Thursday, July 1, 2010

Thanks for the Memories




My father was a romantic. He proposed to my mother via trans-Atlantic phone call from London, where he was working for his great-uncle at a paper mill. She was living in Westfield, NJ and he sailed home for their wedding, a civil ceremony in her parents’ living room. I always wondered why such a simple wedding when she was Catholic and her parents were fairly well off. My grandfather was in the grocery business during the Depression.

I didn’t learn until my own marriage, that my father wasn’t her first husband. She would hardly tell me anything about that marriage. “A mistake,” was all she would say.

My parents sailed back to London for their honeymoon. Letters my mother wrote while sitting in a deckchair described how happy she was. She thanked her father for buying her clothes for her new life. She and my grandmother had gone on shopping trips to the City. Elaborate trousseaus were a sign of wealth and social standing during the Victorian era, before she was born:

"The society woman must have one or two velvet dresses which cannot cost less than $500 each. She must possess thousands of dollars worth of laces, in the shape of flounces, to loop up over the skirts of dresses... Walking dresses cost from $50 to $300; ball dresses are frequently imported from Paris at a cost of from $500 to $1,000... There must be traveling dresses in black silk, in pongee, in pique, that range in price from $75 to $175... Evening robes in Swiss muslin, robes in linen for the garden and croquet, dresses for horse races and yacht races, dresses for breakfast and for dinner, dresses for receptions and parties..." from "Lights and Shadows of New York" by James McCabe, 1872.

"A visiting and reception dress was of maroon velvet, trimmed with wide bands of cocks' feathers of the same shade. A second rich costume was of black brocaded silk and plain silk …" -- from "Miss Vanderbilt's Trousseau," Harper's Bazar, December 15, 1877


My mother’s trousseau was not nearly as grand as during Victorian times, but I’m sure it was very elegant.

My father had managed to find them a flat in Dolphin Square before he left London for his wedding. Dolphin Square is a block of private apartments built near the River Thames in London. It was completed the year they were married, 1937. A.P. Herbert, 'Dolphin Square', 1935, described the Square as 'a city of 1250 flats, each enjoying at the same time most of the advantages of the separate house and the big communal dwelling place'; the provision of a restaurant made him fear that 'fortunate wives will not have enough to do. A little drudgery is good for wives, perhaps. The Dolphin lady may be spoiled'. This booklet was produced as a promotional puff for the firm that owned and built the complex. On purchasing the site, Richard Rylandes Costain remarked to a colleague: ‘in two or three years we'll either drive up to this spot in a Rolls-Royce, or we'll be standing here selling matches.’

They were very happy at Dolphin Square. It wasn’t long before my mother announced to my father she wanted either a baby or a dog. They named their black cocker spaniel Dixie and my mother dressed in one of her many new outfits, complete with a feathered hat, to walk Dixie around the manicured gardens.

They would have stayed in London if the war hadn’t intervened. Soon, nerve-jarring air raids and impassioned pleas in telegrams from my grandparents convinced them to sell their possessions and book a spot on the last peacetime journey of the Queen Mary to New York City before it was converted to a troopship. They left England on Aug. 30 and by the time they landed, the Second World War had started.

Bob Hope and his new wife were also on that voyage, which had a military escort. An impromptu show was arranged in one of the lounges to calm the jittery passengers. Hope and his wife, Dolores, were scared to death on the trip home because the Germans had started torpedoing English ships. He debuted his signature song ‘Thanks for the Memories’ that night.

I don’t think my mother ever got over the loss of that life she left behind. My father became a partner in a corrugated shipping container company in the Midwest. She negotiated for three children and was a housewife in a small town far from her family. She donated her evening gowns to the Salvation Army. She suffered a nervous breakdown and was hospitalized in her 40s but recovered with the help of electric shock therapy, a popular treatment at the time. My mother didn’t talk much about her days in London but I always loved it when she asked me to “post a letter” for her.

When she died, I found a menu from the cruise on the Queen Mary and a photo of my mother at dinner, wearing one of her glamorous gowns with a fur stole. She was smiling, imagining her future.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Decluttering Can Lower Your Stress Level

This is a good article from Realage.com on the connection between clutter and that feeling of stress and overwhelm.


When you're so stressed you can't think straight, take a quick look around. See lots of clutter? Consider it a sign.

In her book, The Superstress Solution, physician and author Roberta Lee writes that a disorganized, untidy, clutter-filled home is not only a symptom of stress but also a source of stress. Clean up the litter and you'll dial up the calm.

The Science of Stress and Clutter
According to Lee, research shows that we secrete the stress hormone cortisol when surrounded by disarray. Bad news for your body. But the good news is that you know exactly what to do about it. With a quick tidy-up, you could reclaim both your surroundings and your serenity. Don't know where to start your spring clean-out? Try these tips:

* Take baby steps. It probably took a long time to accumulate all your clutter, so give yourself time to clear it out. Break up the task into manageable chunks, starting with one room, one corner, one junk drawer, or one cupboard at a time. (Find out how few minutes of clean-up time you need to boost your mood.)
* Set a schedule. Whether you do 20 minutes a day or reserve a whole weekend to declutter, set aside the time you need, and stick to your schedule. (Can't seem to find the time? The real problem may be energy management, not time management.)
* Write it down. Lee recommends keeping a journal to help you set goals and record positive changes you've made to your environment. Ask yourself what's cluttering your life, why you keep it, and what parts of your life and house seem out of control. Then, list concrete steps for changing it.
* Reach out. Articles and self-help books from people who've been where you are can help you get organized and make decisions on what to toss, what to donate, and what to keep.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

