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In times of old, The Furies protected Mother Right. If a mother (or any woman) was harmed, The Furies swooped down and took their vengeance. They were one of the last vestiges of a world that existed before the patriarchy. When we feel righteous anger, it is The Furies who are calling out to us to make what is wrong right again.
Friday, April 29, 2005
Spine Tingling
Thursday, April 28, 2005
Geography Lesson
There's gotta be a better way, don't ya think? 0 comments
Absolutely Nothing
At first I thought the Congress changing the ethics rules back to what they had been was a good thing. Now DeLie could be judged as he should be judged. (Although presently all of the people on the committee have financial ties to DeLie.) Then I grew suspicious. Why would the Republicans allow this change to happen so easily? After all, the Emperor With No Clothes had taken DeLie for a ride on his plane Tuesday, a sign he supported his whip. Then I remembered that politicians often eat their young. I hope I'm wrong, but this rollback of the ethics rules changes could be a sign of a war.
The Republicans could be getting ready to go after the Democrats and any indiscretions they may have over travel expenses. I am not the only one suspicious of this sudden change. According to the Seattle Times, "the tenor of comments on and off the House floor made it clear that the dispute has left its mark on a chamber already riven by harsh partisan politics....'I think there's no question' that an ethics war may break out, said Rep. Mark Foley, R-Fla."
War! Huh. Good God y'all. What is it good for?
Absolutely Nothing.
P.S. By the way, nationwide protests against the proposed Senate rule changes regarding the filibuster took place Wednesday. Did any of your local news stations report these protests? Also, I heard Al Gore's Wednesday speech regarding the GOP's attempt to get rid of the filibuster; he called them "religious zealots." Why wasn't he like this when he was running for president?) 0 comments
Giggling Over Bolton
Wednesday, April 27, 2005
Notes of a Natural Woman: Between Phases
Sunday, April 10, 2005
We go to Falling Creek. Not feeling good until my feet hit the trail. We breathe rain, although it isn’t raining. I like to call it cloud sweat. The trail is cinnamon-colored. Douglas firs rise above us like the giants they are. The skinny deciduous trees still only display green buds that look like the flames at the end of Aladdin’s lamp. We start counting flowers. The counting keeps me grounded when my mind starts to wander out of this beautiful forest into slaughter fields. The trilliums are nearly transparent—as if they couldn’t quite manage the energy to be white this year. Still, they’re dressed well: the green leaves are shiny green. We count eighty-two trilliums.
Deer’s head orchids grow along the trail here and there but mostly amongst the chaos that is forest. Delicate, elegant, seemingly overdressed in this place where grunge is the norm. Yet here they are: each one a surprise, each one a simple kind of miracle of survival. Each and every one of the nineteen we count this day.
The trail snakes (that’s the best word to describe it) up and up. I nearly always feel healed here. My symptoms are not as bad; I can keep most of the awful thoughts at bay. It’s a kind of torture though. I am filled with joy, knowing this time I am certainly cured—only to step off the trail and find it isn’t so.
How many cures have I sought? Let me count the ways. Modern, traditional, alternative, bizarre. At various times I have thought walking, dancing, sex, writing, the desert, the mountains, the ocean would cure me. Hasn’t happened. I’ve had people say, “Well, someone can be healed and not cured.” And I always want to scream, “Fuck you and your New Age bullshit.” Except Linda says it, too, and I nod and am glad she finds comfort in that idea. She also thinks of death as slipping off a too tight shoe. I see it as the end of everything. My dancing shoes may not have been that comfortable, but I ain’t ready to take them off. Got some more dancin’ to do. I no longer look for cures (liar), but I still hope for one.
The trail ends too soon, and we go home.
Monday, April 18, 2005
Linda still does not have water. It has been nearly three weeks. She’s had two infections. In addition to the cancer. Chemo every week. She has to drive an hour and a half there, an hour and a half back. She called me crying one day. She doesn’t do that. Her landlord comes to fix the water and pours industrial strength chlorine into the water tank to kill anything in there. Linda doesn’t believe they actually drained the tank; she’s sure dead rodents are still inside. The smell of chlorine fills the house and drives her out. It is the last straw, she says, as she sits in “her chair” in our house. She doesn’t like sympathy, doesn’t want anyone feeling sorry for her. I understand that absolutely. I don’t like people looking at me and thinking I’m sick. “Keep your fucking evil eye (and thoughts) off of me,” I want to scream. Linda is kinder about it, but she feels the same way. I want to feed her as she sits in my home tired and weepy, but she still doesn’t have her teeth—because of the infection the dentist caused when he pulled the mold for her new teeth up off her gums and created a bubble on her gums. She’s been on a (basically) liquid diet for five months. I want to do something to help her. I listen. I listen. I don’t talk politics with her. Who cares about what the Bushies are doing when you’re just trying to live?
Later I walk down to the Columbia River and ask for help. Please help Linda with her water and her water. By that I mean the water to her house and her urinary tract infection. The River is high. I try to listen for an answer, but I can’t seem to be still.
Wednesday, April 20, 2005
I drive to the mountain ten minutes from our house. Mario and I have hiked to the top (but not to the peak or the end of the trail) before. Mario is at work, so I go alone. I’ve been sick for weeks it seems, along with Linda. She finally got water. The day after I asked the River for help. Now I get out of the car and look up this green mountain—do I actually see green? No. I breathe water again and step onto the overgrown path that goes up, up, up. And I walk. Everything throbs. I try to pay attention. Ferns everywhere. Fiddleheads, too. They’ve uncurled enough so that now it looks as though a rusty-green seahorse is hanging from each fern stalk. The image makes me smile. Some people believe ferns are protective; if you plant them near your house, then your house will be protected. I look around at the wild ferns and wonder if they protect this mountain.
I keep climbing. I feel tight. I touch my pocket to make certain I have my inhaler. I glance up and down the trail. No one else around, as far as I can tell. I’m safe. I can see the forest for the trees and beyond: more trees. Although beyond doesn’t look like a true forest, more like a tree farm. Here on this mountain none of that matters. One foot in front of the other. I start counting the deer’s head orchids. One. Two together. Then three together. I pause. Not sure I can go any further. I am still, trying to listen, but the ringing in my ears is louder than anything else, my vision pulsing with the throbbing of my body. Was there a time when I felt normal?
I make it to the plateau. The deer’s head orchids are tiny bursts of purple amongst the darkness of the forest floor. I’m feeling dizzy. I walk to the nearest and biggest Doug fir, and I sit at its roots. I pray to the tree. Can you help me?
After a couple of minutes, I feel steadier. I slowly stand again and continue up the trail. Two huge Douglas firs stand on either side of the trail. This feels like an entrance, a threshold. I put my hands together at my heart and ask for permission to enter. “And harm to none,” I say. I hear a woodpecker as I step through. I continue walking. So many deer’s head orchids. I stop counting at about 80. I’m on the south side of the mountain now. I can hear Highway 84 across the Columbia River, yet it sounds like ocean waves. I swear.
