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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.
Wednesday, January 31, 2007
Gone Fishin'
We'll see if I can do it. I am addictive by nature. And I want to be heard. The blog is a perfect place to be heard and to be addictive. I will post on Church of the Old Mermaids occasionally.
Now we'll see if I can do this!
See you on the flip side.
P.S. Happy Bridgit, Imbolc, Candlemas, and Sister Bridget Mermaid's birthday.
Blessed sea and blessed be. 1 comments
Raise Some Hell
Blessed be. 0 comments
Crazy Thresholds

Yesterday we went to Mexico for the day. We had read in many places that we now needed proof that we owned our car; otherwise, we couldn't take it to Mexico. We didn't have our title, so we decided to rent a car. We went to a place in Nogales. The people were very nice, but the inside of the car was the ickiest of any car we've ever rented. But c'est la vie. We took it and we drove across the border.
No problemo. We drove through Nogales and got onto highway 15. About ten miles out of town we had to stop and get a tourist pass. We haven't driven in Mexico in twenty years, and this was new. If I hadn't read somewhere that we needed these, we wouldn't have known to stop. But we pulled off and went into this small white building with blue trim. They didn't speak English, and my Spanish is almost non-existent these days, so it was interesting. We filled out the forms, and then the woman said, "banco," which I assumed meant the cashier (bank), so we went back outside into the rain and the cold and got into line. There were other English speakers there and it seemed we had to get copies of everything.
So I went back to this tiny booth with two young women in it. They didn't look at me or anyone else, and they didn't say a word. I handed them our passports, driver's licenses, Mexican car insurance receipt, and the registration to our rented car. They made copies and handed them back to me, and I gave them money. It was mildly surreal. Then back into line again. Once we got to the "cashier," behind plexiglass windows, we learned we didn't need all those things. I said, "We're only going to be here for the day." Still, we had to pay $22 each to come into the country. (This seems acceptable if you're coming there for a week or a month, but for four hours? I've travelled to many countries, and I don't remember ever having to pay to get in.) The whole process took an hour.
We finally were on the road again. I wanted to get out into the countryside a bit and away from the border. I've always loved the colors in Mexico, the vibrancy of the colors. We didn't have time (or the resources) to go deep into Mexico, so this day was all we were going to get. Many of the photographs you'll see were taken in Magdalena. As usual, I am fascinated by doors. I do believe that thresholds, borders, boundaries can be profound, magical, beautiful, and/or awful places.
Some of the photographs were taken along the road (drive-bys). I didn't take many photos of the trash. There was trash everywhere. When I travelled through Europe, I noticed that some countries had terrible trash problems, and some countries didn't. Mario said this would be a great subject for a book. I said it wasn't one I was going to write. But how trash and garbage evolves. When do government entities come into being to deal with these kinds of things? Etc. Mario wondered if when we were children was there a great deal more trash in both our countries (Canada and United States). I have never littered in my life, except maybe accidentally. Trash and garbage spread across the earth has always distressed me. I remember this from when I was a child. I even remember chiding my father for dumping cigarette butts in a parking lot when I was a girl.
I did try to take photographs of the squallor in Nogales as we were leaving the country. I wasn't able to get many good photographs. It is appalling that there is so much poverty within yards of our country. It is appalling that in our own country there is so much poverty (i.e. Louisiana, Mississippi).
And of course, the Virgin of Guadalupe was everywhere. You can go here to see some of the photos I took this journey. (Mario took the photographs of the hills.)
After we left Magdalena, we went out into the country more. It was a beautiful drive through golden hills (mountains?). I kept thinking if I drove far enough I would find an Old Mermaid Sanctuary, I would find the place where I would live the rest of my life. I have this village, this town, in my mind, in my heart, and I thought I might find it in these mountains. We didn't find a town at all. I told Mario that I was sure I'd find some evidence of the Old Mermaids. Something. He reminded me that we'd seen a mural in Magdalena of a seascape.
All day I kept wondering how to create the life I want. How do I make a life that is sustainable, where Mario and I have a good home and good work, where I am contributing and creating my community. I've been feeling melacholy now that I've finished Old Mermaid Sanctuary because I realized I liked being there better than I like being here. So how do I make what I write into reality. Is that possible? Is it wise? Or have my expectations been warped by my wonderful imagination? I want an Old Mermaid Sanctuary here. In some aspects, I want Myla's life. I don't remember feeling this way before. In any case, we had an interesting time together, and we decided to head home before dark.
Then we drove toward la frontera. The line of trucks trying to cross the border was so long. We guessed it was at least a three hour wait. Fortunately we took a wrong turn and we got into a line that was only thirty minutes long. When it was our turn, we drove up to the booth. Three border people were there, two men probably my age and a woman who was in her thirties (maybe).
Mario opened the window and we heard one of the men saying, "I heard the more accurate translation of Crazy Horse's name is Enchanted Horse. Now doesn't that sound better than Crazy Horse?"
The woman asked us of what country were we citizens. We told her. She took our passports and ran them through a scanner in her little booth. She asked us how long we had been gone and what we'd done while we were in Mexico. She asked if we had any fruits or vegetables. I told her no, the cooler had food in it that we'd brought with us from Tucson. While we were having this conversation, this other border guard was still talking about "crazy" and "enchanted."
"Don't you like enchanted better? Enchanted bear." I wondered why he was going on and on about this. And who was Enchanted Bear?
The woman, who was very professional and human, asked us where we lived. We told her. I said we came to Tucson for a month every year. (In case she wondered why we had come all the way from Washington to go to Mexico for a few hours.) I said it had been cold and rainy all day. Then she said we could go. I forget how she said it because that other guard was talking about enchanted bear, and then I noticed what the woman's name was. The guards all had their last names sewn into their jackets. Hers was Crazy Bear. Just then I looked to my right and saw a beautiful huge glorious double rainbow. Mario started to pull away and Crazy Bear and I looked at each other and I pointed to the rainbow. She frowned, not sure what I meant, and then she looked at the rainbow and smiled as we drove away. This rainbow looked as though it went from Nogales, AZ to Nogales, Sonora, Mexico.
The last two times that we'd been to Mexico, we've seen a beautiful rainbow. Probably didn't mean anything—except that it's been raining a lot here. But they are beautiful, a threshold we can never reach no matter how much we try. We can't ever get to the other side. Except maybe in our imaginations.
Is that enough?

