Monday, July 29, 2019

Mini-Vacation to St. Louis.

It was an optimistic morning as we took off down Interstate 44 from Tulsa, heading east by northeast for St. Louis, MO.  

Plan:  five days of rest and leisure in St. Louis, the "Gateway to the West."  Possibly visit St. Mary's, KS on the way back.  Go to the top of the Arch, visit old Catholic churches, sample local European American food, and maybe even swim a bit in an indoor hotel pool.  Such was the dream!   

Five plus days later, back here in T-town sitting in my Okie Armchair, I can testify to the veracity of Murphy's Law.   "If anything can go wrong, it will."  Or rather the hallowed truth that this earthly adventure we call Life is a Valley of Tears.  But also a blessing.  Looking back on our adventure, we definitely experienced both sides of the same coin.

Hanging over I-44 in Northeast Oklahoma is an actual McDonald's which used to be considered the largest McDonald's in the world.  The cashier who served us our breakfast told me the largest is now in Russia.   Over eggs, sausage, and pancakes, we enjoyed the first signs of sunrise greeting us from the east.




The ride was uneventful, but we did see some nice scenery in what I think were parts of the Ozarks.  The thirty minutes you approach St. Louis is especially hilly and scenic.  And you know you are transitioning from a more Evangelical Protestant area to a more Catholic area when many towns are named after a saint, and a number of steeples decorate the sky.

Our first day went fairly well, though not exactly to plan, as can be 

expected on any major road trip.  Turns out Union Station was closed for renovations, a rail road station which also serves as a mall and location for hotels and restaurants.  So our lunch plan turned to finding some parking downtown, walking several blocks, and eating calzones at Sauce on the Side.  Not bad.




Next on our To-See List, the St. Louis Catholic Cathedral Basilica.
Probably the most beautiful church I've ever been in.  When you first walk inside, the size and height of the main vaulted ceiling, covered in Byzantine mosaics, highlighted with sparkling pieces of gold, really hits you, and you are instantly transported into a sacred building.  We sat in the back to pray, just mesmerized.  





As I had only slept six hours the night before, if that, after working over time days before leaving, by now I was ready to check into a hotel for a nap.  The plan was nap for an hour, then go to the St. Louis Busch Brewery for a tour and tasting before dinner.  No such luck.  We crashed until 6:30 then headed to a restaurant that sticks out fondly in my childhood memory when our family visited St. Louis.  The Old Sphaghetti Factory.   Historic restaurant in a historic district of the city, surrounded by cobble stone streets, blocks from the Arch, all underground with a kind of nineteenth century, candle-lit New Orleans-style atmosphere.




And that is where it all went down hill, in my later estimation.

I loved the atmosphere which drew me into the history of the area, the food was decent, and the service fair.   

But twelve hours later I was doubled over in bed in the fetal position with a stomach ache straight out of H-E-Double Hockey Sticks, and for the next 24 hours I literally had to jolt to the toilet 24 times (my wife counted).




The likely culprit?  Well, the kitchen had forgotten to add my chicken to my plate, and made it quickly after I told the server.  So that's at the top of my list.  (Mental note to self:  the next time a restaurant kitchen forgets your chicken and makes it quickly, carefully inspect before ingesting).

It's now Monday, and I'm still having GI symptoms and residual weakness.  Thursday was a blur spending the whole day in bed.

But Friday signs and symptoms subsided enough to check out of our motel and spend a slow, easy day at the free St. Louis Zoo, which was really nice.  The layout made for a continuous, curving walk past various animal exhibits, and even more food areas.  There must've been two dozen areas to sit and eat.   I didn't eat (very much), but often I would sit in the shade to rest sipping away on Gaterade.  I could really tell I was majorly dehydrated.




The Penguins:  Our Favorite Exhibit


Later we (I should say I) had enough energy to visit another Catholic church, this one listed as the 6th highest church in the US, once given by now Cardinal Burke to the Institute of Christ the King priestly society for the exclusive offering of the Traditional Latin Mass.  We arrived around 4:45, and the doors were locked.  Looking up at the French Gothic steeples, I was dizzy.