How To Escape a Boring Life



How To Escape a Boring Life

Go into a cave the end of March
Lie down next to the sleeping bear
Throw your arm softly around her
Listen for her heartbeat

Throw a rock at the neighborhood bully
Watch the blood soak the rag he puts to his head
Wait a minute before turning to run
Down the dark alley

Get on a bus and end up in Mexico
Walk down the streets with your backpack
Left open a little and bulging
Don’t walk very fast

Let the Hell’s Angel come to your place
For a drink or to look at your books
Have him stay over and fix him some eggs
Ask him to let out your dog

Stand on your chair
At the French restaurant
Make up a song for your lover
Get the others to join you

Open your coat to the rain
Step into the fountain
Grab the change at the bottom
And spend it on peonies

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Our Tribe


Our tribe members are those people who accept us as we are and gladly accompany us on our journeys of evolution.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Happy Groundhog Day


Groundhog Day
By Lynn Ungar

Celebrate this unlikely oracle,
this ball of fat and fur,
whom we so mysteriously endow
with the power to predict spring.
Let's hear it for the improbable heroes who,
frightened at their own shadows,
nonetheless unwittingly work miracles.
Why shouldn't we believe
this peculiar rodent holds power
over sun and seasons in his stubby paw?
Who says that God is all grandeur and glory?

Unnoticed in the earth, worms
are busily, brainlessly, tilling the soil.
Field mice, all unthinking, have scattered
seeds that will take root and grow.
Grape hyacinths, against all reason,
have been holding up green shoots beneath the snow.
How do you think spring arrives?
There is nothing quieter, nothing
more secret, miraculous, mundane.
Do you want to play your part
in bringing it to birth? Nothing simpler.
Find a spot not too far from the ground
and wait.

Organize For Who You Are Now


Tip of the Month: Organizing for the Real You

This is from the newsletter of one of my favorite organizers, Jeri Dansky. Visit her website, www.jdorganizer.com, for the original article.

How many of us keep things we think we "should" want or need - when the reality is we don't want those things and will never use them?

Here's Erin Doland of Unclutterer, writing in Real Simple in March 2009: "I liked to think of myself as someone who exercised every day by running on a giant motorized treadmill, read all the literary classics, and baked cookies for every special occasion. The reality? I am not a runner, I like to read pop fiction, and cookies aren't really my thing." So Erin got rid of a lot of stuff.

And here's Melissa Stanton, writing in the no-longer-published Organize magazine, about her Lenox dishes and crystal stemware: "When properly set, my dining room table could be dressed to impress. Problem was, in more than a decade of owning such finery, which I acquired as wedding gifts and by inheritance, I never set my dining room table as described. For most families, dining on fine china is a relic from a way of life we don't live."

Another aspect of organizing for reality is recognizing what activities we're never going to have time for. Fellow organizer Marcie Lovett just wrote about her own experience in this regard: "I finally realized that I will never have the time to do every craft that looks interesting, so I am going to concentrate on the few that I really enjoy: crochet, card making and sewing. That meant paring back the supplies that I am keeping and getting rid of everything else."

Then there's me. A while ago I realized that I simply don't iron anything and I gave away my ironing board. I've joined Erin in giving away highly-acclaimed books that I honestly don't want to read. And I got rid of the cups and saucers, since all I ever use for coffee and tea are my favorite mugs.

So if you're keeping items that don't fit your real life - or the life you are truly aspiring to and moving toward - then give yourself permission to let them go.

Monday, February 1, 2010

A Little About Theory U


The New Century Summit at the Berkeley UU Church this weekend used the principles of Theory U, which was refined by Otto Scharmer, a senior lecturer at MIT. He collaborated on a book about the process (with Peter Senge, Betty Sue Flowers and Joseph Jaworski) called Presence. It is a leadership model with a difference.

Scharmer has observed four different types of listening: downloading, factual listening, empathic listening and generative listening. You know you're downloading when you say, "Yeah, I know that already." With factual listening, you might say, "Ooh, look at that." You switch off your inner voice of judgment and focus on what is different from what you already know. Empathic listeners might say, "Oh, yes, I know exactly how you feel." It requires an open heart to really feel how another feels. We can begin to see the world through the other's eyes. And generative listening is listening from the emerging field of future possibility. "I can't express what I experience in words. Everything slows down. I am connected to something larger than myself."

Another way to say it is that to listen in this new way, we need to 1) observe, observe, observe; 2) retreat and reflect -- allow our inner knowing to emerge; and 3) act in an instant. (This means to prototype the new in order to explore the future by doing, to create a little landing strip of the future that allows for hands-on testing and experimentation.)

Scharmer says that connecting to one's best future possibility and creating powerful breakthrough ideas requires learning to access the intelligence of the heart and the hand -- not just the intelligence of the head.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Happy Birthday, Javier



Another birthday for Javier. Because we are going to be in Berkeley for a church conference, we will get to celebrate together on his birthday. This is a man who deserves a cake not just on his birthday. He deserves a cake a week because of the quiet good he brings to the world. He has helped repair, restore and create gardens for two of my friends who needed a healing touch. He has been a supportive and loving partner to my daughter, walking her dogs, supporting her dreams, driving her to Best Friends Sanctuary in Utah, learning to cook for her. He is a man of few words but when he talks, you listen. He is there for the ones he loves.

Happy Birthday, Javier!

