Friday, 7 February 2025

My friend wanted to ask Brother Thomas something

 A friend wrote to me to ask about Brother Tom, thinking back to the time Father Peregrine was ill, and how Tom felt about visiting him.


My friend wondered, particularly, how this might have affected Tom’s feelings and thoughts about his own process of ageing. She said, I wonder if now that he must be quite a bit older, any of the difficult thoughts and feelings from watching Father Peregrine struggle are affecting him now in relation to his own present and future . . . I wonder if he found a way to be sure of God's love again, after witnessing Father Peregrine's repeated decline and possibly realising he might have to go through something like that himself.


And she mentioned that she feels Scared of how, when changes happen in our physical brains, it affects who we are as people and how we can relate to those around us. Scared of physical dependence and of not being able to move … Scared about how unreal prayer can feel if we are not able to stay being who we are…  


My friend has been involved in caring for someone who has dementia and heart problems, and this has brought these health challenges up close and personal. She wondered what Tom might think about all of this now.


So I went to find him. I tried Abbot John’s atelier, and sure enough Brother Tom was there, on this day of cold wind blowing persistent sleet off the moor. He was occupying himself waxing and polishing the abbot’s boots, primarily because that’s something you can do sitting by the fire on a distinctly dark and gloomy day. 


Abbot John was there too, writing letters. I told them about my friend’s thoughts, and asked the abbot if it would be all right for me to talk with Brother Tom.


“For sure,” said Abbot John. “Shall I go away and leave you in peace to talk by the fire?”


To which Brother Tom immediately responded, “No, thanks, Father! For goodness sake, stay! You know far more about this kind of thing than I do.”


“I think,” said the abbot, “our Little Ghost’s friend wasn’t really looking for advice from a physician, so much as what it all did to you — that time with Peregrine — and how it left you, in your heart, in your soul.”


“Even so,” said Brother Tom. “Just don’t go.”


So Abbot John stayed, listening quietly to what Tom had to say. And I sat on the stones of the hearth which were nice and warm, and not too ashy because Tom had swept them before he got started on the boots.


“Well then,” said Tom, “please will you tell your friend it scares me too. Some of what I saw — the helplessness — I realised that . . . well . . . there’s nothing you can do to lift it away, to ease it. It’s hard to live through, and it’s lonely. Yes. That’s just how it is. It made me do a lot of soul-searching at the time. 

“But then, in fairly short order after all of that, Father William showed up on our doorstep, and that turned me inside out, as I think you know. There was life and death and pain and facing stuff I didn’t want to think about there, as well.

“And those two things kind of melded together. I mean, watching Peregrine suffer so much, and finding the courage to stay with him through it — but then also accepting I was just going to have to live with William and learning to love him. Which I did. 

“There was a turning point, of sorts, the day William tried to kill himself. Brother Stephen ran for Father John, and that left me sitting holding William in my arms to make sure he didn’t choke because he was throwing up. And there was . . . about all that . . . something immediate and something eternal . . . where I realised that all you can ever do is just be there. It’s . . . well . . . you can’t predict what will happen, and life takes you by surprise. You think you know what’s going on and what opinion you hold about it — and then right in front of you it suddenly transforms into something completely unexpected.

“I’ve thought about it all quite a lot, one way and another. I’ve come to see that life is only found in days, in ordinary things, in small encounters. And you know — the best thing I ever did for either of those men was just hug them, hold them. They had enough thoughts of their own and some to spare, they didn’t need mine. I mean, I didn’t need words; only to be there.

“What all that did is bring my focus nearer. Because the only thing we ever have is today. If we don’t live in the here and now, we miss life altogether. The beauty of life is this firelight, the smell of the wood smoke, the feel of soft ash under my hand on the uneven surface of the hearthstone, a mug of ale, some bread fresh made and plenty of butter. That’s . . . that is the love of God to me, and the flame of life. 

“I don’t know what tomorrow will be like. Oh God, yes, I hope I will never be blind or incontinent or mad. I hope I die quietly in my sleep one night, and I don’t mind when. 

