Friday, March 30, 2007

Speaking of Fear.........

There seems to be a real catalyst happening among my favorite bloggers, and, it seems, within my own self. selftaughtartist, misplaced and even penelopetwist (who has been blessed with the coolest name ever) are all exuding a new kind of breath. A new kind of perception. Just new stuff. Spring?

Selftaught and misplaced, both, have been discussing fear and there are these little marbles rolling around themselves in my gut right now as a result. Logically, it's clear that diving into one's fear is a powerful means of release and rising above....of productivity and power. And while I've gone there, it's rarely without having been pushed. And right now, as a result of their inspiration and insight, I feel the little push on my shoulder. The little voice urging "go there" "go there"..... and it's like walking across hot coals sometimes. It's like psycho-analysis.

Pema Chodron, a buddhist nun, talks about Sim and Ripka. Sim is the Tibetan word for "clutter of the mind". It's the buzzing and random dialogue and come-backs one never thought to use on time. It's the hesitation and the passion and the disorganization of thought. A stumbling over and over of just too many things. Our best friends, inspirations and worst enemies all vying for our mental attention. It's the stuff that gives us headaches, keeps us up later than we want to be, and gets on our fucking nerves. It's the stuff that makes our shoulders hurt.

Ripka is space. It's the space between all that clutter. The doorway between the in breath and the out breath. It's the place where the water meets the shore, when it's neither coming nor receeding, ebbing or flowing.

When I"m getting on my own nerves with all that fear and self doubt, when I'm avoiding writing with ridiculous, mundane, useless busy work, it's sometimes just a matter of sitting down, closing my eyes and saying over and over over and over
sim sim sim sim sim sim sim sim sim sim sim sim sim sim sim
and then stop
take a deep breath
notice the space between
and then
R*i*p*k*a
Thanks.

Old People

I have a thing for old people. I love them. Old ladies. Old men. I love their stories, the way their eyes tend to glaze when they tell them. I love how slowly they approach the world, how thoughtfully. I love the way their houses smell.

I think I've just been blessed with an abundance of really cool old people. I grew up on a small one way street where the houses were no more than three feet apart. You could almost reach out one of the alley facing windows and pass that cup of sugar to your neighbor. Really.
Playing hide & seek and tag in that neighborhood was a very intimate experience. Everyone's yard was free game and if they set it "off limits", they were bound to get a banana up their tailpipe or some playdough poop in their mailbox. Revenge was intense. None of the fences were taller than four feet and most of them were chain link, which made for easy hopping. The street was small enough that the only cars coming and going were usually those that belonged to it's residents.

It was a pretty balanced blend of old couples and young families but across the street lived an old man we called Pal. He was round, had a shaved head, a wood workshop in his basement and cherry tomatoes and parsely growing in his backyard. He let us play tv tag in that yard if the street lights went on and we weren't ready to go back inside yet.

But I was his favorite. I spent most of my childhood on his front porch. I'd come outside, he'd whistle and I'd cross the street to assume my place in the green canvas backed chair beside him. He worked the railroad before he retired so he'd sing some of those old songs, repeat the same old jokes but mostly he'd just listen to me talk about growing up. And he gave no bullshit advice, which, to a kid, is a real commodity.

I had a great uncle and a great aunt, who, strangely enough, were brother and sister (respectively) to my grandfather and grandmother (who died too young for me to remember).
They were lovers of words and jingles and my uncle was a naturalist (which I didn't really have the word for until I grew up). All I knew is that he loved telling me about the things that grew up alongside their woods in the yard at their lakehouse. He knew the birds' calls and the night sky. He wrote poems and could bitch the government up one side and down the other. He liked to pinch womens' asses. He refused to be old. The only photo I have of him when he was young is an image of three men standing outside a teepee. He's the tall, lean one in the center with gators on and a heart cut and sewed onto his t-shirt. I think he was the kind of guy who might have stolen my heart. And he did, but it would be years to come.

