Friday, February 24, 2012

The EEL Story OR How the Kitchen Became the Heart of the Home

When I was in elementary school, my dad drove me to school every morning.  I attended St. Vincent's Academy on Market Street in Newark....it was near (right across the street) St. Joseph's R.C. Church and a fire house.  I could sit in my third grade classroom and look out the window at Martland Medical Center which later became UMDNJ (my sister graduated med school from there hundreds of years later).  But, I digress.

I have come to the conclusion that apparently the kitchen was not always the heart of the home.  It was not the gathering place, the warm fuzzy place, the 'just grab a chair and sit at the table' place that it is today.  When I think of my grandparents' homes, and even the homes of other relatives and friends, the kitchen was typically tucked away in the back of the house, non-descript, and basically a room where 'work' (women's work) was accomplished.  When I was very young, the 'living room' was where everyone gathered. 

Whatever was going on in the kitchen was for the cook to be involved with, and probably no one else.

What follows is possibly how that all changed.  I am guessing that after many incidents similar to what I am writing about below, it was decided that if a wife or husband or grandmother or great-aunt was cooking something/anything, they were not to even think about venturing out of the kitchen proper.  It's not difficult to imagine that THIS is how the kitchen then evolved to become the heart of the home -- it was just safer this way!

My dad didn't talk alot while we were driving.  The first part of the ride he prayed, and when he was finished, he would turn on the radio.  Once in awhile, we would notice something....a printed sign, or some such thing, and either I would ask a question, or he would comment, but we were both rather quiet otherwise.  Comfortably quiet, mind you.

I was in third grade when my father told me this story which means I was eight years old at the time.

One morning we driving down Springfield Avenue in Newark, NJ toward school, and on the window of a Fresh Seafood store was a really large paper sign with the word 'EELS' on it.  We both saw it at precidely the same time.

 "Eels?" I exclaimed.  "Eels?  Why would they sell eels?" 

"People eat them," my dad replied.

Calmly.  But starting to smile....which was odd at that hour of the morning.

"What's so funny?" I asked.

A smile at 7:00am could certainly be construed as 'funny.'  We were usually rather quiet together.

And, then my dad told me the "EEL STORY."

He told me that when he was six years old,  his father, my grandfather, was standing at the stove in the kitchen.  The big stock pot was on the stove, the gas was turned on under it, and the lid was on the pot.

My dad had just entered the kitchen, and Grandpa was turning to leave the kitchen.

My dad continued: "Grandpa said to me, 'Leave the lid on the pot.  Don't open the pot.' "

 I knew for a fact (perfectly obedient, first-born child that I was) that at six years of age, being told 'not' to open something was as good as receiving an engraved invitation to get one's grimy little hands all over it and totally open it to see what was inside.

I knew that at six years of age that being told not to open something wasn't even going to register....a six year old's brain wasn't even going to process those words.

A typical six year old never imagines that THIS will happen:




A typical six year old is told "Don't open that pot!" and sees and hears this:



OR this:


Or this:




You get the idea.  The six year old, or five year old, or seven year old is going to open the pot, sack, bag, box, door, jar, window, whatever it is.  The key word here is OPEN.  But, you knew that!

My dad continued:  "Grandpa walked out of the kitchen" 

I was only eight years old, and even I knew that Grandpa should not have walked out of the kitchen.; or at least he should not have gone far.

My dad continues.  "So I dragged a stool next to the stove and climbed up." 

See.

Those 'household accident statistics' have apparently been recorded for a very long time.

I was on the edge of my seat.  Seat belts weren't invented yet.  My father hadn't said this much to me on our morning rides in two years.  I was enthralled.  I had to hear what happened next.

"I climbed on the stool,"  my dad says, "And I lifted the lid off the pot."

He's laughing now. "The lid was barely off the top of the pot, and I began to scream and shout: SNAKES!  SNAKES!"

My eyes, normally big as saucers, grew twice that size.

"Snakes?" I practically shouted.

My dad is laughing and shaking his head no.

"Eels!" he tells me.  "Eels!"

"They came out of that pot as soon as I lifted the lid.  They slithered out of the pot, onto the stove top, and then were on the floor all over the place.  Slithering all over the place."

Okay, that was a visual I didn't need, but it clearly had stuck with him through the years!

"I'm screaming, 'Snakes!' and Grandpa comes running into the kitchen.'

"There are eels all over the place," my dad is laughing.

