Speaking Reality

Speaking Reality: The Power of Words. kktaliaferro.wordpress.com #DailyGraces

Things have been rather quiet here at Daily Graces. We are in the middle of a deployment and have had some family visiting. It is always so nice to have the kids be able to spend quality time with grandmas. And I’m not gonna lie, it’s nice to be able to talk with Ben and not have to share every conversation we have with our delightful, talkative children. Especially Clare, who only knows how to say “Hi” “Bye” “Uh-ha” and “NO!” Conversation is rather limited when those are all you’ve got.

Even though Clare’s language abilities are pretty limited, she is really trying to learn how to say new words. When you ask her to say something, she tries. It usually amounts to grunts and odd combinations of vowels, but she tries. 1 grunt means please – usually sounds like peas when she doesn’t have a pacifier in her mouth. 2 noises of any variety means thank you. We’re working on it =)

All the language focus has brought me to consider the vocabulary I choose to use. I have always believed very strongly in the power of words and how they can not only shape, but actually change reality.

Reflections on how language changes reality. Is it "my" lamp our "ours"? kktaliaferro.wordpress.com #DailyGraces
A lovely display – please excuse the dust =)

We have lamp next to our desktop computer. Lately, John has been stacking dinosaurs on it’s stand. While this is fine normally during the day, it gets complicated when we are trying to skype with Ben and John and Rosie are nearly knocking one another over, or Clare, or the lamp, or the computer, (get the picture yet?) while trying to decide which dino should go where.

Finally, the other day I had had enough and said “John, I want you to stop stacking the dinosaurs on my lamp.” Notice the language – my lamp.

Now, technically, this statement is inaccurate. Really, the only person who could say that most things in our house are “theirs” is my husband, since his job is our family’s primary source of income. From the perspective of our kids, it is probably fair to say that the lamp belongs to Mom and Dad as the adults and heads of the home. My statement certainly reinforced that perspective.

After the fact, I realized the divide I was creating between the kids and the adults in our house with my language. How many times have I, out of frustration and lack of patience, said “Please get off my couch, it’s not for jumping on!” or similar exclamation. I think that my tendency to use a singular possessive descriptor (my) comes from a desire to teach respect for others’ belongings and space. And it’s true, the kids do need to learn to respect others’ things. However, I believe (now) that this particular lesson could happen elsewhere, and my possessive language choices about the items in our home will do more harm than good down the line.

If I want John, Rosie and Clare to “buy in” as it were, to the ownership of our home, my language must reflect this reality. Ben and I both feel strongly that we want our children to take pride in our home, to share the responsibilities of maintaining a home, and help with age appropriate tasks that are necessary to keep our home functioning smoothly and peacefully. We don’t want to offer allowances based on chores, because we all use our home. We all walk on the floors, wear the clothes and eat off the plates. Therefore, we all need to take responsibility for the things we have and to learn to be good caretakers and stewards of our belongings.

For this model to work, my possessive, truly divisive language will not create this reality. Quite the opposite actually.

It’s amazing the power of our words. In this example, simply changing “my” to “our” fundamentally changes how our whole family views our home and our belongings. The power of words stems all the way back to creation. God created the world from nothing (Genesis 1). God’s spoken word created the heavens and the earth, the plants and streams, animals and birds, Adam and Eve. Since we are made in the image and likeness of God, our words have similar, though much less impressive, ability. How we choose to describe people, animals and situations has effects on that person, animal or situation. This is especially true when it comes to helping shape our children and their perception of themselves. Consider this CatholicMom.com post about one mom’s experience when she overheard another parent refer to their child as a “little monster.”

In John’s Gospel, he describes Jesus as the Word made flesh (John 1). This is so important for our Catholic faith. Jesus, being God, is the creative Word. This means that Jesus’ words have the power to change reality, just as God’s did at the beginning of creation. We believe that when Jesus spoke the words of consecration over the bread and wine at the Last Supper, He actually changed the reality. The bread and wine truly became and continue to become His Body and Blood.

One final example, and this is something that has been going around Facebook recently that I think bears mentioning. If we all can agree that our words have the power to change reality, then we need to take a closer look at our vocabulary. The Catholic Church teaches that life begins at conception. This means that:

The words we speak have the power to change reality. kktaliaferro.wordpress.com #DailyGraces
Image and quote found on Facebook. Original source unknown

 

kktaliaferro.wordpress.com #DailyGraces

A Giving Heart

Have you ever heard a story that tugged at your heartstrings? Maybe you’ve watched a TV show or seen a commercial that was particularly moving. Perhaps you were watching the news and saw a story that struck home, that reminded you that there are others out there who are in need or suffering difficulties. Often, these experiences elicit an emotional response – “How beautiful!” “How awful!” “I wish there were more people out there like her.” “Why isn’t someone helping him?”

I would like to share with you one such story that is near to my heart and I hope, will become dear to yours as well.

Ben’s cousin Colleen is presently working in Hyderbad, India through an organization called Sarah’s Covenant Homes. She is a long-term foster mom for 7 children, all with special needs. Colleen has a true calling to work with these precious children. She has had to overcome an incredible number of hospital visits, late nights, early mornings, and a severe learning and language curve since she is in India, a place she had never been prior. Colleen regularly blogs at Letting My Light Shine where she gives heartwarming and heart-wrenching stories of her everyday life with these little ones.  Colleen does an excellent job of sharing stories of all the children in her care, letting her audience really get to know them and the challenges their disabilities present.

