Showing posts with label Assisi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Assisi. Show all posts

Friday, September 4, 2015

Francis of Assisi and Wayne Dyer


Miracles come in moments.
Be ready and willing.
~Wayne Dyer

Last Sunday, I opened Facebook and saw a photo of my friend Julie with Wayne Dyer. She said how he had told her that she had a beautiful smile. (She does.) And, as I scrolled down on my phone, more posts about Wayne Dyer, and then I realized he had passed. 

I'd heard him speak in San Diego a few years ago, and although I never met him, I kind of feel like I knew him. I'm sure all those PBS specials had something to do with it.  I know he has "graduated" and everything, but I still wept, like I was loosing an old friend. I'm not sure how many times I've quoted him on my blog but I know I did a whole post of his quotes! (here)

San Rufino Cathedral, Assisi


He talked and wrote a lot about Saint Francis and in fact I remember taping one of his talks many years ago and him saying the Prayer of Saint Francis, and I sat rewinding it and writing it down. (It must have been before Google!)

I know Dyer had a strong connection to Francis so it seemed appropriate to post photos from my various trips to Assisi. I didn't grow up Catholic so I didn't grow up with any real knowledge of the Saint except for garden statues and something about him protecting animals.

Then, in my 30s, I had a series of synchronicities that led me to want to know more about Francis of Assisi. Wayne Dyer played a part in the beginning of that journey, with his talks, and I'm so grateful.

Assisi, steps from the Basilica of San Francesco


My uncle used to wear a wooden "T" or tau cross and he told me it was the cross of Saint Francis. He and my aunt had been to Assisi and had loved it, and then my parents went there and brought back a little silver Saint Francis metal for me.

One morning, probably 9 years ago, while house and dog sitting in Ojai, I was sleeping on my sister's bed. I had opened the sliding glass door to let the dog out and while lying there, I played with the silver little charm of the Saint around my neck. I thought of Francis and how he was so often shown with birds ...  and then I thought how funny it would be if a bird flew in the open door.

View of Assisi from the Hotel Palotta


I fell back asleep for a while and when I woke up, started cleaning up the kitchen and straightening the house, then began packing up my things to head back to Los Angeles.

But then I heard something. 


I couldn't quite figure out where it was coming from. It was a rustling sound. Finally, I looked behind a dining room chair to find a little bird with grey wings and yellow chest, trying to find his way out! I picked him up in a little hand towel and brought him outside onto the picnic table. We both sat there for a long time. I am not sure who was more stunned.


View of the Basilica of Saint Claire from the Rocca Maggiore 



I knew I needed to be on my way to L.A. shortly, but was worried to leave him, since my sister had a cat at the time. I explain that I need to leave (yes, I was talking to the little bird) and that I would hide him up in the bushes, while I loaded the car. If he was still there when I returned, I would take him to a bird rescue. 

Sure enough, after I loaded the car I went back to the hiding spot and he was gone.


Medieval streets of Assisi


After going home to L.A. I ordered a biography of Saint Francis. It was fascinating (if dense) and covered a lot about the middle ages and his life in what is now Italy ... how his father was a fairly wealthy textile merchant, and how he had wanted to be a knight, in his youth. 

While reading his biography one night, I heard a crazy noise coming from outside my front door. I live on the second floor and there is a stairway and landing. When I opened the front door, I found a pigeon had come in and wasn't able to find his way back out! I ran in and grabbed a hand towel, threw it over the bird. 


I carried him out in front of my building, and standing there in my blue and white floral pajamas, opened the towel and watched him as he flew away, out of my hands and into the night sky.  I have lived in the same building for 18 years and a bird had never come into the landing area before ... or since.


Olive grove near San Damiano


I wept through the end of the biography, as a knight on horseback carried the frail and dying Francis, back to Assisi, where he died, just outside the Porziuncola  that he built. I could in vision it all as I read the story, as if it were a memory. If there was ever a doubt I would be traveling to Assisi, it had vanished. I went just before my 40th birthday.

A couple of months after my first visit to Assisi, I was sick in the hospital and I would walk the streets of Assisi, in my mind, and look up and see a little niche in the side of an old stone house, where Francis looked down and watched over the passers by. It was all so vivid in my mind and I felt like I could remember every detail. I've returned twice since then, and love it beyond what I can express in words.


Though the "Prayer of Saint Francis" was not actually penned by Francis, (it showed up anonymously for the first time in a small French Catholic publication in 1912) I think it speaks so much of the spirit of him. Below, a version by the beautiful Sarah McLachlan.

