Sunday, November 27, 2011

Post Thanksgiving Muse

I awoke Thanksgiving morning feeling so very sad... mostly about my mom whose condition is precarious. Tears there were also for my older daughter and the hell she’s been through in the last three years since her marriage began to dissolve just as her belly began to round with child. Now, that amazing girl-child is two and a half and the light of all our eyes, and the adults in her life are working things out as best they can while remaining level-headed, and, short of getting back together, honoring the needs of this astonishing, bright, articulate woman-child.
Gratitude came fast behind my tears Thursday morn as I realized the house was full of people I love. Both beautiful daughters, the amazing grand daughter and her father who braved awkward moments by showing up and being present - truly present for the entire three days they all stayed.
Grudges are far too heavy to carry into the holidays. Making expansive gestures of celebration is more our style. My husband and I LOVE Thanksgiving. We feel blessed beyond expectation and comprehension. And so we proceeded, with the help of all on hand, to assemble a feast for thirty-seven family members and friends.
Two Turkeys, Broccoli with Butter Sauce, Organic Corn Pudding and Bread, Velvet Crunchy Garnet Yams, Rice, Mushroom and Pine-Nut Casserole and Chocolate Cream Pie with Gingersnap and Crushed Walnut Crust.
One daughter made Dairy Free Pumpkin Ice Cream and Molasses Cookies, the other made her famous Chocolate Chip Cookies. One of my brothers made Mashed Potatoes, the other brought two Hams, Collard Greens and a Pumpkin Pie. My sister-in-law brought Rice-Krispy Treats, Saltine Cracker Stuffing and my brother-in-law made his fabulous Rosemary Bread. A friend brought a Spinach, Pear and Parmesan Salad, a Sausage Side Dish and another home-made Pumpkin Pie. Another friend brought a Trifle made in a huge bin complete with a shovel to serve it. We had Caramel Fudge Brownies and Apple Pie. Red wine and White wine. Guests of all colors. Toasts and laughs, magic and music. 
The blessings of play-time and talk-time, of laugh-time and tear-time all whetted our appetites for life in the year to come.

Feasting, it seems, gives a light-hearted Razz-berry to the Fates which sometimes serve us bitter fare.
May the coming year be the sweetest yet for you and yours.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

5:59 to 6:11 am


I hear you in the morning even while in the deepest meditation, landing with precision the L.A. Times on each driveway. I am not a subscriber. Still, I smile at the familiar sound; the certainty with which your strong left arm lobs each heavy bundle of news out the window, over the hood of your red pick-up truck, or frisbee-like across the street.
Walking early, sometimes I see you, though never your face, only that sturdy left arm and I marvel at the unique circumstance that must have developed those muscles to the max… day after day, week after week… How many years? If I peek at the clock when I hear you, I note that nearly always, you’re by my house between 5:59 and 6:11 a.m.
Years back a tennis coach came to me for bodywork. His right arm weighed almost twice as much as his left, so unilaterally developed it was, and it hurt him a lot. Without much capacity to BE in his body, from the face cradle his muffled voice would joke… one-liners mostly… the kind that might have punctuated his tennis lessons to keep his students up-lifted. He was known for his light heart and mean serve. Only rarely did his voice hint at darker currents. He'd talk about no more 'Mr. Nice-Guy' and his jaw would ripple and clench.
Alas, his downfall was gambling – also a right armed event. In his frenzy to make the one-armed bandit relinquish its hoards he lost the down-payment for the home he was intending to buy for his beloved wife and himself.
Unable to face her/his disappointment (and who knows what childhood demons), he set fire to himself in his car in the desert between L.A. and Las Vegas. No more jokes, no more serves, no more Mr. Nice Guy, no more Coach.
Your L.A. Times gave the story its due… Section D; Page 9, Column 3.
I wonder still if I’d really seen his face... could I have known and been able to ease that level of psychic pain. I don't know.

My wish for you, dear paper man, and for all of us, is that we develop balance; muscular, emotional and spiritual balance. 

Facing our demons face to face with someone who truly sees the stardust we're made of - even if we forget or never knew - can give us a fighting chance against those demons which have the potential to fling us in an unbalanced arc of wobble and yaw to the farthest edges of madness.
*********************************************************************
Ghosts of Thanksgiving Past... 

This is the story of Aunt Mickey and the stove top stuffing.
Aunt Mildred is one of those Aunties who lends herself to good-natured ribbing because she definitely has some quirks. 

