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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.
Monday, August 20, 2007
My Old Sweetheart, One Year Later

My best friend Linda Ford died on this date last year. I had planned on driving to her favorite campsite today. I was going to put up a chair and read Ruby's Imagine out loud. It's dedicated to her, inspired by her. It is pouring down pissing down rain. We'll go out to the spot anyway, but I probably won't sit in the rain for three hours and read my book. Linda would understand. Of course, the spot is between an old growth Doug fir and cedar. Probably not a drop of rain has reached the ground yet. Linda's sister Ruth called, and it was good to talk to her. Sometimes it is good not to feel alone in grief and remembrance. I'll try Serena again, too.
In the meantime, new words aren't coming to me. I listen to the rain, which is so unusual in August here. Yesterday I got word that my friend Barbara's brother and sister in law were killed in the flooding in Minnesota as they were driving home Saturday night. The news was so stunning, sudden, horrific. I think of the Wheel of the Year. August is a harvest month. August is about fruitfulness and life. August is when Serena was born! Birth is what we should be celebrating in August, not mourning death.
So I will repost the elegy I wrote for Linda and read aloud at her beautiful memorial.
This is what I do, my old sweetheart.
I use words to find meaning.
You said there was a reason for everything.
I see no reason or sense in your death.
Yet that is what has happened.
We looked into each other’s eyes many times
And knew the end was near,
Knew this was not what either of us wanted
Or planned.
I wanted to be with you all the time
But some of those times were difficult
Watching you birth your death
It was messy, painful, sad
We all felt the labor pains
Rumbling through valley, hills, river.
I asked what sign you would give me
After you were gone. To prove to me
That you were right, after all.
Even in the end. Even about the end.
"Something with a bird," you said.
"Not quite sure. You’ll know."
Days after you told me this
A hummingbird flew right up to me
Wings whirring, tiny eyes gazing at me.
But you were still alive.
Had your spirit already flown the coop?
One night when you still had your strength
You called and left a message on our phone
I was on the coast, you in Home Valley
Where you were witnessing a summer storm.
Lightning, thunder, and clouds were creating
A masterpiece just for you.
You sounded so excited as you described to me
The beauty all around you. I wept as I listened
To your message. Your message of beauty and joy.
I pressed save. I wanted to have a record of your
Voice, your beauty and joy forever.
But someone erased the message.
And now you are gone.
A few days after you died
I went out to your campsite.
I stood out in the stream on a rock
And said, “Linda where are you?”
I looked around at the beauty
At the stones, the creek, the green.
The blue sky, and I couldn’t find you.
“You aren’t here,” I whispered.
Then I looked down and
Saw a tiny white feather floating on
the water in a small pool encircled
By stones. I watched the feather for a long while.
I remembered once when I asked where you’d
Be after you died and you said,
“I will be in the breeze coming
Across the field. I will be in the
Songs of the birds. I will be the
Sun on your shoulders.”
Although you didn’t say so, I know
When I see a wildflower and wonder
its name, you will tell it to me.
When I linger along the path, it
Will be because your hand is on my
Shoulder reminding me to pause.
One day I will smell a Doug Fir
And know you brought that scent to me.
And when I reach my arms around a tree
I know I will be embracing you too.
It is not enough today.
But someday it will be.
Farewell my old sweetheart.
She would be glad to know that I can now smell! Blessed be.
And to all of you out there, in the words of Ruby from Ruby's Imagine, "I loves you, I loves you, I loves you."
May You All Love and Show Kindness to Each Other in Beauty!
June 2007, me and her

Labels: Linda
2 comments
Friday, May 11, 2007
Thinking of My Old Sweetheart
Still can't talk. It's getting better, but I'm not going to talk tomorrow either, so I can really heal it. It's really rather liberating not talking And constricting at the same time. I hope it's warm tomorrow and not windy and I can sit out with my rosemary bush and listen and watch the swallows. And hummingbirds. Didn't see a single hummingbird today.
It's sprinkling out now. Nice gentle sound. Almost like the clouds are sighing. I used to call this kind of rain "cloud sweat." I hope it goes on for a little bit and cleans out the pollution in the gorge.
I should go to bed soon. As I was cleaning up, I found a letter from Linda. I hadn't lost it, but it was under some papers. Whenever I find something she had written to me, it feels as though she's giving me a message. Or like she's talking to me again. I don't know how to describe it. I just like it. Miss her. She would sometimes get "messages" for me as she was falling to sleep. I listened when she told me about them, but since I don't really believe in channeling—not that she would have ever called it that—I figured what she was hearing were just loving messages from herself to me, which was just fine with me. In the letter I found, written in 2001, she says she had a message for me or from me as she was falling to sleep: "You're going to the SW and you are happy, you have a drum and are wanting to or actually do dance naked in the moonlight, you have a lovely scarf or translucent cloth around your body...You actually smell the sage!" Of course all the time she knew me I couldn't smell a thing, so this was a wonderful message to get for me. She always said that something about the Southwest was like home to me. And she was right.
