A walk with the water birds
April 10, 2011 § 2 Comments
There is something I love about cleaning on a Sunday. I know, you’re not supposed to as it is a day of rest. Yet I find healing in it. And aren’t Sundays very much about renewing the soul? Making the space around me beautiful renews mine.
So the dogs have been bathed, the carpet vacuumed, the kitchen counters wiped clean, and there is laundry running. Dishes in the dishwasher. I love the sound of our dishwasher; sometimes I wish that it was located in my bedroom so it could swish-swash me to sleep at night.
After cleaning comes a walk at Golden Ponds, for me and the dogs. The water and trees here are such a help. Nothing will be very golden, as outside is overcast, but never mind. Out we go, and away from all the reminders of things to do or have or be.
T. wants to badly to go in the ponds but dogs aren’t allowed to swim here. Colorado doesn’t like dogs in the water in general, it seems. (Colorado. Help me out here.)
The water birds taunt her. Geese. Ducks. Herons. They are laughing and she, she is fighting against every gene in her body. (I must help her with this significantly.) The last time we came I could hardly walk her at all, and we left with me furious and her sulky. This time, we have our two new magical Gentle Leaders and life is better, at least for the dog walker.
M., my roommate’s dog, hasn’t been here before. I think he wonders what geese might taste like. Come here, I just want to chew on your neck for a few minutes, please! Or perhaps he wonders how they might play with him. He prances that husky prance and twirls under his leash but he, and T., are still stuck with me.
I am so glad to have found this water spot. Far from the blandness of beige apartments and factory parking lots.
A cloudy day. A light wind’s chill. Home for afternoon coffee and a stack of favorite books, and two sleeping dogs on the clean floor.
Trillium/Narcissus
April 6, 2011 § Leave a comment
I wanted it to be narcissus,
because I knew the story of
that flower’s name, understood
why such a delicate whiteness
would be drawn to itself,
peering into enchanted pools.
Hop, hop, from bunches of grass
and rock across the wetlands.
The frogs were trilling and chirruping
and oh, how loud together! Heels
sunk into water. Ripples ran to trees.
.
I wouldn’t pick the flower; it lived
here. So I skipped over the meadow,
over the hill, and back home to where
a book called it trillium. I closed the
book and frowned. And forgot often in
the next few years that my narcissus
was really trillium, and ought to be
called so. Until, one day, it just was
trillium, so rightly trillium,
a dancing, singing, happy sort
of flower, without a bowed face
drawing her to a lifetime of lonely
self-worship. Trillium, laughing,
turns her face out, three petals open
to beckon, to say, Dance! Sing!
To greet the world, and me.
Rollins Pass and good company
April 3, 2011 § Leave a comment
So much changes when you are in the company of good friends.
I have left many dear ones back in the Midwest and I can’t help feeling the distance. I am making new friends here and they are great. But there is a difference between old and new that can’t be made up for quickly.
When my friend Heather and her husband Jeff came to visit a few weekends ago I felt some old part of me open up again. There was familiarity and comfort. I became at least for a little while less awkward in this state – this state I am still trying to like and belong to.
They adventured on their own for a few days while I chugged along at work. Saturday I got to go play with them. We started with a lazy late brunch at The Huckleberry and then Jeff found a place to snowshoe that was once a train route, with the trailhead just outside the eastern entrance to the Moffat Tunnel. You can read more about the history here. It’s fascinating.
I especially like the tiny yellow church down in the valley. It stands out like a bright reminder of history and hope. See it?
The day was the perfect kind of warm-sunny where you can tramp along in the snow in light layers, and as you heat up with exercise you can even get down to short sleeves for a little while.
It was wonderful to be surrounded by the evergreens.
Jeff left this trail of snowshoe-prints. He went on ahead when Heather and I took a moment to sit on the mountainside and rest. To catch up on stories. To talk as we used to, ideas old and new.
How good it is to have friends who understand who you are, who in some ways are so similar and yet in other ways different enough so that you challenge each other, and complement each other.
We stopped in Nederland for lunch at the Black Forest Restaurant. With its German architecture and menu and the old-Hollywood-movie music piping through, we felt as if we were in The Sound of Music. Outside turned blue into darkness, then black night, with the little lights of the mountain town twinkling through the glass. Coffee from a silver pot. Red-and-white china. Apple strudel, and red-swirled mints to finish the meal.