Labels: Arizona, Mexico, photos, travel
1 comments
Tuesday, January 30, 2007
We Do Love You Molly
Monday, January 29, 2007
OMS: First Draft
All day today while I was in the Quail House completing the book, a phainopepla kept tapping on the window. Sometimes he would cling to the window—I'm not really certain how this was physically possible—and sometimes he would tap on the window. Every once in a while he'd fly and then tap. I was afraid he was going to hurt himself. I went outside to try and figure out what he was seeing, so I could change it. But I couldn't figure it out. Was he just seeing the desert reflected? If so, "turn around, darlin'! There's the real thing." I moved things around on the window sill. I put books there to try and block the view, but nothing worked. I vaguely remember this happening last year, so maybe he knows what he's doing, or at least he doesn't hurt himself while not knowing what he's doing.
My parents came Saturday night and left Sunday. It was great seeing them and spending time with them. And today I finished the first draft of the book. Tomorrow we're driving to Nogales, renting a car, and then driving across the border and going down further so I can do some research. (It is such a pain in the ass to take your own car to Mexico now. You have to prove you own it. Which means you need the title. Well, nobody carries their title in their car! If someone stole your car, they'd have the title and they could do whatever they wanted with it. Next year we may spend a week or more there, so we'll bring the title.) After Mexico I'm resting and relaxing for the rest of the time we're here. We head home Sunday.
So you might not hear from me for a while.
P.S. Did I mention there's going to be a third Old Mermaids novel? I'm not sure of the title because I don't know exactly what's it's going to be about. Maybe Siren Songs of the Old Mermaids. I'm not sure. But I've very excited about where the second one ended, and where the third one will pick up again.
Labels: Arizona, Old Mermaids, writing
2 comments
True Colors
Sunday, January 28, 2007
Give the Man a Hug
Friday, January 26, 2007
Babble
First I am a storyteller. It's what I do. It's how I see the world. Regular readers may have noticed that while I may say I don't like a movie or a book, I don't rip it to shreds. I don't say it's the worst piece of drek ever created. That's because I understand the creative process; I know that creation has its own integrity. In other words, it's someone's baby, and I don't want to tell them I think it's ugly. For one thing, I could be wrong.
That said: I think someone tampered with the voting machines. In Hollywood. What's with these movies that are up for best picture. Or should I say one particular movie. We've seen Little Miss Sunshine. We liked it very much. It didn't seem Hollywooden. It wasn't perfect, but who among us is? And there has to be a flaw somewhere or the gods, who really must be crazy, would also be jealous. I enjoyed The Queen. All the performances were superb. Haven't seen The Departed, and I probably won't. I appreciate much of Scorsese's more violent work from a far. I know he's a genius. But his mob chic movies just ain't for me. Actually how many lowlifes do I have to pay to go see in my lifetime? (I hated, hated, hated, hated Raging Bull. I can't say that enough times.) I will probably go see Letters from Iwo Jima, but I normally find Clint Eastwood movies very unsatisfying. And this one and The Departed are supposed to be very violent, so I'm not sure I will go. (Yes, yes, I know the world is violent and war is hell, etc., etc. But I've had enough violence in my life to last a lifetime; most of us have. So why would I want to go pay to watch more of it? Ain't my thing.)
And now onto the curdled cream of the crop: Babel. Ohmigod. There are two and a half hours of my life I will never get back. Three and a half if you count driving time. The movie tells four barely related stories. Two set in Morocco, one in California/Mexico, one in Japan. The storyline in Japan was so unnecessary. I think someone just wanted go to Japan. There was one long party sequence in Japan that was more interminable than the one in Lost in Translation. (That reminds me that Marie Antoinette had a really long boring party scene. Is Sophia Coppola filming only what she knows? Well, know something new.) The Japanese sequence in Babel was just strange and weirdly sexually perverted—or something. (Or maybe I'm missing something. I feel like I did in college when I read The Sun Also Rises and didn't understand Jake's angst until someone in class said, "He got his penis blown off. Duh." I suddenly knew what it was like to be the dumb girl in class. I went, "Ohhh, that really explains a lot.") As Mario said, if they'd dropped the Japan sequence in Babel, then we would have had a nice little dismal hour and a half movie.
Some reviewer compared it to Crash. Pshaw. (Ohmigod again. I said "pshaw." This movie has caused me to lose the will to curse.) I thought Crash was superb. (Yes, it too had flaws, but it captured me, surprised me, had me weeping in the aisles. If you saw it, you remember the scene when the little girl runs out to greet her father just as the other man pulls out his gun. And what happens after that is incredible. Wow.)
And the worst part, besides wasting my time and money, is that Babel made me sick to my stomach with its jerky camera moves and flashing neon lights. I'm cooking buckwheat right this minute to sooth my stomach. Buckwheat grits. Or groats. This movie has forced me to eat gruel.
By the way, the performances in the movie were all good. I can't fault the actors. (Okay, the actors in the Japanese sequence may have been good, but it didn't make any sense to me, so I can't honestly tell you whether they were good or not. Maybe if they had dropped that entire sequence the movie would be watchable.) Adriana Barraza was the standout in the movie. It's almost worth seeing the movie for her amazing performance. (I would suggest renting it and fast-forwarding it until she's on screen and keep doing that until the end of the movie.)
If you want to see a good movie, go see Stranger Than Fiction. I loved that movie. Granted, it's about a novel writer whose fictional main character is actually alive. So I may be predisposed to like this movie.
Forget the Babel, babies. It's not the worst drek ever created, but it's drek, nevertheless. 0 comments
Thursday, January 25, 2007
Offering
3/16/05
Met two migrants north of BA North station. Tried to call BP. Put on hold and flagged down passing truck.
4/02/05
South of mile post 32 we encountered a migrant walking south named Jorge. Jorge was from Mexico City, crossed the border alone and fell during the night. He had injured both of his legs. He requested that we call the Border Patrol to take him back to Mexico. We gave him water, food, and hygienic products and waited for the Border Patrol to pick him up.
4/30/05
One man walking north on 286, carrying gallon of water. We pulled up to ask if he needed help—at the same time BP drove up facing north and talked with him.
5/5/05
Both stations vandalized. Replaced flag at west station. Refilled both barrels at E. Station, replaced one faucet.
5/06/05
Moved east station away from RR no trespassing sign, a little further east by cattleguard and fence.
5/12/06
Uneventful.
5/14/05
6 migrants near Manville Road and Trico rd. They were in good condition, gave them food and water.
5/19/06
Good scones in Bisbee.
5/19/05
Good trip with Dutch tv crew. We picked up some trash. Saw lots of migrant tracks. Truck #3 engine light came on twice. Rough idle.
5/20/05
Tanks at the west station had the valves left open, flag down. We refilled the tanks and noticed that a minuteman was using the top 2 sections as a shade structure. Had a good conversation and he gave poles back. Wouldn’t give his name, but he had a Jeep Wrangler, Colorado License.
5/25/05
East station had been vandalized (twice by the looks of it). Someone had left gallon jugs at the station to take place of water. Not sure if it was our volunteers or the legal observers down there. There was a reference to ACLU.
5/28/05
Minutemen were camped at BR west. Touched up all the barrels with paint. BR west flag poles were all bent.
6/1/05
Young man from Guatemala beside Highway 92, between Sierra Vista and Paloverde. BP was already there. He appeared OK but had been in desert 2 days without food but had water. We gave him 2 food packets. Left him with officers awaiting pick up.
Flag pole at West Station vandalized, with pole down and broken. We replaced the pole and flag.
6/6/05
Yrena was knocked down but unharmed. Same with South Frink and Hope Springs.
6/27/05
Rattlesnakes! Both tanks shot up. No water left must be replaced.
6/27/05
Lots of Border Patrol out. Planes, trucks, vans and cars locating people on the Frink South Station.
7/11/05
4 migrants on bikes at Poplar Grove. Gave food and water.
7/13/05
Encountered a few teenagers and 2 adults on Manville and Avra Valley Road. Gave them 6 small water bottles and 4 big 1 gallon bottles. Also gave them 7-8 food bags. They said they just arrived to the US today at 4:00 a.m. and were involved in an accident. No one was hurt. At this point the border patrol arrived.
7/18/05
Yrena vandalized.
7/22/05
One gentleman encountered on David Rd. southeast of Tombstone.
There was a Border Patrol Agent parked at the East Station. We collected his name and information in case we want to make inquiry.
7/23/05
4 migrants encountered from Guatemala.
7/29/05
Met 5 migrants from Honduras—gave food and water. They haven’t eaten in 2 days. Destination Phoenix.
7/30/05
Central American named Manicio? from Guatemala was left behind from a group of 30, had been walking 17 days from Altar. Heading to Phoenix. A final destination: California. Looked remarkably strong and healthy.
7/30/05
Stuck in the mud at Brawley so—used jack, manpower, to get out.
8/10/05
Saw a group of 12 cross 86 on way to Cowtown.
8/12/05
Border Patrol was staking out Border Road East.
9/3/05
