Monday 26 December 2011

Wrapping up Christmas

The holidays are flying by! I haven't been as diligent as I intended with blog updates, but who's counting. First, I'll start with some pictures!


My mom called me mid-December and asked me to come home a little early to take a family Christmas picture. Well, the idea of taking a regular dressed-up-in-front-of-the-tree-kindofathing sounded so traditional and boring. So what better idea than to take a very traditional and boring theme and jazz it up a la "Awkward Family Photos" with Christmas sweatshirts (my 91 year-old grandmother's as a matter of fact), Santa hats, bows, and antlers for the dogs. And here we are. Georgia hated the antlers so much that we opted for the festive bow. I love that Rosie's yawning in Mom's lap. And the best part: these outfits were used for real at some point or other.



Speaking of for real awkward family photos... Here's a picture of my dad (top left) and his siblings visiting Santa. I'm guessing my dad was about 11 or 12 at the time and looks the same as he did as a grown up. What would the caption for this picture be?

This year, my family and I decided to go on a whirlwind trip across the state--both ends--over the Christmas weekend. On Christmas Eve we trekked Down East to visit my mom's side of the family. The intention was visiting downtown Winton to see off Santa as he rode through town on a blazing red fire engine through the sole stoplight, blaring holiday greetings to a population of...mm...100. Nothing like it, really. But we were late and missed the action.

I got to spend part of the evening with Grammy (former Christmas sweatshirt owner), sneaking port and listening to stories about her life.  Grammy told me about her friends at Springmoor, the community she lives in, and how she feels sorry for those who don't have families that want to visit them over Christmas. She talked about how she and her sister Lola shared a big room in their house in the Cotswolds that was the coldest in the whole house. Sometimes, she said, they would have ice on their pillows upon waking up because their breath had frozen on the sheets! And she also talked about World War II, and the things she lived through: listening for buzz bombs, being scared of moonlit nights and the incendiary bombs the Germans sent over their dorms, the town's sugar factory being bombed and the sugar burning so quickly and brightly that the town looked aglow in daylight. As a "millennial," hearing her stories makes me realize how much we take for granted especially the resources we have, our sense of patriotism, family, community, people serving in the military...and things I haven't thought to mention.

Yesterday (Christmas), we drove to Winston-Salem for a visit with all of my dad's side of the family. Lindsay has a new baby, who is quick to smile and has such a relaxed disposition, which my sister hopes will change my mind about having children (it might). My favorite part of our meal with the Suttons was sitting at the "kids table" with my cousins Addison and Trey and the old folks of the family--and what a mixed group: Grammy, my mom's mom; Esther, Lindsay's grandmother; Esther's boyfriend, John; and Gram, my dad's mom. Esther preached about loving one another, John talked about his preferences (mainly in food) and how they've changed as he's reached his late 80s (simple foods, peaceful settings, routine), Gram talked about my dad, which brought some tears and memories, and Grammy listened (she is the perfect example of a good listener). I deeply appreciated their perspectives.

This Christmas has felt especially poignant with the realization (especially as get older) that my relatives aren't getting any younger, and I don't know how many Christmases I have with any of them. Certainly, no one of us knows how long we'll live, but I think the holidays magnify that sense of bittersweetness. There's sometimes a pre-gathering sadness at the fact that my dad isn't with us to celebrate the holidays (though that's usually mitigated by blaring Billboard's greatest Christmas songs in his honor). And I don't know how many Christmases Grammy, for instance, or Papa, my dad's dad, are going to be here. Papa gave everyone a professional photo of him this year, and it just made me wonder if he knows something we don't. (Yes, maybe I'm reading too much into it, and yes, perhaps I'm being morbid, but I can't help it). Maybe we all know something we choose not to know though, and as we age it becomes less of an issue to deny the fact that none of us are going to be around forever, thus giving us permission (in a way) to talk more freely about what's next for us.