Thanksgiving day 1974 the whole family packed up to go camping at McGrath State Beach. By WHOLE family I mean: My husband and I and our dog, "Fairfax," (1974 was B.C. – Before Children), my mom, step-dad and eleven year old brother and their dog, "Butchie," my mother in law and her dog "Girl," my older brother, his wife and two sons, Uncle Larry (my mom’s brother) and Aunt Mickey (Mildred), their two daughters and their dog, "Pepper." In addition, Mickey’s brother and sister-in-law, and my then eighty-something year old grandparents came for the meal but stayed in a nearby hotel, rather than camping out.
One of Aunt Mickey’s quirks is that she carries about with her an unwieldy fear of germs. It has gotten in her and other people’s way on numerous occasions. It may have to do with her doing a stint as a registered nurse for our old family doctor, Irv King, or that her sister Serena spent nearly ten years in and out of Children’s Hospital for a bone infection. Something about staphylococci made her cock-eyed and compelled her to engage in specific ritualistic behaviors.


The whole of our camp-out Thanksgiving feast was pot luck. Aunt Mickey was in charge of the turkey & stuffing. She cooked that turkey without stuffing it because heaven knows that could magnetize dread salmonella bacteria and sicken us all so we’d croak right there on McGrath State Beach. (I can see the headline: Entire family and their dogs wiped out by bad Thanksgiving Turkey.)

Uncle Larry carved that turkey at home. There was only one better carver than Uncle Larry and that was his dad, my Gramps. Well, they froze all the turkey meat in neat foil packages. Auntie planned to warm it up and make stove-top stuffing at the campsite….which she did from a box in an aluminum pan over the camp stove. It was done in about 3 minutes flat.
It was November. We were at the beach. It was powerfully windy. It was cold… penetratingly cold. Mama Freddy, my mother in law had brought some pot roast bless her heart! And it was warm, fragrant and delicious. The turkey never did quite thaw. To say that the stove-top stuffing was not a popular item on our menu is like saying that chewing tinfoil is not too bad. It tasted worse than the cardboard box from which it came. No one ate it. 
We put the congealed mass on the ground for the dogs. “Girl,” Mama Freddy’s dog, walked over, sniffed it and walked away. Now, this is a dog who ate horse plop from the equestrian trail near her apartment. This is a dog who would eat anything not chained down. My beloved husband called “Girl” a Sealy Posturpedic with legs. Our dear "Fairfax" took a sniff and also walked away which was not altogether unexpected. Mark says "Fairfax" was an old man in a dog suit. There were many foods from which he’d walk away. And with such attitude! “What? You expect me to eat that? Feh! A dog wouldn’t eat that!” Next up was "Pepper," Aunt Mickey and Uncle Larry’s dog…same story… a sniff and a walk. "Butchie," my mom & dad’s dog, bless his short-legged Corgi self and his food-lovin' heart, walked over to that stove-top stuffing, nosed it a bit, turned, lifted his back leg and peed on it! (I can hear his thought bubble, "I christen thee “INEDIBLE!”)  Even Aunt Mickey had to laugh. The rest of us were roaring ‘til the tears came and nearly froze on our cheeks.

Wishing you and yours a most cozy Thanksgiving. 
May you celebrate mightily and enjoy that for which you are thankful.


Sunday, November 13, 2011

Dunbar's Number

Twig Wheeler, a colleague from the world of Somatic Experiencing, first introduced me to “Dunbar’s Number.” According to this theory the human brain is hard-wired to track one hundred and fifty people and their familial relationships. Supposedly, beyond that, the ol’ brain begins to smoke and froth and do all sorts of Sci-Fi weirdo melt-downs.
One of the directors of Camp  Ronald McDonald for Good Times disproves Dunbar’s theory. Dot can tell you all the names of all the siblings of all the campers who’ve been through this camp for the last 12 years... that’s about 600 to 800 campers per year plus their siblings, plus counselors and parents! I can’t even do the math to know how many folks that means - let alone remember their names and familial connections!
At a recent fun-draiser for this essential and fabulous Oncology Camp, on the back lot of Universal Studios, Dot and I talked about Dunbar and his magic (though flawed in her case) number. She allowed as how other things go missing from her head just because it IS so over-crowded in there. We agreed it would be mighty handy to have a magic wand and a pensive... a` la Dumbledore in the Harry Potter series. 
Would that I COULD remove some of the thoughts clogging up my brain! Would that I could excise and store them in cool glass vials all corked and ready to be retrieved ONLY when I wish to relive those particular thoughts and events - IF ever!
Unlike the “Rewind” movie with Adam Sandler, which I never saw, but whose premise was described to me in detail, I don’t want to change history, I just don’t want my personal history pulling my chains in the present moment.
If I meet someone I deem an authority figure at a social gathering and my ol’ brain conjures the scariest authority figure of my life (dad), suddenly I want to disappear and crawl under the nearest sofa with my heart beating like that of a humming bird. Not so conducive to social interactions, right? I don’t want to CHANGE my history because it did give me many gifts... empathy for others faced with similar AFPs (Authority Figure Phobias) among them. I WOULD, however, like to pull the original terror reaction out of my brain and drop it gently into one of Dumbledore’s pretty vials and store that scene  safely away for future reference, should I ever need to look it up.
I can almost sense the coolness of the quick-silvery mist leaving my head and making room for... well, just about anything else would be a better use of my brain real estate than terror! I’d like to REMEMBER the names of all the folks I meet at this hypothetical social gathering... including the (formerly) dread Authority Figure!
Wouldn’t that be sweet? To have enough room in my keppy for important stuff would be such a welcomed gift!
Hey! I might even surpass Dunbar and his number 150 - like Dot does!
Bless J.K. Rowling for conceiving of the Pensive. Now if only Steve Jobs were here to build it for me....