What a blessed day. To eat well. To talk and explore. To be outside and together.
Weavers
March 30, 2011 § Leave a comment
They sat weaving dreams
amidst the tall grasses,
leaning against a gray
silo half full of grain.
.
Everything could happen.
Honeysuckle grew wild in
the silo’s shade. They pinched
its nectar into their mouths.
.
Late-day sun slid down bare
legs, landing on dandelions
yellow and moon white.
.
Across the gravel drive
four red heifers looked up.
One flicked an ear.
.
How could they know?
These girls in ponytails,
the wonders they would
make and miss and find.
.
Or how the measure of
each blade of grass, slipped
to squeak between fingers
and woven around wrists
.
was part of all that mattered.
So much would come back
to here. To the long metal
gate, to the staring heifers, to
the floating tufts of dandelions.
Creeks and cathedrals
March 27, 2011 § 2 Comments
I do not enjoy that my weekends go so quickly. I do enjoy filling them well.
Yesterday I played with horses, in a workshop for volunteering with a therapeutic riding program. I was surprised to find myself pressing my eyelids to avoid tears. My older brother participated in such a program when we were kids, back in the Minnesota days. He has autism and mild cerebral palsy and I remember him thrilled with the way the movements of the horse allowed his body to move as well. I was jealous (I, after all, was the officially horse-crazy ten-year-old) but also happy. And I got to come along, to pet “his” horse on the nose, to smell the good smell of hay and horses. My response at the workshop of course was different: another reminder of his struggle, and persistence, and thankfulness for the people who have joined in working with him towards yet another measure of freedom. I expect more freedom will come. We always pray for his healing. Wait for it!
The riding center ultimately is a place for encouragement and growth, and worth giving up my lazy Saturday morning. In the late afternoon I met with a friend so she and I and her new baby and my good dog (who’s actually been very naughty lately) could go for a walk. The day was delightfully cloudy – oh how I crave the cloudy days in sunny Colorado, just for the reflective quiet they encourage.
I love walking and talking. I love it. It feels good in my body and good in my spirit, connecting with a friend, considering the world, appreciating and encouraging each other. Being outside. It is one of the best forms of multi-tasking.
Aren’t these fabulous trees? How Wyeth-like, the grays and blues and tans of this day.
Miss T. does not talk but she does swim. Happily our walk was along a creek, so she she (undeservedly) had the privilege of being let loose from the leash to get in. She generally trots up to her knees at first, pauses, wades around, then goes deeper and lowers her body down. You can practically hear her sigh, “Aaaaah,” as some of us would on a hot August day, or upon slipping into a hot springs after a long hike with sore muscles.
And after that she plays and jumps and runs and attacks sticks. As you can see.
T. and bliss.
Today, Sunday. Morning toast before church.
Cinnamon sugar. Butter. These are gifts in my small world. Miss T., do not beg! This is all for me. She knows she will still very likely get the dry corners. Lucky, she is, and a mite spoiled, still she is mine and well and always near.
I am in that split-ness of being between churches and it’s a little unsettling. But God shows up in warmth and power in these places; I can’t explain so much as invite. Basic structures become His cathedrals of worship, His temples of healing. It’s the sort of thing you have to experience. Not just words but presence. He is. He loves.
The world seems a series of obstacles and troubles so often. This is a weekend of gratitude.
An off-day
March 23, 2011 § Leave a comment
Oh tummy troubles. I have cuddled so many little ones through them, with stories and hugs and gentle foods.
One of the downsides of being a grown-up is that you don’t always have someone to comfort and care for you when you’re having an off-day. No one to call the principal or bring you soup or find a nice pile of books to take your mind off of how yucky you feel.
These days my first thought is how much money I’ll lose by not going to work. So I go. I think of blankets and couches until the hours pass and it is home, finally. Still it would be nice to have a hug to return to.
Today I returned instead to loose soil all over the floor, and half my seedlings demolished by two mischievous dogs.
After putting the dogs outside and vacuuming and glad I was too tired to really lose my temper, I went to the kitchen and its near-empty cupboards. This is not good for a tummy that feels very particular about which foods it can handle.
And then I saw a quite full container of yogurt. Creamy top, smooth, plain yogurt.