That night we decided to treat ourselves to a 3 star hotel, the Pear Tree Inn near Union Station, which looks directly down the street downtown to the St. Louis Arch.   I'm more a Motel 6 kind of guy, but this was a welcome reprieve.  

That is until about 7 am the next morning when a second wave of GI distress hit.  For about 3 hours I got treated to abdominal cramps hitting every thirty seconds, to the point I finally went to the toilet, got down on my knees, and stuck my fingers down my throat.   What a relief.  Oh and for fun, I also had a major rash break out all over my body.  I crawled back into bed for another 24 hour suck it up, this is life, until the next morning things finally subsided and I got some energy back.



Enough to go to the St. Louis Arch just before leaving town.  You have to again find a parking garage, and hike a few blocks.  Unfortunately it was a three hour wait to go to the top, so we just saw the museum and movie, and bought some souvenirs, before hitting the road for the six hours back to Tulsa.

Anyway, my energy levels are normalizing and I'm back to the daily rhythm.  I feel a bit like Chevy Chase's character in one of the National Lampoon Vacation movies.  Looking back on our little trip, it had its real rough spots, but I have a smile on my face.  We did get some rest, got to take a dip in the hotel pool, and saw some beautiful sites.  Deo gracias.  




Saturday, July 20, 2019

Saturday Morning Musings: Bishop Gracida, Oklahoma Summer Heat, Minivacation, Blue Hole

Good morning fellow Okie Trads and Beyond.  I'm perched at the end of my couch this fine Saturday morning giving my "Saturday morning musings" as I've been calling them.  Thoughts circulating this week in my mind.

Bishop Gracida:

Bishop Gracida, retired bishop of Corpus Christi, it seems follows yours truly.  I interviewed him a while back here about his proposal that the Cardinals evaluate the canonical legitimacy of the current pontificate.  Discussed here.  Some time back he remarked I reminded him of a contemporary Will Rogers which I found flattering.

His blog is one of the tiny few I check in on now and then, from my own little corner of the Traditional Catholic Blogosphere.  It seems he has made my own comment moderation approach his own, quoting me here.  Kudos good bishop.  By the way, he celebrates daily the Traditonal Latin Mass!  Probably the most traditional diocesan bishop in the world!!




Hey, I like You Okie Trad!


Oklahoma Summer Heat:

Heat advisories being issued here in Oklahoma this week.  One day I hear tell the heat index got up to 110 degrees F.  I sure did feel it, getting in and out of my car throughout the day as I need to do for work.  There was a spell yesterday when I had to be outside in the purgatorial heat for about 15 minutes around 2pm and it sucked the life out of me.  But I figure I am making up for my missed past opportunities for penance. 

There is a spiritual rule expressed in places that if one owes a large amount of "temporal punishment due to sin" that they can pay that debt even in a short amount of time when dealt heavy suffering, and when offered with humility. 

That will be my endeavor these next weeks ahead as I pass through this southern heat and humidity, this mental marathon until September or October.



July and August in Oklahoma
Our Penance


Minivacation:

PTO has been saved up, and we are taking a mini-vacation next week from Wednesday through Sunday, to St. Louis, MO, then St. Mary's, KS.  The tentative itinerary is leave Wed at 3am, arrive at 
the "Gateway to the West" at 9am, have breakfast at Union Station, settle into a hotel, see a church, tour the Anheiser-Busch factory, and have dinner at the Old Spaghetti Factory.  Thurs. Mass at the SSPX priory, go to the free city zoo, lunch, then go to the top of the Arch, see some more churches, then eat at this gourmet restaurant someone highly recommended.



Fri. morning Mass again at the SSPX, leave 9ish, arrive in St. Mary's by 3pm, settle into a nearby hotel, evening Mass if they have it, that or Vespers, meet a friend for dinner.  Sat. will be Mass, go to one or two of the Divine Offices chanted by the Society Fathers, Brothers, and Sisters, visit a friend or two, stay out of the heat, then come back to Tulsa first thing Sunday morning after the High Mass.   Trying to convince the wife to visit one "Pope Michael" in Topeka on the way back, as I interviewed him here before as well.  Uniquely unique man, but edifying.  He's actually emailed me before about info in my blog posts, so I have another very interesting reader to reach out to from my laptop!



