Sunday, April 30, 2017

Bon Voyage



 Something fantastic has happened to me:  I will move to France and be a part of a three-person team that directs and manages the Sisters of St. Joseph International Centre in Le Puy. The Centre sponsors retreats, pilgrimages, conferences, and visits from guests.

The sisters were founded in Le Puy in 1650, and they have branched out to congregation all over the world--including the community at Nazareth.

Since I will be gone for 2-4 years, I'm selling my furniture.

Check out the following items and if you are interested in a piece or two or three, please contact me through a FaceBook private message.



Queen-size futon couch (73.5” x 34") that can fold out into bed.
Cover included
$250


SOLD

 



Two futon chairs (32.5” x 33.5”) with frames that fold out flat

$50 each

SOLD










Coffee table with slats – 42” x 27.5”

free

SOLD




 

Amish-style claw-foot round oak table on a pedestal 54.5” with two 12” leaves and five matching chairs
$250


SOLD



















Set of antique dishes – red floral pattern

$35





 




Antique mahogany corner cabinet 69” high 
(top) three shelves glassed in; 
(middle) drawer 4” deep
(bottom) two shelves enclosed
$100

SOLD








1960s vintage formica buffet 60” x 15” with two sliding doors, two interior shelves and three drawers

$65

SOLD



Antique oak Singer sewing machine with foot pump (34” x 16”)

$25

SOLD







Vintage 1940s-style enamel kitchen table 24.5” x 29.5” with leaf and four vinyl-covered chairs

$75

SOLD



 

Formica table (without drawers) with removable steel legs
59.5” x 29.5”
$25

SOLD








Adjustable height formica table (36” x 30) with metal legs (no drawers)

$20


SOLD


Wednesday, April 26, 2017

A Tribute to the Past -- and on to the Future


After I left Kalamazoo College in 2011 where I spent 11 years teaching education courses, I felt as though my academic career were over. After all, I had been in a premier institution with the best students. How could I possibly do better than that?

So I packed my stuff in banker's and paper-ream boxes and put them in my garage just in case I found another academic job. Then I promised myself that I'd know when the time came to give up. At that time, I'd burn all my academic papers, lesson plans, handouts and articles in a big bonfire.  

For the next 6 years I wandered. I spent one year at Michigan State University teaching at James Madison College and the College of Arts and Letters. I thought I'd land a full-time slot, but didn't. I took an Oxford Seminars' course in English as a Second Language and became certified. That allowed me to teach English to international students at the Center for English Language and Culture for International Students at Western Michigan University for four years. I enjoyed this work very much because I shared my native language with students from all over the world; I had finally found my way into international education! But over the past 2 years as enrollment precipitously declined, I realized I had reached the end of the line. There just wasn't enough work and I'd never find a full-time job. That's when I realized that the time had come to "retire" from academic life. Fortunately, about the same time, an opportunity to live and work in France came along, so I didn't mind "the end" as much.

I celebrated this new turn by "rekindling" my promise to myself and burning all my stuff to a crisp. Fortunately, I found Rose who had a place for me to do this and the knowledge of building and controlling a bonfire. I am very grateful to her for helping me to end my academic career in my own official and ritualistic way.

Now I identify myself as a writer with a new ministry in France. Not bad, eh? Two life-long dreams come true. They're are my "Tuscan Sun."







All gone!



Les Aventures de Madame Beaubien: Gallo-Roman Museum



The Romans tramped all over Europe and Lyon was one of their major cities. Back then the city was called Lugdunum, and its connection the rivers allowed them not only to control Gaul politically and militarily, but to conduct trade in the Mediterranean.

 ...


The photo above is the amphitheatre the Romans first built in 19 A.D. It had a capacity of 1,800. It was expanded in the early 2nd century to house 20,000.



Roman mythology is rich with its many gods, goddesses and accompanying characters. Here are a few of them exhibited in the museum. It's amazing how well preserved they are.

 


Cyclops. You have to look closely for the eye in the middle of this fellow's forehead, but it's there.









 



Fortune--represented as a woman.
































Hermes--messenger god                              Neptune--god of the sea













 








Dionysus--god of wine--in mosaic









 



Dionysus riding his trademark panther (in mosaic)

                        






Zeus--king of the gods








 








Artemis (Diana)--the goddess of the moon and the hunt 














an aristocratic Roman woman






Dice the Roman soldiers used to play with in their spare time.













The sun marks the entrance to someone's house



 





The Hydra, one of the monsters of mythology

 






The Larme let people know they were entering the cemetery section of the city.



The Romans established and maintained an extensive network of roads in Gaul with Lyon as the center. Rivers connected Gaul to the Mediterranean Sea.

A Roman design of a mosaic floor. They were sticklers about filling in every space with all those little tiles.


 


A cool, calm Roman soldier




Friday, March 31, 2017

Les Aventures de Madame Beaubien: Le Dictionnaire


Sister Marie Phillippe encourages me in my French language skills.

Ahhh, the dictionary. It's my best friend when I'm at a loss for French words, which is a constant experience.

Taking a language is a long, hard slough and it takes two basic requirements: (1) you've really got to want it; and (2) you really need to be patient with it. The first requirement is easy for me. I have wanted to become fluent in French since high school. This spring I got my chance to learn the language--in France, no less. It's the second requirement that is so difficult: being patient. Learning a language is hard, disciplined work. It doesn't just come to you. You've got to practice, practice, practice.

Learning French is a constant barrage of rules, pronunciations, conjugations, and exceptions to the rules. At times I think I'll never learn. However, one of the sisters assured me that I AM learning; it's there somewhere in my head; and there IS a logic to the language. One day it will all come together. 