It’s getting late. I’m tired. Still a bit dizzy. I decide to turn around. I won’t make it to the peak today. I like this place, though. I feel...something else besides myself.
I thank the spirits and beings of the place, and then I walk down the mountain again.
Thursday, April 21, 2005
I walk up the mountain twice. Once in the morning. I reach the plateau and then come back down. I go home and eat lunch with Mario. Then I go up again. I’m overdressed. It might be time to get rid of the winter jacket. I can’t seem to stay away from this place. It talks to me. How can I explain? I’m not sure I should even try. Trying to put into words that which is sacred often feels like trying to catch clouds with a butterfly net. Or maybe it’s more like trying to catch a butterfly with a net: if you actually do net a butterfly, it usually doesn’t survive intact. Let’s just say this mountain whispers to me. Much is going on here. More than the trees, orchids, Oregon grape, and ferns. The place is spirited.
This time I make it up, up, up to the first talus slope. I breathe deeply as I stand at the edge of this treeless expanse. I stare at the rocks on the trail; they’re white. Pale green moss covers some of rocks beside the trail. My chest feels too tight and my knees too fragile to go on by myself this day. I say my goodbyes, and I turned around and go down the mountain.
I stop by the library, and someone tells me I am very brave to go hiking by myself. She wouldn’t do it. I think that’s what she says. I say, “Well, on this trail I can see if someone is coming, because the slope is too steep for anyone to come from any other direction.” She stares at me, silently. Then I say, “Oh yeah. I don’t know what I’d do if someone came up or down the trail—someone who could do me harm. I hadn’t thought that far.” Which is strange for me. I was too busy listening to the spirits. “I guess I’d act crazy. It’s worked for me so far.”
Friday, April 22, 2005
The pain in my knee keeps me up for half the night. My knee started hurting hours after my friend Dave told me about his knee injury. It’s this strange empathy I have. It’s terrifying, really. We’ve long ago given up thinking it is a coincidence. So sometimes I’ll hide from people for weeks—I don’t have the energy to take on their pain. I’ve become the Picture of Dorian Gray for my friends and family. Only I don’t seem to be alleviating their suffering, just adding to mine.
In the morning, my knee still throbs, but I want to go up the mountain. It’s sunny and windy. Mario and I drive to the beginning of the trail. I ask for permission to come on up, and then we step on the trail.
Mario tells me about the lunch he had with a friend of his: an artist who complains about having too many friends. Mario does not understand the most recent cause of this man’s angst: he wants his art to mean something; he doesn’t want to be part of the commodity culture. Doesn’t want his art in a box. With a ribbon on it. For sale. He’s trying to think outside of the box. Wouldn’t that be outside of the frame?
Neither of us feels any compassion for his “suffering.” It seems trivial to us. Mario is not impatient with many things but he just shakes his head as he talks about his friend. “I tell him that I want to sell my writing so that I can make a living. He’s only been painting a few years and he’s sold many many paintings. Some artists never sell a single thing. He thinks if his work is a commodity he’ll start to paint for the market.” I laugh. “I’m not into the commodity culture myself,” I say, “but he has control over whether he is trying to change his art to fit the market.”
His angst seems specious to me—it is the angst of someone who hasn’t truly suffered. It is the angst of someone who has the luxury of angst. I probably feel less sympathy for him because I don’t think he likes women much, especially mouthy ol’ broads like me. He appears to be perplexed by Mario’s relationship with me, as though he’s wondering, “You really love her?" His problems seem contrived. He has never seen the true face of suffering. Do I seem judgmental? I guess I am.
Recently I read an interview of an editor—someone I respect—who said he wished writers would go back to writing for the sake of writing. Or something like that. The implication was that once long ago writers wrote for the art of it: they weren’t trying to make a living. I wondered (and still wonder) if I misunderstood this editor’s words. What he seemed to be saying is that we (as artists) should work without getting paid. This is said by someone who has a regular paycheck. Now every editor I know works very hard, and most don’t get paid very well, so it can’t be that simple. Mario’s artist friend thinks there’s something unseemly about getting paid for his art. This is ridiculous. Why shouldn’t artists get compensated for their work? We have to buy food, pay the electric bill, etc. The editor longing for the good old days has forgotten the history of literature, perhaps. The people who wrote without worrying about getting paid were most often from the upper class: they already had money! The other writers most certainly wanted to get paid. Charles Dickens wrote for money. A few dollars might have saved Edgar Allan Poe. Maybe Van Gogh wouldn’t have sliced off his ear if someone—anyone!—had been buying his paintings.
But I don’t want to keep thinking about any of this as we go up the mountain. We shake off our words like dogs shaking off mud. I watch the words scatter throughout the forest. “May they cause no harm,” and we continue up, asking for entrance as we step over the threshold created by the two old Dougs. Tenemos. A woodpecker taps a wooden greeting.
The trail curves. Sensually. I encourage Mario to go on ahead of me. Each to her/his own pace. We remark to one another that this mountain must have been used for vision quests. Something about this place...
Up. Forest darkness all around us. The wind keeps the distant sound of traffic distant, until I am on the north side of the mountain again. Then it is just the sound of soft needles brushing against soft needles. The lullaby of evergreens. It feels as though someone has her hand on my forehead, whispering, “It’s all right, darling. It’s OK. Shhhh.”
We come to the talus slope and cross it. I look down at each rock before I step on it, trying to pick a flat solid place for my feet. Mario stares at the talus. “Something about these stones,” he says.
We get to the other side of the talus and walk into darkness again. Forest darkness. Semi-darkness. Dream darkness. I put one foot in front of the other. It’s all uphill. Up mountain. We come to another talus slope. In the distance, tree-covered hills curve up and down, up and down, looking like green velvet. I want to run my fingers across them. Anger falls away from me, as I climb. Usually I am angry the way other people sweat, only it never washes away; my skin—my being—soaks it up again. So much to be angry about. Fury—righteous anger—has its place. But me being angry because Mario’s friend worries about things I consider trivial—well, that just seems small. I know why I’m angry, though. I know why. Anger keeps me up. Anger keeps me standing. When it dissipates, I fall over. Anger is the fuel that energizes me.
If I wasn’t sick, I wouldn’t be angry.
Hah! That’s a laugh. You came screaming out of your momma’s womb, girl.
This trail goes on forever. As if I’ve been climbing this mountain for fifty years. Five talus slopes we walk over? Maybe more. Then the trail curves, and we are on a sloping tree-covered plateau. Large healthy white trilliums wave in the wind all over the forest floor, amongst the huckleberry bushes and beginnings of hundreds of starry Solomon plumes (smilacina stellata). Trilliums are the harbingers of spring here. Every year, the paper publishes a photo of the first sighting of a trillium.