"Grandpa picks up a skillet that was on the stove, and he starts hitting the eels with the skillet.  He is going all over the kitchen hitting eels.  He is on his hands and knees on the floor hitting eels."

My dad tells me that at the same time Grandpa is exterminating eels, he is yelling at my dad:

'I told you not to open the pot.'

My dad said he was running around the room in tears screaming 'Snakes!'

When grandpa had finally finished doing whatever it is one does to eels with what was probably a cast iron skillet (no flimsy Farberware in those days), he looked at my father and started laughing.

And, he says to my father, smiling:  'Scared ya, huh?'

For sure, Grandpa.  Any individual who can remember in perfect detail something that happened probably 25 years earlier, well, they were probably scared.

And, in my opinion, the prospect of things slithering around one's kitchen is in part responsible for a school of thought which developed...that being that no small child should be left alone in a room with a pot of something that could exit said pot in a slithering fashion.



Hence, the kitchen became the heart of the home.

And, that, Mimi, is the EEL STORY!

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Why Are My Kids Telling Everyone That We Are NOW Gluten-Free Vegans? Oh, Right....Because We Are Almost One Week Into Eating GF-Vegan........

LONG STORY SHORT:   (and when does that ever happen?)

On the day of the Nordstrom's Rack Meltdown, my husband accompanied the kids to the American Girl Store at Tysons for the Valentine's Day Cookie Decorating Event (I don't get mad, I get even! *wink*wink).  He, did, however, get to spend time with the lovely LM (and I would have gone ONLY to spend time with LM, but I was seething....beyond mad.....seething) and she was telling him about The China Study and her decision to switch to a vegan eating style.

Husband was fascinated.  Two nights later when I was finally speaking to him and listening to him, he toldme about The China Study and LM's decision and we decided to give it a try......me more than him probably because I am the one who does all the grocery shopping and cooking.

I sprang into action.  A mere three nights later (I needed time to get up to speed, time to feel like I knew what I was doing, oh yes.....and time to understand exactly what vegan IS) we had our first (cooked by me) gluten-free vegan dinner.  Gluten-free because the ONLY cookbook I could find at Wegman's (that's right - still no trip to barnes and noble) was GF and V.......onward I went.

FTR, they loved the dinner -- it was delicious.  BIG THANK YOU to LM.  I am loving being in the kitchen again.  THIS change makes me have to pay attention and think and plan.

So, I am sharing here with you (my loyal reader:  Cousin Mimi (((hugs)))    b/c I think that mnot days, Mimi is the only one who reads my blog......and I haven't forgotten about the eel story, Mimi) 

THE BEST GLUTEN-FREE VEGAN SNACK RECIPE ON THE PLANET
Tried in my kitchen to quell the whining of 'there is nothing to eat in this house'...which was always heard in THIS house.......no matter HOW much there was to eat

And, no, THOSE are not what the recipe is for......the recipe is even better!!

CRISPY RICE TREATS...HEALTHY STYLE
These are amazing!  My husband LOVED them and he is the pickiest eater on the planet -- my kids are right in line behind him.  TRY THESE!

2 cups puffed rice
1/4 cup sesame seeds (optional)
1/4 cup chopped raw almonds
1/2 cup currants or raisins (optional)
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 cup vegan chococlate chips
1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
3/4 cup macadamia or cashew butter (or other nut butter of your choice - we used cashew)
3/4 cup brown rice syrup (DO NOT SUBSTITUTE - USE BROWN RICE SYRUP)

Place the puffed rice, seeds, nuts, currants, cinnamon,and chocolate chips into a large bown and mix together.  In a smaller bowl, stir together the vanilla, brown rice syrup, and nut butter, then add this  mixtur to the puffed rice mixture.  You will need to stir this together really well so it will hold when you cut it into bars.

Lightly spray a 9-inch square pan with vegetable oil non stick spray and spoon the ingredients into the pan.  With wet hands, spread the mixture out so it fills the pan.  Refrigerate until well chilled.  You can cut into bars, or cut bars as you need them.

ENJOY!!!!!!!



Monday, February 13, 2012

MELTDOWN AT NORDSTROM'S RACK

The house was going to be shown Sunday (yesterday) between noon and one-thirty which meant we had to vacate.  We are getting rather good at being displaced, but I guess I had reached my limit, hence, the
Nordstrom's Rack meltdown -- you can read about it here:

Dh took ds to dh's office to put up art work (he has a new office and is decorating) - I took the girls, and we were going to barnes and noble (our new home away from home when our house is being shown) -- nordstrom's rack is next door to barnes and noble. I have been tring to run into NR for four weeks and get myself a new pair of casual flats for every day. I tell the girls, let's run into NR, I need flats - just flats and then we will go to B & N and get a coffee and do schoolwork.  I do wonder WHY? I am doing school work -- I went to school, I graduated college.....why can't I go to B&N and get a triple tall americano and read a mindless magazine?



