Category Archives: Reflections

Fall’s Rain

We got our first big storm of the year this weekend. Over an inch of rain and some high winds this morning were a good test of the new tarp over the yurt. This morning, I stayed under the covers, grateful to have that new tarp in place. I listened to the rain and watched the ceiling, pulsing as though it was the top of a breathing, living drum. The storm, too, seemed to breathe, pausing for deep inhalations before hurling another bucket of water at us. I like living in this structure that flexes and breathes with the storms.

This week I’ll have been here for ten months, but already I feel the cycle of the year closing in. The storm brought with it a sense of familiarity…yes, I remember this now. Yesterday afternoon, Laika and Jasper burst in through the door, full of boisterous energy and once again patterned the floor with muddy paw prints. And already I have a collection of wet towels and clothing hanging around to dry. I must start tending to my wood pile.

This afternoon I built my first fire of the season. It wasn’t the coldest day we’ve had this fall, but since I was spending all afternoon and evening here (and had things to dry), I splurged. Having the fire is a little like having another pet, and I enjoyed being reunited with its cheery flames and cozy heat.

Most Sunday afternoons lately have been given to creative pursuits (another luxury!), and I intended the same for today. But I mostly frittered my time away until I realized that I may as well finish some work for a client and actually make some money. I tell myself that this invoice will pay for new super-duper rain pants and a camera, but the truth is that it will probably go to pay for a speeding ticket and traffic school. Now I know why the saying is to “cop” a resentment. I love my life and I don’t mind having little disposable income, but it is also familiar territory that little missteps like speeding have a bigger impact on my personal bottom line than they did in my higher-income days.

It was with amusement that I read Interview: man who owns only 15 things. Andrew Hyde only owns 15 things, and at the end of the interview seems to take issue with being called “elitist”. I got a little caught up in the excitement of the idea. Maybe I, too, could live a spartan lifestyle where I’d only own 15 things! Then I laughed when I realized that I simply couldn’t afford it. It would take too much money to pay someone with tools and stuff to do all the things I have to do for myself: cook, clean, shower, drive, keep track of bills and whatever else comes in the mail.

But I have no desire for Hyde’s elitist life; I much prefer my own elitist life, with or without the stuff. Recently I wrote here that I was happier than I’ve ever been, and I’ve thought about that phrase a lot. Some might interpret it to mean that I’m giddy with delight at every moment, but that’s not the case. It’s more like I suddenly woke up, noticed that the dictionary looked a little different, and opened it to find that the definition of happiness itself has changed. Most of my “problems” are still hanging around; the happiness lives side-by-side with sadness, anger, fear. But I’m finally facing all of that, in ways I didn’t expect. I’m becoming more flexible myself, weathering the storms, and maybe even learning how to breathe.

The rain stopped for a while late this afternoon. I went out to fill my water bottles and startled a Sharp-shinned Hawk, probably saving one of the Towhees who lives in the shrubs next my door. As the little hawk entered the airspace above the ranch, the Red-tailed Hawks screamed…four of them, circling over with Turkey Vultures and White-tailed Kites. Evidently everyone was getting lunch while they could. Even the goats were active, seeing me and trotting up to the pasture behind the yurt to say hello. I forgot my errand and wandered through the gate to greet Rozena and Audrey, then the others, and walked among them for a bit.

Tonight, there’s still a parking ticket to be paid, the messed up eating, the confusing feelings, the endless desires for MORE, the fears that the car will quit running or there won’t be enough ranch work to pay the rent this winter, or any number of other things. But there are also the coyotes singing to bring back the moon, the embers of a warm fire, hands that smell like goat, and a house like a rain drum. This is not a work in progress to be unveiled at a later date; this is my life, and I am already here.

Skins and Bones

My love of animals has always extended beyond the living, breathing creatures that I adore. I also like the artifacts left behind when they depart this life. I remember begging my cousin for a “lucky” rabbit’s foot, like the one he had. And I was always a little envious of the things the boys in my class brought to school for show-and-tell…snake skins, pelts, bones, feathers, seashells, antlers, owl pellets….anything left behind by living creatures. It seemed like I never found those things on our farm; it just wasn’t wild enough anymore. I dug for dinosaur bones next to the front porch, certain that I was working on the femur of a Tyrannosaurus Rex. My buddy the cow skull from Larry's, circa 1988 - click to view larger version on Flickr My mom was not pleased by the fact that I’d ruined a brand new outfit because I hadn’t bothered to change clothes before playing in the mud. But I wanted that dinosaur bone.