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Keokuk Haiku


Skates slide over pond
Goldfish glide under the ice
We meet in between

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Olympia Brown Opened Doors for Women


My MIT list (Most Important Tasks) is topped today by: Prepare for Olympia Brown talk. She is a woman I had not heard of until I joined the Sierra Foothills Unitarian Universalists in Auburn. I had visited Unitarian churches over the years but judged them to be too intellectual for my tastes. I stumbled onto this church almost by accident and from the beginning I have been connected with both my head and my heart. We adhere to no creeds but there are seven principles we affirm and promote. The two that speak to me the most are: the inherent worth and dignity of every person and respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part.

We have a part-time minister so we have guest speakers and members of the community present sermons twice a month. In February, John & I will be offering an imagined interview between Bill Moyers and Olympia Brown. She was one of the first women ministers, ordained in 1863. She also became a voice of the women's suffrage movement, speaking often with Susan B. Anthony. Her devotion to her ministry kept her from being one of the most well-known women's rights workers. On Nov. 2, 1920, Olympia Brown, at the age of 85, was among the first women to cast a ballot, after fighting for that right for 60 years. She was an amazing woman who opened many doors for women because she refused to give up.

Here are some words from her final sermon, delivered just before she was able to vote for the first time.

The opening doors lead to no dark dungeons, open upon no burning lake, give no evidence of everlasting punishment. But all gladden us with assurances of Divine Goodness and indicate the final triumph of the good ... Not only by the researches of science are we shown the glories of creation but the scenes of beauty which daily greet our eyes, the song of birds, fragrance of flowers, the moonlight shining on the waves all tell the same story of divine love.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

The Five Senses


We had an assignment to write down a daily list of sensory words and phrases. I wasn't good about it. I thought about as I fell asleep at night and wrote them down a time or two. But not on a regular basis. So here is what I would have written if I had done the exercise.

I saw the black gnarly branches of a tree blown over in the storm.
I smelled the skunk in Colusa and the fainter smell of something dead under my friend's house. "It must have thought, 'this would be a good place to die'", she told me.
I tasted the blueberries in the thin sliver of berry pie I ate at the potluck after giving up sugar earlier in the day. It reminded me of my mother's homemade blueberry pie.
I heard the tapping of the computer keys as my partner wrote his daily poem.
I stroked the fat, orange cat as he inched cautiously towards me on his cat tower.
I saw the gun on the deck of the ship I toured on Mare Island. I imagined what it would have been like during a battle.
I touched the cold metal on the LCS and wondered how the men ever got warm.
I heard the chattering blackbirds in the leafless tree in the WinCo parking lot.
I caught the tantalizing smell of grease as I walked past the In n Out Burger.
I tasted the bitterness of the Green Tea I drank because it's good for me.
I saw a lake of Snow Geese in a flooded field on the way to Colusa.
I heard the whoosh of the furnace first thing in the morning.
I smelled the burnt popcorn.
I tasted the vitamin pill that got stuck in my throat.
I touched the cold feet of my partner.
I saw three geese flying in one direction and two geese flying in the opposite direction.
I heard the insistent honking as they jockeyed for position, spelling each other.
I smelled the coffee perking in the other room.
I tasted the brownie I didn't eat at the workshop.
I felt the rough wool of the scarf I wore to keep the draft off my neck.
I saw the yellow box on the blue sofa.
I heard my neighbor's dog, Lucy, greeting a friend.
I felt the springy curls of the Bichon Frisee.
I smelled the cinnamon on the oatmeal my partner just handed me.
I tasted the cheese in the pasta last night.
I saw raindrops on the clothesline, ready to hit the deck with a plink, tasting winter, smelling the Bay, touching gray satin wetness.

Friday, January 22, 2010

A Fine Kinda Day


So much going on I don't know what to focus on. A common affliction for a Gemini. We managed to walk today between the rain and it was so blustery, it reminded us of the Midwest. I had a hat on and a scarf wrapped around my head. It was still cold. I managed to write a poem today that I was happy with. The writing prompt was "a broken cup and a healing heart." It just came to me and flowed out easily. I've been reading poems of others to the prompt "what dogs admire about cats." Some hilarious and some inspiring poems.

I did some decluttering and made a Goodwill run to donate more stuff I don't need. While I was there, I spotted a ball sitting on a shelf to add to my collection. The shelf is labeled Self Help, which made me laugh.

John just got interviewed on the phone by a reporter from the Sacramento Bee about poetry projects he is involved in. It's like a dream to me that he has been able to really get involved in the poetry scene, both with children and adults. He's teaching a class to kids at the library Saturday which involves writing a poem about a piece of art. I'll be at a workshop for peacemaking at our church. So we're really pursuing the things we talked about when we imagined our lives after leaving the regular workplace. I don't like to call it retirement because it doesn't feel like that. Just a reinvention. With more freedom.

The other thing I'm working on is cutting down on sugar. I've made it through at least two days and I expect to start feeling better soon. Coincidentally, my son, daughter and sister have all given it up, too. My son was inspired by reading Michael Pollen's Omnivore's Dilemma. So rain, poems, peacemaking and sugar. A fine hodge podge and a fine way to live.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Go Illini!


If we hadn't moved back to California from Champaign, Illinois 22 years ago, I know where we would be right now. Assembly Hall at the University of Illinois Campus watching our team play Purdue. No underground parking so we'd be walking across the prairie land, 28 degrees with 20 percent of freezing rain before the game. We'd be wearing orange like maybe 90 percent of the other fans in the bleachers. We'd know the coach, Bruce Weber, because John would have been editor of the Champaign News Gazette until he retired. We might go to a party after the game. We'd know everyone there.

