Magnifying Glass

There is an old, leather-wrapped Jefferson Magnifier that years ago I stole from my parents and use it to read words and letters largely from time to time. As the moments pass and we get closer to the inauguration of the 47th President, I keep thinking about magnification, this time of ideas, rather than random passages in old books.

I wonder if the new strategy is to employ loyalists who won’t say much against, well, anything, and to wear down the resolve of those of us who still believe in parts of the government as good, functional, useful, purposeful, and necessary for our mutual survival as a country. I am consistently reminded, also, of the Batman movie in which Christian Bale is Batman and Heath Ledger is The Joker, and Alfred reminds Bruce Wayne that “some men just want to watch the world burn”. It could be that, too, I suppose.

I wonder how does someone advocating for the slashing-and-burning of the FBI impact me? Does it? What if the Department of Education is dismantled to pre-1979 laws. Would they go after those laws, too? What about IDEA? What about school lunch programs?

I wonder.

When I pull back on this philosophical magnifying glass, I see that this is both a detail and a long-term strategy that started way back when I was little and Reagan was president. So many big ideas had been codified into law during the 1940s-1980, and his administration wasn’t able to do much about it. But what about this one? 40 years later and a whole lot more vocal and indignant.

I hope that the federal government is not changed to a point where we can’t recognize it. I don’t know what that would mean for most people, especially young people and poor people and unhoused people and immigrant people. This last week’s news was emotionally draining for me, but I am trying to read the news about once per day. I do want to know about as much as the media will report. I hope they continue being brave and sharing details. Without them, I am not sure what might happen. I do remember that there were no press briefings during his last administration. Will that happen again?

This all so strange to experience, this shift in the United States. The shift is so dramatic as to be alienating and exciting but not in a happy way. The other side I think probably feels the same way except they are excited in a good way. This is so tiring; I hate that I am feeling so tired by all of it and I feel like my writing is not as clear as normal. But that is ok. Like one of my best friends said today, “it is all so fleeting”.

Ridikkulus ! Or, Why No Lie Is Worth Telling

It is not everyday that you have a major life revelation, something that stitches some theories into the facts column of your memories, forever cementing but also altering your life. Last night, my mom sat myself, my brother, and my husband down to “talk about something for an hour” she said. Three hours later, we had learned that:

  • My father was married a very long time ago to a first wife, sometime around 1965
  • My father and his wife had twin boys who were born on 7 January 1967
  • My father’s first wife “couldn’t cope” with raising twins (on her own? with an unhelpful husband who “worked alot”? with perhaps post-partum depression that was undiagnosed?), so she moved back in with her mother and
  • They never spoke again

My dad’s family, who knew his first wife, who had been to his wedding, and who knew his twin sons, were asked to honor the request of no contact, which they did for 54 years, until a few weeks ago when my aunt told my mom she knew something but she also knew it would be hurtful. My mom asked her to tell her, regardless, and here we are.

For years I have wondered what precipitating event caused my father to lose contact with his family, for after this, he barely spoke to them for 15 years. In fact, my aunt didn’t even know that I was born in England, one hour or less away from where she had her second daughter, born one month before me.

In 2017, I went to England for my cousin Sally’s wedding in the Lake District. It was beautiful and I can’t wait to go there again. Whilst driving through London with Aunt #1, I asked her, “did something happen between my dad and his parents? Like an argument? Did he do something to disappoint them or something? And that’s why you all stopped talking?” She said, “It is not my story to tell. You have to ask your father.” Whilst walking through a town in the Lakes with Aunt #2, I asked her the same question, and she gave me the same answer.

In 2009, when I was getting divorced from my first husband, my parents came to see me. I was confused as we weren’t especially close at the time. Now, looking back on it, I suspect my dad felt that me going through a divorce would be very difficult. I know my mom was worried about me, but she said that they felt I was handling everything very well (later writings will go into how good of an actress I am – Oscar caliber). In my laundry room, my mom let slip that my dad had been married before and that “divorce isn’t that hard, eh Michael?”. This is when I learned he had been married before for about 5-6 years. When I asked him why he had never said this before, he said he didn’t think it was important. I asked him, “what, are you going to tell me that we have half brothers or sisters somewhere?” he said a definite “No.” He lied.

Why did he lie? To me? To my mom? To my brother? What happened and why?

