Sunday, September 26, 2021

A Poem/Prayer about the Full Moon at the Fall Equinox

 


Benediction at Full Moon Equinox


As I gaze at the full Harvest Moon this Equinox,

The Monstrance at Benediction comes to mind,

All knees bent, the moment as holy as Birth or Creation or Love.


I can hear angelic voices singing,

"Holy God, we praise Thy name,

Lord of all, we bow before Thee . . ."


And then, in memory,

"Panis angelicus" bread of angels,

"Fit panis hominum" becomes the bread for all humans . . .


Next the litanies, beautiful mantras,

Another kind of rosary,


Saints Kathleen, Joanne, and Veronica,

Pray for us,

Saint Joachim, ora pro nobis,

Saints Robert, Michael, and Patrick,

Orate pro nobis.


Saints Linda, Julia, Lucia, 

Carolan, Jodessa, Emily, 

Saints Liv, Colin, Jesse,

Saints Lilly, Lucy, Ava, and Leo,

Saint Harper, Saint Gus,

All Saints, known and unknown . . .


Blessèd Blue and Jake-the-Beagle,

And all animal companions--


Help us sustain the Beauty, Grace,

And Love 


And thank you for this Holy Moment. Amen.


[Composed by Bob Coughlin, using the ideas and imagery of Kathleen Prudence / September 22, 2021. Photo by Bob Coughlin.]


Tuesday, September 21, 2021

A poem about the Perseid meteor shower

 Streaking across the Mid-August Night


Last night, around 3:30 am, I woke up, shambled out the front door 

and looked up at the night sky wanting to see the Perseids,

The Tears of Saint Lawrence.

.  

I saw a million stars 

and heard an astonishing percussive concert, 

rythmic and loud music. Thousands of crickets and other mysterious creatures: 

Locusts? Cicadas? Frogs? Toads? Púcaí? Fairies? 

It was beautiful! But no Perseids, no shooting stars-- 


Just thoughts of you streaking across my consciousness! 

And then back to bed for a few more hours,

Dreaming to the beat of the crickets


and the symphony of the spangled night.


[Bob Coughlin / August 13, 2021].

Wednesday, September 15, 2021

My Week as a Cave Man

 My Week as a Cave Man       


by Bob Coughlin


When I was a sophomore at the University of Notre Dame, academic year 1967-68, I had the most astonishing opportunity a working class boy from Euclid, Ohio ever had. For the same tuition (including room, board, books) we were paying to attend Notre Dame, $2500 per year (paid with a small scholarship, a summer job, and loans taken out by me and my parents), I was able to study in Salzburg and Innsbruck, Austria. The $2500 fee included boat travel over and back (SS United States), train travel from Le Havre, France to Salzburg, Austria, field trips, three meals a day, a shared room in a pension, and courses in German at the Salzburg Sommerschule (5-6 weeks, late July to early September), and two semesters at the University of Innsbruck. What would that cost in 2021? $60,000? More?


Anyway, we had a couple weeks of spring break in late March and early April of 1968. My roommate, Brian Wilson, and I decided we would hitchhike to Vienna, Austria, and then just play it by ear for the rest of the break. We stayed in a very odd Youth Hostel (Jugendherberge) in Vienna, in a converted Nazi bunker with thick concrete wall and doors between rooms that looked like submarine or battleship doors. The cost per night was about 20 Austrian Schillings, about 80 cents. While we were there we heard other young people talking about a town on the Isle of Crete where you could live free in caves.


From Vienna we decided to take a train down to Athens, Greece. It was a very long ride, on a train pulled by a steam engine through Yugoslavia. We spent the first night in an inexpensive hotel room in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. We were so confused by the money (“Stari Dinars”) and the language, Serbo-Croatian. I had studied Russian two years in high school so I could read the signs written in Cyrillic--and once in a while I could figure out the meaning. I do remember one funny incident at the train station. Two girls, about our age, sat down by us and tried to talk to us. We weren’t too successful communicating, but in the end I did learn two sentences in Serbo-Croation. Something like “Vreme je lepo” (the weather is nice) and “Ti si lepa” (you are pretty). To this day that’s all I know about Serbo-Croatian!