Mario and I laugh, quietly at the surprise and beauty of it all; we have stepped onto a sacred place. A sign gives us proof. Really. A sign: this is a fragile archaeological site which the First People used for a spirit quest. Young people would stay the night hoping to find a spirit guide.
One would have to be very brave to stay up here all night.
We look through the trees and see the sky. It is so vast and beautiful that my voice catches in my throat, and then I realize it is not Sky: it is the River. My knees shake. I am standing a thousand feet above the Big River, yet she looks like the sky. A Northwest sky. Always ready for a storm. Bring it on!
The trail goes on for a bit, so we walk east and up, toward a squat old Doug fir. At least that’s what we think it is. It is the heart of the place, of that we are certain. We are drawn to this tree like magnets finally finding true north. The trunk is as wide as those we’ve seen tipped over at Falling Creek, with over 400 rings. Yet this tree does not tower. It hunkers on the edge of the mountain, overlooking a talus slope.
One branch that is thicker than my body dips down like a hammock, or a swing, thick and solid, inviting us to rest a spell, only I cannot sit on this tree, this ancestor. S/he has been in this spot for 400 years or more. We stand near her, our feet on the talus, which is now made up of large slate-like rocks. We look west, down at the river and the sides of the Gorge. In the distance is Beacon Rock. Almost directly below us is a mill at Home Valley--ugly and industrial. But the only other thing which uglies the view is a golf course in Carson. Acres and acres of brown. They must be re-landscaping it. Otherwise, we try to imagine what it looked like when this tree first became a sapling. Ahhhh, wilderness.
After a while, we move away from the tree. The trail goes on a bit more. I gasp as I step out into the open. We stand looking east, on the top of the mountain. At our feet and below and all around us is the talus field. Flat black-gray rock after black-gray rock. Only the rocks all look organized, like the slate walls in some gardens or fireplaces. As though someone has shaped rocky nests and paths to the nests. This would make sense, actually. Perhaps the spirit-questers stayed here for the night and watched the sun come up. Wouldn’t that be a sight to see? As the sun rose, sleepy heads popped up, until all around young people sat cross-legged, watching the sun move higher and higher.
I step out on the talus field a few feet. The East wind is blowing hard, as usual. I stand with my arms wide open and I ask the spirits and beings of this place for healing. As I ask, the wind blows so hard I am nearly knocked down—only my walking stick keeps me from tumbling backwards. Then I close my eyes and wait.
But I will not take out the butterfly net. Imagine what would heal you.
Sometime later, I look over at Mario. I am so glad to be in this place with him. We leave a piece of apple on the tree and pour some water on the ground and whisper our thanks.
We look at one another. It is one of the most amazing places we have ever been.
We walk down the mountain together.
I awaken in the middle of the night and look out my bedroom window. The moon slips in and out of black clouds. It seems to mean something. This moon. Those clouds. Me standing at the window watching.
I glimpse beauty.
Sunday, April 24, 2005
We sleep through the eclipse. The end of the two week cycle. From New Moon to Full Moon. In the morning of the Full Moon, we drive toward the mountain. When we’re almost there, I say, “No, I don’t think we should go there today. They’ll say, ‘Whaddya doin’ back here so soon?’” So we go to Falling Creek instead.
We walk the path and count flowers. The trilliums look tired or wounded here. Too much water? But the deer’s head orchids are everywhere. These little miracles in the woods. They’re also called “fairy slipper” or “lady slipper.” They’re shaped like a tiny slipper. I read in one place that they grow out of leaf mold and if you cut them, they seem to bleed. I don’t know if that’s true—I would never cut one. Their scientific name is “Calypso bulbosa,” after Calypso. She was a daughter of the ocean, an Oceanid, who offered the wandering Odysseus immortality if he stayed with her on her island. Each and every one of these Calypso bulbosas seems like a siren, calling for us to walk on the wild side.
We walk and count our way to the falls. We have seen 82 trilliums, 45 anemones, 7 currant bushes, and 249 deer’s head orchids.
Miracles abound. I have to remember that. Miracles and suffering. It’s like the path we walk on the way to the falls. It follows the creek for most of the way. We go through life with miracles and suffering side by side. Sometimes the creek and trail move away from each other, just like life: sometimes we have more miracles or more suffering. Eventually they come back together. Side by each. Which is the path and which is the creek? When you’re on one or in the other, it’s difficult to imagine there’s anything else.
I don’t know. Two days ago I stood atop of the world and opened my arms to it. Today I counted two hundred and forty-nine orchids growing up beside four hundred year old Douglas firs. At the end of the trail, I watched water plunging down over rocks into the creek below, like a giant milky mermaid who just goes on and on and on...
Life is a Siren, isn’t it? Even when we’re about to give up, it just calls us to its bosom. Its heart. I give in. Today the seduction feels good. 0 comments
Tuesday, April 26, 2005
Insurgency Same as a Year Ago
Monday, April 25, 2005
Silence
—Martin Luther King, Jr. 0 comments
Saturday, April 23, 2005
"The first thing we do..."
These people do not want to govern; they want to rule—and break anyone who does not go along with them. They have no sense of history. I don't believe they care about this country or the people in it. They only care about dominance and power and their business interests. I hope the Democrats continue to fight back with every ounce of their energy. The Emperor and his couturiers (and coterie) do not believe in checks and balances in government. I don't think the Bushies are true Christian. They use a minority of religious fanatics to rally around them so they can claim they are Christians while they commit all kinds of dirty deeds. (Thus the so-called "Justice Sunday."
Anyway, call your Senators if you have the mind to do so. Do what you can to keep the Bushies from totally dismantling our government. And make magic wherever you can. Weave those spells. Who knows what will finally work? Time maybe. And don't hurt any lawyers, of course. It may be a few good lawyers that save us. 0 comments
Thursday, April 21, 2005
Bits & Pieces
Still recovering from a couple of bouts of something. Vertigo spun into something else and it sure wasn’t gold. (At least I hope I'm recovering.) I can't listen to the news or be around people much. Every time I hear about one more death in Iraq, one more word about the ratty pope, one more word about something terrible the Emperor With No Clothes is doing, all my symptoms get aggravated. Guess I need some down time.
Scientists have developed infrared technology that has "enabled hundreds of ancient Greek comedies, tragedies and epic poems, composed by classical greats such as Sophocles, Euripides and Hesiod, to be deciphered for the first time in 2,000 years." I hope they find some Sappho. Wouldn't that be grand?
