Showing posts with label Cabrini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cabrini. Show all posts

Thursday, November 15, 2012

A Fall Visit Home

October was a bit of a hectic month for me and there were a couple of extra days worked over the weekends. Which I did not mind at all. But I decided to use that time as an opportunity to make a short visit home to see my family and Sara! Well, it was supposed to be short, in the end I spent a week at home due to Hurricane Sandy. I suppose worse things have happened. :)


 It was really great seeing my family and Sara again. I've been incredibly homesick and it felt good to be around familiar faces and people who I love. On Thursday night, my first night home I traveled to Cabrini to visit Fr. Carl (who had no idea I was coming!) and Stephanie and have dinner with Campus Ministry at President George's swanky digs. That was all such a fantastic feeling; it reminded me where I'm coming from and it was just plain fun to hang out with some great people. It was like no time had passed.


Looking good takes work, folks...
The next day I visited Dr. Wright and Dr. Filling a little bit and talked grad-school plans because I'm trying to keep all of my options right now and that is a very real one! After that Sara and I went to Linvilla Orchards to enjoy fall! We picked pumpkins, went on a hayride followed by a bonfire with marshmallows and apple cider. It was a beautiful day and so much fun. I've had so much fun traveling and getting out and doing different things with Sara in the five months before coming to LA and spending the day with her again it was as if we hadn't even been apart.

And I can't even begin to explain how much I missed fall! I never realized how much I loved the season until I didn't have it. Maybe I wouldn't have even known it if I didn't come to visit. And I picked the perfect time; it was just when the leaves were getting their most colorful and before the trees started to become bare. Cabrini's campus is beautiful (and a large reason why I chose the school) and it is so year 'round but it's hard to top fall there. You can't beat the East Coast in October. You just can't.


Fall! Ah how I missed the scenery of home.
Picking the right pumpkins is a skill...We both have it.
A picture from our relaxing hayride through the Orchards. Great chance to see fall up close!
So us, right?
Well, after we left Linvilla, we decided to return to the site of our first date, The Cheesecake Factory! Sara was craving some pumpkin cheesecake, because she loves all things pumpkin flavored in the fall. And who can blame her? After that, I stopped at home and saw my parents! Later still, we carved our pumpkins. Can you guess whose is whose? The next day I had dinner with my parents, grandparents, and Aunt Dorothy. It was muchos fun and incredibly relaxing.

Saturday night I crashed my brother's Halloween party--Kevin, Bridget, Tina, and Paul had no idea I was coming home and they were quite surprised to see me. It was awesome seeing them all again and even better to do it as a surprise.

Sunday night the original plan was to hang out at Cabrini and go to mass, which I was looking forward to a lot, I've missed that aspect of the Cabrini community immensely, but unfortunately, Hurricane Sandy was on the way and campus was asked to leave. Bummer!  On the bright side though, it did interfere with my flight and I wound up "stranded" at home with loved ones. Oh noooooo!!!

Those last few days at home were incredibly refreshing, fun, and invigorating. I've been struggling a lot with homesickness and it was nice to just sit around and play board games with Jack and Sara and just be around my mom and dad.




Being home was like a reset button for me emotionally. Having spent the last couple months around brand new people and having to stress about and exert so much effort into getting to know them it was a soothing reminder to simply be with people I know and love. It's so easy to take for granted that kind of relationship, and I have always tried to be very mindful of how blessed I am to have that at home, but to have not had that for a significant period of time now, to be with people so familiar and loving again was an amazing reminder of how important and life-giving it is.

My last night home Sara and I decided we needed to get out of the house--and so we grabbed a pair of ten-dollar Sixers tickets and made our way to the Wells Fargo Center. To our surprise, it was the season opener! It was a lot of fun, and they had a lot of different things to do, and in fact we missed the first half of the game exploring the place--because I have never been to the Center before, and Sara had never even been to a Sixers game! They had a craft table to color in signs, balloon hats and animals and Sara even got her face painted!


They even had Fix-it Felix Jr!



The night before leaving was incredibly difficult. More than I thought, actually. Leaving Jack again was oddly heartbreaking (odd simply because I didn't expect it) and even the thought of being away from family and Sara and the things that bring me comfort that I don't have to work at was heart-rending for a little while.