Enter NR.  I am looking for what I want, and the two girls begin the parade of 'Isn't this cute -- it's my size.' Well, of course it's freaking your size -- why else would you be shoving it in my face. I repeat to them that I was buying shoes -- PERIOD. The entire weekend had already been one big spend fest for dd12 as she had cotillion, mani-pedi, hair trimmed, blow dry, new dress, pantyhose, lipstick & eyeshadow and make-up application at Elizabeth Arden where her hair was taken care of, etc. AND.......everything they were showing me was for much warmer weather -- it was 28 degrees here yesterday -- the clothes they were selecting were thin as tissue paper. I did explain that to them.  They did look at me as if I had lost my mind.  Hadn't I heard of 'layering?'  You know, tissue-paper thin fabric on top of tissue-paper thin fabric -- oooooh, cozy warm!



I continue to look at shoes -- finally find two pair and I go over to the 'knee high' section because it has been too cold to go without socks or something.



My phone rings -- -- it is DH. Hey, he says. You guys aren't at B&N so I just walked into NR -- I know you are here -- where are you?

I do consider diving under a carousel of clothes and telling the whitest of lies:  'Nordstrom's Rack?  What are you talking about?  We are at Barnes and Noble......the one in Reston!  Oh, ha-ha-ha, you looked for us at the one in Fair Lakes.'  Lord, forgive me.



I decide to be honest.  I look around and see him and wave. As he approaches me, both girls also find me and they are carrying no less than 20 items each of essentially 'cruise wear.' 'OM gosh!' DH says. 'Who said you could buy them all that stuff.' 'I'm not buying all THAT stuff.' I say. 'They are fantasy shopping while I get two freaking pairs of shoes.'  I am clearly STILL delusional at this point to think I am going to get out of the store with anything.....least of which might be what I want.



'WHAT?' both girls say. Now pouting.  They dump their stuff into the cart and stomp away in search of even more tissue-paper thin clothing dotted here and there with sequins........which no doubt to pre-teens aids in the seasonal transition of clothing from winter to, errrr, still winter.



DS11 comes over practically buried under long sleeved (thank heavens -- someone with a brain in his head), Ralph Lauren plaid shirts (which are essentially his uniform) -- but I usually only buy one or two at a time (they are 'marked down' to $36.  Now call me crazy, but I consider that a little high priced for a shirt for an 11 year old who has to be reminded to shower) -- he had about 6 of them.....shirts, not showers. 



'Mom!' (WHY is it always MOM? WHY not DAD?)

 'Look. They have my shirts. I am almost out of them -- we should get these today.'  I have a fleeting thought trying to fathom how one 'runs out of shirts,' but I quickly give it up. I take the shirts from his arms, and he sprints away calling over his shoulder: 'I'll be in the boys' shoe department.'



DH is headed over to men's shoes, and I follow him -- my cart is piled high, and my two measly pairs of shoes are buried.



By the time I negotiate my way to men's shoes, dh is wearing one very nice brown dress shoe and asking me what I think of it. I am Switzerland.  'It's nice,' I say, as neutrally as I can.  As neutral as the gorgeous pair of Tory Burch ballet flats I DID find in my size that are marked down from $350. to $49.67........THAT neutral.  He agrees -- I'm going to see what else they have, he tells me. Oh, he says -- how much is all that in the cart?



'WHOA!' -- I say -- I came in for a pair or two of shoes -- we are not taking all this stuff. Most of it is for spring and summer and looks like it is for a life-sized BRATZ doll and not coming anywhere near my house - except for ds' shirts, and he doesn't need a passel of Ralph Lauren shirts.



I continue:  'And, I don't know how much all this is -- my intention was to walk out with shoes and socks -- nothing else.'



'Oh' says dh.



'Don't we have an NR $20. gift certif at home?' Yes we do.  But I don't know where.  And, I don't say that I have a pretty fair idea of what all the crap in the cart costs and $20. isn't going to even make a dent in it -- the freaking little Kate Spade socks I selected to go with the TDF Tory Burch flats are $20.