No More Deaths volunteers let us know that the BA South station had been drained and the flag bent. They straightened the flag for us. We filled the barrels.
9/9/05
2 young men from Vera Cruz, Mex on the Avro Valley road. Two men we encountered told us that 4 men were 1 hour behind them in desert were in bad shape. No water, no food, bad feet and wanted help. We met the border patrol members and helicopter at location and directed them in the location.
9/19/05
Engine light on.
10/22/05
Stopped for migrant needing help. Called border patrol to help him out. They came immediately. He asked us to get them because he wanted to return to Mexico and was lost and exhausted. Hunting season in PA, warning given, heard gunfire. Hunters Org. having large gathering at Pima Co. Emptied our tanks, ground soaking wet. We talked to them. We think Pima Co. should know what they have done.
11/19/05
2 men on bikes who ran away as we approached BA south.
12/31/05
Truck bed coming apart!
1/06/06
Manville was destroyed completely. Stand was gone and barrels were punctured. Flag missing.
1/21/06
2 men at 34.5 milepost. Fed, gave water. In good shape but had us call BP. Wanted to go back to Mexico. BP responded with 15 minutes.
2/4/06
We encountered 2 migrants walking along highway 286. We stopped and spoke with them. They wanted to know direction to Phoenix. After we pulled away the migra pulled up and took them in. They had been passed several times earlier that morning by border patrol.
2/18/06
1--2 packs of food; 2 packs of water
2--4 packs of food; 4 bottles of water
3/3/06
We encountered 2 mid 30-40 migrants and gave them food and water.
Lost bung wrench at one of the stops. Sorry.
4/15/06
2 men from Michoacan (at Cowtown) gave them water and several food packets.
4/15/06
Mile Post 35 BP were putting a group of men with back packs and h2o into truck. Several more BP vehicles heading south. Check engine—light is on.
BA South we found lots of activity recently—footprints, new bottles, empty, empty back pack, food containers and people. Lots of blue trail markers. Milepost 26—BP has set up a check point.
4/16/06
Several in a group stopped by Border Patrol at mile post 25.
4/19/06
Mile 28 young man 8:30 a.m. was OK, wanted to return to Mexico. Called BP.
4/22/06
BA South Station encountered 15-20 migrants in BP custody. (Film crew in tow.) Pima county gate locked with one lock. No access by vehicle. Need a new key or something.
4/29/06
Between Brawley wash stations, encountered 2 migrants. One had some difficulty walking. Called 911 Border Patrol to Pick up.
5/11/06
4 migrants and border patrol on Trico Road. Truck 3 needs food and water. Service brake booster message on gas.
5/13/06
BP had 7-8 migrants along Avia Valley Rd near the mine. BP refused to allow us to give them water.
5/20/06 2 migrants—didn’t need anything, crossed in 4 days and are camping near a water station.
5/26/06
Purdy Lane sign is gone. 2 Minute Men from Phoenix showed up and photographed us without introducing selves; only on the 3rd time did they answer my question about who they were; chlorine level low.
6/3/06
Please pick up farm jack from the store in Sasabe arizona. They are holding it for us.
6/13/06
Looked like cow ? chewed on spigot—barrel was empty because spigot was broken.
6/27/06
All 4 tanks were punctured and empty. We turned them over, but they need to be replaced!!!
7/8/06
Truck #4 Stolen pump!
BA North all 3 faucets were missing. Replaced and filled, power pole down 100 yards north of station.
7/9/06
Significant problem with little ranch. Bee’s have formed a hive on the underbelly of the one barrel—unable to reach water station—bee’s swarming.
7/16/06
Flag at Cot stolen. Replaced with new flag. Moderate footprints at Cot coming from south fence. Again swarm of bees at little ranch, punched hole in barrel belly where bees are gathered. Engine light on entire trip.
8/3/06
Heavy rain on the trip out. Delayed for 1/2 hour due to flooded tunnel. BR east: both barrels shot—bullets inside. Replaced both, but first replaced barrel—none of our bungs fit one hole. Second replacement barrel had knife cut in it 1/2 way up. Water pump problems. Tried again but several connections opened up spraying water everywhere. Finally gravity filled barrel up to level of knife cuts and the other now quite full. All barrels on truck 4 need to be checked and repaired.
8/11/06
3 men, 1 women. They had water, 1 man had bad blisters. We gave them food and bandaids, shoes and socks.
9/14/06
2 minutemen between Manville and Trico sitting in chairs with rifles.
10/7/06
Need flags. Replaced flag at Pima City. Flushed one tank at BA North because it looked rusty.
La migra seemed to be staking out the BA South station.
11/4/06
Please be careful when adding chlorine. The test strip at Brawley were very dark!!! BA South trashed, flag literally ripped in 5 segments, barrels emptied and overturned, stands thrown away from site.
Labels: Arizona, migrant issues
1 comments
Moon Broken
The sun is setting, so the clouds are pink, and the Catalinas are pink. And it is cool and windy so if we went outside I would be pink.
I have started other posts, but I haven't finished them. Been in a funk. Not sure why. Partly the weather. Partly having trouble with the novel. Partly other things that I don't need to burden you with. In the novel, The Old Mermaid Sanctuary, Myla has had some surprising things happen to her, and she's a bit adrift. And that's hard because if Myla ever was actually adrift in the Old Sea, I think she would be the one who would find the life raft, or put it together herself, and gather everyone up and put them on the raft. I'm sure things will turn out for our gal, but in the meanwhile, it's strange. And she went 100 pages without telling an Old Mermaid tale!
The good news is that I've used many of the Old Mermaid tales that I've posted on the blog in the book. At least I think that's good news. Some of those tales I am quite fond of, so it's great to be able to incorporate them into the novel. I always tell those tales in Myla's voice, so it was fairly easy, although I shortened some of them. Right now in the story, our intrepid gal is in Mexico. She's having trouble getting back home. That's all I'm saying.
You all know about my visit to the borderlands last week. This week I talked with an attorney who deals with asylum cases. She was very helpful, and I got the answers I needed for the book. She also told me about the Florence Project. They help get legal counsel for migrants. Legal aid attorneys are not provided to people who are facing deportation, so this group tries to fill that gap at the Florence and Eloy detention centers.
I also learned from this lawyer a bit about what happens during the asylum process. (Someone might apply for asylum because they've been tortured in their country and they have a fear that it'll happen again if they go back.) After they apply for asylum, they have to wait for an appointment with an asylum officer. This person can grant the asylum, or they can say they don't think there are grounds for asylum, and then there is a hearing before a judge where the lawyer for the refugee can argue the case—and the Feds can argue against letting the refugee in. But the interview with the asylum officer can be rather arduous, to put it mildly. These interviews can go on for hours, with the asylum officer trying to prove that someone wasn't really tortured. "So first you say you were beaten for fifteen minutes and now you say it was twenty minutes? I think you're lying." Someone who has been tortured often suffers from memory loss to begin with—and can you imagine how traumatizing being interrogated like this can be, especially if your torture began with an interrogation in the first place! She said the asylum officer often doesn't understand the difference in cultures. For someone in parts of Africa, for instance, they view time in seasons. "It happened during the rainy season." To the asylum officer that reference of time can seem to vague, and they can use it as a reason not to believe the refugee.
Also this week, I spent more time at Humane Borders headquarters. Every time someone does a water run, they fill out a trip sheet. They make comments about what they find at the water stations and if they've had any encounters with migrants. I sat in a room for two hours looking through just a small portion of these trip sheets. They are a fascinating historical record. I asked if I could post some of these, so I will do that later. To me, it's a kind of narrative. And I'm percolating a way to incorporate this kind of storytelling into a novel.
We also chatted with Robin Hoover, the founder of Humane Borders. (I got to see what a blackberry is. No, I had never seen one before.) My experience has been that people who accomplish great things are often bigger than life, opinionated, driven, and sometimes annoying. My guess is that Robin Hoover is all of these things, which is to the benefit of the people he is helping. We need more people with vision and the ability to make their vision into reality.
After that, Mario and I went to Humane Borders weekly meeting. More than twenty-five people attended. (I say "more than" because I counted twenty-five but a few more people came in later and I didn't count them.) I was impressed with their committment. And there was no showboating during the meeting. No power trips. No one trying to impress anyone else—unless I'm really dense, and I'm not. I'm usually fairly sharp about those kinds of things. They talked about trips they'd taken and the evidence they'd seen regarding the further militarization of the border: heavily armed guardsmen, more Border Patrols, lots of machinery for building things like walls. It's sad at so many levels. We're not at war with Mexico, but you couldn't swear by that at some places along the border.
All right. This post had a point, but I lost it. Help! Help! I've lost my point.
May I borrow yours?
Sorry. I'm a bit weary.
Labels: Arizona, Broken Moon, Humane Borders, migrant issues, Old Mermaids
0 comments
Monday, January 22, 2007
Snow White