Our closest neighbor is an old man. His name is Ellis and he grew up in the valley we live in. He's an old widower, stacks his own wood, sugars every spring and has a wooden leg. Well, it's probably not wooden anymore, but it used to be, and Ella likes to say it's still so. He, like Pal, sits on his front porch when the weather allows. He, like my uncle Wilfred, keeps bird feeders and binoculars and knows the comings and goings of the creatures around his place. He likes it when Ella comes and sits on his porch and tells him how it is to be a kid these days. He'll tell her about the days they used to log with draft horses and how sometimes they'd run into bear or mountain lions on the ridge behind our farm. It was on that ridge where he lost his leg in a hunting accident. He was nineteen years old. Hasn't hunted since. He lets her know when we're going to get a storm because his missing leg tells him. And he's always right.

I love the fact that she's got his company. And that she'll know the sweetness that old people can provide. When they go, their stories go with them. If I had more time, I'd spend my days archiving old people's stories.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Post Massage

There's something like an ethereal fire between my shoulderblades right now. The mat I laid on was a heated sheepskin, covered with a flannel sheet. She found clumps of calcium deposits in recesses I didn't even know exist. She did, indeed, beat the piss out of me. But it was productive, for as much as it hurt.

I'm milking this day off. Tea, soup and a seven layer bar at the coffee shop, enjoying wireless hookup as opposed to the snail paced dial-up I deal with in our home.....

I just had lunch with a girlfriend who I used to live with. I was a doula for she and her husband's first birth (and second, come to think of it) and it worked out that around that time, I needed housemates to live with me in the big, beautiful home I had just moved into. Bill and I had just split and I probably wouldn't have thought to have a brand spankin' new family move in with me but they asked if they could and so I agreed.

Ella was only a month old when Bill and I moved into a house with a roommate.... a guy we hardly knew. We hadn't been together real long before we found out we were pregnant and there's really nothing harder on a relationship than introducing parenthood. Throw a housemate into the mix and things just get even stranger. I didn't want to be that monkey wrench for them but they seemed to think it would be a good mix.

And it was.

Except for the fact that her husband contracted chicken pox from Ella that winter and got really sick. Oh, and the fact that they had to deal with my relationship drama that just wouldn't seem to wane. Oh, and the leaky roof, and the driveway as steep as an alpine slide. And the time she came home with her younger sisters to find me in my bedroom with a girlfriend of mine, wasted on red wine and cutting out scarlet letters and pinning them to our t-shirts with safety pins (it was a theatrical kind of therapy~ long story ~ another post). We ended up on the roof that night, chanting goddess songs. I don't know. I don't remember.

I digress.

Pre Massage

In ten minutes I'll drive ten miles up the road to get a massage from a friend of mine. I give anywhere between 7-17 massages a week but rarely get one for myself. And now, with a strained rotator cuff and this kink in my neck, I'm finally taking some care of myself. I know she's going to beat the piss out of me but I am soooo excited to be laying on that table. The right side of my neck is on fire, inflamed from those two cervical vertebrae that insist on pressing against eachother.

I've been in more car accidents that I can count on my two hands (not all of which I was driving) and so my spine, all these years later, still feels the reverberations of those wrecks. I've smashed a friend's windshield with my head, which I'm sure has much to do with the cervical vertebrae bothering me today. Someday, I'll write about the time I crashed into the moving ambulance. Oh, and also about the time I had a head on collision with my VW van, landing in the floor of the passenger seat. That was a doozie. I was driving for both of them.

The sun is shining, the air is cold. I'm off with my hot tea for the drive north.

I'll drive carefully.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Wednesday's post ~ Take III

It figures that once I resolve to post once a day, my first day on is full of trials and tribulations. Thank you so much SelfTaughtArtist for all of your tech support today. I'll get back to you on exactly how to clean my cookies.....
My first post was just four or five clever little paragraphs about the kink in my neck that I woke up with this morning and the funny relationship with the local chiropractor. Nothing spectacular. Mostly just words. The second post I wrote today was grumbling and bitching about not being able to navigate through Blogger successfully. For whatever reason, every time I hit Publish and then View Blog, all that would show up would be the title and the label. Nothing more.
And here I am, almost 8pm, still got a bitch of a kink in my neck and I'm getting ready to crawl in to Ella's bed for a suspenseful chapter of Inkheart. (for anyone who loves juvenille fiction, this series is the new best thing! Cornelia Funke is the author. I'd link to it, but honestly, I'm too fucking tired.)
Looks like whatever time I devote to real writing and true blogging will have to happen tomorrow. Maybe from the little cafe next to where I'm getting a massage in the morning. It's about time I get one instead of give one.
SelfTaught, thanks again. Talk to you tomorrow!

