This Wednesday, March 5, the 40- day season of Lent begins. We might and can say that we begin the observance of Lent. All of us are born with different levels of observation – that goes without saying – yet it is possible, and sometimes quite necessary, to sharpen our observation of various aspects of our lives. If we consider ourselves by virtue of our Baptism and the other Sacraments, members of the Church, then our ongoing observance of what it is that we do as Catholics is crucial and necessary, especially if we are going to be and feel united with our brothers and sisters as true members of the Catholic – which means universal – Church. The Lenten observances bring us to that awareness each year and are not so hard to remember or to do if we simply sharpen our observation skills when it comes what we are to be about during Lent as the Church – the Body of Christ on earth today. As a reminder, Ash Wednesday and all the Fridays of Lent, including Good Friday, are days of abstinence from beef, poultry, pork and game meats. In addition, on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday, the Church asks us to fast as well – to eat only one full meal with two or more smaller portions eaten on those days, as our health/diet situations allow, so that we might be aware of Jesus’ sacrifice for us and share in that sacrifice in this traditional practice of the Church. Lenten practices/ observances are not complicated today, as some may remember from decades past, and what I have spelled out above is the current observance/practice that Rome encourages us to participate in as best we can. We are the ones who benefit from these observances - these practices that have been part of our Catholic heritage for so many centuries. Being a follower of Jesus, a Catholic Christian especially, is not a “do-your-own-thing” way of relating to the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. The season of Lent unites us in our diversity and calls us to observances that have proven manageable and doable all these years.