This Monday begins the last week of high school for my son. Friday is his official final day of secondary education.
Now, my son acts all tough; he doesn’t really reveal his emotions all that much. But I can tell he’s sensing a huge shift coming in his life. I remember that shift from “I’m in high school” to “Holy shit! I’m an adult!” It was not an easy transition for me. Even today, I still don’t know what I want to be when (if?) I grow up.
When you devote so much of your life to something, you feel the loss of that something acutely, whether it’s a school or person or career. I enjoyed my high school days. Enjoyed my classmates and classes. Sure, there were challenges, but those challenges were incidental compared to some of the shit I’ve gone through since getting my diploma. Devotion is easier when you’re younger. There’s not so much clutter in your noggin. The path seems clearer.
Marie Howe reflects on devotion . . .
Without Devotion
by: Marie Howe
Cut loose, without devotion, a man becomes a comic.
His antics are passed
around the family table and mimicked so well, years
later the family still laughs.
Without devotion, any life becomes a stranger’s story
told and told again to help another sleep
or live. And it is possible
in the murmuring din of that collective loyalty
for the body to forget what it once loved.
A mouth on the mouth becomes a story mouth.
It’s what they think they knew—what the body knew
alone, better than it ever knew anything.
Without devotion, his every gesture—
how he slouched in the family pantry, his fingers
curled into a fist, the small things he said
while waiting for water to boil—
becomes potentially hilarious. Lucky for him
the body, sometimes, refuses translation,
that often it will speak, secretly,
in its own voice, and insist, haplessly,
on its acquired tastes. Without devotion, it might
stand among them and listen, laughing,
but look, how the body clenches,
as the much discussed smoke intermittently clears.
It has remembered the man standing, wearing
his winter coat.
Watch how it tears from the table, yapping, ferocious
in its stupid inarticulate joy.
Howe is right. Without devotion, most things become trivial or ridiculous. I’m a church organist/accompanist. If I don’t devote myself to several hours of practice each week, I know the results will be hilarious. Or horrendous. Either way, it will have people telling stories for quite a while.
I don’t think my son will have as difficult a transition to college next fall as I had when I was 17. My son’s been taking college classes since his junior year of high school. This past semester, he took an asynchronous online cyber security course. That means that the entire class was virtual, with no in-class meetings. My son pretty much had to teach himself everything, with email guidance from his instructor. He had most of the semester’s work completed within the first month. After that, he just had a research paper to write. And he never came to me for help or advice.
Here’s how I know my son is going to do alright transitioning to college in September: he got an A in the asynchronous class, and the instructor reached out to my son’s advisor to say my son was one of the best students he’s had in years. My son devoted himself to doing well in the class, and that devotion payed off.
As most of my faithful disciples know, my son really struggled in elementary and middle school. Lots of bullying. Lots of fights and visits to the principal’s office. Five years ago, I wasn’t even sure my son was going to graduate—he hated school that much. He just doesn’t learn the way most kids do. And he struggled with suicidal depression and ADHD, as well. By the time he hit eighth grade, he’d already been labeled a “bad kid.” My wife and I had to make a change for our son, or he would have suffered for four years (if he didn’t drop out completely).
So, we enrolled him in a local alternative high school. He got a 4.0 GPA the first semester of his freshman year. He went from almost failing every course in middle school to being an honor roll student his whole high school career. That sad, isolated, and angry adolescent has became a happy, social, and accomplished young adult.
Devotion pays off. My wife and I were devoted to helping our son succeed. My son was devoted to doing well in school (once he was in an educational environment where he felt safe and supported). Without devotion, I don’t think I’d be sending out graduation announcements this week. My son is one of the resilient people I know, even during his traumatic middle school years. He could have simply given up on education, but he didn’t. He stuck it out and found a place where he was accepted and respected.
CUE: “Pomp and Circumstance”
And now, in a little over a week, he’s going to be walking into an auditorium in cap and gown, and he’s going to walk out with a diploma in his hand.
Saint Marty wrote a poem about resilience for tonight . . .
Midnight Thunderstorm
by: Martin Achatz
1.
Nobody thought the radiated soil
of Hiroshima would green again,
predicted years of charcoal and hunger.
Yet, mere months after the bomb, oleander
blushed in the ruins, pink as first breath,
reclaiming ashes from armageddon, showing
us all how the world could begin again.
2.
Last night, I listened to a storm
roll through the dark like a panzer,
all wind and rumble, accompanied
by artillery fire rain on the roof.
Flashes of lightning strobed the bedroom
walls and ceiling, and I understood
why ancient people divined famines
and droughts and wars and plagues
from the heavens. This morning,
I smelled mud, saw worms fat and drowned
on the sidewalk. Everything was bejeweled
with water: pines, grasses, mailboxes.
The world was a bright, new diamond.




