Monday, November 12, 2012

SANCTUARY



One of the places in the SLU campus that I truly love is the Chapel, the Saint Aloysius Gonzaga Chapel. Whenever I’m missing my life as a college student, I always look back on the fond memories that I had and of the places that I loved to go and stay into and that for sure includes the Chapel. There are also those times when I really wish that I’m in there praying or just sitting and feeling the solemn and peaceful atmosphere.

Way back then, the Chapel had always been the first place where I go to whenever I feel sad and low. It was where I took refuge. It was where I try to find inner peace when I felt like everything that was happening was in chaos or failure. And after spending some time there or after attending a mass, I always felt like the heaviness that I was feeling was lightened or lessened. I always felt better afterwards.There was this one time when I felt so sad and downtrodden and I wanted to cry or scream my heart out, I immediately went to the Chapel after my class and I cried and cried and cried until I could cry no more. And I had such a great relief after then! I think just by simply going there, praying  and spending some time for serenity, you’re able to exude the negativity inside you because it’s God who is calming and blessing you.

My very first memory of going into the Chapel was before taking my very first practical exam in college (that was for the subject Zoology). I can remember that I was really trembling because of so much nervousness and I was fervently praying to God for me not to forget what I had studied and be able to concentrate on my exam. Thanks to God, I was able to pass that exam and I was able to surpass all of the many nerve-wracking, brain-draining, grueling and unforgettable exams that came after then. Remembering that now makes me laugh!

But of course, more than taking refuge on those lowly moments, it’s more important that one goes to the House of God whenever blessings come. When you’re happy, go there and show to God your jovial spirit. When you receive blessings, go there and give thanks. I think just by your mere presence, God would be very happy.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

MARLEY MADE ME CRY



A few years ago, I watched a movie entitled Marley and Me starring Owen Wilson and Jennifer Aniston. It was a very heartwarming movie which involves the story of a couple who got married and was starting to build a family together with a naughty yet bubbly, loyal and adorable dog named Marley. It was a very nice movie! And it had such a very tear-jerking part when it came to the point of Marley’s death. I could vividly remember that I cried while watching the latter part of the movie. 


Only now that I was able to buy a copy of the book where the movie was adapted from. It’s Marley and Me written by John Grogan. I really got interested with the book upon seeing it at National Bookstore because I knew then that it’s going to be a nice read. And like what others say, more often than not, the book is always better than the movie.

The story is told by Grogan in a naturally amusing and detailed way. You’ll really see how disastrous Marley is yet he also mentions how different he is in a way that is special or even extraordinary among any other dogs. You’ll go crazy with his comically mischievous manner but you’ll definitely adore him for his love and devotion to his masters. Here, you can see how a pet turns out to be a vital member of a family. He is a devoted friend, too; a man’s best friend, indeed.


Let me just share some of the beautiful lines from the book, mostly taken from the latter part. Perhaps, you could also ponder on these.

“Marley reminded me of life’s brevity, of its fleeting joys and missed opportunities. He reminded me that each of us gets just one shot at the gold with no replays. One day you’re swimming halfway out into the ocean convinced this is the day you will catch the seagull; the next you’re barely able to bend down to drink out of your water bowl. Like Patrick Henry and everyone else, I had but one life to live.”

“In the lonely blackness, I could almost taste the finiteness of life and thus its preciousness. We take it for granted, but it is fragile, precarious, uncertain, able to cease at any instant without notice. I was reminded of what should be obvious but too often is not, that each day, each hour and minute, is worth cherishing.”

“We loved that crazy old dog, loved him despite everything –or perhaps because of everything.”

“Marley was a funny, bigger-than-life pain in the ass who never quite got the hang of the whole chain-of-command thing. Honestly, he might well have been the world’s worst-behaved dog. Yet he intuitively grasped from the start what it meant to be man’s best friend."

“No one ever called him a great dog –or even a good dog. He was as wild as a banshee and as strong as a bull. He crashed joyously through life with a gusto most often associated with natural disasters. He’s the only dog I’ve ever known to get expelled from obedience school. He was a chewer of couches, a slasher of screens, a slinger of drool, a tipper of trash cans. As for brains, let me just say he chased his tail till the day he died, apparently convinced he was on the verge of a major canine breakthrough. There was more to him than that, however, and I described his intuition and empathy, his gentleness with children, his pure heart."

“What I really wanted to say was how this animal had touched our souls and taught us some of the most important lessons of our lives. “A person can learn a lot from a dog, even a loopy one like ours.” Marley taught me about living each day with unbridled exuberance and joy, about seizing the moment and following your heart. He taught me to appreciate the simple things- a walk in the woods, a fresh snowfall, a nap in a shaft of winter sunlight. And as he grew old and achy, he taught me about optimism in the face of adversity. Mostly, he taught me about friendship and selfless and, above all else, unwavering loyalty.”

He was central player in some of the happiest chapters of our lives. Chapters of young love and new beginnings, of budding careers and tiny babies.Of heady successes and crushing disappointments; of discovery and freedom and self-realization. He came into our lives just as we were trying to figure out what they would become. He joined us as we grappled with what every couple must eventually confront, the sometimes painful process of forging from the two distinct pasts one shared future. He became part of our melded fabric, a tightly woven and inseparable strand in the weave that was us. Just as we had helped shape him into the family pet he would become, he helped to shape us, as well –as a couple, as parents, as animal lovers, as adults. Despite everything, all the disappointments and unmet expectations, Marley had given us a gift, at once priceless and free. He taught us the art of unqualified love. How to give it, how to accept it. Where there is that, most of the other pieces fall into place."
John Grogan with Marley (left) and Gracie (right, the Grogan's new dog that came after Marley )


Aren’t those wonderful and inspiring? I need not say more. I guess you’ll be able to extract inspiring thoughts from there. While reading these parts, I already found myself crying. I was so touched with the story! This is the first time ever that a book made me cry! I admire John Grogan for that and I will surely read his other novel as soon as I grab a copy. I’m aiming for his book ,The Longest Trip Home.

Marley makes me want to have a dog sometime in the future. I’ve never had a dog before except for the one we had when I was still little. His name was Lucky. I could only remember a very few memories of him but I know that he was a very passionate and loving dog, too.

Animals, specifically dogs have traits that are to be admired and cherished. They may not be able to speak, but their actions can show humanly love and care. I believe that they can recognize and do reciprocity; love and care for them and they will do the same. Perhaps, they will even care and protect you much more than what you can give to them.