Monthly Archives: June 2009

Raising the roof in MN

We have been on the run since our trip to NYC.  Milt has been re-editing Video Letters From Prison based on the great info we got from Fernanda.  In the meantime, the plot for our strawbale has been leveled and a load of clay arrived on the property today.  Now that he got the rough cut done, we will be seriously looking at “rasising the roof” and laying the foundation for our new house.  I feel a little bit like I am in a dream.  I’ve had a pattern in my life of not really believing good things can happen to me.  It is strange, because great things DO happen to me.  My life is blessed beyond what I could ever have asked for, and yet I look at that leveled plot of land and have trouble “seeing” the house there.  I’m working on it–both my belief systems and my vision.

I remember when my dad built our first house.  I was in junior high and the housebuilding took two years and all of our help.  My sister Becky and I used to sit on the floor (no walls or roof) of our “bedroom” and dream about when we would be actually sleeping there.  In the winter we used to jump off the “floor” into the snowdrifts below.   I can remember digging ditches, nailing siding, and doing whatever else was required.  I also remember that we had to move in before it was done and our living space was the downstairs “rumpus” room.  I think that is was an early name for “family room.”  There were 7 children and my mom and dad but we did take over the bedrooms so it wasn’t totally a camp out.

June 18th was the anniversary of my Dad’s death.  It was also the day my parent’s married and my sister’s birthday.  She was born one year after they married.  I think, since I am thinking about Dad and building houses, I will post a little thing I wrote about him several years ago.

Later,

Jamie

My Father’s Hands

Last night I dreamed my father gave me a beaded bag with trails of heart-shaped beads wandering across the pale cloth.  Something in my soul wants to finger the trail of beads to discover what he meant by this gift.  Does he mean follow this trail, my darling girl, the trail that is both made of the heart and leads to the heart?

So many books about mothers and daughters, fathers and sons-but what of the daughter caught by a golden thread to her father’s soul?  What of that child?

I am a grown woman, a grandmother now, who looks down at her own stubby fingers one day and sees her father’s hands.  They are not the hands of a piano player or a dancer but the sturdy hands of labor, of getting things done, of endurance and strength.  Iremembers his hands in one scene and then another: tying myskates in winter, sketching the walls of his new house, or solving an intricate problem on paper as if each blunt fingertip had its very own brain, and only when his hands moved could he think.

I remember the warmth and strength of his hands as he kneaded the calves of mylegs late in the night when growing pains hurt badly enough to wake me up crying.  I see his hands holding cards in a favorite game of whist or bridge or gently patting the shoulder of a friend he meets on the street.  I see his two hands resting on a steering wheel while driving to Grandma’s house or holding the very edges of the Sunday paper after church, a plate of powdered-sugar donuts hidden on the other side of the news.  I remember the way my father’s hands would pick up my needlepoint project and run the yarn through six rows tugging just a little too tightly so that I could always see in the tapestry of the finished work, his rows beside my own.

It is his hands I see holding a Louis L’Amour book late in the evening letting go only to take a sip of the beer warming on the side table; his hands building two of our houses to shelter those he loved most; his hands fashioning the ugliest boat ever out  of wood and plank; his hands turning wood, twisting metal, picking berries–and then building a special screen to roll the berries down to clean them.

I see his hands playfully slapping my mother’s backside or holding her against the fridge to steal a kiss, and his hands wielding the razor that plowed a smooth path across his lathered chin while I, sitting on the closed lid of the toilet, waitied for the moment when he would turn and growl and try to kiss my cheek like a rabid dog until Iscreamed and ran out of the bathroom giggling.

All of this I see in an instant when I look down and see my own square hands, so sturdy and strong.

And then I see his hands, swollen and bruised, a blueberry stain on the back where the IV had kept him alive for three more minutes, five more minutes, and then that last and final breath, of death.  And then he was gone, living on in the short fingers of my own hands that crack in the winter just like his did.

My father’s hands.

(Note:  My father married on June 18, had the first of eight children on June 18, and died on June 18.  It was Father’s Day on the day he passed on.)

