunteers" comes from the fact that Tennessee was the first state to volunteer to re-join the Union after the painful and divisive Civil War.

Even though I don't think Barack is the best man for the job at this moment in our history, I'm happy for him and for our nation and what this all means.

I do think, though, that it's important that the Republican Party reclaim the mantle of true conservatism that led them to advocate full and equal integration originally.  Remember that the party that has nominated Obama was the party of segregation. My, how far we've come.

In fact, as the Heritage Foundation points out, it's time that conservatives in general reclaim the true conservative legacy that Dr. King advocated and based his beliefs in, such as "the power and necessity of faith-based association and self-government based on absolute truth and moral law," both of which are definitively counter to pretty much all of the current Democratic Party platform at this point in history.

"King aimed to unite a divided America behind the goals of the Founders, not to shift fundamentally unjust public policies to favor different groups. Affirmative action stands outside King's legacy because it requires the government to see Americans as members of privileged and disfavored racial groups, not equal individuals. This is also the conservative view."

So where can and should these ideals live?  You tell me... but I know where I think they should live.

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28Aug/080

The reason for the house

house.jpgBuying a home was a big decision for Suzanne and me.  Not only is it one of the largest financial decisions/transactions you'll ever make (or perhaps the largest), it's one of the most long-lasting and has an inestimable impact on your health, happiness, and well-being.

This article in the New York Magazine, although set in a different geography on a different scale (extreme suburbs of New York City), does an excellent job of covering all of the reasons why we chose to plant our roots in our hometown of Granite City, a re-inventing-itself steel/industrial town in the shadow of St. Louis' Gateway Arch.

"It's a story, admittedly, about... people not pulled to one city or another by family obligation
or job transfer, but rather by some grander idea of who they are and
where they might best fit
."

Of course, we've been blessed by the fact that this place has also been able to remain the center of our family (both sets of our parents and siblings) and our parish church community that sits at the center of our lives.  But the reality of a low house payment, proximity to a "big city" when we want it, blocks from an 80-acre park with all we'd want, a beautiful home in a gentrified and historic neighborhood... all that is something that we couldn't find in one package anywhere else we looked.

Don't miss the article. It's a good one.

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26Aug/080

Just about forever

manival.JPGYeah, I've been "missing" from the blog for just about forever.  I could pin it on any number of things in particular, but in general and in reality, I've just been busy.  I don't have as good of an excuse as Nicole, I know, but here goes...

This week's Manival (which also fell off the face of the world temporarily) is up and ROCKS like those before it.  Men, check it out.

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6Aug/080

The Only Full Answer to Evil: Love

The_Agony_in_the_Garden.jpgI was floored tonight to read this letter by Sister Lucy Vertrusc.  As a young nun, she became pregnant after being raped, along with two other sisters, during the war in the former Yugoslavia, in 1995.  The letter was written from the sister to her mother superior and was originally published (at the mother superior's request) in an Italian newspaper.  She truly knows - and testifies with her life - that all things are of God, and all things can contribute to His greater glory.  My friends... this is sainthood in the making.

"I am Lucy, one of the young nuns raped by the Serbian soldiers. I am writing to you, Mother, after what happened to my sisters Tatiana, Sandria, and me.

Allow me not to go into the details of the act. There are some experiences in life so atrocious that you cannot tell them to anyone but God, in whose service I had consecrated my life nearly a year ago.

My drama is not so much the humiliation that I suffered as a woman, not the incurable offense committed against my vocation as a religious, but the difficulty of having to incorporate into my faith an event that certainly forms part of the mysterious will of Him whom I have always considered my Divine Spouse.

Only a few days before, I had read "Dialogues of Carmelites" and spontaneously I asked our Lord to grant me the grace of joining the ranks of those who died a martyr of Him. God took me at my word, but in such a horrid way! Now I find myself lost in the anguish of internal darkness. He has destroyed the plans of my life, which I considered definitive and uplifting for me, and He has set me all of a sudden in this design of His that I feel incapable of grasping.

When I was a teenager, I wrote in my Diary: Nothing is mine, I belong to no one, and no one belongs to me. Someone, instead grabbed me one night, a night I wish never to remember, tore me off from myself, and tried to make me his own . . .

It was already daytime when I awoke and my first thought was the agony of Christ in the Garden. Inside of me a terrible battle unleashed. I asked myself why God had permitted me to be rent, destroyed precisely in what had been the meaning of my life, but also I asked to what new vocation He was calling me.

I strained to get up, and helped by Sister Josefina, I managed to straighten myself out. Then the sound of the bell of the Augustinian convent, which was right next to ours, reached my ears. It was time for nine o'clock matins.

I made the sign of the cross and began reciting in my head the liturgical hymn. At this hour upon Golgotha's heights,/ Christ, the true Pascal Lamb,/ paid the price of our salvation.

What is my suffering, Mother, and the offense I received compared to the suffering and the offense of the One for whom I had a thousand times sworn to give my life. I spoke these words slowly, very slowly: May your will be done, above all now that 1 have no where to go and that I can only be sure of one thing: You are with me.

Mother, I am writing not in search of consolation, but so that you can help me give thanks to God for having associated me with the thousands of my fellow compatriots whose honor has been violated, and who are compelled to accept a maternity not wanted. My humiliation is added to theirs, and since I have nothing else to offer in expiation for the sin committed by those unnamed violators and for the reconciliation of the two embittered peoples, I accept this dishonor that I suffered and I entrust it to the mercy of God.

Do not be surprised, Mother, when I ask you to share with me my "thank you" that can seem absurd.

