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Archive for the ‘Reflections on the everyday’ Category

She’s brought news to my mailbox as long as I have lived here, and she’s quitting soon.

The newspaper lady – a woman capable of projecting a rolled newspaper into a mailbox newspaper slot while only barely slowing her vehicle. Ten years worth of daily news, and I can’t remember that she ever missed a day.

But impeccable aim and service are not her finest qualities. Every month without fail I received handwritten “thank you” notes for an added monthly $2 tip. She has the distinction of being the only person I ever knew to thank me for a “refreshing” tip, never failing to end her notes with the “God Bless” that is her steadfast trademark.

Even the notes don’t capture Naomi. The newspaper has cut her salary to 30% of what it was ten years ago, and carpel tunnel surgery is going to be her reward for all those magnificent hand-offs.

We have all known someone like her. Someone whose work ethic and faith fused a path she was happy to follow. And it is probably that simple happiness that is her finest quality, the greetings exchanged each winter afternoon as I trudged the neighborhood, the excitement as my garden came to bloom in the summer. She saw it, shared it all, every day, without fail.

Life is steady, purposeful, for people like Naomi. I will miss her.

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Like walls, doors are an essential architectural feature. No getting in, or out, without doors. Walls contain and hold up, but doors let it all out.

Doors punctuate walls. Although walls can get built up, or tumble down, their premise is structure. More cheeky, doors are both structure and movement. What an expanse life would be without doors. People pacing up and down, unable to get through. Doors are fundamental, it’s good to know where they are.

Some of the best doors, though, are unseen in a landscape. Present, but not visible. Stumbled upon, they provide some of life’s greatest moments.

But some of those unseen, not-so-accidental, doors are the most frightening. No choice but to go through, hope for the happy ending, sometimes there, sometimes not.

Locked doors, lots of those in life – sometimes that’s good – they protect. But sometimes that squeeze stems from rusty hardware, broken, unhinged, unable to mediate any longer, cold and heat rush in, exposes things that shouldn’t be.

Doors themselves have personality, made of different things, designs, paint. Some doors swing, lots are hollow, the sturdiest are solid. Even two doors that look exactly the same are not, their use and outlook differ, experience matters with doors.

So too with doors, like real estate, location is everything. Front doors have a lot to say and see – most of the drama. Back doors live on the sly, admit and deny the real world. Side doors are in-between the headlines and the backpage, no show there. Side doors are for friends, or those making a discreet exit, good for emergencies too. Let you out where it’s safe, not too bright, not too dark.

Doors have their own space, their own Way. We call it a “doorway.” It is a place in-between folks, like me, prefer. Doorways are like the moon, sometimes open, in phases, partly closed, peeking. Time in the doorway is liminal, reflective – a threshold between here and there, always changing. Doors, like the moon, enable, inhibit, keeps things interesting.

No matter how humble, all doors have moxy. Without something breaking up the landscape now and then, symmetry becomes stifling. Doors are where the new stuff comes in, falls from the sky, creates an escape or a new paradigm. Doors don’t just offer an outlook, like a window, they let you make good on it.

Doors – we slam them, throw them open, answer and close them quietly. Always something coming and going, have to love doors, it’s where all the action is.

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Peanut gallery alert: Warning essay ahead…

I am a fan of St. Patrick’s Day.

On a day when “all the world is Irish,” it matters not, at least in my opinion, whether a blood claim exists. There is something for everyone – a spring festival, a saint, the gritty origins of the world’s biggest immigrant celebration.

In 1845 a highly infectious, fungus-like pathogen called Phytophthora infestans (commonly known as “Late Blight) changed the course of Irish history. In the mid-1800’s, Ireland was a generally poor country that supported a population of about eight million, one-third of which was either entirely or significantly dependent on the cultivation of potatoes as a staple food. By 1901, after the Famine era, the population had fallen to four million.

The crop failure that occurred during 1845 coincided with a period of Irish population growth as well as economic stagnation. The potato failure of 1845 should not have had a lasting effect on Ireland. However, the lack of effective intervention by Irish landlords, merchants and most importantly, the British government, transformed the crop failure of 1845 into a famine known as An Gorta Mor (the Great Hunger).

Successive crop failures between 1845 and 1851 and an inability or unwillingness to provide assistance to the poor and destitute brought unimaginable pain, disease or death to over two million souls who fled into Ireland’s underworld arms or sailed beyond the ninth wave to find new life in countries such as America and Canada. Tragically, many of those seeking to escape the famine died on disease-ridden vessels known as “coffin ships.”

Ironically, the pathogen that caused the potato famine itself came from the Americas (central Mexico) and traveled across the Atlantic to Belgium where it began its deadly devastation of European potato fields in 1843. The ravages of poverty, pestilence and politics permanently changed the lives of those who call themselves Irish.

