The frenetic activity of the
holidays has no place in the natural order here in the wintered west. The weak light
is deeply slanted from the south. Most deciduous trees have shed their leaves
and are resting. A range of migratory birds still find the
occasional spider or a conifer bursting with seeds awaiting harvest or
dispersal. And, the long nights and crisp days encourage a gentle sense of hibernation. The world around
me is at rest, gathering silent strength for rejuvenation. Winter is not
necessarily a time of endings. Like the conifer, it gives us seeds awaiting
spring.
Sunday, December 29, 2013
Sunday, December 22, 2013
silly season's greetings
I
want to send warm and mirthful greetings to everyone for a Merry Christmas. So, I
am using last year’s photo of the skinny Santa walking the streets of San
Francisco in one of our many outrageous traditions….SantaCon….hundreds,
literally hundreds of folks put on some version of a Santa suit and go from
store to store, bar to bar, Union Square to the Mission, all the while bringing
a light-hearted Christmas spirit to the City.
Nearly
the end of the year. Christmas just a couple of days away. Weather
unseasonable, desperately dry and not much change expected soon. A few
Christmas cookies baked. A few cards sent. A few gifts selected. Not much in
the way of traditional decorations. It seems like an un-traditional season for
me. Not bad, just not quite the pace of many years, not quite the standard that
was generally unmet anyway. And, it seems really fine. Merry Christmas and/or warmest wishes to everyone for whichever holiday you are celebrating at the Solstice!
Sunday, December 15, 2013
dancer on the street
The sun was shining
brightly. The street was wrapped in a beautiful winter-morning’s cloak. A young
woman, actually a girl, ahead of me was dancing from side to side on the urban
sidewalk as she moved toward the stoplight. She had a broad smile and seemed to
be hearing a tune that I could only imagine. We stood together as the light
changed from red to green, she started across Mission Street . Only then did I realize
that her dance steps were actually her normal walking pattern. Her spine had
formed in such a painful way that she could only walk as a dancer. She crossed
the street dancing, with her continuing and lovely smile.
The photo is of beautiful
wild flowers that I photographed at Jepson Prairie one Spring. I hope that it is
an appropriate remembrance and tribute to the dancer.
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
live the questions
American Thanksgiving. Most countries do not have a
secular tradition of giving thanks for the bounteous gifts of the earth and
community. As the day and weekend progressed, I began to question my own sense
of gratitude. So much is taken for granted in my life. I never have a concern
for clean water. The air in my city is almost always pristine. My food choices
are phenomenal, safe and nearly always available ─ for a price. Frankly, most
often my friends and I have the wherewithal to buy nourishing food. I live in a
safe neighborhood, have dear friends and family, have never been displaced by
war. And yet, I am not grateful every day for all of that. I don’t even notice
much of the time. It seems simply normal, perhaps a birthright. One Facebook
friend/colleague speculated that life is less worth living when we cease to
have a sense of wonder about it all. That seems like a very good step to move
toward gratitude. I so often turn to Rilke for an opening into the nether
world. I remembered his advice the young poet to live the questions.
I beg you, to have patience with everything unresolved in
your heart and to try to love the questions themselves as if they were locked
rooms or books written in a very foreign language. Don’t search for the
answers, which could not be given to you now, because you would not be able to
live them. And the point is to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps
then, someday far in the future, you will gradually, without even noticing it,
live your way into the answer.
Rilke, Letters To A
Young Poet
(Note: the
photo is of a sculpture in the gardens of the O’Hanlon Center for the Arts. The
sun was shining through the leaves of an old Coastal Oak and reflected in the
polished center of the stone work by Dick O’Hanlon)
Sunday, November 24, 2013
from the alpine heath
I had
thought I would write about the grieving process and how we know little about the consequences and changes caused by loss, except as we look back. I have not been able to do
so, perhaps later in a poem. At the end of this blog entry, I do have a poem by
Vladimir Nabokov about the loss of youth.