It was not what we expected or what we thought we wanted, but it was so beautiful. And it was great to get out into it. It's been so cold and rainy here that I haven't been able to get much exercise. Snow I can stand. It's usually not as cold when it snows. And here it lasted only a few hours. I got up before the sun was up over the mountains and took a bunch of photographs. Later we went out again and then again. It was great fun! Go here to view the set. Enjoy! You can view it as a slideshow. Just click in the upper right hand corner. 2 comments
Fear Not Our Enemies...
So let's go. These boots are made for walking... 0 comments
Saturday, January 20, 2007
Who?
It's always good to wake up laughing.
Here's the thing about the owl: The first year we were here, we heard the owl in the palm tree behind the casita every night and every morning. But it was warmer that year, and we had the door open pretty much all the time. Last year we didn't hear her/him as much but enough. Both years it seemed as though some lovin' was going on between two owls in the palm tree. As I said last year, don't come a knockin' when the palm tree's a rockin'.
But this year I forgot that it was mating season. The other night I heard the owl near dusk and I went to look for it in the palm tree. (Since I don't know if it's a he or she I'm going to call it 'it' and hope it doesn't mind.) Mario came out and looked with me. I tried to hoot back at the owl, but I didn't have the sequence quite right. Mario had figured it out, though, so he demonstrated softly how it would go. "Who-whooo who who." So I looked up at the tree and said, "Who-whoo who who." A second later the owl flew right down at us—and then over our heads and away. I figured it was a coincidence, but Mario thought the owl's action was in direct response to whatever I had said in owl language.
The next night when the owl woke up and began who-whooing again, I went out and spoke with it. I varied my who-whoo a bit in emphasis, but I stuck to the sequence. The owl responded about 4 seconds after I responded to it, every time. If I didn't say anything, the owl didn't say anything for a longer period of time. This went on for a while, and then an owl flew away—but the owl I was talking to kept talking to me. I was appalled. I had thought there was only one owl there. What if I had interfered with their mating ritual. ("Home wrecker," Mario said.) The other owl decided she/he couldn't compete with me? Or was annoyed by me? Hasta la vista, baby.
I went back into the house right away, figuring I had interfered enough.
And this morning we heard nary a who.
Ah well.
Birds keep diving at us during this trip. The owl, the golden eagle, other smaller birds.
What's it all about, Alfie?
The eggs are ready. Oh, ick. I just realized what I'm eating....
At least they're not owl eggs. 1 comments
Friday, January 19, 2007
Bridges
We headed down to Nogales, Mexico, to go to the No More Deaths tent just across the border. Part of the reason I wanted to do this was for research for my novel Old Mermaid Sanctuary. But immigration is also an issue I have been interested in and involved with (on the periphery) for many years. As this country seems to drift further and further away from our ideals, it then becomes the responsibility of the citizens to make our ideals visible through us and our actions. Part of what I want to do with both COTOM and Old Mermaid Sanctuary is to tell migrant stories. My husband is an immigrant. Both his parents endured great hardship to leave their countries in hopes of a better life. Nearly all of us who live in this country are here because an ancestor left his or her country to come here.
So with all this in mind, we headed down south. I had gotten directions from two people who volunteered with No More Deaths. They both told me that Gilberto would be at the tent, and he knew English and he could answer any questions I had. When you normally drive to Nogales to cross the border, you go to the end of Highway 19—or almost to the end. You park your car across from the Burger King and walk across the border. Today, we got off at exit 4 and followed the truck route. We turned the wrong way, so we got lost for a little bit. Then we followed the road as it wound around in the desert for a while. Then we came to what looked like a truck stop. I saw concrete blocks which was where Shura had told me to park. All around the parking lot were men, watching and waiting—I don't know what they were waiting for; they just had that air. Several of them were on cell phones. Shura had told me to park the car and then walk toward the chain link fence. There were chain link fences everywhere. And there were semitrucks everywhere lined up to go through one gate. I'm sure there was some kind of order, but it seemed like chaos to me. The air pulsed with the sound of these trucks. The wind was blowing. It was cold. If we went where the trucks were going, I couldn't see that we'd end up anywhere. But I couldn't see a pedestrian entrance. It was like being in a very confusing noisy industrial park. We didn't know where to go or what to do.
Finally I asked a man who was walking by how we got into Mexico. He didn't speak English. So I asked a woman. She thought I wanted to be on the U.S. side, but I told her I was going to the tent on the other side, the No More Deaths tent. She seemed to think that was a bit strange (or I was), but in her accented English she kindly told me where to go. I thanked her, and then we were separated by an orange fence. She smiled at me, and I smiled at her, and we both shrugged at the divide and went our separate ways. There was something sad and poignant about our separation that I can't really explain, except that I know we both felt it; I saw it in her eyes as the bars came between us.
Mario and I went through the turnstile and were in Mexico. It's always amazing to me all the fuss there is to get into this country and absolutely no fuss to go into Mexico. Two lanes of road were backed up from as far as I could see with cars waiting to get into the United States. The sun reflected off the tops of the cars, and I couldn't look at them. The road going into Mexico was empty. Concrete blocks were everywhere, it seemed, trying to keep something out, making it barely a road. Mario and I couldn't figure out where to go.

