I am known at times to be far too much of a sentimentalist,
and it has also been said of me that my fixation with all things involving the male
species and their flying machines (I chose my first school project to be about
Orville and Wilbur Wright as I loved the idea of not one, but two aviation
pioneers!) has, at times, bordered on the obsessive. However, mid-life hormones aside, what I find
so wonderful about these movies is the common thread – individuals with a love
for speed, danger, excitement and of course, living on the edge – something history
has shown to me that I am clearly far too fond of.
To digress slightly, I decided at the beginning of this year
that it was time for me to return to the early morning, very traditional, said
(not sung) Eucharist at the local church.
It had been so long since I had taken communion that if I were Catholic
and had to state how much time has passed since my last confession, the priest
would most certainly need some smelling salts in order to be revived.
On the back of the fact that the Pearl Harbor film is nearly
three hours in length, and involved some tears on my part over the affairs of
the heart involved for the characters, I arrived at church this morning at
06h55 looking red eyed and I dare say a touch disheveled.
Amazingly, I was greeted with long lost hugs of affection by
members of the parish I felt sure would never remember me, but, astoundingly,
they all did. They are wonderful people,
and they have been attending the old stone house of worship for a long, long
time. It became apparent to me whilst I sat
listening to the sermon, that I had most definitely brought the average age of
the congregation down by about seventy four years.
Biological statistics aside, when I left, I was approached
by a senior citizen and asked if I would consider being a “Sides Person” to
help out with collections and directing the congregation towards the correct
place for communion etc. I did not want
to be impolite, so I said I would “think about it.” The very nice gentleman said to me, “but we
need you!” Suddenly Uncle Sam’s army
poster flashed before my eyes, and I felt, for a Nano-second, like I was
signing up to be one of the gorgeous nurses, like Kate Beckinsale, out of none
other than Pearl Harbor.
I managed to escape without signing on a dotted line, but I remembered
vividly a line in this very movie in which Alec Baldwin says of the war pilots
that there “is no such dedicated a soul as that of a volunteer.” It is so true isn’t it? If one volunteers to do something, it means
you really do want to help out in that particular area, and correspondingly, it
means that as a soul, you must be so dedicated to the cause.
I am still sitting on the church fence trying to decide
whether to sign up or not, so I shall sleep on it, without watching any lengthy
movies, in order to make my final decision.
All this being said, two things that rest with me are: decades may pass between visits to the local
church, but in many instances, familiar, kind and welcoming faces remain where
last you saw them; and secondly, I have decided to really go after that Kate
Beckinsale look, and once I have it, it may be time to try and find my own
Orville Wright.
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