Economist Steven Levitt purports in his book Freakonomics that legalized abortion is the reason for dropping crime rates. Reviewer Stephen E. Landsburg says that Levitt "was struck by the fact that crime began falling nationwide just 18 years after the Supreme Court effectively legalized abortion. He was struck harder by the fact that in five states crime began falling three years earlier than it did everywhere else. These were exactly the five states that had legalized abortion three years before Roe v. Wade. Did crime fall because hundreds of thousands of prospective criminals had been aborted?" Levitt says he just uses the facts. I haven't read the book and don't know whether this guy is a fruitcake or not, but the book is apparently pissing off liberals and conservatives.
I found this quote on Tom Cowan's website: "The poet's job is to tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth, in such a beautiful way that people cannot live without it; to put into words those feelings we all have that are so deep, so important, and yet so difficult to name. The poet's job is to find a name for everything; to be a fearless finder of the names of things; to be an advocate for the beauty of language, the subtleties of language. " —Jane Kenyon, from "A Hundred White Daffodils"
This is an interesting interview with the girl blogger about her new book. Here's an article with a bunch of links about DeLie's misdeeds. And of course, Arianna Huffington has some cogent things to say about the man. Did you see the clip when he was talking to the NRA. Bleck. He said, "When a man is in trouble or in a good fight, you want to have your friends around—preferably armed."
Pope poop: What I’ve been saying (screaming, actually) is that journalists need to treat the pope and the catholic church as political entities. The previous pope tried to interfere politically in the business of other countries, so the new pope should be treated like a politician. He should be investigated. Reporters need to be critical when interviewing him. He apparently doesn’t want Turkey in the EU. I don’t have an opinion on whether Turkey should be in the EU or not because I don’t know enough to form an opinion. However, the ratty pope believes they shouldn’t be in the EU because they are a Muslim country and the purity (my word) of Europe should be maintained. Yuck, yuck, and triple yuck. Here’s a journalist who agrees with me about journalists and the pope. This piece is by a catholic who is not going to leave the church despite the ratty pope. His spiritual beliefs and decisions are his own. I wonder if he’s still going to support the church financially? I left the catholic church as soon as I was of age. I refuse to give money to institutions that condone (and actually encourage) anti-homosexual and anti-women beliefs and behavior. Institutions live and die by the amount of cash going into the coffers.
Things in Iraq seem to be going from worse to worse. Is the MSM covering it at all? At least the Guardian is.
By the way, raise your hands if you are disturbed that the MSM is now covering blogs. I don’t like it. What I’m afeard is going to happen is that now people will start slanting their blogs so that they will get mentioned in the MSM. I don’t want blogs to become part of MSM—not until MSM changes radically. Like maybe hires some real journalists again and let them do real investigative reporting. 0 comments
Tuesday, April 19, 2005
Holy Shit!
Monday, April 18, 2005
Counting on Wildflowers Now Available!
Many of these essays are from "Falling: A Memoir in Nature," so they combine my love of Nature with my feelings about the state of the world, including the state of my own body. Counting on Wildflowers: An Entanglement includes two original drawings by extraordinary writer and artist Terri Windling, along with several photographs by yours truly. Aqueduct Press is doing great work. They published Life by Gwyneth Jones which just won the 2005 Philip K. Dick Award. I am honored to be part of their "Conversation Pieces." I hope the book does well. Blessed be. 0 comments
Sunday, April 17, 2005
Work in Progress: Camel Jockey
Part One: Remember Shahrazad
May 30
You whispered when you gave me this pale green book with the blank pages, dear little brother. You didn’t want Uncle Rubel and our mother to hear us talking. I don’t know why. Ami wouldn’t care. But Uncle Rubel? Is he mean to you when I am away? At least he gives us a place to live. I don’t want to speak ill of any of our relations, of course, but I am not certain Baba liked him either. I miss our father so much. Will we ever get used to him being gone, Umar?
I wish you remembered when we lived in the village, before the bad things happened, and we had to come live in Karachi. Baba owned a store and was well-respected. We had a house. It was small, but I had my own room. At this time of year, you could smell the wildflowers growing in a small patch near the spring, especially these blue flowers shaped like bells. Ami called them blue bells, and Baba would laugh and ask if she could hear them ringing. Ami had several saris and dupattas then--made with the softest silks and the most becoming colors. She was much admired, our mother. But then our brother Rahman was accused, and I got hurt. That is not the story you want to hear tonight, is it? You wanted me to write about my experiences away from home and then read them to you when I visited on my day off.
I will try to do that, little brother. You are only six years old. I know you will not like hearing this, but you are too young for some things. Like the story of how I got hurt--even though you are the only person I have ever let touch the scar on my face. I remember the first time you said, “It looks like the new moon we watch for at the end of Ramadan.” You grinned. “That’s the time when we get to feast and celebrate. Just like I celebrate every time you come home!” And you asked if it hurt. I told you no, but it does hurt. Every time I look in the mirror--which is not often--and I move my dupatta away from my cheek, my heart hurts to see what they did to me.
Why am I talking about this? It must be Uncle Rubel. I don’t want to be unkind, Umar, but he reminds me of the men from the village. And that makes me shudder. I don’t like him talking to Ami about money. I give her all my pay, little as it is. It must be enough to pay for you both, plus our brothers send something. Don’t they?
Anyway, you gave me the little green book and showed me your little red book. Baba had written our names on the first blank page. “Remember Shahrazad,” he wrote to me in the green book. “Learn wisely,” he wrote to you in the red book. Do you think he knew he was going to die? It was very hard for him to lose everything. I was only thirteen when we left the village. He tried for four years to make our life better here. I think it hurt him that our brothers did not come home to help. Maybe they never realized how bad things had gotten.
I don’t think I will read you everything I write here. I am writing too many sad things, even though I don’t feel sad. Fatima is snoring next to me. I should be sleeping, but I am remembering telling you stories tonight like Baba used to tell me when I was your age. He taught me to read and write, too. I hope Ami sends you to school and doesn’t listen to Uncle Rubel. You should not be working at your age! Whatever happens, I will make certain you learn to read and write. Fatima found me a pencil to use to write in this little green book. I can hide it in the book and put both in my pocket.
Tonight I told you the story of Shahrazad. Of how she convinced the king to spare her life if she told a good story. He agreed. And each night for one thousand and one nights, Shahrazad told a story that saved her life, until the king finally decided she had told enough stories and he allowed her to live. That’s how we got Alf Layla wa-Layla, A Thousand Nights and One Night. (Even though Baba says Shahrazad was not a historical person, I believe someone like her existed. Maybe many someones like her.)
When Baba first told me this tale, I said, “A king can kill people?”
Baba said, “A king can do anything. But he has someone he must answer to--even if it is only his own conscience. Everyone has someone like the king in their lives. Shahrazad was clever. She didn’t wait for her fate. She went to the king and said let me tell you a story. And she saved her own life. No sense crying and wailing over how terrible your life is. Someone always has it worse. Someone always has it better.”
Before you would go to sleep tonight, little brother, you said, “I want to see the moon.”
“But we have no window,” I said.
