---------------------------------------- The Extremes September 27th, 2017 ---------------------------------------- In an earlier phost I spoke about the wedding and funeral I was facing. I'm back from that long weekend now and I've had time to digest both events. The moments in life marked by extreme emotion stand out from the crowd of memory. I can remember fights from my childhood. I remember breakups and exhilarating moments of pure joy. It makes sense, of course. Why would we remember all the mundane stuff with the same clarity as the things that got our hearts pumping? I'm sure there's some biological stuff in it too. This weekend was a combination of extreme sadness and extreme joy with nothing to cushion one from the other except a seven hour drive. The viewing was first. A close friend lost his father unexpectedly. My own dad is in pretty bad shape, health-wise, and my mind is already thinking about the soon-to-come. This viewing gave me a taste of it. I was a Jesuit novice in the not-too-distant past. I worked in hospice care there, as one of several apostolic works. I remember the first time I went to the hospice, not knowing what I'd be asked to do or what the experience would be like. If you had stopped me then and asked to guess, I'd have talked about sadness, grief, and the consolation of family. Instead I found a place of profound joy. I don't think I can do it justice through words, but to give you a sense of what it was like you need to think about the catharsis of a really good cry. When you can express yourself without any reservation and be completely and totally authentic, and when you can share that experience with another person without any care to judgement there's an incredible weight that lifts. It's a weight of our own making and our own relationships, and one that is arguably necessary for day-to-day living. It's also a weight that goes away in the "moments that matter". Funerals, viewings, in the face of present tragedy and loss when we are all reminded of our frailty and limitations, of our own transience and we cling to each other like floating wreckage upon an endless sea; there is no need for facade. We are authentic and the experience we have is one of joy. That's what happened at the viewing. In the midst of an unarguably tragic loss, in the center of the grieving of family and friends, the coming together in authentic love for the man, gone, and for the support of those surviving was one of love. There was opportunity to express that love in words and in presence. The wedding, likewise, was a testament to love through presence and sharing. Authenticity in joy! In sharing of unbelievable happiness written across faces that never expected it, that same weight lifted. I asked you to spend 30 seconds with me in the last phost to imagine what those feelings might bring. Try it again with what I've shared and see if you can find a hint of your own true authentic joy creeping out of the shadows for a moment.