“There are, it seems, two muses: the Muse of Inspiration, who gives us inarticulate visions and desires, and the Muse of Realization, who returns again and again to say ‘It is yet more difficult than you thought.’ This is the muse of form. It may be then that form serves us best when it works as an obstruction, to baffle us and deflect our intended course. It may be that when we no longer know what to do, we have come to our real work and when we no longer know which way to go, we have begun our real journey. The mind that is not baffled is not employed. The impeded stream is the one that sings.” – Wendell Berry
Living Simply
I thought yesterday was October first and here I am preparing for Thanksgiving. Why do I feel like I’m living in a time capsule that moves forward at a gazillion miles an hour?
As a little kid, I felt time moved too slowly. Adolescence was the worst. All I wanted was to be grown up and out from under the boundaries my parents set up for me. During my twenties it sped up a bit. But being the caretaker of two little people, I still felt pretty limited. Once those little ones were in school, the pace picked up from that of a turtle to that of a hungry dog anxious to be fed. Once Mark and Lisa left home there was no stopping the hours from rushing to the finish line. These days I get up in the morning and before I know it, it’s time for bed. There are never enough hours in the day to do all of the things I put on my list of daily intentions. It can be so very frustrating.
I want things to slow down a bit now, thank you very much and I don’t think I’m alone in feeling this way. Most everyone I know complains about there being too much to do in too little time. While we whine about our computers being too slow, we wish for the time to take a nap, soak in a bathtub filled with bubbles, or simply lounge about, dreaming of what a real vacation might look like.
Today is my seventieth birthday. It’s once more time for me to stop my craziness and think about what is most important to me. Is it more pressing for me to spend my time and money accumulating more stuff and being seen at every community event? Or is it more important for me to slow down and smell the proverbial roses? What about seeing friends for lunch or going for long walks in the woods or through streets crunchy with falling leaves? Do I need to go see every movie that is now playing at Charlottesville’s new fourteen screen movie complex this very week? Or might I stay at home, sitting in front of a fire, with a good book, snuggled up with my dog, Sam?
This past year, I seem to have opted for the long walks and the good book with sweet Sam at my feet. And even though my pace is slowing naturally as I age, it’s not all that easy to stay in the slow lane. If I’m running late for an appointment, I find myself swearing at the numerous red lights and the heavy traffic that makes me even later. And if it’s too cold or too hot, I can easily find myself wishing that the season would move on and bring me more comfortable weather. What I too often forget about, is living every moment as it arises.
I’m not one who is fond of this holiday time of year. I do love being with my family and eating turkey with dressing and pumpkin pie, but I’m not happy with the consumerism that I sometimes feel wants to devour me. Now Black Friday is set to begin Thanksgiving evening. Will we now call it Black Thanksgiving? Those who have jobs in the big box stores that are so popular because of their low prices, are in many cases forced to work on one of the few days of the year that they have off to spend with their families. A recent news report pointed out two women somewhere in California, already on line at their local Best Buy, so that they won’t miss out on the latest whatevers that they absolutely must have.
I could easily sit here and wish this season away, preferring it were March, and being able to work in my garden. But where would that get me? I’d have to skip tonight’s dinner at one of my favorite dining spots, and then hearing our local symphony orchestra perform Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7 in A major Opus 92. I’d miss being with my grandkid’s on Christmas day and most likely miss out on a snow storm or two that could transform my world into a fantasy land dressed in white.
It’s true that there may also be some very painful and unhappy days that I might be able to avoid by wishing life away. But if I didn’t enter the darkness from time to time, I’d never appreciate the light and the joy that surrounds me.
Today, I’m reminding myself once again, that rushing my way through life is not worth it. I don’t want to miss the smell of wood smoke in the air, and early daffodils poking their frilly, yellow heads out in February. Once Thanksgiving is over, I’ll sit down and listen to Handel’s Messiah, while sipping a steamy mug of mulled cider as I write down all of the things I am grateful for this past year.
I’m convinced that I need to live more simply, being present in every moment. Time here is too short. It should not take cancer or any other dreaded disease to slow me down, forcing me to finally begin appreciating the littlest things that I too frequently overlook each and every day.
Happy Thanksgiving Y’ All!
I hope you enjoy every precious moment.
