Sunday, December 17, 2017

O Christmas Tree.....





Here we are, two days to go.  I'm sure it will feel like two weeks.  From what I am hearing, there may not be too many students at school on Tuesday.  I'm actually not sure why, but expect fewer students.  Tuesday morning is Polar Express for grades K-4 and Christmas Breakfast for grades 5-8.  Gina will be playing the videos created by her video production club at 2:00 p.m. Tuesday afternoon and will send out directions for how to view. 

Thank you Heather, Kelly, Paula, and Derrick for a great Christmas Show!!!  Thank you Charles and Jose for making the sound happen!!  Who knew we had such talent in our students.  Great acting and singing!! 

I hope everyone has a restful and joyous Christmas with your friends and family. 

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Sunday, December 10, 2017

O Come O Come Emmanuel

As we enter the Second Week of Advent, let us remember to pause in the midst of the usual Christmas chaos and thank the Lord for sending his Son so that we may be saved.  Let us also thank the Lord for the beautiful gift he brought to the Wiles home this past week.  We have much to be thankful for.  Come Jesus, come quickly!

Thank you Julianne for putting together our Advent Retreat.  We truly are blessed to have Julianne take on these extra tasks that there is never enough time to get to.  By doing the framework for these days, it allows teachers the time to focus on creating one activity to share.  I walked through the school a number of times throughout the day and I would like to share my thoughts of how we can improve our retreat days.  I first would like to share something that Fr. Dermot said to me in August when we were talking about our Faculty Retreat at the start of the year.  After I talked a little about it, he asked me if it was a retreat or a workshop.  Those words keep coming back to me, particularly as I walked through the school on Friday.  The framework for a reflective retreat was there, but we may have strayed from the path at times.  Advent is a joyous time and the retreats tend to be more lively than during Lent, but here are some things to think about for the Lent retreat, a time when we should quiet our hearts:

  • No one should be talking above a whisper.  Retreat days should be a time when we stay very quiet and move toward having a close, personal relationship with Christ.  
  • Hands-on activities are necessary, particularly for younger students.  However, there should always be a time for prayer, meditation, or reflection that goes with the activity.  One idea I've used is to make a retreat journal for each child that we would go back to throughout the day so that students could make connections and understand the meaning behind what we are doing.
  • Activities should be making, creating, interacting.  Students should not be coloring worksheets or playing games.  They should be making advent wreaths, jesse trees, mangers, etc. to take home and share with their families.  They should be reading the bible and acting out how the story might look today in modern times, or create a visual art or song based on a bible story.  They could make and pray the Advent stations of the cross.  
  • Be prepared for everyone moment of the retreat so that transitions happen smoothly and quietly.  
  • We should also do everything possible to ensure that we do not use subs on a retreat day.
Many of these things were happening on Friday and I did see some great things.  I also understand that retreats are easier as they students get older.  I also know that sometimes things are beyond our control like a hurricane that moved the Early Childhood conference to the day of our retreat.  I only offer these thoughts as some things to think about for the next retreat, especially as we struggle to bring the children closer to Christ.  If we can make that relationship stronger, the begging and pleading at home to be taken to Mass on Sunday will also grow stronger.  

You may want to show the powerpoint from this weekend at church to your class.  Thank you Gina for helping me (or pretty much doing it while I watched) with the presentation.  Your students might enjoy seeing themselves.  It will be on Facebook Monday and maybe we can show it on the Morning Show.  

This week I will be gone Wednesday morning at a principal's meeting.  Monday is a Holy Card free dress.  The Christmas Show is Friday.  Friday is also a half-day and you are free to leave after carline.  The calendar was still showing Parish Christmas party for Friday afternoon but we took it off.  That was our original plan back in May but it has been replaced by our Epiphany Party.  Please be sure you have responded to the invitation by indicating how many and the ages of your children if you are bringing them.  If something is preventing you from attending, please come talk to me first before replying no.  Thank you and have a Blessed week.  

Sunday, December 3, 2017

Happy New Year


advent-usa.jpg (750×501)The First Sunday of Advent ushers in the new Liturgical Year.  This year is Year B in the Lectionary.  As we prepare our hearts to receive the gift of Jesus' birth, let us pray for confidence in God's love for us and trust in his power to do what is best for us.  At my retreat on Friday I heard many things that spoke to me.  In particular was the idea of emptying ourselves so that God can penetrate our hearts.  In order for that to happen we need to let go of all our worries and live in the moment.  Buddhist Mindfulness - intentional, deliberate focus on the present - is one way to do this.  The Buddha said, "Do not dwell in the past, do not dream of the future, concentrate the mind on the present moment."  How difficult a thing this is for us to do, particularly in our profession.  
Another way to empty ourselves for the Lord is by following St. Teresa's idea of Contemplative Prayer.  Contemplation is a great act of love. We desire God as God desires us. We give our hearts to God, and it is within our hearts that we encounter God in his Son through the promptings of the Holy Spirit. A person puts aside the self—the “me”—and sees everything in terms of the gospel and the unconditional compassion of Jesus Christ. It requires few if any words.  Here is a suggestion from the Catechism of the Catholic Church on how to proceed with Contemplative Prayer:

  • Find a quiet place, you can have music playing
  • Find a comfortable position, breathe and quiet yourself
  • Focus your attention on an image of Jesus
  • Acknowledge the things that are trying to get your attention---thoughts, worries, plans, aches and pains, sights and sounds around you.
  • Slowly let these things go.
  • In your silence and stillness, let God’s Spirit within you make itself known.
  • Do not expect anything to “happen”; put yourself in God’s hands.  
And finally I would like to share a quote from Blaise Pascal for you to think about, "The heart has its reasons which reason knows nothing of."  When I realized what it was saying, it made so many things clear.  Maybe it will speak to you too.

The representative from our cleaning company will be here Tuesday for a walk-thru.  If there is something you would like me to point out or tell him, let me know.  I am considering a new cleaning company for the school.  I met with the rep and had a good feeling about the work this company does.  One plus is that they are very familiar with cleaning schools.  If there is something you need done in your classroom over Christmas break, please let me know by Friday.  Hopefully the new AC will be installed over break.  This should alleviate some of the leak issues we have been having.  I'm also hoping the awning will be installed over break and we ordered 4 new picnic tables for the playground thanks to the Angel's paddle item.  Another addition to the property will be 4 more speed bumps in the parking lot which hopefully will slow down drivers who currently race through the lot.  Allen and I are working on getting these ordered.  The Lord is good!

Please be sure to pass out envelopes on Friday and remind students that this weekend coming up is the weekend to wear their uniform and grab a holy card for free dress.  Thank you for all you do and I am praying that everyone experiences a meaningful retreat this Friday.  

Happy Gaudete Sunday

 What is Gaudete Sunday?  The day when anyone can wear pink and it's cool.  It's also the Sunday we rejoice.  For two weeks, we have...