This past Mother’s Day at Mass, the priest said, “Would all the mothers please stand? And that includes not just those who have physically given birth, but all those who are spiritual mothers.”

I myself was not up to mothering. Can anyone imagine a more heroic, difficult, higher calling? I bow before the steady nerves, courage, drive, patience, long-suffering, forbearance, discernment; the capacity for love and the capacity for suffering that even “bad” mothers demonstrate!

I’m not a mother but I admire and support mothers, I have the heart of a mother, and I’m “mother,” in my way, to many.

I owe that to the Church, to Christ, and so I stood with the others.

Always, no matter our station in life, the Church gives us a place at the table. Consequently, I don’t feel oppressed. I don’t feel angry. I don’t feel perpetually injured, victimized, and aggrieved. I feel more or less like I’m doing what I was put on earth to do.

I find it increasingly difficult to carve out a place for myself — as a woman, as a human being — in contemporary culture. For any man or woman who feels the same — take my new collection of essays, "Ravished: Notes on Womanhood." And eat.

Here’s an excerpt.

The Eighth Station of the Cross

“I grew up on the coast of New Hampshire. Since childhood, I’ve been captivated by the ocean. Since childhood, I’ve felt compelled by the infinite horizon.

“My first kiss was near the ocean.

“I first told a guy “I love you” while walking along the shore of the ocean.

“In 1990, newly sober, newly married, I moved to another ocean, another shore. In 1996, I converted to Catholicism and came into the Church. In 1999, my father died. In 2000, I was diagnosed with breast cancer. In 2001, I was divorced and had my marriage annulled. In 2010, I sought healing for the abortions I’d had over 20 years before. In 2012, my mother died.

“For years, I’d set aside an hour or two each morning for prayer. I read, pondered, and wrote about the Way, the Truth, and the Life of Christ. I devoted many hours a week to staying sober and helping another alcoholic achieve sobriety.

“And in July 2014, I decided to go back to the coast of Massachusetts, general site of my deepest childhood, sexual, and emotional wounds. I signed up to do a 30-day retreat, based on the spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola.

“A few days in, I was walking a footpath in the woods when I came upon the Stations of the Cross.

“I’d prayed the Stations many times over the years, usually during Lent, without paying especially close attention. But recently I’d felt moved to buy a little laminated card, imprinted with the appropriate numbers and prayers, which I happened to be carrying in my back pocket. 

“I’d thought, dimly, to commit all 14 to memory. This particular Stations consisted of simple, open-faced wooden boxes with small metal bas-reliefs: Station One: Jesus Is Condemned to Death. Station Two: Jesus Takes Up His Cross.

“Each was nailed to a tree and the trees formed a double row: a kind of grassy allée that ran down to the ocean. The woods were alive with the sound of birdsong, the skittering of small mammals, the low hum of insects.

“So I had my little card, and I was going along, praying. And at Station Eight — “Jesus Speaks to the Women” — I was unexpectedly overcome. Between the second and third time that he fell, Jesus spoke to the women.

"The eighth station: Jesus meets the women of Jerusalem," from Ted DeGrazia's Way of the Cross series on exhibit at the DeGrazia Gallery in the Sun in Tucson, AZ. (CATHOLIC NEWS SERVICE/NANCY WIECHEC)

“I’d never reflected that, according to tradition, the women were the last people Christ met before he fell to the ground beneath his burden, was stripped of his garments, and was nailed to the cross. 

“We all like to look good in front of the opposite sex, but at that point he would have been at his absolute worst: his weakest, his most vulnerable, his most physically grotesque. And yet he stopped. He spoke to the women.

“Who better understood weakness, vulnerability, the fear of looking unattractive, the desire to love and be loved, than Jesus? Who, in other words, better understood women than Christ?

Jesus spoke to the women. He was speaking still. He’d been speaking to me, personally, all along.

“The intensity of my reaction shocked me. I felt a stab of melting intimacy, a rock-bottom sense that as an aging, childless, spouseless woman, I was wanted and needed and loved, by him at least, if not by the world.

“It may have been the first time I definitively realized that my long, long pilgrimage toward purity of heart, purity of motives, the slow burning away of all in me that was self-absorbed, self-obsessed, and selfish was not just about me; not even primarily about me.

“It was the moment I realized that for over two decades, I’d been writing about and trying to work out what it means to be a woman walking with Christ.

“It was the moment I thought: I should collect those thoughts into a book.

“A week later, I noticed a huge bull’s-eye rash on my stomach, went to the ER, and was diagnosed with Lyme disease.

“Very funny, Jesus. I’m pretty sure that deer tick bit me while I was kneeling in the woods, weeping.”

Heather King is a blogger, speaker and the author of several books. For more, visit heather-king.com.

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