In another letter in the same envelope, she wrote, "In order to release yourself from the worry and fear you now feel, you must give up your expectations of events to come. These expectations appear real. Fear is: False Expectations Appearing Real. (Chuckles, giggles here LF)...You have 'forgotten to listen.'
The parenthetical asides were all hers, by the way.
Funny. I get this letter when I can't talk, so I have to listen. Well, I don't have to, but I'm trying to.
Thanks for the advice, my old sweetheart.
Labels: Linda
2 comments
Tuesday, October 31, 2006
More Hallows Eve
Today it was even colder, but Mario and I walked slowly, just listening and feeling and breathing in the world. I saw gold, so we stepped off the trail. We stood on the soft ground and stayed silent for a while, seeing what we could learn about the area just using our senses. A marvey exercise. A grand life.
We asked the creek if we could have some water for ceremony. The light flickered on one of the overhanging trees. Only flicker is the wrong word. Or maybe the right one. It looked like Tinkerbell did in the Mary Martin version of Peter Pan. Ice on the creek made geometric art pieces in some places. I got the water.
Next we drove Linda's campsite. It seemed as though every golden and yellow big leafed maple leaf had fallen and now covered the ground, like a quilt of fallen stars. We went to that creek and—with permission—I dipped my container into the creek and I got more water.
We went home and the day got colder and windier. Paul and Barbara came over so they could see the kids in their costumes. (They don't get any trick or treaters where they live.) We ate soup and dal and rice in-between getting up and going to the door to dispense sweetness for the new year. We had gotten a bag of chocolates that were shaped liked eyes, fingers, ears, mouths; the older children really liked those. I would say, "Would you like a finger, ear, or eye?" They'd blink and then look at what was in my palm; delight would spread across their faces. (I'm full of cliches, tonight, aren't I? Ah well.) When the older kids came to the door and they didn't look dressed up, I asked, "So what are you?" Come on. Entertain me or else no candy for you.
Yesterday and today I was calling around to get people to come to a Halloween ceremony: outside! I called people in town, so no one would have to come far on this cold night. By about 2:30 p.m. on Halloween, thirteen people promised to come down to the park. (We have several parks, but we'll just call this the park.) As the night went on and got colder and windier, I started wondering about what I was asking people to do. I went out and talked to the Wind. That just made it windier. I decided just to trust and do it. Barbara went home to get warmer clothes. Mario and I bundled up, and then we put the accoutrements I needed for the ceremony. My idea of what to do during the ceremony changed by the second. The colder and windier it got the less time I thought we should spend outside. I took cream and chocolate for the faeries, the 13 shells from the Old Mermaid from Santa Fe, a tiny altar cloth woven by Sandra Ingerman, a bone with a dolphin carved on it given to me by my friend Peggy, ice, two bowls, the water from the two creeks, and 13 glass animals—along with drums and rattles, just in case people wanted to drum and rattle. And I brought extra blankets and gloves.
We drove the few blocks down to the park. The river was choppy with waves. White caps reflected the half moon that lit up everything. The trees danced in the cold. A wind sculpture whirled and spun in all directions. The wind was definitely with us tonight. I tried talking to it again. Several of the women did. But it was going to town! I hurried down to the shore of the Columbia River, moonlight my only guide. The waves were crashing ashore, but I took my little bucket and got some water. I said thank you and hurried back to Mario. We added that water to the jar with the creek water in it. I spilled the shells and could only find twelve.
Twelve of us showed up. One woman was sick, so she stayed home. (Thus the twelve shells?) I had asked one woman to bring the skull of an elk she had found in the woods. I had dreamed of an elk a few days ago. The elk became out thirteenth. I decided it was too cold and windy to do anything more elaborate than us standing in a circle, holding hands, creating energy, and speaking out. I put the altar into a bowl and set that in the center of the circle, along with the elk skull and two flashlights and the water. I talked about Halloween, talked about this time of the year when the veil between worlds was supposed to be thinnest, about how some people believed this was the night of the Wild Hunt when the faeries or spirits came out and gathered up any of the souls who had gotten lost after they died—and this was the time to ask them and any of our ancestors for help. So we asked. The wind swirled around us, shaking the moonlight-drenched trees, but we began to feel warmer as we made noise, as we imagined, as we talked to the dead, to the living. We stood in silence and listened to what the world had to say to us. I poured out the water in a spiral as we imagined letting go of disease, sadness, anxiety, obsession, war. And more. We ate an apple cut in thirteen pieces. We nourished ourselves, taking in joy and health, peace, transformation, protection. People said what needed to be said. Then we opened the circle. I gave them each one of the animals, as their protector. As everyone left I poured out the cream in a circle for the faeries. I unwrapped three pieces of chocolate and left them there, along with the thirteenth piece of apple. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
Mario and I went home to our cozy warm house. No one had smashed our pumpkins. (Mario had carved bats on one, ghosts on another. I carved a Celtic triple spiral.) I started writing a new novel. The Blue Honey Clan. I think it's going to be a thirteen book series. Young adult. It begins when the three girls are 13 years old. On Halloween. We'll see how it goes.