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Sharpening my Focus


When I first started this blog, I had no idea what would come of it. I still don't. I'm just desperate to write and to have some venue to do it. And I'm tired of journals. My wrists hurt when I use a pen at such a feverish pace and I'm a fast enough typer that I can almost keep up with my brain. So being on the computer makes more sense. I didn't want it to be a mundane, irrelevant tab of my day to day doings, but I didn't want it to be solely based on my past either. Although, the more I wrote down those old stories, the more I realized how much I was really enjoying getting them into the written form after all these years. I've been finding that my writing, much like my day to day doings, is so much about catching the past up to the present so that there can be a sense of cohesiveness to my life. So that there can be a stronger sense of peace and definition. I've spent the better part of my life thus far groping around for some idea of who I am and it's only been in the past half decade or so that the answers have been trickling in. Slowly but at a steady pace. I have to work for them. I'm just standing by the fax machine of self-realization gathering the paper in neat stacks.
When I first started this blog, I kept it to myself. I wanted to have some freedom and space to see what happened to my writing without the inhibition of known readers. I looked forward to the anonymity. I've noticed that since I've given out my blog address to a few friends, my writing has slowed down tremendously. My conscience and subconscience have recently gathered in the ladies room and put two and two together.
I've got stage fright.
I laid in bed last night, the window cracked so that I could hear the rain and feel the cool breeze on my head, and I made a decision to post at least once a day.... on whatever. Something.
Last winter, I joined a small writer's group. We have a studio center in our neighboring town where artists come for anywhere between three week and three month residencies. One of the artists-turned-employees led our group. It wasn't necessarily based on feedback as much as it was based on process. The first group led to another and then another....the last two being focused on writing poetry. It was my first time in that kind of writing venue, and while I enjoyed the company and the new experience, I found that at the end of it all, I was no longer able to write poetry at all. Something that was always entirely free flow and intuitive became totally stunted. Still is.
Years ago, Jim Brandenburg, a photographer who does work for National Geographic, took on a project in the mountains of Northern Minnesota. Over the course of 90 days, he allowed himself to take only one photo a day.... all of which were then published in National Geographic in a feature called the North Woods Journal. As an exercise for the class, we decided to take on a similar practice with our writing. To write, even if it was only a paragraph, about at least one thing a day.... one observation.
I have real issues with follow through. I really do. I try to work on it... and it continually gets better but twenty years from now there will probably be some kind of medical breakthrough and a resulting prescription for what I deal with. My North Woods Journal lasted, maybe, three days. I wasn't feeling it. But honestly, I think I just may not have been feeling the class.
For as many gaps as there are with this blog, I feel like I've been following through... maintaining it. But last night, rain falling outside, the smell of wet earth coming in with the winds, I decided to start up a new kind of North Woods Journal. Not necessarily observations.... no limitations..... just something.
If I start to slack, leave a comment. Hold me accountable. I need that!
We can just bag the Equinox marking spring here in Vermont. Usually when the Equinox rolls around, we're still under at least two feet of snow. There are no crocuses bordering pretty houses. I doubt robins have even begun their journey north. Spring happens when the ground thaws.... when the circles of wet Earth start to ring the trees and big bellows of steam can be found billowing out of sugar houses along the sides of country roads. And we're right about on the cusp of that.
So, I'll just kind of visualize my writing as the little crocus bulb working it's way toward the sun. A post a day. It's possible.

Calling all Bloggers

Has anyone found, with Blogger, that they have a really hard time signing in? The only way I can get in to make a post is if I make a comment on a blog (usually my own) and then my computer reads me as logged in so I can go right into the posting area of my blog. I'm not sure if it's just my own computer but it's been happening since we've had that option, when signing in, of using Old Blogger or New Blogger.

Wondering if anyone else has had a similar experience.

Also, I've reread some of my blog posts and gone in to edit some things and no matter how many times I do it, it doesn't change. Anyone?





