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 02, 2008

Taking Care 

It’s night at the Old Mermaid Sanctuary. A strong wind rattles the dry leaves in the palm tree just outside our door. The great horned owl is long gone, I’d imagine, out hunting. I haven’t heard any coyotes. No animals sounds of any kind. Just the wind in the palm tree. And then silence. Profound, dark silence.

It’s been a time. I have appreciated all your kind words and wishes for me and my family. As Joanna says, love, love, love. I still feel so unmoored. I’m having excruciating back pain. This morning I got out of bed and a few minutes later, I felt this spasm in my side. It was as though a muscle decided to pull one of my ribs out of place. I was in tears—and in agony. After I put hot towels on it and took a hot shower and then a hot bath, Mario and I went into the desert and walked for about an hour. We also talked. He thinks it’s TMS. I wondered if it was from a too soft bed or from driving 15 hours the day before. (I couldn’t do any yoga, by the way; that’s how bad it was.)

Mario pointed out that I always feel as though I have to fix things. I feel the need to solve problems and make things better. I said, ‘don’t you feel that way?’ ‘No,’ he said. ‘Hmm,’ I said. ‘I thought nearly everyone was like that.’ ‘No,’ he said again. I can’t bring my mother back, and I can’t help my father. I can’t make anything better right now.

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And I keep thinking of everything I’m doing wrong. I hate it when adult children treat their parents like children. When I was in Santa Cruz to see my father and sister and her husband, we went to the Forest of Nisene Marks, where I’d been several years earlier. I wanted to show my father the redwoods there. I found out my father had not eaten since early in the morning, and now it was about seven hours later. My father has to eat something every two or three hours or his blood sugar drops (or something) and he gets depressed and has other symptoms. He’s just getting over an illness (the shingles) and he’s still reeling from my mother’s death. Right now I feel like he needs someone to watch over him, just like any person would under these circumstances no matter what their age. Anyway, I was chastising my brother-in-law for not making sure my father ate, and my father was getting a little annoyed with me. I realized later that I was probably sounding like one of those adult children who treats their parent like a child. I didn’t mean to do that, and I keep worrying over these kinds of things.

I feel as though I am failing at everything. I know this is wrong thinking.

Ten minutes before my back went into spasm, I was in bed looking up at the ceiling and wishing I could stay here forever. And then one of the many little voices in my leetle brain said, “Bad things can happen here too.”

Well, of course they can! This is where I developed allergies and asthma and where my whole life went into a terrible downward spin for so many years...

Anyway, soon after that my father called and soon after that, my back spasmed.

By the way, in the middle of the redwoods, away from the ocean, mind you, I discovered two seashells. Near this huge old redwood off the trail. I thought they were mushrooms at first, but then I saw they weren’t. I said, ‘Dad, look. The Old Mermaids have been here. Remember from the book, if you find a seashell away from the ocean it means a mermaid just found her tail.’ Near to it was a circle. Perhaps someone left the shells as offerings.

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Did they pray to an Old Mermaid? Does this mean I’m the Old Mermaid who heard their prayers?

I wish you happiness, good health, and much love.

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Today I sat by the pool, the beautiful curving pool that has an Old Mermaid painted in the bottom of it...at least it does in my imagination and in Church of the Old Mermaids. The old owl slept in the palm tree above me, buffeted but seemingly unmoved by the winds. Across from me was a statue of part of a woman. I love the art here. There is something new every year. This partial woman turned up last year. She has no legs or hands. I don’t like this. I’m not saying it’s bad art; I’m only saying I don’t like it. I don’t like dismembered art. Never have. Every time I look at this woman thing, I think of violence and helplessness. I want to run over and reattach her hands which are on the ground near her—and fashion her new legs and tell her to run, run, run to safety. I see this place as a healing place, and the dismembered woman doesn’t fit with that. There are also heads in my enclosed garden this year. Four of them. Quite gruesome. I want them gone. Every time I step outside, I have to avert my eyes. It’s not restful or healing. Will I grow accustomed to them? Last year I didn’t go out to the pool side much. I couldn’t stand seeing the dismembered woman. Today I just stared at her.

We got here in the dark. The headlights of the car lit up the shovel I’d found in the wash so many years ago, the shovel that became the tail of an Old Mermaid, in real life and in the novel.

I’m so tired and sad. I feel stingy. There is so much I have. I remember the quote by e. e. cummings, probably because I’ve read it here somewhere at the Old Mermaid Sanctuary: ‘I thank you God for this most amazing day, for the leaping greenly spirits of trees, and for the blue dream of sky and for everything which is natural, which is infinite, which is yes.’

I had more to say. But my back is aching. Everything is aching. Maybe I’ll read for a bit. Or just close my eyes. Perhaps I’ll dream. The Old Mermaids will come into my dreams and take care of me.

Maybe one of the Old Mermaids will be my mother.

Six hours later. Awaken from a dream. It’s long and complicated, but in the end, I’m in a car that my mother is driving. I’m in the back. My father sits next to her. She doesn’t look like my real mother. I ask her a question and she can’t remember the answer. She pulls the car over and says there are so many things she doesn’t remember. She looks at me and then hugs my father. “Tell Kim it’ll be all right,” she says.

I awaken. It takes a long time to go back to sleep. I take another bath to alleviate the pain in my back. I’m so exhausted I can’t think or feel. I nearly fall to sleep in the hot water.

Morning. The rash on my hands has started. Sometimes I wonder why I come here every year. The first year I had a bad rash on my back, plus there was an obnoxious dog here which kept me confined to certain parts of the property and I got pricked by nearly every cactus on the property. The second year I had another rash, but I also wrote Church of the Old Mermaids. Last year I remembered to bring white cotton gloves, so I didn’t get a rash. And I wrote another novel, The Old Mermaid Sanctuary. Now I’ve got a backache and a rash. And there are heads growing in my garden. When I’m here for a month, these nuisances fade. Since I’ll be here less than two weeks, I wonder if I’ll have time to acclimate.

Still, the Old Owl is here, quail flutter as we walk the property, and I found bobcat prints in the wash. Magic awaits. I know it. Or I used to know it. We’ll see.

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Thursday, December 27, 2007

Pieces 

I'm listening to Annie Lennox and trying to keep my eyes open. We're leaving for Santa Cruz tomorrow morning, and I should be doing something productive. My father left on a plane this morning for Santa Cruz. It is strange not to be with him after so many weeks. It was the longest time I've spent with my father since I was eighteen years old.

My father is healing, and we hope that trend continues. The eye doc saw him every day for nearly a week—every day except Xmas and that was because she thought he was doing well enough to skip a day. It's been difficult for my father. He went straight from the train to the doctor and then to our home and then to another doctor in Portland. I had some kind of virus so I was hacking like someone from a TB ward, so I only went with him once. I was still in such a state of crisis and shock that I didn't think to convert our spare room into a bedroom for him. Instead we had him sleep in our room and we slept downstairs on the couch and floor. I didn't realize until later that this probably added to his sense of un-ease, dis-ease. He felt as though he was disrupting our life instead of being a part of our life.

We did make a routine of our week here, though. When Dad got up at six-ish, I got up, too, and made him oatmeal. Then he usually went back to bed. I then made breakfast for Mario and Dad, eggs and sweet potatoes. Then they went to the doctor in Portland. And I would try to rest and get well. They came home, and we'd have dinner. Afterwards, we watched something funny on TV or a football game. I turned on our TV service, and that seemed to relax my father. Did I say that one of the things I have learned from all this is that sometimes it is enough just to be in the same room with someone? Nothing has to happen. No great insights. No great wisdom. Just time passed with each other. I mentioned to Mario that my father seemed to relax once we had television service, and Mario said, "So did you." He was right. I enjoyed sitting next to my father watching football or some comedy.

One day Mario asked Dad if he had seen my new sewing machine. So I showed my father. I also showed him the pieces of cloth a friend had given me to make a quilt. One of the pieces was of a mermaid. Within minutes my father had designed the quilt we would make from the pieces. He began cutting and piecing the quilt together, with the mermaid at the center of it. We did this for part of three days. I did some sewing, but Dad did most of it. One day we went to Jo-Ann fabrics and got batting and some muslin. That night we finished one side of the quilt and then the three of us pinned the three layers together. While my dad was working on the quilt, he was himself again. Mom taught him how to sew and how to quilt, and now he was showing me.

Some times, many times, my father sat with his head in his hands. I'd ask him if it was the shingles or his grief. Most of the time he didn't answer, unless I insisted. I said, "Dad, you have to tell me if you're having new symptoms."

Sometimes when I look at him, he seems so vulnerable. I don't ever remember seeing him like this. Maybe when my grandfather, his father, killed himself.

Now that reality is setting in, my mother's death seems even more awful, more painful. I keep thinking of all the moments I'd spent with her in recent years. I wonder if I praised her enough, loved her enough, noticed her enough. She was so quiet that I think she just disappeared sometimes. I googled pneumonia and saw that pneumonia caused by Legionnaires can cause diarrhea, one of Mom's symptoms. But she'd had that before, so they didn't think anything about it. What if we'd known? What if she'd seen a doc right away? And then I'll realize that unless this is all a dream—which is what it feels like—my thinking about this isn't going to change anything: Mom is still dead. (And writing that makes me want to throw-up.)

And death. I keep thinking about death. Sometimes it feels as though some guy with a scythe is hanging around, circling, just waiting. I've got to be alert. I wonder incessantly if I have pneumonia. Am I about to die? My mother said to my father, "Am I going to die?" Am I walking around thinking I'm alive and I'm going to be dead any moment? Who else is the walking dead? I try to imagine being dead, and I don't like it. The sheer nothingness of it. Makes me shudder. I prod my body for signs. I look at Mario for signs.

I remember the photographs Mario took of me with my parents and my sister Kathleen in October. In them my mother was always blurry. I remember looking at those photos and thinking, she's leaving. She's disappearing. She's already gone.

But I didn't like those thoughts. I wanted my mother here. I wanted her here here here so that maybe some day some how I could figure out how to save her life.

Where is my mother? Where is Linda? Dave? Bill? Jeanne? Sheila? Where have my friends gone? I have no evidence that they've gone anywhere besides into the ground.

