“Calling His
Name,” written by Seong Youm, the Korean Ambassador to the Holy See, came out
recently. The collection of short essays reveals the author's thoughts,
meditations, vision, and life experiences.
Seong sees everything he has received as a gift. His parents died young, but many warmhearted people helped him and his brothers prepare for the future. Of course, there have been ups and downs.
He was educated to be a priest but dropped out of the seminary to marry a woman who fell in love with him at first sight. They believe in different religions, but they respect each other. Love solves every problem. Seong is not a priest now, but he is doing good work not only for the church but for the country.
Everything is a gift to share with joy, generosity, and gratitude. Sometimes, reality can be hard to accept. It can demand endurance and sacrifice, but difficulties can bring profound wisdom and awakening. If we appreciate the deep meaning underlying each moment, everything can bring enlightenment, even painful things.
I was deeply touched by Seong's life story and insight while reading "Calling His Name." It was a special experience to help edit the book, and I did my best.
I had to remove my womb before Christmas. I cried for a while and felt purified little by little. Tears came out naturally as if they were a gesture of repentance.
"I feel like being a new person! Be happy with me." That was how I felt before the operation. It was a statement of new beginnings.
Then, my community of sisters replied to my words. A sister cheered me up by saying, “Not anybody can say that." Another sister told me, "I'll watch over you."
I felt I was changing inwardly. The doctors put me under anesthesia at 8 a.m., and it was about 5 p.m. when I woke. I had an irregular pulse. My belly hurt deeply, but I was glad to be alive. I felt pain but was grateful for new life through suffering. Everything was new, and I was happy to appreciate the presence of those who are near me. I wrote this poem:
An Empty Palace
For you,
only for you,
I have emptied the
womb of life in spite of many conflicts.
However, not you
but another guest
came
in that intimate
place where nobody could enter.
That was a lump
twisted and
twisted in many folds,
dangling tightly
to the string of attachment.
Without knowing
it,
it has grown
freely to the fullest
while sucking all
kinds of nourishment.
Whenever I shed
tears
because of
unavoidable desire,
that lump was
increased like a snowball.
In the end,
when the identity
of the lump was revealed,
a death sentence
was given to take it all out.
While entrusting
the naked body without any power,
having the belly
cut, deepened by desire and bound by attachment
was such a pain that permeated every corner of the flesh.
There is now
neither the womb
nor the lump.
The inner space is
only empty.
In the very place
where I can’t hold
anything in my hand,
You are coming.
You have hung
about outside the door
for a long time
and wanted me to
be a new person.
At the very moment
when I can't do
anything by myself,
You come to me.
Opening your arms,
You raise me up.
In the very palace where I was imprisoned by the fence of "being different from each other"
and where I
was immersed in the entrusted works,
so many sisters
come and go.
I have become
really a new person.
Love that doesn't
build a house in any place
has come into
being.
Two weeks have passed away since the operation. I hardly rested before, but now I'm
learning to rest and enjoy each moment. I find myself still wearing the old
person, but my mind and vision are being refreshed little by little. I hope the
new year will let my dream to be a new person come true.
The Korea Times/ Thoughts of the Times/ Dec. 30-31, 2006
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