Will make a blog post with pics and commentary of our trip! 


Blue Hole:

Well, it's going to be hot again today I expect so I'm hitting the road now.  To get to Blue Hole early for a swim, picnic, and country drive back.  I love Blue Hole!

Lastly, I am planning a post about the "Attack on European American, Conservative, Catholic, Christian, Masculine Men" by the '"Culture War."  A diabolical attack ultimately in the end on traditional marriage, the family, and Christian society.   Hope to write it this weekend!

Saturday, July 13, 2019

What Does it Mean to Become a Traditional Catholic? What Does it Not Mean?

In the Church today we find ourselves surrounded by competing and conflicting ideologies, a sliding scale continuum between varying degrees of conservatism to the right, and varying degrees of liberalism to the left.  

Along that line are countless sub-points where Catholics choose to sit.  In their mind, they’ve chosen the best course.



 
The Ideoligical Spectrum


Not to disparage the relative use of ideology.  The Church herself has never condemned developing particularized systems of political or social thought and belief about anything under the Sun, including issues concerning the Church. 

And I myself fall on that spectrum most definitely in the "traditionalist" camp.  My theological opinions for what they are worth being closest to that of Archbishop Lefebvre and the Society.


 
Well said, Okie Trad!


Trads are a comparatively tiny minority, perhaps a few million out of the 1+ billion Catholics on Earth.  They are the few who turn away from the whole system of Vatican II reform, the Novus Ordo Mass and post-modern religious milieu of the mainstream Church precisely because they see it as an empirically proven wholesale failure.

And they do not want to apostatize or join the Eastern Orthodox.  Instead they are turning back to Catholic Tradition, both the big "T" Tradition of developed dogmas and doctrines, and the little "t" tradition that is organically part of, and ultimately the very expression of, "Tradition."  As in the traditional Mass.

But in my experience with the Traditional Movement these last two decades, this turn towards Catholic Tradition is not always exactly an actual turn towards Catholic Tradition, but to something very different. 


 
 
Turning back to Catholic Tradition



As I will try and express, there remains for some professed “traditional Catholics” more a reactionary, political-cultural adherence to a very particular ideology somewhere to the far right on that ideological spectrum of conservativism vs. liberalism, than to the traditional religious standards of belief and practice in so far as those standards have been more or less maintained since the Church began two millennia ago.

Consider the different ways a Novus Ordo-attending conciliar conservative might turn towards Tradition.   Is it an ever hardening stance of even stricter strictness on moral standards about proper liturgy, modesty of dress, lifestyle, etc., etc.?  An elevation of oneself as morally superior joining a private club of religious, gnostically illuminated elites?  A retreat not just from novelty but from sacramental and social-religious communion with Catholics outside the traditionalist circle?

Or is it a turning back toward the shared, timeless standards of the Saints?   The common moral theological teachings of the Fathers and Doctors of the Church?   A deepening of one’s understanding of the hierarchy of moral virtues?   Wherein by what St. Thomas calls the Golden Mean, or Middle Way, we are guided in our moral choices between all extremes. 

 
St. Thomas Aquinas
 
"Virtus stat in medio"
"Virtue stands in the middle"


I submit a turn towards Tradition is not a hardening process that commits the doctrinal error of Rigorism, or substitutes Ideology for right belief (orthodoxy) and right practice (orthopraxis).

The traditional Catholic in the Latin Mass pew, who is truly converting themselves more fully to Catholic Tradition, kneels in submission to the perennial mind of the Church on moral and spiritual subjects so well developed for two millennia.

Turning towards Tradition is not like joining the KKK or working oneself up into a perpetual frenzy about the latest conciliar pontificate in crisis.  

Rather it is like slowing down, planting your anchor in deeper, stiller waters.  Tradition truly embraced is sobering, maturing, humbling, illuminating but spiritually motivating.  It is a deep well of riches to be drawn from daily.


 
 
Deeper, Stiller Waters
 
Of course the blame for this Ecclesial Crisis rests more with the Church authority in its wholesale negligence, but us laity always have access to reliable sources, even if it takes more work than usual to find.  Traditional books, catechisms, works of theology written for laity to read, recorded sermons and conferences, and of course traditional priests and traditional Mass locations.