One Sweet Journey
Two weeks ago Bill and I went up to Long Island, to scatter my mother’s ashes. I worried about the trip for weeks ahead of time, waking every morning with the same questions. “Am I doing the right thing and why? Will releasing her in this way really bring me peace and healing?” And there were the two questions that I can never seem to leave behind: “Am I a nut case and what will other people think of me for doing this? “
Every morning that I woke to these questions I’d answer them with a few more questions, “I don’t know and what does it matter? I feel called to honor Mom in this way. So what if I am a tad crazy and what does it matter what anyone else thinks? “
The day I began the letting go it was chilly and blustery with rain showers off and on. We found the vacant lot in the town of Patchogue, where her house once stood when she was a just a teen. Around the corner was the high school that she attended, and ten or so miles away we were shown the gravesite where her mother and father are buried. We also found the house that my dad bought for her after we all moved to Vermont in 1960. She hated the long dark New England winters and when she couldn’t take the North Country any more, she’d escape to the more comfortable world of Long Island. I left a bit of her in all of those places.
The next day, we visited a beach on the north shore of the Island, where Mom often took my brothers and me to gather fresh clams for eating on the half-shell, for steaming and for her delicious chowder. My favorites were steamed long neck clams dunked in melted butter, strongly flavored with fresh garlic.
Above that beach still sits the pavilion where I’d occasionally attend parties with my parents. A square dance caller would move the adults about the wooden floor, while us kids gathered lightning bugs, played tag under the stars, and ran in and out of the pavilion for frosty bottles of soda pop, chips and slices of sweet, pink watermelon. Seedless melons hadn’t yet been invented and we’d spit the numerous seeds out of our mouths, trying to be the one who could spit them the farthest.
After lunch in Northport, where I graduated from high school, we enjoyed a treat at the soda fountain where I used to hang out as a kid. It’s still owned by the same family that opened the business in 1929. I swear the stools at the counter are the same ones I sat on when I lived not far from there over fifty years ago. Bill ordered a Black and White Malt and in honor of Mom, I chose homemade lemon custard ice cream, drizzled with hot fudge sauce, which was Mom’s favorite treat. I have to agree it’s one of the best, especially when the person who dishes it out for you, makes the ice cream themselves.
Our last stop was out on Eaton’s Neck where we lived for about five years before moving to New England. I scattered the last of her ashes in front of the house we lived in, at the tiny public beach nearby, and directly into Long Island Sound. As the last ashes blew into the salt water where I used to spend my summers, I felt a deep sense of satisfaction and release from parts of my life that were happy but also extremely painful.
I felt lighter and taller, having let go of a heavy burden I had been hauling around with me for years. Mom and I had a deep love/hate relationship, especially at the end of her life. As I visited the places where she grew up and spent both sad and happy times, I felt an intimacy with her that I haven’t often felt. Her own upbringing had been abusive and I never would have been able to reach the understanding and forgiveness I felt that day, for both of us, had I provided her with a traditional burial.
Amongst the revisiting of place, I also had the opportunity to reunite with two cousins that I haven’t seen in fifty years. When I was just a little kid, they were my favorite people in the whole world. While Joanne is five months older than I am, Mary Anne is five years older. I always felt in awe of them and loved being with them. Though we’ve kept in touch via Christmas cards over the years, it hasn’t been enough to keep us in each other’s lives. Being with them was extra special medicine for me and I have no intention of allowing time to pass us by again.
At the end of our Long Island sojourn, Bill and I spent three nights in New York City. We saw several shows and a few movies besides visiting the church where my grandparents on my dad’s side were married and where I was christened. We also visited the addresses of where my dad once lived and where his father opened his cabinet shop a century ago. There were no signs that they had ever walked those streets, but it was easy for me to imagine the horse-dawn carts and the narrower streets that have been replaced by our mad, contemporary world.
So here I am back at home in Virginia. Those nagging, early morning questions don’t haunt me every morning as they did just a few weeks ago. They’ve been replaced with deep gratitude for the gift of the journey I’ve been privileged to go on and the sweet love of family that never dies. I may be a tad crazy, but to my knowledge, no one really cares. They all have their own craziness to deal with and it’s what makes all of us humans one big nutty family. I hope your journey is as filled with love as mine has been.