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Starting
Point Love
found in life of holes
By MICHAEL DALEY
At 3-and-a-half years old, my
daughter Cara loves to question. I say it, she questions it. She sees it, she
questions it. She hears it, she questions it. Why? How
come? When? Whos that? Whenever she goes
into one of her litany of questions, Im reminded of the bumper sticker
that reads: Question Authority. Shes got a gift for it. So determined is
she that she reminds me of the widow in Lukes gospel (18:1-8) who wore
down the judge with her persistence.
Just the other night, in an attempt to gain a few more minutes of
freedom before bedtime, she asked a good one. Wed just told her to stop
jumping on the bed. Wanting to divert attention from herself, she looked at her
mother and asked, Mommy, why do you have holes in your T-shirt?
Far too young to be told the workings of laundering clothes and
what may or may not happen when using too much bleach, my wife responded,
Because sometimes your Daddy hugs me so tight that some of the love
inside me comes out. I smiled at June after she said it. Cara got a real
serious look on her face. She was taking her mommy very seriously.
I couldnt help but think that my wife, though wanting to get
our daughter to bed as painlessly as possible, had chosen an apt metaphor for
love -- a holey shirt. To love, to become vulnerable, is to open ourselves up
to a life of holes. In offering ourselves in relationship to others there is
always the possibility that our love will not be returned in kind, but rather
rejected and rebuffed.
C.S. Lewis, British author and Christian apologist, captures this
well in his book, The Four Loves, when he writes: There is no safe
investment. To love at all is to become vulnerable. Love anything and your
heart will certainly be wrung and possibly broken. If you want to make sure of
keeping it intact, you must give your heart to no one, not even to an animal.
Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all
entanglements; lock it up safely in the casket or coffin of your selfishness.
But in that casket-safe, dark, motionless, airless space, it will change. It
will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable. The
alternative to tragedy, or at least to the risk of tragedy, is damnation. The
only place outside Heaven where you can be perfectly safe from all the dangers
and perturbations of love is Hell.
If my years of marriage and parenthood have taught me anything, it
is that there can be no authentic love without the possibility of pain and
suffering. With that possibility though comes the opportunity for great joy as
well. In either case, holes are the result. Spouses miscommunicate, say hurtful
things to each other, forget important dates. They also communicate immense
love with a simple touch. Bring a smile with a single word. Save the day with a
timely reminder.
Likewise, with parenthood, the person I want to be for my daughter
and son is not the one I am. Freedoms given them are often misused. Molehills
become mountains. On the other hand, patience is rewarded generously. Their
love is unconditional. All of us have fleeting, or should I say forgiving,
memories. With each day that passes, it becomes increasingly clear that the
only way to a life of holiness is through the holes.
At the end of the evening, after the stories had been read and the
prayers said, Cara looked at me and asked, Daddy, will you hug me really
hard? So I stretched out my arms, put them around her, and squeezed her
as hard as I could. Once. Twice. Three times.
Were still looking for the holes in her pajamas.
Mike Daley teaches theology at St. Xavier High School in
Cincinnati.
National Catholic Reporter, September 13,
2002
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