Soon after leaving the Society of Jesus, Bob Holstein became the focal point for a group of men, mostly former Jesuits but some still in the Society, who came primarily from the California and Oregon Provinces. They gathered periodically to enjoy each other’s company, and to commiserate and support each other, offering healing to one other in their struggles to adapt to life after the Society—moving on in their lives as companions on a shared journey. The stories in this book distill meaningful moments in some of those journeys. These are their attempts to “capture” the key moments, inside or outside the Society, which made them who they are today. Their stories capture in myriad ways what was happening in the church and in the wider world in the latter part of the twentieth century and into the twenty-first. Each story, unique in itself, has universal ramifications not merely for these men, but, hopefully, for everyone who lived through or wants to understand a critical epoch of the Catholic Church and the world it inhabits. Reading these stories of transitions in the lives of a particular, quite specific group of human beings can shed light on what it means for anyone to be human—changing, growing, searching. Don Foran entered the Jesuit novitiate at Sheridan, Oregon, in 1961 and left the Society and the priesthood in November 1978. He earned his PhD in English at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles and a post-doctoral MA in Theology from the Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley. He recently retired from forty-four years of teaching, mostly Literature and Writing. He and his wife Maggie live in Olympia, Washington. His literary, spiritual, and social-justice interests are unfurled at http://donforan.webs.com/.