But we left Champaign to move to Ventura and never again have we been so attached to a college basketball team. When we lived there, U of I basketball players would stop by on Halloween just to say hello. My favorite player was Tony Wysinger, 5'9 guard who had more heart than players a foot taller. I loved to watch him drive to the basket, spin around and lay the ball into the basket to the chagrin of his opponents. Another favorite was Steve Bardo who is one of the announcers for tonight's game. We tailgated before football games in the fall and loved to watch the band sneak into the stadium with their hats on backwards for some reason.

Now we're watching the game in the comfort of our living room, wind howling outside, stormy but 46 degrees. I miss those nights of squeaky gym shoes, enthusiastic cheers, the feeling of being part of a tribe. Score at the half: 32-28, Illinois.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Dance With Me


Friends from the Bay Area stayed at our house over the weekend. They were competing in the same-sex dance competition in Sacramento, a series of dance events that will culminate with their competing in the Gay Games in Cologne, Germany, the end of July. The Games are built upon the principles of participation, inclusion and personal best™, for more than 25 years. We went to the ballroom Sunday to cheer them on. Literally. "Go #148!" It was a noisy, joyous gathering with sparkly, skin-baring costumes, black dance pants, coordinating outfits, high heels, flat dance shoes, chiffony scarves, ruffles, ties. There were three categories, A, B and C. Our friends were graded in the C group and by winning that round, were chosen to advance to the B group. This meant dancing four different dances in the C group and then, after a brief break, four more dances with the B group, ending with the Quick Step. But they had achieved their goal of moving into the B group before the Games.

There were more women than men couples. One of the male couples had danced on "So You Think You Can Dance" where one of the judges said he'd like to see them both dance with a girl, adding, "You never know, you might enjoy that, too." In an interview, they explained it's not about girls and boys but about leading and following. We can all do that, right?

There's that quote about Ginger Rogers being a better dancer because she did everything Fred Astaire did but backwards and in heels. But hopefully we are reaching a point where it doesn't matter which partner leads or who dances with who. What I saw Sunday was a whole lot of people having a wonderful time together.

When John & I lived in Suriname, we took Mambo lessons from a teacher who spoke Dutch. We were the oldest couple in the group, and I remember how easy it was to master the basic steps, and then how difficult each new variation became. It was difficult to just sink into the music and move without counting out the steps in my head. When I was able to get through a dance with a minimum of missteps, I remember feeling the flow of joy as we all moved to the beat of the music. It felt freeing and equalizing. Dancing is joy.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Letter to Pat Robertson

I had to share this.

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune published a letter from Satan to evangelist Pat Robertson, responding to his comment that Haiti's persistent troubles, including the earthquake, are due to a pact the nation made with Mephistopheles.

Actually, it wasn't Satan who wrote the letter but Lilly Coyle of Minneapolis writing in the persona of the hellish one.

I think she got it down pretty well. What say you?

Dear Pat Robertson,

I know that you know that all press is good press, so I appreciate the shout-out. And you make God look like a big mean bully who kicks people when they are down, so I'm all over that action.

But when you say that Haiti has made a pact with me, it is totally humiliating. I may be evil incarnate, but I'm no welcher. The way you put it, making a deal with me leaves folks desperate and impoverished.

Sure, in the afterlife, but when I strike bargains with people, they first get something here on earth -- glamour, beauty, talent, wealth, fame, glory, a golden fiddle. Those Haitians have nothing, and I mean nothing. And that was before the earthquake. Haven't you seen "Crossroads"? Or "Damn Yankees"?

If I had a thing going with Haiti, there'd be lots of banks, skyscrapers, SUVs, exclusive night clubs, Botox -- that kind of thing. An 80 percent poverty rate is so not my style. Nothing against it -- I'm just saying: Not how I roll.

You're doing great work, Pat, and I don't want to clip your wings -- just, come on, you're making me look bad. And not the good kind of bad. Keep blaming God. That's working. But leave me out of it, please. Or we may need to renegotiate your own contract.

Best, Satan

LILY COYLE, MINNEAPOLIS

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Writing Prompt: Noises My Mother Made


MY MOTHER’S WINSTONS

What is the noise of smoke?
Silky sigh of exhalation.
She was calmest then,
for a moment.
Click of Bic lighter,
rainbow colors,
I brought them to her
in the retirement home.
And the cartons
and cartons of smokes.

Later, she moved
to the assisted living floor.
Couldn’t smoke unless
she went outside.
An act more difficult
than her desire for a cigarette.
Then she forgot she smoked.
In the end, the noise of smoke
is a rattle.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Making Space For Art


It's a new year and already I can feel the difference. After stewing about it for a long time, I have resigned from a board and a committee with organizations I believe in strongly. It was difficult to do because I had signed on and I felt like I was letting people down. But then I felt a burst of energy when I realized how much time I had opened up for myself. When we first moved to Roseville a year and a half ago, we got involved in several organizations so we could make a contribution and start to build a new community. But now I see that I said yes too many times. I need to redesign my calendar so there are some nice empty spaces to do art, to write, to learn new things.

As one who encourages people to declutter, I often ask people to look at what they are doing that might no longer thrill them. It probably did when they first joined this committee or that book club but maybe now they are doing it because they are afraid of the reaction when they say it's time to move on to something else. And personally I find it very difficult to admit that I am moving on to take care of my own passion. I was trained to put others' needs first. And I thought that would be a big part of my life in retirement.