 He says that he and ds (who has put three pairs of shoes in the cart at this point and says he is going looking at jeans) will run home and CALL me with the Certificate # so I can give them the number when I check out and get $20. off what I have now estimated to be $350. worth of merchandise NOT including my shoes.



By the time I say 'No - don't do that - we are not buying thise stuff. And I am not giving them a number when I get in line -- I don't want to feel like an a** if they won't take the #........' he is out of the store.  DS is giving me the thumbs up and waves as he runs off with his father.



I stood there. I take a deep breath, my hands are shaking. I feel tears welling up. I turn and say to the two girls, 'we are going home.' And I started walking out of the store. 'Wait!' they say. 'You didn't get your shoes.'

I continue walking.



We drove home -- 1.3 miles from NR.



I walked in the house -- 'What are u doing here?' says dh -- 'I'm getting ready to call you with the gift certificate #.'

I have not included any of what I said next.  Not.one.single.word.  It is better that way.



'Take the kids and go do something fun with them please,' I reply. 'Right now.'



'You didn't get your shoes,' he says.



'You all need to go and I need to be unavailable to you all the rest of the day. Do you understand?' I say.



And, they leave (I've given you the pleasant version -- I DID totally lose it with them.  Totally.  I was even able to work in the heritage of one's parents and the offspring of one's parents peers.)



I sat for hours and listened to the sound of 'silence' in the house -- no one picking or pecking at me. It was delightful.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Why I'm STILL in therapy.......

This exchange between me and my sister (which began with me asking my oldest daughter a question about a piece of furniture that my mother gave to me, and I gave to oldest daughter) hits the nail on the head if one wants to know why I am in therapy.  Here goes:

It starts with this:

Mariann:  S32 (oldest daughter), do you have EEE's (my mother) tea cart from her dining room set?  I have a sinus infection and so does M(12).

S:  i never had eee's tea cart--hope you guys feel better
Yesterday at 9:51pm ·


  • Mariann: the piece that the top opened up and became behemothly (?) large?
    12 hours ago ·



  • LuLu (my sister):   Yeah, you had it. It used to have candy hidden in it in 1971. I wanted to check and see if it was still there one day at your house. I think it was 2009...
    11 hours ago ·




  • Mariann:  i know she had it -- she just doesn't know it was called a 'tea cart' -- it should have been called the 'stuff it under there, we have no room for it' cart.
    11 hours ago ·




  • Mariann: btw, I ate the candy. (((YUM)))
    11 hours ago ·



  • LuLu:  Did you eat the nuts for Mah Jhong too?
    11 hours ago ·




  • Mariann: Yes. But I told mom you did. That's why she threw her shoe at you when you were running up the kitchen stairs.
    11 hours ago ·



  • LuLu:  Fat cow/Skinny duck.
    11 hours ago ·




  • Mariann: Better I should have raised pigs......I would have sausage.
    11 hours ago ·



  • LuLu:  I'm going to get a room and go live all by myself.(This one is still in use.)
    11 hours ago ·




  • Mariann:  Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm. When you do something wrong, walk across the street, point to this house and say: THAT's where I USED to live.
    11 hours ago ·




  • Mariann:  obviously i have done something the police are at my door.....really.....no sh*t.
    11 hours ago ·



  • Mariann:  ok-- all is well. kids let the dog out without turning off the alarm. I thought it was the homeschool police.
    11 hours ago ·



  • LuLu:  ‎"When you do something wrong, walk across the street, point to this house and say: THAT's where I USED to live" was the "Sex Talk". Explains alot.
    10 hours ago ·




  • Mariann:  it.certainly.does.
    10 hours ago ·



  • LuLu: I had to learn about sex from books because my mom wouldn't tell me anything. I asked many times as a child "how the baby got out of the mother's body". The answer was always, "it just happens. God does it." Imagine my surprise as an OBGYN when I realized that this was not always true.
    10 hours ago ·




  • Mariann: Explains alot.  'I don't know nothin' 'bout birthin' babies, Mis' Scarlett!'
    10 hours ago ·



  • S:   Are you two having fun and amusing yourselves? The "teacart" or buffet as I called it was sold this summer with the rest of the dining room. It was part of the payment for the bathroom- go figure
    9 hours ago ·




  • Mariann:  Actually, I was totally serious - I must have missed when it was sold. Anyway, mariano assumed something had happened to it when he broke into your garage earlier (just kidding) and didn't see the dining room set. And, it's a tea cart - it becomes a buffet when one opens the top and puts food on it. Lulu turned it into a trip down memory lane.
    7 hours ago ·



  • LuLu: ‎"Buffet" as in Warren or Jimmy, or is it Bufee as in rhyming with touche or away? OK, I'll stop now.
    2 hours ago ·



  • Mariann:   You probably never saw the episode of 'Mad About You' -- Here's 10 minutes of the best of show -- 4:30 is the buffet part but the whole thing is classic.    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7Fl_9vP5I4



  • And, that is why I could have bought myself the most gorgeous Vuitton handbag last month BUT FOR THE FACT that I wrote a check to the therapist instead.  My mother (EEE) has the most amazing collection of Vuitton.  Go figure.


