This month my letter is written
from home, and a little early. That is partly because
we have had some particularly good Sundays, but also because
I have just returned from a very brief trip to France,
and I wanted to tell you about it while it is still fresh
in my mind.
If I am fortunate, it will
help me to keep it sharper for myself also, as setting
things down on paper often does. This is my way of keeping
a journal, not so much of daily events in the external
world, which I must admit I would never go back and read,
but more of inner events, the thoughts and experiences
of the mind and of the spirit, which have enriched me,
and for which I hope I have learned much.
I went to France for a mystery
writers’ conference held every year in Le Havre, on the
Normandy coast. They invite one or two foreign writers
to come for two consecutive years. This was my second
time. All the other writers are French. Last year was
good, this year even better, because the agenda, the hotel,
and almost all the people, were familiar to me.
My brother came with me because
I don’t feel I can manage driving on the “wrong” side
of the road, organizing the arrangements and doing the
signings, questions, and so on, without a little help.
Also it was nice to have his company. We flew to London,
spent the night there, then caught the Eurostar train
under the English Channel to Calais. There we hired a
car and he drove us through the coastal villages to Le
Havre.
I know France is reputed
to be beautiful, but I was still overwhelmed by the glory
of it in full summer. Great sweeping, rolling land verdant
green, the fields deep in ripening grain. Some of it
looked already waist-high. Trees billowed enormous, skirts
wide, all barely stirring in the hot sun — and it was
hot! Most of the time it was between 90 degrees
and 100 degrees in the shade!

We did not see any sheep,
pigs, or goats, but everywhere gorgeous cows, standing
peacefully dozing. I love cows. They seem to be the
embodiment of sanity, usefulness and quiet beauty. These
ones looked so sleek and well cared for. Everywhere was
lush, it must have been a good spring. The blue skies
had only the faintest puff of cloud on the horizon, and
the slightest breeze carried the perfume of dry grass
in the sun, warm earth and ripening crops.
The architecture is lovely,
most of it very old, elegant and with plenty of sense
of space, deep windows, curious and interesting roofs.
There were some exquisite mansions as well as the more
ordinary residences.

There was very little traffic.
I don’t know where everyone was.
We reached Le Havre about
7p.m., and were heartily welcomed back at the same bed
and breakfast hotel as last year, and by Dominique and
Ann, the couple who were our hosts at the Festival. It
was a case of meeting friends again. There is so much
of tragedy and ugliness in the daily news that it is of
intense value to meet people who have spent their working
lives showing school children the beauty, value and intellectual
wealth to be found in literature, and in the riches of
other cultures.
But even more than that,
it is my personal opinion that a good teacher conveys
the value of dignity, honesty and laughter and the joy
of work. If their pupils learn those things, then the
facts they teach will be useful, but by far the lesser
portion.
And even if I have heard
those things before, a catch-up course is never out of
place. Goodness cannot be taught, but seeing it in others
can inspire one to wish to learn, and that is the beginning
of wisdom. Once the hunger is there, once the beauty
and the excitement has been tasted, the journey has begun.
We were there three nights
and two days. As one might expect in France, the food
was delicious. They offered the same breakfast as last
year, morning fresh bread, butter and home-made jams —
I chose the apricot as usual — and to drink, there was
fresh hot chocolate made with milk. I could seriously
over-eat!
We joined everyone else for
lunch. The second day it was at the le Havre Yacht Club
overlooking the harbour, full of small boats. The light
on the Normandy Coast is remarkable, glittering clean
and soft, which is why so many impressionist painters
choose to live and work there — particularly Monet, but
others too.
Le Havre has a marvelous
museum, which I visited last year. Reproduction of paintings
really gives you only an idea of what they are like; the
true glory of them doesn’t come through. Monet’s lily
pools look as if you could fall into their cool depths.
One can almost smell the shadowed water.
We spent the afternoon in
tents on the beach, signing books for members of the general
public. That sounds as if it would have been cool and
lovely, but the wind was off the land, not the water,
and it was 100 degrees inside the tent. There were ambulances
on the beach. I think someone may have had sunstroke,
and I wouldn’t have been surprised. The sirens were going
and there was a bit of drama. I am very sorry, because
that is a dreadful way to feel.
Prizes were given to students
and beginning writers, to showcase their work and encourage
them, which is the purpose of the whole Festival.