But this year I am trying to remember the words of Forrest Church, a Unitarian Universalist who died recently. He said; Be Who You Are; Want What You Have and Do What You Can. Fine words for a new decade.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Start Your Day Right; Have a Baby


Today is our daughter Jamie's birthday. We got a text thanking us for a card we sent (via banjobunny.com, very creative cards) and I asked John what time of day she was born. He is responsible for six of our children and I contributed two. He said she was born at night and it was cold but not snowing. I said mine came in the morning: start your day right, have a baby. I said it to be funny, but it is a profound statement. I was thinking yesterday of the moment 40 years ago when I heard from my doctor's office that I was pregnant for the first time. This was before drugstore pregnancy tests and I had spent the day with my mother, distracting myself until the time they had said I could call for results, with a trip to Park Forest, the first shopping mall near our home. It was a 30-minute drive and then that was a big deal, especially in the winter. My mother was very anxious about driving in the snow.

This was shortly after Thanksgiving and we looked around for bargains, buying very little as I remember. Then we had lunch in the Marshall Field's tea room. It was a quiet, muted restaurant with thick carpet and pink tablecloths and all women servers. A far cry from the Food Court at my local mall where I grabbed a lunch of Chinese food yesterday after my date with my Apple at the Genius Bar. Back then, we probably had something traditional like chicken salad or shrimp Louie, followed by a cup of coffee, not decaf, and a cigarette for my mother. This was before smoking sections in restaurants. I could hardly wait to get home to call for the news that could change my life. And the news was positive.

Nine months later, I woke up at six in the morning in Berlin, Germany, with strong cramps and a backache. My husband was serving in the Army and he drove me in our blue Volkswagen bug through the city streets where we passed a construction worker tipping a bottle of beer to his mouth. My first child would have been born in the morning except for the fact that there were three other women, one a friend, in labor at the American hospital and one doctor. I was the last to deliver so his arrival was just after 1 pm. He was the largest at 9 pounds 4 ounces. The smallest was a preemie, a little girl. There was another big boy and my friend's daughter, who she named Valerie because her husband wanted a boy so badly, he refused to choose a girl's name. She picked the name because I was handy. I often wonder what happened to that little Valerie.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Something I Threw Away


This was written in response to a prompt from Molly Fisk. The prompt was: things I throw away and things I keep. It was scary sending it off to a group but I did it. Later today I'm going to my women's art group and tonight a group at church that is going to make treasure maps. An art kind of day. Leading the life I imagined I might lead.

My Lost Childhood

What happened to my stuffed animals,
the mouse with the torn tail in a sweater,
the monkey with tennis shoes and suspenders?
What happened to the board games and dice,
Sorry and Clue and Uncle Wiggly?
Did I throw them away, give them away,
were they taken away?

How about the china set with green flowers,
the easy-bake oven, the crying baby doll?
the play money, the plastic food?
The set of My Book House books
with illustrations of fanciful castles
and shiny knights on horses?

I don’t remember losing them.
They were mine and then they were gone.
All that’s left of that long-ago time
Is a 2 by 3-inch photo of my baby brother
sitting in his high chair, wearing a sweater,
and white leather shoes, smiling at me.
As if to say, remember me.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

The Blank Page


It's only the 12th and I'm wondering why I committed to writing a blog every day. This is a giant step for me. (Distracted: remember that game "Mother, May I?" There were all those different steps you could take: baby steps, giant steps, scissor steps. But you had to ask permission before you moved or ... something bad happened.)

I do think the blank page is intimidating. I watched a DVD last night that I got from the library. (Distracted: the library is having a big BOGO sale ... buy one, get one ... and I got 10 magazines for fifty cents ... great for collage and also some Vanity Fairs for the interviews.) It featured an artist from Ohio with a step-by-step guide to acrylic collage. I loved watching her process. "No, that's not working ... oh, I like that better." I also liked the sounds of the train from her studio window. (Distracted: I loved the sound of the train when I was growing up in Kankakee, Illinois. It was a wistful invitation to me.) One of the techniques she uses is to draw with pencil on the blank canvas. Just squiggles and interesting lines but she says it keeps the blank white space from being too scary. It invites the hand like the train whistle invites the traveler. She might cover up the writing, but it helps her get stared.

(Distracted: John reads me a poem by Molly Fisk about Junior Mints and I love the poem and remember the Milk Duds a new boyfriend offered me one Saturday morning in the only theater in our town and how that ended the relationship. I was a Boston Baked Beans kind of girl.) (Distracted: on our first date, John took me to a performance of a ballet troupe that came through town and at the intermission he asked if I'd like an Orange Crush. "Oh, no, I never drink Orange Crush," I replied. But it was only the beginning of our relationship.)

Monday, January 11, 2010

The Generations




John with his youngest son, Jerry, and newest grandson, Liam, in Chattanooga, TN. And with his oldest son, Jeff, and grandson, Jason, at Vanessa's wedding in North Carolina, where we officiated.

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Instead of Judging, I Might Try Observing



(Photo by my daughter, Kara Bowman Ziemer, for my ball project)

I am getting back to studying and trying to use Compassionate Communication (NVC) to make my life more wonderful. The following reflection is an excerpt from Peaceful Living: Daily Meditations for Living with Love, Healing, and Compassion by Mary Mackenzie, published by PuddleDancer Press, and is offered courtesy of NVC Academy and Mary Mackenzie.