Katherine - kktaliaferro.wordpress.com, shininginindia.wordpress.com #DailyGraces #WorksofMercy #DonateNowI would like to specifically draw your attention to one of Colleen’s little ones – Katherine. Katherine is a 2 year old who is blind, deaf and has a form of cerebral palsy. When Colleen first met her, she was lethargic and very unresponsive. Colleen’s patient, steady and loving care of Katherine has yield some incredible results. In just 3 short weeks Katherine began responding to the stimuli in her environment by crying when she was displeased with something. Before this, she would not have any response, even if she was uncomfortable or upset, she would just shut down and go to sleep.

Colleen’s diligence with Katherine has brought an incredible opportunity to her. Colleen has been very good about following up with best care she can for all of her kids, pursuing whatever avenues she needs to with each of their unique disabilities and challenges. For Katherine, she has been trying to figure out what options are available for her hearing loss. After a whole series of doctor’s visits, Colleen was thrilled to find out that not only is Katherine’s cochlear nerve intact, she is still a viable candidate for a cochlear implant! With only 3 of her 5 senses working, regaining some hearing will completely revolutionize Katherine’s world.

As if this wasn’t enough good news, Katherine has been blessed by a local organization who is willing to pay for the implant itself. It is a huge financial burden off of Colleen and Sarah’s Covenant House. However, it means that it is up to Colleen to raise the funds for the surgery and hospital stay. In total, she needs to raise $3,000.

This year, especially during Lent, Pope Francis has really called everyone out. In his address for Lent, Pope Francis said:

For this reason, I expressed my hope that “the Christian people may reflect on the corporal and spiritual works of mercy; this will be a way to reawaken our conscience, too often grown dull in the face of poverty, and to enter more deeply into the heart of the Gospel where the poor have a special experience of God’s mercy” (Misericordiae Vultus, 15). For in the poor, the flesh of Christ “becomes visible in the flesh of the tortured, the crushed, the scourged, the malnourished, and the exiled… to be acknowledged, touched, and cared for by us” (ibid.)

We all can’t travel to India. We all can’t sit with Katherine at breakfast and watch her reveal in a sense she can enjoy. We can’t all sit with Colleen as she struggles to help Katherine engage in the world around her. We all can’t sit by Katherine’s bed when she wakes up from surgery. We all can’t be there the day Katherine begins to make connections between the sounds she is hearing and her environment.

But we can help make this life-changing surgery possible. Lent is a time of fasting, prayer and almsgiving. If you have been discerning a new charity or cause to support, consider Katherine’s. Pope Francis wants us all to “reawaken our conscience” by actively performing the corporeal and spiritual works of mercy. By donating for Katherine’s surgery, you are not only helping the sick, you are concretely giving Colleen the tools she needs to shower Katherine with even more love and works of mercy.

Here is the link you need to donate. It is simple and all through PayPal so it is secure. Any amount you can give will help Katherine get that much closer to the gift of hearing. If at this time you are unable to give, please pray for Katherine, Colleen and the other children. You can also share this post or any from Colleen’s blog to help spread the word about Katherine and children just like her in need of advocates, in need of love, in need of mercy.

Thank you so much. Please click through the links so that you can learn more about Colleen, Katherine and the incredible work she is doing.

Book Review: My Badass Book of Saints: Courageous Women Who Showed Me How To Live

My Badass Book of Saints #dailygraces #bookreview kktaliaferro.wordpress.comWith such a title, who wouldn’t want to pick up this book?! I have to say, it certainly grabbed my attention. Even the cover is great. Maria Morera Johnson, author of My Badass Book of Saints: Courageous Women Who Showed Me How to Live, is a college professor, blogger and radio host who has selected a beautiful and badass group of women that are sure to inspire you. Not only has she chosen named saints (that is, saints with a capital St.) but she has also chosen bold, courageous and devoted women from a variety of backgrounds. For Johnson, to be truly badass you are, in her native Spanish, tremendaTremenda means “tremendous, sometimes. It also means terrific, and terrible. It translates to bold. Daring. Fearless. Stalwars. Smart. Courageous…But mostly, it means badass” (xvi).

Johnson weaves the lives of these badass women with her own story, a first generation Cuban-American, military wife and mother. The women, 24 in total, each represent characteristics that Johnson considers “badass.” They are audacious, courageous, missionaries, advocates, selfless, passionate, compassionate, and virtuous, to name just a few. At the end of each chapter, Johnson offers reflection questions on the highlighted quality and how we as people of faith can integrate the lessons from these women into our life.

Some of the saints and women I knew about already. Consider how St. Joan of Arc would be a model of courage, St. Catherine of Siena a model of advocacy or St. Gianna Beretta Molla a model of human dignity. I also knew about Audrey Hepburn and her work with the UN and Immaculee Ilibagiza and how she not only survived but found forgiveness in the Rwandan Genocide of 1994.

I was blown away by the women I had never heard of. Did you know that Sr. Blandina Segale stood up to Billy the Kid not once but 3 times!? Or how about Nancy Wake, an Australian socialite turned super secret spy for the French Resistance and was so good at it the Nazi’s never figured out who she was?! Or Phyllis Bowman who founded the Right to Life movement in 1998, but started her work on behalf of the unborn in the mid-1960s by forming the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children in the United Kingdom?

The women in this book are incredible. They are more than beautiful, they are more than strong, they are more than awesome. They really are badass.