Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Post Ash Wednesday mass reflection and a dead Jesuit

Five minutes after Ash Wednesday mass at 7:30pm, I found myself standing in line to pay my respects to a dead Jesuit named Fr. Desmond Reid. I don't think I have ever met Fr. Reid, and certainly did not recognise him from his picture. But M, who was responsible for getting me in the queue, said he was such a wonderful person, a friendly man, who had led many of her bible discussion groups. So I said, okay, I would accompany her to the wake. It was also, conveniently, on the way to where I had parked the car, so there was that, too - a heavy flow of traffic that would have prevented me from leaving anyway. I was quite taken aback by the crowd of people who had gathered in the hall that for these past three nights had become a funeral gathering. It seemed there were more than two hundred people there, and more outside. Amazing and wonderful and to my mind, rather unexpected.

As we were shuffled, waiting for our turn, I found myself telling M, who I feel very friendly and homey toward (for the simple reason that she is/was a good friend of my cousin's in college), how it was only in Singapore that I started going to mass regularly again. That actually, once I stopped living in my parents' house, mass was only an every now and then thing. As and when. Now and then. And that I had no other reason for my return other than an inexplicable, indescribable need for it...you might even say a hunger. Also, I was worried for my kids, for my family. If I was not going to give faith to them, who was? They would be left bereft, without a choice simply because they did not know. I received it. I chose to leave it a little, and I chose to return. I pictured my kids as adults and realised that if they never had it, they might possibly never want it to return to.

M, who I see at mass sometimes with her children, rarely with her husband, seemed to understand what I meant. That night, for Ash Wednesday mass, we were both alone, and there was no need to speculate on the reasons.

As we shuffled closer to the open casket, I caught a glimpse of Fr. Reid. All of a sudden I remembered a story T had told me of a time when he was maybe in the third grade at the Ateneo. Some Jesuit, then as now, had also passed away. And all the students in all the classes were made to line up and pay their respects in pairs. T was paired with a school mate and as they looked down at the face of the dead Jesuit, T felt a mad uncontrollable impulse to laugh. Something about the man's face. Something off in a funny way. His eyes met with those of his friend's, and almost as if by understanding, they shared that wild desire for laughter. Biting their lips, they ran like mad, pell mell to the outside of the chapel. Only when they got there did they burst into spasms of gut-wrenching mirth.

Recalling this, I squelched a similar impulse of my own to laugh. I closed my eyes, bit my lower lip and said a silent prayer. For Fr. Ried and for my family and for our faith.

Of course.

6 comments:

Mark Rice said...

Noelle, you are such a great writer! It feels so good hearing your voice her and catching up and I can't wait to see you in April.

I think you should make the blog a book. That's your assignment! And how funny--your comment about not starting with titles. I always start with titles. Right now I'm working on Viet* Mom. Pretty bad title, huh?

love,

Anne

Lionel Valdellon said...

Noelle!
There's a scene in some movie or TV show that talks precisely about that... about wanting to laugh at a funeral, and the director chose to show a visual metaphor using stacked glasses... The point being you keep stacking the glasses (biting your lip to keep from laughing) and at one point the glasses all fall (you end up on the floor, laughing yourself to tears)....

come to think of it, the show may have been Desperate Housewives, season 1.... Not sure though.

Hello!!!

:::Lionel Zivan S. Valdellon (Acid42):::
blog:>> http://acid42.bluechronicles.net/blog

Noelle Q. de Jesus said...

Lionel!
Gusto ko magkoment ka sa translation ko nang apo. Ok ba? Hindi kasi sumagot si Rofel...
Saan ka lilipat sa States?
N

Anonymous said...

Okay this is kinda weird - I just stumbled across this article by accident & started to read it ... only then realising that the Jesuit you refer to - Fr Des Reid - is actually a relative of mine who died earlier this week .. its a small world ... I think he would have found the idea that he made it onto someones blog as very entertaining .... E

Noelle Q. de Jesus said...

Hi! Thanks for the comment. That's a strange coincidence. Were you looking for items about him? I'm glad you said what you said, though, and I hope he nor you would be offended. N

Lionel Valdellon said...

Noelle,
My email is acid42[at]gmail[dot]com.
sned the translations over, though you should be warned i am rusty!

Am now in Northern California! And it's cold! weird winter.

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