More beautiful Assisi ...

Santa Maria Sopra Minerva on Piazza Commune 


The road to Eremo Carceri 


Remain humble and grateful for all your accomplishment,
and know that a force greater than your ego
is always at work in your life.
~Dr, Wayne W. Dyer

Assisi Street


View from Basilica of Saint Claire up to the Rocca Maggiore fortress


The Rocca Maggiore (first documented back to 1173)


Stop acting as if life is a rehearsal.
Live this day as if it were your last.
The past is over and gone.
The future is now guaranteed.
~Wayne Dyer

Saint Claire at San Damiano


Wayne Dyer, on visiting the Porziuncola chapel in Lower Assisi, from his blog
"I was escorted into the tiny chapel which once was the spiritual meditative home of Saint Francis. I sat down to meditate in this sacred place, and immediately felt bliss and unconditional love entering my energy field. I returned a second day to visit again and confirm how powerful the experience had been and to be certain that it wasn’t just my expectations at work in that chapel. The room radiated unconditional love. It was in the air, so to speak. This little chapel, inside the outer chamber surrounding it, seemed a metaphor for ourselves.  Our body is the outer protective chamber. But deep inside that chamber is a place of perfect harmony and peace, a place to visit often and feel the radiance that abides there.
Here in Lower Assisi is a place where Saint Francis made conscious contact with God, and a place where millions of people have come with love and gratitude to be in the imprint of his energy field. This kind of energy leaves its mark. It remains there to be felt and experienced. Loving radiant energy joyously impacts the energy field of all who enter. In places where spiritual consciousness and unconditional love are practiced, an invisible energy field of grace, beauty, and tenderness remains in the environment."
Wayne Dyer's article "Saint Francis Show's us how to be happy" on Facebook, here.
Sweet fresco on the street, of Francis, Claire and Mother Mary

The Rocca Maggiore at sunset

Outside the Basilica of San Francesco


Upon awakening,
let the words Thank You flow from your lips, 
for this will remind you to begin your day 
with gratitude and compassion.
~Dr. Wayne W. Dyer

Blessings and light

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Last December in Assisi ~ My Last Day in Umbria


Basilica of San Francesco


The sun was shining on my last full day, in Assisi. It was December the 12th, 2012.

I headed to the Basilica for a last look, and to enjoy the life sized nativity. The first time I saw it, it was dark and at first glance, I thought that people were standing on the lawn … 

Isn't it amazing?


Here is Friar Alessandro, who I'd seen in concert, at the beginning of my stay in Assisi. He sings Ave Maria,  in Shepherd's Fields, Bethlehem, for his new Christmas Album "Voice of Joy."



Christmas is not a time nor a season,
but a state of mind.
To cherish peace and goodwill,
to be plenteous in mercy,
is to have the real spirit of Christmas.
~Calvin Coolidge










Piazza Commune







Christmas waves a magic wand
over this world,
and behold,
everything is softer
and more beautiful.
~Norman Vincent Peale




How delicious do all these pastries look?! Unfortunately, I generally would eat so much at my meals I never made it to dessert! Next time!




In Piazza Commune, Santa Maria Sopra Minerva ...



The morning I left Assisi … 


If you missed the Assisi Christmas Festa posts, and want to check them out, click here and here.

One more song, from Friar Alessandro, in Bethlehem …



As always, it was difficult to leave a place that I love so much and feel so connected to. But, I was off on a great new adventure. I was headed to see my friend Vincenzo, in Genoa!


Our hearts grow tender with childhood memories
and love of kindred, and we are better throughout the year 
for having, in spirit,become a child again at Christmas-time.
~Laura Ingalls Wilder


Monday, December 9, 2013

Spectacular Morning Walk to San Damiano ~ Assisi


It's my birthday today, and on this day I'm happy to remember my beautiful visit to Assisi, one year ago, and one of my very favorite places on this planet, San Damiano.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Basilica of Santa Chiara of Assisi
1257-1265


It was a spectacular day in Assisi, and perfect for a walk through the olive groves and down to San Damiano. 

I stopped in to the Basilica of Saint Clare, dedicated to her, and where she was laid to rest, in the crypt. Her sister, Saint Agnes of Assisi, is also buried in the basilica, but in one of the chapels. (It's on the left side of the nave, and there have said to be healing miracles by her grave, which is why, I think, she was also made a Saint.)