And you gently pulled my scarf away until you could see my scar. I leaned down, and you kissed it. I will never have a husband, and I will probably always be a servant in a household like this one, but I have the best brother in the world. Your breath on my cheek--on my scar--felt like the breath of Allah.
You said, “Promise you will never leave me.”
“I promise,” I said. “Promise you will never leave me.”
“Never,” you said.
Good night, sweet brother. Dream of the two of us flying on a magic carpet, will you? We are flying far far from here.
Your loving sister, Nadira 0 comments
Saturday, April 16, 2005
Silence is Not Golden
But I do write about what frightens, angers, and saddens me. I write about passion and illness, about love and death and suffering. I don't believe there is sainthood in suffering—or suffering silently. In fact, I think silence breeds more silence. As a society and individuals, we need to talk about our suffering. I don't mean we should sit around whining, but we should be able to speak our truth outloud to ourselves and others. What is so honorable about putting a happy face on terrible things?
We need to talk about what's happening with the environment and then act on it. We need to talk about the suffering happening around the planet because of war, misogyny, and disease, and then decide how to act. We need to talk about the prevalence of chronic diseases. We need to find out why so many people are suffering with these illnesses. The solution is not to medicate and then sweep the ill under the proverbial carpet. By being silent about our suffering we add to the problem: if people don't see what's happening, they will not act to stop it.
A couple of years ago I was at a restaurant with several other people, and they began talking about a woman I did not know. She had been seriously hurt in a car accident. Everyone agreed she was an incredible woman: because she was silent in her suffering! I was appalled. This woman was elevated to near sainthood because she kept her mouth shut and didn't let the others around her know how terrible things were for her. Yeah, well, great for them, but what about this woman? Maybe she was so damn silent because she didn't feel like anyone would listen to her. Maybe no one would sit with her and just let her speak her truth.
The truth is profoundly beautiful, no matter how ugly it is.
Now let us be prepared to hear it. 0 comments
Wednesday, April 13, 2005
Vertigo
Being in the labyrinth again today, as always, I think of the Minotaur and wonder what I can do to get myself out of the labyrinth and this underworld of chronic illness. I've never related to Theseus, as I've said before. I am soul sister to the monster at the center of the labyrinth. Misunderstood and just trying to get some peace and healing.
So no writing and very little reading today. Although it's nice to see Arianna pointing out some salient facts about the strange "news" coverage we've been getting as of late. I've also found the hearings regarding John Bolton (who is Bush's nominee for the U.S.'s main man in the U.N.) amusing. I'm not sure why. He so clearly hates the U.N. that I'm curious why he even wants the job. But that's all I can comprehend right now. Time to stop.
I shall try some sleep now. Cross your fingers nothing spins out of control... 0 comments
Tuesday, April 12, 2005
Pots & Pans & Rummy
Artemis & the Poppy Dance
As we swim in metal, we pass a park where the rainlight is at its peak. Artemis watches me, her arms reaching for the swollen clouds, tickling the fog into rain. The world is moist with love. Life. Her many breasts go all around her blond body.
"It's Artemis," I whisper. "The many-breasted goddess. She looks like a sycamore."
I am well with love.
We stop the car. I dodge speeding bullets and run across the river road to the many-breasted goddess. I stand in a state of agape (the original meaning of that word), my arms outstretched, drinking in the rain and her loveliness. How could I never have noticed these trees with breasts? I look around. Two more stand nearby, making a triangle, like the triple goddess the wild Artemis has always been. The cars race by. The trees and I are still. Why now?
At home. The poppies have started blooming. They are visible even when the rainlight has faded. In sunlight or rainlight they throb with orange. Rarely one of them. Always more. The many-bloomed goddess. Is it a coincidence that poppy remains are found in sanctuaries for Artemis? Not the drug inducing kind. Just the kind that bloom. And bloom. Survivors, thrivers.
If they were women, they would dress only in orange scarves and dance under the many-breasted goddess trees, laughing, cupping their breasts with their hands, their feet planted on the ground as their hips swayed in time to the beat of the planet.
Can you feel it?
Voluptuous.
Poppies are the flowers of Demeter, whose attendants were said to be the melissae, priestesses of the bees. Yet Artemis was also surrounded by the melissae. Bee goddesses both? Fertility. Abundance. Wild and cultivated. Ain't that the definition of a modern woman? No, sistah, ain't no definin' me!
I dream all night of the Many-breasted Goddess and orange poppies. What message have these dreambacks brought to me, crossing the borders between dreamtime and lifetime?
Words are not art, I've heard. Black and white scratchings. No sun or rainlight. Ahhhh, but don't they see? It is the ultimate abstract art. It is the key to the imagination. The palette of our being. Not a dream. Not anything quite so ethereal. Living, breathing. It is you? Don't you see? You are the artist. And the art. The Poppy Women and the Many-breasted goddess. The rainlight and the dance.
Voluptuous.
Cup it in your hands. Life. Feel it shivering? Waiting for your response... 0 comments
Brothers & Sisters of Compassionate Hand-wringers!
Yours in true loving kindness,
Sister Cutlass of Mild Reason 0 comments
Monday, April 11, 2005
Honey Cookies
It was all exotic to me. I was fascinated. I was a small town girl accustomed to Irish-Americans. Jimi's father was Lebanese. His mother was Irish-American, like most of us in our small town. His father was patriarchal, cold, quiet, and I knew my "mouthiness" bugged him. Neither of his parents liked me. When I look back at it now, I wonder what on Earth could they have disliked—except the fact that I had a mind of my own? I was a good Catholic girl saving myself for marriage, bound for college, involved in school activities. I didn't smoke or do drugs. I was about as “virtuous” as you could get during the seventies. My dresses were short, but then it was the age of the mini-skirt. I had to reach up to get into my locker; I would have Jimi stand behind me, so I didn't flash my underwear to the whole school as I got my books. (I later learned that the group of boys down the hallway who always congregated kitty-corner from my locker between classes waited there just to see me reach up.) This was back in the days when schools had dress codes. Literal dress codes: girls had to wear dresses. It changed while I was in high school, but I forget what year.
So back to Jimi's parental units. They didn't like me. I was Jimi's first girlfriend, and I had opinions about everything. I wasn't quiet. To them, I wasn't respectful because I offered my opinion when asked a question. Probably even when I wasn't asked. Then one day I found a chocolate chip recipe in a magazine. I can't remember which mag or why I decided to try it, but I did. It was called Honey Chocolate Chip Cookies.
This was the recipe (or something like it):
2 cups of flour sifted before measuring
1 cup honey
2/3 cups butter
2 eggs
1 tsp baking soda
2 tsp real vanilla extract
1 cup of chocolate chips
Cream the honey and butter together. Then whip the eggs and add to the creamed mixture, along with vanilla. Sift baking soda and flour together. Mix liquid and dry ingredients together. Add chocolate chips. Bake at 375° until done (about 8-10 minutes).
