Monthly Archives: August 2010

Twin Cities, Two Dreams, One Family: Everyday Magic, Day 47

This morning as I walked through Dinkytown, where we’re staying at the fabulous Wales House bed and breakfast, I realized every time I visit these cities, something happens. The first time in Minneapolis was for a conference, which I had to leave early because my long-suffering grandmother finally died, propelling me to re-unite with a cousin and aunt I hadn’t seen for 35 years because of my parents’ crazy divorce in 1973. It was healing for all of us.

The next time I came to Minneapolis to attend a conference, I ended up blowing off most of the sessions and wandering the city, traveling the light rail without any sense of where I was going, and recommitting myself to get my writing published despite years of intense rejections. I ended that trip leaning into the small opening of 18th floor hotel window with a Cuban fiction writer and Domician poet, all of us dropping tiny pieces of paper out the window with our writerly wishes written on them.

Last fall, one of my granted writerly wishes — to have my memoir published — led us to St. Paul for both the Midwestern Booksellers Convention and for Natalie to check out the McNally Smith College of Music. Signing books for a long line of people (even if my publisher was giving out the books for free) was a delight, and we were all smitten with the college.

Now I’m back to move Natalie into that college today, and last night, I received word that after 10 years of trying to find a literary agent, a very good one is going to represent my next book.

While I continue to live my writer dream, Natalie is here to embark upon her singer dream, in the twin cities where earnest wishes, hard work, surrender to the forces of chance and karma, and catalysts for true healing seem to always find me. I wish for her to find her own dream large and generous, unfolding for her as mine unfolds for me all life long.

Photos: even the houses here are twins!

Sorting Socks As Rite of Passage: Everyday Magic, Day 46

Before I drove 500 miles — fueled by herbs, cold medicine, coffee, and thrills for Natalie’s launch into college — there was the necessary sorting of the socks. For many years, our socks were routinely mixed up in the laundry (thanks to my wonderful does-all-the-laundry husband), and in recent years, just about all our other clothing too (as Natalie grew up and I grew thinner). It was easy enough to separate her size 6 jeans from my size-umm ones, but socks were far more complicated.

So as we were packing, it fell to me to sort the socks — from her drawers, my drawers, and corners of the laundry room. I ended up dumping everything on the kitchen table, trying to sort by color or size, but I quickly lost track of what I was doing because of the stories so many socks brought back, from the tiny pink embroidered toddler socks she still had to the many cool frog or Jewish star socks I found for her at airports over the years. There were also at least twice the amount of mateless socks as matching ones. Furthermore, she no longer wanted her teddy bear or giraffe socks.

In the end, I decided the socks needed to mate across species, and that if she would no longer wear the more idiosyncratic socks, I would. Although I managed to keep from crying too much in the sorting, I know that waiting at home in my sock drawer are now little surprises. I might lose it some days because I’ll be missing the previous wearer of such socks, but I know I’ll also find something too — like how much love brings together like with unlike and carries us forth into the world, one step at a time.

BABY!: Update

As soon as I finished the post below, I got a call from my pal, Scott, asking if I saw the update on facebook. The baby was born — 8 pounds, 6 ounces, 22 inches — and all are well after a very hard and long labor (I think about two days). A friend of theirs said there were complications every step of the way, but at a critical point, this child “zigged instead of zagged.” Here’s to this new life and to hundreds of people who sent this family wishes, prayers and love.

Praying: Everyday Magic, Day 45

Today I’m praying for friends and their just-born or just-about-to-be-born baby with all my heart. I don’t know what’s happening, only that a call went out for “hardcore praying power” for them. All night, I kept waking up, wondering if their baby had been born after about two days of labor. Now that I heard this call, I’m sending my deepest wishes for whatever healing is needed.

When I first heard the news, I fell into deep worry for a moment, but then I told myself, “Remember what prayer can do.” I should know and never forget. When Daniel, now 21, was born, he inhaled amniotic fluid and was on the cusp of leaving us for a while. People prayed far and wide, and one friend saw him in a dream standing on the edge of a pool, wondering whether to jump in. “Jump in,” she encouraged him, and he did. He survived in fine fashion, and a few years later, asked me, “Do all babies, when they’re born, leave their parents and go back to God and then return to their parents again?”