“But . . . look . . . life is so sweet, so precious, such a gift. It was William brought that home to me. Holding on to him after we cut him down from the rope. Hugging him after he got in such a mess with our money and he was so full of shame and everything. Doing what we could after Madeleine died. It made me see — grab every moment and love it for what it is. Don’t waste any of it. If this is a day when you can still walk, still hear, still eat; if there’s anything to laugh about, if there’s a robin singing or a blackbird, if there’s the smell of new-mown hay . . . and most of all, if there’s anyone who loves you, if you have a friend  . . . well . . . don’t trade any of that for fear of tomorrow. Don’t let a future that hasn’t even happened rob you of it. Just refuse

“Start close — don’t look too far along the path. If your hands are folded in your lap, then feel your hands, skin on skin, and know that is the blessing of being alive. If there’s a breeze blowing, enjoy the feel of it. If there’s a candle burning, watch the flame . . . and know this is a kind of miracle, God’s good gift that he hoped you would enjoy. I . . . am I talking too much, Father? Am I making sense?”


Abbot John smiled. “Yes, I think so,” he said. “Maybe tell your friend, Little Ghost, to be gentle with herself. Every creature, even a mouse, even a butterfly, is held in the hands of God as if that were his only concern. And so is she. The apostle said God’s grace is made known in human weakness. Whatever happens, he will never let her go. Never.”





12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Your writing always makes me smile.

Pen Wilcock said...

❤️. Thank you. x

Мария said...

I fully support Tom. There is a saying: if they beat us, we will cry. It means that one should not start crying in advance, when nothing bad has happened yet. You should not poison the present with thoughts of a possible terrible future, which is not yet a fact that will come. I think it's a kind of discipline to remove those kinds of thoughts from your head. I think it's impossible not to be afraid, but it's possible not to dwell on fear. I believe that none of us will be sent trials greater than we can bear.

Pen Wilcock said...

100% ❤️

Jackie Rowe said...

So beautifully written Pen. I’m in my 79th year and the question is definitely on my mind. So glad you found Brother Tom!

Pen Wilcock said...

❤️ xx

Em said...

Oh my, I love this. Tom is (and always has been, even when he was younger and hadn't gone through all this) so much better than I am at living in the moment and appreciating it for what it is. This was a good reminder to me.

~Emma

Pen Wilcock said...

Thank you Emma. I love Brother Tom, too. He has a very comforting presence.
About the second, longer comment you sent, with a question for the brothers. I haven't published it here — I'll keep it back until I've had a chance to ask them, then I'll copy it and paste it into its own post. I'm going to ask Father Francis and Father Peregrine as you suggested, but also Father William and Father Felix (I think you haven't yet met Felix), who know all about that subject area. Depending how much they each have to say on the matter, that might extend to four posts (!) so watch this space — a very worthwhile question. xx

Em said...

Ahh, that's fantastic! What a lovely thing to look forward to. And I keep wanting more and more to meet Father Felix. As he's the one who knew much about introspection, and now this, he sounds very relatable a person indeed.

I've been on a personal book-buying pause for a while, because I tend to get books and then get more even if I haven't read what I have yet. So I'm trying to catch up some on what I already own, and I'm a slow reader I'm afraid. I'm also waiting till more of yours are out in the Humilis Hastings republished form, but I want to buy all of them even if it takes me a little while. And I still intend to read them in order, so it might be a bit till I meet Felix. 😭 Aggravating. But something to look forward to!

In the meantime I greatly enjoy reading these snippets. It's so exciting to me when I check your blog on occasion and find a new St Alcuin's post or two.

Pen Wilcock said...

😄 I read slowly too. xx

Anne said...

I'm loving reading these extra insights into these beloved people. When I think of Tom and Peregrine in his later years it is the scene with the bowl of raspberries that hits me again: the realization of how deceptively easy it is to use power to disempower others, even when trying, we think, to help. I have a question, then, for John and, if possible, Peregrine, which is haunting me. How, when you have been elected into a position like Abbot or bishop or any role of authority, do you hold the power given you gently enough to empower rather than disempower others? And how do you stop yourself beginning to take the influence the rule gives you for granted?

Pen Wilcock said...

❤️ Thank you, Anne. I'll ask. x