Later, when I fancied myself a punk, skulls and skeletons were my favorite motif. They were harder to find then! I always preferred the stylized versions…flat white on a black background. Friends liked to contribute to my skelly collection frequently, but often didn’t understand that I wasn’t interested in the horror-show versions.

This week, my nephew was visiting and started telling me about his school lessons about bird feathers. I pulled down my jar of feathers and we sorted through them, first separating the curved wing feathers from the straight tail feathers and the downy feathers. “Aunt T, this is a downy feather. They’re like the bird’s underwear!” Then we sorted through them again, identifying the birds when we could, consulting the Sibley Guide for pictures of the animal that left the feather behind. It made me happy that he handled the feathers without reservation…I’ve seen adults approach them with a sense of revulsion…what if they’re dirty?

And last weekend I finally found a way to display the two goat skins (from another ranch) that J gave me last spring. Goat Skin Curtains - click to view larger version on Flickr Salted and dried, they’d been hanging in the yurt behind my shelves. They now hang as curtains over a window that’s been covered for the winter. There might be some who are surprised that someone who loves the goats as much as I do would have these skins, but to me it is another way to honor the animal.

Last spring, during the rainy kidding season, the real blood and guts of life and death was ever present here. I sometimes spent days without leaving the ranch, and began to feel a little feral. I remember heading out of town one day, passing some people at the graveyard. Dressed up in suits, ties, skirts, I suppose they were waiting for a funeral. A voice in my head said, “They should be wearing skins and pelts and feathers to show some respect!” I was so surprised, and nearly turned around to see if someone was speaking from the back seat behind me. Memorial with goat skull added But I understood what this voice in my imagination meant.

We don’t accept death in our culture. We’re all trying to look younger, to find the magic health plan that will let us live forever. We try not to think about death too much. We develop weapons that let us kill from afar. The kids are left at home with the babysitter for funerals. Bodies are sent to professionals who sanitize them and arrange them to look “lifelike” in caskets that seal everything out. Meat has no connection with something people know as an animal.

I don’t think it’s any coincidence that I have both a fascination and love for these skins and bones, along with addictions to disordered eating and alcohol. I notice an attraction to these same kinds of symbols in others who share these problems. I’ve often wondered if it’s symbolic of a death wish. But I’m also starting to see it in a more positive light as a reaction to modern culture in people who share certain personality traits with me, specifically those of us with an introverted intuition preference. To engage fully in this culture we are born into, we’re forced to ignore everything in us that seeks to connect us back to the full world…a world that includes the unconscious, death, the underworld. And then, like Persephone, we are captured by it, enthralled by our skull motifs, by throwing off fears through drinking and then dying to the unconscious by blacking out; the stuffing down of the feelings of life with food or becoming a picture of death itself through starvation.

We’ve given up the rituals that connected us to the symbols of death and the underworld, so we create new rituals that bring the symbols into being through our physical bodies. How do we stop that? How do we heal? We need to honor the rituals and the symbols, and acknowledge their meaning and importance to us personally. It is not necessarily an easy thing; it goes against the flow of where our culture seems to be heading.

I think a lot about that, and how it relates to my fascination with skins and bones, during this time of the year. It’s the time of Halloween, Samhain, Día de los Muertos, All Souls Day…the time of the year when the veil between the worlds is the thinnest. A time, perhaps, to honor the skins and bones and the departed, to celebrate Persephone’s descent that makes new life possible.

