| Be Still | |
| By Robert Royal | |||
| Sunday, 09 August 2009 | |||
| Gentle reader, I am in an undisclosed location, not in the way that Washington bigwigs get whisked away, we’re told, for some national security reason or other. And I haven’t entered the witness protection program – at least not yet, though it may come to that for Christians. Much to my surprise, and I think for the first time since the elder Bush was president, I am actually taking a vacation. I travel a lot in my everyday labors, so for me to be away from home for any reason is a bit too much like work. If I am going to take a few days off – and I almost never can – I’d normally rather be at home. This year my wife convinced me that we really needed some time doing basically nothing, preferably far away from This is the only kind of vacation I care to take. I know lots of people who plan vacations where they “do” things, and I am impressed with the kinds of things human beings have thought up to do. But I am already plenty busy during the rest of the year and prefer the kind of leisure in which you can “loaf and invite the soul,” as Walt Whitman advised. The great Catholic authority on leisure, of course, is Joseph Pieper, whose book Leisure, the Basis of Culture you should read as soon as possible, even if you’ve read it several times already, as I have. He starts with the line in Psalm 46, “Be still and know that I am God,” and it only gets better from there. Pieper wrote this slim little masterpiece in the aftermath of World War II, when he felt that he had to remind the people busily reconstructing For Pieper, play can be timeless, as it is for children, but there are other sides to leisure, too. It has only happened to me rarely, but I’ve noticed that once in a great while, when I am traveling somewhere and am out of a regular routine between duties, or when I’m on a retreat where the press of practical life is lifted for a while, I – just barely – glimpse a different kind of time as somehow both passing and present. Actually, the experience reminds me of some of those long days you remember from childhood that seemed to last forever, as if you were in some eternal story, familiar yet exotic, even though you would be hard pressed to explain how. Almost every adult I know talks about how fast time seems to go. And it does for busy adults, I think, because practical concerns compress the world in some way distantly akin to the way that Einstein says relative velocity alters time and space. It’s not only that we have many things to do in the everyday world; those pressing matters eat up the different sense of time and space – and perhaps the world’s openness to transcendence – that otherwise we might have. A spell in an undisclosed location happily also produces a real and simple proximity to people and things. Human beings have long had a tendency to drift away in imagination from their surroundings, even before cell phones, Internet, and email called for a new kind of E-asceticism. But in the last few years, I’ve noticed that not only do I and other people abstract ourselves a lot from immediate surroundings to keep up with work. You’re also constantly multi-tasking, which is to say you are in several cyberspaces at once, divided in heart and mind, as if otherwise you might miss something and your life would be the poorer. I’ve left all that aside for several days and feel for the moment like a blessedly different being. I don’t think it’s a Romantic fantasy that the Native Americans in this area lived a different sense of time and space. There are petroglyphs, picture writing on rocks, here that really capture their sense of human beings in a setting that’s vast and varied, and yet simple. The Mormons regard Indians as the lost tribes of So, even though I’m in Robert Royal is editor-in-chief of The Catholic Thing, and president of the Faith & Reason Institute in Washington, D.C. His most recent book is The God That Did Not Fail: How Religion Built and Sustains the West. © 2009 The Catholic Thing. All rights reserved. For reprint rights, write to: info at thecatholicthing dot org The Catholic Thing is a forum for intelligent Catholic commentary. Opinions expressed by writers are solely their own.
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