Then finally sleep. And dreams.
Hope you had a hallowed night. Or a fun night. Or both.
Blessed be. And blessed sea. Blessed you and me.
Ta, darlinks!
Labels: Falling Creek, Halloween, Linda, nature
1 comments
Wednesday, August 30, 2006
Home Again
Lay on the couch most of the day Monday. Serena came over in the morning, sat down near me and worked on something. I was so sure she'd disappear from our lives the day after the memorial service. It was good to have her near. I had to resist the urge to hug on her. She's not a mushy child. So I don't mush on her...too much.
The rest of Linda's family went home. They were all so gracious and kind, even when I was cranky. I admire that kind of grace.
Monday night they had the book discussion of Mercy, Unbound at our library. It was fun to sit and listen to people discuss my book. I wanted to join in, but I try to wait as long as possible because as soon as I talk at these things conversation often comes to a halt. One person described the book as a compassionate look at one girl's life (or something like that, although he said it better). I liked the word compassionate because the world could always use more compassion. And I do think it is a compassionate story. No villains. No bad guys. I think stories without villains are harder to write, as I'm sure I've mentioned previously. When you have a villain, it's so easy to write a story. In real life, most people are just doing the best they can; they aren't villainous.
Today I got an email from one of my teachers about Mercy, Unbound, and she mentioned compassion, too. I'll reprint the letter below, not because I'm trying to show how great I am or anything, but because it's such a lovely letter and it meant so much to me. As I've said before, when someone compliments my books, it feels as though they are praising something separate from me but something beloved, almost as though they are praising my kin—or my children.
The letter reads, in part:
"I have finally found time to read your beautiful new book, Mercy, Unbound. I finished it tonight and then looked at the inside back cover, which calls it a book for teens. Well maybe, but I wept through the whole last section, so I think it maybe has more potential than that—I'm almost 60.
Your voice in this book is so compassionate and poetic. I think you've really found something, a kind of grace. It's fabulous. I hope it really makes a big impact. I was so touched from the beginning....it's very healing in general, speaking to the whole disorder of society.
Good for you!! You've made one of those grand healing gestures through literature. Brava!"
Isn't that lovely?
I am so fortunate.
And I'm off to sleep.
May You Dream in Beauty!
Labels: Linda, Mercy Unbound
2 comments
Sunday, August 27, 2006
End Days
Gotta get used to it.
Our day started at 6:30 a.m. and did not let up until about 6:45 p.m. I won't bore you with the details of setting up the place and all that entailed. We were ready by the time it was ready to begin.
The memorial went well. I think I did my job. I'm a good public speaker. When I do book readings, I usually do well. At those times I am establishing a relationship between the audience and myself that is essentially about me. This is not my first memorial. I have facilitated one other. For a memorial, it's not about me and my relationship with the audience. I need to put them at ease enough for them to trust me to carry them along on this journey we take together. But it's not about me being charming or a star or anything. I am the facilitator: the conduit for their memories. It's a completely different way of speaking, and I have to be aware of that. (We've been a part of two other memorials in the last six months. Three dead friends in six months. I hope that trend ends here today.)
I began the memorial with a kind of eulogy—or liturgy, maybe. Her brother in law called it that. I thanked the family and the people who helped Linda and Serena during her illness. I talked about her life and her importance to the community. I could have gone on all day, but I just skimmed the surface of her life. I called my talk "Sauntering with Linda."
I said, "Before she got sick again, Linda and I would walk in the woods several times a week. These weren’t really hikes. If you’ve ever walked in the woods with Linda, you know what I mean. She noticed everything. We sauntered rather than hiked. Back in the day, in Europe, pilgrims used to walk to the Holy Land. When people asked where they were going, they’d say, “a la sainte terre.” To the holy land. So they became known as sainte-terre-ers or saunterers. That’s what it was like walking with Linda. We were always sauntering to the holy land and on the holy land—because she believed the woods, nature, this place is holy land. Walking with her, sauntering with her, was always an amazing and wonderful experience."
Then we told jokes. The audience was skeptical of this at first, but soon we were laughing. People got up and told jokes for about half 'n hour. It was great fun. Serena laughed. I sat where I could keep eye contact with her, so I would know how she was doing. Then she did her powerpoint photo essay of herself and Linda. After that, we told Linda stories. This went on for some time. I didn't hurry it. We allowed for moments of silence.
On the program for the memorial, we put quotes I'd found underlined in her books and quotes by John Muir, whose life and writing she admired:
When we contemplate the whole globe as one great dewdrop, striped and dotted with continents and islands, flying through space with other stars all singing and shining together as one, the whole universe appears as an infinite storm of beauty.
—John Muir
Come to the woods, for here is rest. There is no repose like that of the green deep woods. —John Muir
It is a dark and cold world we sit in if we will not open the inward eyes of the spirit to the inward flames of nature. —Gustav Fechner
The clearest way into the Universe is through a forest wilderness. —John Muir
Everybody needs beauty as well as bread, places to play in and pray in, where nature may heal and give strength to body and soul. —John Muir
I never saw a discontented tree. They grip the ground as though they liked it, and though fast rooted they travel about as far as we do. —John Muir
Death is not only a time of mourning. It is a time of truth. —Emmanuel’s Book
Tug on anything at all and you'll find it connected to everything else in the universe.