The following morning, which might have been April 3rd, 1968, Brian and I boarded a train headed to Athens, Greece. There were no seats for us on the train, so we stood for hours on end. Finally, I decided to sit--in the bathroom! The only possible place to sit on our long train journey.


After a long ride, we reached the Greek frontier at a city called Salonika (maybe more formally called Thessaloniki)--the city where two of St. Paul’s epistles were set.


Right before we reached the Greek border, a man standing near us asked us if we would claim a package as our own as we crossed the border. He said that it was a tape recorder and he wouldn’t be allowed as a Greek to bring it into the country. Brain gladly said sure, glad to help out.


When the border patrol asked to see our passports, we handed them over. Then one of the agents asked if we had any packages to claim. I said no, the truth, and Brian said, yes. So at the back of Brian’s passport the agent wrote something in Greek. and then they moved on. When we asked someone on the train what had been written, we found out that on Brian’s passport there was a statement that he could not leave Greece unless he had the package in question on him! 


O no! we thought. We immediately got off the train and ran to find some people from Customs. Brian told them what happened, that we had been tricked, and then he handed over the package (which we assumed was a tape recorder). They took the package, and then added another note on Brian’s passport which we understood to mean, “Disregard the previous note.” Since we couldn't read Greek, we were relying on other people for translations. I think Brian could have been arrested for smuggling, but they let him go and we continued on our way to Athens. We never heard what happened to the man who initiated the little smuggling operation and we never found out what it actually was. Later we found out that there was some sort of terrorism going on in Greece and that it was at least possible that this package had materials for bomb making. We’ll never know!


When we got to Athens, we found the youth hostel and did some walking around the incredible sites of Athens for a day or two, including a walk up the Acropolis Hill, wandering through the Parthenon, and admiring the Vestal Virgins (Porch of the Maidens) on the Acropolis. 

 Above, Brian Wilson (now Dr. Brian Wilson, Hilo pediatrician)

(above, me, Bob Coughlin, by the Parthenon, early April 1968. I was 19 years old)


We did have a funny incident near the Acropolis. A man on the street in front of a bar grabbed us and asked us, “Do you like girls? Do you like girls?” Of course we like girls! Then he pulled us into his bar and it didn’t take long before we found out what he was up to: “Bar Girls,” trying to entice us into buying drinks. And maybe they were more than “Bar Girls,” but we didn’t hang around to find out!

(above, Porch of the Maidens, by the Parthenon, Acropolis, Athens)


The next day, which might have been April 4, 1968 (a day that will live in infamy!), Brian and I boarded a ferry at the port of Piraeus, and headed toward the island of Crete. Our plan was to live free for a week in a cave in the town of Matala, on the south shore of Crete--the rumor circulating in youth hostels.


The ferry was very interesting, loud, and crowded (and cheap!). Music was being played all night on exotic instruments which I had never seen before. We saw women nursing their babies in public, something not seen at that time in the United States, especially at all-male Notre Dame! Some time in the middle of the night, Brian walked over to me with a girl he had met. “Bob, I want you to meet a girl from the East Side of Cleveland, Sally Kovach” [not her real name].


As we got to talking I realized I knew Sally’s cousin, who was in my class at St. Joseph High School in Cleveland. And I had been to a store that her parents owned. It was uncanny!


After a long ferry ride, we arrived in Heraklion, on the north coast of the Island of Crete. Right away we began to hitchhike. All we knew is that we wanted to go to the village of Matala, on the south coast of the island of Crete. It didn’t take long before we were offered a ride by the driver of a dump truck. Sure we would take the ride, but where would we sit? Brian offered to sit on the load of gravel, and Sally and I got into the truck next to the driver. The road was bumpy and occasionally the road was severely damaged by earthquake activity. There were places where you could see the tectonic movement rearranging the roadbed!


During the long ride, we tried to communicate with the driver and he tried very hard to tell us something. We tried English and even German (because I only knew two phrases in Greek, “Thank You” and “You’re Welcome!”). The driver knew a little German from World War II years when Germans were in Greece. He finally got it across to me that Martin Luther King Jr. had been shot and killed. I still wasn’t sure I had understood him until a little later that day.