A priest dedicated to restoring Catholic Tradition, especially through the Divine Liturgy, to save souls.  Simply that, and nothing more than that.

In conclusion, to practice the Faith in the Roman rite as a “traditional Catholic” is something transcendent.  One transcends the Crisis in the Church, the ideological spectrum itself, petty infighting and divisions.  One transcends towards the timeless, true, and proven.  Towards stability, constancy, and wisdom.

Saturday, July 6, 2019

Blue Hole Spring. Wholesome Family Destination. Unknown Oasis.

Blue Hole Spring is a swimming hole park located about ten miles east of Salinas, OK, itself about seven miles north of Locust Grove, itself forty-five minutes east of downtown Tulsa.   Owned by Ms. Wanda, a revered community elder widow who has devoted her elder years after the death of her husband to making this Oasis open to the public.  Picnic areas, camping spots, rentable cabins, concession stand, solid family-oriented establishment.




Blue Hole Spring
The deep swimming hole is on the other side of that red car and some small 
waterfalls. 


We went there for the 4th of July!   Blue Hole.

Somewhere northeast of Wanda’s super cold, crystal clear water emerges from the ground a size-able  stream.  Which on Wanda’s land forms a large swimming hole, in places 15+ feet deep, which while standing looking down on it looks in its deep places a rich, aqua blue.  Hence the name. 55 degrees F makes it a kind of verifiable spa.



Because when you spend an afternoon dipping in its waters, your body temperature lowers so much that your parasympathetic nervous system kicks in.  Big time.  Stress hormones plumit.  Serenity now.  Not just for hours later but for days, as I can currently testify writing this at the end of the work week 24 hours plus since swimming at Blue Hole.

Blue Hole Springs.  Hidden Okie Oasis. A Diamond in the Rough.  Not an hour from Tulsa.

Along your way stop at famous Country Cottage restaurant in Locust Grove.   One time about ten years ago I was about to get a haircut from a rural barber (I loved that humble soul), sitting there
waiting my turn.  The guy in the chair was talking about how literally awesome was Country Cottage in Locust Grove.   Gen-uu-wiiine country home cooking extra ordinarie. Yessir.   The design and decor is authentically Victorian.   The wait staff as hospitable and helpful as any small town eatery may have to offer.

Blue Hole.  Call me infatuated, but this place is a verifiable gem.


“Ol’ Blue Hole”
By - JH

To an easy, quasi-melancholic tune...

When the love of men is growin' cold
And the arguments are gettin' old
Brother, let's take a break and go
Down to water at the Ol' Blue Hole

Let's relive those times before
When innocence was at the door
Knockin' lightly, "Hey, let's go"
Down to the water at the Ol' Blue Hole

And the conversations, were conversations
Not concealments for altercations
Not a springboard for consternation
Down at the water at the Ol' Blue Hole

When He comes back, what shall He find?
Faith, and love, and all one mind?
Or will most take a dive and go
Down to the fire at the Ol' Red Hole

Do we drown our brothers in the saving waters?
Ignore our kids while we quote the Fathers?
Brother, let's take a break and go
Down to the water at the Ol' Blue Hole...

-JH







Tuesday, July 2, 2019

The 4th of July

Two days and counting.  Will have to work a half day that morning, but the plan is to hit the road taking my mother and aunt to ‘ol Blue Hole Spring.  Set up a day tent, grill some hot dogs, swim a bit in the ice cold water (exactly what my overheated body as of late needs), maybe even fly-fish A River Runs Through It-style (great movie by the way).  Wrap up the day at a firework show back in T-town.  Such is the plan.  

I’m reminded that it is part of our duties as Catholics to be patriotic.  To not retreat into the deep woods like anarchist libertarians, but to give continued support to those elected or apppointed officials, and those running for office for the first time, who either inadvertently or deliberately are promoting the Social Kingship of Christ. 

That is the unity between Christ and His Church and government and public society. 

That’s what I’m reminded of when I think of how our President has been used by the hand of God, in some significant measure at least, to help restore all things to Christ in this country. 

Anyways, we’re getting close to the 4th of July, our national day of rightful patriotism.