In these last months I have been crying a sea of tears for my two brothers who were assassinated by the same aggressors who go around terrorizing our towns, and I was thinking that it was not possible for me to suffer anything worse, so far from my imagination had been what was about to take place.

Every day hundreds of hungering creatures used to knock at the doors of our convent, shivering from the cold, with despair in their eyes. Some weeks ago, a young boy about eighteen years old said to me: How lucky you are to have chosen a refuge where no evil can reach you. The boy carried in his hands a rosary of praises for the Prophet. Then he added: You will never know what it means to be dishonored.

I pondered his words at length and convinced myself that there had been a hidden element to the sufferings of my people that had escaped me as I was almost ashamed to be so excluded. Now I am one of them, one of the many unknown women of my people, whose bodies have been devastated and hearts seared. The Lord had admitted me into his mystery of shame. What is more, for me, a religious, He has accorded me the privilege of being acquainted with evil in the depths of its diabolical force.

I know that from now on the words of encouragement and consolation that I can offer from my poor heart will be all the more credible, because my story is their story, and my resignation, sustained in faith, at least a reference, if not example for their moral and emotional responses.

All it takes is a sign, a little voice, a fraternal gesture to set in motion the hopes of so many undiscovered creatures.

God has chosen me-may He forgive my presumption-to guide the most humble of my people towards the dawn of redemption and freedom. They can no longer doubt the sincerity of my words, because I come, as they do, from the outskirts of revilement and profanation.

I remember the time when I used to attend the university at Rome in order to get my masters in Literature, an ancient Slavic woman, the professor of Literature, used to recite to me these verses from the poet Alexej Mislovic: You must not die/because you have been chosen/ to be a part of the day.

That night, in which I was terrorized by the Serbs for hours and hours, I repeated to myself these verses, which I felt as balm for my soul, nearly mad with despair.

And now, with everything having passed and looking back, I get the impression of having been made to swallow a terrible pill.

Everything has passed, Mother, but everything begins. In your telephone call, after your words of encouragement, for which I am grateful with all my life, you posed me a very direct question: What will you do with the life that has been forced into your womb? I heard your voice tremble as you asked me the question, a question I felt needed no immediate response; not because I had not yet considered the road I would have to follow, but so as not to disturb the plans you would eventually have to unveil before me. I had already decided. I will be a mother. The child will be mine and no one else's. I know that I could entrust him to other people, but he-though I neither asked for him nor expected him-he has a right to my love as his mother. A plant should never be torn from its roots. The grain of wheat fallen in the furrow has to grow there, where the mysterious, though iniquitous sower threw it.

I will fulfill my religious vocation in another way. I will ask nothing of my congregation, which has already given me everything. I am very grateful for the fraternal solidarity of the Sisters, who in these times have treated me with the utmost delicacy and kindness, especially for never having asked any uncareful questions.

I will go with my child. I do not know where, but God, who broke all of a sudden my greatest joy, will indicate the path I must tread in order to do His will.

I will be poor again, I will return to the old aprons and the wooden shoes that the women in the country use for working, and I will accompany my mother into the forest to collect the
resin from the slits in the trees.

Someone has to begin to break the chain of hatred that has always destroyed our countries. And so, I will teach my child only one thing: love. This child, born of violence, will be a witness along with me that the only greatness that gives honor to a human being is forgiveness.

Through the Kingdom of Christ for the Glory of God.

From Roman Catholic Vocations.

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6Aug/080

Bigger. Stronger. Faster.

HulkHoganPicture.jpgYep, that's what I'd like to try to accomplish in the coming months.

And now, thanks to one of my favorite blogs (The Art of Manliness), I have the musical inspiration I need:  52 Workout Songs to load into a playlist in my iPod for my next run around the park or batch of sit-ups or push-ups.

Of course, the way I've kicked off lately, I'll be lucky to get through one song before I wrap up my sit-ups or push-ups, but I'll get to two songs.  You just wait and see.

Check out the list.  Some of these are really, really good.

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Filed under: Journal No Comments
1Aug/081

Ouch! That’s gotta hurt

I got the scare of my 30 years tonight when we got home from the 4-block walk to Mr. Twist for ice cream.  Suzanne had just come into the house with Matthew and Thomas and I was unloading everything from the stroller and gathering everything back into the house.

Of course, I thought they had all gone upstairs for bath time when I came flying back in the front door, only to hit something on the other side as I crashed through the threshold.

I closed the door to gather my thoughts and figure out what I had hit only to see little Thomas (the 3-year-old) reeling from the door, holding his eye.

Of course I immediately crashed back through the door, upon realizing that I had hit him with the door handle on my previous attempt at entry.

I picked him up to soothe him from his shock into a good healthy wail, at which point he had no more interest in being anywhere near me and only wanted mommy, who had made her way back down the stairs and traded me sons.

Way to go dad... your son's first black eye is your own fault.

At least we can be thankful he's okay for the most part.

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1Aug/080

Uh… hey… what kind of animal is this?

Wow. I mean wow.

News from across the pond today suggested that school-aged children are more clueless than they ever have been about the natural world around them.

In part, the article from an education correspondent of The Independent pointed out that "Half of youngsters aged nine to 11 were unable to identify a daddy-long-legs, oak tree, blue tit or bluebell, in the poll by BBC Wildlife Magazine."

Wow.

Sounds like the wuss-ification of culture again.  Sounds like we need another Lord Robert Baden-Powell to come along, get the kids to put down their cell phones and iPods, and head into the woods for some learning, some teamwork, and some survival.

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