I think I made the first batch for Jimi, and he took some home, and his father liked them. (I've made cookies from this recipe or one like it for the last 30 plus years, and no one has ever disliked the cookies.) So I made Jimi’s father a batch of cookies. Suddenly, he could tolerate me. He even smiled when I was around, joked a bit. I told Jimi it was because I had done something that a traditional woman would do: I baked. I thought it was quite amusing. This little bit of baked bribery did nothing to win Jimi's mother over to my side. Jimi's grandmother—who couldn't speak English despite decades of living in Michigan—loved me; his father tolerated me, but his mother was still suspicious.
She shouldn't have been worried. We were basically innocent. Besides, Jimi wasn't someone who was influenced easily. I always liked my boyfriends and girlfriends to have minds of their own. Like most teenagers in love, Jimi and I did some strange things. After we had been going out for a couple of years, I used to wake up in the middle of the night, climb out my upstairs bedroom window, hang down and then jump to the ground, then steal my parents' car and drive to Jimi’s house. He slept downstairs in the same room with one of his brothers. I would park down the road, then hurry in the dark to his house, walk through the dark garage, and open the unlocked door to the downstairs. I would then tiptoe through the darkened downstairs to Jimi's room. When I look back at it now, I think, what on Earth was I doing? What if my parents had heard me leave in the car? What if Jimi's parents had come downstairs? I vaguely remember falling to sleep and waking up when it was light. I had to hide in the closet until Jimi checked to see if the coast was clear. Then I hurried out the garage and down the road to the car. I should point out that the car was a Volkswagen. When you think of Volkswagen, what do you think?....Noise. It was extremely noisy. (I wonder if his brother ever knew I was there?)
Anyway, don't worry, I'm not getting nostalgic or lusting after old boyfriends (good grief, we would have killed each other had we stayed together–nothing in common except our past and Mario thinks these stories are funny), but every time I bake these cookies, I think of Jimi, high school, and his father and that old saying, "You catch more flies with honey..."
Of course, I have altered this recipe over time. This is what I did tonight:
2 cups barley flour
1/4 olive oil
1/4 maple syrup
2 eggs (or 1 egg plus 1 T water)
1 tsp baking soda
2 tsp real vanilla extract
1/2 cup raisins
1/2 cup sugar-free chocolate chips
Mix the honey and oil together. Then whip eggs and add to the honey and oil, along with the vanilla. Sift baking soda and flour together. Mix liquid and dry ingredients together. Add chocolate chips and raisins. Bake at 375° until done (about 12-15 minutes).
I've made these cookies many times without the chocolate chips, by the way. Tonight Mario and I ate them while watching a movie and drinking Zen tea (hot water).
Now I'm high on chocolate and caffeine. I'm giggling, too, remembering the teenager who was me driving that noisy VW bus (or car) down those long dark roads.
Glad I don't have to bribe anyone with cookies any more, or drive in the dark to cuddle with my honey. Speaking of which, time for bed. 1 comments
Baghdad Burning in Book Form
Unitiarian Jihad by Jon Carroll
Saturday, April 09, 2005
Notes of a Natural Woman: Mountain Lullaby
My feet haven't felt earth beneath them for so long. Round hole in a square peg. No, that can't be right. But I don’t fit. I feel as though I'm in one of those end of the world science fiction novels I read when I was younger. Only on the surface it appears so normal because everyone has been brainwashed, and we only know it's all wrong because everyone is sick.
It's everywhere.
Please take me where my soul can touch the Earth. My soles. She's everywhere, but I cannot feel her. I need to touch the face of the divine.
Drive one way and we see the rain falling in the near distance. It looks like someone is drawing a foggy curtain on creation. Sunlit. The remains of the crater of an ancient volcano rises alongside the river and the light, like a shadowy beacon.
We turn around anyway.
Take me where I can breathe the sighs of trees, coyotes, and bears.
We drive up a mountain road close to home, looking for a way up. We stop and get out. An east wind moves through a stand of pines, and the sound is like a lullaby. We stand and watch, listen. Shhhhh. I stare at the tall dark beauties, and I can think only of the sea—as though these windswept beings are sirens—mermaids dressed in tree boughs—trying to lure me...
So I walk up the steep hill. The cold east wind pushes the trees back and forth, back and forth, like seaweed in an ocean wave. I say a little prayer, asking for protection for Mario and me. I turn to look behind me, and the pines look so tall next to my husband coming up over the ridge, sunlight at his back. He looks so beautiful. I keep walking into the dark. I breathe.
Breathe. I start to see for the first time in days. Weeks? Oregon grape: shiny, with light yellow green berries in a small cluster in the middle of it all. The leaves of wild roses just beginning to bud out. I am so cold, So cold. A deer print. Dear, dear print. The wild roams here. Can you put your hands on me, on the world, and fix me/it? Or at least pretend. Up and up and up. The music of the east wind through the trees masks everything else.
Then Mario points out a delicate purple, lavender deer's head orchid that rises an inch or two off the ground like a Barbie doll shoe left behind by a far-too modern fairy. Linda always says if there's one, just wait; there will be others. So we wait. Seconds later, we see orchids here, there, and here.
We come down out of the cold and head for Wind Mountain, away from the wind. It disappears, the wind, just like that. And swallows swoop and dive above us. I lift my arms up.
We discover a trail up the mountain. It's a surprise, an invitation in the silence, an invitation into the darkness that is beginning to spread across the mountain. I step onto the path that goes up through the mossy rocks, salal, Oregon grape, and fir and pine trees. I have to pay attention to every step. The path is narrow, and I could easily slip down the mountain. Ferns grow all around us, trembling slightly as we pass. The moss looks wet but is dry to the touch. Mario points out a lizard or salamander. I crouch next to the cinnamon-colored creature, and I feel altered, slightly in-balance, as I was once before on the coast when a lizard stopped me for a kind of mystical chat. They both said the same thing: "It's all a dream." It crosses the path slowly between Mario and me.
If it's a dream, it's a beautiful gorgeous horrific dream. It's all so beautiful. This. This place. This man. This moment.
We walk over recently downed trees. More deer's head orchids. Trilliums. Yellow violets. Teeny white flowers the size of a pin head.
The setting sun falls across the forest below us like a golden child stretching and yawning before sleep. Mario and I stare at the light and the coming night.
I breathe and breathe...
...and breathe.
Later, we walk on pavement again, and I try to remember the words to the lullaby. It went something like, "Shhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. It's all a dream.” Didn’t it? 0 comments
Thursday, April 07, 2005
The Contender
I feel so lost and frustrated because I can only stand by and watch and offer help. I can't make it go away. Then I go home and want to crumble. Of course death and dying are parts of the natural cycle of life, but these horrific environmental diseases do not feel natural.