"And I turned twenty one in prison


doing life without parole ~ no one


could steer me right.


Mama tried


Mama tried


Mama tried to raise me better


but her pleadin I denied


So I got no one but me to blame


cuz Mama tried."




We had us another Grateful Dead dance party this weekend. Friends congregated in our local town hall and projected a concert from Three Rivers Stadium, Pittsburgh 1991 onto a big white tarp sealed over the entire width of the stage.




Friends of ours had a beautiful baby girl this past summer and, while I love kids, I'm not the type to really scoop the closest baby up into my arms. This little girl, though, has won a very specific peice of my heart. I've been holding her in my arms since she was just days old and the last time we had this event, she fell asleep in my arms as I danced.




This weekend, as soon as she arrived with her dad, I claimed her as my own. She sucked on my necklace while jiggling around on my hips that refused to stay still.




I found myself singing the above lyrics into her ear as I danced and she sucked, wondering where it was being filed in the developing recesses of her brain and how it was being processed. I wonder the same thing too about Ella's love for Johnny Cash. Folsom Prison the first CD she purchased with her very own money because "he sings to jail people" and, I guess, at five years old, that was really cool. I think at any age, singing to jail people is pretty cool.




It looks like our little dance parties will be a monthly event. Each time we hold it, we send the kids around with a big jug to collect dollar bills from everyone. The money goes toward raising money to restore the town hall. Each year they tackle another project on the building. The clock tower, a handicapped access, a new foundation. One of these years, they'll get around to tearing off the peeling wall paper and maybe painting the walls. For now, we have no complaints.




It's a big wide open space where the kids can run and freak out and the grown ups can get a taste of the yesteryears. Good stuff.


Friday, March 16, 2007

Lenore

This here is my Nan, as you're likely to find her. She doesn't leave the house without her purse. Doesn't leave the room without her purse. You'll see it, constantly, cluched under her knuckles as she makes her way around the world. And once she gets there, she expects a beer. At 87, she's known to show up for family gatherings in black leather pants and lips adorned in hot pink. Always. Sometimes, we have to take her by the elbows and lead her to bed at night. At her age, she still puts the beers away, although, she's slowing down a bit on the drink. She still plays cards five days a week, goes to church twice weekly, gets her hair done every Friday and almost keeps up with our generation of drinkers. I can keep up with none of them anymore.... nor do I attempt.

I call her the Bionic Grandma. She's the first person in her family to live past fifty years old. I'm not sure how much of is has to do with her nerves of steel or how much of it has to do with modern medical technology. She's been widowed since 88. We lost my Pop to lung and liver cancer. It was only when he was diagnosed with severe emphysema that my Nan, reluctantly, gave up smoking cigarettes.

She had a brain annurism at forty, lost a breast from cancer at forty eight, had a stroke at fifty-five and then several heart attacks to follow, including a quadruple by-pass surgery and about a dozen stents (I kid you not) strategically placed throughout her body, holding her arteries open for blood flow. Still, once a week she drives across the bridge to the Arby's drive-through where she orders a half dozen Arbies roast beef sandwhich (with the special sauce) and keeps them in her refridgerator for daily lunches. She does what she wants.

She was almost eighteen when my grandfather first saw her. He came back to town for a homecoming football game and she, Lenore, was a cheerleader. They "courted" (I can only imagine what that means) for a year or two before my pop, Trevor, enlisted for WWII. He got whisked away to England where he helped load children onto trains to get them out of the city. Lenore became very bored without her suitor and so enlisted herself. On their military breaks, they would meet up where they could....France, Italy, Greece... and, upon arriving home, they were married. For those Grateful Dead fans, it was a real, live Reuben & Cherisse.

There have been times in the past summer or two, after an afternoon of margaritas or daquaris, where she'll proceed to tell me (because she knows I'm receptive to such things) that she occasionally wakes in the morning to find Trevor or her mother sitting in the chair beside her bed. She tells me that she knows she's ready to go but every time she makes her peace with it, our family plans one more event.... a graduation, a wedding, a reunion... and then she knows she just has to hold out for that one more thing. Every time I come for a visit and then hug and kiss her goodbye, I wonder if she'll still be there when I come next.

I wonder how many more years she's got of holding out for that one more thing.