One of my cohort friends who is my mom's age said earlier this month, "The holidays get harder as you get older." What she meant is that each year brings its own set of memories and sentiments, deaths and births, and that it can be really difficult to navigate such a time of joy and expectation. And the more expectation you have, the less likely it is that those expectations will be met. Such an ironic twist on a holiday that puts so much expectation into the birth of one baby boy. I suppose that's why I see my neighbors with a "Jesus is the reason for the season" magnet next to those reindeer antlers they have sticking out the side windows of their van.

All I know is that my point of reference is my family (biological and chosen) to the point that I get almost too sentimental and make my heart hurt about it. They make me laugh. Make me sad and/or angry. Make me reflective (and know when I need space in those times of reflection). As the new year comes rolling in, I have a mind to take time to think and feel about all the things that have happened this year and what I want in the year ahead. Most of all, I'm just really glad that I've been with the people I love this holiday.

Happy eating those leftover Christmas treats!

Tuesday 13 December 2011

Musings from the rabbit hole

The neighborhood I find myself in during my daily visits to BlogLand consists majorly of:
youth
perfect bodies
richness
love
fecundity
wealth
abundance
smiles
music
an ideal of what we want or could have or what's sexy and in

I suppose my attraction to these blogs lies in their flawlessness, the idea that life can be only sweetness and light. They serve to build what fantasy I may feel like I need to escape from the not-so-perfect aspects of my life at any given moment, taking me away to a world where everything is Indian summer warm, effervescent, romantic, and timeless. As if I could be stuck forever in amber rays of some dreamy sunset meadow. 

But I've grown tired of this fantasy.  Where are the other neighborhoods?
I want to see more:
rawness
age
making it
tears
resilience through ache
love that's not just on a wedding day
strong women, not just models or moms or women looking for a perfect outfit
men taking a role other than that of Man or Worker

...there will be other things to look for (and links) as I contemplate this shift in exposure to something other than blog fluff.

On a more, erm, nerdy note, I found some interesting content about an artist named Mary Jane Ansell who paints portraits. Although I wouldn't consider myself an art critic by any means, I find there's something about the content of some of her paintings that is pretty captivating. I think it's the eyes.

"Girl Reflected," 2010

In some ways, her work reminded me of John Currin's portraiture. I suppose it's the fact that I don't know of a lot of popular portrait artists. 

There's something strangely attractive about Currin's paintings. As a woman and sortof academic feminist (that is, more a feminist of paper or in mind I think), there are certain things that come up when I see his works: revolting, absurd, maddening, grotesque, beautiful, haunting, weirdly sexy, sad, darkly funny. On the other hand, some of his stuff just really grosses me out, and those aren't here. Oh, art.

"Thanksgiving," 2003

updates from the weekend

hi hi!
i thought i'd actually update with some pictures from the Holly Jolly Holiday Bash. i had fun playing with filters on my phone, and like the way some of these turned out. the paper bunting, snowflakes on the ceiling, and fireplace complete with yule log were a hit. i don't think the pictures do the decorations justice. we still have them up in the living room and the effect of sunlight on these happy homages to the season are magical!





Stockings for Kate, Michele, Franklin (the turtle), and Georgia (the dog)!



Family picture (minus Franklin who chose to stay in the aquarium)


Champagne wishes and caviar dreams...and visions of sugar plums?



Monday 5 December 2011

A Little Light Music

I recently found a new blog that I like: Wit & Delight
The layout is a little bit frenetic, but the individual posts are well-crafted and very hip. Seriously, some of the content makes me want to learn how to create clever animations and memes.

One thing I really like is the playlists that she features like this one which has songs from Woody Allen movies. I imagine a 1950s cocktail hour with these songs.

Speaking of cocktail hours, I'm having a holiday party on Saturday! Requirements include dressing up and wearing sparkles. I'm making mulled wine and decorating with some pretty crafty things like this, for instance:


and I think this is beautiful on a Christmas tree:


ah, the luminescence!

Also, these prints by Sasha Prood would make a great little gift for that empty space on a friend's wall.






Friday 2 December 2011

am I

the only one who hasn't read Thought Catalog? If you haven't read it, you probably should.

Wednesday 30 November 2011

Pendleton

I had a dream last night that I went to visit my mom at her house in Big Sur (no, she doesn't really live there). Her house looked like something out of an Apartment Therapy post: sky sweeping views, sunlit nooks, a loft filled with cozy neutral furniture with bursts of color. And I found treasures: bags stuffed with jewel toned Pendleton blankets and duvets. Now I'm on the hunt.