—John Muir
When we finished telling stories, I read the prose poem I had written a few hours earlier.
Farewell
This is what I do, my old sweetheart.
I use words to find meaning.
You said there was a reason for everything.
I see no reason or sense in your death.
Yet that is what has happened.
We looked into each other’s eyes many times
And knew the end was near,
Knew this was not what either of us wanted
Or planned.
I wanted to be with you all the time
But some of those times were difficult
Watching you birth your death
It was messy, painful, sad
We all felt the labor pain
Rumbling through valley, hills, river.
I asked what sign you would give me
After you were gone. To prove to me
That you were right, after all.
Even in the end. Even about the end.
"Something with a bird," you said.
"Not quite sure. You’ll know."
Days after you told me this
A hummingbird flew right up to me
Wings whirring, tiny eyes gazing at me.
But you were still alive.
Had your spirit already flown the coop?
One night when you still had your strength
You called and left a message on our phone
I was on the coast, you in Home Valley
Where you were witnessing a summer storm.
Lightning, thunder, and clouds were creating
A masterpiece just for you.
You sounded so excited as you described to me
The beauty all around you. I wept as I listened
To your message. Your message of beauty and joy.
I pressed save. I wanted to have a record of your
Voice, your beauty and joy forever.
But someone erased the message.
And now you are gone.
A few days after you died
I went out to your campsite.
I stood out in the stream on a rock
And said, “Linda where are you?”
I looked around at the beauty
At the stones, the creek, the green.
The blue sky, and I couldn’t find you.
“You aren’t here,” I whispered.
Then I looked down and
Saw a tiny white feather floating on
the water in a small pool encircled
By stones. I watched the feather for a long while.
I remembered once when I asked where you’d
Be after you died and you said,
“I will be in the breeze coming
Across the field. I will be in the
Songs of the birds. I will be the
Sun on your shoulders.”
Although you didn’t say so, I know
When I see a wildflower and wonder
its name, you will tell it to me.
When I linger along the path, it
Will be because your hand is on my
Shoulder reminding me to pause.
One day I will smell a Doug Fir
And know you brought that scent to me.
And when I reach my arms around a tree
I know I will be embracing you too.
It is not enough today.
But someday it will be.
Farewell my old sweetheart.
Her brother Daniel read the Rilke poem (below) to end the memorial, and then we ate together and continued to tell stories and jokes.
You mustn't be frightened
If a sadness
Rises in front of you,
Larger than any you have ever seen;
If an anxiety, like light and cloud shadows,
Moves over your hands and everything you do.
You must realize that something is happening to you,
That life has not forgotten you,
That it holds you in its hand
And will not let you fall.
—Rainer Maria Rilke
And that's the way it was. Lots of hugs and love all around.
That's all for now.
Blessings on your days, all.
Labels: Linda
2 comments
Saturday, August 19, 2006
Cocoon
I spent all morning on the phone. Finally got breakfast around noon. Spent part of last night at Linda's. Her caregiver didn't show up, so we went to the house and brought Serena ice cream and pie, and we kept her company for a while. I stroked Linda's forehead and did a "meditation" with her to her favorite place. It's very difficult to see her like this. (That is about the understatement of my life.) She can't really make her needs known at this stage, so we don't know if she's suffering or not. After Mario and I went home, Serena called about 11:30 because the caregiver still hadn't shown up. I called the sheriff's department to make certain no one had been in an accident. After that I talked to Serena for a long time, urged her to try to sleep, was glad she felt she could call me. My body was still pumping with adrenal from her phone call (because it was so late and I was asleep) so it took me a couple of hours to go back to sleep. Even so, I was glad to be there for her. And it helps me too. I can't be in mourning—I can't be depressed—when I've got this girl in my life who needs to step out of what's happening in her life for a few minutes. I've made spaghetti for her dinner tonight. The pie we took her last night was made from apples picked from her mother's apple tree.
I don't want to talk about it any more. Just for a minute. I want to remember my beautiful friend out in the woods, knowing everything, taking her time as she walked from plant to plant, driving me crazy because I wanted a workout not a botany lesson. She was forever teaching me to stop and smell the roses (despite my lack of smell) even when I resisted.
Resistance is futile.
I miss her so much.
After my noon time breakfast, I firmed up all the dates and places for my trip to the Southwest. I'm quite nervous about it. I hope I can physically do it. It'll be a challenge. I hope Barbara and I are friends at the end of it. I've stopped saying this to her, however, since it makes her very nervous. "Why wouldn't we be?" she wonders. "I've never had trouble traveling with anyone." Hmmmm. Whenever I've travelled with anyone there's always a time when we get on each other's nerves and we get a little stressed out. Except Mario, of course. We're perfect together. (You can all laugh now. Of course Mario and I can get irritated with each other too—although it is rare.)