Tragically, his first wife (first and second wives were both named Susan, oddly), died about one year after he did, in 2022. He was born in 1939, she in 1943. He died in 2021, she in 2022. He had his twins when he was 28 years old. I cannot even imagine what my dad was like/looked like/acted like when he was 28. My husband had his son when he was 26 and I remember what he looked like: an adultish person.

Thankfully, all of my dad’s siblings have told us we can ask them anything now that the cat is out of the bag. But sadly, both people involved are dead. Strangely, she kept Blythe as her last name all these years, as have done the boys. Why? If it was such a split, wouldn’t it make sense to change names or……….something.

Did he ever pay her any money to help raise them? Were they ever in contact? Why did the split even happen in the first place? Apparently my grandmother took care of the twins when she could. She always loved babies and was great with children. She also had to live with this condition of giving up her first two grandchildren, and, her daughters say, fought it until my granddad insisted. I cannot imagine how painful that must have been for her, for him, for his first wife. It just seems like so much pain, and I will never know the reason why, probably.

When I asked my dear Uncle Denys why this happened, why we left the UK and our entire family, when we were having tea after Sally’s wedding, he said, “it was a different time”. Maybe it was? What does that mean? Did he know?

This opens up so many questions. Is this the reason that we moved to the States, so that he would never have to deal with it? It seems so. Why did he never tell my mom? Why did she never insist on meeting his family before they were married?

Because, oh yes, my mom never pushed on meeting his family. He said they didn’t want to meet her, and she accepted that, despite that his 5 brothers and sisters would have loved to meet her, and did, about 15 years after his first divorce, when he was married to his third wife and living in Houston, Texas.

I have written about this here before, but sometime around 1970 my dad lost touch with his family and regained contact with them around 1985, after we had emigrated to the United States. My granddad was ill with progressive health problems, and we came to England and met the family for the first time. The aunt who orchestrated this meeting is the same that spilled the beans to my mom two weeks ago, She is truly amazing and a creature of love and acceptance. I love her so much. After the first English meeting, my grandparents came to Texas and saw us there. My granddad died very soon thereafter, in 1989, of cancer and heart problems. He had been a nuclear chemist and the exposure to chemicals damaged his body. My grandmother was diagnosed with cancer in the 1960s, looked around at her 6 children and her scientist husband who didn’t pay bills but knew how to (mostly) build an atom bomb, and said to her doctor, “I can’t die!” and didn’t until 1994.

What is bothering me so much about this story is the lie at the center of it; a lie that, to me, is wholly unnecessary. Why would he leave behind his children? What about his wife? Did he love her? Did she break his heart? Did he break hers? Yes, yes, and yes? We could have had two older brothers. (We think we have found them. One looks just like him, with eyes just like me and my brother’s. The other looks like my granddad, to a T. Round, bald head, round nose, nice smile.)

28. When I was 28, I was getting divorced from my first husband. I owned a house in Austin. Did he own a house in England? He always told me he sold his boat to buy his first house with my mom. Is that true? The trick of this lie is that the two people who were really involved are now dead.

This experience, which right now is only 24 hours old, has taught me that is never worth it to lie. Never. What would have happened if he had just told my mom about all of this, like we would all expect to have happen between two people committing to each other in marriage? Would anything have changed? Only one, to be certain. The lie wouldn’t have been there. My uncle used to stay with them, he says. My grandmother helped with the babies. My aunt was living with my grandparents when they split and she remembers everything.

My dad was always best in a group, at a party. In person, he was very challenging. He was avoidant, afraid of commitment, and angry. When he was confronted, he became so angry that he was scary. I suppose that guaranteed that no one would get close. He drank to excess, creating health problems for himself and his family. He died three years ago, and during the last year of his life, became very emotional. He cried alot. He said to me once, “I used to be a great man” or something similar. I told him, “you ARE a great man, Daddy”. Despite talking to my brother and I a lot over those last two months especially, and we did talk, a lot, he never told us about this. Was this his wound? Was it the reason that everything else happened? It seems so. By avoiding three people, or perhaps four (apparently my dad’s first wife’s mom did not like him and did not want them to get married), he dragged in 5 brothers and sisters and their partners, his second wife, friends(?), my mom, my brother and me. All drawn into a web of sadness that was never soothed or understood, just forgiven, because that is what you do when people die.

This is just the first time I will write about this. I had to get something down, some sort of recording of how it feels to know an answer, perhaps the answer, to the question that I have been asking about my father for years. I knew something had happened. I thought it was something in Vietnam. Right now I don’t even know if he was ever there. I don’t know very much about him at all. Today, I feel like I know more and less, good and bad. My takeaway from 43 years on the planet is that it is both/and yes/no good/bad all the time, together. They are mixed, hand-in-hand, like dough, chocolate, or clay.