This morning we took my father to the airport. He was going to ride with us down to Santa Cruz, but the weather got messy. We weren't sure when we'd be able to get out of here. (The Siskiyou Summit is always the bugaboo.) At the airport, I watched my father go through security. The guard—or whatever he was—wasn't too obnoxious. Still, I wanted to push him and everyone else aside and say, "This is my father, goddamn it. You show him the respect he fucking deserves!" I wanted to take him home again. But I just watched as he pulled things out of his pocket to put in the tray. "It's all right, Dad," I said. "It'll be all right." He looked small. I don't know if I remember ever noticing that my father was small. But he looked small this morning. Oh man. When he was younger, he was short, yes, but he had a gorgeous build. He looked like a man who worked for a living, a man who used his arms and legs, which he did, just not at his job where he was a teacher and then a principal. During the summers, when I was a girl, he also did carpentry work.

My father could do anything.

This morning, he looked like he was disappearing.

If I took a photo of him, would he be blurry?

Fuck, fuck, fuck.

Don't go anywhere, Dad. Please don't leave us. We don't want to be orphans. Don't want to be in the world without you.

I was talking on the phone to my sister in Santa Cruz when she said with joy and love so apparent, "There's my daddy!" and I knew my father had just walked into the store where she worked.

I knew exactly how she felt. Every time I see my father I feel the same way: "There's my daddy!"

Two nights ago, I dreamed of my mother. My sister Kathleen and I were outside and Mom was there. She looked good. Young and healthy. She had a kind of glow around her. I was glad my sister was there because she was proof that I hadn't made it up. Mom was there, but I knew she was dead. She talked to us, but when I woke up I couldn't remember what she said. I tried to get her to go to Dad and tell him that it'd be all right. When I woke up, I went into the kitchen to make my father oatmeal. I stood at the sink, and I told him the dream. Crying. I said, "I tried to get her to come to you and tell you that it'll be all right." "I know it will be," he said. I looked at him, and I wasn't sure he did know that.

I wasn't sure it was going to be all right.

I know people get through these things. I've watched others go through this process with such dignity and grace. They keep going. They continue. That's what we're supposed to do. That's what we want to do.

At my age, I should have these things all worked out. I should accept death. It's gonna happen to all of us.

But I don't.

If I believed in heaven, I'd be shaking my fist at it right now.

Instead, I think I'll go to sleep. Perhaps my dreams will help me piece together the answers.

The Old Mermaid quilt my father and I made is folded up on the bench. I've got to tie it together. Except for that, it's finished. Although it won't be done until my father signs and dates it.

So I'll be heading south tomorrow, toward the sunshine and my daddy.

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Saturday, December 22, 2007

Fatherland 

As with Motherland, I wrote this and then posted it. I didn't even read it again. I asked Mario to read it for sense, so I hope it does actually make sense. It's long, the longest post I've ever written, I think. So here it is. I can only put the words out there and hope they provide healing or insight or something for myself and others.

It feels as though it’s been forever since I’ve written. So much has changed that I don’t know where to begin. I know I left off writing when I was on the train headed to Michigan. Now I’m on a train headed to Washington, only this time I’m not alone. My father is with me.

My train trip to Michigan seemed like a blessing, a magical mystery journey that eased me into the reality of my mother’s death. After I wrote to you last, I meet two more interesting people. The first one knocked on my door one night and asked if he could escort me to dinner, and I said sure. So we ate together. I mostly picked at my food while we talked about all kinds of things. He said he took the train because he wasn’t in a hurry to get anywhere. ‘I have a bumper sticker on my car that says 0-60 in about ten minutes.’ He was going back East to meet a daughter he’d just discovered he had less than three months earlier. She was in her forties. The mother of the daughter hadn’t known she was alive either: The people at the home for unwed mothers told her her baby died, at the behest of her parents. I was shocked. I didn’t know things like that happened in real life—it sounded like something out of a movie. People have the most amazing stories to tell. I liked him. He worked on a farm in eastern Washington. I’m not sure our politics or outlook on life would have meshed, but it didn’t matter. He was good company for dinner and then breakfast the next day.

When I got off the train in Chicago, it was cold and I had too much crap to carry. I should have gone with a skycap but I didn’t know we were so far away from the station. By the time I got inside to the ticket area, my heart was beating so fast and furious I was afraid I’d have a heart attack. And then I went into a full blown anxiety attack. The train station was busy and loud and there were so many lights flashing and anxious people everywhere. I saw two guys casing my bags—primarily my purse—and I tried to get a hold of myself. I had travelled all over Europe. I had backpacked all over Europe. I had been all over the United States and parts of Canada and Mexico. Come on, woman. You can do this.

Of course, my mother hadn’t just died any of those other times.

I decided I should just leave some of my bags behind. Why had I brought my computer? It was way too heavy. And the little cooler. Again: too heavy. And the kitchen: I hadn’t been able to use it on the train. At one point I asked this man for help and he didn’t want to help me and I started to cry. So this man picked up my bags and took me to my gate. The skycap asked for the elderly and the disabled to come to the front of the gate. Four older women got on his little car. I told him I didn’t feel well, so he let me come too. The four women hugged me and cared for me when I blurted out that my mother had just died. One woman’s husband had died a year earlier and she was from Brighton, which is where I’m from and where my parents live. She put her arms around me and held me close.

On the train from Chicago to Ann Arbor, I sat behind them. And behind me was a woman, May, and her granddaughter, Kay (not their real names). I loved being on this train. The whole car was filled with people from Michigan and all of them were talking to one another! This is what I missed about the place where I grew up: connection, communication, a sense of belonging. People were asking other people where they’d been, where they were going, where they were from. This does not happen in the West, as least in my part of the West. People keep to themselves and seem much more wary of others.

The Chicago to Ann Arbor train was packed, but I managed to get a seat by myself, and Kay came and sat with me. Within minutes, I was absolutely in love with this nine year old child, and she was in love with me. For five hours, we sat together and gabbed and huddled together. I didn’t have time to think about what was next for me and my family because I was in this beautiful sacred space with this child. Sometimes I regret not being a parent, but I am a good friend to the children I know. I am able to be present with them, to be in the here and now with them, and I think that’s important for children—and for everyone.

And Kay was extraordinary. At times she would just put her face right in mine and stare at me with her beautiful brown eyes. She spent a lot of time showing me her virtual cat at first. A virtual cat who ate and slept and meowed—and pooped, once, three months ago. We both decided that was way too long to go without...going. We walked up and down the train together counting the cars. We wrote a story together. She had a hard time sticking to the story, but when I suggested she draw the story, she settled right into it. It relaxed her the way writing with words relaxes me. She told me how sad it made her that her father worked so much. I was once again so grateful that my father had spent so much time with us when we were growing up. His work was never a priority; we were.

Kay was pretty wound up after a few hours and it was getting late and I could see she was tired, so I told her the story of Broken Moon. She was mesmerized, especially when I talked about the Shadow Boys and Scharazad. She asked me to tell her the part about Scharazad again, in more detail. I was a little hesitant to talk about a king chopping off the head of his new bride every night with a nine year old, but I did—with gory details spared. Children really respond to fairy tales and it’s important not to gut their power by trying to sanitize them. We curled up on our seats facing one another as I told her the story. Her eyes fluttered shut a couple of times. When I was finished, she told me a story. It was so nourishing and nurturing. I hoped we could be friends for the rest of our lives.

We got to Ann Arbor, and Kay came to me for a hug, twice. I needed the hugs. Our trip together was extraordinary. I don’t have the words to explain how wonderful it was to sit with this child from Chicago to Ann Arbor. She and her grandmother went to their car, and a moment later my father and sister arrived to pick me up on a cold and icy night. I held my father tightly. He had aged considerably in the six weeks since I had seen him last. Probably in the last six hours.

I don’t remember much about that ride home. It was dark. It was sad. I don’t remember what we said to each other. Soon enough we were home. All of my four sisters were there. We were all together for the first time in about twenty-five years. I don’t remember much about that night either. One of my sisters was asleep. She had come back home right away and had made most of the arrangements for my mom’s Catholic funeral. She had lists on the refrigerator of when things were happening which was really helpful for me, since I was the last to arrive. The rest of us stayed up talking until about 2 a.m. Then we all tried to sleep. Two of my sisters slept in Mom and Dad’s room; another sister slept on some box springs in my mom’s sewing room; another one slept on a mattress in the bonus room (the room over the garage) and I slept in the loft above the living room where my father was sleeping on the couch. I listened to his breathing and his moaning for hours it seemed, afraid that suddenly he would stop breathing, before I finally slipped into sleep.

I think I went grocery shopping that morning, Monday. My sisters had already done so much and I offered to do this one little thing. I remember feeling dazed at the store and out of it. I hadn’t eaten or slept well in a couple of days. Everything kind of pulsed. As I walked into the store, a woman stopped to tell me she liked my hat and we looked at it together, trying to figure out how it was made. By Tibetans, I said. She was a knitter. It was comforting to talk about something so ordinary.

That afternoon, we got ready for the ‘visitation.’ This was where my mother’s body would be on view for family and friends at the funeral home. (We used to call it the viewing.) It was so sad and strange being in my parents’ house, the one my father had built for my mother less than 10 years ago. I kept wondering where my mother was. Yet, yet, yet...my mother had slept so much of the time during the last ten years of her life that it seemed as though she must be sleeping somewhere, and she’d just wake up and come eat with us. I liked being around my sisters. They all seemed so grounded and grown-up. Everyone was loving and caring toward one another and my father. We were all protective of my dad. We kept telling him he could cry in front of us, but he kept leaving the room or apologizing when he cried. He seemed beyond sad. I can’t seem to find a word in the English language that adequately describes his anguish and sadness.

We went to the funeral home. There was my mother’s name up in lights. Would have been cool except for the “funeral” part. We went into a large room with chairs all along the walls. My mother’s coffin with my mother’s body in it was at the front. Vases of flowers were all around her. My mother did not look like my mother, and if my sister hadn’t had her arm around me, I don’t know if I would have fallen down or screamed or what. Where was my mother? I thought when my sister told me she looked peaceful that meant she looked like my mother, but she didn’t. Except for her hands. Her hands looked like my mother’s hands. She was dressed in her pajamas, with one of my father’s quilts tucked in around her from the waist down.