From NYC back to MN

We just got back from a few days in New York.  We always like going there for a bit.  We had a fabulous doctoring session for Milt’s film, Video Letters from Prison.  Fernanda Rossi spent an entire day with us going scene by scene through the film.  I learned a lot and gained some great strategies that I can even use with my writing.  What fascinated me was that she began by getting to know us and how we think/live/create.  Then she laid out the differences (in films and other areas) between a film whose core is rooted in values, a film whose core is based on fascination (entertainment) and one whose core is based on “moral obligation.”  What Milt and I realized was that one of the reasons we are not very commercial is because most of our work is value-driven.  We tend to stay away from projects meant only to entertain or to preach.  It was kind of an eye-opener.  Even the Bead People are simply here to lead the way to a more peaceful way of being.  We are not pounding the pavement for “peace.”

After the core analysis, then Fernanda went scene by scene with us through the film and helped us to see what the main objective of each scene was.  When we identified that, it was much easier to see what belonged and what needed to be cut.

I loved the process of working with her and ten hours later we were both excited and wasted.  We stumbled back to our hotel and relaxed.

We did have one day to play, though, and also some some good friends.  Tomorrow–it is back to the homestead.

Short post tonight.  I am tired.

Jamie

Reflection on an old newsletter

I just reread that earlier post.  Lately as I unwind from our move from Rapid City to the northwoods of MN, I have been really trying to empty myself out to see (or hear) what spirit wants from me.  It is like a maze–I follow any path and end up in the same place.  I want to write stories and share them.  Tonight we went to a special event in Minneapolis celebrating the people who got Bush Foundation Fellowships.  I applied for that for the second time but did not make it into the finals.  It’s funny–I was not jealous.  I honestly felt like celebrating their success.  At the same time, I felt a bit sad that I can’t find a place for my shining little stories that attempt to bring light to the world.  It feels like my only link to a reading public is through this blog.  I am happy you are finding me and I plan to begin sharing some of those light stories with you even if I have to do it chapter by chapter.

Thanks for being here.

Jamie

Say Yes to Spirit

First published in March of 08 in my newsletter after the birth of my fifth granchild, Adrien Walla.

Years ago when Milt and I were first starting to produce Oyate (native music series), our first encounter was with a Siletz woman named Aggie.  We’d traveled to Oregon to interview her husband, Grant Pilgrim.  We were nervous and unsure of how we’d be received (strangers in a strange land) and Aggie met us at the door and said, “Oh, the creator is so good to us-he has sent us just what we asked for.”  Later, we discovered Grant was dying of cancer and his family’s greatest wish was to hear him sing once again-and to record that music for later generations.

Aggie’s words, “The Creator is so good to us” have become like a mantra to me and the beginning of 2008 seems even more abundant than usual.

Before Christmas this past year I was feeling grumpy from my overloaded schedule and was whining around (forgetting my mantra).  One night I got tired of hearing my own complaints so I sat down and wrote three pages nonstop listing every single thing I’m grateful for.  When I finished, my self-pity had evaporated like mist and rain.  It has yet to return.

Today I think I had another lesson in this curriculum of life.  I was driving back from Pine Ridge after a long week of classes and plugged in an old cassette tape (we’ve been doing a lot of sorting and clearing).  On the tape a man was talking about shamanism and how we must say “yes” when spirit calls.  He kept saying it over and over again.  When spirit calls, say yes.  When spirit calls, say yes. He jokingly said we put spirit off as if it had gotten a message on an answering machine saying, “Hi, you have reached the body of Albuerto.  He isn’t in right now but will get back to you as soon as he can.”  This made me laugh aloud in the car, and I thought of how often I put off what spirit has asked me to do.

What spirit asks may not always match what we thing we should, could, or want most to be doing.  As our world unfolds, I feel an urgency that more and more of us need to say “yes” and quit buzzing around empty beehives thinking that is where the honey is.

I was struck by my own ability to put spirit off.  I realized that I project my beautiful worlds into fiction and then long to enter those worlds-where rivers, stones, trees, and animals all communicate, where mighty winds blow knowledge into the minds of the forgetful humans.  I say yes to writing the stories spirit tells me to write-but then I don’t share them.  I keep them as if they “belong” to me.

So, in the midst of my familial abundance, I make a new resolution for this new (but aging) year.  I will say yes to spirit by sharing anything I can with others.

Rocks Don’t Breathe

I decided that you have heard enough of my planting and play.  I scoured my files and found a bit of “flash” fiction to post tonight.  It was my first attempt at this mini genre and it actually got an honorable mention in the Florida State Short Short Fiction contest.  I won’t say anymore about it and will just post it.