We finally got left off at an archeological site known as Phaestos, a 4-6000 year-old Minoan site, one of the most important archeological sites in the world. Unfortunately, we spent a very short time there because we had a long walk to Matala, about 22.6 kilometers!


Bouzouki


We travelled pretty light in general: we each had small backpacks and sleeping bags. But we did have one large item: Brian's guitar. The guitar became a great entré device. One person we met on our long walk asked to see Brian's guitar and started playing "Never Kiss Me on a Sunday," a song with a Greek feel about it.


Further down the road a man saw the guitar and invited us into his beautiful little home. Then he pulled out his pride and joy, a spectacular bouzouki.



He played it for us and agreed to pose with his family and his priceless bouzouki.



[Below, a few photos I took of Matala and our cave. I wish I had taken more, but film was expensive for us as was developing film and getting prints. In one you can see one of the cave-pocked hillsides by the little cove. In another, the tiny village of Matala as seen from inside our cave. I think that's Brian swimming below. In one photo, taken from the hilltop, you can see the caves on both sides of the cove and an island 10-20 miles off shore.]


 


Brian and I continued on the dirt road to Matala. At one point we encountered a rather fancy restaurant with people sitting outside at little tables. To my astonishment, they were eating snails! I had never even heard of that back then.


We finally arrived in Matala. It was a very tiny village, hardly a village at all. It was set at the head of a small cove of blue-green water that opened up to the Mediterranean Sea. In the distance you could see a small mountainous island. And far in the distance you could see snow-covered mountains. On each side of this cove were steep hillsides pocked with caves, many on each side. Brian and I found a cave up about 40 feet above the water and that’s where we stayed for the week. Our cave was clean and empty, carved out of the stone. It might have been about 9 feet square approximately, big enough for us to lay down our sleeping bags. I remember there was a kind of stone bench inside the cave, nothing else. At the time we had no idea how these caves got there--they seemed to have been made for us, ha ha. But as I think about it now, I wonder if these had been burial caves at one time.


I can hardly remember the details of living there. We did go in swimming, but the water was fairly deep, clear, and cold (Brian swam more often than I did). And we got some meals at a tiny little restaurant there. I remember getting delicious egg omelets. And I do remember one evening drinking the inexpensive local red wine. I was pretty “beschwipst,” and faced some danger getting back to my high-level cave. And the next morning, I had a terrible headache from the red wine.


I remember one day wandering on the hilltops above the cave in incredible fields of wildflowers buzzing with bees. It made me think that the honey used in delicious baklava was made by these bees!


A few years after our sojourn in Matala, Joni Mitchell, the great Canadian singer-songwriter, wrote a song about her visit to Matala, the song “Carrie.” The words of the song are pretty accurate though in 1968 Matala wasn’t exactly a tourist town--that happened soon after. I don’t remember the tiny restaurant being called the “Mermaid Cafe,” though it might have been. And for historical purposes, I want to make it clear that neither Brian nor I was “Carrie,” ha ha. We didn’t steal Joni’s camera and didn’t sleep with her, at least I didn't.😉


Lyrics to Jone Mitchell's song "Carey"


So after a week or maybe less, Brian and I left Matala and started the long trek up the dirt road to a place where we could hitchhike. Amazingly, an army troop vehicle stopped and picked us up. With our backpacks and guitar, Brian and I entered the truck. There sat around 10 soldiers in full battle array. The truck drove on for a short distance and then for reasons unknown to us, they stopped and ordered us to get out, which of course we did (they all had guns; we had a guitar). We were unaware of the political situation in Greece at that time, but I think there had been a coup d’etat and the army was on terrorist watch. So we were happy to start walking again.


We finally made it to Heraklion, on the north coast of Crete, after many hours of walking and hitchhiking. There we caught a ferry boat headed for Bari, Italy. We had started on our way home to Innsbruck, Austria. A few more adventures awaited us.




Italy


Our ferry finally arrived at the city in Bari, a fairly large town on the southeast boot of Italy. Then we found the road west and hitchhiked across Italy. We arrived in Napoli on Good Friday or Holy Saturday, that is April 12 or 13 of 1968. Martin Luther King Jr. had been dead for a little over a week and we finally started seeing Italian newspapers covering the chaos, anger, and riots back in the USA. We still had not seen any TV or heard any radio (and the truth is we saw almost no TV nor heard any radio that year we were in Europe).