My youth was spent in the dream of government service in the State
Department. In the summer of 1963, I was so privileged to have a summer
internship at the new Peace Corps in Washington ,
D.C. I could see the White House
across Lafayette Square
from my borrowed office. Washington
seemed filled with excitement and hope. It was Camelot. My boss was the
President’s brother-in-law. Twice, I was awe-struck to be in the presence of
the President. I shook hands with two of his brothers. Truly, it was an awesome
experience for a young man from the Rockies . I
was filled with hope that fall as I passed the Foreign Service exam and saw my
life on the trajectory that I had dreamed, so supported by my family. It was
not to be.
The 50th anniversary commemorations of President Kennedy’s assassination brought days of reflection on my part. November 22,1963 was chilly in Boulder ,
but the sun was shining. I remember walking across campus to lunch at home with
my friends. The phone was ringing when I opened the door. A political friend
was on the phone with the unbelievable news. Everyone was in shock. No emotion. No
talking. We had Campbell ’s
Tomato Soup and grilled cheese sandwiches for lunch. We ate in silence. At
such moments, every detail remains etched.
I knew at
that moment my life had changed for ever. The day remained mostly in silence,
just a constant droning of the radio, as college students we did not have t.v. I
have little remembrance of what was being said, just the unending drone. Late
in the day, I finally found a church, Roman Catholic, with the doors open. This bereft, not very religious young man sat alone in the back pew near statues
of saints I knew little about, near quietly weeping elderly women and realized
I could not cry. And, truly my life had changed forever.
We So Firmly Believed
We so firmly believed
in the linkage of life,
but now I’ve looked
back ─ and it is astonishing
to what a degree you,
my youth,
seem in tints not
mine, in traits not real.
If one probes it, it’s
rather like a wave’s haze
between me and you,
between shallow and sinking,
or else I see
telegraph poles and you from the back
as right into the
sunset you ride your half-racer.
You’ve long ceased to
be I. You’re an outline – the hero
of any first chapter; yet how long we believed
that there was no break in the way from the damp dell
to the alpine heath.
Vladimir Nabokov
Sunday, November 17, 2013
long shadows of November
Our seasons here, a
Mediterranean climate mid-way between the Tropic of Cancer and the Arctic Circle , are more defined by light than by drastic
weather changes. Many trees are coming into bud, fewer have lost their leaves.
The grasses turn from golden to green with the first rains. But, it is really the
light that marks time.
The long shadows of
November, the sun barely edging over the southern hills in the City ─ a time to
contemplate the coming darkness of full winter. I treasure each season, although
the slanted light of late autumn or early spring seem especially wonderful to
me. November light signals the slowness of winter, March light tells the coming
wonder of spring.
Days are becoming short, the
light even more precious when it is so limited. A time for interior repose and assessment.
Sunday, November 10, 2013
without irritable reaching
So
often our friends are openings into wisdom. Recently, I had afternoon tea (really old fashioned) with a dear and insightful friend. We
treasure these times for the conversation, or sometimes we read to one
another poetry that we have found meaningful. This day was just meandering around our
lives and how we perceive the end of life, and what is after this life. We
talked about the thin veil to seeing that seems to be getting thinner with such
incredible new knowledge of the universe. What are our personal connections
between scientific learning and religious or philosophical thoughts and mores?
How do we connect this past with now? Do we?
Does it matter? All questions, little resolve.
I thought of this as I was standing on the
upper level of the San Francisco Art Institute recently. This sixties-modern
building in early morning could have been Thebes
or even Petra ,
with philosophers and seers debating meaning. And, yet, hundreds of
generations later we are still left with mysteries that don’t yet respond to
reason.
“Negative Capability, that is when man is capable of
being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts, without any irritable reaching after
fact & reason — “
John Keats, Letters of John Keats to His Family and Friends
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