The final evening my brother
and I dined with Ann and Dominique in their home, which
was one of the nicest of all events for me. We ate in
the garden, surrounded by flowers, as the dusk drew in.
I thought again, what utterly delightful people, gentle,
intelligent, funny and kind, generous and hospitable,
but certainly not without opinions, or afraid to fight
against wrong, or to work hard for what they believe in.
I returned home so grateful
for the opportunities to travel and to meet people, see
so much beauty of sight, sound, taste and experience,
and even get to call it “work.” I would be guilty of
the ugliest ingratitude if I did not thank God for it,
and try to share some of its riches.
I am very fortunate to live
where it is not a hideous cost in time or money to travel
to other countries and partake in the abundant charm and
richness of their culture.
Journaling One’s Life
This past Sunday it was my
lesson, as it so often is when it is time to write my
letter to you. Possibly it is no coincidence. It is
also an example of what a blessing it is to teach, because
it makes one think far more deeply about whatever the
subject may be.
This month it was on keeping
a journal. I admit, I did not approach it exactly as
the manual suggests, because the emphasis was very heavily
on seeing church history unfold, holding the priesthood
and observing its power to perform miracles, and leaving
a record of your times for your posterity. Well in this
far corner we only see the very edge of church history,
and many of us do not have the priesthood in our homes,
nor do we all have posterity. I really make an effort
in my lessons not to leave anyone excluded.
So I approached it that any
person’s experiences, and especially their thoughts, are
valuable. It might be shared with others, either later,
or now. Or it might be simply to think more deeply as
you try to explain and understand, and then in some future
time, look back, both on your joys and successes, and
also on some of the difficulties or failures and realize
how far you have come. Or it could be to realize that
we all have certain feelings that hurt, and we can learn
from them also. At the time the experiences may seem
harsh and pointless, but the future may show their benefit.
Or on the other hand, we may realize how to avoid them,
for ourselves, or others.
Beautiful things seen or
heard can enrich us, compliments, happy escapes from misfortune,
questions raised, perhaps to be answered later. If you
have a problem or a question, why not write it down?
Sometimes simply putting into words, where no one else
will see or judge, can clarify it to the point when the
answer appears.
All honest writing is a journey
of self-discovery, and that cannot be bad. Share it if
you wish, but not if you prefer it remain private. Don’t
worry about spelling, grammar or punctuation, just be
honest. There is nothing wrong in admitting that you
hurt, that you feel ashamed of something, or that you
are lonely. There is no “should” or “should not” in a
journal. The only rule is, “omit what you wish, but don’t
lie to yourself.”
Everyone’s experiences are
uniquely valuable. There is no other kind of person on
the earth except sons and daughters of God, so whoever
you are, you cannot be worthless or unimportant.
The Ultimate Family Resemblance
Which brings me to another
point. I recently received a letter from a friend in
Florida. I have never met him, but we have corresponded
for some time. He seems to be a spiritual and deep thinking
person. He wrote about the genetic heritage we have from
our parents; height, build, features, colouring and so
on, and talents, abilities, strengths — the way we grow
throughout our lives. Often family resemblances are easy
to see.
Then surely it follows that
God who created the whole universe is simply using the
same pattern in us? Think that we too “resemble” the
Father whose genes we carry — and be of good courage,
and full of hope.
Ugly Behavior
There have recently been
other lessons to learn as well. Events have happened
in far larger areas, affecting millions, which have made
me think deeply on certain sides of our nature. The World
Cup is currently being played (as I visit) and the Wimbledon
tennis tournament. Racist hatred is acknowledged almost
everywhere as one of the most hideous of all human characteristics.
In many countries it is actually a crime. But where is
the moral difference, between race hatred and nationalist
hatred, or class hatred, or any other sort of patronizing,
excluding or abusing of someone else because they are
in some way different from us? Such sentiments are always
around, but sports can make them particularly visible.
I caught myself recently
in feelings I despised. Scotland did not make it as far
as the play-off in Germany, and one prominent Scottish
politician unwisely, I think, voiced strong anti-English
sentiments, saying they would back anyone at all, just
so long as they beat the English. I am afraid my instinctive
response was retaliatory, along the same lines. And then
I realized what I was doing, and how ugly it was, and
I was ashamed of myself.
I hadn’t said anything aloud,
but I could hear it in my head. If I were a person one
could respect, and who could look the Lord in the face,
I would admire all good play, all courage and skill.