Rocks Don’t Breathe

When he found me I was living under a rock contemplating the wide nothing that had become my life.  I was used to fungus and soft moss and no mirrors and was beginning to think this was not a bad life.  After all.  At least I was no longer clawing tree trunks and scaling naked sky and flying into nothingness.  I am a rock.  I live under a rock.  Rocks are all I eat.  I shit rocks.  When I grow up, I will be a bigger rock.  That’s life.

But when he scraped the mossy sweater off my back and found pink skin and breasts and said that’s not fungus, that’s the life of a woman between your legs, I was so scared I burrowed and hid, but he said no and pulled me into sunshine and laid me nude atop a boulder to dry and said you are so beautiful.  I said yes but you cannot imagine how much I like rocks and he said bullshit.  Rocks don’t bleed or breathe or beat.  Rocks don’t.

And then I was between the rock and him, a hard place to be.

But I pushed when he said push and breathed when he said breathe and air entered my stony lungs in deep gulping pulls and I came out of myself fast, rushing, realizing, split seconds only, that I could have it all.  After all.

Finding the Balance Between Living and Working

Today was an odd day.  The sun was shining and there was a cool breeze–a perfect day for gardening.  I planted dill, replanted my tomatoes, added some cukes (replacing the frozen ones) and then began to feel guilty for not working on the text book project or Video Letters.  I snitted around a bit and then asked Milt to add a small table to our trailer so that I could spread out the three working manuscripts I need for the text book project.  Within 30 minutes I was spread out in a corner of our trailer.  The table will have to come down in time for the bed to come out–but it was so pleasant I got a lot done.

It is challenging living with less and making the best of small things.  I like it.  It makes me feel light on the earth, which was one of my goals.  I look at that comma before which and wonder is that right?  The text book I am editing is a grammar book, and I dream about dependent and independent clauses at the moment.  I am hoping to have this part of the project wrapped up within a week and off to the printers.

“Going Green” has become a marketing tactic.  I find that very interesting and a bit paradoxical because what we really need is to use less and find other ways to fullfill our desires.  I think the spirit longs for great things and when we do not feed it great things, it settles for the small things.

One other thing I did today was work with a tiny space beneath a spruce tree.  I’d found this metal bushal bin in the woods behind our trailer yesterday, and I have decided to turn it into my “Lisa” garden. I erected the “drift kabob” my sister gave me last summer (a metal rod with artistically drilled and stacked pieces of driftwood on it)/  Beside the bucket and the driftwood is a small windchime our niece gave us long ago.  It is one of the few pretties that came with us to MN.  What is a Lisa garden?  When my daughter got married one of the guest gifts was a small packet of flower seed with their name and wedding date printed on the package.  I ‘ve carried that around with me since they got married and now I plan to plant a mini Lisa garden.  I think I will plant a small garden for each of my children, and whenever I tend it I’ll imagine all the good things that are growing or will grow in their lives as they mature.

I think the berry patch belongs to my mom.  Last summer when I was maniacally picking blueberries, I was in the patch that my mom and I used to pick before she died.  Even now, over a decade later, I would lift my head and imagine I could hear her calling my name.  We used to call out to each other as we wandered the woods to keep from getting lost or too far apart.  W also planted two Concord grape vines in there this afternoon.

I love that garden.  It is across the meadow from my trailer and my newly developing gardens because we needed immediate access to water last summer.

It is clear that I am beginning to unwind from a hectic winter and spring.  I’m not sure where my thoughts will take me. I just now overheard a couple screaming at each other, throwing the ‘f’ word around and calling each other effing stupid.  I think about how gently I pulled those grape vines from their bucket this afternoond, taking care to expose as little as possible, adding water immediately, covering them quickly.  People need to care for each other just as gently. We should watch our mouths.  We need to be awake and aware and active.  Now.  In 20 years of marriage I have never used that word with Milt.  Why would I want to hurt someone that I love?

For those of you who are tuning in, friends and strangers alike, take good care of those you love–the yield will be beyond measure.

Jamie

Ode to Acorn Squash

Today I wandered around and kicked up hills in the sand and dirt and planted acorn squash and pumpkin.  I thought it would be fun to see all these plants just roaming whereever they want to go.  In my small garden in Rapid City I had to contain and train and cajole them to stay put.  One year I had a pumpkin plant that took over nearly the whole garden.

