dual personalities

Month: December, 2011

Stand ye still, and ye shall see the salvation of the Lord

by chuckofish

Tonight I went to our service of Advent Lessons and Carols at Grace Episcopal Church. We sang all the great Advent hymns, including (56) O Come, O Come, Emmanuel, (66) Come Thou Long Expected Jesus, and (265) our all-time favorite, Gabriel’s Message, the one about “thou lowly maiden Mary, most highly favored lady.”

There were eight lessons, scripture readings from the old and new testaments, and a variety of carols sung by the Choir of Men and Women, the St. Nicholas Boys Choir, the St. Cecelia Girls Choir, and the (adorable) St. Patrick Training Choir. This AND a homily from the visiting Rt. Revd. Stephen Dokolo, Bishop of the Diocese of Lui, Southern Sudan, who looked like a Masai warrior without a spear. Very impressive indeed.

The highpoint for me was when fourth grader Brigid strode across the choir, bowing before the altar, and proceeded up to the lectern to read the second lesson. Clearly enjoying herself, radiantly self-confident, she smiled and read Isaiah 40:1-8: “Comfort, O comfort my people, says your God” better than most adults are able. She never stumbled over such stumbling blocks as “recompense” or “constancy”. She read with conviction, “‘Cry out!’ And I said, ‘What shall I cry?'” She brought to mind Linus in A Charlie Brown Christmas.

I am particularly fond of Brigid and her siblings because daughter #2 has been babysitting them for many years and so I have a tangential, proprietary attachment to them. They give me faith in the next generation.

So onward through Advent: Look toward the east, O Jerusalem, and see the joy that is coming to you from God.

The cutest elves ever

by chuckofish

We had a set of these when I was growing up and I spent hours playing with them every December. A couple of years ago I started searching on ebay for a set of my own and after months of outrageously competitive bidding and many disappointments, I finally procured my very own sweet elves. I just love them. I know they are only cardboard and pipe-cleaner, post WWII Japanese made, but somehow these little guys just make me happy. I got them out today and wanted to share… Don’t you wish you had some?

My goodness!

by chuckofish

How did it get so late so soon?
It’s night before it’s afternoon.
December is here before its June.
My goodness how the time has flewn.
How did it get so late so soon?
–Dr. Seuss

Moving to the Big Apple

by chuckofish

It’s official: daughter #1 is moving from Washington D.C. to NYC in January. Of course this put me in mind of my favorite movies that take place in NYC, especially the ones that make it look beautiful and full of sophisticated, beautiful people.

Here are my top four choices:

1. The World of Henry Orient (1964), directed by George Roy Hill, starring Peter Sellers, Angela Lansbury, Paula Prentiss, and written by the father/daughter team of Nunnally Johnson and Nora Johnson (who went to Smith College!). Two private school misfits run all over NYC following their hero Henry Orient, giving us great glimpses of Central Park, the Plaza, brownstones and Carnegie Hall.

2. Pillow Talk (1959) directed by Michael Gordon, starring Doris Day, Rock Hudson, Thelma Ritter, and Tony Randall, written by Russell Rouse, Clarence Greene, Stanley Shapiro, and Maurice Richlin (Academy Award winners for Best Screenplay). Career gal Doris Day goes to work, various decorating hangouts and numerous cool bistros all over town.

3. Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961) directed by Blake Edwards, starring Audrey Hepburn, George Peppard, Mickey Rooney, written by Truman Capote and George Axelrod. You know this one–starting at Tiffany’s and continuing through Central Park and Rockefeller Center–all over town.

4. Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993) directed by Woody Allen, starring Woody Allen, Diane Keaton, Alan Alda, and written by Woody Allen and Marshall Brickman. This one has the usual Woody pre-war apartments and walks through the streets of New York.

What do you think? Any other ideas?