All Diocesan Articles

Vacation’s over: How to get Back into the Routine with Joy and Hope

Posted on September 09, 2025 in: News, Reflections

Vacation’s over: How to get Back into the Routine with Joy and Hope

After days of vacation this summer, many people have returned to their usual routines, leaving behind long, peaceful days and that feeling of freedom from schedules or obligations.

The return to school, the early-morning rush, and the many responsibilities of work and family life can sometimes lead to fatigue and even a certain melancholy. However, this time also offers the opportunity to begin anew and embrace Christian joy and hope with faith.

Father Juan José Pérez-Soba, a diocesan priest and professor of family ministry at the Pontifical John Paul II Theological Institute for Marriage and Family Sciences in Rome, offered some reflections on the end of summer and the beginning of fall.

He told ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner, that “our actions arise from the presence of the people we love and therefore create obligations in which we feel that our hearts are filled up.” 

The obligations of the first days of September can be experienced as “a call from the Lord that contains a promise, … encouraging us to walk with the certainty of counting on the presence of God, who is a source of life,” he noted. 

He said that joy and happiness arise when “we discover the true meaning of what we do.” This will depend on whether our desires “are well-oriented toward building a beautiful life.”

“We must know how to recognize this daily: Even if we end up tired because of what we have done, we are joyful because it was beautiful,” he emphasized.

During vacation, we tend to have more free time to pray, read, and even meditate. Asked whether it is also necessary to begin a prayer routine upon returning from summer vacation, the priest said that “routine entails psychological rest from an action repeated many times, which requires less effort.”

“As with all love, habits are formed that we rely on to grow; this is also good for prayer,” he added.

Pérez also noted the communal dimension of prayer: “Where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there in their midst” (Mt 18:20). Thus, he emphasized that “praying as a family is vital.”

Prayer should be included “in small communal acts: meals, getting up from and going to bed; also in parties and celebrations as a spontaneous act of thanksgiving. In this way, we discover that it is the love of God that unites everything,” he added.

 

Living the present and the everyday as a gift

Regarding the tendency in our society to “postpone happiness“ for some future time without fully experiencing the gift of the present, the priest said that “not focusing on what we are doing but on what we have to do next is very exhausting because it makes us twice as tense.”

This, for Pérez, “comes from a results-oriented mentality of wanting to respond to demands and not knowing how to enjoy what we are experiencing, because it isn’t considered a gift.”

He said we should know “how to recognize that God gives great unity to our lives through the blessings we receive from him, which allow us to read our history through God’s eyes.” 

"Thus, the year, as in the liturgy, is not about 'repeating' what is necessary, but rather about celebrating God coming into our lives, a memorial that reveals the newness of love, which in every moment asks us for something original," he said.

The priest emphasized that "happiness does not consist in feeling good about doing something, but in understanding that we remain faithful on God's path, in which, as with the disciples at Emmaus, he sets our hearts on fire by explaining the Scriptures and breaking bread."

"This is the time of grace, which is not an empty time, but rather filled with a presence of love that reminds us of the past, that lives on promises, and that knows how to be grateful for present blessings," he explained.

By Almudena Martínez-Bordiú
ACI Prensa Staff

This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA.


Most Viewed Articles of the Last 30 Days

Venerable Fulton Sheen to Be Beatified

Posted on February 09, 2026 in: News

560

Venerable Fulton Sheen to Be Beatified
A portrait of Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen (1895–1979), New York, 1964. | Credit: Bachrach/Getty Images   The Holy See informed the Diocese of Peoria that the cause for the Venerable Servant of God Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen can proceed to beatification, according to the diocese. The Holy See has officially informed Bishop Louis Tylka of the Diocese of Peoria, Illinois, that the cause for the Venerable Servant of God Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen can proceed to beatification, according to an announcement from the diocese. “The next step in ...