Millions of people fled Ireland’s broken hearth during and in the years following the Great Hunger. Carrying their culture and their connectedness with them, these immigrants took up residence all over the world. The fortune, political clout, and identity forged by these immigrant populations abroad has served to sustain their ties with Ireland.

Whether or not the descendents of these immigrant families ever physically return to Ireland is not of consequence. With no geographic borders, the Irish psyche remains connected over boundless space and time, and sometimes, I think, over history.

Beannachtai Na Feile Padraig – The Blessings of St. Patrick on you.

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There’s a banana peel out on the North Forty, next to the street. It had been perched atop a snowbank for some time before I introduced myself.

I could have collected it for the trash can, and my property might have looked less like a compost pile – but consider – what is a banana peel doing on a snowbank? Drive-by toss? Garbage truck escapee? The incongruency of a tropical peel astride a snowbank piqued my interest, much as roadside attractions do.

Each day I walked by and nodded, a perfectly cordial peel.

As the snow melted, the peel lost altitude, and the day after it rained, with no snowbank to cushion it, it sprawled on the flattened, brown grass.

Two days ago, decidedly brown, yesterday, almost rancid, its cheerful yellow coat replaced by mush. The benefits of refrigeration.

Things last longer when chilled. Get a little warm? True colors show, decomposition holds sway, for the worse, and eventually for the better.

If the object of life is to cling to what looks good, chill may win out. But even now, in changed, blackened form, beginning mucousal slide toward the storm drain, that mush has a rich journey into disintegration, eventually becoming fertile organic detritus. That says a lot more than that perky peel ever did.

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Word Games

Think of a word……..yes, that one. Not the one that sounds better, the one you thought of very first. Now, if you feel like it, send it to me at:

dustycrossroads@gmail.com

or

leave it as a comment to this post. Whatever you would like. I’m just gathering words, not email addresses and the like. No privacy issues here, I won’t be keeping the email, just the word.

In this interactive world, it occurs to me that it would be interesting to learn that first word, the one ready to jump into being at that moment’s notice.

If you read this bog, it means that you either feel sorry for me and do your part to read the things that I shouldn’t write, but do, or that perhaps you have a quirky interest in life’s big and small things.

So, I thought it would be interesting to hear the word that was waiting there, on your mind, whenever you might read this particular bog – the day it was posted – or three years from now.

And if you don’t want to, not to worry, that is okay too.

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I have had a cell phone for maybe ten years. Mostly for emergency purposes, out and about, always wanted to make sure my children could reach me.

I am not the kind that rushes to a ringing phone, caller ID was made for folks like me. So in all that time, I never enabled my cell phone voicemail. Energy deposited when you’re not looking, voices creating obligation. More obligation, more. Too much.

Yesterday I set up voicemail. I wondered why I hadn’t. The thought of someone calling back when I am on the move seems novel. Something I would like to try. Some seeming circuit becoming complete. Another mailbox gets a lift.

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On a peerless blue day, the sound of a jet drew my attention skyward. As is so often the case, the plane was long past the sound in the sky that had caught my thought. The contrail wend its way westward.

The jet, progenitor of both plume and roar, was long beyond before I cast my eyes upward. Funny how things in the sky often have a cause and effect, lightning and thunder, jets and their traces.

But the similarity ends there, I think. Lightning splits the mind, the circumstance, and rattles our cages with its voice. Skyward airplanes deliver, slipping silently past before we see and hear winding footsteps.

Life comes both ways, highly charged or lost in thought, and clouds.

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Snow. Frozen precipitation. The arrest of flow into solid, due to freezing conditions. It stacks up, adds up, confounds movement – of cars, animals, emotions. It sits there, waiting.

And the ground that it waits on, freezes, holds in, dries out. Holds things that were once stuck there, like mailboxes.

And the snow melts, and the ground gives in, but not quite because it isn’t yet warm enough, but it is trying. And the mailbox falls over.

Too cold to set a new stake, too much warmth to be cozy in the snow, but the mail must get through. A new season arriving, but not quite here, assistance is still needed.

Two metal poles and some bungee cords. The poles hold up, the bungee cords hold on. It’s okay, it works for now.

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Note from the peanut gallery: Warning essay ahead…

“Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth
Unseen, both when we wake and when we sleep.”

~John Milton, Paradise Lost

Disguise is a prevailing wind in our day. In literature, arts, cinema and life, disguise features prominently. Disguise speaks to illusion and to the elusive. We are all the wiser for the adage “things are rarely what they seem.”

Perhaps disguise speaks to a fundamental doubling of human nature. Like dreams that show us our backs, there is often something we cannot discern, but that exists, had we been looking from a slightly different angle.

