Be Careful

“Be careful what you wish for, Missy.”  I can hear my mother’s words reverberate in my head.  Be careful what you wish for, be careful what you wish, be careful.  Be careful.  I was raised to be fearful.  Somehow, the times, the burgeoning women’s movement, the rise of feminism, the advent of women as something other than playthings for men, allowed me to transcend my upbringing.

I stood there in front of the travel agency door looking at the poster.  Travel!  It said.  And oh I wanted to go in and book a trip- to somewhere, anywhere I haven’t been before.  To escape nostalgia.  I wanted new and unfamiliar.

But in times of decision, I heard my mother’s voice.  Over and over.  Boys don’t like girls who…your future husband will want…, when you are grown and married…, when. . . It was like I never had a chance.  And then I was forty with a husband and I didn’t give a fuck what he wanted.  That was my sign to get out.  I wished for a life other than what I had, and my mother’s voice came back to me, “Be careful what you wish for.”

Photo by Keszthelyi Timi on Unsplash

I have been sincere with my wishes.  They represent my core values.  I didn’t need to be careful; they were front and center and required no deliberation.

I left my marriage.  Not gleefully I recognized the tragedy and the failure it represented, but as the bible said, be ye not unequally yoked.  We were unequal in every way.  It was a disaster.

And here I was possessed of half of my retirement account and newly paid-off credit cards.  I went in.  A bell tinkled with the movement of the door.  The woman at the front desk seemed surprised and I said as much. 

She said, “We don’t get much foot traffic.”

I said, “I need a trip to somewhere I’ve never been.  A place most people don’t go.  A place where I can lose myself in the novelty of moving through unfamiliar streets.” 

She snapped her fingers and said, “I have just the place for you.  And we have a promotion going on.  It’s quite the deal.  Free airfare if you book The Budapest Hotel.”

I paused for a second and said, “I’ll take it.  Do I need a visa?  Travel papers other than a passport?” I didn’t even know what country Budapest was in.  I knew nothing.  It was perfect.

“Yes, but it’s pro forma. We can take care of it here.  Just fill out some online forms and voila!”

An hour later I had everything I needed to leave for Hungary the following Tuesday.

I didn’t second guess myself, oddly enough.  I strode into my boss’s office and told him I needed five weeks off beginning Tuesday and he said no.  So I said, “I quit.”  And he said, “Now woah, wait a minute…” but he wouldn’t relent and neither would I.

I was sitting on the plane, in first class no less due to an upgrade for the number of weeks I had reserved a room at The Budapest Hotel.  It took nearly all my retirement account to reserve the suite.  But I didn’t care.  Maybe I’d care in 20 years, but not now.

The flight attendant brought me a glass of crisply cold champagne, a finger bowl, and a warm towel.  The juxtaposition of the temperatures and the textures was sublime.  I handed her the used towel and she took the bowl.  I was left with nothing but the bubbly and my thoughts and I penned this. 

I think this trip will be transformative.  I’m going to keep this journal and document my deepest feelings.  The ones I’ve always shied away from because of Mother’s voice in my head.

Changes

Photo by x ) on Unsplash

Nothing in my world is certain but “this too shall pass” which is my stock answer to everyone and anyone who asks for advice. Good or not, whatever is going on will be interrupted by change. 

Sometimes I let my guard down, thinking I’ve reached a state of stasis where the pattern of my life is on a path that has been steady (sometimes unrelentingly so) and I think, This is it.  This is what my last twenty years are going to look like” and then the Universe laughs at me and drops a boulder on what I thought would be a steady path.

John Lennon said, “Life is what happens while you are busy making other plans.”

Well, this time the Universe dropped a boulder ON me and I’ve been trying to carry the damn thing down the path.  Finally, I realized:

Put the damn boulder down.  There there.  See how nice that feels.  Walk around the damn things or crawl over them, but they’re not to be carried. And while you’re at it, clean out that backpack.  You don’t need all that shit.  And get some sturdy hiking boots while you’re at it.  You are not a forest nymph – bare feet for these, the last 20 good years, are going to require support and thick soles.

I think they call realizations of this magnitude epiphanies.