The relatives came. Relatives I hadn’t seen in years. I got lots of hugs. I felt better being around my people. And that’s what it felt like. Like I was amongst my own. I wondered why I had been gone so long. Why did I leave the people who were connected to me by blood and by the land we shared? Two friends of mine from college showed up as I was sobbing at one point. I hadn’t seen them in fifteen years maybe, and I just put my arms around one of them and held on. Later I looked around the room and noticed everyone in groups talking. And away from it all was my mother’s coffin. I said to someone, maybe one of my sisters, that suddenly I felt like I had when Mom was alive: That she was all alone in a group of people. One of my sisters said she’d been feeling the same way and wondered if she should take a chair up there and sit by her. I said go for it and later that’s what they did.

We went home for a breather. Then we went back to the funeral home for the rosary. I met the priest then. I wanted to give a eulogy for my mother at the funeral the next day. The priest told me I had three minutes. I said ‘what if I want five?’ He told me not to get snappy with him. I said my mother had just died so I could get as snappy as I wanted. He told me I could give a eulogy now, before the rosary. In about five minutes. I wasn’t prepared, I told him. He shrugged and went on his way. I was furious. F.u.r.i.o.u.s. I went downstairs where they have a place for the family. My youngest sister was sitting there with two of her friends and I came in swearing and saying vulgar things about the priest (sexual in nature). When I calmed down I went back upstairs. My sister followed me to go talk to the priest, even though I asked her not to and told her I would deal with it on my own. A few minutes later she came over to me and leaned down and whispered in my ear, “I have just confirmed that the priest is a dickhead.”

Now that was funny.

My father liked the priest, however, and I was not about to make any kind of stink, especially since I think my dad was a little afraid I would. After all, he tells people I’m a witch. When it was time for the rosary, my father and his five daughters sat in the front row. While we were away for our “break,” they had moved the chairs into rows so that we were all facing my mother. The priest came to the front, and we said the rosary together. Yes, I said the prayers (Hail Mary and Our Father) clearly and loudly so that my father could hear me. I believe it was the respectful thing to do. I wish I could say that this ritual and these prayers made me feel healed or brought me some semblance of peace, but it didn’t. It felt lifeless, dead, like so many Catholic rituals I’ve participated in. I hoped that it was healing and reassuring for my father.

Afterwards—or was it before?—an old friend of my father’s asked me to sign her copy of Broken Moon. Because this person was dear to our family and to my father, it didn’t feel strange. However, a friend of one of my sisters came over and asked me one question after another about my writing, rapid-fire. I thought, my mother just died and you’re cheerfully asking me about my writing? I eventually extricated myself from that conversation.

For the most part, people were so kind and loving. My mother was one of eight children. She was the first of five sisters to die. She was not the oldest. All four of Mom’s sisters and her one living brother came to the visitation and the rosary. A couple of them weren’t speaking to one another. When I heard this, I just shook my head. Does every family have this kind of crap going on? I love my family, and I enjoyed spending time with them even under these trying circumstances—and I wished they could just like one another and realize that life is too fucking short for pettiness. But I also understand that members of a family can hurt one another like no one else can. Sometimes I think family sees us for who we used to be, not for who we are, and therein lies the problem.

That night after everyone was sleeping I sat on the couch with my father. After dinner every night, my parents would sit on the couch and my mother would look for something to watch and my dad did crossword puzzles. Now, since Mom died, Dad was sleeping on the couch, often with the television on. After a while I said to him, ‘Do you think you could go to sleep now?’ He said, ‘yes but I don’t want you to leave.’ ‘I’ll stay,’ I said. So he lay on the couch and I sat close to him on the couch and held his hand and watched TV until he fell to sleep.

The next morning we went to the church early for one last time with Mom’s body. One of my sisters and my father kissed her. Then they closed the casket and we (the family) draped the pall over the casket and then they wheeled it down the center of the church to rest just below the altar with immediate family walking on either side of it. Everyone else was already seated in the church, I think, or maybe they followed us.

We were in St. Patrick’s Church, which was my church when I was growing up. A new church stood on the footprint of a beautiful old church (where my parents were married) that was demolished years ago. A more modern church replaced that old one. My oldest sister got married in that church. We went to mass there every Sunday. That church had been remodeled in the last many years, and it no longer looked like a Catholic Church. It reminded me of one of those megachurches. Catholics are always accused of being idol worshippers, and I wanted my idols. I like dark Catholic churches, full of mystery and shadows. This one was well-lit and modern. It felt sterile.

And so the mass began. My father and my sisters and I sat in the designated area, in front. I don’t remember much about the mass. At some point the priest was singing something like, “Hosanna to the highest.” I almost burst out laughing because he sounded so high-pitched and silly. (He’s very young. Did I mention that?) I had visions of me laughing at my mother’s funeral like Mary Tyler Moore did at Chuckles the Clown’s funeral. I got myself under control and then one of my sisters elbowed me and I almost started laughing again.

But most of the time, it was just sad. And I think I was way out of my body. I didn’t want to cry because it clearly upset my father when we were upset, so I tried to keep it together. So I just looked around the church wondering, where is my mother? The priest came down from on high and stood by the coffin and talked about my parents’ 53 year marriage. He talked about my mother as though he knew her. We all appreciated that. He said the right words. Still, he lacked warmth and depth. He seemed to be somewhere else when he spoke, as though he was trying to remember something he memorized.

Then it was my turn to go up and say a few things about my mother. In three minutes. Although what was he going to do if I went longer than three minutes? I walked by the priest and the altar and went up to the podium. It was too tall for me and I couldn’t reach the microphone. I said, ‘whoops. Well, I am a Kelly girl, and we’re a little people.’ Or something like that. And someone came and pulled out a stool and I stood on it and began to talk about my mother.

If I get the energy later, I’ll write down what I said and post it, but for now, know that I talked about how my mother nurtured and encouraged the uniqueness in all five of us and then I read the quote she had shown me when I was a child, the quote that gave me permission to be the little oddball I knew myself to be: “If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away.”

And it was over. It was time to go to the cemetery. It was cold and rainy out. My father, sisters, and I got into the black limousine in front of the church, and the driver followed the hearse with my mother’s body in it. We snaked through town, our procession of cars, to the graveyard where my grandparents—the Antieau’s and the Kelly’s—were buried, and we drove down a long paved road inside the graveyard. Used to be a dirt road. The driver told us a parishioner got tired of driving on the potholes to visit a relative’s grave so he paid for the drive to be paved.

When I was a girl, one of my mother’s sisters and her family lived close to the graveyard, and we children sometimes walked through the woods and over the hill to it. In the summer, it was cool under the trees, and the grass growing over the graves was wildly lush. Grandma Kelly’s grave marker had a statue of Mother Cabrina next to it. Grandpa Antieau and Grandma Antieau’s graves were right next to one another, with one headstone. For many years, the stone had Grandma Antieau’s birthdate on it with a dash after it. To be filled in later. When I was a child, I thought that was scary, almost dangerous. To me, it felt as though my grandmother was tempting the fates to kill her. How could she actually acknowledge and concede that she was going to die? She was giving in instead of trying to find a way out.

The driver told us to wait in the car while he got out. I think they put my mother’s coffin over her grave while we were in the car. I had a glimpse of the coffin, and then I looked over and saw a small red tent covered the grave and coffin and the six chairs in front of the grave. Finally we got out. It had started raining or sleeting. It was cold, the ground icy, snowy, wet. Someone from the funeral home put umbrellas over our heads and lead us into the tent, and the six of us each sat in one of the six cushioned chairs waiting for us, my father first. My mother’s oldest sister had trouble walking and standing (she’s 90 something), so I got up and had her come sit with us. We all scooted over, so that two of us were on one chair. The rest of the family stood behind us.

The priest said something. I don’t know what. Sending my mother’s soul to God? Then it was over. Everyone slowly left. A couple of my sisters and I stayed for a moment. I ran my hand over my mother’s coffin. We took a rose each. My sister had arranged for there to be a red and white rose at the center of the bouquet of flowers on the coffin, to represent my parents, and around them were five pink roses, to represent each of their daughters. I took a petal from my rose and left it on the coffin. I put another petal on my grandparents’ gravestone and another on my Grandma Kelly’s stone. The pink was in sharp contrast to the snowy ground and the bone gray of the gravestone, like a spot of blush on Mrs. Haversham’s cheek.

We went home, and soon after relatives started coming to the house, and they stayed most of the day. It was sad and comforting. I asked my aunts if my mother was ever happy. A couple of them said that it was difficult to get to know my mother, but yes, they thought she had been happy during times in her life. One of my sisters had set out an old scrapbook of my mother’s for me. Inside it my mother had pasted in old restaurant menus. Some of them were from Atlantic City.

I remembered when I was a girl Mom had talked so fondly of Atlantic City and the boardwalk. She was never someone who wanted to travel overseas or see exotic places, at least not when I knew her, so I wondered when I was a child what kind of place must Atlantic City be to charm a woman like my mother. Inside the scrapbook was also a notebook where my mother wrote about wanting to be a writer. She listed all the qualities she thought a writer needed to have: They had to be interested in everything, they had to have perseverance, they had to be able to deal with rejection.

I hadn’t known my mother wanted to be a writer.

Where is my mother now? What about her hopes and dreams? Her life?

The next day one of my sisters left unexpectedly. It was sad, but it was probably good for her. We all needed a break, and she had been there a long time; I was very impressed with how much she had organized and taken care of for the family. I spent half the day with my niece. I hadn’t seen her since she was a child, and now she was a grown up woman with two children. We had a great time just being together and going grocery shopping. One night she sat on the end of my mattress on the floor and she told me about her life.

My parents had bought us all pajamas for Xmas, so we wore them and watched TV together and lay on my parents’ bed talking and curling up next to one another. I was so exhausted and every part of my body pulsed unnaturally, it seemed. I’m sure my other sisters felt the same. My father wanted us to go through my mother’s jewelry and each take something. We looked through her boxes. So much of it we didn’t recognize. My mother didn’t wear a lot of jewelry. She had various pieces in little red bags. One of my sisters said Mom would sit there at the dressing table and open up the bags and look inside. Something about that was so tender and beautiful and sad that I could hardly bear it.