In some ways, it feels like a circle has been closed, soldered shut with fire and time and communication, finally. I wish I could hug my dad and tell him I am so sorry that he felt that this was the best decision he could make at that time, and I also feel like shaking my dad by the shoulders and shouting, “WHAT IN THE ACTUAL FUCK?”. It is both. I understand the sadness and shame, but the lie? The behavior? My brother and I hope to reach our brothers and we hope that they want to speak with us. Beyond that, no expectations. Goddammit, Daddy.

p.s. I hope you know the reference in the title today. I think it is the appropriate spell for today. I wish I could shout it at my dad.

Control Issues

Why is it so hard?

Today, I found myself holding my head in my hands whilst standing at the counter full of gold jewelry. I was thinking about being a public school teacher for 20 years and how the president-to-be wants to eliminate the Department of Education. I was thinking about life and careers and goals and how maybe, it’s just not all that important.

I listened to sad music for awhile, made jewelry for awhile, and then proceeded to watch my dog barf and poop in various spots throughout the gallery (really hope I found all of them!) for the rest of the day. He even pooped in front of two customers. Yikes.

Then it got dark, and the moon ascended and when I got outside it was bright white-yellow and the clouds were just covering its glow and they were blue and grey and it was magical. It was so damn dark for 5:05, let me tell you.

Then I came home and cried for a while and talked with my husband and then talked with my cousin and they both told me to look around and stop being such a sad sack. OK they were nicer than that, but they did tell me to look around at all the good stuff.

Why do we spend so much time on the bad? Is it because so much of the bad is flying at our faces at any given moment? Why isn’t the good flying at our faces?

My friend Kevin is telling me to think about things that are in my control versus things that aren’t. This concept is my new personal project. Control is an illusion but it is so deceptive, so slippery – I want to try to hold onto the smoke of it so much!

This post is a bit of a ramble. Kevin also asked me what will I do if the worst case scenario happens? I don’t have an answer to that at all. What will I do?

Cool Breeze, Bright Stars

I was just outside, eating leftovers on my front porch. The house, when it was for sale, advertised said porch as a “farmer’s porch”. I am uncertain what that means. It is stained this bizarre burnt-orange UT color, which contrasts terribly with the sage green of the house. I hope to change it sometime soon. But I really hope to shingle the house soon, so that the color of the farmers porch doesn’t matter as much.

I was just talking to the stars, as I do. I was talking to my friend Mary Ann, too, about how much I miss her and wish I could talk to her. I wish I could talk to her about how weird everything got after she died and what bitches her friends were to me and to a couple of other friends. It was a mass disintegration and reorientation around a small crew of rich bitches. I guess it was inevitable. I asked the stars tonight: did I move to Maine, change my life, sell my house that I loved so much, because I hated my job and my best friend died?

The answer: not exactly. When I left Maine last time, it was like I left my art here. I still did art in Texas, but not to the same caliber or with the same intensity or regularity as I do here. Texas moves so fast and there are no seasons and there are so many highways; it is easy to just go with the flow and not examine yourself all that much. Also, in rapid fire over the course of three years, Cody’s grandma moved in with us, she died, there was a global pandemic, my dad died, and then Mary Ann died. This summer, Kate died and a few months ago, Michelle died and so did Brian. It has been terrible….let me rephrase. It has been bewildering to me. What happened that made Brian and Michelle so sad that they chose to leave us when they had taught me so much over the years? I can see Michelle smiling at me across a table, laughing, tossing her pretty blonde hair, laughing to keep from crying. Brian I can see spinning in a classroom, sharing music and asking us to think more deeply, to see connections. I remember the night he showed us True Stories when I was 15 years old, and didn’t understand it. I didn’t understand alot of what he taught us til I was in college. I have been listening to lots of Stars of the Lid and I feel that lessons are held within those songs, too….lessons to slow down and think. Think, and then do.

So Texas moved too fast, and Maine is so slow. We are changing into the fall and the air tonight is chilly and brisk and beautiful. The stars twinkle; there is a special fall-winter sharpness to the starlight that I love.

I am so thankful to have this time to investigate and think about what is going on with me. I am thankful to be able to ask myself: why am I so sad right now? Today I told my best friend that maybe I can’t be happy anywhere and he laughed and said something about how our dopamine levels are probably off or maybe we were both born in bad moods.