Tuesday 22 November 2011

OMG Yum


(I love her whole site)


Super Yum - especially with ginger
(and the best "I'm staving off a cold" remedy)

Tuesday 1 November 2011

It's November!

It's November! Which means that it's time to start thinking of cozy Thanksgiving recipes and making gifts for friends and potlucks and fuzzy socks and steely skies and crunching leaves and tea.

I found a fun project that I want to do for Thanksgiving table setting and that would also make a really great host gift for a friend: pulled fringe napkins found via http://www.purlbee.com/pulled-fringe-napkins/


Maybe it's the bread and butter on an antique table, but these napkins remind me of eating warm, candlelit dinners in a wood heated farm house. Making these same napkins in a fun color would be perfect for taking along on a spring picnic, too. There's nothing like the comfort of a set table, simple surroundings, and everyone you love being near.

I'm so excited to have Thanksgiving at my mom's house this season! I think we've got a running count of around 30 people, most of them excellent cooks, all of them a little zany and a lot of fun. There's so much to look forward to about this holiday, and I'm bouncing in my office chair a little bit just thinking about it. Get ready for more posts to come about recipes and fun holiday musings...

Monday 31 October 2011

Loving the Fool

"I must learn to love the fool in me--the one who feels too much, talks too much, takes too many chances, wins sometimes and loses often, lacks self-control, loves and hates, hurts and gets hurt, promises and breaks promises, laughs and cries. It alone protects me against that utterly self-controlled, masterful tyrant whom I also harbor and who would rob me of human aliveness, humility, and dignity but for my fool." -- Theodore I. Rubin, MD


This quote describes my life this very minute, thinking about the timing of everything. This weekend was crazy. J came to visit and I went to Penland to party with Marie and Nicole. There's so much to write about regarding relationships and friends and expectations...but that's involved and long and too nebulous to write right now. I'm just taking it all in, filtering through experiences past and imaginary, and connecting these moments not in a linear fashion but more like a spiral, each one building on the next, moving out, always connected to a center point. 


Bottom line: I had fun with the guy but we just don't have It. I love my friends. I'm glad to have had the combination of these events take place the same weekend because it's forcing me to be more honest with myself and my needs. I need someone who can be real, unguarded, healthy in mind, body and spirit, and who gives a fuck about life. I have that with my friends and family thank goodness.


Most of all, if it weren't for these experiences and people, I would be missing the rapturous wonder and passion and turmoil that is being human. I'm a fool within reason. Someone who swings between reckless abandon and uptight responsibility to finally rest somewhere in the middle. This weekend is helping bring me back to the middle, as I'm ready to be balanced again. I need to process. I need to love the fool in me.



Sunday 23 October 2011

Cultivating Gratitude

Today was J's father's funeral. The weather was perfect--the most beautiful autumn afternoon one could have wished for in any other (or maybe especially in this) context. The service was tender, lit by such sweetness and poignancy that I sniffled through its entirety, feeling sorry for J and her mom, sorry for the hole left in their lives, sorry for myself and my own experience at having lost a father and what that means. For me, my dad's loss was not having the hum of projects going on around the house, someone to cook steak on the grill and sing to James Taylor as the potatoes baked, buying junk cereal at the grocery store, or come tuck me in at night. 

I remember the last time I got tucked in by my dad. I was 16. Too old for tucking in...but then, you're never too old for having the covers securely wrapped around your legs and receiving a gentle kiss on the forehead. By this time, my dad had been sleeping downstairs in our office-converted-master-bedroom after a double hip replacement. He was using a walker, patiently swinging one leg after the other, holding on to the walker with his strong hands clenched into a tight grip, shoulders pushed up to his ears in an effort to lift himself up and forward, up and forward, tennis balls on the walker legs swishing along the floor, punctuating the slow shuffle of his movement. I'd gone up to bed hours before. In the early morning hours, I woke up to the hall light turned on and my dad's shadow coming through the doorway. He had pulled himself up stair by stair, through pain and arduous tedium to kiss his peacefully sleeping daughters good night. As he crossed the room, I remember being so struck with gratitude that he would make such a journey--one any other would have done with speed and ease, but that took him generous concentration and effort minute upon minute--just to say, "I love you. Sleep tight." It had been months and months without his presence upstairs at bed time, and I couldn't help but feel the specialness of this moment magnified by millions. As he sat on the bed, the weight of his body pushing down the edge of my mattress, I memorized his figure, willing him not to leave and wishing to always be tucked in.

