Guest Bloggers

Sharing Inspiration

Reading Nan Merrill’s website   Friends of Silence   one is able to reclaim in a fresh way, hope, peace and compassion. There, poetry and prayer heal, unravel confusion, pain and darkness. Great quotes from current authors add   further inspirations and is a rich resource to turn to again and again.

Nan Merrill has also written Psalms for Praying: An Invitation to Wholeness    an inspiring contemporary   rendition of the Psalms for our times.  

I hope you will find these resources as inspirational as I have. 

- Sister Patricia St. Louis

Water... FIRST

The Sisters of St. Joseph congratulate Water First   for its concrete action in addressing water issues in Indigenous communities.

As one of the growing number of Blue Communities we are thrilled to be a part of the work that Water First is doing.

We have financially supported Water First to continue its training program leading towards achieving government certification. Last month, CBC Radio Morning North host Markus Schwabe interviewed Kendra Driscoll, a Water Quality Specialist with Water First, about the Internship Program on Manitoulin Island. You can    listen   to the interview here, on cbc.ca. In addition, they shared a story about it online. You can   read the article here, on cbc.ca. Water First is training Indigenous students to be prepared to fill the employment gap in water treatment plants.

Visit our Federation website   to see other things we are discovering about the many issues surrounding water.

The Federation of Sisters of St. Joseph of Canada are committed to clean drinking water as a human right. We are the first group of religious communities to be designated a Blue Community and urge others to join us.


Water ...for profit?

Recently, I found myself disturbed by a 46 second commercial by Nestlé. What prompted my unease was the skillful combination, might I say manipulation, of visuals and messaging.  The first image that greets us is the Nestlé Pure Life logo which stands out as it is centred on a white background. The scene shifts to a close-up of a blue-eyed girl that immediately transforms to a side view of the same young girl enjoying a drink of Nestlé bottled water. Simultaneously, we see the words and hear voiced, “THIS IS WHERE EVERYTHING STARTS”. Next our attention is captured by the young girl diving into a water-filled magical world.  The messaging continues, “THE FUTURE IS BUILT EVERY DAY”, “THERE ARE NO LIMITS”, followed by “EVERYTHING IS POSSIBLE”. The last lines make the exaggerated claim, “A future of possibilities starts by drinking pure quality water now”.  The video ends as it begins centred on the company’s logo which becomes the featured product, Nestlé Pure Life surrounded with the parting message - “pure life begins now”. I was left feeling cheated as childhood images of innocence, trips to magical lands, skipping rocks and blowing bubbles aligned and had been co-opted by product messaging.

The disturbing pitch is the product of ‘bottled’ water…when we know what bottles are doing to the very same future they are selling us. Our commitment at the Sisters of St. Joseph to be a Blue Community and that access to free   potable water is a human right and the ever growing importance of protecting our water made this commercial - and "water for profit",  all the more disturbing.  I invite you to view the commercial here and offer your comments.

Here are some compelling articles and a deeper look at the "water industry":

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-09-21/nestl-makes-billions-bottling-water-it-pays-nearly-nothing-for

For more information about the Sisters of St. Joseph's Blue Community please visit, https://bluecommunitiesnow.wixsite.com/water/blog/water-as-a-human-right

Take action to protect Ontario's water

When you no longer drink disposable bottled water you save money, live healthier, and join in the movement for global sustainability.  And yes, water is PURE LIFE what it doesn’t need is to come in a bottle, or with a label… - Sr. Nancy Wales, csj.

SELFie

The growing social media craze, the “Selfie”, piqued my interest. My search of “selfies” yielded a staggering 961,000,000 google entries. In fact,  I discovered that Oxford Dictionaries selected, “Selfie”, as its “2013 International Word of the Year” because the frequency of the word’s use had increased 17,000 percent over the previous 12 months.[i]

 

I presume, like most of us, we believe photographic self-portraits to have made their debut in our lifetime. My first experience of taking a picture of myself came in my earlier life after I acquired a camera with a delay timer during the 60’s. However, taking pictures of oneself was routinely employed in the early 1800’s as inventors used themselves as their most available model.

The first ever “Selfie” is attributed to Robert Cornelius. The Guardian newspaper notes:

The image in question was taken in 1839 by an amateur chemist and photography enthusiast from Philadelphia named Robert Cornelius. Setting up his camera at the back of the family store in Philadelphia, Cornelius took the image by removing the lens cap and then running into frame where he sat for a minute before covering up the lens again. On the back of the image he wrote, “The first light Picture ever taken 1839.”[ii]

For most of us, the selfie fad is harmless. However, negative results have occurred for a growing number of selfie enthusiasts whose pursuit of the dramatic shot have resulted in lethal consequences.[iii] For example, James Crowlett died after his selfie with a shark. How foolish is that? In the same vein, recent studies have examined the negative effects on mood and behavior of selfie-taking. [iv]

Meanwhile, my own curiosity about the phenomenon of “selfies” leaves me with deeper wonderings about the pluses and minuses of such emphasis on self...   - Sr. Nancy Wales, csj

[i] https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/19/selfie-australian-slang-term-named-international-word-of-the-year

[ii]  https://publicdomainreview.org/.../robert-cornelius-self-portrait-the-first-ever-selfie-18...

[iii] https://www.cbsnews.com/pictures/dangerous-selfies/

[iv] https://newsroom.clevelandclinic.org/.../research-looks-at-selfies-and-their-impact-on-...

 

 

Daisies

During my retreat this summer, I enjoyed sitting on a porch that overlooked a large pond. There happened to be a planter on the porch with three daisies – two were fully bloomed, while the third was still a bud. They caught my attention because daisies were my sister Helen’s favorite flower and I had two special experiences involving daisies the day of her funeral many years ago.

My last evening on retreat, I noticed that the two fully bloomed flowers had now reached their peak and would start to wither, but the bud had finally expanded a little. The final morning of retreat I felt compelled to walk over to that porch again and check on the bud. Overnight it had nearly fully opened. I found this significant, even though I didn’t know what it meant for me in terms of my retreat.

 One day after returning home from retreat, I found myself reflecting on those daisies. I considered how the opened, fully bloomed flower stays about a week or so before it begins to die. In contrast, most of the flower’s “lifetime” is spent on the earlier stages of growth – from seed, to stem and leaves, to bud, to full bloom. [Not being a botanist, I may not be exactly accurate here, but you know what I mean.] Comparatively, the culmination – the full bloom – lasts for only a short while.

The analogy to human beings and growth in the spiritual life became apparent to me. Typically, it takes a lifetime to come to full bloom, with most of one’s years spent on the earlier stages of growth. Moreover, much of this growth is so gradual that it can easily go unnoticed. But finally, there is the “full bloom.” What immediately came to mind next was the verse, “Es ist vollbracht” – the German rendition of John 19:30 of the passion narrative usually translated in English as “It is finished.” I was moved to check the Greek-English Interlinear New Testament where I found that the Greek “Τετέλεσται” is more literally translated “It is accomplished.”       

Like Jesus’ life, we might think of our own lives as coming to “completion” once we have reached “full bloom” – when we have carried out our mission or when we have become all that God created us to be. [Of course, all analogies fall short, and we can quickly come up with examples where, humanly speaking, we would say that some lives never have the chance to fully bloom. But it’s impossible to speak for all of the “flowers” in God’s garden.]

At this point in time, my takeaway from my retreat experience concerning the daisies is this: to be ready to meet God is to be fully bloomed. I pray to be “fully bloomed” when it is time to meet God.

Guest Blogger, Sr. Marian Maskulak, cps, Missionary Sister of the Precious Blood