We went to mass on Easter Sunday, April 14th, at what I think was the Cathedral in Naples. There was a level of poverty in Naples that I hadn't seen before and I was amazed at the density and excitement if the city. One thing that surprised me was the commerce taking place during mass on the steps of the church, unheard of in America.


One remarkable thing I remember about Naples is the great volcano, Mount Vesuvius, not far from town. Unfortunately I didn't go to Pompeii, the famous city buried in an eruption of Vesuvius.


The day after Easter, Brian and I started hitchhiking toward Rome. Unfortunately, we got separate rides and would be separated for days until a miraculous reunion in Northern Italy.


On my way to Rome I was picked up by a young Italian couple. We struggled communicating but got by with bits of Italian, English, German, and Latin. The took me up to Monte Casino, where St. Benedict established the Benedictine order and rule about 1500 years ago. As we drove up the small mountain toward the monastery, they told me about the Allied bombing of 1944 that destroyed the building. By 1968, the monastery was fully restored. I was embarrassed that my country had destroyed this historic monastery.



Rome. When I arrived in Rome, I located a youth hostel and began my wanderings in the city. I now had almost no money and a long hitchhike back to Innsbruck--and I was by myself. I had no idea where Brian Wilson was and back then there was no way at all to communicate with him. I started wandering around Rome on foot and found my way into Vatican City. I had no guide book, no money, and I was on foot so I didn’t see much of Rome. The parts of the city I saw included pretentious Mussolini-like memorials (the Victor Emmanuel II Monument) and very busy streets. Luckily the Vatican was quieter and more intimate. I walked around St. Peter's Square and I was lucky enough to see the Pietà, one of the greatest works made by human hands. Michelangelo carved this from Carrara marble circa 1498-99 and it’s at home in St. Peter’s Basilica. 


(Above photo from a Google search)

I also saw the Roman Forum. I was struck by how strange the forum looked, everything in ruins, and I didn’t know how to think about it.


North to Bolzano. From Rome I headed north and got a ride in a little sports car going 120 mph on the Autostrada. I felt relieved when I got out! The trip to Bolzano was about 380-400 miles, a long day hitchhiking back then. But I made it to the bilingual (German and Italian) town by 6 pm or so and immediately tried to figure out where I was going to sleep that night: I had no food and no money. What was I going to do?


Bolzano, Italy has another name--Bozen, in German. After World War II, the area called “Süd Tirol,” was taken away from Austria. The area had long been trilingual--German, Italian, and Ladin (an Italic language derived from Latin, spoken in certain mountain valleys). There was huge resentment even in 1968 about this and there was occasional acts of terrorism and you could see graffiti around stating “Süd Tirol bleibt Deutsch"-- "South Tyrol remains German." So that is the background.


I looked around town for a place to sleep and spotted the bed of an old pick up truck outside a house. Maybe I could lay my sleeping back down there and then get up early before the people in the household. So that’s what I tried to do, but I caught the attention of their dogs, and a very angry Roma man (what we used to call a Gypsy) ran out of the house and I quickly grabbed my sleeping bag and rucksack and ran! Guess I wasn’t going to sleep there.


After that I tried to find a park with a bench. It was now getting dark. There was someone in the park, but she left, so I stretched out my sleeping bag on a bench and tried to go to sleep. It wasn’t long before a federal policeman, a carabinieri, came by, machine gun in hand, and ordered me to stand up and raise my hands into the air. He spoke to me in Italian and I answered him in German, which made him even more suspicious. Then he began searching me and my pack for, I suppose, bombs. I tried to explain to him, in German, what I was doing, that I had no money left and was travelling north to Innsbruck, Austria. He finally accepted my explanation and then told me to go sleep in the train station. So again I gathered my sleeping bag and backpack, and headed to the Bahnhof to sleep. I went inside and tried to sleep sitting up on a bench. But at a certain time of the night, everyone had to leave the inside of the train station, no exceptions. So i went outside and wondered what I should do. Finally I did something crazy. I stretched my sleeping back out on the steps of the train station and went to sleep. I actually slept--I was so tired! Very early the next morning, I woke up and looked around and saw a crowd of people gathered around, wondering who was in the sleeping bag and what the heck he was doing there! 


