Pages

Friday, December 03, 2010

Breather

The December symphony madness has begun. Five different rehearsal locations, two different performance sites, five load-ins of the equipment truck (which logically also means five load-outs), seven rehearsals and three performances. All in the next ten days.

This weekend's concert will take place in the largest church in town. A most wonderful building. A glorious setting. And I absolutely hate performing there. Let me rephrase...I hate setting up to perform in there. In spite of being the largest church around, it's not easy to fit the orchestra and chorale in the space allowed. It can be done, but it's cramped, and visually ugly. But the sound is pretty good, and the non-Catholics appreciate any opportunity to see the inside of the Cathedral.

I was asked to meet the symphony's organist there this afternoon (last minute request--like I didn't have other things to get done). There was a dispute about where we wanted to put the organ console versus where the Diocese would allow it to go. He wanted me there early, but I had to work, then had the beginnings of a truck loading scheduled. I told him I could meet him at 3:45. He made a minor complaint that he'd be there earlier to practice, but that he'd come back. As it ended up, the truck loading went smoothly, so I got there about half an hour ahead of time. I didn't see his car, so I decided to just sit in a pew and wait for him.

The church organist was practicing in there, so I stayed off to the side so I wouldn't disturb him. And then the most amazing thing happened. Nothing. Absolutely nothing. I sat there in total serenity. The scent from the pine and fir boughs that made up the Advent wreath was filling the air. The organist was practicing something that sounded French (ah, no one writes organ music quite like the French!). Repeating passages that needed work. Holding long bass notes while adjusting the various buttons and levers on the console to get just the right sound. And I just sat and my mind emptied. I didn't have a conversation with God. I didn't pray. I didn't think about my dad. I didn't think about anything. I didn't doze off. I didn't fidget with my phone. I just sat. All the sadness of the past couple weeks drained out of my head. The stress of the next two weeks disappeared. I didn't even try to mentally follow along with the music being played. I just reveled in the tranquility, the serenity, the peacefulness. I just stared. At nothing in particular. I literally emptied my mind. It was, by far, the most amazing half hour I've had in years.

Finally, I stepped outside to call him, since he was about 10 minutes late. Straight to voice mail. I left a message and went back inside to wait for another 1o minutes more, at the most. It was then that I looked at the organist, and found it to be the guy I was supposed to be meeting in the first place! He had no idea that I'd been there for the past half hour, and I had no idea it was him. We take care of our logistics problem, and I leave.

Maybe God was telling me in His own way to sit down and zone out for a few. I don't know. I do know that if I'd taken another four steps further into the sanctuary when I first got there, I would have been in and out of there in 10 minutes, and I would have missed this wonderful opportunity. That would have been a terrible thing, and I wouldn't have even known...

14 comments:

  1. I enjoyed this post... I think a higher power gives us these moments from time to time.

    ReplyDelete
  2. What a great post. We all need this from time to time, but we so rarely get to or find the time to make it so. I'm glad you were able to revel in nothingness for a time. It helps to keep us grounded, imo.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm glad you got that breather. Given all that has gone on and is to come, you needed an opportunity just be.

    Great post!
    ~Emmy

    ReplyDelete
  4. Very cool that you shared that experience, Os. I'm glad you found a half-hour of tranquility and rejuvenation. Funny how that happened in church.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Yeah, it's those little moments that can make a huge difference. :)

    ReplyDelete
  6. Excellent.
    You achieved a moment of "no mind" that many attempt to get to through meditation. Such a great stress reliever!
    I am glad you were able to experience this and hope that you are able to achieve the same other times in the future when you need to recharge your brain.
    The really cool part is, you were able to do it with music as the catalyst.
    I would ponder on this happening some when time permits. Something important might have been presented that you really needed. Don't read too much into it, just let it happen and you'll figure it out.

    ReplyDelete
  7. That is just aweseome.
    tranquility is soo under rated.

    Take it easy good friend.

    ReplyDelete
  8. BTW... I linked this post as part of Da Count today.

    ReplyDelete
  9. :)
    We all need that time to Reboot Im glad you found yours

    ReplyDelete
  10. I love that you got this time to just be. ((you))

    ReplyDelete
  11. How your moment of peace, of clarity, of being made me smile for you... xx

    ReplyDelete
  12. I really loved this post, especially since you were in such need of that perfect peace you experienced.

    ReplyDelete
  13. It is your busy time isn't it...... come play if you have time for me ;)

    http://chptrtwo.blogspot.com/2010/12/guess-what-is-happening-in-these-pics.html

    ReplyDelete
  14. Ah, moments like that are so fleeting but so needed.

    ReplyDelete