The good-for-the-gut kind of food. The “off-ness” I have felt all day suggests, in fact, that whatever is going on in my stomach is something that could use a punch of probiotics. Happy helpful bacteria.
So I poured the yogurt into a ramekin with a dollop of honey and a dusting of buckwheat flour. Normally I’d use oatmeal, but I’m all out, and the finer flour is gentler, anyhow.
Honey to heal. Yogurt to balance. Buckwheat for substance and a little bit of dark flavor.
I ate and it’s at least one nice little reversal of things. Sometimes God and I have a difficult time but I love how He gives us food with its wonderful capacity to nourish and nurture.
Adaptation
March 23, 2011 § Leave a comment
Walking. The grasses are yellow.
Dry as straw still in the ground.
.
You don’t walk barefoot through these
grasses, not like the ones back home,
where the rainfall is hardly ever
lacking. When spring comes
.
there the wide and lively rivers
might flood their banks
thanks to many winter snows.
.
You are jealous of the drifts
that friends complain about climbing over
in city streets to get to their cars.
.
Above the yellow grasses, smoke drifts
from a mountain fire. It smells like
camping and the north woods.
.
At night, the ice maker clunks
muted from the kitchen. You walk
across linoleum in your socks, and
toss a cube to the dog, and the other dog.
Two for you, no, three.
.
Let the dry cubes melt into icy water.
Lick the moisture
from the curve of your hand.
The spring cometh!
March 20, 2011 § Leave a comment
Today is the first day of spring.
My little plants started coming up in the middle of the week.
Yesterday, I went snowshoeing in the mountains with friends from Iowa. We dressed warmly and gradually lost the layers, hiding coats and mittens in bushes. Sunshine, snow, a farewell-to-winter, hello-to-spring day right before the vernal equinox. With that glorious close moon in the evening. (More to come on that fun.)
Today my roommate and the dogs and I are off for a hike. The dogs will scamper and run and I will want to skip alongside them like an eight-year-old. There’s just that something in the air!
My friend and roommate from my Oxford semester used to say that spring makes her twitterpated. And that seems the exact right description for this feeling. Except the twitterpated-ness is not in regards to any particular men so much as this season itself, of warming breezes and new greens and the smell of wet soil.
I can’t help loving the eagerness of these seedlings. Yes, I know they are leggy. Hungry for the sunlight in this unfortunately northwest-facing apartment. They are graceful, beautiful, yet fragile in their fast-reached height.
I had hoped I might get by without having to invest in a grow light, as it doesn’t fit well within the new churchmouse budget I’m on. But I will need to replant these hard-working babies a bit deeper, cross my fingers, and wisely start new seeds with more light made available to them. There are ways to innovate, and I like to play. This is trial-and-error, this apartment gardening.
The seedlings seem to be willing spring as much as the rest of us. I stretch for the light. We go again outdoors. Happy Equinox! Happy spring.
Chaos and calm
March 16, 2011 § Leave a comment
Japan. Lives and homes disappearing into earth and sea.
The Middle East awash in riots. My mother’s childhood home.
These are places I have never visited – but the stories of others have drawn them into something vivid and nearly tangible for me. There are scenes of pools in Lebanon, hiking paths to temples in Asia. Flowers, foods. Communities. People.
So much loss, fear, anger, despair.
Everyone has something to say. The footage of course says the most.
I can only say a little about things so far away, things so big, things I don’t know enough about.
And it is but a wish: that grieving, troubled, distraught spirits would find a moment of calm in all this horrid frenzy. That, there, they might gather remnants of hope.
And prayers go heavenward. Hands go to help. Funds are collected, sent forth.
Despite everything, good shall reign.
World. Be loved.
Rising
March 16, 2011 § Leave a comment
Dangle your feet over
the edge. Beyond,
.
a glow rises
warm as fire.
.
You only want it
to be the shimmering
.
waters of dreams,
that you might slip into
.
and swim within, like
a porpoise, like a blue
.
dolphin. It will wash gold
through your hair, light bronze
.
in your eyes, and when it rolls
and tosses, may you laugh and ride.
.
But.
.
Here, dangling your feet – you
don’t know. You don’t even know
.
if you can swim.




