In memories like these, or in those times like today, loss feels exponentially greater, leaving loneliness twisting in my gut or turning my chest into a refugee camp of melancholy. It's easy to get sucked into a place where nothing seems good. I don't like that place. I don't like sensing sadness. I also don't like sensing life moving on around me, willing me to move on and get over it and do More Important Things than dwell on misery and suffering. On the other hand, I don't think of sadness as particularly miserable, as it's really something to move through. And part of me needs to move through my sadness for J's dad's passing and my own grief over my dad's death.

There's this other realm of my life right now. There's this person I like. I talk to him on the phone and imagine having something real with him besides these conversations derived from hours together and imagining what the other is like outside of this little fantasy world we've each created for the other. Talking to him is fun, light, based in the past and in the future, but really never in the present. Today's experience requires presence and processing, and as much as I want to talk to him and process these things, I take on the role of Kate Who's Fun To Talk To (but who really wants to tell him about all of my life, my dreams, my fears, my wish for love and a need for someone to share my love with...and, well, maybe, my life with). But because we don't really know each other, I don't say too too much. I don't want to scare him away. Now that, my friends, can be lonely. Talking to someone but not having him here is lonely. That conversation, darkened by a previous experience or the mood of the moment, without acknowledging the darkness, is lonely. 

So I feel somewhat alone. 

And then, I also feel grateful. I'm glad to be alive and feeling. I'm glad I know what I'm feeling. I'm grateful for having friends who care about me and who will talk about the darkness. I'm excited for the things my life has to offer right now even if I feel absolutely overwhelmed by school and sometimes just want to give up. I'm grateful for the ability to have choice and know that if I really wanted to, I have the choice of quitting school and living this fantasy of running away to a big city and escaping in the frenzy of people and things going on outside of my day-to-day as it is here in this town. 

So I cultivate gratitude. Even in and, I suppose, especially in these moments. 

“He is a wise man who does not grieve for the things which he has not, but rejoices for those which he has.” — Epictetus

“Real life isn’t always going to be perfect or go our way, but the recurring acknowledgement of what is working in our lives can help us not only to survive but surmount our difficulties.” — Sarah Ban Breathnach

Wednesday 19 October 2011

Rainy Wednesday

The rain started last night, gently pattering on the roof, wetting the driveway, making the gutters begin their slow gurgle that eventually takes over the symphony of house noises. It was the perfect night for painting and drinking wine especially after seeing students back-to-back for six and a half hours. The odd thing (and most lovely thing) is that such a busy day was tiring, but without the overwhelming bricksonmyshoulders feeling that used to come from my work in an office. Instead, I felt a sense of having made something of my day, a sense of contribution and accomplishment in connecting with others--a purpose. I think I'm getting to a place in my program where I'm finding a fit with my Self and what I want to do in my mission to help others find purpose and passion in their lives.

And in lieu of this cold, rainy day: adorable pictures!





Sunday 16 October 2011

shopping list

Recently, I've been pretty taken with reading fashion and design blogs, which I think stems from the fact that 1) I don't own or watch TV; 2) my style has been in need of a lift and I get great ideas from these blogs; 3) it's an outlet for getting sucked into a little fantasy land in my corner of the internet. It's hard not to want to buy a bajillion things after reading, and so, in an effort to keep myself from spending like mad (with my nonexistent millions), I'm making a list of stuff that I really, really want. Here it is in pictures:

Classic Tomboy Shoes

I know, I know...but they're warm! And I'll only wear them in the house!

God, I have ugly shoe taste don't I? Well, these are comfortable. And make me think of fall pumpkin carving and walking through an orchard.