No photos are allowed in any part of the church, including the chapel that holds the San Damiano Cross.

The San Damiano Cross was brought up to the basilica, from the monastery, after Clare's death, by her community of Poor Clares, the Franciscan order that she founded. 


Above, you can see the right hand side of the façade, looks different from the rest. It was originally used, in Francis's time, as a hospital, school (which Francis attended) and the original Chapel of San Giorgio. Now it is the Chapel of the Crucifix, where the San Damiano Cross hangs. (More on the cross later.)


Porta Nuova Gate
The "New Gate" 
built in the 14th Century




The walk is stunning, with beautiful views of the countryside, below Assisi. Though it isn't that far, it is downhill, so wear comfy shoes.




We have been called to heal wounds,
unite what has fallen apart
and to bring home those who have lost their way.
~ Francis of Assisi 


On the way down, there is a very small chapel, that unfortunately, I don't know anything about!


Well, I do know that it's been locked every time I have walked past it.


I was able to peak through the locked gates, and through a tiny, open, square in the door, and and take this photo.



Be praised, my Lord, through all your creatures,
especially through my lord Brother Son,
Who brings the day; and you give light through him.
And he is beautiful and radiant in all his splendor!
Of you, Most High, he bears the likeness.
~ Francis of Assisi 
From Canticle of the Creatures


The sign on gnarled tree says to treat yourself to something good and that here you can find the most recent harvest oil! Not sure if it was at the closest house, or what. 




A single sunbeam
is enough to drive away many shadows.
~ Francis of Assisi


Looking out toward Santa Maria degli Angeli, below ...



It must be Brother Leo transcribing the "rule" of the Franciscan Order, from Francis, both seated below the beautiful mosaic.




Almost there ...









My selfie with Francis …



Saint Clare


San Damiano
1205


Altar in the courtyard with Mary, baby Gesù, Francis and Clare ...



When you enter the church, which still a convent, you aren't allowed to take photos, and you are supposed to visit in silence, or at least be very very quiet.

You enter through the Chapel of Saint Jerome, with frescoes by Tiberio D'Assisi (16th Century) then through another tiny chapel with a wooden crucifix by Fra Innocenzo da Palermo (1637)

My sketch detail of Fra Innocenzo's crucifix
graphite on paper



Photo, below courtesy of Wikipedia, public domain photos.
Nave of the main church of San Damiano



What hangs in the church is a replica. As I mentioned, the original cross is up at the Basilica of Saint Clare. The significance of the cross is that when Francis was roaming the area, trying to find himself, he came upon a dilapidated San Damiano church and when he prayed to this cross he heard the word of God. It said to him,"Francis, do you not see that my house is falling into ruin? Go and repair it for me."

San Damiano Cross


This was a huge turning point for Francis, and years he would write his famous Canticle of the Creatures here, in Clare's garden, while she and the sisters nursed him in sickness. 

When Clare left her old life of nobility, and decided to follow Francis, they ended up handing this place over to her (I'm sort of giving you the Cliff's notes here…) and this is where she lived out her life, until her death in 1194 at the age of 59.

Clare's dormitory, San Damiano
Pastel on Paper


Above, is the dormitory where she and the original sisters slept and in the far right corner, a candles burns. This is where miracles occurred and spot where she passed. Many people come to pray for miracles of healing. It is quite bare, always silent and very very peaceful.

We become what we love, 
and who we love, shapes what we become.
~ Clare of Assisi

The beautiful cloister ...


You might be able to make out a sculpture, of Francis, close to the center of the photo, below. From inside, you see it out a window. It is the window where Clare saw Francis for the last time, as the brothers carried his body, after his death, past her window and up to the Chapel of San Giorgio, in Assisi.



This is an incredible place, where Francis spent time both rebuilding the church and convalescing in Clare's garden and Clare spent decades of her life cloistered here. 

There aren't a lot of tourists, and you really feel the history and presence of these two souls … these two Saints. I can't imagine a visit to Assisi, without spending time here. It feels truly blessed and sacred.



To see my springtime post of San Damiano, on this blog, click here.

To read more and see photos of the interior of the Basilica of Santa Chiara, click here.
For more on the San Damiano Cross, click here.
For more on the convent of San Damiano, with more interior photos, 
click here.

He who works with his hands 
is a laborer
He who works with his hands and his head
is a craftsman
He who works with his hands, his head and his heart
is an artist.
~ Francis of Assisi

Blessings and light!