Moralistic judgments imply that other people are wrong or bad because they don’t act in ways that are in harmony with our values. If you see someone driving faster than you think is safe, you might say that they are a maniac driver. If someone talks slower than is fun for you, you might say that they are boring. You may also do this to yourself when you think that you’re fat because you don’t weigh what you’d like to, or that you’re a bully if you regret something you just said.

Anytime you judge someone else or yourself as bad or wrong, you are expressing a moralistic judgment. Another way of looking at things that allows you to evaluate your circumstances without judgment is to express how something affects you.

For instance, when I see someone driving faster than I think is safe, I may say or think, “When I see that person driving that fast I feel scared and I’d really like the road to be safe.” Or, if I’m discouraged with my weight, I could say or think,“Ugh. I am so frustrated with my weight. Losing 20 pounds would really give me hope that this can shift.”

Judging the situation only creates distance and additional hurt feelings. Acknowledging our feelings and connecting those feelings to our unmet needs (safety and hope) can help us to connect with ourselves and others, and to heal.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Stumbled Upon Autistic Planet


Got to bed early last night and woke up at 6:30 am. First stop: computer. Do you know about stumbleupon.com? It's a tool for discovering and sharing websites. A dangerous tool for me, my friends. In the olden days, my mother would send me newspaper clippings and to be quite honest, I appreciated her thinking about me but I didn't find them all that useful. It appears I have inherited that gene from her because I can't stop myself from sending "fascinating" links to my grown kids. It's so easy now. No need to find an envelope and stamp. Just hit that send button. Whoosh.

What I did Not send this morning: the video of the polar bear playing with the sled dogs in the snow. It is very cute. I researched the story behind it ... even checked it out on snopes.com. Which led me to a site containing a wealth of interviews which will keep me occupied until the end of my time, whenever that happens to be. It's an NPR program called Speaking of Faith with Krista Tippett. There are now more than 200 podcasts sitting in my ITunes. One I listened to today was an interview with a couple who has an autistic son. It's a topic I have researched extensively, having a close family member who has been diagnosed. This gave me a whole new perspective. The metaphors this couple shared were so enlightening. I plan to pick up a copy of the mother's (Jennifer Elder) book, Autistic Planet. The father, Paul Collins wrote Not Even Wrong. He is an historian and he says he understands his son's behavior because he himself can be hyper-focused when he is researching in dusty archives and it's as if his ears turn off. In fact, he says there are studies that show that people who are in the sciences are much more likely to exhibit autistic traits. When he gave a talk at Microsoft, he noticed many in the audience were looking at their laptops and someone explained to him that they were watching him on the Webcast even though he was speaking live twenty feet from them. That was just their preferred way of listening. (By contrast, studies show that people who study English are more prone to manic-depressive disorders.)

From listening to this interview, I also learned that Simon, the cousin of Sacha Baron-Cohen (think Borat), is a leading expert on autism. Baron-Cohen proposes that the cause of autism at a biological level may be hyper-masculinization. This hypothesis posits that certain features of autism (‘obsessions’ and repetitive behaviour, previously regarded as ‘purposeless’) as being highly purposive, intelligent (hyper-systemizing), and a sign of a different way of thinking. He wrote a popular book on the topic of sex differences and its relationship to autism (The Essential Difference, 2003).

So I admit I sent an article about Baron-Cohen the scientist to my son because he and I share a love of Baron-Cohen the comedian. I'm sure he'll enjoy it. (Thanks, Mom, for all those clippings.)

Friday, January 8, 2010

Fa Waka: Words as Common Coin


(1) [VERB/ADJECTIVE + weh]VERB/ ADJECTIVE
derivative meaning base meaning of base
a. giwèh ‘give away’ gi (V) ‘give’
gowèh ‘go away’ go (V) ‘go’
hitiwèh ‘throw away’ hiti (V) ‘throw’
b. langaweh ‘far/far away’ langa (A) ‘long (spat. & temp.)’
c. grandeweh ‘long ago’ grande (A) ‘big, great’

I often think if I could go back and do another life, I would be a linguist. I am fascinated by words and gestures. I have enough French blood that I would find it difficult to speak without the use of my hands. I wonder why we gesture so much when we talk; is it a holdover from the days when we only used our hands to communicate?

I took French in high school but never became anywhere close to fluent. I might be able to if I lived in France for a year or two. But I did have the experience of learning a little Sranan Tongo when I lived in Suriname a few years ago. We lived in the capital, Paramaribo, when we were in the Peace Corps, and we luckily were given language training in Sranan Tongo rather than the official language, Dutch. So we said Fa Waka for hello rather than something that sounded like "Who Hot Het." There were some Dutch sounds that we couldn't make without gagging.

According to Wikipedia, the Sranan Tongo words for 'to know' and 'small children' are sabi and pikin which is due to the Portuguese having been the first explorers of the West African coast, where they developed a pidgin language from which a few words became common coin in interactions with Africans by explorers who came afterward, including the English. However, research has established that Sranan is fundamentally an English-based language, with an overlay of words from Dutch, due to the Dutch takeover of Surinam in 1667.

Sranan Tongo's lexicon is thus a fusion of English, Dutch, Portuguese and Central and West African languages. It began as a pidgin spoken primarily by African slaves in Suriname who often did not have a common African language. Sranan also became the language of communication between the slaves and the slave-owners, as the slaves were prohibited to speak Dutch. As other ethnic groups were brought to Suriname as contract workers, Sranan became a lingua franca.