My other story concerns my youngest son, Forest, who was thrown from our van in 2001 when I hit some black ice and careened off the road to land upside down in a ditch. His brain was bleeding in three places and jaw was broken in five, but thanks to the superb energy healing of Ursula Gilkeson, and prayers from around the world and in dozens of flavors, he pulled through. The doctor who examined him after three days said his staff couldn’t make sense of the new x-rays compared to the original ones right after the accident.

This is not to say that prayer gives us the results we want in all cases or that I can fathom the intentions of the life force or the mysteries embedded in why people suffer, recover, live or die. This is only to say that when it comes to my friends at this moment, I’m praying, sometimes by crying a little, sometimes by envisioning them with their baby healthy in the future, sometimes by just yearning for whatever healing is most needed. Mary Oliver, in one of her poems, says, “I don’t know how to pray, but I know how to pay attention,” and this sums up for me what it means to let our deepest love guide us.

Listening to My Daughter Sing: Everyday Magic, Day 44

When Natalie was a toddler, she didn’t talk: she sang. In fact, she narrated whatever she was doing or feeling in song, kind of like an ongoing improv opera from her carseat. “We’re going to buy shoes, we’re going to buy shoes,” she would belt out at age 2 or 3. As she got older, she started writing her own songs and soon learned to accompany herself with a few guitar chords or on the piano. She even performed some of these songs at the annual recital of her then voice and guitar teacher, Marianne Carter.

It’s no wonder that today she sings regularly, having immersed herself in many choir opportunities throughout junior high and high schools. For the last who-knows-how-many years, Ken and I would creep like mice to her closed bedroom door to spy on her practicing. We both loved not just her voice but the little grace notes and nuances she came by so naturally.

Last night, she sang “Why Don’t You Do Right,” a jazz standard, as part of her final recital with Vanessa Thomas, her voice teacher for the last three years. Sunday, I drive her to St. Paul to study jazz vocals at the McNally Smith College of Music. What she’ll do as a singer is as mysterious as moving toward any art that calls us, but I love that she’s following her voice, which also reminds me of Gayle, a college friend and roommate.

Gayle sung constantly, and especially loved the song “Landslide.” When she died from cancer our senior year of college, I vowed to give her name to any daughter I had. So I named my only daughter Natalie Gayle, and just as I write this post in a coffee shop, Stevie Nicks’ version of “Landslide” comes on to remind me of the power of voice, how it can take you up an mountain and bring you home again, and how the song lives on and on.

Pictures: Cultivating her jazz diva with Forest many years ago, and last night with Vanessa.

The Dead Poet Society Lives!: Everyday Magic, Day 43

I just got an email from Walter Skold, head of the Dead Poets Society of America, letting me know about a new literary holiday meant to honor and remember our dead poets, known and unknown. The festive occasion is Oct. 7, and it’s endorsed by a bunch of us poets laureates of various states.

Skold writes, “Frankly, it is an idea that is past due; our culture does not give due recognition to the hundreds of past poets who sang their hearts out and contributed such wealth to our cultural commons. Please join in the fun and help create a new, literary, living tradition.” How can we create this new tradition? Well, organize readings, or just stand on a chair in the middle of your living room and read some of the great works of Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, or your great aunt Leonora who wrote poetry in secret. As for me, I’ll be telling folks about this holiday from the readings and workshops I’ll be doing that day in Marshall County, Kansas.

Long live the dead poets! Long may we sing of those known and unknown to changed our lives with their words.

The Wabi Sabi Guide to Transition: Everyday Magic, Day 42

Last night my Wabi Sabi group met to talk about transition. “Wabi Sabi?” you ask. It’s the Japanese term, originated from the beauty of decaying, ancient tea houses, that connotes the perfection of imperfection or the beauty of passing memory. So what better topic than transition because, at its heart, Wabi Sabi is all about transition: dwelling in the mysterious change and unfolding that’s always happening despite our human desire to have some sense of control. I called together this group several years ago so that kindred souls could share insights with me about how to live.

