Creative Nonfiction

A Righteous Bender

Calix meus inebrians quam praeclarus est!
(My chalice which inebriateth me, how goodly is it!)
—LATIN VULGATE, PSALM 22 (DOUAY-RHEIMS TRANSLATION)

THE LORD OF APRIL

It was strange, but in the pre-service prayer that Sunday, as I began to feel the crushing presence of God and to slip into the intense spiritual intoxication we commonly call “speaking in tongues”—as my prayers in English began to give way to a language that, in sound, could be every language, or none—the words that came to my mind were not from the Bible. I sensed these words so strongly and clearly, it was as if someone was whispering them in my ear. But they didn’t belong to any prophet or apostle. Instead, the words that came to my mind were Chaucer’s: Whan that Aprill with his shoures soote / The droghte of March hath perced to the roote.…

I had often heard my husband shout these words to himself as he walked back and forth in our tiny apartment and prepared to teach The Canterbury Tales to his high school English students. But this time, a jolt ran through me as I felt them and considered their meaning—“When April with its sweet-smelling showers has pierced the drought of March to the root.…” I began to cry out aloud. My mouth could not form familiar words.

My mouth was out of my control. Whatever words were coming out of me at that point, they meant this: pierce through. I was really starting to slip now—three sheets to the wind, in a holy way. Rhythmic sounds, very like a language, yet unintelligible to me, began to gush out of me like water out of a broken water main. And then I was fully gone. Under the influence of an intoxicating God.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Creative Nonfiction

Creative Nonfiction4 min read
Battling the Book
I have just finished writing a book that tells the story of the evolution of creative nonfiction, as I saw it and lived it. And now, as I write this in late July, a couple of weeks after sending the manuscript off to my publisher, I am beginning to f
Creative Nonfiction13 min read
Dismantling the Patriarchy by Reclaiming Her Voice
In 2010, Elissa Bassist, then age twenty-six, wrote to Cheryl Strayed, a.k.a. Sugar from the Rumpus advice column Dear Sugar. She asked, “How do I reach the page when I can’t lift my face off the bed? … How does a woman get up and become the writer s
Creative Nonfiction11 min read
Silver Spaceships
Push open the high school doors during lunch hour and breathe in the salty-sweet air of Burger King and Taco Bell and Starbucks, the delicious temptations of the franchised suburbs. Behind you, forever behind you, the cafeteria food is as appetizing

Related Books & Audiobooks