Some of the simpler words we learned were 'gwe,' which when shouted at one of the mangy dogs following us as we walked home would send them running. Go away!! I developed an aggressive side that surprised me but I wasn't sure my rabies shots would protect me if I got bitten. Another favorite word was 'kaba' which meant Done! Over. We used to practice in the morning, using only Sranan for an hour. We even tried playing Scrabble, one of our favorite pastimes, with Sranan words, but we didn't get very far. The irony was that Dutch was considered the language of educated people so our attempts at speaking our language wasn't met with great enthusiasm. Our counterpart George, the person we worked with, always wanted us to speak Dutch. Easy for him to say!

As luck or synchronicity would have it, we recently met a friend at our church in Auburn who lived in French Guyana on the border of Suriname. When she heard we had lived in South America, she came up and greeted us: Fa Waka! Now we have decided we will all study the language and keep our brains fit. Besides, the creole language has such a beautiful way of expressing things. 'Ati' is the word for heart and 'ati sidon' means to be satisfied or at ease. Literally 'heart sit down.' Broko ati is broken heart. If you have heard that learning a language is good for your brain, consider learning Sranan. And then you might plan a trip to Suriname to try it out. Waka bun. (Walk good.)

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Art Journal Page 1


I don't know if it's proper to blog twice in one day; that feels a little indulgent. But my friend Cathie asked me to post my art journal page and here it is. I'm feeling more and more technically-able and that's a good thing. I'm not sure if the page is finished but I do know it's a start! The little girl reminds me of myself on the monkey bars at Torrence Grade School. I used to swing on them pretty fearlessly and climb trees with abandon so I'm not sure why I so often dream of being afraid I will fall. The picture of the feather is one of my prize finds. I opened an old photo album in my favorite thrift store in Oakland and it was filled with page after page of brilliantly-colored feathers like the kind men wore in the bands of their Fedoras. They were stuck in the book with black photo holders and I have the book of feathers plus pictures of the feathers, just waiting for the right project. The geode I brought back from Keokuk on my last trip there. It's one of my favorite amulets. Amulets. A word I just heard describing an art project done for an exhibit at MOMA by artist Song Dong. You can view the video on my Facebook. It was a collaboration he did with his mother who lives in Bejing. She is a hoarder and he has displayed the things she has collected over a lifetime. The curator says that in the end, the mother is happy because she wanted these things to be useful to her family and now they are, but not in the way she imagined they would be. I am fascinated with collections. My mother collected souvenir spoons; I don't know what became of them. She probably sold them to an antique shop, not thinking I would be interested in them. I collected stuffed animals when I was a child and my mother talked me into giving them to the woman that helped keep our house clean. For her children my mother said. But I was really not ready to give them up yet and I was always sorry I let them go when I did. I've just started collecting little hand-painted ceramic houses and shops from England that I found in a thrift store, but I consider my collection complete. I won't add to them, and when I've enjoyed them long enough, I'll probably pass them along to someone else who might like them. I'm a believer in traveling collections.

Where Do Your Cousins Live?


Okay, so now it's official. I am in the Writing Resolutions workshop with Molly Fisk. We were asked to introduce ourselves to the others thusly: Where do your cousins live? What's your favorite food? Who is your favorite writer? When I listed the places my cousins live I was struck by a couple of things. One, I am the only female on my mother's side, a fact I was always proud of but it probably didn't really get me anything. "We moved to Iowa before I could speak." This is a line borrowed and adapted from a poem I just read by Kathleen Lynch of Sacramento. I found her poem in a newspaper I picked up outside the hospital in Auburn where we went to visit Ginny, who had just had surgery after breaking her hip at a friend's party. There were four nurses at the party we were told so she got excellent attention while waiting for the ambulance. She never made it to the party; fell on the way up the stairs. Ginny and Bob have been married over sixty years. They grieved mightily last year when their parrot died. He had been with them for many years of that long marriage. Now Bob is trying to keep Ginny from pulling tubes out because she is so impatient to go home.
The other thing I was struck by when listing my cousin's homes was that I am not close to any of them, with the exception of an older cousin who lives in Santa Barbara and is a little in awe of how many places I've lived. He has had two homes I know of since he got married 40 years ago. I say in awe of but maybe it's really aghast over. I'm not sure. He and his two sisters and one brother grew up in Laredo, Texas, where my Uncle Mac moved when he was a young man. My uncle was the oldest of seven children and he was my father's hero, even though he left home for MIT when my father was a young boy. In the 30s I think, he was business manager for the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield, Michigan, then called the Cranbrook School for Boys. The community was founded by George Gough Booth, a Detroit newspaper baron and philanthropist, and Eliel Saarinen, the Finnish architect who occupies a major position in the history of modern American design and architecture. Both were inspired by the vision of the Arts and Crafts movement, which began in England in the mid-nineteenth century and soon spread to the United States.
I don't know why my uncle left his job there but I have heard the stories of his arriving in Laredo in the late 30s and being attracted to the sound of music floating out of cantinas (I may be making this part up) and he stayed, marrying a woman whose family helped found the town. He eventually bought a ranch called the Double G, one of the Gs being for my name, Gault, where my cousins had a goat as a pet. I was so jealous, My father never went to work without wearing a suit and tie and he couldn't stand animals. He was the guy who every cat and dog gravitated to immediately at a party, however. They seem to know.
Uncle Mac's youngest son was named Arturo after his grandfather and I visited their home one time when I was living in San Angelo with my first husband, who was in the army. We had huevos rancheros for breakfast and drove across the border to have cabrito at a famous restaurant, my first authentic Mexican meal. I remember one time my uncle drove into the small Iowa town where we had moved to from New Jersey (he and my father the only two siblings to have left their East Coast homes and never quite forgiven for that by the family). He was driving a sporty Thunderbird convertible and all the neighbors came running when they saw him pull into our driveway. He also raced Jaguars and had a sailboat in Corpus Christi named after his grandmother, Ida. He hunted in Jackson Hole, Wyoming and had dated movie stars (Joan Crawford's name was mentioned) and, well, you get the picture.
Even though my uncle and my father had not spent much time together once he left for college, my cousin and I were both amazed at how similar some of their traits were. Even though they had chosen very different lifestyles, they moved in the same fluid way and smiled with clear blue eyes that pierced you when they noticed you. When my father was suffering from dementia near the end of his life, he told me he had seen Mac on a street corner in San Francisco. "He didn't speak to me," he said sadly. Mac had been dead for five years. I told him, "He just didn't see you."
"Yes," he said, comforted. "That's what I was thinking."