What did we learn and share about transition? Here’s what I’m remembering this morning:

  • Each moment has its message, and all we need to get through it until we arrive at the next moment.
  • The older we get, the more skilled we get at navigating transitions without excess stress (I mean, the transition itself could be stressful, but we don’t have to pile on it fears of how we’ll get through it as much because we know we can get through it).
  • As our bodies change and seem more limited in some physical ways, they also can lead us to other kinds of grace in stillness and motion.
  • Sometimes when you least expect it, you can look up from your computer and see a coyote out the window.
  • In moments of great pain when there’s nothing we can do to stop the pain, we can breathe into and through it, and make peace with whatever is happening until the pain changes into something else.
  • Grandchildren are wonderful, but the love and bond isn’t automatic. Even this lovely transition takes time and presence.
  • Being in the flow is what calls to us as we get older much more than accomplishing goals or crossing things off a list.
  • Most of us love arriving at moments and times in our lives when we will have no plans.
  • When embarking on a transition, it’s good to simply let yourself not know how you’ll feel, and then ride the waves.
  • Our bodies are marvelous amusement parks.
  • The permission fairy lives in all of us, and gives us full permission to live our most true life, something necessary for meaningful transitions.

Thank you, Wabi Sabis, for your wisdom! May everyone find their own Wabi Sabi guidance in transition. (Picture is a Japanese tea house in the Wabi Sabi aesthetic.)

Clean Bed, Clear Head: Everyday Magic, Day 41

Anne told me that each morning she makes her bed as soon as she gets up, advised by a yoga teacher who told her, “Clean bed, clear head.”

Although it’s such a simple thing, it caught me by surprise. “Why make the bed?” I thought to myself about, say, 40 years ago. After all, I was just to get back into it and mess it up again. Yet for the past 25 years, I have made the bed right before sleep each night because my regular sleep-thrashing.

I starting making the bed first thing about 20 days ago, and my head is clearer. When I walk into my bedroom, even if other parts of the room are chaotic, there’s a kind of order and beauty at the room’s center now. It’s also a way to honor the place I go each night to dream myself or be dreamed to parallel cities, long excursions, or the difficulty (as in last night) of packing a bunch of hideous antiques that belonged to my grandmother for travel when the airlines charge so much for each suitcase. No matter, the bed is made. The day is ready. And as I smooth the sheet and blanket across the mattress, I’m hearing and clearing myself at once.

Everything Looks Different From the Water: Everyday Magic, Day 40

“I’ve gotten to the point where I would rather see places from the water,” Sandy told me on the sailboat yesterday afternoon. “Everything looks different from there.” She was right, I realized, as I looked out to the wooded areas, some slightly hilly, surrounding Perry Lake. For one thing, everything looks different when you get into the cool wind of the moving sailboat, and the August heat dissolves. For another, being in the center of the water makes you feel like you are now officially at the center of wherever you are.

We left the dock about 4, and for the next 4 hours moseyed and sped, leveled calm and tilted quick, across the lake and into a section of it about 12 miles long. I especially liked standing next to the sails, holding onto a line of course, and feeling the breeze continually wash over me.

All in all, it was a magical afternoon, our family graced with this gift from Sandy and Frank, as we sailed through conversations about stem cell research benefits, the latest headlines from The Onion, our kids’ elementary school days (since as the previous 5th and 6th grade teachers to two of our kids, Sandy and Frank had the goods on us), origins of sailing and how the Vikings learned to sail into the wind, the best food of Spain and Costa Rica, Flamenco guitar, flamingos and other pink birds, and how it was we older folks lived our childhoods without hummus.

By the time we got back to land, just after sunset, I felt, although half the ice in the cooler hadn’t even melted away, we were returning from a refreshing vacation, all of us tilted right away by sailing through and with the wind. Thank you, Frank & Sandy!

Mark’s Memorial and Poem: Everyday Magic, Day 39

Last night was the memorial service and party to honor Mark that he wanted — he left behind explicit instructions to use some of his money to throw a major shindig, and thanks to the Unitarian Universalists, KAW Council and a bunch of friends, it all happened. It began with a moving service featuring friends telling stories, Tim Miller reading from Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass, a marvelous woodwind quartet, Susan Harper leading us in some songs from the piano, and a superb minister from the church summing up and unfolds Mark’s life and values.

That led to one of the potlucks of all potlucks, a whole lot of visiting inside and out morphing into the concert performed by the Alferd Packer Memorial String Band (for those of you unfamiliar with its name, Packer was the only man in U.S. history accused of cannibalism, simply because he ate a bunch of Democrats, already dead, while snowed in on a remote mountain pass in 1870).