The JuJu Collection

On of my favorite blogs is Los Farallones, written by the staff working for Point Reyes Bird Observatory on Farallon National Wildlife Refuge, a remote rocky island almost thirty miles off our coast. Recently, they wrote about Gull JuJu:

Here on the Island, we’ve noticed that the Western Gulls have a particularly unique and fascinating taste for edible-looking things and nest decorations. When walking through gull territories, one will often notice a collection of rib bones, regurgitated bits of plastic trash and other such goodies, brought back lovingly from the mainland, some 30 miles away. Over the years, we’ve collected our favorite findings and stowed them away into the Gull JuJu Archives. By far, the most common juju items found are decrepit plastic figures. A variety of army men, Winnie-the-Poohs, Lego characters, rubber duckies and many more have found their way into gull’s bills and stomachs.
Gull JuJu - photo from Los Farallones

I’ve been sorting through some of the junk and debris of my own life recently, and during this process I’ve dreamed of piles that look a lot like this, washed up on the beach at the edge of consciousness. I keep working through it in my conscious life. Rigorous honesty, as they say.
Juvenile Western Gull - photo by Marlin Harms.
Once I have my juju gathered up, sorted, labeled and cataloged, I take it to the beach with a friend. She brings blankets and scones. A juvenile Western Gull watches, eager for a piece of scone, or maybe hoping for a special bit of juju it can steal for its very own.

In the act that I have been dreading for weeks, I retch all my juju up into the sand, and we look at it piece by piece. We talk about my labeling and cross-referencing. It’s quite a collection and the themes emerge. Tattered family photos, old grade cards, broken doll parts, tampon wrappers, army men with their guns who’ve pledged to protect all this juju if only I stay silent. Stolen coins and candy. Piles of chocolate chip cookies. Little bits of colored plastic, melted into blobs by anger or worn smooth by shame. A proud little pile of junk that I guarded like secret, dangerous treasure.

My friend looks at it all without judgement. And she points out that I have one tiny army guy left, one I picked up over the weekend and hadn’t quite swallowed yet, and suggests maybe letting go of that, too. I’m not sure. Maybe he’s there to guard the next pile. But I know she’s right. I can’t let go of the juju without letting go of all the juju. I really do want that one tiny post-confession moment where I am free of all of it, before I start collecting it again, as all humans do.
Adult Western Gull - photo by  Laura Gooch.
We put on our shoes and get ready to leave. The gull sitting and watching is now an adult Western Gull. I smile. Usually it takes them four years to do that.

I do feel older, as I go through the rest of my day. But the remaining army guy bothers me. It’s just a little thing, it seems so inconsequential…just one tiny failure to express my feelings honestly. And maybe everyone would be better off if I didn’t. But all day long, I keep stepping on that damned thing in bare feet. It annoys me. I vow to get rid of it when I have the chance. I don’t know how to do that without adding it on to someone else’s pile. All I can do is trust in something bigger.

At night I try to sleep, but toss and turn and yes, that stupid little hard jagged piece of green plastic is there, digging into my skin, until finally I surrender. I get up, swing open the door and send that army guy off, give him to the moonlight. Empty and unguarded, I finally find sleep.

Photo of gull juju from the Los Farallones blog. Photo of juvenile Western Gull by Marlin Harms. Photo of adult Western Gull by Laura Gooch.

Grace at the DMV

My last name has changed back as part of the divorce. I like to say that I’m taking the name of my niece and nephew, because they took such good care of me last fall, and because I hate the idea of going back to anything. Whatever the case, it now means a series of trips through bureaucracies to do the name change.

The social security office was my first stop, and relatively painless. In a few days, my new card arrived in the mail, and I was able to start the next round: the dreaded DMV. I didn’t mind having to get a new license; just last December I’d had to have my license renewed and a new photo taken. My photo was predictably horrible, my face swollen by weeks of crying and the last vestiges of alcohol. I felt lucky to replace it. That horrible version of my driver’s license had replaced the one I got when my name changed before, one of my best ID photos ever: a newlywed.

So I took the day off work, took a water bottle and plenty of things to keep myself busy, and sat in the DMV office for a couple of hours until my name was called. I approached the clerk and handed over my papers, bracing myself for bad news about something I missed or something I’d done wrong.

The clerk smiled as he took my papers, looked over my name change form and my social security card. Then he stopped, looked up at me, smiled, and said, “You’re a brand new person!”

“I guess so.” I said.

He looked through the rest of my papers, came to the court papers, made a couple notations on the computer. Then he looked up again, and said, quietly and sincerely, “I’m sorry for the reason.”