My image of this hallowed moment is the scene from "The Miracle Worker" where young Helen Keller finally understands the connection between objects she feels and the "finger game" that identifies and names them. "She knows!" the teacher says. 


Meanwhile, I will continue to make mistakes like confusing derriere (rear end) for dernier (the end). Not to worry, Pope John XXIII made the same mistake. Or when I wanted to say after a sumptuous dinner: J'ai eu assez (I've had enough) and said instead:  Je suis plein (I'm pregnant). Or when I was offered les pêches for dessert and wondered why it was sinful (le péché).

 And there it is: taking the risk of speaking when you haven't yet got it right yet. Learning a language takes a certain courage because nobody likes to look dumb when s/he is interacting with another. Yet, only by making mistakes do you learn the language.

During my month of language learning I met students from all over the world who also want to learn French. They came from Korea, Japan, Ukraine, Italy, Spain, Finland, Syria, Brazil, Mexico, Colombia, USA. We were all there in the struggle of learning French. And, as we struggled, we learned together, which made it all worthwhile as we worked together toward our goal. (By the way, all of these students also spoke English, and we would sometimes get caught translating our French from English, which the school discouraged.)

Actually, there's nothing less encouraging than to have just heard a French recording about some subject only to discover that no one in class could follow it. This actually happened on my last day of class!

"Was the speaker speaking in French?" I asked the teacher. She gave up exasperated on that lesson and turned the page to another. Meanwhile, we all laughed, relieved the tension, and became a little closer as a learning community. We exchanged photos, Facebook addresses, and blogs. We were becoming friends. Isn't that the point of language: to allow people to communicate and thus bring the world together?


Thursday, March 30, 2017

Les Aventures de Madame Beaubien: Sunday Mass


I've been going to Sunday Mass with the sisters at a parish about 5 short blocks from our apartments. It's called Holy Sacrament Parish. 

There are stained glass windows all around the church and based on the theme of the Blessed Sacrament. Look at the following windows. See the priest consecrating the host just below the crucifix:






Here's a view of the inside with its beautiful Gothic arches over the main altar.


It is a magnificent thing to attend Mass in these old churches. I can feel the history in them.  also think about the people who made the church the center of their lives.

 I also think about Ken Follett's book, Pillars of the Earth, which tells the story of a medieval cathedral builder and his life.


And, much to my surprise, I thought the French were largely non-practicing Catholics and that the church went empty. Wrong! These churches are filled with people on Sundays. One church I often visit during the week, St. Bonaventure Church is filled, especially on Fridays! One of the reasons is that we are in Lent and the church provides an exposition of the Blessed Sacrament after the 4 p.m. Mass. The people process behind the priest who carries the Blessed Sacrament in a monstrance and then places it on one of the side altars so that the people can pray in front of it. 

Here is Saint Bonaventure's Church, which is near my language school and on my way home.

 Construction of St. Bonaventure Church was begun in 1325 and completed in 1494. During the French Revolution in 1790, the church was spared from destruction but it was turned into a granary. The building was re-established as a church in 1806. 

Here's the interior of St. Bonaventure. Sometimes I sit in the pew and imagine piles of grain. I also think about how this church's history is a reminder that the Church endures even when things look bleak. We have to thank God for that--and for tremendously beautiful buildings like St. Bonaventure's!


The churches in Lyon are also interesting because there is usually a beggar, a woman, at the door just before Mass. Sometimes she has a little child with her. I usually don't give out money to beggars either in the USA or anywhere in the world where I've traveled, however, the sisters have taught me something. They pick a particular beggar and give to her. They also talk with her a bit and look both the woman and the child in the eye. If the child is drawing or doing something, they usually comment on it. This is a Christian thing to do, so I followed suit. Giving a little money to a poor person at the door of a church is a decent thing to do.

Another church I visited this month was St. Jean's Cathedral. It is the seat of the Bishop of Lyon. St. Jean's is a 12th century Romanesque and Gothic cathedral that took over four centuries to build. Saint Jean Baptiste is famous for its beautiful original stained-glass windows.  

The interior of the cathedral is not as impressive as the architecture outside. However, it is praised for its simplicity and feeling of austerity that it imparts. This is the church where Sister Rose served as a parish minister for 10 years. People still remember and appreciate her and say hello to her personally.

Every week a choir from a different part of the diocese sings for the congregation. The sisters and I visited the cathedral on Week 4 of Lent and had a great choir to listen to for Mass.


Les Aventures of Madame Beaubien: Confluence



In Lyon, the Confluence is the meeting point downriver between the Saône and the Rhone Rivers. The Lyonnaise seem to dwell on the Confluence. Actually, it was a very industrial area and over the past 15 years or so, the city's Chamber of Commerce converted this area into a shopping center and a museum area.

I walked all the way to the end of the point that marks the Confluence (see photo above) and ceremoniously dipped my hand in the water to become "a part of Lyon," a city I have come to love very much over the past month.

 

Here is an aerial photo of the Confluence.



 

 

And, a close-up of the point.













 

The city erected a sculpture near the Confluence with its motto, "Only Lyon" and its signature lion mascot.  


By the way, the name of Lyon has nothing to do with lions. It is a shortened form of Lugdunum, one of the most important cities of the Roman Empire outside of Rome itself. Nevertheless, the area has been inhabited since pre-historic times. For background on its ancient history, see my blog post on the Gallo-Roman Museum (coming soon).

This very odd-shaped building is Le Musee des Confluences. It is built at the tip of land where the Saône (on the left and the slow river) and Rhône Rivers (on the right) meet: thus, the confluence.


The museum houses very creative exhibits of natural history, evolution, the solar system, anthropology--and even an Antarctica exhibit, which I liked the best. 



Here are some of the other exhibits.