I have little idea about what's going on in the world. I'm pretty much in Linda's world. Although it isn't really her world any more. It's a twilight kind of world, a twilight kind of life. I haven't read what anyone else has been writing or written any letters. I apologize to anyone I haven't written. I would like to be poetic and beautiful right now, but words fail me. Or I fail them. This kind of dying is harrowing. It doesn't seem right. Or maybe it's just us, resisting it, wanting it to be different. Why can't she just hold out her hand and cross over—which is how she views dying? Last night I whispered to her, "You can take off that shoe now if you like." She has told me many times that she viewed death as taking off a too-tight shoe.
One of our friends accused me of allowing Linda to suffer (because Linda said very clearly she did not want morphine) because we are following Linda's wishes. She accused me of other things too. It was very sad. I was so angry and hurt because I was so tired; otherwise I would have taken her accusations in stride. She doesn't want Linda to die, so she's fighting it. Someone told me that next time someone questions what I'm doing that I should take off my shoes and hand them to her. I like that very much. Perfect. Walk in my shoes and then see how your harangue goes. I keep saying, "It's not about you; it's not about me. It's about Linda and Serena and doing whatever we can for them." That's the beginning and the end for me. (And in-between it's about me and everyone else getting enough rest.)
Okay. I hope your lives are fun and exciting or restful and joyful or whatever you need and want. I wish you all peace and great good health.
Much love, love, love.
Labels: Linda
3 comments
Thursday, August 17, 2006
How's Youse?
I went to the workshop in Portland. It was hot and I was having dragon-sized hot flashes and sweats. Plus lots of things were going on with Linda, so it was difficult to concentrate. On the second night in Portland—after I couldn't sleep again—I got up, wrote Mario a note, left the hotel, and drove home. It was so great to get into the car and just go. Middle of the night. Cruising down the Gorge, half moon out my left window. I could breathe again. The chatter in my head didn't stop, but at least I was moving. I thought about going to Linda's and seeing if she and Serena were all right. I hadn't slept in so long that the scenario seemed to make sense.
Once I got home I stepped out of the car and breathed deeply. Felt so much better. Went inside the house, lay down on the couch, pulled the quilt my dad had made me up over me, and fell to sleep almost immediately. I woke up an hour later, at 3:00 a.m. That amount of sleep was enough to restore me to sanity. I realized I had left my husband sleeping in a hotel in Portland: and he didn't know it. I got into the car and drove back to Portand. Which is beautiful at 4:00 a.m. Fortunately I found a parking spot near the hotel. I went back into the hotel and into our room. Got into bed. Mario said sleepily, "Did you go down to the lobby?" "No," I said, "I drove home. I've been gone for three hours." He had no idea.
He went right back to sleep. I was wide awake.
I didn't go back to the conference. We went home a few hours later.
The rest of what's been going on I won't bore you with. (What a sentence, eh.) It has been an extremely intense and stressful week. So many people have an opinion about how Linda should die. It's excruciating. Why can't people honor and respect the wishes of others? So many people are so certain they know what is right for other people. It amazes me. I'm rarely certain what is right for me let alone what's right for someone else. Is it relaxing to always "know" you're right, or really stressful?
Does this make sense? Too vague. My mind is a bit fried. Now I'll try to sleep again.
I wish my friend peace.
Sweet dreams all. 0 comments
Friday, August 11, 2006
Story Time
As I sat by Linda's side this afternoon, I thought about god again and reaffirmed my disbelief in an omnipotent omniscient god. If something/someone had the power to stop suffering, they would do it, right? Unless they were a cruel despicable evil S.O.B. (Or as Paul Erdös calls god: the Supreme Fascist.) Therefore, either god doesn't exist or if it does exist, it is evil.
I’m not saying geni loci and the rest of the Invisibles are not possible. Probable. I'm not eschewing the Old Wild Mother (as Cate calls her). But they are not omnipotent. (If they were and they did not stop suffering, I would call them Supreme Fascists, too.) There’s the difference.
But I haven't the energy for a thealogical argument right this second.
Tomorrow I have a reading at the library. I'll read scenes from Mercy, Unbound. I'll probably read a bit of Broken Moon and Church of the Old Mermaids. I don't do many readings any more. It doesn't really help with overall sales of a book, and it can be exhausting. So I only do ones I really want to do. It should be fun, although I was dreading it for a while—I couldn’t find people to stay with Linda while I was gone. Serena has a class, and nearly everyone else is out of town. Fortunately Linda’s niece is coming for part of the day, and Serena's godmother is coming for part of the day. Hurrah!
So tomorrow I'll talk about story at my reading. Maybe how I started out. I started writing stories before I could write. But you've heard that story before. When I was in college, I was in love with the language, but I didn't understand plot. Didn't understand story enough. After Clarion (the six week workshop where I met Mario), language became just a tool to create story. It was all about plot. Now I understand story and I love the language. But I'm still an Ernest Hemingway kind of writer. He could say so much with so little. I ain’t a flowery writer. If I can’t describe something in a sentence, I rarely do it.
