Friday
for us at Yeshiva
University is an early
day to honor the start
of Shabbos. On this
particular Friday, on
Oct. 11, 2024, I'm
closing up shop when
the doorbell
rings—unusual in
our neighborhood
because the delivery
people just drop the
goods and go, and our
neighbors are not ones
to be doorbell
neighborly.
Standing at the door in
all their prim and
casual innocence were
Sister Reese ("like the
candy") and Sister
Serrata (Italian name
but not Italian
herself), Mormons on
their mission in
Ludlow, Massachusetts,
complete with the
requisite courier bags
and tell-tale
black-plastic-with-white-lettering
name tags over their
hearts. (There is an
LDS church nearby,
something we did not
know.)
Cue the inner atheist
in me, who opened with
a rude but polite
product warning label
that I believe nothing
of what they believe,
that I do not believe
in any divinity or
divinities, and that
their pitch would be
lost on me. They took
this in stride (I am
sure mine wasn't the
first such incantation
they had heard); Sister
Reese countered with a
smooth "How did you
come to believe that?"
Which morphed into a
civil discussion about
belief/non-belief and
so on. At one point, I
used "determinism," a
term they were
unfamiliar with. After
I explained it, Sister
Serrata said (I
paraphrase), "We don't
have anything like
that. We believe God
gave us agency and that
there are consequences
for the choices we
make; we have to take
responsibility for
those." To which I
said, "I
agree—that's the
human condition. Just
no need for a god to
direct the flow of any
of that."
But while the
light-touch theological
back-and-forth had its
pleasures, it wasn't
what I really wanted to
hear from them. Just as
they wanted to know how
I came from being
raised Catholic to my
fallen state of
beliefless wandering
(my words, not theirs),
I wanted to know so
much more about what
propelled two human
beings (Reese from
California, Seratta
from Las Vegas) to
member themselves to
the Mormon church
(based on a book of
Joseph Smith's fevered
imaginings) and then
agree to come as
strangers to a strange
land to mission people
with the word (and The
Word) in the hope of
getting them to cross
over from their dark
sides into the light of
the temple.
How would they set down
the narrative of their
lives? How would they
assess their success?
How do they handle
failure and rejection?
What do they make of
the western
Massachusetts native?
What do they do for
fun? How do they see
the world, and how do
they think the world
sees them?
If the Marvelous María
Beatriz had not been in
a session with a
patient, I would have
invited them for tea
and cookies and more
conversation. (It would
have had to be an
herbal tea, which is an
exception to the
general prohibition for
Mormons against not
drinking "hot drinks,"
which include coffee
and regular tea.) But
it would haven't been
right for an elderly
man to invite two young
women into his home
without that other
presence, so I didn't
mention the option.
And then off they went
down the street.
(Later, I asked our
neighbor to the north,
who is married to a
biker and hosts the
Uncaged Lions Club at
her house, if they had
stopped by. She laughed
as she recounted how
they had tried to pry
something out of her
husband—he was
not the kind of
material the angel
Moroni could work and
mold.)
As I watched them walk
away, I realized that
something had changed
in me. Not that long
ago, I would have
relished demolishing
the structure. Now, I
don't really care about
what they believe
because beliefs, and
the act of believing
itself, are mostly
about nonsense:
figments, paracosms,
dioramas, all of it
just-so.
This time, I cared more
about the believers:
how they were trying to
make their way through
a world thick with
danger, indifference,
selfishness, suffering,
sadness in a way that
left themselves intact
and invested and
willing to get out of
bed in the morning.
These stories, these
made-in-the-moment
memoirs we call our
lives—they are
all any of us have to
show for our time on
the earth.
Which brings me to our
wills and trust. We
recently had them
done—finally—and
the thought experiment
of how life proceeds
after the hourglass has
run out is another
variation on the
storytelling that is
also known as "life,"
using the imperfect
information of the
present to create an
imperfect rendition of
an unknowable future
while still being
obligated to be
responsible for all
consequences.
It is all like the man
on the Ed Sullivan show
spinning plates on
bamboo rods until it
isn't that anymore.
Is there relief in the
crashing of the dishes
and the breaking of the
rods? Surcease of
sorrow (thank you,
Edgar Allan)? Reprieve
(no more being at the
mercy, thank you, Alice
Munro)? Or is there
more
profit/pride/blessing
in slowing each plate
down until it drops
into our hands and is
carefully stacked with
all the others, and the
bamboo rods sheaved and
set aside for someone
else to use—going
gentle rather than not
into that good night?
At this point in my
life, with all my
obligations, with all
those that depend on
me, this is how things
appear to me: The
emboss of a wet leaf on
the sidewalk that
evaporates with the
sunlight.
I cannot say if this is
sad or appropriate. All
I can do—all I
must do—is keep
telling the story and
ask others to tell me
theirs until all goes
silent.
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