But the morning on my drive to the airport I held Sara's hand, looked out into the Philadelphia skyline as the sun was only beginning to rise and I felt calm. These things are part of who I am and distance, in the end, while difficult, does not make them less so. I am comforted in the knowledge that I will always have a place to call home full of people who love and support me...and that is the greatest gift I could ever hope for.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

"For I know well the plans I have for you..."

"...plans for your welfare, not for woe! Plans to give you a future full of hope. When you call me, when you go to pray to me, I will listen to you. When you look for me, you will find me. When you seek me with all your heart, you will find me with you, says the Lord." - Jeremiah 29:11-14

I came across this Bible verse pretty randomly during a Prayer 101 session at Cabrini last fall (it's hard to believe that it's probably closer to a year than not at this point.) At the time it was something I needed to see and it has since become one of my favorite passages...not that I have much familiarity with scripture other than that. 

At the time I wasn't sure about anything. I knew that I wanted to volunteer following graduation, but what did I want to do? What kind of work am I suited for? How could I find my calling? And what about after that year? I was feeling lonely and starting to get lost. But every once in a while a small thing comes by to remind you that things will be ok. I've kept that passage in mind and have seen it in random places since then. It has given me strength in hard times. But truth be told there haven't been very many of them in the last few months.

I have been very fortunate. The last few years has been nothing but blessings. I have seen many great things in my life. I have had great opportunities the last four years and everything that has happened to me has led me to this--my volunteer year. I am currently sitting in the airport waiting for my flight to board. It's hard to believe I'm in Denver right now on my way to San Jose, California for a week and then to Los Angeles where I will be spending the next year.

A lot of things have brought me to this point in my life. I have had great people with me; my family has shown me so much love and kindness. I have made very good friends and experienced a lot of amazing things. 

I guess this particular journey starts with my entry into Cabrini--which wasn't much of a decision at the time. I just felt like I had to go to college and this one accepted me. That was about it. I had already gone through the application process to try to go to art school and I didn't have much passion for searching out schools again. But Cabrini had something about it that drew me. Maybe it was the small, beautiful campus, but whatever it was I'm glad that I picked it.

Sure, those first few months were terrible. I was not much of a person for adjustment, I was very shy and very sick. After my first semester at Cabrini my Crohn's Disease flared up particularly badly and I had surgery. 

After ten years of pain and fatigue and sickness, that surgery was the best thing that ever happened to me. I was energized and felt alive for the first time in a long time; the first time I can remember, really. But I stayed home the second half of my freshman year and wasn't sure if I was going to go back to school. I had tried it twice and it just didn't seem to be working out.

But I wasn't completely ready to quit, who knows why? Maybe I just wanted what all my friends at home seemed to have--a memorable, fun, college life. But whatever it was I signed up for a few things my sophomore year...I really wanted to meet new people. I was a commuter my sophomore year and kind of removed myself my first semester from campus life and the people at Cabrini. But second semester I went on Search Retreat and Project Appalachia--two turning points in my life.

On Search I learned to open up to myself and to other people, to reconnect with my own faith which had been shaken to the point of abandonment in my illness. I saw a glimpse of who I could be and who I always wanted to be. I made friendships that to this day I cherish and hope to see continue. The next week I went on Project Appalachia, a service immersion trip to West Virginia with a few of the same people, and grew closer to them and to an even larger group of people at Cabrini.

I went on Appalachia and Search both more to meet people than in any sort of mission of faith or altruism. I just wanted to make friends. And while that did happen, in West Virginia I also saw the power of service, the importance of educating yourself on the world outside your door, to the reality of people within our own country. I learned about the power of faith and belief and the importance of cherishing what you have when you have it; not complaining or hoping for more. It was something I had started to see in my own life in my recovery from Crohn's and to see people in dismal living conditions continue to have a cheerful attitude, faith in God and love for one another. Through their struggles, the people of West Virginia showed me the resilience of the human spirit and the capacity for kindness in people. Strangers in the neighborhood would stop and talk to us, we got to speak with the homeowners we were serving and understand their story. 

I got a lot more than I had counted on in my trip to West Virginia and it made me want to do more, to be more involved with Campus Ministry and service at Cabrini. 

One of my Search Leaders recommended me to be an RA, a job I had thought about briefly but never believed I had the strength for. But I did it anyway, scared as I was. If someone else saw the potential in me, who was I to ignore it?

