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During my time in St. Cecelia's I learned a lot about music, and about musicianship and about God particularly my last year in the choir. High school ushered in many challenges, amongst them an episode of deep, excruciating and unshakable depression. I was in pain, I was angry, isolated, inconsolable. Getting out of bed in the morning prompted anxiety attacks that made eating breakfast impossible. Homework was a Herculean task. The only thing I looked forward to was music and not just any music. Music in this place with this organ.
Music is often described as the language of heaven, and in that vein I firmly believe it has the power to articulate our feelings in a way that words cannot. In some of my darkest moments I sat here and while listening and practicing and singing I had the opportunity to connect with God in way that I had never understood before. Singing De Profundis Clamavi or "out of the depths I cry to you Lord" wasn't an exercise in reciting words off the page, it was an act that allowed me to express an almost unrelenting feeling of pain. A triple pianissimo or barely audible line allowed me to speak and then listen for whatever God might say, and a triumphant ending inspired a sense of joy. And while I was in the midst of all this music I couldn't help but feel that the space between the Divine and myself was really quite small. When I sang and when I listened God heard me and I could hear God.
With incredible experiences and friends I graduated and left St. Cecelia's - it was time to head off to college to become a "grown up", an "adult." Surprisingly after school my professional life brought me back to San Diego and like a homing pigeon back to St. Paul's. Now I sing with the allegedly adult choir though I often think we're nearly, if not more, rambunctious than our younger counterparts. While the group is different, the experience is quite similar.
The music here still draws people in and whether they are singing or listening, it can help bind us when we feel shattered, comfort us in moments of sorrow, and help us celebrate in moments of joy. Music gives us a shimmery sliver of the Divine.
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Thank you.
Margret Hernandez
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