I think my new question is where the sadness is coming from; what is its origin story? Can I find it? I am sure I can. For so long, for years, it was my abortion that happened when I was 15 and the guilt I felt around it. I no longer see it that way; I now know that it was the right decision at the time. My new task is to examine these feelings of now and figure out where they come from. I think they have something to do with my job two years ago at Booker T Washington Elementary and working with two very challenging children. I didn’t know what to do, I am afraid that I hurt them, and I know that they hurt me, physically and mentally. I don’t even know how to describe those experiences yet, but am looking forward to working through some it with my therapist this fall. Cody says it wasn’t my fault and that I did what I was told to do and what I thought I had to do. I remember though, many moments when I just wanted to run away, to hide, to close my eyes and have it be over. Unrealistic.

I wonder what trauma response that experience touched on; it pressed a button to be sure. Lately I have been so interested in epigenetics and how sometimes our responses are not ours, but learned and coded in our genes to predispose us to bad moods, sadness, depression, anxiety, etc. I need to read about it. I am convinced there are generations of sad, scared people inside my soul. I have to tell them that they need to stay in their time period and let me explore mine.

I have been listening to old music, too. I wonder what is happening. What is the journey in my mind? I am hoping to remember to write down as much of it as I can.

Something New

It is the end of August – the light is sharpening in its angle and the sun is moving ever lower on the tree line each day. I did something wild and left my public school teaching job about 2 weeks ago, and here I sit, in my favorite armchair, which I share with my favorite dog, wondering.

We moved to Maine one year and two months ago. Moving cross country in your forties is no small feat and it has been harder than I thought it would be. Peoples’ lives have changed and everyone has aged. Houses are so expensive, if you can even get one. Wages, if you’re lucky, just barely keep up with the costs. There is this other aspect of middle-aged life that I am curious about, too. It is the sadness; I wonder where it comes from, and does everyone share it?

With middle age comes a lot of experiences, and I think quite a bit of loss. There are a few people that I know who have made it to their mid forties without significant losses of loved ones, but, on the whole, it seems that the decade comes with an acceptance that people you love are going to die, and sometimes, a lot of them are going to die, closely together. Some of them will be old, and so their deaths will be understandable, but some will be young, and will die so quickly that it is like whiplash when they go.

My friend Kate passed away last month, a week shy of her 50th birthday. She died after being sick for 11 months. I will write more about Kate later; she deserves a deep-dive into my many times and experiences with her and learnings from her, but suffice it to say for today, her death scared the shit out of me. I didn’t know that that could happen: that you could be diagnosed and pass away in 11 months. It cemented a decision I had already made to jump into the unknown.

Here I am. Seems a little nuts. I own a house and in a week won’t have any health insurance. Somehow, it will work out. My husband is such a sweet person but he, too, is struggling with his own middle-aged sadness. I am not sure where his comes from, because he has trouble identifying his emotions. I think he was taught at a young age that emotions were a weak enemy to be vanquished and sent away; he did that, to his current peril. He says his brain feels like mud. I worry about him and want him to have dreams again.

This place is so seasonal, and here we are, in a transition again. A great friend and I were talking today about how fall feels early, but it’s possible that it just feels that way because we spent most of our lives living in a place with no seasons (Texas). I found a red maple leaf on the driveway two days ago, and today I saw an entire red maple tree on the drive home.

Today I drove into Northeast Harbor to go to work and was struck with a feeling that I don’t feel about it the same way that I did before. I am not certain that I have lost some magic feeling, or just that my feelings on the whole are a bit muddled right now. I am worried that I might struggle to be happy anywhere, and what that means to me. I am curious about how I find peace in accepting myself. How do I keep my inherent loneliness at bay? Or, alternatively, how do I welcome it in and befriend the feeling? My husband and I were speaking about that yesterday; about being people who have always felt lonely, and yet, are together.

Does it come from my 0-3 formative experiences? Is it genes? Is it the crazy stressful harsh and intense family of origin I come from? Probably. But what do I do with this?

I am working on a book that is based on many of the writings I posted here about 10 years ago. Over the next month or so, I will be removing those posts as this blog goes in a new direction; this version of me, not the older version. So many lives in this one life, if we are lucky. One of my mentors, one of my professors from grad school, told me to write everything down. I had said that to someone else, so I have decided to take my own advice, and his, and be here now, writing and musing. I think that I am finding some kernels of truth within the annals of my mind, but it is a deep labyrinth in there and will take some time.