The day after the funeral my father went to my mother’s graveyard. He saw deer tracks in the snow on my mother’s grave.

Eventually my oldest sister and my niece left. Then two of my remaining sisters, myself, and my father went to his cardiologist at UM hospital to get the results of his latest echocardiogram. The doctor was very kind about my mother. He examined my dad and then told us that the echocardiogram showed that my father’s valve was closing up even more, but since he didn’t yet have symptoms they would put off surgery for now. He had to come back in six weeks for another echocardiogram.

It wasn’t great news, but it wasn’t the worst news he could have gotten. We were afraid he’d have to have heart valve replacement surgery right away, and we didn’t think it would be a good idea for him to get surgery so soon after my mother’s death.

Afterward, I drove my baby sister to the airport. By that time I had barely slept for almost a week. I hadn’t been able to get the food I needed to stay healthy because I was with my family nearly every minute and the weather was bad and the stores were far away—plus I was too exhausted to cook. I had a sinus infection and a cold: prime territory for the return of the polyps. And mostly I felt bad that my mom was gone and so sad for my father. Imagine that every moment of his life was about my mother, and now she was gone. He couldn’t stay still. He couldn’t decide what he wanted to do next, where he wanted to be. As we drove to the airport, my sister said something about me having very strong opinions and that everyone knew how I felt about my dad’s surgery. I said, ‘well then tell me my opinion because I don’t know what it is.’

Members of my family often believe I have certain opinions because they try to interpret what I’ve said instead of just listening to what I have actually said. I explained to my sister, as I’ve explained to my family before, that I believe health care is personal, as personal as religion and sex. More. How we decide to care for our sweet selves is entirely our own business. I didn’t know what was best for my father so why should I have an opinion about what he should do?

And I told my sister that if I’m having a conversation with someone, it means I have enough respect for them, most of the time, to be having a conversation. And when I say my opinion, that’s my opinion; that doesn’t mean other people have to share that opinion. I expect people to be adults and stand up and say something themselves. If they want to go home and talk about how opinionated I am and say, ‘poor me I didn’t say what I wanted to say because Kim’s opinions were so strong,’ then that’s tough. Stand up. Be an adult. Speak your piece (or your peace) to my face and then we can have a dialogue. If you don’t want to speak your piece, get over it and move on.

I’m saying all this as I’m bawling my eyes out driving 70 mph to the airport. So not unexpectedly, you might say, we got lost. I groaned and said, ‘shit, Dad’s gonna kill me if I don’t get you to the airport on time.’

My sister really listened to all I had to say instead of taking any of it personally. She said, ‘see, I learned something new from this conversation.’ And I really admired her for that. She’s a recovering alcoholic and an ex-smoker and the baby of the family. During all the stress we’ve been under, she didn’t drink, she didn’t smoke, and she didn’t get pissy or make it all about her (at least when I was there)—which was something that used to happen frequently. She seemed a lot clearer and more grounded than most of us. Although physically, she seemed about ready to collapse much of the week.

I eventually turned the car around, and we made it to the airport; my sister got on her plane on time by the skin of her teeth.

I went back home. One of my sisters was still there. She lives nearby in Royal Oak, Michigan, and she could stay as long as she wanted. For the next week, the three of us became our own little family unit. My dad wandered around restlessly. And he had a constant headache. He often sat with his head in his hands. We kept wondering if something terrible was happening to him. Was he going to die suddenly too? He insisted he was fine. We couldn't tell if he was grieving or sick.

I made three meals a day for them and myself. My heart seemed to be beating hard and fast; I couldn’t seem to relax. Dad kept saying he wasn’t hungry, but he ate everything I put in front of him. After dinner, which was at 5:00 p.m., we’d all put on our pajamas. They watched TV while I cleaned up and then I came and sat with them, often with cotton in my ears because the TV was so loud. Dad sometimes did crossroad puzzles. My sister and Dad liked watching those real life cold case shows. I usually curled up on the couch or in the chair and tried to sleep. We were all exhausted. I missed Mario more than I can express, and each time I ached for him, I thought of my father who would never see my mother again.

A few days after the funeral my father picked up the death certificate from the funeral home. It said my mother died of respiratory failure, bilateral pneumonia, and septic shock. After each cause they wrote how long it had been going on. Respiratory failure: hours. Septic shock: hours. Bilateral pneumonia: Days. My father was quite upset over that. ‘Saying it was going on for days makes it my fault, like I should have gotten her help sooner.’ I told him we didn’t know how they got those times. They could have had some kind of standard chart for each cause. And in any case, Mom was fine three days before she died. And a day before she died, she just thought she had a little cold. He couldn’t have done anything. He couldn’t have known anything. I hoped he didn’t keep beating himself up over this. Regrets can eat a person’s life away. I understood, though. I kept wondering what we had missed, how she could be dead. But she was. And we all needed to accept it.

One day, it snowed twelve inches. It was lovely outside, but we couldn’t go anywhere. After a day or two, I got outside and walked in the two lanes across the yard, which are actually one lane now and a private drive, but I decided if anyone said anything to me about trespassing I’d tell them my family had been walking this land for one hundred years, and I myself had been walking it for almost fifty, so get over it. In the snow, I saw lots of deer tracks. Solitary deer tracks. One or more were traveling alone. I also saw lots of wild turkey tracks, arrows pointing in the opposite direction of where the turkeys were traveling, a crafty misdirection. I talked to my mother and asked her to help us and my father. Show us a sign that you’re there. But there was nothing. Just the turkey tracks leading me nowhere.

I went with my father to the graveyard one afternoon. I saw the deer tracks on my mother’s grave. I wondered if the deer had come to eat the flowers. I asked my father, ‘do you feel like Mom is here?’ ‘No.’ ‘Do you believe in heaven?’ ‘No. Not like how some people believe it. I do think there is more going on than we know.’

My father told me to take one of my mother's bowls. 'I know you like bowls,' he said. 'Take one. Take more than one.' I picked a green one. I wrapped it in my new pajamas and packed it in my suitcase next to a pair of my mother's pajamas and a couple pairs of her comfy slacks. He urged us to take whatever we wanted of her. I wanted something she had sewn, something her hands had created. Then I remembered I already had a tiny quilt she had made me and my Raggedy Ann and Andy dolls.

Do you remember I was writing this on the train? I am on the train still. My father is sleeping. At least I hope he is. I’ve left him in our roomette. I had to yell at our asshole attendant to fix up our room. I tried to do the room myself, and I failed. The attendant is, in the words of my sister, a dickhead. My father is ill. Did I mention that? I don’t know if he’s dying, has a cold, or is in grief. He got sick the day before we left. I suggested he not go, but he wanted to. Now he’s on this train, and he is miserable and I am miserable. I am left with our remaining parent and all I can think of is my mother was sick for two days with a cold or something and then she fucking died. What if that happens to my father?

And you know what else I’m thinking? I’m thinking why aren’t I handling this better? Why aren’t I Zen? Why don’t I give up control? Why am I asking these stupid questions?

I’m also thinking that I really want to go to Arizona. I really want to be at the Old Mermaid Sanctuary. I want peace and quiet. I want to mourn. I am surrounded by hundreds of people on this very packed train, and I feel as though I’m part of a herd. I’m coughing a lot. Those tubercular sounding cough, throaty and mucousy. The kind where people look at you and want you to go away. No Martha or Kay this trip. Just me staring at my practically comatose father wondering if he’s about to expire. I try to help him. I sit next to him. I rub his back. I pat his legs. The fucking attendant thought we were married. Do I look like I’m 75 fucking years old?

Ah. The eff word. Must be anger rising to the surface.

I just called Mario and cried and said I was losing my mind. I’m so mired in this that I don’t have perspective. When I got off the phone, I started talking to the couple next to me in the observation deck. Or they started talking to me. I said, ‘my mother died unexpectedly a short time ago and my dad wanted to come on this train with me and now he’s sick and I’m afraid he’s going to drop dead, too, and my sisters would kill me. And that’s way too much information.’ They smiled and said, ‘no, that’s all right. it helps to talk.’ I said, ‘they were married 53 years and now he’s got to do everything without her and he feels responsible for her death because he’s the man and he thinks he was supposed to save her.’ They listened, and saying it outloud to someone on the train felt good. Some of the pressure I’d been feeling eased. The woman had deep beautiful wrinkles in her face; the man leaned forward and ran his fingers over his thinning hair. They’d been married nearly sixty years, and they had a farm. We began talking about gardening. How people who’d never had veggies straight from a garden didn’t have any idea how delicious they were. We talked about composting and how to keep pests away with fences and various plants. He’d heard vinegar in the garden would help keep away bugs. When they were called to dinner and had to leave, they both said they’d be thinking of us. The man asked me my father’s name. ‘Lloyd,’ I said. ‘Lloyd,’ he repeated. ‘We’ll be praying for him.’ He said this with kindness and warmth, and I was grateful to him.

I eventually went to sleep after several more frantic calls to Mario (and to my older sister who reassured me that all would be okay). I slept in the tiny bunk above my father. I heard him snoring softly and felt reassured that he was well. Then sometime in the night, he got up and went to the bathroom. I could still hear the snoring and figured out it had to be someone in the roomette on the other side of us. Finally in the morning, I saw my father’s face. His right eye was swollen grotesquely and the rash on his forehead looked like leprosy. I was appalled and terrified. I said, ‘dad, did you see your eye?’ ‘Yes, but I feel better.’ If I just looked at the right side of his face, he did look better. ‘Well, I suppose except for the Quasimoto hump on your eye, you don’t look so bad.’

We only had a few hours to go on the train from hell. We sat together and watched the sun come up. The Columbia River appeared, came into view, showed itself to us. I was almost home, home, home, home. I would get my father to a doctor. I would be with Mario again. I would never ride a train again. Almost there, almost there, almost there. We passed by the huge goddess-shaped hills that make up part of the eastern end of the gorge. Home, home, home. I felt rejuvenated. I felt like I was home and this surprised me. I would find help for my father soon, soon, soon. Water flowed over some of the hills making waterfalls here and there. We saw a great blue heron near one of the inlets.

