It went back to my wishes

Stanisław Barszczak, The successful Pole (part 3) As you know then I went on the Parish. I met as reverend as jocular Priest there. All this inborn confidence was admirable, of course, but honestly, try living with it. My parish priest, also named Stanislaw Pytlawski, was decidedly less fun to be around, a patriarch who’d sit in his recliner with a newspaper open on his lap and the evening news blaring on the television nearby. His demeanor was nothing like my mother’s. For him, everything was an irritant. He was galled by the day’s headlines, by the state of the world as shown on TV. Then he also mumbled something to himself most often. He shouted at housekeeper in the kitchen, a sweet, soft-spoken woman and devout Christian named also Stanislawa. She cooked his meals and absorbed his barrage of complaints and said nothing in her own defense generally. I will not forget her small figure … and wooden shoes never. I had a grandmother on the parish, Mrs. Helena Giełzak. Once she could not stand it, I remember, she screamed when the parish priest took her bread from her hand. By day, in her off-hours with parish priest, she was reduced to a meekness I found perplexing, even as a young vicar. There was something about my grandmother’s silence and passivity in her relationship with parish priest that got under my skin. According to my mother, a grandmother Helene was the only person to talk back to priest when he yelled. I did it regularly, from the time I was very young vicar and over many years, in part because it drove me crazy that my grandmother wouldn’t speak up for herself, in part because everyone else fell silent around him, and lastly because I liked parish prist as much as he confounded me. His stubbornness was something I recognized, something I’d inherited myself, though I hoped in a less abrasive form. The parish priest was a holistic but very good-natured. He was also deep. For me, coexisting with Father’s strong sense of purpose – sleeping in the same room with it, sitting at the breakfast table with it – was something to which I had to adjust, not because he flaunted it, exactly, but because it was so alive. In the presence of his certainty, his notion that he could make some sort of difference in the world. His sense of Christian purpose seemed like an unwitting challenge to my own…So, there’s grace in being willing to know and hear others. And you tell about them. This, for me, is how we become… Do we settle for the world as it is, or do we work for the world as it should be? It was a phrase borrowed from a book I’d read when I first started out as an organizer, a vicar priest and it would stay with me for years. It was as close as I’d come to understanding what motivated the Pope. The world as it should be. Now another thing. I can hurt you and get away with it. Women endure entire lifetimes of these indignities – in the form of catcalls, groping, assault, oppression. These things injure us. They sap our strength. Some of the cuts are so small they’re barely visible. Others are huge and gaping, leaving scars that never heal. Poland is not a simple place. Its contradictions set me spinning. I’d found myself at Catholic church. For the Archbishop had been an empathic and patient listener, coaxing each of us through the maze of our feelings, separating out our weapons from our wounds. He cautioned us when we got too lawyerly and posited careful questions intended to get us to think hard about why we felt the way we felt. Slowly, over hours of talking, the knot began to loosen. Each time Archbishop and I left his office, we felt a bit more connected. I began to see that there were ways I could be happier and that they didn’t necessarily need to come from Archbishop’s quitting spiritual politics in order to take some happier job. (If anything, our counseling sessions had shown me that this was an unrealistic expectation.) I began to see how I’d been stoking the most negative parts of myself. It was possible that I was more in charge of my happiness than I was allowing myself to be. That time I was too busy resenting Archbishop for managing to fit workouts into his schedule, for example, to even begin figuring out how to exercise regularly myself. This was my pivot point, my moment of self-arrest. Like a climber about to slip off an icy peak, I drove my ax into the ground. That isn’t to say that Archbishop didn’t make his own adjustments – counseling helped him to see the gaps in how we communicated, and he worked to be better at it – but I made mine, and they helped me, which then helped us. For starters, I recommitted myself to being healthy. This new regimen changed everything: Calmness and strength, two things I feared I was losing, were now back. So many of my friends judged potential mates from the outside in, focusing first on their looks and financial prospects. If it