Below that doubling of ego and environment resides a quieter domain. Original spirit is perhaps the real truth, the sine qua non, behind the doubling, disguise and elusiveness – timelessly – affected by and affecting all that we do, feel and accomplish. The flutter of wings, of heaven or hell, that brush our face from time to time.

Crossing paths with that energy, we look out of ourselves and sometimes attribute it to the passing of what we call an “angel.”

Of course, agreeing on a precise definition of an angel is about as useful as disputing the number of them that can dance on the head of a pin, but most folks apparently feel or hope they exist.

And they do. Why, I encountered one in a big-box grocery store some moons ago. Arriving early on a drizzly day, I was mulling over my own lack of vision, the loss of direction in my life. I shopped to my list, carefully scrutinized my fistful of coupons, assayed the sales and arrived at the check-out in time to join the queue waiting in the one open lane.

An older man wheeled up behind me, his cart stocked with frozen dinners and soda pop. There is a moment in this type of encounter, when one understands that a stranger needs to talk – whether it is on a plane, on the street – or in a big-box grocery store. A decision is always made – either to politely demur or politely listen. It also happens that individuals of this type sometimes continue to talk despite a polite refusal – but that is not this story.

As mentioned, my own energy was dim that day. The man spoke quietly and sadly without pause, about his wife of many years who had passed away three winters ago. She had battled cancer for a decade. The story of the progression of her illness kept time with the progression of the grocery line.

As I listened I physically turned to face him and he seemed to realize at the same moment how he was talking and said a bit sheepishly, “sometimes it just helps to talk about it.”

As I began to unload my produce onto the checkout belt, his story picked up again. He seemed to have a pressing concern about the once happy house he now lived in alone. In the years since she passed, it seems the fellow felt his wife was still present in the house. He sometimes heard a piano tune that only she played, sometimes heard her voice as if at a distance, sometimes noticed small things rearranged.

The canned goods were bagged, only the cereal was left and he asked me somewhat urgently the question that had been on his mind all along. He had made plans to sell his house and move north, closer to relatives, but now was afraid to, afraid he would leave her behind. Did that sound strange?

I took time answering, the steady beep of the grocery scanner seemed distant as I looked him in the eye. The question was there. I slowly told him that I was certain that she was in the house, and that I was just as certain that when he moved – she would move right along with him – that neither of them would ever be left behind again.

He looked at me for a bit and something shifted, or maybe I just thought something had passed through or passed by. By then it was time for me to ante up my money and crumpled coupons and close the deal. I turned again before I left and wished him a good day. At the same time, we both said “it was good talking to you.”

I trundled my cart away to hear him greet the check-out clerk with a hearty “and how are you, young lady?”…

Any onlooker could easily have found his story sympathetic and my patience admirable. But as I wrestled my cart out the door I realized there was a warmth present in my heart that I had noticed missing earlier that day, earlier that week. Encoded and disguised in a loving story was energy, a field, a data stream or precisely-timed random occurrence that I needed.

In myth or lore this would have been the encounter with the marginalized old man or woman asking for help from the dummling, or youngest brother, who unquestioningly gives what he has, realizing only later that his act of kindness saved his life or his quest.

How lucky I was to encounter this soul willing to share, able to give me this gift. Would he feel any different? I’ll never know, but the glimmer in my heart told me angels come in many guises – isn’t it so that help sometimes comes from the most unexpected places?

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It started early last week. Halfway up the street before I noticed him. Leaning against a garage, well dressed, hat askew, amiable expression – who knows what lay below that cool exterior?

Yes, it was a snowman. Plastic. From the black pipe molded to his face I assumed he was sadly out of touch with the dangers of smoking. Black hat, coordinating scarf in Black Watch plaid. Half-buried in a drift. An expression bordering on…I couldn’t quite put my finger on it.

From behind me, a “clink, clink” wafted by on the breeze. Turning, the man himself, Santa Claus. No body mass index issue here, Santa swung, bleached and flat, a slack pole-dancer atop a front-yard flagpole.

From out of the landscape emerged the things, the Christmas things, out of time, out of season. Dried wreaths, battered bows, the occasional candy cane yard ornament. Christmas lights. Bound by hoar frost and forgotten owners.

Or were they? For a fleeting moment it crossed my mind that they were simply an alternative landscape, self aware in randomness. Obscurely collected and waiting. Waiting for what?

With a shiver and a smile, I moved on, just forgotten stuff.

Time brushed on, more snow fell, some melted. Just a few days ago, I settled myself into a pleasant collegiate atrium. As I reached for my backpack, I caught a flash of peripheral red. And there they were – verdant, lush, full greenhouse bloom, pot after pot of – poinsettia’s.

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