So today I watched The Contender again. President Jeff Bridges nominates Joan Allen for his vp after his original vice president dies. They call it a political thriller, but I don't think it is. It's a political movie, and I really like it: even though we spend most of the movie watching Joan Allen being tortured (not literally). What I like most about the film is what happens after THE END comes up on the screen. It says FOR OUR DAUGHTERS. Makes me weep every time.
In the Making of documentary in the special features, they talked about other political thrillers. They mentioned The Parallax View. That was a great movie. That movie changed how I saw the world. Although I still am not a conspiracy person, I could see from that movie how easy it would be to make it look like someone innocent had committed a crime. If you've never seen the movie, it'll probably seem dated, but at the time, it was something new and scary. The Making of docu also mentioned The Manchurian Candidate. The original one. Now, while I enjoy seeing that movie every once in a while for the style and the acting, I have never believed a single solitary word of it—to me, it is total fantasy, something that did not and could not have happened. The recent MC was just stupid, without the style.
Now it's back to real life...as opposed to reel life. 0 comments
Wednesday, April 06, 2005
Another View of the pope
Tuesday, April 05, 2005
War Against Women
The Blanding of the Planet
Hey buddy, can you spare some sense? 0 comments
Monday, April 04, 2005
Derailment
We went to visit a friend on her houseboat near Sauvie Island, about 20 minute northwest of Portland. I hadn't been to a houseboat 'burb before. My friend calls it her floatopia. Maybe a dozen homes floated on either side of a dock on the north side of Sauvie Island. It reminded me of homes along the ocean, only there weren't any beaches. While we talked inside the floatopia, the water streamed by the house, reflecting the changes in the weather. The clouds grew darker, then lighter, then darker. It rained. It stopped raining. Birds came and went from her feeder. The houseboat rocked slightly when someone went by in a boat. It was quiet and peaceful.
We got home just as it was getting dark. We drove to the train wreck. The road had been closed for most of the day, but now it was open. We stood—just the two of us—in the dark and the rain watching as huge machines moved the engine off the tracks (or onto the tracks). Three cars behind it leaned against the embankment. We had heard no one had been seriously hurt. I hoped that was true. Spotlights illuminated the tracks, train, two huge yellow CATs, and workers dressed in orange, making it all look like a movie set.
We stayed until we were shivering from the rain and cold, and then we went home. 0 comments
Sunday, April 03, 2005
Perspective
I ain't buying what they is selling. I called my oldest sister in disgust about this, and she said, "So, do you think they'll elect a woman pope." Then we laughed uproariously—after which we discussed how disgusting it was that all these old men were going to get together to decide on the new spiritual leader for the Cathols (as Eddie Izzard calls them). Dressed as women, I might add. A bunch of drag queens getting together to elect the biggest and bestest drag queen. As the deathwatch continued one day, I had the passing thought that if the pope suddenly popped up from his deathbed and said something profound, I might have changed my mind about him and the Catholic Church. For instance, he could have said something like, "I've seen God, and She has convinced me I was wrong about women and gays. In order to even things out, only women and homosexual men can now be priests for the next 2,500 years. We're going to throw out the pedophiles. We're going to celebrate life instead of suffering through it. Ding dong I'm dead."
But it didn't happen.
Yes, I know I don't have much flexibility on these kinds of issues. If someone is a racist, homophobe, or misogynist, I can't see the good. I recognize this may be a blind spot I have, but I don't think so. It doesn't mean I want that person dead or I wish them harm—I certainly never wished the pope any harm. I didn't wish him anything. He meant nothing to me. But now that he's dead I ain't gonna sing his praises.
For my Catholics friends who might be grieving, I am sorry for your loss. I was raised Catholic. The pope meant nothing to us. He was some old man in Rome who knew nothing about our lives. 0 comments
Saturday, April 02, 2005
Felled
June 2002
I’m sitting in Hoda’s Middle Eastern Cuisine dining room in Portland, Oregon, eating vegetarian mezza for two with my husband Mario and listening to the owner’s husband at the table next to us talk with his parents in Lebanese. I like the sound of the language—it’s like listening to a creek; I know the words have meaning, but I don’t know what that meaning is. And I don’t need to. I could close my eyes and fall to sleep to the music of it.
Earlier in the day, I fell to sleep in the back of our Honda while Mario drove us home from the south side of Mount St. Helens. I had fallen on the trail, and for some reason I crawled into the back seat of the car—something I never do—to sleep with the sun on my face. Mario said my body needed the rest to mend. I hadn’t thought the fall was that bad.
Maybe I was like a dog curling up to lick her wounds.
We have lived in the Cascade Mountains at sea level for nearly two decades. When we resided in White Salmon, Washington, I saw Mount Hood (W’yeast) every day. I watched the snow come and go and clouds move over her, envelop her as if she never existed, then disappear again to reveal her shiny silky-snow sides. For our tenth wedding anniversary, Mario and I stayed the night on W’yeast, at the timberline. We sat above cottonball clouds while a fat full yellow moon rose above us. I awakened in the middle of the night and watched the lights of a snow-groomer move up and down the mountain like a lit comb slowly untangling the tresses of a white-haired giantess.
From afar, I worshipped Mount Hood and her snowy ornate appearance. When I went up her sides, however, I felt anxious, short of breath, de-pressed. Pressed. I supposed it was because of the altitude, yet I didn’t feel that way on other mountains. Each mountain evoked different sensations.
The last time I went to Mount Rainier, her sides were spotted with wildflowers, looking as though the latest thundercloud had let loose colorful drops of paint rather than rain. I felt light-hearted on Rainier and half-expected Heidi to run out of the lodge looking for her grandfather.
When I was a teenager living in Michigan, I used to imagine running away to the mountains in the event of a nuclear holocaust. I pictured the western mountains much like Heidi’s Alps—only with more trees. Knock on wood no nuclear holocaust happened, but I did eventually move to the mountains. Last year Mario and I renewed our twenty-year old wedding vows standing on the lip of a lava tube created by an ancient eruption of the area’s disappeared volcanoes.
Mount Saint Helens (Loo Wit) erupted May 18, 1980, approximately six weeks before Mario and I met. We both remembered volcano dust falling on the cars at our respective towns, mine in Ypsilanti, Michigan, his in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada. Neither of us knew then where Mount St. Helens or Washington state was. Two years later we moved out West together as husband and wife.
Seven years after the eruption, we visited Mount St. Helens for the first time. Her sides were gray, covered in pumice and charred blow-down. Standing far from her active center, I felt renewed. Loo Wit had blown her top, exposed her fiery center, felled 150,000 acres of trees, and obliterated billions of organism, yet seven years later wildflowers pushed up through her ash.