I had more to write on this topic, but I am weary to the bone. I need to get some sleep. I don't generally give writing advice, even when I’m asked. I think most writing advice and writing books are crap. Once you know the language and understand basic sentence structure and grammar, I think you learn fiction writing by doing two things: reading fiction and writing fiction. But that’s just what I think. I also recommend two writing books, Damon Knight's Creating Short Fiction and John Gardner's On Becoming a Novelist.
I reread Damon’s book regularly—although I just looked for it and can’t find it. Damon was one of the instructors at Clarion. I miss his presence on this planet. I never liked John Gardner’s fiction; he clearly didn’t take his own advice. His writing books are quite good, however. So that’s all the advice I’ll give; I don’t want to stray into crap. Of course, maybe I already have. Strayed. I am a natural born writer (if there is such a thing), so it was probably easier for me. Mario has reminded me of that. And I’ve been writing for 45 years. I know what I did: I learned the basics. Then I practiced, practiced, practiced—and observed by reading. But I said that already.
Okay. This Old Storyteller is going to bed. Still looking for the Sand Man.
Wish me luck. 0 comments
Tuesday, August 08, 2006
I Need a Man...
I finished the rewrite of COTOM when I got home. At least the first run-through of this rewrite.
The wind is blowing outside. An almost full moon brightens the whole world. I looked at the headlines online. Read some articles. Felt sick to my stomach. To hell in a handbasket, that is for sure.
Now I think I'll make some toast, then try to sleep. If you sent me a letter last week and I never wrote back, you might want to try again. My kimantieau.com e-mail went down for a couple of days last week. If you wrote to me in the past couple of days, I've just been otherwise occupied.
Is this coherent?
See you on the flip side. I'll be back after I get some sleep and get COTOM finished. 2 comments
Sunday, July 23, 2006
Heat
What am I babbling about? Who cares about my consumer products? My brain is addled.
What have I been up to. Spending time at Linda's and/or arranging for people to come stay with her, so Serena can have some breaks. The rest of the time I am like a beached whale, just waiting for the rain to roll in. Or maybe fog. Something cool.
Before the heat set in, I went for a hike at Falling Creek. Yep. By my lonesome. Got up early and went. Needed it to soothe my aching soul. It was glorious.
We're camping downstairs tonight. I've been sleeping on the couch almost all week. Fitfully. I awaken and try upstairs. Then I awaken again and go back down to the couch. Mario is joining me. He's hauled Serena's bed out to my study and is sleeping underneath the AC. Romance is dead when it's this hot.
And so is creativity.
Last night I dreamed I was in Italy, and the proprietors of my hotel wouldn't let me back into my room. Room 11. I have this dream a lot. Always in another country. Can't get in my room or something's wrong with my room. Why am I telling you this uninteresting dream? See. Too hot.
We're off to the coast tomorrow to restore ourselves. See you on the flip side.
Labels: Linda
2 comments
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
Aching
Today the wind stopped, for the most part, and the outdoors became bearable again. I went to Evine's house to meet Linda. (I can’t get down her snowy icy drive, and she can’t get up my steps.) Several other friends came over too. We sat at the table eating crackers and cheese—well, they ate crackers and cheese. I hung out and balanced the medical benefit fund checkbook.
It was nice to see some friends and especially good to see Linda before we leave. She still doesn't have water at her house because the pipes froze. She's hobbling along on her walker with a catheter hooked on it, trying not to break her very fragile hip, and she doesn't have water and her lights were flickering. She’s all by herself at night. Her catheter bag broke last night and leaked all over her rug. She doesn’t complain. I think she’s trying to show her daughter she can do for herself so that she’ll go to college in January.
On occasion friends have called me and said they really thought we should try to encourage Linda to live closer to town so that she would have all the conveniences of being in town—and then we wouldn’t have to worry about her so much. But Linda doesn't want to live here. She wants to live even deeper in the woods. I’d say, “Why should Linda live in town just so we don't worry about her when her heart is elsewhere? If she freezes to death, she freezes to death. It's her choice.”
After tea and snacks, Linda opened a box and brought out some of her favorite things and passed them around for us to take. I took a rabbit worry stone she had made.
As we looked at her treasures, she said, "You know, the healing circle you guys did at the hospital really helped. I believe that. The nurse told me that no one ever lives with calcium at 24."
"I hope she didn't tell you that at the time," I said.
She laughed. "No," she said. "Later. That's when I understood why my family was there."
"Yes," I said, "we called your family because they said you were going to be dead at any moment. You fooled them.”
"It was the healing circle," she said. "I'm sure of it."
When it was time to say goodbye I started to tear up. Very unexpected. She doesn't like that. I told her, "This is the deal, Linda. Everything has to be all right while we're gone. I mean it." This would probably be the last time I saw her before we leave for Arizona.
“That's right,” Linda said. “Nothing can happen unless you're here in the middle of it." She smiled and hugged me.