So I got up, rolled up the sleeping bag, grabbed my backpack, and started walking. By now I was very hungry, and almost totally broke. I walked for about 15 minutes when I saw a guy walking toward me. It was Brian Wilson, who I last saw in Naples! I was so happy to see Brian, and my first remark was, “Brian, do you have any money for food?” He did, hurray, and Brian and I got breakfast and soon started hitchhiking the last stretch, across the Alps, to Innsbruck, Austria. 


Thus ended an incredible couple of weeks and my week as a cave man!


[I took all the photos in this piece except for the one of the Pieta.]



Friday, July 23, 2021

Memories of Over-the-Rhine in the 1970s: Some Favorite Places

 I don't intend this to be a systematic piece on Over-the-Rhine, the old Cincinnati neighborhood north of Central Parkway (which at one time had been a canal). My living there happened at first by accident (or fate? Luck of the Irish?) and I had very little intellectual or social/political or religious agenda at first.


I moved to Cincinnati by invitation of Chris Cotter, my Notre Dame/Innsbruck Program friend. He invited me in late January of 1971, and I said yes more quickly than he could have expected. A few days later I drove my junker Ford Econoline van (a vehicle so eccentric only I could drive it) to Cincinnati. Chris had made some contacts with folks living in Over-the-Rhine (this began when he met Kenny Przybylski at Christ-in-the-Desert Monastery in Abiquiu, New Mexico; Ken invited Chris to come visit the Mansfield House Commune in Cincinnati).

 

For the first few days I stayed at Chris’s parents house in the Western Hills area of Cincinnati. This, to me, was luxurious living that I hadn’t experienced in our little home in Euclid, Ohio. Chris’s parents, Larry and Faye Cotter, were hospitable and generous, but Chris and I knew we had to find something that involved a simpler, more austere lifestyle, more in line with our values. It was our luck that Peggy Scherer and Anne Weinkam were getting ready to go on a very long road trip out West and needed someone to sublet their apartment, 225 Orchard Street in Over-the-Rhine (OTR). The apartment was not bad at all and the price was only $48/month--total! That was $24 per person. And we even had a responsive landlord. If memory serves, he was an Irish plumber who owned some old buildings in OTR. His last name might have been Dougherty. Chris and I immediately moved in to this “furnished” apartment--it was furnished but pretty simple. I think there was a kitchen table, a few chairs, a davenport, two beds, and not much more. I learned at one time that the chest of drawers Peggy and Anne left behind had belonged to Shirley Gallahan. I used it in Cincinnati, Pippa Passes, Kentucky, Berea, Kentucky, Euclid, Ohio, and Chardon, Ohio. About 10 years ago we bought a new Amish-built chest of drawers and gave Shirley's away.


Across Sycamore Street from our apartment was the Mansfield House, a commune of about 6-10 people . . . [more about that in another blog entry].


I loved Over-the-Rhine and explored it very thoroughly. Here are some favorite places and memories:


There was a little bakery near where I lived: north across Liberty and a block west to Main Street, then right around the corner on Main Street or possibly E. Clifton. This bakery sold donuts in the early morning right out of the grease for 7 cents a piece! (1971 prices). They were delicious, and police officers, firefighters, and ordinary working folks lined up to buy them. And I did too!


There was a great bluegrass music bar on Main Street near 13th, "Aunt Maudie's Country Garden." They had the best live bluegrass a few nights a week, no cover charge. Usually you'd hear The Stoney Mountain Boys, with Boatwhistle on acoustic bass (his real name was Vernon McIntyre Sr.); Earl Taylor on mandolin; Jim McCall on rhythm guitar; and Junior McIntyre on five-string banjo. They all sang. They were magnificent, maybe the best bluegrass band in the world. I almost got shot at Aunt Maudie’s one time!  but that’s a story for a different time.


There was a fine religious bookstore on the east side of Vine Street about a hundred feet north of Liberty. It might have been called St. Francis Bookstore. I loved to browse in this progressive book shop and I remember well the highly informed store manager (her name might have been Mary).