Thanks for the love,

Son, can you play me a memory?

What makes me so afraid? Who is the one who is scared?

I have been thinking a lot about genetics and memories; how many of our memories are ours? I don’t mean remembering your kindergarten teacher, but rather, the memories that trigger our responses to things. How do I deal with change? How do I deal with control and the fear of the future?

Please forgive me as I wax poetic a bit here; it may be too many episodes of Northern Exposure, or too many trees, the way the light looks on the water each day, or the way the light itself is changing as we make our way out of summer. Hard to say.

I want to make this big change in my life. I want to quit my teaching job and get a new job and become an art therapist, even though I am already an art therapist. I want to learn more about it so that I can do it more meaningfully. I want to volunteer/work for hospice and talk to people who are dying, and their families. I want to work with kids who are on the autism spectrum. I want to work with people who have cancer, brain injuries, who are old and who are young.

In about a week or so I have to make this decision and pull the trigger of stability and quit the job that the school district so graciously gave me back in April or May. I feel sort of guilty about this, but not really. I feel that all of us who serve others understand the spirit of a calling; something that tugs at your heartstrings so hard you’d be a fool to not pay attention.

Part and parcel of this desire, though, is this fear. It is REAL. It is fierce. It says: what if you end up under a bridge? What if you can’t find a job? What if you can’t pay your mortgage? What if you disappoint everyone? Isn’t that interesting?

Last night was my mom’s 73rd birthday and I concocted a whole plan for her birthday: fancy dinner out at a fancy restaurant. Within about 20 minutes I recognized that this was all about ME and not anyone else. My mom was answering texts about real estate on her phone, River and Maddy were talking about whatever it was on their phones, Cody looked uncomfortable, my brother and I were just sitting trying to make it all tolerable and workable. We went to the Claremont, which is so pretty, but we stood out like sore thumbs in our lack of pink wealthy Hawaiian print and Indian block print dresses. Cody felt that everyone was looking at him; I knew better. They wanted us to look at them. Dinner was delicious if not exciting, but it was insanely expensive and so, yet again, I learn a lesson by it literally being charged to my bank account. $410 for 6 people seems, even for Maine in July, a bit much.

WHAT AN IDIOT – I said to myself all night, not sleeping. I said it all day, too.

I am about to go to bed now, and try to let it go. An expensive lesson, but a good one. My mom doesn’t care. We could have gone out for ice cream. I so desperately want her to be happy that I spent $410 on that hope; in vain. She isn’t happy, she doesn’t want fun. She is who she is.

Gah.

OK so maybe I am not an idiot, perhaps I am a deluded hopeful person (not much difference there). My mom is definitely at the forefront of my mind’s eye when I think of quitting my job and starting something totally new. I want her visage to go away. I don’t think it’s really real.

So who is afraid? Is my grandma? My grandpa? My father? My nana? I dedicate the next few days to that exploratory mission.

Good night.

The Grasping Hands of Primates are an Adaptation to Life in the Trees

There was the first spring, when the roses bloomed in February – or perhaps it was even January – I have forgotten. In the front of the garden lay the double pink and the yellow roses, standing stalwart against the North wind. A late February ice storm beat them back to the ground; I almost thought they were lost, but no, roses are strong.

The second spring came similarly; why were all the storms so strong now, as if sending us a message from on high, something we were supposed to notice? There was the hail storm that felt as if someone was pouring golf-ball size hail from the roof amidst a green sky like one of a tornado. The tornado came later, and we all learned that the scariest parts of tornados is that they are invisibly powerful as they tear off your roof.

My roof remained unscathed; my friend sent me a photo of the tornado traveling just above our house on its way out of town where it wrecked a fine line of homes and barns in a path of destruction.

The changes happen slowly; perhaps we should have known this. I should have known this, as an armchair scientist and teacher of critical thinking, discernment. How could it be fast like in so many stories? It was slow.

I often wonder about princesses in carriages; gazing out the windows at the landscape. What did they think about? Were they in conflict with their material possessions in contrast with the lives of their people? My doctor said to me two weeks ago: we all had gotten way too used to all the Amazon, click-a-button and have it shit, it was time for a change.

A change is here; I feel it settling around me and I am trying to choose how to respond. I keep planting trees. I have planted six so far. My husband said last night, “I will be working in the garden on the day they blow the world apart”.