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Invitation to Writing More in 2010


Wendy on Facebook said: "Here we go." And I replied something like "Fear of heights won't stop me now." Then I got an invitation to join an online writing group for January. Had to decide. Decided. To go for it. Wrote a haiku this morning in response to a haiku written by a former teacher at Sophia. Mine was: Gray morning quiet/Furnace sighing its warm tune/I am arising. I notice how much better I feel after I create something. Anything. I am going to create one page in my art journal today. Today I say. I have been watching youtube tutorials and I get so inspired when I see how people create these beautiful pages. I am ready to move from observer to doer. I need to still, or turn the volume down anyway, on the inner critic ... that growly, crusty critter that comes to life when I put pen to paper or fingers to keyboard. Down, boy. It's okay. I know you are trying to protect me from the unkempt hobo of my Iowa summer childhood. But I saw his eyes. We have more in common than not. I want my freedom. I want blue skies. He wants a soft bed. A deep connection to another human being. I'm going to visit a friend in the hospital today. A beautiful woman who has been married to her partner for something like 60 years. She fell and broke her hip and he must be devastated. She is probably quietly healing and trying to keep him from worrying. I think after the visit, we'll go to the Flower Farm Coffee Shop with our computers and write. Something we've been meaning to do since we discovered it. Here we go.

Monday, January 4, 2010

Compassionate Communication for an Anniversary Gift


My 30th wedding anniversary is coming up Feb. 15. I know, why not Feb. 14? Well, we had to work that day. We got married in the living room of a dear friend and the snow started coming down as we became man and wife (man and woman?) That didn't stop us from driving to Chicago to a nice hotel for our short honeymoon. We couldn't stop for fear of getting stuck once we got onto the highway. (They weren't freeways in Illinois.) John started a new job the Monday after our wedding so we took a longer honeymoon several months later.
The thirtieth is a big event, especially when we've both been married before. So today I read about a five-day retreat in the Santa Cruz mountains in nonviolent communication (also called compassionate communication) which just happens to take place on our anniversary so I took it as a sign. John was enthusiastic about it, so we will spend that big day in a rustic cabin in the mountains, refining our communication skills so our next 20 or so years will be as much fun as the first 30.
It was challenging that we dropped the car off today for a tuneup and learned that we need four new tires and a new battery. But the car is paid for and it's important to keep it in good shape and safe too.
Because we just have one car, a friend agreed to meet us at the car dealer's and we went to the mall to walk for 45 minutes. We were challenged by John to stay on task and not be distracted by shiny things. He was actually the first to be drawn from the path; he just had to check the price on those spiky, strappy heels at Macy's that I told him were all the rage. $110. And I told Linda I was grateful we never had to wear those things. We marched past the Pottery Barn and the Crate and Barrel and were not even lured in by the Border's. We finished the walk with a healthy lunch at Pluto's where you get a gigantic salad with seven toppings for under $7. I'm looking for inexpensive entertainment this year and that was a good outing. Saturday we brought a few sacks full of books to a used bookstore in Sacramento called Beers and were offered $39 in credit or $30 cash. We also took a walk around that neighborhood for something different to look at. So I have stuck to my resolution to walk 45 minutes a day and I have blogged twice. Now if I can just get myself to unwrap the yoga DVD.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

A New Decade


Here it is 2010 and I haven't written since April of last year. But it's a new decade. Woke up a little blue. What do I have planned for the new year? Nothing. But then I watched a youtube tutorial on art journaling and got my spirit back. Yesterday was filled with food (delicious: artichoke dip, horseradishy dip, tamale pie, Cowgirl Creamery cheese from Pt. Reyes, chocolate haystacks, lemon bars, potato chips, pita chips, triscuits, banana bread pudding...) and football: Rose Bowl & some of the Sugar Bowl, when I remembered that I left the sugar out of the banana bread pudding. Probably a good thing. Now I sit with a bowl of oatmeal and raisins and vow to eat nothing bad for me this day. I also vow to want what I have, do what I can and be who I am. Wise words of Forrest Church who died last year. He was a UU minister at All Souls Church in NYC. I first heard of him when Bill Moyers interviewed him 20 years ago, before I learned I was a UU. (Took a quiz on belief.net and scored 100% on UU and 97% liberal Quaker.) Luckily, when we moved to Roseville I stumbled upon the Sierra Foothills UU church in Auburn and have been driving up the hill ever since. Today I will do two pages in my journal, take a 45 minute walk and ponder all the ways I have been given just what I need.