I am experimenting with different things.  In one spot I tried a “trench garden” where you dig a three foot deep trench, fill it with trash paper and cardboard, and the fill it in and plant on top of it.  In another spot I tried bag gardening–bags of topsoil with the tops cut off and the seed sewn right into the bag.  It is supposed to be a good way to start a first year garden.  I only put greens and cilantro in those.  Maybe I’ll call my pumpkin and squash garden “Free range squash.”  I still have two grapevines to put in and then I need to replace my tomatoes and cukes.  I also created a “Tool Tipi” today.  That was fun–two trashy looking closet doors destined for the dump came together to provide a shelter for my rakes and shovels.  It actually looks kind of cool.  I stapled a rice bag over the top to give it a little more water protection.

The sun shone.  The ticks roamed.  The mosquitos smiled.  And it was a wonderful few hours under the newly blue sky. There is just something about working with dirt and sand and my own trash pile that makes me happy.   And then I ended the day with my second belly dancing class.  My sister and two pretty nieces are all taking belly dancing lessons.  They are one session ahead of me but I can shimmy with the best of them.  I am not sure if my right hip aggrees, but that is what happens when a 55 year old woman shimmys.

Next week we fly to New York City to work with a “film doctor”.  Fernanda is going to spend a day asking us questions about Video Letters From Prison and helping us to hear our own answers.  No mystery as to why we chose her to work with!  Gaydell–thanks for signing on.  I miss you!  When I figure this straw bale thing out I still may come and plant one on your land.  Tell those other bear lodge eaters to sign on, too.

I’ll keep you posted,

Jamie

New Goals

Tonight I am realizing that it is time to decide what to do with the time I have just freed up.  It has been raining, cold, and gray and my old Minnesota depression threatens to return.  I need some new goals.  A long time ago when I found myself in a similar situation, I decided to ride it out for awhile and see what the greater forces wanted me to do.  I entered a quiet period of aloneness and meditation and that is a little how I feel right now.  I’m nearly done with the text book I’ve been editing and Milt has become fully immersed in producing his film, Video Letters from Prison.

Now what?  I can’t be sure if family constellation and teaching are still up for me.  Time will tell, I guess.  I do know that we will be breaking ground on our strawbale house sometime in the next week–rain or shine.  My first goal will be to learn how to put pictures on my blog!  How is that for a short term goal?  And how about if I make a goal to add something to my blog every day.

What is your goal?  What direction are you heading in?

Jamie

Homesteading MN–The Adventure Begins

After a week of getting settled, I’m finally feeling here.  On May 22 I went off contract with Oglala Lakota College, and then I went to Lincoln, NE to watch my grandkids for a week.  Now, I am back in our little tiny trailer in the north woods of Cass Lake, Minnesota.  It is pretty wild.  Not the land but the fact that we would sell most of our stuff, clear it all out, quit a good, steady job, and leave to live in a 8 x 16 foot trailer.  I’ve had moments of thinking we must be nuts, and other moments of taking a deep breath and falling into my body.  All 24 of my blueberry plants survived the winter.  I sat one day and plucked or cut all the pretty blooms off so that the plants could have another year to get established.  I wonder what I need to do to get established?

Since we already had a substantial bit of land tilled up and fenced for the berries, we decided this year to just put a few vegetables in there and concentrate on building our house.  Unfortunately, it has been so cold that the cukes and tomatoes we bought froze last night-on June 5th.  Unbelievable!  I obviously don’t need to worry that I am getting my garden in too late.

A lot has been accomplished in just over a week.  The power folks came in and put our electricity in and the next day my brother’s showed up and helped us pound a well.  Milt and I “witched” the spot we wanted for the well.  My brothers gave us each a pair of slim rods bent just enough to hold in the palm of your hands.  We walked all over the area near where we want to build.  It is amazing how those slim rods seem to have their own energy and slide through our hands and cross over the “water spots.”  We chose the place where it was strongest for both of us and we got water within 12 feet.  We pounded down to 20 feet and then added a pump.  When we tested, we were getting ten gallons per minute.

As much as I love puttering and planting and playing with this bit of land, I also want to settle into myself to see what is next for me.  I have left behind the regular family constellation work I was doing, my full time teaching job, plus all of my other creative pursuits.  What now?  I am hoping that an irresistible urge to write comes over me at some point but I’ve decided not to even push that.  I am not going for a subsistence kind of lifestyle-just a simpler and healthier one.  I love that crystal clear water flowing from my well, and the berries blooming on my bushes.  (Although I did do a terrible bloomicide.)

So, stay posted and I will see what comes up.  Milt and I have two big projects that we are finishing and then hopefully the warm weather will come and we will begin building our strawbale house.  We staked it out the other day and got it approved.  Exciting.

Onward,

Jamie