Could it be? Every day I go into a classroom and turn on lights, log into the internet, kids come in and go and get breakfast and later, lunch. We walk up a green hillside dotted with dandelions and if we have time, go into the woods to walk the trails. Children are friends, get mad at each other, stare into their phone screens, cry, laugh, and make fun of me. I love it. The children everywhere are the best part of the gig. I think every day about children in Israel, Gaza, Yemen, Ukraine, Russia, the Congo, the Sudan, etc. and I wonder do they get to walk into a classroom?

I remember teaching in Philly 12 years ago and how surprised I was at the world within the world I was then a part of. The other day there was an article about that same neighborhood in the New York Times and it made me so sad. Why? I think because I know now that it is worse than it was when I was there, and that fact is so shocking to me. I remember walking to the Dominican restaurant down the block to get lunch or to the little shops under the El to get candy or cookies for kids. There were no homeless people sick from drugs then; there were simply drug markets selling the drugs that would then populate all the blocks, all the corners. I remember taking a photo of a vacant lot with a hurricane fence, overgrown with weeds and wondering why there were no trees there.

For me, peace is coming in tiny moments and I have to actively pursue them. Dusting furniture, looking at the ocean, cooking dinner, planting a tree, refilling a bird feeder; all are tiny moments that are expanding into a greater peace. I look at the pine boughs in late afternoon sun and the way clouds look early in the morning and remember that we are all so tiny in this cosmos, and it will continue long after we are gone, whether through simple mortality or grave human error.

During the eclipse, I watched with awe the power of the Sun, and thought, without that one thing, all is lost! How amazing. We used to think that we were so powerful, before. Now we understand that nothing is certain, clear, or real. Perhaps it is time to jump into the unknown? Perhaps it is time to recognize that our hands are empty, but when we reach out to grasp another, the grasp and the hand are real.

Good night.

I love you, Michelle!

With her goddess-like beauty (blonde wavy smooth 1920s hair with her beautiful bod! Her smile! Her laugh!), immeasurable intellect, wittiness, caring heart, and a little bit of sass-spice-wicked-impishness, I say goodbye to my friend.

She was lost in the blink of an eye, just. like. that. Gone.

The last two days I have been remembering Michelle and mostly what I find so funny and graceful and beautiful is that I can see her smiling and laughing across a table, like we are sitting at a diner. Her sister today asked me to say a prayer for her and I said I already was: prayers upon prayers upon thoughts and memories and pictures in my mind of her. When I was 18 years old, I thought Michelle was the coolest girl I had ever met. I had met her a few years earlier but actually became friends with her when I moved to Austin. She lived with her smart, cool boyfriend who I had loved and respected for years as one of the good guys in speech and debate. Their apartment was in West Campus, in a small building with a central atrium, open to the elements. They had a patio that looked out on it, and we sat out there and shot the shit. One night she taught me how to make everything I baked vegan by using a banana and some flax seed powder in the place of an egg. Her apartment was painted in all these amazing ways including a room that was matte light blue and metallic silver vertical striped.

Like all of us, there was tragedy as well as success and hilarity. I am beginning to wonder so much about our generation and our tendency toward a) having a history of traumatic childhood experiences b) coupled with addictive tendencies for alcohol, drugs, relationships, etc. There seem to be so many of us that struggle with these two issues, and I suppose that the addictions are the coping mechanisms for the childhoods. I hate to blame the parents, but there is something in our generation; kids raising themselves as parents were absentee due to work or their own addictive tendencies or whatever it was. Parenting now, speaking as a parent myself, is so different than the parenting that I remember experiencing.

Michelle was one of the first people who encouraged me to say “fuck off” to parents who said hurtful, shaming, or mean things to their kids. She was an advocate for the no bullshit philosophy that many of us now understand is this thing called “having boundaries” and “standing up for oneself”. In the 90s, this wasn’t common especially among women who had grown up in the South (or in English-Texan households, like myself). Her attitude of being ok with who she was was inspiring to me as a young adult, and I wanted to be just like her. She took me in like a friend or like a little sister, showed me a world that was new, and was always loving and laughing.

A few years ago she asked me to go to breakfast with her at Kerbey Lane, a small cafe in central Austin that used to be so easy to get into, and now, like everything else in that super-saturated town, is impossible. But Michelle was worth it, so we went and we talked about divorce and how terrible it is, about bad boyfriends and husbands (turns out that the smart, cool college boyfriend became a not great husband (there’s so much of that, too, but that is a meditation for another time), and about what we do next once we learn all this information. That was the last time that I saw her, and she looked great with her beautiful blonde hair and her smiling face and her laugh and her true beautiful self. Since then, we have talked alot, consistently every few weeks, chatting here and there about things both meaningful and not.