I know this too shall pass, but what I thought was an impasse is simply a wake-up call.  All my life, I’ve had to switch paths.  I have no idea why I clung to this one.  It wasn’t headed anywhere particularly interesting. 

So, I’m heading into the forest where there are lions and tigers and bears, oh my.  I hope to find the Emerald City.  I could use a spa day.

A very broken Hallelujah

This image is from twelve years ago.

The wind is blowing.

From the west?

Will I ever experience gentle west winds again or will they fill me with fear and remembrance from here on out.

Trauma creates deep wounds that never quite heal despite all the scar tissue.  Ready to open up and bleed at the slightest provocation.

The windchimes, the ones of wood and copper handmade and tuned to a melodious phrase (I forget which key) by a company named Woodstock may be gone.  Or perhaps they’re in the debris left behind.

I used to love listening to them when the wind rustled on a summer evening.  The setting sun glinting on the copper.  They sounded like my heartstrings thrumming in contentment. During storms, they played a symphony of strong emotions.  I wonder what they sounded like when the tree sheared off. 

Did the tree scream?

Research now tells us that trees communicate with one another, have friends, and have a mechanism to help a struggling friend who is sick or malnourished or dying of thirst.  Is my forest in mourning?  Are they pumping nutrients to the stump? Are they singing a dirge when the west wind blows?

Much of the trunk of the tree still lays in my yard.  I need someone to cut two four-inch or so slabs.  I want a remembrance of that tree for me.  One for my son.  Charcuterie boards?  Maybe.  Something.  I have a friend who is a serious woodworker.  Perhaps she will have an idea. 

But I want that wood sheltered in my home.  The one miraculously still standing.  My heart home.

I’m in shock still, but able to recognize my good fortune.  My house should be collapsed.  It wasn’t built to sustain such a hit.  The tree was old.  I’m guessing the diameter was 36 inches or more. I hugged it a time or two.

Years ago, now, perhaps 15 or more, I planted a variety of climbing hydrangea.  It grows wild in the forests of Japan.  It needs shade and the north side of an oak tree to thrive.  It had both.  Slow growing, it had just started to take off – flowering its tiny white flowers in June.  I hope I can salvage it – move it to another oak tree.

My garden looks like a war zone.  The same wind that sheared my tree threw my lawn furniture, fountain, and garden tools around.  I’ve no doubt lost a lot of work.

But my house still stands.

Hallelujah.

Yes, Hallelujah in the vein of Leonard Cohen.  Perhaps I’ll write my own verse to that masterpiece. 

I offer up my own very broken hallelujah.  Grateful.  So grateful. 

The Sacred Hour

Dawn is the sacred hour.  We move from one world to the next accompanied by a dramatic lighting of this world.

Old Window in Finland by Helena Turpeinen, poster to View From My Window Facebook group

It wasn’t until my late 40s I was able to appreciate or regularly meet the dawn.  If my sleep schedule ever regulates, I will miss these holy hours.  I wake in the dark and cast off the stories my psyche told me while asleep and head for my beloved roll-top desk. 

Dependent on the time of year, it could be some time before the dawning or just minutes.

But as I write the stories and sip coffee in silence, I glance over my shoulder through the atrium doors to look for the first arc of light. 

It usually begins as a soft peachy pink rising with the fog over the hills and peeking through the trees.  Dependent on weather and time of year, the color will sometimes intensify, sometimes wane, but always is a hearkening.

Here we are again.  We made it to another day.

The silence is important. 

Soon, the birds will start and the world will begin its hustle, but for a few minutes it’s just light and the creation of a new day, the creation of a new story to be told.  Color on the silhouettes of the mountains bring me such contentment. 

In twelve days, I will be on the shore of Lake Okeechobee in Florida.  I’ve never been there before but I’ve seen sunset photos–another sacred part of the day.  I am eager to nestle with my lover before leaving our bed to sit on the dock with my mug of coffee and journal.  It won’t be silent – the lapping of the tide should, will, create its own sounds of peace.  I am eager to see the Spanish moss hanging from the trees light up as the sun begins it ritual. 

I’m sure I will photograph the scene in order to remember it, but I hope it imprints on my heart. 

This is the sacred hour.  Rejoice in the silence and witness the light.  Turn to a new page and tell the story.