Today I wake up sore by waltzing in heels with Ken (I wore the heels, he’s already tall enough) to one of my favorite waltzes, “The East Lawrence Waltz,” written by Steve Mason of the band, who said, “Of all the East Lawrence waltzes, this is the only one I wrote.” I also wake up grateful for Mark with a fuller understanding of his grace and awkwardness, loves and fears, and all he gave to our community. Here is the poem I read at the service:

Conversations With Mark

My self will be the plain,

wise as winter is gray,

pure as cold posts go

pacing toward what I know.

– William Stafford

1.

Say, did you travel far enough west to see who lives

in the vacant houses? Did you stop for a lunch of apricots

and hard luck? Was it raining all the way, a panorama

just before and after the storm at once? Are your dead

friends within earshot? Is there much of a climb to get to the next

large rock with a view, and does your knee still hurt? Did you stop

being afraid in a darkness glowing like polished lapis?

When you close your eyes, are you still alive?

2.

In the still air right before the front arrives, I listen for you

but can’t make anything out. I remember the camp at

Tuttle Creek, how cold the water was, and how we all brought

the same jugs of apple juice on sale at the co-op.

When the edge darkened and spread over us, you sang,

always so much louder than you spoke. “Home on the Range”

turned to “Oh, What a Beautiful Morning,” and when the sun

blanched the ground back to August, we washed the dishes,

our stomachs full of Mike’s pancakes. I was 22, you were 50,

and this was just the second of dozens of such weekends, the rain always

near or upon us, the circle small or large as we stood

near a make-shift kitchen, holding hands, calling out our crow

song that perched us together — “Kaw! Kaw! Kaw!” –

your voice a river of tone, hunger, surprise and earnestness.

3.

Your garage held old paint cans, foam mats for a bed, a used

boxspring, three broken wooden chairs, a child’s metal pail,

my bike, an old refrigerator, an uncle’s disregard, a corner

of despair with a high wide shelf of joy, several coffeemakers

which may or may not work so well, a tin box of buttons,

six large boxes full of very slim jeans and t-shirts left over

from the dorm runs, your father’s silence, a plastic eagle clock,

empty jars good for canning, whatever your mother said to you

that did such damage, snow tires no one uses anymore, the miles

between you and your young man self, a computer monitor

from 1991, a Thanksgiving platter with a slim crack,

a broken heart behind some boards, still ticking, still yours.

4.

Mark is on our front porch, leading on the railing,

talking cattle with Gary. Mark’s plate is on the shelf.

Mark walks toward 8th Street from the library, thinking

the rain will hold off a few more minutes. Mark gets into

the backseat of the big gas-guzzler, six of us with plenty

of legroom as we head toward Vancouver. Mark’s letter

is in the paper again. The phone rings at the wrong time,

and it’s Mark. Mark is sitting on the ground with us

beside Castle Rock in autumn. Mark is climbing onto

the train, heading west. Mark’s postcard just arrived –

having a great time in San Francisco. Mark is back

for another party, carrying a paper bag of lettuce

and three half-empty bottles of dressing. It’s Mark’s turn

in the circle, and sitting on the couch, he tells us it’s time

to listen to each other. Then pauses. We lean into

the center just a little, listen to one another breathe

and the wall of cicada wave after wave enclosing us.

5.

The horizon fools me, seems to be an ending

or beginning, when really it’s not even a line

across sky or time. I listen in the space between

grasshoppers and birds, air-conditioner on,

air-conditioner off. Something will come

as it always does, deaths will be sudden or not,

and that will seem to matter because my mind thinks

“horizon” while the round earth thinks “breathe.”

Mark is around the bend. No matter, the conversation

goes on. The clouds build in the west, storm or

fall apart. The end of summer leans into us in such a way

we cannot imagine ourselves outside of it. When

I open the door to go outside, a moth flies out, not in.

A hackberry butterfly, weeks behind the others, lands

on my chest, and the cottonwood leaves, the cicadas,

the blue heat of this moment all keeps breathing,

each moment pacing toward what we know

because of you, without you, with you.

Photos: (from top) Mike talking with Kelly & Frank; Eric, Ken & Forest; Danny, Daniel and Anne (Mark’s niece); two sisters — Ann & Jean; Jerry & friend; three KAW gals — LaVetta, Caryn & Joy