PilgrimDance

Celebrating the journey with words and pictures

sentio hero

My Father: January 28, 1926–May 7, 2018

Family

I remember standing in the upstairs hallway on Heathfield Road in our Baltimore row house with my Daddy.  He was holding the wet sash of my purple plaid dress and calling down over the banister, Mom!  What should we do?  Janny got her sash in the potty.”  He hardly knew what to do with a little girl (though he had many more chances) just as, many years later, I hardly knew what to do with a little boy.

Mostly he let Mom deal with us, though she always prefaced it with your father and I,telling us the rules, handing out allowances, arranging the Easter photos (where Kathy always cried).  But one day in 7th grade I was getting ready for a first:  friends and I were dressing up and taking the bus downtown by ourselves!  Daddy pulled me aside in the den and gave me $2 for extra spending money.  I was surprised and delightedhe never just handed me money! Rather, Daddy quietly and faithfully earned the money to support us.  He was one of the young men, a handsome sailor with a big grin, who came home from the war and ran with the promise that was America in mid-century.  He went to college on the GI bill, got a job, got married, bought a row house and set about raising a family, which turned out to be four little girls (and a female cat).  I always told people he joined the Scouts to get a break from us girls.

1957:  Dad & Mom with Mimi, Kate, Lisa & Jan​ Keep reading

Meditation for Good Friday (2018)

Bible

13th century crucifix, Church of San Martín, Frómista, Castile y León, Spain

Psalm 88: 6-7a You have put me in the lowest pit, in the darkest depths. Your wrath lies heavily upon me….

The agony had started in the garden. Jesus knew what was ahead; he had been part of the eternal plan before the foundation of the world. The second person of the Trinity had taken on human flesh, true God becoming true man, to bear the punishment for the sins of his heedless and hostile creation. The climax of redemption was near. Jesus had been living thirty-three years on earth, a real man with a real body that would bleed and nerves that would transmit searing pain, and a mind that could contemplate rejection and the horror of the cross. What was ahead was the agreed-upon will of God; it was right and would lead to glory, but the suffering would be unimaginable. It wouldn’t just be the torture of crucifixion, Keep reading

Final Delights of Provence (Tuesday June 13, 2017)

Provence

Carrières de Lumières

A famous image of Provence shows bright purple rows of lavender leading to the solid but elegant mass of a timeless Romanesque abbey, Senanque, near Gordes. We saved our visit there until the end of our trip in hopes that the lavender would be in bloom; sadly such was not quite the case.

Keep reading

A Course Camarguaise (Sunday June 11, 2017)

Provence

Outrunning the bull in a course Camarguaise

In the morning we explored Isle-sur-la-Sorgue’s enormous market, stocking up on strawberries and tapenade and a white lace top that dazzles like the hot Provencal sun.

Tapenade and other delights for enjoying on your Provencal patio

Tapenade for packing into your suitcase so at home you can try to pretend you’re still in Provence Keep reading

Treasures in the Luberon (Saturday June 10, 2017)

Provence

the 3rd-century BC Pont Julien

Painting lessons were over for the Provence trip. “Let’s go sightseeing!” said Maurice. We had noted a few tantalizing places nearby and set off.  Today I put on the other pair of hiking shoes I had brought, a new pair of Merrells in men’s size 9W. My right foot is happy but my left foot wonders who else is coming to the party. The shoes look like clodhoppers. But my shoulder is so much better that I can get dressed by myself.

A tiny church on a tiny hill on a tiny plot in a tiny town, St. Pantaleon beckoned us to see the nécropole rupestre, tiny tombs cut into the rocky hill. Keep reading

Fontaine de Vaucluse (Friday June 9, 2017)

Provence

Fontaine de Vaucluse is an idyllic little town for daytrippers under plane trees at the base of abrupt cliffs in an enclosed valley (“vallis clausa”) . In the 14th century the Italian poet Petrarch retired here at age 33 to pine for his lady love, married to another; though she died of the plague, he never got over her. Collecting water from all over the Vaucluse plateau, the source of the river Sorgue is here as a resurgent spring. Some decades ago Jacques Cousteau plumbed its depths to 315 meters and still did not touch the bottom. Guidebooks say the river “springs full blown from the mountainside” but no more. Something has shifted deep within the earth and, though the sapphire blue pool is still visible within the mouth of a cave, the river appears some hundred meters or so further down its rocky bed, just suddenly there bubbling among boulders between tangled banks. It tumbles over little falls and flows past the big mossy wheel still turning five times a minute at the paper mill that’s been beating pulp since the 16th century. Clear and cold, the river rushes over a dam with a kayak course arranged, then widens and calms a bit as it embraces water plants and spreads into a garden park with sweet colorful blooms and old plane trees where the painters have set up their easels.

Maurice with his talented instructor Janice Keep reading

The Giant of Provence & Blue Gold (Thursday June 8, 2017)

Provence

Le Mont Ventoux

The painters had the day off, so through the congestion of Carpentras Maurice and I drove toward the Mont Ventoux. Rising high above the ripe cherry trees and waving wheat fields of the fertile earth, Mont Ventoux’s top bare of foliage gives it a faux snowcap. We were excited to meet the Mont, the Giant of Provence of Tour de France fame. For years we had agonized with strong young cyclists straining at the ascent up Mont Ventoux, pumping with legs of sinew and steel, sucking air, oozing sweat–well, we agonized from the comfort of watching them on TV from our family room with cold drinks at hand. Now we were going to check out the climb for ourselves. We passed a fortified church in a town square, a field of poppies, a hill town glowing in the sun, and the Giant loomed ever higher. Ignoring the glories of the village of Malaucene, we turned at a sign announcing that the route was ouverte. Keep reading

Wildlife in the Camargue (Tuesday June 6, 2017)

Provence

At the Parc Ornithologique Pont de Gau

My shoulder is so much better I washed the breakfast dishes. Soon I hope to dress myself without contortions.

The gardien, M. & Mme. Laurent and their son Patrick

It was a good two-hour drive to a peninsula in the marshy Camargue where Janice had arranged us an outing to a manade, a type of farm in the Camargue that raises bulls for French bullfighting and the semi-wild Camargue horses in the care of a gardien. Keep reading