Being an RA was another amazing experience that helped me grow and shape me in ways I did not anticipate. Not only did I grow more confident, I learned countless useful communication skills, professional experience, and learned how to be comfortable as myself with larger groups of people. I loved working in my house with all of my residents and fellow RAs my junior year. It began to feel as if everyone I met since I came to Cabrini was there for a reason; that I was finally somewhere that I belonged. It was a feeling I had never had before. Slowly but surely there was something inside of me that had been empty for very long beginning to fill up.

It was more than just my experiences shaping me; I also felt that everything I was doing at Cabrini could also benefit others. I became a member of the Community Service and Outreach Club, a Relay for Life committee member, a leader for our pre-orientation program, S-Cubed, which introduces freshmen to our volunteer opportunities. All of this on top of my duties as an RA as well as taking part in other service.

In December 2010 I attended Rostro de Cristo, an immersion experience in Duran, Ecuador, which to this day remains one of the best experiences. We lived on two dollars a day in solidarity with the people facing poverty in that country and spoke to so many people in the local community. We heard there stories, formed relationships, and learned so much. Like so many people in such a situation, they found great pride and thankfulness in what they had before them; not bitterness for what might be seen as unfair by others. They worked for their families, counted their blessings, and love got them through all things. Love for one another, neighbor, for God. 

Love can be boundless if we open our hearts to it. Ecuador's children showed me that. Children are an inspiration, because they have no inhibition, they love unconditionally and open their hearts so completely. In Ecuador we worked with after school programs in the local neighborhoods, these children just needed some attention and care while their parents worked, or just couldn't take care of them the way children deserve. They found that attention through the work Rostro de Cristo sponsors.  The volunteers that go down there provide that well-deserved attention and the kids repay in kind. Jumping on backs, sometimes three at a time. 

I will never forget the day Hablan in Arbolito jumped on my back before I ever even reached the program's walls. He never let go of me from that moment on. His brother and friend later joined him. But when I was tired, Hablan would run and fetch my water bottle and help to rejuvenate me for another round of play. It was a surreal, beautiful afternoon. 

Rostro was when I first began to ponder the idea of serving for a year. I felt so alive in that week.

Following that trip to Ecuador I went on another Project Appalachia and there while at the work site one day, surveying all that my fellow students were doing I was overcome with a sense of purpose. I was doing what I was supposed to be doing, and I knew that I had to follow this. I didn't know where it was taking me, but I knew that it was what I had to pursue. 

I worked for the next year toward the purpose of applying for a year of service. I had no desires for grad school, a part-time job, or any other possibility. I was called to service. I became a Peer Minister, led Search Retreat and Project Appalachia, two events that changed my life, and in the end took on the most fulfilling work I had ever pursued, convincing me even more that I was doing what I was supposed to do. I've never felt more fulfilled than that last semester working in Campus Ministry and giving back to the program that has been such an integral part in making me who I am today, that gave me self-confidence and a renewed outlook on life. If I could give that same experience to someone else, even just one person, that the leaders in Campus Ministry had given to me everything I worked for at Cabrini would be worth it. And I managed that. One retreatant in my small group for Search Retreat told me I made a difference for her, and that alone made all the hard work worth it. 

I came to JVC for a number of reasons; to continue my service, to challenge myself in community and learn how to more completely take part in my relationships, to find my own strength, and to act upon the values of social justice that Cabrini had inspired in me. 

Mother Cabrini's values were shaped in large part by St. Ignatius, the founder of the Jesuit order and for that reason, the values of JVC are very much in tune with Cabrini's mission of "Service Beyond Oneself," and the Justice Matters core curriculum. I'm sure a lot of students didn't take Cabrini's mission or slogans very seriously and in fact rolled their eyes at the social justice mission. But honestly, it spoke to me quite a bit and is something that continues to stick with me. Cabrini tells their students to "Do something extraordinary," and although I don't necessarily think what I'm doing is particularly extraordinary, I do think that my year at JVC matters, that it is something important, even if it is only important for me. Hopefully, though, I can help share that feeling with you through this blog. 

And although this new year is scary and there are some really tough parts about being away from home, which I will write about more in the future I'm sure, I take solace in Mother Cabrini's favorite quote, which hung behind a statue of her at our chapel in school. 

I take solace in the quote from Jeremiah, but I also trust myself to the words that St. Frances Xavier Cabrini lived her life by, pictured below.




So, join me on this journey, if you'd like…there is much more to come. I don't know what exactly, but I'm sure it will be challenging and worth it all in the end.