25 Words or LessI've learned from my son
is to face my humility for the child I was
and to admire the humanity of the parents I had.
—me strauss Letting me be
Once there was a little girl with eyes that see deeply. She could see many things, deep things. She could see when people hurt and make them feel better. She lived in a cabin in the woods with the other scatterlings and seers. They would gather together and tell stories in the woods.
The tulips are out by the Day School. They’re standing tall in front of every landmark house on Hawthorne Street. Some are red and yellow in new sod. Some are white and scattered randomly. They’ve even made their presence known in front of my very own building.
Most of the time that I knew her, she was sitting in a chair. She was then as tall as I am now, and as thin. I think of that often. How strong the genes must be to have gone from her to him to me.
The two meanest things I was working on are done. They were mean in the way only words badly used can be. They pulled at my brain trying it, tying it into knots, turning it round and round, because thoughts were not well thought. I had to stop and go back time and time and again . . . and again.
One of my earliest blogging memories is of discovering Unburned Pieces of The Mind by Scot Cunningham. I read a piece he wrote called A Mid-August Stroll. It moved me to write this comment before I left.Thanks Scot, for the clarity, thought, and thoughtfulness in your writing. The further I read the more comfortable I became easing myself into your day. Enjoy the walk. Hope it gives you what your writing gave me.
I'm beginning to find that having a blog is akin to having a village store.You have the regulars that stop in on a regular basis to get their usual wares
and to catch up on anything new. And then there's the new person in town who stops in for a look see. The new person might get a couple of the regulars curious to the point where one asks, "Who's that." To which the reply is, "Don't know, someone passing through I guess." As for my blog, I'm glad you stopped by to have a read and for your kind response.
Since you're a newcomer, I decided to check out your blog, and I find I'm very pleasantly surprised with both your content and your craftsmanship. I like personal narratives, especially when they're well written. "Trusting and Believing" reminded me of the many conversations I used to have with my grandmother. Without "Hope" and "Joy," as your essay so eloquently demontrates,we lose our "connection to humanity." Your last paragraph is especially poignant and makes that connection self-evident without being contrived. Beautifully done. I think I might find myself becoming a regular. As such I have linked your site to mine.
Thanks again for visiting, Scot.
I’ve never been paranoid. That requires a sureness of thinking about such things that I don’t have. Instead, I’ve been afraid−afraid that people weren’t telling me something I should know, afraid that they might be spending time while waiting for something better to do.
One day I was riding my bike home from the Jankowski’s. FAST. I was five minutes late for dinner. Late wasn’t a good idea. With my mom, late was a matter of principle.
Sometimes when we were little, Mr. Brunick would take a while before he’d get around to mowing his back lawn. The grass would grow a little higher than it probably should, but my friend, Craig, and I didn’t mind. We’d be glad, in fact, especially the first time it happened early in the spring.
Each morning at 8:00 my dad got up after about four hours sleep. He would go to work. What he did there, he never said. As I grew up I sort of pieced it together. He opened the back door to let in the homeless man who helped with the clean up from the night before while my dad readied the barroom and the kitchen and talked to those folks and farmers who for one reason or another were in a redneck saloon before the sun had hit midday. He also met with the typical sales reps and vendors that venture forth to small town taverns and saloons.
My younger, older brother thought it was his role to teach me about people. He thought like my mother−that without a little more armor I didn’t stand a chance against the world. It was sure to eat me up. He often took it upon himself to teach me how to navigate with smarts. He was a cool kid and clever. I was a little girl without guile.
I remember playing in the basement I couldn't have been more than four. Listening to the record player, I’d keep turning the tuning dial, trying to decide which way it should be for me to hear the sound as I should.
We all try to change the world with our words and ideas.
I write some words. They are the truth that stretches from my being up through my heart. I use my head and fingers only to get them down where I can see them. I look at them in wonder. I’ve been able to make something that has so much meaning. I tinker with it gently.
As time goes by I find my self wanting to slow down a bit. Take my life like a nice cognac one sip at a time. I wake in the morning and stretch myself into my head. Not stretching to reach for something, stretching to find a place that feels right. Right place, right time.
A small state park just outside of my hometown has paths and trees for walking and wandering any time of year. I’m not really one for that kind of stuff, except for every now and then, when I am. It’s usually the first of spring when the walking and wandering happens. I get this feeling that I want to be in the world again. Can’t say exactly what kicks up the wanderlust. I don’t know. I just know something does.
Some days my life is so much heat and dust. It’s a Texas day in the sun, digging for hours through the clay just to make room for a tiny flower. It’s the hot Texas sun turning my skin brown, while I mix the sand and loam to make dirt. I don’t even know my face is streaked with brown from wiping my forehead or that I’ve got a blister from pushing the shovel into ground that was fighting back. Those hard-working days go on and on so long that they’re all I know.
When I go to the restaurant I know, I order the same food. I don’t like having to figure out what I might want again. I don’t like being disappointed when I could have had what I already know I like. When I drive to a place I like to go, I take the route I like, I don’t usually wander. I look forward to the sights I know are coming, and I don’t want to give them up for something that might not be there.
I am a very lucky girl. I read and think for a living. I get to wander through thoughts, see where they take me, and watch how people respond to them. I write stories or imagine places and color in details with tiny brushstrokes and wonder whether folks will notice them.
For the longest while, I’ve felt like a magnetic field has been around me. Maybe it’s been there all of my life. I used to joke it. I’d say things about my magnetic personality making elevators go, but this past year I’ve actually felt it−felt myself inside of it. It’s been a weird sort of knowing that how I felt was being transmitted, telegraphed through the air, like a boxer’s punch to people I couldn’t see, to folks who didn’t know me, to the stars and to the universe. That all electrons knew when I was on or off.
I told Meryl how it was to talk to this guy who’d only read my writing, yet he knew me. Well, he was a writer too. I guess he could read between the lines. He talked to me as though he was aware that I had no hidden agenda. That he could take what I said as what I meant. I almost danced with energy as I related the freeing feeling. I was able to be myself without worrying that I was being mistaken, misunderstood, mistrusted. It was as if my brain could come out to play without worrying. Playing is such a good thing.
Almost since I can remember I’ve been phenomenal at multitasking. I can remember 83 tangents of a conversation while typing a story and answering three questions. At the same time, I might be clicking through a calendar and checking the status of three programs, keeping nine balls in the air, and four plates spinning. I’ll stop to tie my shoes without missing a comma, and I’ll work my way through a novel before I get to the end of my third cup of coffee. Doing any less than that always seemed boring.