In spite of the fact that I would like my own team to
win, I could applaud all excellence.
And if I lose I could do
so generously, without excuses or bitterness, or trying
to make it somehow someone else’s fault. I would generously
say that on the day the other team played better — no
twist in the tone of my words. Being petty, lying about
it, making excuses does not make my team’s play any better,
it just makes me someone who cannot be generous, or even
honest. I don’t fool anyone — except maybe myself, into
thinking that is anything other than grubby and pathetic.
But how easy it is to design
all sorts of behaviour into self praise, and the putting
down of other people. We are better, because... then
immediately try to think of some reason why we are actually
superior. We are morally better? We stand up for freedom,
truth, saving that world — whatever. We are clever, we
invented — anything that comes to mind. We are more civilized,
we don’t do — we beat you at — then think of something
quickly.
Why are we so uncertain of
our own value that we have to be building it up in such
ways — which if only we could see, actually lessen it?
Qualities we really are sure of we don’t need to trumpet.
If I have really faced with courage the dangers that frighten
me, that is enough. I have no compulsion to say so.
Similarly if I am honest,
no matter how painful it may be to admit something, the
act itself needs no outward praise. “Methinks thou dost
protest too much,” stretches to a lot of things. We say
it of people who say too often “I love you,” and that
is easy to understand. Those who really do care, show
it in their acts, and to say it at all is pleasant, but
quite unnecessary. We do not rush up to people and tell
them, over and over, that the sun rose today, or even
that it will rise tomorrow. Both our heads and our hearts
already know it.
Generosity of Spirit
I would like to be able to
listen to someone else’s achievement and praise it, without
feeling the need to add my own, to laugh at someone else’s
joke without topping it with another. I would like to
be generous enough of spirit that I did not need to add
myself in at all.
Of course I doubt myself,
my value, my acceptability, just as it seems we all do,
but perhaps if I acted with more grace, the inner certainties
would come? Even if they didn’t, I would be a better
person.
The only one we ever truly
compete with, in any sense that matters, is the people
we could be, if we lived up to all our potential — if
we multiplied all the talents the Lord gave us. If we
return two for every one given, that is perfect. It is
high time we realized that perfection is not being without
fault. Potatoes have no sin, for goodness sake!
More than that is required
of us: We must grow, eternally. Whatever we can do,
achieve, learn, create, we can always dream of more, and
achieve that too, with time and faith.
Perfection is doing your
very best now, today, with what you have now. If you
are given two talents and return four, that is perfect.
If you were given thirty-five, then you need to return
seventy. Any less, and you “could have done better.”
Double what you are given, that is always possible in
God’s eyes, and to do that is perfect. Can it really
matter, in the long run, what anyone else thinks?
If we see what is good in
others, and help them to see it, believe in it and magnify
it, then surely we have magnified our own gifts also,
possibly without even thinking of ourselves?
Spiritual Guidance
In the past while, several
of our last lessons and Sacrament talks have centered,
one way or the other, on the Holy Spirit’s guidance.
Some wonderful stories were told, encouraging — uplifting
and thought provoking. The Holy Spirit is there to do
all those things, including to guide us into safety when
there is danger, to tell us when and how to help others,
and to distinguish between truth and falsehood.
I believe it will also help
us to understand other people when language or custom
make it harder and help us see what is meant when it might
be obscured by nervous, frightened or hurt behaviour.
It can help us praise what is good, and perhaps heal some
of what is bad. It can certainly help us to have the
courage to cling to what we feel is generous, merciful,
honest, brave and wise, in spite of the temptations others
may put to us to retaliate against perceived insult or
belittlement, or threat to our self-esteem.
We should praise what is
good, wherever it comes from; and deplore what is evil,
and fight against it wholeheartedly, but without hatred
or anger. It is not a person’s or an act’s origin that
determines its value, but its nature. The whole earth
is God’s, and every human being His child. That is an
awfully big thing to grasp, and at times we pay it lip
service, but forget it the moment after the words are
said.
This next while I am going
to try to do a little more of seeing people, and the world
itself, more as God sees it and rather less as my defensive
human nature sees it. I am absolutely certain it is immeasurably
more beautiful that way — and so would I be, if I could
achieve that! There’s a thought!
May the Lord be with you,
in the beauty of kindness and truth, until next month
(and of course, forever).