Almost home, almost home. A break in the clouds. Blue sky. Sunshine. A glimpse at a snow-covered W’yeast—Mount Hood. I was in the mountains again. A rush of joy filled me. This was home. Familiar and beautiful. I knew what this place looked like, felt like, sounded like during all the seasons of the year.

I was also getting closer to Mario.

Then the train stopped at Bingen. It didn’t even stop at the platform. There was Mario, my sweet Mario, my home. The attendant from hell—no Hecate he—practically threw my suitcase on the gravel. I didn’t care. My feet touched sacred ground. Mario was there, and we’d get my father help now.

Some people get their sense of home from place, from the land; others get it from the people they love. My father felt at home in the world as long as my mother was in it. Perhaps as time goes on, he will find home again in the land and in the people who love him. I feel at home most where Mario is, and I can only imagine how my father feels.

I knew as I stepped off that train that life was never going to be the same for my father or me. Only two weeks had gone by, and it felt like months. But I was back home. For now. The train disappeared from our life, and my father and I walked across the gravel to Mario.

Afterward:
My father has shingles. His eye is affected so now he’s being treated by an ophthalmologist. We are in medias res, I suppose. Not at the beginning or the end. Trying not to wait but waiting. He is miserable, so sick and on so many medications. We are hopeful his eye will heal. We’ve found a great ophthalmologist who is seeing Dad every day, even though it’s the weekend and nearly Xmas. She’s from Arkansas and when she first saw Dad she said, ‘wooo-eeeh!’ One hour at a time, we’re getting through it. I’m not thinking about Tucson or sunshine or rest. I’m thinking my father needs to get well, and what better place to do it then here, with Mario and me.

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Friday, December 14, 2007

Motherland 

I wrote this on the train on my way home to be with my family and bury my mother. It's nearly a week later and much has happened. I haven't reread this since I was on the train, mostly because I think I'll change something, because I was so raw then, and I'm not quite as raw now, and I think it should stand on it's own. I have so much appreciated your emails and letters. Somehow it helps to know that people care. Please don't take it personally if I haven't responded. My brain is kind of on hiatus right now. I have such dear readers and friends, and it's felt good to know you're out there. I know so many of you have gone through the same thing. I am not unique in this, unfortunately. I'm still in Michigan and will be here for a while longer. Take care, Spinners.

I’m on a train, stopped, somewhere in Montana. To the north, snow dusts the furrowed earth. Away from the fields, the ground is grass-blond. The sky is milky blue. I woke this morning and felt like it was all a dream. My mom can’t be dead. She was alive yesterday. Yesterday. How could she die just like that? I called Mario, sobbing. ‘Why am I on this goddamned train? Shoulda gotten on a fucking airplane!’ I want to make it all better for my father, who weeps and says he should have been able to do something, should have fixed it, should have saved our mother for us. Now we are motherless.

When I was a child, I believed my father could do anything, but he was not responsible for my mother living or dying.

And the truth of it, of her death, is slippery. They thought it was pneumonia at first and then congestive heart failure, which means she was probably walking around with it for a while and didn’t know. Why? Because she has asthma? Had asthma. Those of us with lung issues often feel weird, our lungs, our chest. Maybe she couldn’t tell. Thought she had a cold. Flu. Who goes to the doctor for every Tom, Dick, and Harry cold? Who could know? (Please say no one could have known, nothing could have been done.) And now she’s dead.

Yesterday my father wandered around the funeral home, and he found my mother on a stretcher, waiting for them to do those things they do. As my sister told me this, I could see him in my mind’s eye. His quick short strides. Him looking away from his sorrow, to the right, for a moment. Trying not to think about what was happening. And then he found my mother, and he hugged her, kissed her. My sister said, ‘we can come back every day, dad, until the funeral if you like, if it’ll make you feel better.’

She told me mom looked peaceful.

Mom’s all gone.

Fuck.

Mario said, ‘there should be something in between dying from a long painful illness and dying so quickly and unexpectedly. I said, ‘yeah, when you’re 100 years old and you die in your sleep.’ Mario said, ‘and your kids are senile so they don’t know you’re dead.’ We sat in the dark in our car, down by the lumber yard, near the railroad tracks, waiting for the train.

When the train came, a big dark man leaned out of one of the open doors and called, “Mrs. Kim?” I laughed. I suddenly felt Korean. I kissed Mario goodbye and got on the train. In my room, I asked the big man to call me Kim. He said, ‘as long as there is a Mrs. in front of it.’

The conductor, a small Irishman with a ruddy complexion, came to my room so I could pay for the ticket. He said, ‘did they tell you how much this will cost?’ He seemed a bit incredulous. Was I really going to pay that? And I said, ‘my mom just died and I need to sleep.’ As though I’d gotten on this train to sleep because my momma died. Taking a train ride to sleep. He said he was sorry and he took my credit card. Later he came back to finish the paperwork on my ticket. I asked him to sit down and he did. When he noticed the date, he said, ‘December 7th. It’s Pearl Harbor Day.’ I said, ‘Yep, what a terrible day to die.’ I immediately flashed onto the ships in Pearl Harbor and thought of all the people who had died that day. Why on Earth had I said that? Why was Pearl Harbor Day any better or worse than any other day? When he was finished with my ticket, the conductor stayed and told me stories of Alaska, about some of the characters he knew when he lived there. I sat listening to his stories, smiling, and I let the train and his words rock me, soothe me. I appreciated his kindness. I hoped I could remember some of the stories to tell my father.

The Mrs. Kim man—I’ll call him Gabriel, Mr. Gabriel—wanted to bring me a cold plate. I didn’t think I would eat it, but I let him bring it anyway. Later I walked to the observation car and handed it to three young men. ‘There’s nothing wrong with it,’ I said, ‘my mom just died and I’m not hungry.’ ‘Oh, I’m sorry,’ one of them said, and I realized I’d said that out loud again, about my mom dying. Why do I keep saying it? It can’t be true. Can’t be real. ‘No,’ I told them, ‘I just mean, that’s why I didn’t eat it; it’s perfectly good.’ They offer to pay for it. ‘No! Just enjoy it. I hate waste.’

When I can get phone reception, I talk to my sisters and father. I feel bad I’m not there. I feel weak for not flying. But that’s the way it is. My mother being dead is new and traumatic enough. I didn’t want the plane ride on top of it. Mom would understand. She didn’t fly, either.

And what things did we both miss in our lives because of our fears? I’ll change, I’ll change. Do I have to do it today?

I lay in bed with my hepa filter whirring next to me while I watched Seabiscuit on my computer. I love the story of Seabiscuit, the small broken-down horse who, during the Depression, became famous and well-loved for winning races. I love the movie, too. About down and outers getting up again and thriving. My mom was a Depression child, and her father died when she was twelve. She knew what it was like to be very poor, and she didn’t like it. She dropped out of high school to help support her family. Later, when I was in high school, she went back and got her diploma. She was an artist when I was younger. She once painted a nude woman on our bedroom wall. And she loved to dance. In the sixties, she’d play Johnny Cash on the hi-fi and sing along with him while I rolled my eyes and thought, ‘Mommmm. How embarrassing.’ And she told me to always write in ink because pencil fades and one day when I was a famous writer, people would want to read what I wrote when I was a girl.

I turned off Seabiscuit and I tried to sleep. I kept thinking about my mother and all the things I didn’t know about her and that I would never know about her now.

At one point in the night, it seemed as though my mother was there, sitting at the end of my bed, looking out the window. I said, ‘Mom, can I open the curtains for you so you can see better?’ She said, ‘No, I can see fine.’ And then I fell to sleep.

Shhhhh.

Did she whisper in my ear as I slept. It’s all right, darlin’. It’s all right.

I remembered sitting at the kitchen table with my mother in October and showing her my photographs from my to D.C. trip. I had taken snapshots of some Mary Cassatt paintings, mostly to show her. She called to my father to show him the one with the girl in the green slouching in green chairs. A few minutes later she said to me, ‘You know I really love you, don’t you?’ It was a funny thing for her to say. As though she really wanted me to know. ‘And I love you, too, Mom,’ I said, and I kissed the top of her head, just like I used to when I was a girl.

I also remembered walking with her and my father up some stairs when I was home, and she had to stop to rest. She said, ‘I shouldn’t be so tired.’ I didn’t think anything of it then. I often get tired going up stairs, and my mother is 78 years old. But now I wish I had pressed the issue. I should have done something...

As though I had that power.

Some people believe everything happens for a reason. Well, sure, things happen for a reason. There is an explanation for everything. But I don’t think that’s what people mean when they say that.

I dreamed they were spraying pesticides on the train and they accidentally sprayed me. Little welts popped up on my arm where the poison touched me

In the morning it feels like I’m in a nightmare. I call my father and say hello and start to cry. I don’t mean to. And he cries. He should have fixed it, he says. ‘I feel so bad I couldn’t save her for you kids.’ Oh man. We keep talking. I pray silently that the phone doesn’t go out, that he gets to say everything he needs to say. A coyote—or a wolf—walks across the field followed by four deer or pronghorn. Or is it the other way around. I can’t tell the details because I’m too busy trying to keep the ether phones in tact. It works. We talk until his battery starts to die.

Mario urges me to go eat breakfast, so I go to the dining car. I ask the host if I can start out sitting by myself. The question seems to irritate the host. He wants to sit me with a talkative blond mom and her yelling three year old and another man. I stand at the table and the boy screams, so the host takes me to another table without me having to say another word. He sits the next woman who comes in with me. She’s on her way to visit her brother in North Dakota. She laughs a lot, quietly, a strange childish laugh. I feel easy with her. She doesn’t ask me lots of questions and she likes looking out the window with me. She doesn’t seem to understand everything I say and I wonder if she’s deaf, at first, but then I realize it just takes her a while to process what I say. Or something.