As a follow-up note to the "eaten homework" of last week... The Mac needed to complete some essential “down-loads.” Once accomplished, in the capable hands of Kelly at the Genius Bar in the Mac Store, the brand-new-baby-computer was just fine! Whewh! Not a bad Apple after all. The Ants have not come back since being expelled via vacuum... three days in a row. They were persistent critters! I wonder what their version of Dunbar’s Number is!!??

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Of Macs and Ants


Well… here’s a new twist on “the dog ate my homework!”

Knowing I’d be tired Sunday night from a weekend spent with ten healing colleagues up on Mount Pinos, I wrote my blog offering on Friday morning before heading up the mountain. I wrote it on my brand new baby (month old) “macbook Pro.” 

It was a beautiful weekend, by the way, and snowed a LOT up in Pine Mountain Club! Sun showers created diamond down pours as snow melted off the roof and refracted the sunlight.

While chatting around the table Friday night with my buddies, I wanted to share some photos from the most recent grand-daughter sighting last week - when Miss Devlyn was dressed as a Purple Kitty for Halloween.

I pulled out the Mac and turned it on and waited and waited… I thought, well it’s the altitude. We are at nearly six thousand feet here. Maybe it's cold. We waited some more. Then a file folder shaped icon popped up in the otherwise pale blank screen with a question mark flashing on and off.

The husband of one of the healers, a Disney engineer and computer maven, said, “It looks like a hard drive problem or like it’s looking for a power source.” At that point he forced it off – but the poor macbook kept on chirping, squeaking and tweeting… sort of a cross between a Guinea Pig and an unhappy Canary sound.  Also, the back of the computer was getting really HOT. NOT a usual occurrence... though it did feel warmer to me when I turned it off Friday after I finished writing. I thought nothing of it until this HOT HEAT triggered the memory.

John forced it "Off" again by holding the power button down a little longer. Finally the twittering stopped and the apple logo on the outer case went dark. I haven’t dared to try to re-boot since Friday night. I have an appointment Monday at the Mac Store… maybe I got a rotten apple?

While I remember the topic and some of the choice tid-bits of the piece I wrote about Dunbar’s Number and a cluttered mind, I have no copy of it on this ol’ Dell PC and no way to retrieve the macbook version until tomorrow… IF all goes well and it coughs up the goods. So, Stay tuned for the next installment of mymondaymuse.blogspot.com. No, it wasn’t the dog… it was the APPLE that ate my homework! Honest! 

ALSO… in limbo are all those sweet photos of the Purple Kitty! Darn!

Here’s something yummy from Mary Oliver sent to me by my writing buddy Jaimi Blakeley:


WILD GEESE
by Mary Oliver

Tell me about your despair, yours, and I will tell you mine...

http://www.rjgeib.com/thoughts/geese/geese.jpg

You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
For a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
Tell me about your despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes,
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting --
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.

QUOTES:

Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter and those who matter don't mind. - Dr. Seuss
"I always knew looking back on the tears would make me laugh, but I never knew looking back on the laughs would make me cry." - Unknown

Have a tearful… in a good way… week, and may you be blessed by the sight of geese flying over but plagued neither by Blue Herons nor Egrets! 

Here's another odd bit of news... that rainstorm, while nourishing our local earth, seems to have displaced some ants (again). They are marching two-by-two into my office and congregating on the earthing pad grounding cord and transformer for one of the computer components. They've brought their eggs with them as if they plan on staying a good long while. I've asked them, in the nicest possible way, to LEAVE at once. I don't see any hint of compliance - in fact, they are climbing the power cords and walking across the desk top, the light fixture, the keys...  hey... I wonder if I've just discovered what's wrong with the Mac?? Maybe it's got ants in its pants??

While typing this, I've been trying to think of the most efficient way to return the ants and their nursery brood to the great out-of-doors with the least amount of death and destruction. I certainly wouldn't want a giant to swoop down and destroy all my work and live babies!! Shall I scoop them all into a jar... like I would a spider? Shall I vacuum them up and take the canister to dump outside? And how shall I plug up the baseboard hole where they're entering? So many possibilities! So little predictability! 

Grateful for these challenges. I'd rather have ants try to homestead on my power source than my having to homestead in the ant's territory! I think I'll help them out NOW.