I thanked him but also innerly cursed him as the tears welled up in my eyes. I never know when it’s going to hit me again. And there’s something about this simple, heartfelt human contact that always makes me cry. I can stand just about anything other than a little tenderness.

Trying to lighten the mood and avoid having a teary photo taken, I joked with him. “Don’t you think I look better now?”

He agreed. “You’re all set now. Take these over to window 18 and they’ll get your new photo.”

2001 2009 2010

The Dharma Master of Love

Portrait of Ikkyu by BokusaiMy newest zen hero: Ikkyu, originator of the concept of “the red thread of zen”. Philip Toshio Sudo described Ikkyu’s philosophy and influence like this:

To Ikkyu, cutting off relations between men and women so as to attain enlightenment made no sense. In his philosophy of “red thread zen,” sex deepened the experience of enlightenment. No one can enter this world without being born of both a man and woman, he said; we are connected to sex by the “red thread” of blood at birth. Back and back the red thread goes, long and unbroken, to the origin of all being. We’re of sex. That fact should be embraced, not avoided, Ikkyu said.

The poems are fantastic; I look forward to reading more of them. This one is from Wild Ways: Zen Poems of Ikkyu, a collection of translations by John Stevens:

The Dharma Master of Love

My life has been devoted to love play;
I’ve no regret about being tangled in red
thread from head to foot,
Nor am I ashamed to have spent my days as a
Crazy Cloud–
But I sure don’t like this long, long bitter
autumn of no good sex!

For ten straight years I reveled in pleasure
houses.
Now I’m all alone deep in the dark mountain
valley.
Thirty thousand cloud leagues live between
me and the places I love.
The only sound that reaches my ears is the
melancholy wind blowing in the pines.

Something for the Child Within

During my first year or so of therapy, I used to dread each appointment. I wanted to go, but I still dreaded it. I’d spend a fair amount of time thinking about what subject I might want to bring up and talk about. I was, I guess, trying to be in control of it all.

About three months into it, my shrink suggested that I spend some time thinking about the question of “what the child within wants.” I figured I knew the answer already. We want love, right? We want to be held, we want affection. The answers seemed trite and unhelpful.

The next week, I was back in the chair and started, as usual, trying to take control of things. But something happened, and I veered off-course. I heard myself saying, without any plan, “You know you said to think about what the child within wants? I think it wants a dog.”

I had been thinking a lot about a coworker’s dog, a big affectionate chocolate lab. Another coworker brought in a puppy that belonged to a friend. The happiest parts of my days were when I could hang out with those dogs.

My shrink didn’t tell me to go out and get a dog. He listened to my exhaustive list of reasons why it probably wouldn’t work to get a dog. He did make a suggestion: go to the pound and look at the dogs there. Don’t go to get a dog, go to observe your feelings. Just see how it feels.

And so I did. I went to the then-new shelter on Route 12 and looked around. I didn’t pursue adopting any or filling out any forms, I just tried to see how it felt. I still have a journal entry from it. I wrote that when I left, my heart was beating fast and I was feeling guilty for not telling my husband that I planned to go look or that I was interested in this at all.

I spent some more time with the idea, and eventually did get up the nerve to begin talking about it. Things feel into place; the landlord and the husband both approved. I started building a fence.

On a Saturday morning, April 8, 2006, we headed for Ukiah to see a dog named Sebastien. I remember being terribly hungover. When we arrived, we found that Sebastien had just been adopted, so we looked at Bart. Bart wanted nothing to do with us, so the staff asked me some questions, and came back with “Roxy“, a very scared Shar-pei/Black Lab mix.

laika_shelter

The rest, as they say, is history. And tomorrow, I will have to give my beautiful, confident Laika Lou a few extra treats to celebrate our four years together so far.

Napping. Or Pretending to.

I hope she is happy here; the past year has been tough, and I’ve asked a lot of her.

Sometimes I’m so busy doing all the responsible adult things I must do, that I forget that she might like a little attention.

I forget to play. I forget to stop and stretch. I forget that everyone needs to run hard once in a while and then have a little nap in the sun.

And when I forget, she’s there to remind me. A delight to both the child and the adult within.