turned out the person they’d chosen wasn’t a good communicator or was uncomfortable with being vulnerable, they seemed to think time would fix the problem. But Archbishop arrived in my life a wholly formed person. From our very first conversation, he’d shown me that he wasn’t self-conscious about expressing fear or weakness and that he valued being truthful. I wasn’t going to let one person’s opinion dislodge everything I thought I knew about myself. Instead, I switched my method without changing my goal. Archbishop was serious without being self-serious. He was breezy in his manner but powerful in his mind. It was a strange, stirring combination. Surprising to me, too, was how well he knew Czestochowa and her thumping parishes from the very beginning. His task was to help rebuild neighborhoods and bring back jobs. As he described it, it had been two parts frustration to one part reward: He’d spend weeks planning a community meeting, only to have a dozen people show up. His efforts were scoffed at by diocese leaders. Yet over time, he’d won a few incremental victories, and this seemed to encourage him. Despite my resistance to the hype that had preceded him, I found myself admiring Archbishop for both his self-assuredness and his earnest demeanor. He was refreshing, unconventional, and weirdly elegant. I was deeply, delightfully in love with a man whose forceful intellect and ambition could possibly end up swallowing mine… As mine the parents od mine, they didn’t own a house. I were their investment. Everything went into me. Mom, I don’t think my mother announced whatever her doubts and discontents were to my father directly, and I don’t think she let him in on whatever alternative life she might have been dreaming about during those times. Was she picturing herself on a tropical island somewhere? With a different kind of man, or in a different kind of house, or with a corner office instead of kids? I don’t know, and I suppose I could ask my mother, who is in her eighties, but I don’t think it matters… So, optics would always rule our lives. Though this was not me and never would be. I could be supportive, but I couldn’t be a robot. As a priest I was determined to be someone who told the truth, using my voice to lift up the voiceless when I could, and to not disappear on people in need. There were moments when the beauty of my country and its people so overwhelmed me that I couldn’t speak. Then once spring day it was over. Even if you see it coming, even as your final weeks are filled with emotional good-byes, see Konopiska, Rząśnia, Sosnowiec parishes, Zabkowice village and settlement in Kozłowek, Cracow. One priest’s furniture gets carried out while another’s comes in. Closets are emptied and refilled in the span of a few hours. Just like that, there are new heads on new pillows – new temperaments, new dreams. And when it ends, when you walk out the door that last time from the world’s most famous address, you’re left in many ways to find yourself again. So let me start here, with a small thing that happened not long ago. I was at home in the redbrick house that my family recently moved into. Our ‘new house’ sits about two hundred miles from our old house, on a quiet neighborhood street. We’re still settling in. In the priest room, our furniture is arranged the same way it was in the parish. We’ve got mementos around the house that remind us it was all real – photos of Mom and his child, a hand made pots given to me by wife of a parishman, a book signed by Professor Joseph Tischner. This latter, unspoken was the fact that he could just go. He could walk out the door and catch a cab to the airport and still make it to Vienna in time to vote. He could leave his mother and fretting host of the house halfway across the Mediterranean Sea and go join his colleagues. It was an option. But I wasn’t going to martyr myself by suggesting it… What was strange about this night was that a mother wouldn’t and everyone was gone. It was just me, and empty house like I haven’t known in tventy years. Everything but was not lost. This was the message we needed to carry forward. It’s what I truly believed. It wasn’t ideal, but it was our reality – the world as it is. We needed now to be resolute, to keep our feet pointed in the direction of progress. Archbishop, I wanted to believe that there was a man who’d materialize and become everything to me, who’d be solid and whose effect would be so immediate and deep that I’d be willing to rearrange my priorities. It just wasn’t the man standing in front of me right now… I knew from my own life experience that when someone shows genuine interest in your learning and development, even if only for ten minutes in a busy day, it matters. It matters especially for women, for minorities, for anyone society is quick to overlook… to be continued.

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