In the near distance I saw a big building. Shura had told me to look for the customs building, so Mario and I walked toward that, weaving in and out of moving cars and people. We crossed the road and walked past a long line of men. We reached the building and I saw the No More Deaths tent.

As we got near to the small white tent with a small trailer next to it, two Anglo women inside turned toward us. One said, "Are you Kim?" I said that I was. I went toward them and introduced myself and Mario. In the back of the tent, a man stood by the stove cooking. I asked if he was Gilberto. He said that he was. I asked him if Shura had told him who I was and what I was doing. I repeated that I was a writer and I wanted to ask some questions if that was all right with everyone, and I told him I could help out, too.
The tent was open on one end, closed where Gilberto stood by the stove. Behind Gilberto was a mound of clothes; I assumed those were extra clothes for the migrants. On the south side of the narrow tent, four migrants sat: three women and one man. They sat in chairs, but there was a cot near the opening of the tent with a wet sleeping bag on it. On the north side of the tent was a table with a mishmash of supplies on it: food, water, papertowels, cutlery, etc. Near the opening of the tent were the first aid supplies. The dirt floor was wet and muddy. The two volunteers for No More Deaths were organizing the supplies.
I squatted next to the migrants and asked if they spoke English. None of them did. I asked Gilberto if he would mind translating. He agreed to do that. (I don't know how he was able to do that and everything else he did, but he did it. He was cooking. He was getting coffee. He was talking to people. If he does this for twenty-four hours a day, I don't know how it's humanly possible.)
And so I began speaking with Alicia, Theresa, Phillipe, and Caterina. (I have their last names, but I don't want to post them on the oft chance I might inadvertently cause them trouble.) Alicia and Theresa were very shy. Theresa kept her hand over her mouth most of the time, even when she spoke softly. Caterina and Phillipe were brother and sister, and they talked with me the most. I asked them all if they had been treated well when they were picked up by la migra. They said they had been. They were given crackers and water, and no one was hurt. I asked them why they had tried to cross illegally. They said they wanted "a better life for my family." I asked if there weren't job where they lived. Phillipe said there were jobs, but the pay was bad. They said they could make about $4 a day.
(By the way, in case you haven't heard, the price of tortillas in Mexico has been going up and up. Most Mexicans eat about ten tortillas a day—at least that's what I read recently and now I can't find where. Tortillas are a staple of the Mexican diet and of their economy. When NAFTA came into being, American corn growers dumped their cheap corn on Mexico. That put the small growers and tortilla makers out of business. WalMart came in with cheap tortillas and took a big chunk out of the market. Now American corn growers are selling their corn for ethanol which leaves Mexico without corn and with the farmers out of business that leaves a shortage of corn and tortillas so price gouging occurs. I'm sure I missed something or got something wrong in this summary, but that's the gist of it, I believe.)
Anyway, the four migrants I talked with were each leaving children behind, thirteen in all. They felt they had to do this so that they could come to America and make some money. They all said they wanted to stay a few months, make some money, and then return home. Gilberto said, "When they get to the other side, the chollos are waiting for them. They have guns and they rob them." I asked if the chollos—gangsters, he said—were Americans or Mexicans. "Oh no," he said. "They are Mexicans. Sometimes they make the women take off all her clothes and they see if she's hiding anything up there. Sometimes they rape the women. One man came in here, tears coming down his face, and he say they raped his wife. Fifteen years old." I said that was very sad. (Understatement of the year, but that's about all I knew how to say in Spanish.) They all agreed if was very triste.
I had Gilberto ask the migrants if they had just been robbed by chollos. They had been. Phillipe described with his hands that they had taken the money in his wallet, his ring, the chain around his neck. He said there was nothing he could do because they put a gun to his head.
I asked Gilberto why the guia—the coyote—didn't take the migrants on a different route if the chollos waited in the same spot all the time. He said the coyotes were in on it. When the chollos robbed the migrants, they always asked, "Who is the guia? Then they take him aside. They don't rob him." I asked if they could cross without a guide. They said no. They needed someone else on the other side to pick them up, and the guia knew the way through the desert.
I asked if the desert trek was very difficult. Phillipe said to get across it was about eighteen hours, but it wasn't too bad. He said they saw coyotes, the canine kind, and the Border Patrol told them there was a mountain lion up by Tucson. I asked Gilberto if the Border Patrol was telling the truth or just trying to scare them. He said they were trying to "make them afraid."
I asked if crossing was different now than it used to be. They all said it was much more dangerous. They said it would be easier if they could just come across and work and then go home again.
I asked Gilberto if he knew of women with children at home and without husbands who were crossing. (He didn't know what I meant when I asked about single women. I have heard that thousands of single women live in this country, work, and send money back home to children they may not see for years.) He said he did know of some women like that. "But they shouldn't do it. No, they should stay home."
I asked for permission to take pictures of them, and they all agreed.
Shura, Theresa, Caterina, Alicia, Phillipe, Gilberto
The other volunteers left, and Mario and I helped prepare a meal. Mario cut up tomatoes and onions for huevos that Gilberto was making. More people came into the tent. I helped get coffee. A man came in who was very hungry. He quickly ate several tortillas and beans. Gilberto made the huevos (scrambled eggs, tomatoes, onions), and then Mario and I served the migrants. We gave them all forks, which was silly. They just wrapped the huevos up in the tortillas and ate them that way.
Alicia, unknown, Gilberto
After everyone had eaten, Mario and I decided it was time to go. I shook hands with everyone and thanked them. They thanked me, too. Caterina put her hand over mine and said something very kind, but I didn't know what. (I understood some of what they were saying, even though my Spanish is twenty years gone. I think if I was someplace Spanish-speaking I would pick it up fairly quickly again. I certainly picked up the rhythm of speech within minutes. I'm an unconscious mimic that way.) I asked Gilberto to ask them to all be careful. He repeated what I said in Spanish, and everyone in the tent responded to that. They looked at us and nodded, said gracias. We could tell it was something they appreciated—something they were concerned about.
Then we left. We made our way through the concrete jungle back toward the turnstile. Cars, cars, cars everywhere. I couldn't really digest any of it because it was so overstimulating—I just concentrated on not getting hit by a car. Finally we approached a single guard who asked us what our citizenship was. And then we went on through, crossed another street, and got into our car.
Before we went home, we decided to go to the tourist part of Nogales. We got back on 19 and drove to the end, parked by the Burger King, and walked to Mexico. This entrance was much quieter, less cacophonous. I wanted to see again the white crosses on the border fence; each one represented a migrant who had died trying to cross the border.


I also wanted to buy something. If my dollars could help a family that was trying to live on $4 a day, I wanted to do that. We walked down the streets and responded as each barker tried to get us to go into their store. I enjoy the banter. When I do go into a store, I'm always amazed that they all seem to think we are rich. Today I realized that if someone is trying to live on $4 a day, we are rich, no matter what we may think.
I bought something for $13 from a Mayan woman: a rattle, box, a ceramic cat for the woman who is taking care of our house. We got a ceramic sun from another shop. After we bought it, we stood outside talking to the man next to a huge pile of cow skulls. Georgia O'Keeffe would have loved it. He told us that after it rained, like today, and the sun came out, the skulls would really start to stink. I said, "Those are a lot of dead cows." Steers, I guess they were, because they had horns. He said they're from slaughterhouses. The skulls are put out into the desert until they're just bone.
Later we stopped by a shop that had beautiful finely woven rugs. I was admiring these works of art and letting the man show me rug after rug when I realized that I was wasting his time. He was trying to make a living and I was looking at rugs I could not afford. We did buy a red kokopelli blanket from him, however.
By this time, we were exhausted. Most Americans are not accustomed to this kind of shopping, including us. And I am not accustomed to shopping at all. We left Nogales and headed home. Soon after we got on the freeway, a golden eagle came straight for our car but veered off just before I hit it. I had to actually brake on an expressway to keep from hitting an eagle.
About thirty miles up the road, we had to stop a checkpoint. The Border Patrol was set up under Agua Linda Road. As our car neared where the officer was, I got angrier and angrier. What has happened to our country? How have we let ourselves come to this? This was the United States of freaking America and I was being subjected to a police search without cause, without notice, without reason. It is outrageous. The blond boy looked at our lily white faces and waved us past.
Mario patted my leg and said, "It's all right."
"It's not all right," I said. "It's really not all right. We're just lucky we look like what their version of an American is."
Once we neared Tucson, the drive got tedious. Too many long desert roads with too many cars and too many lights. We were exhausted. Then we saw the storm over the Catalinas. And the light. And the clouds. We opened the window and breathed deeply. The Rincon Mountains weren't visible, covered in storm clouds or dusk or mystery.
We followed the rainbow home. Drove right over it as though it were a bridge. How easy it was for us.
I wish the world had more bridges and less walls.
Wouldn't that be grand?

