Archive for the 'Essays' Category

God Night

I feel like I am coming home to myself at last.  I needed a bit of summer to restore my spirit.  Today I went to the park and built Bead People underneath a tree.  It is so strange how those little characters can restore my equilibrium.  The project itself is beginning to grow outside of my own creations.  My daughter, Nichol, has started the first outside Chapter of Friends of The Bead People in Lincoln, NE.  And, in typical Nichol style, she has created a beautiful, enchanted booth that makes me want to go to Lincoln and build a few just to sit inside of it.  She called the other night and told me that she had three blind people building bead people in her tent.  It was such a lovely image I nearly got teary-eyed.

It is strange how engaging such a simple project can be.  It reminds me that beads have been a part of every single human culture since the beginning of time.  They have been created from mud and glass and seeds and shells.  They have been used to adorn, as money, and of course, as gifts.  It must be embedded into our collective souls-this love of beads. 

Sadly, her partner Lynette, who is 7 months pregnant, has been told she needs to be on bed rest for the remainder of her pregnancy.  Although I’ve never met her, her energy and enthusiasm for the Bead People has reached me from 11 hours away.  We will hold her in our thoughts and prayers.  Nichol also told me that she sent her husband home with a list of necessary items she would need for her hospital stay-and top of the list were her Bead People supplies. 

We are now inviting others to get involved.  You can see details and meet Nicci and Lynette at www.thebeadpeople.org.  In recent weeks we have had money donations for printing, bead donations from as far away as Australia, and several requests to get involved.  Two women at our own Journey Museum fell madly in love with The Bead People and I spent over an hour with them as they handled each little person in order to pick the ones they wanted for the gift shop.  I loved watching them play.

That is what the project is about.  It is play-with a mission.  It gives us a way to sit around and get to know each other and to talk about life and how to create the world we all want, where “family” takes on a much bigger meaning.  I love the Lakota saying, Mitakeya Oyasin-We are all related.  I believe that in my heart.  Our humanness so outweighs the differences.

I am back at work on another novel.  While we were in D.C. recently, I had a note from my agent with her list of first submissions for my novel, One Drum.  Suddenly it struck me that my life-long goal of “being a writer” was at hand and I want to be ready if a publisher wants to see what else I have up my sleeve.  The novel I went back to work on is about a small and very wise lizard (yes, I said lizard), named Sulee who is sent to help a girl named Lela.  This little lizard is so engaging.  He is smart, funny, and very sincere.  It sounds like a children’s book but it is not.  It is in the same theme of what I’ve begun to think of as my “Earth Series”.  Sulee lives in a world where the animals, the stones, the trees are all awake and aware, tuned into the earth in a way that humans have forgotten.  Maybe tomorrow I’ll post the opening pages just to give you an idea of this wise-but young-little lizard.  Oh, the working title is “Sulee-A Lizard’s Tale”.

God night.  That was a typo but I rather like it.

Jamie

Blunt Force Impact

This was written a few months after my first husband, Wayne, was killed in a plane crash.  I did not post one of the later edited versions because I decided I like the first version better–raw and to the bone. 

Blunt Force Impact

I can’t find the top of my bedroom dresser again. Flat surfaces don’t stay flat in my life. Deciding it’s a good day to clear it, I empty the tissue paper out of a shoebox and start with one thing empty. I begin picking though the contents and realize that the pile is a collage that represents my life these past two months. It’s not all my stuff. There are two movie stubs, my husbands. He usually goes to the movies alone-a voracious appetite for Hollywood and I’m a picky eater. A boarding pass from Luthansa Air; in October we flew to Germany to interview a man with a deep soul and to experience Europe together for the first time. We landed in Frankfurt and took a train to Kufstein, Austria. I felt strangely at home there.
On the dresser is a single small, tan pebble with a lighter streak running through it. It looks like the tip of a finger. Dachau. I picked the pebble up at Dachau knowing full well it was probably a recent addition, hauled in with a load of rough gravel to keep the mud from seeping up. Atop my jewelry box is the small yellow booklet on Edith Stein, the Carmelite Nun who died at Dachau. The nuns have surrounded Dachau with prayer. We bought the German version of the booklet. Intention? To learn German.