In August we lost another mutual friend who I wasn’t as close with but still respected as another one of the good guys of debate (they were few and far between), the person who introduced me to David Byrne and the Talking Heads, Henri Foucault and disciplinary power, the importance of developing our own mechanisms for complex, critical thought and the role that music and art have in helping us find joy and calm amidst desperation. It is terribly hard to know that Brian died the way he did when so many people loved and respected him. It is terribly hard to know that Michelle died so randomly, so quickly; we still don’t know her cause of death, but I know what I want to say to her.

Dear Michelle,

I am so thankful for the people who gave me the time of day when I couldn’t see anything clearly. Now, being older, I realize that I know very little except the importance of being available and loving to others. If I could say this to you in person, I would. I want to tell you how formative you were to who I am now and how thankful I am for that and all these years in between. When I found out that we had lost you in a moment that no one planned for, no one could have expected, all I guess I can do is pray and hope that wherever you are, your energy is at peace. I love you.

Love, your friend, Patience

I hope to take more time to pay attention to my life and the friends in it, spending the time wherever and whenever I can. The one thing I do know after living these last 5 years is that life is so precious and it can be taken away in a moment, a day, a few weeks, a month. You never really know. Grief-love is our ultimate learning experience, I think. That’s all for today.

A 2024 New Year Love Letter

Maxfield Parrish “Hilltop Farm, Winter” 1949 – he just ***knows*** winter light so well

[I am loving this new album by Andre 3000]

January.

Today I spent the day watching snow fall, steadily, increasingly fast, then slowing down to a peaceful stop around sunset. I took my dog out for a walk in the half-light; everything was cast in blue and so quiet, as it is after it snows.

This is a new year, one that comes after many hard ones. There has been so much LIFE in these last four or five years. Starting with taking care of my husband’s grandma in the summer of 2019 followed by a global pandemic, Masters degrees, the death of my father, of a dear friend who was more like a brother-father than a friend, and the passing of one of my best friends. Add to the mix, changing jobs, confronting a school system that I found morally injurious, navigating the first few years of marriage to a wonderful guy, getting a sweet little dog, selling our amazing magical house, and moving here to Maine.

Maine is calm and quiet; every night I look out the window at stars (as long as it isn’t cloudy) that hover above the tree line. We have no visible neighbors here, but do hear the sounds of cars passing on the highway. Our house is peaceful and warm and cozy and laid out so well; we each have space to be and to do, and I love the kitchen.

Lately, I have been thinking about my thought processes and where I am in my life. I have been asking myself: am I happy? Will I be happy? Is this happiness? What is this all about, anyway? I have watched so many people that I love go through so much during these pandemic years. We are all changed. But we would be even if there hadn’t been COVID. Perhaps it has helped a lot of us get somewhere? I know it has helped me.

For most of my life I have struggled with staying in one place. My father was a ramblin’ man to be sure; he was a traveler who worked internationally and never wanted to be in one place, I don’t think. I have said many times that I am glad that he had my brother and I, but that he wasn’t really cut out for family life. Even when my brother and I were alive and growing up, it seemed to be painful for him to be with us and be a father who helped our mother with all the things that are necessary for a life in America at the time they were trying it out. When he died, I sat with his body in the hospital and held his hand wondering where he was. I knew that he was somewhere fabulous, somewhere in the world of memory that he lived in. I am sure he was drinking really good booze and eating really good food while wearing a fancy pair of shoes and a glittering wristwatch. He had such good taste in things.

I think I inherited so much from my dad; my temperament, my intelligence, my fear of staying, my fear of disappointing everyone. For many years I was worried that if someone knew my inner persona that they would know I wasn’t worth knowing; poor little girl inherited that from somewhere. It was an idea plucked from the ether of family and history and had/has no bearing on reality. I came to that conclusion after many years of therapy and talking with friends. I don’t think my dad ever felt he could do that. I inherited my anxiety from him, my emotional temper that (luckily) very rarely shows up. With him, he wore it on his sleeve and it was almost ever-present. Last semester, when I was trying to decide to leave a job that was not right for me for so many reasons, I was consumed by worry and I immediately thought of him and wondered if that was why he seemed so angry all the time. I feel relief that my journey with these feelings has been different.