A block or two north of the bookstore was Stenger's Cafe. I especially remember an occasional treat they had--homemade potato pancakes. They were fabulous. They also had wonderful, affordable roast beef sandwiches. I can still picture the proprietor, though I can’t remember his name. This was a great neighborhood bar and restaurant.


Across the street from Stenger's was Bolte's. They sold dried beans, peas, lentils, whole wheat flour, spices, herbs, things like that. The prices were good and the quality was good. I don’t know how they could sell enough to stay in business. What a great resource for the community!


A block west of Bolte's was The Findlay Market. I did shop there often enough. Sometimes we’d go there at the end of the day when they were practically giving away unsold fruit and vegetables. This market was something like Cleveland’s West Side Market. The vendors were local and many had been there for years.


The Empire Theater, near the corner of Vine and Liberty. You might think I’m crazy for including this funky place. Joanie Levy first took the Mansfield/Orchard Street gang there to see Clint Eastwood Spaghetti Westerns. The nice thing about this theatre is that it was air-conditioned. OTR was sweltering in the summer, and this was a place you could get relief for a couple hours. Unfortunately, your feet stuck to the floor in this theatre! Oh well . . .


12th Street Clinic. Also known as “Pilot City Health Service,” PCHS was a model for the future of medicine. It was a small but comprehensive clinic with general-practice physicians, a dentist, social workers, sanitarians, visiting nurses and aides, and a health education department (that’s where I worked 1971-73). Dale White DDS was the best dentist around. The social workers, Tom DeFolco and Mark were excellent (Tom later became a priest). I just recently heard of some unfortunate attitudes some of the doctors and nurses had, discouraging breastfeeding. That must have been an attitude of that era. It was unfortunate but not universal at PCHS. I know that because I assisted Becky Meyers, RN in teaching a class for new and expectant parents, and we promoted breastfeeding. The 12th Street Clinic had fees based on the ability to pay, a sliding scale, and was led by Dr. Joe Alter, who, I believe, had been a Conscientious Objector because of his Quaker beliefs during World War II. He was a terrific leader.


The Bank Cafe, 12th Street and Vine. This was an ordinary buffet-style restaurant, very busy, full of life. It was inexpensive and occasionally I’d get a hamburger there. I’d order it with everything on it, and the waiter would yell to the cook, “Burger through the garden!”


Washington Park. I walked through Washington Park (at 12th Street, between Elm and Race Streets) every day for a couple years when I worked at the 12th Street Clinic. Back in the early 1970s there were lots of alcoholics hanging around the park and I saw some unfortunate incidents there. Later, I attended some political demonstrations in the park, the last one being a memorial for Buddy Grey circa November 1996. That was the last time I saw Maurice McCrackin. I think I saw Kathleen Prudence there that day too.


Music Hall. This, of course, is the home of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. It must be the most impressive building in OTR, and, completed in 1878, kept hundreds of bricklayers, masons, plasterers, painters, woodworkers, and other craftspeople busy for years creating this master work. For a long time this was probably one of the few connections between Cincinnati’s upper-middle class and OTR. That, of course, has changed with the astonishing gentrification of OTR that’s been going on for many years now.


Seventh Seal Bar. This was a very strange bar on McMicken Street in OTR run by a fellow named Ted (for some reason I think he was a former priest). This was Ken Przybylski’s favorite bar and I was in there many times with the Mansfield House/Orchard Street folks. There was nothing particularly memorable about it except that I was there with my friends. And it had a strange name, I think from a famous art film by Ingmar Bergman.


Old St. Mary’s. St. Mary’s might be the oldest or one of the oldest Catholic churches in Cincinnati (built 1841). I only went to mass there a couple times (and I believe they had mass in English, German, and Italian!). St. Mary’s was also the place where we went when we were “jumping” for Meals on Wheels, so it served to a certain extent as a social center for the neighborhood. About a block from the church was the Bible Center, which became for a while a Drop-In Center for many folks in the OTR area. I’ve been working with Homeless folks many years in Painesville, Ohio, up in Lake County, and a drop-in center is about the most needed thing for homeless people. They often have nowhere to go during the day and during bad weather. 


