Archive for May, 2009

A Day Late And A Lot Of Dollars Short

Friday, May 29th, 2009
How MANY First Communions???

How MANY First Communions???

Let’s try this again!

This has to be the world’s most boring blog!

Of course, since no one seems to read it but me and my favorite spammers . . . so what?

This weekend is Pentecost and with it comes the pscyhological end of the choir season. There are churches where music directors keep soldiering on, since liturgical Ordinary Time is really anything but ordinary. But I say, “Stop the insanity!” We are only human and we all need a break – if not a life of indolence at least a break from the ordinary. It is a time when we can do those exotic things that normal people, with less insane work hours, can make time for more easily if they choose to . . . like “spend time together”, or “count daisies”.

Starting next week, the phone stops ringing, the e-mails stop coming, and folks withdraw from frenetic church activity. It is a time to catch up, look forward, and enjoy more evenings at home – for both myself and for them!

It’s also a time to revive a languishing blog and give some TLC to neglected projects and ideas.

Certainly the coming months will not be boring. The NPM (National Association Of Pastoral Musicians) Convention is here in Chicago this year and we will be there, promoting our CDs and websites and seeing old friends again. Being local this year I will be helping out with preparing for a few events like the Opening Plenum Address music, the Convention Eucharist Choir, apart from bringing our own youth choir and having two showcases ourselves. Look out for us if you are going – Exhibit Booth #119 – Kingsfold Music Productions.

Busy and off the streets as this will keep us, it is NOTHING compared to the insanity of the last few months. I’ve been working in this profession for a long time now – am I just turning into an old dude or are things just getting crazier. There has to be an easier way.

So I’ll say it in public (listen up, spammers!): I vow, this Summer, to work efficiently and proactively so that next Spring will not be as insane as this Spring. Advance prep is the name, moving past sharpening pencils is the game!

Next year in Jerusalem . . . a day early and less dollars short!

Where’s My Car?

Friday, May 29th, 2009

[This Post was written on my phone on 1/9/2009 but languished as a draft for the last 4 months while I was too busy to work on any of this stuff. So I just put it up now for the heck of it!]

Watch out, fingers!

Watch out, fingers!

Today I’m sitting in Rioghna’s Tae Kwan Do class typing on my phone. She got her brown/red belt – SO proud. We got here in my car, which I finally got back from the repair shop this morning after three days.

So, I’ve been reflecting on how it feels to be carless in America. When I lived in Ireland I never had a car. In fact, I never even learned to drive until I was in my late twenties and already living in the States. In those days, I never thought twice about it because I did not know any different. I thought nothing of walking a few miles to get where I needed to go. (I was also fitter as a result!) of course, in Ireland, things generally tend to be a lot closer together and more accessible to pedestrians, whereas here everything is built and designed around the automobile to the extent that we take it totally for granted.

And it’s because we take it for granted that we can feel so bereft when our trusty steeds are taken from us. I can attest to feeling less adequate, more dependent, poorer. But then, I have built this busy life around being able to move around at will in these few hundred square miles of the Chicago area. Also, the Midwest winter does not exactly help either.

Or maybe it has to with the cost of auto repair. $600 lighter in the pocket can make you feel poorer too!

My kid just put her foot through a board like it was water. That’s the way to deal with things, instead of whining about it.

Still glad to have the car back, though.