As soon as I stepped out the door I got a bad headache. Tried to drink lots of water. Ate. Several times. Now Mario is making me blueberry pancakes. (Five ingredients: blueberries, oat flour, water, egg, baking soda.) Then cooked in olive oil. OK, then I douse them in maple syrup. Pure, of course. Thank you, Maples! When I have a headache, blueberry pancakes always help. (Quelle surprise, eh?) Not sure I feel better after I'm finished, but it’s worth it for those few minutes.
If that doesn't work I might have to resort to drugs.
Tomorrow I finish my NAET treatments, have another craniosacral session, and see the naturopath. Doesn't that sound exciting? As I'm writing this, I'm realizing it all sounds very blah. It's the headache speaking. It's saying, "Blah, blah, blah, blah.”
OK. Ate the pancakes. Headache still there. Now watching That 70s Show. It’s so funny.
Speaking of media. I can hardly wait to see Brokeback Mountain. I’ve been waiting for this movie for months. When I heard the story, I thought, "Man, I wish I'd written that." (That's the highest compliment a writer can give.) Mario has to work Friday when it opens, so our friend Dave and I might go. I want to see it in Portland instead of Tucson. Portland is a movie town and a blue town. Tucson is a blue town, but it is in a red state. So I can’t be sure what the audience will be like. I don’t want to be watching this movie with a bunch of of people going, “Ooooh, ick,” every time the boys make out. In Portland, I don't have to worry about that.
What can I say?
I’ve just realized this has deteriorated into a high school diary. I do apologize.
I blame it on television.
Which I’m now going to go watch with my full attention.
Labels: Linda
1 comments
Wednesday, May 04, 2005
Bowling for Blueberries
Seriously, though, I like my bowls. I don’t buy a lot of things. For instance, I have one pair of jeans. OK, two if you count the cranberry-colored ones. To me, jeans are blue. Until a week ago, I had two pairs of shoes. Penny loafers, which really need replacing. The heels are so worn down on the outside. (It’s difficult finding nice-looking loafers.) And a pair of running shoes that I use for hiking. Wait. I almost forgot the blue/black pair of shoes I used to wear to work; now I sometimes wear them when I put on a dress. They’re twenty years old, give or take, so they don’t really count. I’m getting lost in detail here. Sorry. The point is that I don’t buy stuff. But I have many bowls. Forty-two, I believe, counting the mixing, serving, salad, soup, and cereal bowls. The plain bowls—they’re made by Tag—are my favorites. These bowls are beautiful in their simplicity.
Sometimes I open the cupboard and stare at the Tag bowls. Piled on top of each other. Egg yellow, split pea, plum, blue, dusty cranberry. They’re like huge open flowers, each one spooning the next. Or bowling the next, I suppose. Almost nesting, but not quite. I like the colors. I want to take photographs of them the way I take photographs of rhododendrons: up close and personal.
Every time I make something that requires using one of these bowls, I smile. I reach for one deliberately, slowly, and take it off the pile. I look inside at the translucent white well to make certain nothing untoward has dropped inside. This one could be split pea colored. Perfect for the split pea soup I am going to eat this Thursday. Or perhaps that is too monochromatic. I will try the egg yellow instead. Chick yellow, really. I like that description better. It’s kind of that fuzzy yellow that baby chicks have. If the yolk of an egg was that color it wouldn’t be tasty; it would mean the chickens weren't getting enough sun and running around time. (Do I understand I’m speaking of the same creature only in a different form: egg or chick? Do I understand I am talking about myself in the trois person?)
I don’t have the ingredients or the time to make fresh split pea soup. So I saute organic shitake mushrooms in olive oil in a soup pan. I open a can of Walnut Acres Split Pea soup (all organic ingredients; vegan; no sugar) and pour it into the mushrooms. I heat it until it is very hot. Then I drop a handful of frozen organic peas into the soup. (Just assume if I’m cooking or eating it, it’s organic.) While the soup continues to heat for a bit more, I lightly toast rye bread, crush several garlic cloves onto the bread, slap on a couple slices of baked tofu and a rainbow chard leaf, and then I close up the sandwich.
I set the sandwich on a small green fiestaware plate. My mother sent me four place settings of the pastel fiestaware about a decade ago. Every time I use them, I feel strangely elated. I ladle the soup into the chick yellow bowl. As I eat, I feel as though I have engaged in some kind of ritual—as though I am preparing my body for nourishment, even if it is fast food natural food. The bowl becomes a kind of down home cornucopia. Barbara Walker says bowls represents the “divine female principle” or the womb. She says in “Babylonian scriptures, the whole earth or the whole cosmos was represented as the Goddess’s mixing-bowl.”
So I stir the soup and stare at the cosmos. Then I eat it.
On Saturday, I talk to my friend Linda. She is so sick: another infection, reactions from medications, on a liquid diet for months because she has none of her back teeth. I feel so frustrated and angry that I can’t do something for her. She loves my pumpkin pies but can’t eat them any more. So I say, “Wouldn’t you like some pumpkin pudding?” Just pie without the crust. We’re speaking to each other over the ether. With a telephone. Her voice perks up. “Yes,” she says. “I would like that.”