Labels: Arizona, Mexico, migrant issues, No More Deaths
2 comments
Agua
It seems like such a simple idea, doesn't it? Sometimes I think there is no way to fix all the problems in the world. We've got to do this, that, and the other. I remember someone telling me once that if everyone did just one thing, really devoted time and energy to one thing, then eventually all the things would get fixed. The people at Humane Borders are holding out water to thirsty people. I love the elegance of this solution. When someone is dying of thirst in the desert, I doubt they are thinking about international politics or how to fix global economics. They don't need that. They need water.
Of course, actually putting up and then maintaining these water stations isn't exactly simple. They need to keep the barrels filled with water, replace ones that are stolen or damaged, and regularly pick up litter and replace first aid kits and emergency rations at the water stations.
I admire these people, for their solution, their efforts, and their great kindness.
Labels: Arizona, Humane Borders, migrant issues
0 comments
Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Pieces

And now if you want to be inspired and buoyed, watch The Quiltmakers of Gee's Bend. These women take pieces of the cloth—pieces of their lives—and sew them together to make art.
We had the good fortune to see many of the quilts shown in this documentary in San Francisco, at the Quilts of Gee's Bend exhibit, on the last day of the exhibit. Another exhibit is now touring the country, Gee's Bend: The Architecture of the Quilt. (Go to the bottom of this article and you'll see the schedule. Maybe it's coming to a museum or art gallery near you.) One curator on the film said that these quilts call into question our definition of genius. It is amazing to me what people can do despite poverty and great hardship—how creativity springs forth despite all. Sometimes it seems as natural as breathing to us.
The quiltmakers all talked about their faith. As I watched these women, I was amazed and impressed by their fortitude and lack of rancor. I don't understand their belief in god. Any god I believe in would have to get me out of the trouble they have seen, I gotta tell ya. But I said to Mario, "Maybe they don't pray to Jesus because they think he'll make it all better. Maybe they pray to Jesus because they feel as though he loves them."
I found out about the Gee's Bend quilts after I wrote Grand Mother Yemaya Mermaid & the 13 Quilts. My mother used to win awards for her superb skill as a seamstress. She taught my father to quilt, and he makes us beautiful quilts. Maybe someday they will teach me how to do it.
If you want an example of how to turn a life into a work of art, you might want to find out more about these women and their quilts. 1 comments
Five To
Before this, scientists primarily noted the danger posed from all the nuclear weapons in the world. Now, for the first time, they are taking into consideration the catastrophe we call global warming.
Olivia Ward of the Toronto Star writes, "American non-proliferation expert Joseph Cirincione said today's movement of the Doomsday Clock's hand was a 'measurable indicator of how bad things are. If some of the world's smartest scientists are saying we are now closer to doomsday, it should focus attention on both the problems, and the urgency of finding solutions.'
"And, he said, U.S. President George W. Bush's administration has made the dangers faced by the planet worse.
"'They came in determined to make a radical change and they made it. It was a complete disaster. Every member of what they call the `axis of evil' is a greater threat now than it was before they came to power. They thought they could use the blunt instrument of military might to overthrow evil regimes. But instead of intimidating countries, they made things worse.'
'And global warming is also worse, said Cirincione, a senior vice-president at the Washington-based Center for American Progress. 'We lost six years when we could have been taking steps to fix the problem.'"
Good times all around. 0 comments
Tuesday, January 16, 2007
The Old Mermaid Sanctuary: A Novel
The Old Mermaid Sanctuary
Myla Alvarez walked the wash that ran through the Old Mermaid Sanctuary and looked for bits and pieces of treasure she could sell at the Church of the Old Mermaids, the table and wares she set up on Fourth Avenue in Tucson every Saturday. It wasn’t an ordinary church. It didn’t have a building, and Myla didn’t subscribe to any dogma. The closest thing to a bible the Church of the Old Mermaids had were the stories Myla told about the Old Mermaids who had washed up into the desert when the Old Sea dried up.
Five year old Lily walked the wash with Myla today. Her small feet sank slightly into the glittery sand as they went.
“Why does the dirt shine?” Lily asked in English. Most of their conversations were partly in Spanish, partly in English.
Myla smiled. The Church of the Old Mermaids had no dogma, but Myla did adhere to at least one golden rule: Answer all questions put to her by a five year old child with honesty and beauty.
“Well, Lily my Lily,” Myla said, “I can’t be sure, but I think those shiny bits of sand are star dust, at least that’s what Mother Star Stupendous Mermaid told the other Old Mermaids when they first got to the New Desert. They had to sleep in the wash for a while, and Mother Star Stupendous Mermaid told them the sand would keep them warm and give them good dreams because it was made from star dust, shed by the stars the way we shed skin. I’m not sure the Old Mermaids believed her, but they did agree that the star dust was much more comfortable to sleep on than they would have guessed.”
“Let’s try it and see,” Lily said.
Myla laughed. “Maybe another day,” she said. “I think the wash might be a bit more prickly than it was when the Old Mermaids lived here.”
Myla looked around the wash and the desert as they walked. Two months earlier a flash flood had turned the wash into a river again, and Myla hadn’t found much in the way of trash or treasure since. A desert cottontail scurried across the wash in front of them, slipping on the loose dirt and looking completely panicked before it jumped up out of the arroyo. Lily clapped. Maya noticed something in the sand near where the rabbit had made its getaway. She and Lily walked over to it.
A tiny bit of pink stuck up out of the sand. Myla bent down. The rabbit’s scrambling must have exposed it. Lily crouched next to her. Myla began pushing away the dirt with her cotton-gloved fingers. It was the heel end of a shoe.
“Can I pull it up?” Lily asked.
“Do it slowly,” Myla said. She was always teaching Lily to go slow in the desert; danger and delights were unseen all around them.
The girl began pulling as Myla continued to gently brush the dirt away. The shoe came out of the sand easily.
“Oh,” Lily said. “It’s pretty.” She handed the shoe to Myla who knocked the sand off of it before she set it on the ground for them both to look at.
It was a child’s shoe or maybe a small woman’s, dirty with age and weathering, more coral than pink--or salmon, maybe. Myla had never really been very good with colors. It was a juicy lively mystical pink as far as she was concerned. At first glance, it appeared to be made from scales, but it wasn’t; it just had that look, like snakeskin. Myla took off her gloves and touched it. Cloth. On the top of the shoe, where the toes would be, someone had embroidered a dark orange spiral. On the sides were blue sea stars, three on one side, two on the other. Probably an old beach shoe.
“One of the Old Mermaids lost her shoe,” Lily said.
“Looks like,” Myla said.
“It’s too big for my foot,” Lily said. “Too small for yours.”
Lily picked up the shoe and dropped it into the ruby-colored cloth bag hanging from Myla’s shoulder. They started walking again.
“There’s a woman up there,” Lily said.
Myla followed her gaze. She thought she saw someone or something go around a curve in the bend, but her view was blocked by a palo verde hanging over the path. They didn’t often meet anyone in the wash, especially since four of the five families who owned the Old Mermaid Sanctuary land were gone.
“She was limping,” Lily said. “Maybe she lost her shoe.”
Myla glanced at Lily. She often saw things in the wash that no one else did. She and Lily went around the curve.
Up ahead, a woman walked away from them.
“She’s fast,” Lily said.
“I was just thinking the same thing,” Myla said. “Hello!” Myla called.
The woman didn’t respond. In another moment, she was out of the wash, and Myla could no longer see her. Lily and Myla walked to the dirt road where the wash ended. A barbed wire fenced the land across the road where the wash picked up again. Lily and Myla looked up and down the road. It was empty.
“Huh,” Myla said.
“Maybe we should leave the shoe here,” Lily said, “in case that woman lost it. Remember what you said about the Old Mermaids when they first got to the desert.”
“I’ve said many things about the Old Mermaids when they first got to the desert,” Myla said.
“You said they weren’t used to their land legs,” she said, “and they had tender feet. If she’s a new Old Mermaid, she needs her shoes.”
“All right, Lily,” Myla said. “You can leave the shoe for the tender foot.” Too bad. She could have come up with a great story for it on Saturday. She pulled the shoe out of the bag and handed it to Lily who then set it on the ground in the shade of an agave plant that was nearly as tall as she was.
“Here’s your shoe,” Lily called. “You’re welcome!” She looked up at Myla and smiled. “Now can we go back home and eat while we look at the mermaid in the pool?”
“My exact wish,” Myla said.
Labels: Old Mermaids
5 comments
Sacred Geography
Sunday, January 14, 2007
Found

Valarie James and her colleagues Antonia Gallegos, Cesar Lopez, and Deborah McCullough took pieces of discarded clothing found in the Arizona desert, most of it probably dropped by passing migrants, pulped these pieces, and blended the pulp with Sonoran Desert plants to create Las Madres.

Each figure stands in vigil, each Mother "represents over 1000 men, women and children who have lost their lives crossing the desert." If you look at my photographs and the photographs on the website, you'll see that the figures are changing, are breaking down, just as Valarie James expected and intended.