I have realized since starting my new job last week that I do not want a stressful job, maybe ever again. It is wonderful to be in a positive environment where things are easy going and most everyone is happy enough. I go at 7:30 and I come home at 3. The ease of it is helping me process the lingering stressors and confusions that still swirl in my mind; it is also helping me figure out what I want my future to look like.

Choosing stability when one has grown up without it is very challenging; I inherently am distrustful of myself and my decisions, despite how they look from the outside. I can look at myself rationally and say: you have done a very good job in being a grown up. I can look at myself emotionally and say: but it doesn’t feel right (the problem being I don’t know what does). In times like this I am so thankful for my husband and his family and their constancy with each other and their normal behavior with each other and with me. They have showed me what it can be like. So have my friends and their parents.

The snow fell and I was sewing a quilt for my son and meditating on trust. Trusting myself, trusting others, trusting the process, trusting that life will unfold. I was reading a new year meditation today, one of those goofy ones on Instagram that flash by your eyes in an instant but nevertheless make a mark. It asked: what if what you wish for comes true? What if it all works out? My stomach hurts when I think of things this way as there are deep-seated core cells of my body that don’t trust that these things could ever be true, despite all the hard evidence to the contrary. As I was sewing his baby blanket into the back side of his quilt, I thought about how he is in college now, and starting his life, and I remembered when I was his age, starting mine. It was so long ago now: 25 years ago. A quarter of a century ago, I was a baby grown-up.

In Maine right now I am a long-term substitute teacher who makes quilts and who is brainstorming a line of jewelry for 2024. I am helping my friend with an online quilt class she is hosting which is incredible and is using my Masters degree, which makes me happy. I am cooking in a kitchen that is so well set-up for me. I am dreaming in a king-size bed with a dog, two cats, and a sweet husband, who, I am sure, is going through the same wending thought processes as me.

My goals for the year are to stay in the present and to worry less. I hope I can do this, with the help of more therapy, which I just re-started with a therapist I know and trust who I can see in person. I hope to focus on my own creativity and developing my skills at sharing it with others as well as building a career integrating technology with the arts and using the internet as a meaningful teaching avenue for myself and others. I want to keep the slow pace. I want to spend time with friends and let people in to who I am without being so scared all the time. I want to stay grateful and do what I want to do because I want to take advantage of every moment that I have on this beautiful earth. So many times I think Mary Ann is sitting in the back seat of my car as I drive around, or is standing behind me when I am doing something. Sometimes I feel her poking me gently in the right shoulder blade, reminding me to BE ALIVE, BE ALIVE, BE ALIVE!

Everything is brand new, and yet familiar. Happy New Year.

Maxfield Parrish, “Birches in Winter”, 1946

Moving Cross Country at Almost 43

Today it got dark at about 415pm but it was darkening as I drove off the island back to Ellsworth for a job interview. It was 3:30 as I peeled out of the school driveway onto the highway, watching the light rays bend down down down, closer to the ground.

There are still some yellow leaves on the trees and the pine boughs seem to hang extra low as if to say they are tired, too. Everyone is ready for a rest.

We have been here for almost 5 months and it has zipped by; I find it disturbing how fast time passes these days. I suppose the rate only increases with time. I think it’s the rate that makes every moment feel so precious, as if you must satiate yourself and appreciate everything around you at any given moment. Or at least, that’s how I feel.

Last week was the two year anniversary of my Dad’s death and the week before that was the year anniversary of my dear friend, Mary Ann. A little while ago I was standing in the kitchen of the small school I have been assisting since August and she stood behind me telling me get my act together and get out of there. I made the decision, there and then, but it took me another two weeks to actually resign.

Time. Time passing. Time passing quickly. Time passing quickly, so. Time passing quickly, so notice. Time passing quickly so notice everything. Don’t waste time.

I am doing something I have never done before, which is to quit a job without having another one to take its place. I am trusting that it will all work out. Every evening I stare up at the sparkling stars rising on the east side of the house and thank them for buoying me through this, inspiring trust and providing a backdrop of understanding that it will be all right.

Moving across country at almost 43 was really, really hard. Much harder than I had thought. I was used to my rhythms and routines and the expectations of my day. Since coming here, I haven’t been able to find a rhythm or routine just yet but it feels like it might be just around the corner. Here’s hoping.

We bought a house in this little town named Hancock, about 2 seconds from the east border of Ellsworth. I love it, love the house and all its spaces. Sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night and look out the windows and see a sea of stars, sparkling in the darkness. It is so dark here: no streetlights, no people. Just the footprints of deer, some great rooms, some beautiful windows, time to breathe and think: peace.