She asks me if the sleeping cars are expensive. I say yes. ‘Maybe they’d make an exception for me because I have a disability,’ she wonders. ‘Maybe,’ I say. She talks in a singsong, like so many Native Americans. When I find out she’s originally from North Dakota, I ask if she’s Lakota. She nods and says, ‘Chippewa and a little Irish.’ I watch her. My mother looked Native. Whenever I was with older Yakama Nation women, I felt like I was sitting with my mother.

My breakfast mate eats oatmeal with a roll. She holds up the roll. ‘I don’t like my bread wet,’ she says. ‘Me, neither,’ I say. I put Tabasco on my well-scrambled eggs. ‘Do you want some for your oatmeal?’ I ask. ‘Noooo,’ she says. ‘I’ll put sugar on my oatmeal.’ And she opens one sugar after another. We look at all the dead trees on the slopes. ‘Dead trees make me sad,’ she says. ‘And all the ice melting in the Artic.’ I nod. ‘All the pollution,’ she says. ‘I think people are crazy,’ I say. ‘They don’t realize that it’s all connected.’ We look for animal prints in the snow. ‘I hope we see some animals,’ I say. ‘Me, too,’ she says. We stay together in the dining car for a long while watching the sun come up on the snow-covered mountains. She tells me the brother she is visiting is tall, even though he’s her younger brother; she doesn’t like being short. ‘That’s the Irish in you,’ I say. ‘All of us are little.’ ‘Irish are little?’ she asks. ‘All the ones I know,’ I said, ‘in my family. We’re all leprechauns.’ She smiles and says the word ‘leprechauns,’ almost to herself, seeming to savor the word—and imagining herself one, perhaps.

After a while, I finish my Zen tea and I feel the need to sleep again. I ask her her name and she tells it to me. I tell her it was nice meeting her and she says the same. ‘Have a good Christmas and New Year,’ she says. She says it so purposefully, as though it’s the first time she’s said it and it means something to her. “You, too,” I say, and then I go back to my room.

It’s almost dark now. I skipped lunch. I’ve stepped off the train a few times to breathe the fresh Montana air. It seems like there should be more snow. An ice storm is heading to Michigan and Illinois. I hope my oldest sister gets in all right. She doesn’t like to fly either, but she forces herself, and she isn’t happy about the ice storms. Mr. Gabriel told me the ice wouldn’t affect the trains. It might affect someone picking me up in Ann Arbor. But that’s a day away.

I keep thinking about what my father’s life will be like after we all go back home. His job was taking care of my mother. What will he do without her? Two days after the funeral, he’s supposed to see his heart doctor to see the results of his tests. He may have to have open heart surgery again. Doesn’t seem like that would be wise now. His heart has already had a tremendous trauma.

That’s all in the future. Gotta stay right here, right now. The train is passing by a farm. Old battered farm equipment fills one meadow, littering the ground like bones after a massacre. The sun has sunk and now the horizon is muddy red with sundown and pollution.

When I can get reception, Mario and I talk on the phone. But he’s at work, and I’m wordless. Or something. I call my father one last time for today, maybe. Some of my uncles, a cousin, an aunt, and three of my sisters are at the house. He tells me all is ‘looking bright for now.’

All my life, I’ve felt as though my mother was alone. Even when she was with a group of people, she often seemed somewhere else, some place solitary. Sometimes she was so quiet, I’d forget she was there, and then she’d be gone. And I always felt bad. Why didn’t I try harder to make her a part of everything?

When I was younger, I felt like she thought I could cure her, save her. She was sick with depression one summer while I was in Europe. She came to the airport with my dad when I came back, and she told me that she knew when I got home, she’d feel better. But she didn’t. I wanted so much to be able to give her something, tell her something, be someone who could make her well and happy. She struggled so much to find...something. I don’t really know what. An outlet for her creativity? Happiness? A voice? Good health? She said to me once, about ten years ago, ‘At least I know I did one thing right. I was a good mother.’ The statement surprised me because I never thought she really wanted to be a mother. I told her then that I appreciated her so much, that I was amazed at how much she was able to accomplish—like raise five daughters—in spite of her being ill nearly all of my life. She said, ‘Aren’t you glad you feel that way now instead of figuring it out after I die?’ I laughed and said, ‘Yes, I am.’ But I wish I’d said so many other things.

My mother was so unlike any mother I knew in ways too numerous and, right now, too heartbreaking to recount. And of course that was the way it should have been. My mother always danced to the beat of a different drummer. She taught me to do the same.

I hope it was enough for her.

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Thursday, November 01, 2007

The System 

Mario and I drove over 7,000 miles during our recent five week trip. Most people we met thought we were crazy, crazy people, except for an occasional young person who thought what we were doing was "cool." But really, the trip was great, and Mario and I are convinced it was because we used The System. Now since we were on a long car trip, we had lots of time to figure out how what we did could fit into the letters of "system" so that we could have an acronym. Aren't we clever? We tried to make this trip as sustainable to the environment and ourselves as possible on a road trip where we're using exploding dinosaurs as fuel. We have a good car which gets decent gas mileage (although still obscenely low, about 35 mph). We took it to the dealer before we left to get it all tuned up and checked over. Okay, with that, I give you our system. Drum roll please.

S: Sustenance. Make sure you've got good healthy food with you. Eating junk along the road might initially be fun, but you'll feel like hell before long, or at the very least your energy level will be all screwy. For about a week before we left, I cooked various dishes, mostly bean dishes, and then I froze them. Just before we left, we made steamed veggies and quinoa to take along. We put all these into the cooler just before we left. (We used gel packs, by the way, not ice. Ice makes too much of a mess.) We also brought some raw veggies, sandwich fixings, and a few healthy canned soups. I had planned and brought food for fifteen meals which was how many meals we'd need on the trip to D.C. We also googlemapped all the food coops along our route (and Whole Foods when we couldn't find coops). That way we could stop and get lunch or freshen up our stash of food along the way. And except for the last day of our trip, Mario and I did not snack or graze constantly on junk or anything. We ate regularly: breakfast, lunch, dinner. We put together a little kitchen for the trip, too. In a small suitcase, we put a pan and a pot, flatware, a turner, can opener, garlic press (yes, that's right), bamboo cutting board, strainer, steamer, bowls, dish soap, and a burner. We set this up to make our breakfasts and dinners. Part of sustenance, too, is water. We had a pitcher filter to clean the water from the hotels. We put the filtered water in two big non-leeching recyclable plastic bottles. You gotta stay hydrated. Keeps you sharp and keeps away headaches from dehydration.

Y: Yakking. Okay, that's all we could think of for Y. The yakking did not involve Mario and me. Mario and I have lots of great conversations, but we were driving for days. Neither one of us expected the other to entertain or be intellectually scintillating over the course of 7,000 miles. When Mario drives, he doesn't talk much. When he's the passenger, he falls right to sleep. I don't sleep when I'm a passenger (or when I'm driving, knock wood), so I wanted some entertainment besides my own crazy thoughts. In the past we've taken books on tape, but that usually only lasts for one book. We never count on the radio because if you've travelled by car for any distance you know that there are three things you can always count on hearing: Rush, Christian shows, and country music. I don't like any of those things. So this time we decided to get satellite radio. As I told you before, we looked at XM Radio and Sirius radio. We decided to go with XM Radio because Sirius radio calls its conservative wingnut station "patriot talk," implying that Progressive radio was not patriotic. And we went with XM Radio because it carries Air America. Buying XM Radio is one of the best purchases we've ever made. It was great. We listened to Air America all across the country. We also listened to Public Radio, although their public radio station has got to do something about their sound engineering. It really sucks. Half the time we couldn't hear the person speaking. We were shouting, "Talk into your mic, buddy!" We also listened to C-Span and every once in a while, we listened to one of their many, many music stations. It was great. And right now I've got it in the house and I'm listening to Ed Schultz while writing this.

S: Sustainable lodging and sustainable sleep. Before we left, we searched for "green" lodging along the way. For us, green meant that they couldn't use pesticides in their hotel. If it did other green things (recycle, reuse, reduce, etc.) then that was a bonus. This really made our trip more memorable as well as safer for us than it would have been if we just stayed in chain hotels. For instance, we would never have gone to Boonville, Missouri if it hadn't been for Hotel Frederick, which we loved. If I could find hotels like this all over the country, that is where I would stay. (Mario says I have a crush on Hotel Frederick, and I think he's right.) We also worked to get enough sleep, which was very important. We started our drive very early every morning because then by noon we were halfway through our driving day which felt great. We tried to stop every night by 7:00 p.m. at the latest, although that didn't always work. And we went to bed early.


T
: Teamwork in driving. We each only drove for an hour at a time. When the hour was over, we pulled over and switched drivers. This was absolutely essential for this trip. We couldn't have done it otherwise. My friend Barbara and I figured this out when we were driving back from Santa Fe last year. We switched at every rest area, which was about every 45 minutes. We drove from Ogden to our town that way which was a 10 hour drive (if you drove nonstop). We did that drive easily and weren't exhausted. So Mario and I decided to try it, and it was great. Thinking about driving for 10 hours sounds exhausting, but then we'd think, "Oh wait. I've only got to drive five hours," and that sounded possible. Even if we were a bit tired, we knew we could drive for an hour at a time. We'd never do it any other way now. We also worked as a team in everything else we did. Since Mario carried more stuff than I did (in and out of the places we stayed overnight), I often did more of the cooking.

E: Exercise and elimination. When we switched drivers, we usually stopped to pee and to take a quick walk around the rest area. Hey, you don't want to talk about it but it happens to almost everyone who travels: They become a bit irregular. If you eat right (good fiber, avoid junk and boiled eggs), drink plenty of water, and get some exercise, you'll avoid that problem and you'll feel great. So exercise and you will eliminate!

M: Maps. We had lots of maps. We googlemapped almost every possibility. We googlemapped to each night's lodging. We googlemapped to the food coops or to Whole Foods. We also had a good road atlas. Maps are essential.

Okay. That's our system. Hope you find it useful!

I'm leaving on another short trip tomorrow, so I've got to start cookin'! See ya later, gators.