Read More

Pope Proposes Lenten ‘Fast’ from Hurtful Words
Pope Leo XIV urges Catholics to listen more closely to God and others — and to “disarm” their language by fasting from words that wound — in his message for Lent 2026. In his message for Lent 2026, Pope Leo XIV urges Catholics to listen more closely to God and others — and to “disarm” their language by fasting from words that wound. The Lenten season begins Feb. 18 with Ash Wednesday. In the message, released Feb. 13, the pope offers a simple definition of Lent as a time when the Church “invites us to place ...

Read More

Indoor Climbing with Bishop Reidy Brings Faith, Fellowship, and Fun— Despite the Cold
Despite bitter winter temperatures outside, warmth and energy filled Central Rock Gym in Glastonbury on Saturday, February 7, as families and young people from across the Diocese of Norwich gathered for Indoor Climbing with Bishop Reidy. Braving the cold weather to attend, participants were rewarded with an afternoon of movement, encouragement, and joyful connection— both on the climbing walls and off. Hosted at Central Rock Gym in Glastonbury, the event invited climbers of all experience levels to challenge themselves in a supportive, faith-filled environment. Fro...

Read More

Welcome the Elect with a Diocesan Celebration of Faith--February 22, 2026
Rite of Election All parishioners are invited to attend the Rite of Election on Sunday, February 22, 2026, at 2:00 p.m. at the Cathedral of Saint Patrick in Norwich. The liturgy will be celebrated by The Most Reverend Richard F. Reidy, Bishop of Norwich. Your presence is a powerful sign of welcome and encouragement for those preparing to enter or be received into full communion with the Catholic Church. The Rite of Election, celebrated on the First Sunday of Lent, is one of the most moving moments in the Church’s year. During this liturgy, catechumens and candid...

Read More

Registration Open for Women’s Conference: “Dinner with Jesus”
Women of the Diocese are invited to an evening of faith, reflection, and fellowship at the upcoming Women’s Conference, “Dinner with Jesus”, on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, from 5:30–9:00 p.m. at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell. The conference will feature guest speaker Jennifer Hubbard, a Sandy Hook mother and author of Finding Sanctuary. Her memoir was named the Catholic Media Association’s #1 Memoir and offers a powerful witness of faith and hope. “Dinner with Jesus” is designed to give women an opportunity to step away from ...

Read More

Ash Wednesday at the Cathedral: “Return to Me… It Is Not Too Late.”
The Diocese of Norwich entered the holy season of Lent with the celebration of Ash Wednesday Mass at the Cathedral of Saint Patrick, with the Most Reverend Richard F. Reidy as celebrant, concelebrated by Father Ted Tumicki and Father Brian Romanowski. In his homily, Bishop Reidy set the tone for Lent with words that were both direct and deeply hopeful. He began by drawing attention to the opening call of the prophet Joel—words the Church places on our lips at the start of the season: “Return to me.” Bishop Reidy reminded the faithful that those words ar...

Read More

Annual Catholic Appeal

ACA DONATE

English

Español

 

Latest Articles
Ash Wednesday at the Cathedral: “Return to Me… It Is Not Too Late.”
Bishop Reidy to Celebrate Mass for Life and Lead Bus Trip to Connecticut March for Life
Pope Proposes Lenten ‘Fast’ from Hurtful Words
Diocesan Catholic School Basketball Tournament
Roots of Reverence: Observing Lent as a Family
Welcome the Elect with a Diocesan Celebration of Faith--February 22, 2026
Calendar of Parish Events from Around the Diocese
Registration Open for Women’s Conference: “Dinner with Jesus”
Recently Added Galleries
Click to view album: Adventure, Faith and Fellowship with Bishop Reidy
Click to view album: Ninety-Fifth Anniversary of the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the Saint Brendan the Navigator Catholic Community
Click to view album: Episcopal Ordination of Bishop Richard F. Reidy
Click to view album: Students Called to Feed the Hungry
Signup for Weekly Newsletter

     

    Roman Catholic Diocese of Norwich
    201 Broadway
    Norwich, CT 06360-4328
    Phone: 860-887-9294