A blazer--this one is nice. I like the color of the pants and the polka dot top, too.

Big, Cozy Sweaters!

Sheer


Bright Pants. Maybe add a trench or a thicker, neutral sweater over a ruffly top.

Lace dress for layering with said blazer or cozy sweater.

Loving zig zags right now.

That's the list for now, though I'll be posting more ideas later. Hopefully, in the future (when I get my iPhone), I'll have enough style savvy that I can post some outfit pictures. My newest adventure theme is bargain hunting for clothes, and I found some great things yesterday that I'll have to share. 

K

Friday 24 June 2011

soul diving part deux

met with my newest favorite professor yesterday. she said i didn't know myself yet. she's right. i'm at the brink.

there is greatness waiting to be found within this old soul.
it sets my heart burning.

Wednesday 1 June 2011

Soul Diving

Every day I read something new for my counseling classes, I feel ever more grateful for the privilege of being back in school and for what the content of these courses offers me personally. I have been enhanced by the knowledge gained by being in class with some extraordinary people, and am so transformed (already) from this process of having clients and, really, having them speak to my soul.

Yesterday, my professor used a new term: "soul diving." I feel like that's what I'm doing when I'm in class, when I'm talking to friends and connecting about certain things that just make us human: love, relationships, "why am I here," "where am I going," how we connect to life, what life is, what the universe is, God, and love again. The depths of my soul speak to the depths of this other person's soul, and we are connected in this place far from space and time in the darkness and lightness of savoring our spirits' journey as we meet on the same road. I am in love with this process.

With that illumination, comes an understanding that I know nothing. I know nothing and have so much more to learn. They always say, "The more you know, the more you know you don't know." It's true. After speaking with certain people about past relationships and my "stuff" and what happened and why...well, hindsight is 20/20...but the bottom line is I've been insensitive--to myself, to others and there is a certain level of compassion that I am striving for in this process of soul diving to, I guess, compensate for that insensitivity of my past. Oh how I wish I could share it with those people I've hurt (including myself)...but I don't know how when I'm trying to push them away in order to heal myself first.

I believe I'm on the road to living more compassionately, but the process is one step at a time. And I want and need to savor each step.

Tuesday 10 May 2011

Book List

I'm going to read as many of these books as I can: http://www.stumbleupon.com/su/2QuCDt/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_100_Best_Books_of_All_Time

It's not that I'm all the time lonely because I'm not. There are just fleeting moments. Flashes of longing that come and go but leave a trace of ache and tenderness that I wish would go away. But I don't know that I'm so tough. And I don't know that I really want to be--it's that fully felt emotional tendency I have that makes me feel all the more human, deeply impressed by the poignancy of what it means to be human: to love and hurt and be hurt and love again and live and die within the perimeters of such a temporary existence.

Now that the first year of this master's program is up, it's becoming easier to breathe again and feel more like myself. That also means I have more time to think for myself, which could, if unchecked, lead to dangerous ruminations of memory. And I don't want that. So, with all of my intention and will and optimism, I will read, ponder, peruse, enjoy, cherish and revel in the time I have for whatever I want to do with my sparse schedule. Here's the top ten (in no particular order):

1. Flea markets/thrifting/vintage shop road trips
2. Reading "the best books of all time"
3. Drinking beer on the deck
4. Cookouts and potlucks
5. Yoga
6. Long morning walks with Georgia
7. Long bike rides
8. Coffee and the paper or crafts or letter-writing
9. Shows
10. Visiting the people I love

I'm so grateful for the support of those people in #10. The crafts and letters and treasures will be for them. I just love a healthy dose of altruism and summer feelgood vibes.

Monday 2 May 2011

Kahlil Gibran

You were born to be together, and together you shall be forevermore.
You shall be together when the wings of death scatter your days.
Ay, you shall be together even in your silent memory.
But let there be spaces in your togetherness,
And let the winds of the heaven dance between you.
Love one another, but make not a bondage of love.
Let it rather be a moving sea between the shores of your souls.
Fill each other's cup, but drink not from one cup.
Give one another of your bread, but eat not of the same loaf.
Sing and dance together and be joyous, but let each of you be alone,
Even as the strings of a lute are alone, though they quiver with the same music.
Give your hearts, but not into each other's keeping,
For only the hand of life can contain your hearts.
And stand together, yet not too near together,
For the pillars of the temple stand apart,
And the oak tree and the cypress grow not in shadow.