Today we hiked on the south side of Loo Wit. We wanted to go east, but the roads were still snow- and debris-covered from the winter. We drove instead to Lava Canyon at the foot of Mount St. Helens. The black sides of Loo Wit showed through the melting snow, looking like a bushel of snakes thrown onto a white blanket or tangled black licorice tossed on a heap of melting vanilla ice cream. As we drove toward the parking lot at the trailhead to Lava Canyon, Loo Wit’s peak disappeared; I felt as though I were on the body of a goddess and could no longer see her head.
It was cold and windy. I wore two jackets, a hat, and gloves. Mario walked beside me down the paved switchback trail. We had started out the morning crabbing at each other. He thought I was picking on him; I thought he was oversensitive. We generally did not argue with one another. We had great discussions where we disagreed with each other on particular subjects, but petty bickering was not part of our relationship. We had had our first fight about ten years into our marriage and wondered briefly if that meant we were headed for divorce court. We decided instead that normal people did occasionally get on each other’s nerves—as we had this morning. The morning fight was now nearly forgotten as we walked down into the canyon. I hoped the paved trail ended soon. I wanted my soles against Loo Wit.
Lava Canyon had an interesting history. Approximately 3,500 years ago, new mud flows had eroded much of the lava already there from a previous eruption, then filled up the canyon. Trees grew on the new soil. Grassy meadows appeared. No one knew a canyon lay beneath it all until the mud flows of the 1980 eruption scoured out the canyon again, revealing the ancient lava and other rock formations.
Muddy Creek ran through the canyon now, creating lovely falls as it twisted and turned over the lava rock and the red/orange rock that now made up the canyon.
The trail seemed to end, and we stepped onto the slippery curving lava: it was smooth and black, and I wanted to lay my body down and stretch across it. It reminded me of the backs of whales. The Muddy River swirled around the hardened lava, becoming swimming-pool blue, before bubbling down and over into a deep dark pool below. It was so far down I could look for only a second before feeling dizzy and stepping back. Not all of the water fell into the chasm. Some stayed on the lava and continued alongside us as we walked along a new dirt trail, on the other side of the lava.
This trail took us away from the lava and water. To our right, twenty year old riparian trees grew. To our left, a huge slab of slate hung above us, pieces of it ready to fall at any moment. Near the ground, the layers of gray-black slate looked as though they had been crushed—or heated—until they all fused together. As we kept walking, the rock changed from slate to some kind of red/orange rock streaked with lines of cream. I used to be a rock hound but did not know what this stone was. On a ridge above and beyond the young deciduous trees, older conifers grew, many with branches on one side only, as if the 1980 eruption had stripped and crippled them but hadn’t quite killed them. Some had turned into snags.
The dirt trail ended at a narrow wooden suspension bridge—above the deep very deep deep canyon below. Mario started across, stopped a third of the way, and looked back at me. “This is scary,” he whispered. Mario loved bridges; no bridge had ever scared him before. I took a step back. Mario kept going. The bridge swayed, reminding me of Galloping Gertie (the Tacoma-Narrows Bridge) just before it collapsed.
Once on the other side, Mario turned and waved. I waited for the swaying to subside, then started across.
The bridge wobbled. Swayed. I looked down. The bottom had to be three million miles away. I slowly backed up until I was on Loo Wit solid ground again. Mario walked back over the bridge to me.
“I’ll go with you,” he said.
“No!” I answered. “That’ll just make it sway more.”
I started across again. Got to the same spot and stopped. I looked down. Two huge old trees spilled down the falls and were completely still. Water found passage below them, streaking down the red/orange rock. From here, the two hundred (at least) year old trees looked like Lincoln logs.
I looked forward to the other side. The bridge swayed.
“I’m not gonna die,” I chanted. “I’m not gonna die.” I kept walking. I tried not to imagine the bridge wires snapping, me falling, falling, falling...
I got to the center of the bridge. I felt as though I were going to throw-up. I wasn’t sure I could ever move again. I could see all green in my peripheral vision. Renewal. Possibility. Life. I didn’t want to be afraid of a bridge. My stomach churned, I was dizzy, my heart raced. I thought about getting on my belly and crawling to the other side, but I figured that would make the bridge sway even more.
“I’m not gonna die, I’m not gonna die, I’m not gonna die.” I walked slowly forward.
The bridge rocked. Rolled. Swayed.
Finally my feet touched the Earth again. My legs were so rubbery I had to sit down. I looked at the ground until Mario was safely across and by my side again.
“Wasn’t that fun?” he said, grinning.
I shook my head.
“No, it wasn’t,” I said.
We continued on the trail, going up now, on a loop back to the beginning of the trail. My legs shook, and the rocks beneath my feet didn’t feel solid. The trail took us into deciduous trees again. Cool, green, watery. This felt familiar, unlike the desolate mountain sides. The path curved. I put my foot down in water. I picked it up again to put it somewhere else. I thought, “This is too slippery.” In the next second, I went down, hard. My foot slipped out from under me. My hands and right side fell to the Earth, the moss and water tempering the blows of the rock. I heard a crack. Splash.
Instantly I was back up again. Soaking wet. I pulled the camera from around my neck.
“Don’t worry about me, check the camera for damage,” I said in answer to Mario’s inquiry about my fitness.
I tore off my top jacket and stepped up onto dry stone. I pulled up my wet pant leg. Blood on my knee. Bruising on my leg. Throbbing foot, hands. I needed some first aid, but I was OK. I looked down at Mario; he gave me the thumbs-up sign about the camera.
I washed the wound out with water, sang a healing chant I knew, and continued up the trail, with Mario carrying everything, including my hat on top of his hat.
“I bet I look very stylish,” he said.
“You certainly do,” I said, laughing and limping next to him, one pant leg up, the other down. What a sight we were.
At the car, I pulled off my pants. I put a couple of drops of lavender on gauze and taped it to my knee. We ate lunch, then drove away from Lava Canyon with me still pantless. The mountain peak came into view again, and I asked Mario to pull over. I got out of the car, dressed only in a shirt, sweatshirt, panties, bandage, and shoes. I was cold, so I put on a jacket and walked a short distance to get a better view of Loo Wit. I took a picture of the snakes in the snow. (Later I learned the area I was shooting was called Shoestring Glacier.)
I turned to go back to the car. Mario smiled at my attire, at me taking photographs of Mount St. Helens nearly naked. He looked completely charmed, smitten. I grinned.
“It’s cold,” I said.
“I bet,” he answered, laughing.
Soon after I curled up in the back seat. Ten miles later, I got out of the car, went into the woods, and urinated. Loo Wit wouldn’t mind. I wasn’t a foreigner here. And even if I were, it would be all right.
I thanked her for the day. She might not understand my language, but I hoped it was soothing to her, like listening to one of her creeks curve around her beds of lava.
I got into the backseat of the car, again, lay down, and stroked the back of Mario’s head as he drove us toward home. I closed my eyes. The shadows of the trees flickered across my eyelids
as I was falling
falling
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