    Wednesday, January 11, 2012

    The POLICE were just here ----No, not Sting and the others............

    The Men in Blue -

    Never a freaking dull moment!

      Must be a slow morning.


    'Who's at the door?' the twins asked nervously, peering out the front window.

     'It's the police!'  E (11) shrieks.

    Seems that the twins let the dog out w/out turning off the alarm.

    Not one to let an opportunity pass by, I responded:  'Oh no!  It's the EX-homeschool police!  An unannounced visit.  I've heard of those kinds of visits, but I didn't really believe they made them.' 

    You have never seen two kids produce pencils and spelling books faster in your life. Tee-hee!

    More's the pity that on Sunday, the twins busted my digital camera by trying to take a photo of DD11 throwing the enormous Beach Body Exercise Ball at DS11 who was holding the camera trying to preserve it for all perpetuity.  Otherwise, a photo of the look on their faces would have been.......um....priceless! 

    Said photo would also, alas, have clearly shown M(11)'s bruised eye from said exercise ball smacking said camera into his face.

    Tuesday, December 6, 2011

    Advent: Second Wednesday of Advent -- 12/7/11

    Second Wednesday of Advent (Isaiah 25:6-26:6)

    Yesterday, we read of the final judgment of God on the actions of men; today, in the reading for the second Wednesday of Advent, we hear the promise of Christ's reign over all the nations. The earth will be remade; death shall be destroyed; and men shall live in peace. The humble and the poor will be exalted, but the haughty will be humbled.

    I think that tonight's Advent message is summed up in the words in red above.  We have been reminded so many times that Jesus did not enter the world as the Prince that He indeed was.  He was born of a young girl from a simple background. Mary was a young girl who said, "Yes."

    A couple of thoughts -- in Isaiah's words above, he writes that the Lord is going to remake the earth.  Think about how Mary's life was 'remade' as soon as she was visited by the Angel Gabriel.  Isaiah writes that the humble will be exalted -- reminding you of our definition of humility -- putting the needs of another before your own needs, Mary certainly fit the description of humility and a person who was humble.  And, she is exalted - we do lift her name in prayer as we beseech her to pray on our behalf.

    Can you think of three people more humble and poor than Jesus, Mary and Joseph in that stable on the night that Jesus was born?  I can't. 

    One final thought about humility -- I was trying to make a point about humility this morning to one of my children.  I was explaining that given a certain situation, a particular child was conducting him/herself in a very humble manner and that part of humility is doing the act WITHOUT the expectation of recognition or reward.  The reward is the knowledge that one had done something for another without seeking recognition or payment.  THAT is a big part of humility and a facet of it that the kids and I need to explore further.  I had taken it for granted -- they were totally unaware of it.  Lots of work to do there.

    Also -- Thursday, December 8, 2011 -- the Feast of the Immaculate Conception. 

    Second Tuesday of Advent -- 12/6/2011

    Second Tuesday of Advent (Isaiah 24:19-25:5)

    Isaiah prophesied not only about the coming of Christ as a child in Bethlehem, but about the final reign of Christ as King over all the earth. In this selection for the second Tuesday of Advent, Isaiah tells us of the final judgment.

    If you live in northern Virginia, do you remember where you were and what you were doing when we felt the earthquake this past summer?  Before you knew what it was, do you remember how you felt and what immediately ran through your mind?

    When I opened Isaiah 24 and began to read v20, I thought back to this summer and the earthquake:  'The earth reels like a drunkard, it sways like a hut in the wind.'  Isaiah is writing about the final judgment.  As I stood ready to leave Wegman's and the building began to shake, I made the Sign of the Cross and pleaded to the Lord for whatever it was to stop.  I would have to say that for however many seconds the quake lasted, my heart was empty of everything except 'Lord have mercy.'