Tuesday 26 April 2011

Rumi

The Guest House

This being human is a guest house.
Every morning a new arrival.

A joy, a depression, a meanness,
some momentary awareness comes
as an unexpected visitor.

Welcome and entertain them all!
Even if they are a crowd of sorrows,
who violently sweep your house
empty of its furniture,
still, treat each guest honorably.
He may be clearing you out
for some new delight.

The dark thought, the shame, the malice.
meet them at the door laughing and invite them in.

Be grateful for whatever comes.
because each has been sent
as a guide from beyond.

-- Jelaluddin Rumi,
translation by Coleman Barks


The last stanza is how I want to see and live my life more and more and more.

Sunday 17 April 2011

family

A thought piqued my curiosity of family systems theory. I was reflecting on my Uncle Finkle's life and funeral this morning. There is a lot I feel I missed out on in understanding my uncle and Delaware relatives, even things I don't know about my mom. Pondering this, I began wondering about his life and the lives of his siblings, and how these things became a little more transparent at his funeral as my mom, her mother, and brothers sat in the front pew of church, each with their own grief, silent Jones stoicism, and way of interacting, which, I imagine, could have been reflected over fifty years ago at Pop's funeral in the same church.

But first, Uncle Finkle.

When I was little, visiting Grammy in Delaware consisted of visits to "the station" where Finkle worked, and well, lived, really, so that my mom and dad would have a chance to catch up with him. Finkle would come out of the office, grizzled and smiling with his watery blue eyes lighting up behind a tangled, grey-streaked beard. And then, always, he'd tell a joke and pass around the drinks. Usually, there were a few other guys around, grease stained, smelling like smoke and engine oil, always with a Budweiser in hand and cigarette between the fingers. These memories I have of my uncle, juxtaposed against my white bread childhood, breathe character into my upbringing. This visceral impression is the only one I have of him, leaving me wishing I had learned more about him past the beard and the drinks and the bad jokes.

We visited the station one last time on our trip to Delaware in March after Finkle's funeral. It was here, in this archive of papers, logs, car parts, a broken refrigerator, pictures, trophies, dog stuff, shoes, books...it was here, under the image of booze and cigarettes and shabby appearances that I caught a glimpse of my uncle as he really was, throwing my childhood impressions off balance and igniting a sincere desire to breathe in and memorize the message and context of his personhood. All of these parts of his life scattered around the station left behind a story of a man who knew much, took little, and gave to many during a life of what could be seen as struggle and hardship.

Phil wanted to be a veterinarian. When his grades weren't good enough he became a mechanic. He turned his ability to listen to the nuances of quiet animal communication and the grieving utterances of pet owners, into expert interpretation of the whispering of an engine and muddled clues from non-car people. My Uncle Bob and the men who frequented the station (especially at happy hour) swear he knew everything about cars. And I'm sure he did. He knew a lot about a lot of other things, too, evidenced by the stacks of Time Life books, encyclopedias, manuals, and newspaper clippings we found the morning after the funeral, each page and surface, marked with ghostly grease prints. In the corner, tucked away gently with a pair of clean socks, was a pair of Sunday shoes. Phil had recently worn those shoes to a funeral for someone in the community, as he had every time he found an obituary for someone familiar. Sometimes, he would leave work a few times a day to honor the losses. A good day, he said, was not finding an obit and not having to wear those shoes. This, I thought, this is why we feel his loss.