Old St. Paul’s. I was never in St. Paul’s Church in the Pendleton area of OTR when it was an active church. But I was there plenty of times after it had been decommissioned. I believe Jim Tarbell had been allowed to oversee the church and its incredible rectory. I occasionally slept at the rectory when I was between apartments, and I did some painting and plastering work there with Jack Shereda in the mid 1970s. I remember strtipping off about ten layers of old wallpaper before patching the plaster (Jack’s specialty) and painting. I especially remember the incredible bathrooms and showers in the old rectory, with multiple showerheads. It struck me that these priests lived at a level of luxury unknown to the regular folks in the neighborhood. Around 1976 we celebrated a wedding in the decommissioned church, that of Chris and Linda Cotter. I believe Rev. Hilaire Valiquette was the celebrant (in the de-commissioned church!). The reception party took place right afterwards in the church and the rooms behind the tabernacle. It was a fun and joyous event, and much alcohol was consumed. The highlight of the night was Dick Crowley’s attempt to recite a Pablo Neruda poem, “I Body of a Woman.” Dick intended it seriously, but his recitation was met with howls of laughter. Gee, I really miss the Dick Crowley I knew back in the 1970s. What a guy! One other thing just came to mind about St. Paul’s. There was a Ravi Shankar concert held there around 1976. I lived very close by, but didn’t have the ten bucks needed to attend the concert.


I realize my list is strange and eclectic. It probably reflects the point-of-view of an unmarried man in his twenties, which I was. My friends who were married or had children would almost certainly have a different list. And this list doesn’t talk much about the most important and remarkable thing about OTR, the people that lived and worked there.


Key to Patricia (Patsy) Harman's Nonfiction Memoir "Arms Wide Open"



 Key to Patsy Harman’s “Arms Wide Open.” Patsy's book is like a "roman-a-clef." It's a mix of fiction and non-fiction, with the characters' names changed and some actions and places slightly fictionalized.


These are my best guesses:


Patsy Patsy Harman, who I knew circa 1974 as Patsy Sun, partner at that time with Bob Sun, now known as Robin Wilson.


Mica Kaya, son of Patsy and Bob Sun.


Tom Tom Harman, now married to Patsy


Mara Wendy Rawlins

Benny Steve Tuck


Stacy         Robin Wilson, known circa 1974 as Bob Sun


Kaitlin Kerry Grant (later married to Tim Jenkins)

Tall Terry Tim Jenkins, Winona, MN, friend and classmate of Kenny Przybylski.


Tristan John Meyer. Close friend of Barb Siarca.

Annie Barb Siarca, of Willowick, Lake County, Ohio. Now in Montana.


Colin Chuck Matthei, one of the greatest Peacemakers.

From the North Chicago suburbs.


Shanti Diane. From the Dakotas. She gave me her old junker green Dodge, mentioned in the book, on page 103, Chapter 2.


Bro. Lenny Kenny Przybylski, mentioned only briefly on p. 128


Rachel Short, stocky fiddle-playing Jewish girl,

Not a great fiddle player back in 1975.


  • Patsy and Tom currently live in West Virginia.

  • Wendy and Steve also live in West Virginia.

  • Robin Wilson still lives near Spencer, West Virginia.

  • Kerry and Tim live near Westby, Wisconsin. I've visited them on the way to Montana.


Kenny, Chuck, and Diane are deceased. Chuck died of thyroid cancer. Diane also died of cancer.



A Couple of New Words of Baby Lucy Maria Margaret

 


“Bee” Is for Lucy at One


As we walked by the bee hives, Lucy said, “Bee!”

and waved both hands in all directions

as the bees buzzed around us.


Earlier that morning, eating blueberries with yogurt,

she said, “Bee!!"

B is for blueberry too,

and Lucy loves them!


Then that evening, eating supper at Paul Bunyan Cafe,

she looked up at the giant head mounted on the wall

and said, “Bee!”

B is for buffalo of course!


"Bee" can be an ant,

a speck on the table,

and a giant buffalo


At age One,

Lucy has a lot of homonyms!


Bob Coughlin / June 26, 2021




Lucy’s Cock-a-Doodle-Doo


When Lucy hears the rooster

trumpet out his boastful cock-a-doodle-doo


she tunes her voice to a higher pitch

and sings out her own doodle-doo,


a beautiful, recognizable word--

that I can’t match up with letters of the Roman alphabet.


Bob Coughlin / July 5, 2021