As usual, it takes a long while for us to say goodbye. I don’t like talking on the phone, normally. Except to Linda or Mario. But Linda and I have trouble saying goodbye on the phone. She’ll spot a wren or towhee at her bird feeder, and she’ll have to describe it to me. Or I’ll talk about the rhododendrons blooming in town: the wedding cake white rhodie at the library, the blood red blooms on the bush at the courthouse annex, and the one by the church, the one that is the color of a peach that has suddenly decided it would rather be a flower than a fruit. But finally, we say goodbye, and I pull out one large Tag mixing bowl from the cupboard below the counter. Split pea colored.
I wish I were the Great Goddess. I would stir health and healing into the pumpkin pudding. Of course, who knows what part of us is Divine. Or at least witchy. One and the same? In the bowl, I pour 1/3 cup of honey. (Honey given to me by my friend Barbara whose husband Paul is a melissae, a beekeeper.) I add an egg and whisk the honey and egg together. Into this goes a can of pumpkin puree, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1/4 teaspoon clove, 1/4 teaspoon nutmeg, 1/4 teaspoon ginger. I stir the ingredients all together until it is a dark pumpkin color.
Double, double toil and trouble; fire burn, and cauldron bubble.
I pour the concoction into a glass pie plate and put it in the oven at 350° until it sets, which is about 30 minutes.
I wash out the mixing bowl with reverence. What a wonderful thing it is to cradle that which nourishes us—even if it is only for a short while. To be a container of sorts. I wish I could alway be a container of pure joyful love—but it doesn't always work out that way.
The next morning, Mario and I put the pumpkin pie without the crust in the cooler in the trunk. Then we drive to the mountain and walk to the top again. I talk to the East wind and listen for the wisdom of the sea tree hags. Rough and prickly. If you can’t take the heat, get out of the kitchen. I ask for healing for Linda and my mother. Myself. I leave polished stones on the rough black slate.
The day is blue like my blue bowl. Is the sky the color of the bowl or is the bowl the color of the sky? Doesn’t it make you giggle just to think of it? Linda looks drawn, tired, thin as she comes out of the house to greet us. She hasn’t the energy to be her usual cheery self, which certainly isn’t a requirement for us. She takes the pudding and puts some on a plate. We walk to the fenced flower garden next to her farmhouse. The house leans into the earth like an old woman leans on a cane.
We sit on weather-worn benches, the dark green grass at out ankles. Swallows swoop above us, singing their watery arias. A wren sits on a small willow tree near the large bird feeder and sings his heart out. Linda is sure the bird is a “he.” Flowers grow along the fence lines, wild and brightly colored. Linda says, “I need to cut the grass and weed the flowers.” She sighs, exhausted by the prospect. But she eats the pudding as she sit sheltered by the bowl of the sky, with us alongside her.
Later, Linda is in so much pain that she calls an ambulance. I don’t learn about this until the next day when she calls to tell me she went to the hospital. She is home again. I don’t fuss over her. She hates that. I just listen. When I get off the phone I go to the cupboard, open it, and stare at the bowls. They’re still beautiful. Full of memory. Potential. Color.
I go to the other cupboard and pull out two big mixing bowls. One is split pea, the other is chick yellow. Mario loves my blueberry muffins. Only they aren’t muffins. That’s too much fussing to pour the mixture into a muffin tin. Too much bother to clean. So I make blueberry cake. I have the recipe memorized. First I measure out two cups of barley flour and put it in the split pea bowl. I should shift it, but I don’t. I drop in two teaspoons of baking soda and then whisk the dry mixture together.
In the yellow bowl, I put a teaspoon of vanilla extract, 1/4 cup olive oil, 1/4 cup maple syrup, and one egg. I whisk them all together and then add 3/4 cup water. I gently pour the liquid ingredients into the dry ingredients. I stir it all together with a bamboo mixing spoon. Next, I drop a cup (or more) of frozen blueberries into the bowl. I fold the blueberries into the mixture carefully. Almost immediately the cake mixture turns blue. Not ordinary blue. But a blue-green. No, that’s not it. It’s the color of blue that you imagine a mermaid’s tail would be. It’s so deep and light and natural and perfect that I can only oooh and aaah. I show it to Mario. If I were a painter, I think, I would spend a lifetime trying to create this color. But then, why bother? Nature has already done it.
I oil a Pyrex dish and then pour the blueberry mixture into it. I put it in the oven at 375° for about 30 minutes. I wash the mixing bowls carefully, reluctant to clean away the blueberry cosmos.
Later, I serve my beloved blueberry cake. I watch him eating my love along with the blueberries, egg, flour, and oil. I wonder what he would think if he knew he was eating the cosmos, too.
Tomorrow, he has promised to make one of my favorite dishes: a kind of stir-fry with rice and tofu and veggies all mixed together. He will use the huge chick yellow Tag bowl that we have not had an occasion to use yet. It will be a glorious sight, I am certain. A great feast.
“This is even better than usual,” Mario says as he eats the blueberry cake. “Did you do anything different?”
I smile. “It’s the bowls, darlin’. The bowls.” 0 comments