best greetings of Panama City from WWD to my Readers

Stanislaw Barszczak, The successful Pole…

Most people were good people if you just treated them well… Time, as far as my mother was concerned, was a gift you gave to other people. From time to time she patiently endured gossip and long litanies of health woes, and nodded knowingly at stories about how money was tight. Though, our stories connected us to one another, and through those connections, it was possible to harness discontent and convert it to something useful, I ponder… In my youth I watched my fellows in the flow of a sweaty game with a group of boys on the adjacent school corner. Everyone seemed to fit in, except for me. I look back on the discomfort of that moment now and recognize the more universal challenge of squaring who you are with where you come from and where you want to go. I also realize that I was a long way, still, from finding my voice… Then I saw Saint parish priest, reverend father E.Liszka. He was not like anyone we’d dated before, mainly because he seemed so secure. He was openly affectionate. He ‘told about me’ I was beautiful. He made feel good on Christian community… For every door that’s been opened to me, I’ve tried to open then my door to others. And here is what I have to say, finally: Let’s invite one another in. Maybe then we can begin to fear less, to make fewer wrong assumptions, to let go of the biases and stereotypes that unnecessarily divide us. Maybe we can better embrace the ways we are the same. It’s not about being perfect. It’s not about where you get yourself in the end. There’s power in allowing yourself to be known and heard, in owning your unique story, in using your authentic voice… My mother maintained the sort of parental mind-set that I now recognize as brilliant and nearly impossible to emulate – kind of unflappable Zen neutrality… She wasn’t quick to judge and she wasn’t quick to meddle. Instead, she monitored my moods and bore benevolent witness to whatever travails or triumphs a day might bring… When I’d done something great, I received just enough praise to know she was happy with me, but never so much that it became the reason I did what I did… I wasn’t particularly imaginative in how I thought about the future, which is another way of saying I was already thinking about theology school… Listening to the catholic church, I began to understand that his version of hope reached far beyond mine: It was one thing to get yourself out of a stuck place, I realized. It was another thing entirely to try and get the place itself unstuck. I was gripped all over again by a sense of how special he was. Slowly, all around me, too, the church ladies began nodding their approval, punctuating my sentences with call “That’s right!” I here knew father S.Konczyk. His voice climbed in intensity as he got to the end of his pitch. He wasn’t a preacher, but he was definitely preaching something -a vision. He was making a bid for our investment. Once day he took me to minor seminary. The choice, as he saw it, was this: You give up or you work for change. “What’s better for us?” Father Konczyk seemed to call to me: “Do we settle for the world as it is, or do we work for the world as it should be?” Then as a priest I traveled abroad. Because I also wanted to make sure that when I visited a new place as a priest, I really visited it -meaning that I’d have a chance to meet the people who actually lived there, not just those who governed them. Traveling abroad, I had opportunities that father Konczyk didn’t. I woke one night to find him staring at the ceiling, his profile lit by the glow of streetlights outside. He looked vaguely troubled, as if he were pondering something deeply personal. Was it our relationship? The loss of my uncle? “Oh,” she said to me. “I was just thinking about income inequality.”This, I was learning, was how Mom’s mind worked. She got himself fixated on big and abstract issues, fueled by some crazy sense that she might be able to do something about them. It was new to me, I have to say. Until now, I’d hung around with good people who cared about important enough things but who were focused primarily on building their careers and providing for their families. Mom was just different. She was dialed into the day-to-day demands of her life, but at the same time, especially at night, her thoughts seemed to roam a much wider plane… And my tante… So far in my life, she’s been like a lawyer, she’s been a vice president at a hospital and the director of a nonprofit that helps young people build meaningful careers… And until recently, she was like the First Lady of the Poland- a job that’s not officially a job, but that nonetheless has given me a platform like nothing I could have imagined. It challenged me and humbled me, lifted me up and shrank me down, sometimes all at once. I’m just beginning to process what took place over these years- from the moment in 1967 when her husband and at once my uncle first started talking about running and finishing for the see. Some people handed over their savings and borrowed too much, ending up with a nice home but no freedom at all. This not a case of my uncle… After my parish work I was in the Convent of the good brothers of Saint John of God several years. I had spent there more than a year writing a draft of the book by Paul Ricoeur during the hours I wasn’t at one of my sacerdotal jobs. I worked late at night in a small room the Convent of brothers of Saint John of Gór had converted to a study at the rear of their apartment. I’d sometimes go in my mind in, you imagine, stepping over the piles of paper to sit on the ottoman in front of his chair while I worked, trying to lasso that with a joke and a smile, to tease me back from whatever far-off fields I’d been galloping then through. The brothers of Saint John of God were good-humored about my intrusions, but only if I didn’t stay too long… I’ve come to understand, I am the sort of person who needs a hole, a closed-off little warren where I can read and write undisturbed. It’s like a hatch that opens directly onto the spacious skies of my brain. Time spent there seems to fuel me. In deference to this, we’ve managed in the church to create some version of a hole inside every home we’ve ever lived in – any quiet corner or alcove will do. To this day, when I arrive at a parish house I go off looking for an empty room that can serve as the vacation hole. There, I can flip between the six or seven books I’m reading simultaneously and toss my newspapers on the floor. For me, the hole is a kind of sacred high place, where insights are birthed and clarity comes to visit. For my friends, it’s an off-putting and disorderly mess. One requirement has always been that the Hole, wherever it is, have a door… As a Christian I always wanted to align myself with different foundations and food suppliers to install thousand salad bars in school cafeterias and were recruiting local chefs to help schools serve meals that were not just healthy but tasty. Though this no matter, because I have had no money to fulfill the chance, no idea of that. (to be continued)

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