     Isaiah goes on to write that we are to praise the Lord and exalt Him in perfect faithfulness.  Is anyone of us able to praise and exalt the Lord without humbling ourselves before Him?  Can we praise and exalt the Lord without humbling ourselves before others?  Can we be obedient without first practicing humility.......true humility? 

    I'm asking these questions because I would be remiss in my parenting if I did not take time and make you aware of the importance of humility.  Sunday night you told your dad and I that humility was putting the needs of another ahead of your own needs.  That is an excellent definition of humility.  We asked you who was the epitome of humility and why and you answered Jesus because he died for our sins and put our needs ahead of his own desires. 

    So tonight, let's talk abut Mary, the Mother of G-d.  Her feast day, the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, is the day after tomorrow, and, really, how in the world could we talk about preparing for the birth of Christ and not talk about Mary.   I mean, really?  Let me ask you:  do you think that Mary showed humility?  But, before you answer, let me tell you some things about her.

    As a young Jewish girl, Mary was considered marriageable at the age of twelve years and six months.  Remember that people had a much shorter life span 2000 years ago so at twelve and a half years old, one was of marriageable age.

     Luke 1:26-38,  The Evangelist tells us that in the sixth month after the conception of St. John the Baptist by Elizabeth, the angel Gabriel was sent from God to the Virgin Mary, at Nazareth, a small town in the mountains of Galilee. Mary was of the house of David, and was espoused (i.e. married) to Joseph, of the same royal family. She had, however, not yet entered the household of her spouse, but was still in her mother's house, working, perhaps, over her dowry. (Bardenhewer, Maria Verk., 69). And the angel having taken the figure and the form of man, came into the house and said to her: "Hail, full of grace (to whom is given grace, favoured one), the Lord is with thee." Mary having heard the greeting words did not speak; she was troubled in spirit, since she knew not the angel, nor the cause of his coming, nor the meaning of the salutation. And the angel continued and said: "Fear not, Mary, for thou hast found grace with God. Behold thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and shalt bring forth a son; and thou shalt call his name Jesus. He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Most High; and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of David his father; and he shall reign in the house of Jacob forever. And of his kingdom there shall be no end." The Virgin understood that there was question of the coming Redeemer. But, why should she be elected from amongst women for the splendid dignity of being the mother of the Messiah.  Therefore, not doubting the word of God like Zachary, but filled with fear and astonishment, she said: "How shall this be done, because I know not man?"

    This twelve and a half year old girl knew and had studied and prayed and she understood that the world was awaiting the Messiah, BUT as she is kneeling and praying on this day, the Angel Gabriel has told her that she is going to be the mother of the Messiah.  She, who has not engaged in any behavior that would cause her to become pregnant, is going to give birth! 

    The angel to remove Mary's anxiety and to assure her that her virginity would be spared, answered: "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee and the power of the Most High shall overshadow thee. And therefore also the Holy which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God." In token of the truth of his word he made known to her the conception of St. John, the miraculous pregnancy of her relative now old and sterile: "And behold, thy cousin Elizabeth; she also has conceived a son in her old age, and this is the sixth month with her that is called barren: because no word shall be impossible with God." Mary may not yet have fully understood the meaning of the heavenly message and how the maternity might be reconciled with her vow of virginity, but clinging to the first words of the angel and trusting to the Omnipotence of God she said: "Behold the handmaid of the Lord, be it done to me according to thy word."

    Let me have you read these words here yourself and pay attention to the part that is underlined.  Do you see that part?  THAT is humility.  Essentially, this is what Mary said:  'I have no idea how the Lord is going to do this.  I do understand that I have been chosen by Him.  So be it.  I am the Lord's servant -- His needs come before whatever I think mine are.'

    That is humility (did I say that already?).  

    So, let's think about this in relation to our own lives.  When you are asked to do something, do you respond 'yes,' 'no,' or 'wait awhile?'  If you are asked to do something that is inconvenient for you at that moment (you are at a crucial point in a video game or television show or movie), OR maybe you aren't even doing anything at all but you HATE doing what you've been asked to do, whose needs influence your response?

    If your mom asks you to set the table or empty the dishwasher or take the dog out, does your answer depend on whether or not you actually feel like doing it or if you want to do it?

    Are you beginning to get a more clear idea of what humility is and how it is so closely tied to obedience? 

    Do you know that in order for us to be pleasing in the sight of the Lord, we must practice humility?

    Please think of some ways that your behavior and attitude have to change in order for you to be pleasing in the sight of the Lord.  What needs to be swept out of your stable so that humility and obedience can move in?