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Friday, October 26, 2007

Sacred Ground Part 1: Home Land 

(This is one long post, but I broke it up into three, so you could have a bit of a break; I also posted them so that you could read them in order all at one time if you wished. I'm still on the road, in Boonville again tonight. The last couple of days have been a bit of strain, so I haven't gone back and read this post over. I hope it makes sense, and I hope you enjoy it.)

Monday

I am in Ann Arbor, Michigan sitting in the huge Borders store here. Across the street is the Michigan Theater where Mario and I went to see Dr. Strangelove about 27 years ago. The first Borders ever in the world was just down the street from here. We used to wander around it until the smoke got to us; back then, Borders was the place you went to smoke and read books.

Mario is at my parents’ home out in the country near Brighton, sleeping. He’s got a cold or something and not feeling up to par. My parents are napping, too. It is a beautiful warm sunny day. Perfect autumn weather. The trees are gold and green and red and orange. Spectacular! My mom, dad, and I went for a walk down the road from where they live, down the road from where I grew up. My father was too cold. It had suddenly gotten chilly. Recently the doc told him his heart which has healed itself a couple of times already may have to be operated on again. They’ll check him in two month. In a soft shaky voice my mother told me she was worried she has dementia. She says she tells the doctors that she doesn’t feel all there but no one seems to listen. I encouraged her to go to a good gerontologist so she could know if the symptoms were from her medication or stress or dementia.

What would any of us do to take away the pain and suffering of those we love?

Before we came here, we went to Canadaland. After Salem, we travelled up through New England to Canada. In Vermont, the traffic thinned and we travelled through mile after mile of colorful deciduous forests. I made a snap judgment from my highway seat: I could live here.

Plus Vermont had wifi in their rest stops and their rest stops have green houses and use recycled water.

I decided I was going to be free and easy about where we stayed that night. It was Tuesday night and it’s always easy to find a place to stay on Tuesday night. We got up to Montreal and it’s like a whole ‘nother country up there. Stopped at a place to get gasoline. I asked for the restroom (in my best French, which ain’t that good). The man told me “out back.” I said, “Oh, they’re outside?” He shook his head. “Out back, out back.” At this point the woman turned around and said, “You go out there.” I said, “Oh, you mean--” and I pantomimed pulling down my slacks (can you believe it?) “--you mean go outside and squat?” “Yes!” They were delighted that I understood.

It was dark by the time we got lost trying to stop in Montreal. We decided to keep going to Ottawa. We eventually made it to Ottawa, late, and we tried 10 hotels before we found one that had a room, and it was a cancellation that opened up just as Mario was leaving. Apparently in Ottawa the busiest hotel nights are Monday and Tuesday. They cater to business people. People lobbying the government? Working for the gov?

This night was the only night I actually felt like I was on a long awful journey.

We got to Mario’s Mom on Wednesday afternoon. We spent the next few days hanging out with her.

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(Mario's Mom Agica and Mario; Agica and me.)

Mario got sick on Saturday. We left on Sunday so we could stop and see his brother and his family who lived near Toronto. We had a nice couple of hours there, and then it was time to head back to the states.

We left his brother’s house just before dark. There was lots of construction on the way to Michigan, and it was a wee bit stressful. When we crossed the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor into Detroit, we expected to jump right onto the highway. It was about 10:30 p.m. Unfortunately there was construction there, too, and we had to wander through various Detroit neighborhoods to find our way to the expressway. This was nerve-wracking. When I was growing up, Detroit was the murder capitol of the nation. When I was a girl I stayed with my aunt who lived in Detroit, and she wouldn’t let us sit on the porch if anyone was outside walking down the sidewalk.

At home, I heard about the murders in Detroit nearly every night on the news. When I was in college, I used to drive from Ypsi to the Renaissance Center in downtown Detroit (it’s called something else now), and I’d sit there and write. And we came in to see plays, go to the art museum, or eat in Greek town. But I always knew where I was then and where I was going. Except once. I got lost. I stopped at a gas station to ask someone how to get where I was going. I was naïve and innocent and believed since I intended no harm to anyone, no harm would come to me. The gas station attendant was fairly disgusted with my ignorance and gave me directions to get out of that part of town as fast as I could.

All this is to say that I didn’t know where I was last night in the dark in the night where no one can hear me scream...and I was a little nervous. I told Mario to keep his head down.

I have the street sense of a country girl. I know there are lions, and tigers and bears out there.

But we made it home. My parents were asleep when we arrived last night, so we tiptoed into the house. (They now live next door to the house where I grew up.) I put Mario to bed in one of the tiny beds upstairs. (We are a tiny people.) Brought him water and tissues and such to make him comfy, and then I went to another room with another tiny bed. There was no room for two of us anywhere. Outside, someone was drag racing. 120 mph I would guess. The moon silvered the lawn and my father’s flower beds. And I could see stars through the skylight.

I was home.

Kind of.

I fell to sleep.

Felt a little wrenched.

Later...

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Sacred Geography Part 2: Common Ground 

(My sister Kathleen has always been the photographer in my family. She was fascinated with my camera, so she took a lot of the photos below. She would be disappointed if I didn't post a photo of my parents' cat, Geena (who bit my mother remember), so you will see the cat, too. I suppose the cat has something to do with the narrative, peripherally. No, I don't dislike cats in general; I dislike cats who bite my mother.)

Tuesday

My sister Kathleen came the day after we arrived. The four of us sat at the tiny kitchen table eating and talking. Mario stayed mostly upstairs, sleeping or resting. This visit feels different from any of the visits I’ve had here since I left in 1980. Usually I feel punched. One time I curled up on the couch and didn’t get up for three days. Another time I thought Mario and I might breakup; another time I felt like I would break apart. Six years ago when I visited I swore it would be the last time.

I’m not sure what happened in the past when I come home. Was it a geography thing? My parents are certainly not evil or bad people. My sisters are not evil or bad people. I am not an evil or bad person. There are no huge explosions when I’m home. No name-calling fights. Nothing like that. Is it that I take up space? I always have. When I try not to take up space, I take up more. Does that get annoying?

I don’t know. Or maybe I do know but right this second I am hot and tired and I can’t think of the words to articulate what used to happen when I went home. Last visit, as I’ve mentioned in other posts, I felt that I knew with absolute certainty that my parents did not like me. I felt as though they wanted to diminish me and put me in "my place." I felt as though they wanted me to be different from who I am.

And all along, I realized later, I wanted them to be different from who they are, too.

Six years later, I am older. They are older. The world is so different from what it was six years ago. None of us had any idea that the world could change so drastically. We are no longer interested, perhaps, on what separated us; now we know what we share and what we believe to be true about the world: or what should be true.

So we sat at that kitchen table and ate and talked and laughed. I didn’t take anything anyone said personally. For instance, my mother looked at some soup I made and she said it looked disgusting and ugly. Six years ago that would have hurt my feelings. This time I laughed. My sister Kathleen, Mario, and I drove to Ann Arbor and shopped at Whole Foods. Mario was still shaky, still sick, although I didn’t realize it at the time. Kathleen and I walked around the store in a daze. Finally we landed at the bakery. We stood in front of the confections display for a long time. In my family we are not gourmets. We don’t eat a lot, but we eat often, and we can talk about food for just about ever. Or we can just stare at it. Kathleen and I stared at the food. I didn’t get anything because every goodie had gluten flour and sugar. I saw a big cinnamon roll that looked delicious. I thought my parents might like it, so I got it. Then Kathleen and I went and stared at another food display. Eventually Mario scooped us up, and we went home. Once there, Mario went right up to bed.

I gave my parents the cinnamon roll. My parents think I eat like a freak. They’ve never said that. Well, actually, my mother may have said that. But they rarely even want to try the food I make, and they never offer to make me anything. I don’t try to force my food on them and vice versa. Getting them this cinnamon roll was a nice gesture on my part—although I’d forgotten that earlier in the day I’d gotten them long johns from Marv’s Bakery in Brighton.

Let’s pause here for a Marv break:

When I was a kid, my dad and I went to Marv’s Bakery almost every Sunday after 6:00 a.m. mass. We always got long johns with white cream filling. Maybe some donuts, too. I can’t remember. I only remember the long johns because I loved them. We’d take the white bag of goodies to my grandmother’s house. (Do you think my father let me have a bite of the roll to help tide me over until breakfast? I was not good at fasting for communion. I often ended up throwing up in the bushes sometime during mass.) Once we got to Grandma’s house, she made this spectacular breakfast. (I know you’ve heard this story before but that’s the way it goes...) Afterwards my grandma, grandpa, and father would sit around drinking coffee and reading the paper. Sometimes I’d go out and feed the chickens or climb up onto the fence of the paddock where the stallion lived and watch him pace.

And I always ate one of those long johns. Tuesday morning, Mario and I drove down Grand River to Marv’s Bakery. The road was bumpy and terrible, like old times. I looked for the old bar where I used to go dancing and get drunk when I was eighteen. The Crossroads. And I looked for the little subdivision where I lived in a house with my boyfriend’s uncle who was accused of killing his wife. I didn’t see either place. Didn’t matter. But there was Marv’s. I didn’t remember the mural of the two bakers out front, but the building looked the same. Inside looked the same. Long and narrow with displays of baked goods in an L-shape. I ordered the long johns and asked if it was the same owner from when I was a kid. She said the same man had owned it for 35 or 40 years. (Probably 40-something years actually.) I took the white bag of long johns and brought it back home to my parents. I bought a long john for me, but I didn’t eat it.

I felt buoyed going to Marv’s. Nothing looked the same in my home town. It was always so jarring to come home because my body remembered it as it was but not quite. I remembered my wonderful small town without the sprawl of ugly box stores up and down and all around it. It was a quiet small town with a Mill Pond and two drugstores a couple blocks from one another. And a library in a red brick building. And a graveyard right next to the Mill Pond where we looked for ghosts when we were one age and we went to make-out when we were another age. I grew up in a small town where half the people in town at least had grown up with my parents and who still knew my mother as one of the Kelly girls. I lived in a small town with lakes all around it, and in the summer we had to tolerate the tourists along with the mosquitoes. I grew up in a small town where we looked forward to the 4th of July parade and the carnival that came to town then. I grew up in a town with one hotel right in town, the Pink Hotel. I walked a little faster when I went by it on the sidewalk. When I was a teenager one of my uncles hung himself there and my father had to go identify him. I grew up in a small town where my father took me to the post office to get my social security card when I was very young. It was a big deal. Probably afterward we went to the lumber yard a block or two away from it. Or maybe to the Dime Store to pick out some candy from the open bins. When I had a dentist appointment after school, the bus would drop me downtown and I would walk to the dentist office just off Main Street. Afterward, I’d walk another block over to the library where I’d sit upstairs looking at history books while I waited for one of my parents to pick me up.