They are beautiful and moving. I first heard about them at the Border Issues Fair I attended on Saturday. I told Valarie later, in an e-mail, that I was stunned to see these figures, particularly after writing Church of the Old Mermaids, which deals with migrants lost in the desert. Myla and her friends create community at the sanctuary where she takes the migrant by transforming what they find, what has been discarded, into art and stories.



You can see these amazing pieces yourself at Pima Community College in Tucson at their east campus.
Beautiful. Thanks, Valarie.
Labels: Arizona, migrant issues, photos, Valarie James
4 comments
Environmental Travesty
Right now, people who are coming across usually pay smugglers a small fortune to bring them across. Last I heard it was $1,000. This is one of the ways it works, although it changes. The person wanting to go across usually finds an enganchador—a recruiter—often someone local to start the process. The migrant usually pays this person. Then he sells that migrant to an encaminador; he’s the one who takes them to a stash house. A clavo, they call it. They’re locked inside this place with dozens of other people. You can imagine what that place is like. The encargado—the guy in charge of the stash house—is paid to keep them locked up and to keep any other gangs from stealing them. A guia, or guide, takes them to the other side. Once across, they sometimes have to stay in another stash house. The guia takes them to the chofer, usually a couple of guys with a van. This is the most dangerous part of the trip; this is where they can die in the desert or can be deserted by their guide. Then if they make it to the chofer, they can die in car accidents.
Anyway, if people could just walk (or drive) across the border, free to come and go, most would return home, especially if home becomes economically viable. Right now it's so dangerous to come and go that many of the migrants stay here and just send the money back. One suggestion made at the fair yesterday was that the migrants leave a kind of deposit (that's not what she called it, but I can't remember what it was called). Instead of giving all that money to a smuggler, they could leave a kind of bond that they only get back when they return across the border.
There are ways to solve this issue, but destroying people and the environment isn't the way. The Sonoran desert does not end at the border. The animals who traverse this land do not stop at the border. If this fence is built, it will be devastating for local wildlife. It will be the end of the jaguars returning to this country.
700 and some days until these people are gone. However, I don't know that the Dems will do anything different. Bill Clinton wasn't much better about border issues, and Hillary Clinton has said she thinks a border fence is a good idea. I haven't heard anything new from John Edwards about this issue. As far as I can tell, he doesn't have his "position papers" anywhere on his site. (Can you find them?) Of course, Dennis Kucinich has interesting things to say on these topics. First he wants to withdraw from NAFTA. Wouldn't that be something? (I'd like to think Clinton would not have signed onto NAFTA and CAFTA if he knew what devastation it would cause.) But Kucinich doesn't seem to address the issue head-on either. I guess no one would say they are for open borders. What a firestorm that would cause. But maybe a firestorm would clear out some of the brush (and bushes), and we could have a real conversation about these issues.
I can dream, can't I?
By the way, notice once again that this administration uses the media (and our attention span) to their advantage by announcing on Friday that they were going to waive any environmental concerns (yes, let's wave good-bye to our environment, bubye) so they can build this stupid fence.
Let's tell them we noticed, and we don't want it.
Labels: migrant issues
1 comments
Saturday, January 13, 2007
The Pink Shoe
We had a moment of silence, and then the speakers began. They were all good. Those who lived in la frontera, in the region near the border, said they felt as though they were in a "low-intensity war." Black hawk helicopters and the Border Patrols were a daily part of their lives. They could be stopped at any time, and they were, on the pretext of national security, and they had to show ID. The Border Patrol, and now the local police who were helping them, were often belligerent with the members of this community when they asked for ID. (These are American citizens, by the way, living right here in Arizona.)
The speakers talked about the root causes of illegal immigration. They talked about global economics and "savage capitalism" which devastates communities. (Multi-global corporations, dumping of products, etc.) The Reverend Delle McCormick gave statistics about the poverty in Mexico. The Reverend Mark Adams talked about the coffee cooperative he and others started on the borderlands. Joseph Nevins gave a historical prospective on immigration and immigration laws in the United States over time.
Joseph Nevins talked about mobility being a basic human right. He said, "Security in the United is a 'god' word, something universally embraced and insufficiently questioned." Despite all the billions of dollars that have been spent on border "security," just as many people get into this country illegally as before they spent billions of dollars. (Mark Adams said they lent the coffee cooperative $20,000, and now that cooperative is supporting 37 families. Imagine what could have been done with all those billions of dollars. If people can feed their families, they don't want to leave their own lands.)
Nevins said, "Despite a massive buils up in resources, drugs and migrants still cross. About 1/3 get caught. 92/97% eventually succeed. There's no difference between before and after the build up at the border....Political actors have exaggerated the security threat. They say there hasn't been any attacks since 9/11, but there weren't any attacks the 5 years befor 9/11 when they had spent much less." (Did you know 25% of the prisoners in the world are in our jails, even though we have 5% of the world's population?)
Nevins said we need to change the language of the debate on this issue. He pointed out that the Minutemen are using the deaths in the borderlands as a reason to have increased border security. Nevins said we need to say that we don't want any more deaths, and we are interested in basic human rights, which include the right to mobility and the reunification of families.
Later when I went to the Samaritans table and saw all the items they had picked up from the desert, dropped by passing migrants, I started to cry. The woman standing next to me said, "Seeing this kind of gets to you, doesn't it?" I thought of Myla walking the wash and picking up what she found there and taking it to the Church of the Old Mermaids. I thought of her walking the desert near la frontera and finding Lily, left there as though she was trash. Myla said, "Lily held out her arms to me, and I embraced her. From that second on, I knew I would lay down my life for her; it was as though I had given birth to her—or she to me." I wish everyone of those people who walked the desert had had someone like Myla. I wish they didn't have to walk the desert. I wish they could walk into this country with dignity and return to their own countries when they wished with dignity—or make this country their own.