Phil didn't charge enough for his services. He barely made enough to cover the bills and faced debt from 30 years ago when the EPA fined him heavily for underground gas tanks that had been leaking before he bought the station from another owner. But he didn't complain. He didn't worry. Instead, he worked long hours, drank heavily, and lived life as he saw fit. Although he grew up in a middle class family, it always seemed that Uncle Finkle was most happy in a blue collar setting, working for himself with his dog at his side and people around try a new joke on. Visiting the station years ago, I was always a little afraid of my uncle because I didn't understand why he lived the way he did--it contrasted too much with my father's corporate work, but then, I think my dad always envied Phil for that. Now, however, I can see there is much to be said for doing the work you love and being an expert at it. If only we could all strive for so much.

My thoughts turn to the funeral. There we were sitting in church, listening to the preacher lament with us, as we felt the presence of someone missing. The pews were filled, people stood in back, honoring a man who touched their lives. None of my family knew them, but they were the family Finkle left behind for our Jones reunions. Maybe it was being back in church after so long, but I couldn't help thinking how much these people I saw with drawn wrinkled faces, wearing their best jeans and mismatched suits, bearing the evidence of hard living or struggle, were the people Jesus talked most about loving. Finkle loved. Without condition. And it was obvious at this standing room only event. This recognition added to my feeling of wishing to know Finkle more and laid a certain weight in my chest of the fact that I too often do not love unconditionally. If I couldn't get past the beer and cigarettes and grease-stained image of my uncle, what does that mean for my interaction with the people I know nothing about? Lesson noted.

As I sat there, I noticed how I had never seen my mom's nuclear family sitting together in formation much how I would have imagined them sitting in the back of a station wagon on a family road trip circa 1960. And it seemed, in a way, that for the moment the "kids," who I only knew as adults with their children and grandchildren and lives separate and apart from my own family's, were kids again. My grandmother, much shorter with her curved osteoporosis spine, cropped white hair, and chiseled 91 year-old features was still the matriarch of the six who sat beside her now. These adults now kids taking the roles they had always known: the oldest, the most stoic and responsible; the next-to-oldest, the caregiver, the nurturing son who keeps everyone together; the twins, known as the jokers (who took Phil into their private twin world); and the youngest, the only girl who remembers sharing a room with Finkle because he obliged when she complained that everyone else got to share a room with a sibling and she felt left out. The women wept, the sons spoke, and all of us looked into the past-turned-present of what the Jones clan is.

Ironically, the funeral for my mom's father, who passed away nearly 50 years ago, was at this church. A large, framed portrait of him, which comes to all family functions, sat next to a poignant picture of Phil kneeling against the one working bay door at the station. Each man looked keenly into the audience, and we stared back looking for meaning. The morning of Phil's thirteenth birthday, as he bounded down the stairs in celebration, was the same his father died. Phil took it in stride the same as he did with all things.

I feel as though I could elaborate on so much more. But that's the jist of this morning's reflections.Uncle Finkle's life and funeral got me started thinking about family--what it means, what happens to families, and how we are the way we are with them. It's common for families to fall back into the dynamics of the growing-up years. Adult children who return home for holidays become the kids again and parents take the charge of the parent role. In a way, this role playing generates homeostasis within the family--anything unfamiliar or new can be too much work, too disconcerting. When the holiday is over, the kids become adults and the parents empty-nesters with their own lives and agendas. Equilibrium returns in a new context. This concept is what family systems theory explains. But, clearly, it's more than theory, it's life and all of us experience it. I suppose it's the meaning we take from these experiences that counts the most.

Monday 11 April 2011

edwardestlin cummings


present life is wrapped in these two poems:


III

Spring is like a perhaps hand
(which comes carefully
out of Nowhere)arranging
a window,into which people look(while
people stare
arranging and changing placing
carefully there a strange
thing and a known thing here)and

changing everything carefully

spring is like a perhaps
Hand in a window
(carefully to
and fro moving New and
Old things,while
people stare carefully
moving a perhaps
fraction of flower here placing
an inch of air there)and

without breaking anything.

i carry your heart with me

i carry your heart with me(i carry it in
my heart)i am never without it(anywhere
i go you go,my dear; and whatever is done
by only me is your doing,my darling)
i fear
no fate(for you are my fate,my sweet)i want
no world(for beautiful you are my world,my true)
and it's you are whatever a moon has always meant
and whatever a sun will always sing is you

here is the deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud
and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows
higher than the soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars apart

i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)