I loved my town. I never wanted to live anywhere else when I was a girl. My town was in the fastest growing county in the United States when I was growing up. During the 27 years that I have been away from Michigan, development has obliterated my town. I no longer recognize it. I used to walk or drive down Grand River and go by the building where my parents met when it was a restaurant. My father was the dishwasher, my mother a waitress, and my grandmother was the baker. Now the building isn’t there—or else it’s been remodeled so much that I no longer know it.

I could tell you stories about most of the places in town, except the buildings are no longer there. So many have been replaced by the faux buildings, quick and dirty buildings designed to house chain stores, buildings without vision, buildings with fake architecture. Monoarchitecture. It’s always jarring to my body and spirit to come home and see it the way it is now. Mario and I tried to think of a word to describe it. A constant state of vertigo? Or maybe I develop a kind of Jean Sartre nausea each time I go into my home town now. It’s like being in two worlds at once, only the most-present world ain’t got no soul. If I had never moved so far away, perhaps the changes would make sense, perhaps I would be able to go with the constant shapeshifting...

As it was, I was glad to see Marv’s Bakery was still there and it hadn’t changed that much.

I bet you’ve forgotten about the big cinnamon roll at this point. My parents went on and on about how big it was and how were they going to eat it, and I laughed and laughed, and soon it was a big joke about this monstrous cinnamon roll. Six years ago it would have hurt my feelings—I would have thought they didn’t appreciate me, didn’t like me, and on and on. Now it was just funny. I told them to shut up and eat the damn thing. After they finished it, they said it really wasn’t big enough. Why hadn’t I brought more? You know how family gatherings can be. A little thing can unravel the day or it can become the joke of the day. We had our joke.

This visit was one of my better visits with my parents. We always have good visits when I see them in Arizona or when they’ve come out to the Pacific Northwest. The visits seem to go better with only one or two daughters around. If there’s four or five of us, it’s a little dicier. Maybe we all unconsciously compete or fall back into destructive childhood behaviors. Who knows? This time, I just enjoyed their company.

My mother didn’t talk a lot, but I saw flashes of her sense of humor. They have a cat that they adore. My mother likes that cat better than she likes her kids. The cat bit my mother the day before we arrived, so I was not feeling very kindly toward it. It’s not a friendly cat. I asked Mario to stay away from her because I did not want to contend with him getting bitten, and I stayed away from her for the most part. We barely saw her. When we did, she looked like she was about to jump out of her skin. One night I said to my mother, “Why is your cat so unrelaxed?” She said, “Because she’s part of the family.” I thought my mother hadn’t heard me and that she was answering some other question she thought she’d heard. “No, Mom, why is your cat so unrelaxed.” She looked at me and said, “Because she’s part of the family.” Oh. I get it Mom. I laughed. One morning we were talking about the fires in California. We hadn’t realized the seriousness of them until we saw that 1,600 homes had burned. I was leaning on the table with my elbows resting on the Detroit Free Press. Jokingly I said, “This is a big deal. I can’t look it up on the internet. How do you people live like this? How do you find out anything!” My mother tapped one finger on the paper. “Here,” she said. “Oh yeah,” I said, and I picked up the paper.

One day my sister, Dad, and I took a walk down the two lanes. There’s only one lane now and it’s a private road, but we walked down it anyway.

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(Kathleen & me. Dad took the pic.)

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(Dad & me. Photo by Kathleen Antieau.)

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(Lloyd Antieau. Photo by Kathleen Antieau.)

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(Dad & me walking down the lane. Photo by Kathleen Antieau.)

When I was a girl, I spent hours, days, weeks of my life on the land across the road from our house. I took the long trek down the lanes to the Huron River and played up on the bluff amongst the trees, usually by myself.

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It was good to walk there again. It’s owned by the area park system, so I’m hoping it’ll never get developed. Nowadays, the sound of the traffic on the highway is an omnipresent noise. When I was a girl, I only heard the freeway if the wind shifted a certain way and then it was a muffled noise, the sound of ocean waves. The songs of birds and the wind through the trees was the music I heard when I was a girl.

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(Photo by Kathleen Antieau.)

Does it all sound too idyllic? Do I sound too nostalgic? I believe that each and every person has a right—has a need—for a childhood spent in Nature as I did—or in some kind of sacred geography that informs and inspires them. My parents provided me with that. The place where I grew up made me who I am today. Isn’t that true of most people?

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After our walk in the two lanes, my father and I went in the back yard and looked for deer bones. A deer had died there one winter not long ago. The dead deer had dissolved into the earth it seemed, and we found no trace of it, but I got to walk with my father and I asked him about all the beautiful landscaping he had done around the yard. He is an artist with flowers and grass and bushes.

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They are always wild-looking and cultured all at the same time. Good cultured. Like Emily’s poems, for instance. They are wild, yet you know a poet whispered them into existence. My father looks most at home outside. He knows the names of every plant. When we walked in the woods together when I was a girl, he knew the name of nearly every plant there, too. I’d point to things and he would tell me their names. I was in awe. What kind of magic was that to know the names of everything? Didn’t that mean then that my father knew everything and everyone?

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(This is the house where I was raised, although my parents no longer live there. It was pink during much of my childhood and then red. It didn't have a garage. I shared the front room furthest to the right in this photo with three of my sisters until I was a teenager. Then my room was in the new "dorm" upstairs, the top left window. That's where I stared out at the stars.)

We laughed a lot this visit, my sister, parents, and I. I haven’t laughed that much in years. My parents are interesting people. I would be friends with them if they weren’t my parents. My mother was an artist. She painted; she took photographs; she wrote. She still appreciates art. I found out she likes Edward Hopper, one of the artists whose paintings were on exhibit in D.C. while we were there. She was looking at my photographs of his paintings and she said she really liked how he was able to show what people were really feeling. I said, “Especially their loneliness.” She said “Yes,” that was it.

The last night I was there, my mother said she was feeling something but she didn’t know what.

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(Mary Antieau. Photo by Kathleen Antieau.)

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(Geena. Photo by Kathleen Antieau.)

I encouraged her to tell us what it was, but I didn’t press it and things moved on. But she did seem out of sorts or irritated. I was sleeping in the open loft above the living room which meant I couldn’t go to sleep until they turned off the tv and went to bed, so I felt a bit out of sorts too, waiting for them so I could go to sleep.

Finally the lights went off and I was able to try and sleep. I woke up several times. The moonlight lit up the yard and I was reminded of all those full moon nights when I was a girl: I had loved being outside in the full moon, or just standing in my bedroom and looking out at the light and shadows, marveling at the brilliance of it all, how my sunny world became slightly different and even more wonderful under the bright moonlight. And the stars twinkled and I knew it was going to be a cold cold night. So each time I woke up on the last night, I stared out at the moonlight draped across the lawn and on the old oak trees like a cloak they were all shrugging off. And the moon shined down on me from the skylight.

Thursday

Before I left in the morning, I hugged my mother goodbye as she sat at the table. She said, “I love you, I really do.” I wondered if she was trying to reassure me or convince herself. I stroked her hair and told her I loved her, too. My mom stayed inside while the rest of us went outside and my sister took more pictures of us. I hugged her and my father goodbye. I hate these goodbyes. It’s always then when I feel like I didn’t do enough, I didn’t say the right thing, I wasn’t good enough. But I didn’t hang onto the feeling. Instead, I was elated that I’d had a great visit.

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(My sister Kathleen, Mom, Dad, moi.)

We drove away. I had Mario stop at the gate down the road. I got out of the car, climbed over the gate, and walked into the woods. I walked on my grandfather’s land which was now owned by the metro park. I walked toward the hills, the sacred hills of my childhood. To my left were the half million dollar homes that were built on my grandpa’s land. Before me was a grass-covered road that hadn’t been here when I was a child. On the other side trees and then bushes grew and blocked my view of the hills, although I knew they were overgrown now too. I walked along the path. When I was a girl, there was no old road here. I travelled on this land following the trails that the cows, sheep, and deer had left. This was where I had been most at home.

I hardly recognized any of it because it was so grown up in some places and changed in other places. And the sound of the traffic on the road was disconcerting. I kept walking deeper into the woods, further away from the road. The grass under the trees looked inviting. I walked up into it. The dew washed my shoes over and over as I walked. Birds twittered here and there and showed themselves to me. I said hello to the visibles and invisibles. I thanked the land for my childhood, for my life, for teaching me so much.

I walked out into the sunshine for a moment and looked around. It all looked alien and familiar all at the same time. But I understood this world. I touched the tall blond grass that rose up in a patch here. I looked at the bird houses someone had put in here and there. I looked at the trees and the blue sky. Then I turned around and ducked back into the woods. It was all still here. What had formed me, what had taken hold of me like an artist takes hold of a piece of clay and pinches here and presses there, was still here. I was most at home where the wild things lived, and I was at home here. Even though it was barely wild, I still recognized it. I still knew it and it knew me. The existential nausea receded. Or maybe I just recognized what I was. Bewilderment. Each time I came home I felt the call to be wilder. Now here I was, my soles next to my soul. Bewildered. Betwixt and between. I was at home.

I picked up a stick from a downed oak tree. I thanked it. Then I walked back to the gate, climbed over it, and got into the car.

And we drove away.

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Sacred Geography Part 3: Heart Land 

(This is a self-portrait. Any thing anyone needs to know about me is right here, on this land, my grandparents' land, the place where I ran with the Visibles and Invisibles. The place where I talked to the trees and the birds and the frogs and the dead sheep by the big old maple. This is where I walked into a field when I was a child and asked God to prove to me that I wasn't crazy. This is where my soles touched the soul of the Earth. Then and now.)

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