The stories about the people who have crossed were very powerful. Mark Adams talked about the man who said how painful it was to leave his land. Joseph Nevins talked about the 13 year old boy who dragged his mother's body across the desert for days after she died from heat exhaustion. He talked about Olivia Luna who was only 11 years old when she was found on Tohono O'odham land. A trip to the hospital did not save her life. They found Olivia Luna in the desert dying, he said, wearing pink sneakers. I gasped (yes, really, outloud) when he said this and looked at Mario; he looked stunned, too.
I started my new Old Mermaids book this week. In the first scene, Lily and Myla are walking the wash together looking for things to take to the Church of the Old Mermaids. They aren't finding anything until:
A desert cottontail scurried across the wash in front of them, slipping on the loose dirt and looking completely panicked before it jumped up out of the arroyo. Lily clapped. Myla noticed something in the sand near where the rabbit had made its getaway. She and Lily walked over to it.
A tiny bit of pink stuck up out of the sand. Myla bent down. The rabbit’s scrambling must have exposed it. Lily crouched next to her. Myla began pushing away the dirt with her cotton-gloved fingers. It was the heel end of a pink shoe.
All week I've been saying to Mario, "I know I'm going to find a pink shoe somewhere."
And there it was, on the foot of Olivia Luna Noguera.
That's the way writing these books and stories has worked. There was some reason Myla found that pink shoe in the wash. I don't know what it means. Recently I had started to lose faith in what I was doing. How could me telling stories, particularly stories of the Old Mermaids, be accomplishing anything, even though they meant so much to me? As I thought about Olivia and all her companion walkers, I realized again that the Old Mermaids had walked up onto these shores, this New Desert, without shoes, without anything, because their home had dried up (literally). They were migrants; we are all migrants, every day, trying to find our way in this land and in our lives. Church of the Old Mermaids was always about migrants coming together to create community.
I want to tell the stories of people like precious Olivia Luna. I want to tell the story of every item I see on that table, just as Myla told stories of what she found in the wash. I want to find the truth in those stories. And I'm hoping telling these tales will in some way contribute, in some way document what is happening—maybe even transform it on some level. Who knows?
I wish I had been out in that desert to hold my arms out to Olivia Luna. I would have wiped her tears and tied the shoelaces of her pink tennis shoes. I would have protected her, no matter what.
At least I'd like to think so.
Labels: Arizona, migrant issues, Old Mermaids
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Friday, January 12, 2007
Borderlands
I made a lot of phone calls today and did a lot of research. On days like these, my journalism training comes in handy. Trackin' down a source, searching out a clue, bugging people until they comply. Although really, people are usually more than happy to talk with me. I haven't been able to get an INS investigator to return my calls yet, but I'm not giving up.
Tomorrow we're going to the Border Issues Fair in a town about an hour from here. I hope to meet some people and get more information. Even though I've been studying this issue (borderlands, immigration, etc.) for years, I still feel sometimes as though I'm stumbling around in the dark. Both Church of the Old Mermaids and the new Old Mermaids book deal with these issues, so I want to get them right. Next week I've got an appointment to talk with the Humane Borders people. The following week I'm talking with a lawyer who helps migrants who are trying to get legal status. I'm also hoping to go to the repatriation tent in Nogales, Sonora, that the No More Deaths volunteers run to help migrants who've been deported and dumped on the border. I'm also trying to find out how I can go to immigration court. No luck so far. They don't really make those kinds of things easily known. Plus I have a jaguar conference to attend again, and my sister is running a marathon on Sunday, so I'm going up to support her. And I'm trying to write many thousands of words a day. A lot of things going on!
All this means is that I might not post for a bit, although I am taking my camera tomorrow, so who knows?
May You Spin in Beauty!
Labels: Arizona, migrant issues
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Thursday, January 11, 2007
Homeless, Homeless...
A theme that runs through Church of the Old Mermaids is finding home and homelessness. At one of their Saturday night dinners, they talk about squats and squatters. Worldwide one person in six lives in a squat now.
By the way, if you want to read an amazing book about squatters (although, of course, the book isn't just about squatting), try The Good Terrorist by Doris Lessing. It is a true, beautiful, scary book. That's all the description my zombie brain can conjure this afternoon.
May You Walk in Beauty!
Labels: Old Mermaids, sustainability
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Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Songs of the Spirits
I heard what the soon to be ex-prez wants to do in Iraq. I can only say: Vietnam, Vietnam, Vietnam. If you study any history of Vietnam, you'll see they did this kind of thing over and over. They believed if they just had more men or a better plan that they would win. But they could never win. It wasn't their country. Iraq is not Bush's country. We will now see if the new Dems have any mettle. We will see if the American people will stand up and say no, we don't agree to this.
In the meanwhile, I am in the desert. It usually takes about a week for me to settle in, and it's been a bit over a week. Mario has finished writing one novel and started another. I wrote an Old Mermaid story, and today I started a new novel. It is tentatively called The Old Mermaids School of Telling Tales and Finding Art. Mostly, I've been enjoying the place and getting used to things. At first the noise always troubles me. I can hear the traffic, they're doing construction, dogs bark, and trail bikes squeak in the near distance. When I go into the Quail House or into the casita those sounds usually disappear, but I want to be in desert, in the wash. I want to hear the birds. I want to hear the silence.
Eventually, I know the other sounds won't matter. (Unless the trail bikes get closer; if they do, that is a noise I cannot tolerate.) I know what time the dogs usually bark (around 5:00), and the construction is intermittent and can become a dull background noise. And I know I only notice these sounds because it is quiet, and eventually I will get to hear the desert silence. It is different from any other silence. How to explain it? It's a desolate and comforting silence. And when you hear the sound of another creature, it's as if you're all in it together—you're all in this place surviving and thriving and figuring it out. We're all compañeros.
Today I had one of those silent desert days. I walked the wash and walked the wash, just like Myla, looking for trash I could turn into treasure. I figured out what I was going to write next and listened to my feet crunching over the sand. Quail walked daintily, all in a row, up and out of the wash. Doves fluttered from the trees as I went by, startling me and them. Then I sat outside near the Quail House. I listened to the whoosh-whoosh-whoosh as a crow flew overhead. I heard the owl call out twice. Thrashers and other birds made themselves known. Desert cottontails hopped here and there and everywhere. Once in a while I heard the horses snort or whinny. Clouds moved overhead, putting me in and out of shade. Nothing could have been grander.
Before that, I was restless most of the day, moving from here to there and everywhere. Mario said it's what I do before I start a novel; it's the creative energy rising up. I wrote the first 1,000 words of the novel today. It was nice to be with Myla and Lily again, but it was a bit nerve-wracking. I've never written a book using the same characters from another book I've written. And to do it without having sold the first book yet is rather foolish, so call me fool.

Now we're getting ready for sleep. I'm listening to Linda Rondstadt and Ann Savoy's Adieu False Heart. I think they call it Cajun folk, and it is so beautiful, makes my heart ache. I have never been able to describe music. When it's right, when it's beautiful, it is beyond words. (Maybe I should just say, this album has a good beat and you can cry to it.)
A bit a go we went out into the night and the dark to get something I thought I'd left in the Quail House. (I hadn't.) As we were getting on our shoes to go out and I was fiddling with an umbrella, Mario said, ""Who'd ever have thought you'd be using an umbrella here." I said, "I don't want to talk about it." He laughed. I only said it because I knew he'd laugh. I don't mind the rain. It rained a bit the first year we were here. It keeps down the dust. It's supposed to rain for three days. I told Mario, "Maybe it'll flash flood and we'll have water in the wash!"
We usually establish a routine once we've been here a while. I don't quite have one yet. Last night we slept eleven hours. (!) The day before I only slept five. We work during the day, Mario in the casita, me in the Quail house or wandering around in the wash. (I wear the white gloves because I get a rash on my hands from the sun; it happens in Washington, too, in the spring when I first start gardening.) At night, we play cards or Sorry and watch a DVD or we go to the movies. We've been to a lot of movies given the amount of time we've been here, probably because we can't go out anywhere to eat since my diet is so restricted. (I am now going to talk about the movies I've seen, so if you're afraid I'm going to tell you something you don't want to know turn away now.)
We've seen The Queen. The performances were all good. We could have waited until it came out on DVD; it was that kind of movie. But it was still fun. The first part was actually funny. Not slapstick funny but "how can these people be so dim" kind of funny. Then we went to see Freedom Writers. Yes, I know, another movie about a teacher who helps out kids. Corny. Overdone. Yes, yes, and yes. And we almost always love them. We liked this one, too.
(When we were thinking of seeing Freedom Writers, Mario said, "That's all we need is another movie showing a rich white person saving all these underprivileged kids." I said, "The daddy of those movies is To Sir With Love. Remember when I saw that when I was nineteen. Afterwards I tried to kill myself because I thought I hadn't done enough with my life." I laughed and shook my head. Mario said, "Good times.")
This afternoon on a lark we decided to go see The Prestige. It's about two magicians who are competing with one another. We both thought it had potential—until they started knocking off the women. (No, not by murder, but still...The men were multiplying and the women were disappearing.) Both of us sat there wondering why we hadn't gone to see Marie Antoinette instead. (The time for The Prestige had been more convenient, and yes, I know Marie Antoinette was beheaded so that would be another woman disappearing, but at least she had a life, albeit a short one, where she wasn't a sidekick for some man. Besides, I'm sure in Marie Antoinette we would have had some fun silly costumes to look at.)
Well, I've rambled on long enough. I need to get to sleep. Got work to do in the morn.
Hope all is well your ways.
Labels: desert, movies, Old Mermaids, photos
2 comments
Monday, January 08, 2007
A New Old Mermaid Tale

I've written a new Old Mermaid tale for teetotalers, or rather teatotalers: Sister Sophia Mermaid & the Drifter. It's a long one. Enjoy! 1 comments