I recognize that I’m distracting myself with this sudden need to clear my dresser top. I’ve just reserved a room in a motel at the top of Rimrock Highway in order to gather my focus to finish the final paper of my master’s program today. I asked for room number nine on the second floor. It’s the last room on the end near the rocky slate wall that rises above Rapid Creek. I can see number nine in my mind. I’ve been there three or four times already. It smells of dust and old carpet and some cheap deodorizer but it has no phone. It’s cheap. And except for the creek running below the rock wall, there is nothing to distract me. My paper is on “belongingness”. Ironic-that I retreat from my husband, my son, my eight-year-old granddaughter to write about belonging.

I sort the stray socks that have lost their mates, separating his from mine. There is a small leather box from India or Guatamala bought at a third world store to support the worker from other nations. It holds my favorite earrings, including the small dream catchers with colored metallic thread catching the dreams. More stones, from Vermont, gathered on walks in between learning sessions in structural thinking with the Fritz’s.

After Germany I drove from Philly to Vermont. It was in the old New England house serving as a conference center that the idea for my position paper came to me. I had not yet made the crossing between an old German man whose work is ancestral, almost Shamanic, dealing with the deep, hidden pools of family and the Fritz’s who deal only with structures. I felt out of it. I picked the fist-size stone up walking alone on the skinny, leafy, Vermont road while repeating a walking mantra to myself. Systems? Or structures. Does human behavior link to long ancestral lines, or internal structures? I resent being asked to choose. Why must I choose to belong? And at what price? This becomes the topic of my paper.

The lone socks on my dresser are mated once again; blue to blue, beige to beige, paired for life, until the next wash day, and then they risk separation once again.

The sand dollar on my dresser is from Orange County. That dollar, and some of the stones, are there by intention-for me to look at. When we came back from California last July, there were two sand dollars. On a beach outside of Santa Barbara I found a fresh sand dollar, before the gulls had plucked its center out. It was the first, perfectly intact sand dollar I’d ever found on all the beaches I have walked. I broke it trying to protect it so my granddaughter could take it to show and tell. The one on my dresser is the less than perfect one.

Belongingness sounds like a too simple topic for a final paper in a master’s program in Human Development, but it is the one I’ve chosen. Not belongingness so much as conscious belongingness. The paper is called a “position paper” and I find that ironic as well, that I should be asked to scan my studies and choose and defend a position. Conscious belonging is about gaining the freedom of self to not just blindly belong but to pick, choose, finger the cities of the self like the stuff on my dresser and decide what deserves care and attention-and what to discard. I tried hard to protect that sand dollar but ended up snapping it into two pieces.

Blind belonging.

The most curious item on my dresser is a small leather box. It’s a toy, probably 50 years old, a viewfinder complete with the small round cards. I can’t figure out how it came to be on my dresser. I didn’t put it there. Usually, it’s tucked high up into the closet; it may be an antique so nobody is allowed to play with it. I take it out of the box. The plastic is that heavy dark plastic. I slip in a card at random and click through the Sonoran Desert, fascinated by the 3-D effect. I stop on a Joshua tree, looking at how it reaches upward, like most living things, especially plants. I met my husband in the desert lands around Tucson and so always have a special fondness for things of the desert. Once we spent the drive between Tucson and Phoenix creating a joke book we called Saguaro Psychology. We personified each Saguaro and gave it a caption.

I put the viewfinder back up in the closet and pick up a book of poetry by Rilke. Poor, brilliant Rilke. I read an article on his life once. His mother lost a baby daughter and later named her son Ranier Marie after the dead daughter. My German teacher, who we interviewed in Germany, would see Rilke caught in the tangle of his mother’s grief and bravely bearing it for her. Belongingness.

I think back to Germany, to Bert’s living room. He is 76 and had just had knee surgery and would lunge his body into the couch so that his legs would land propped on two giant pillows. He would grin every time. To his left was what looked like a giant piece of orangish quartz lit from within by a small bulb. Salt, he said, from the mine at Bertesch Gaden.

Salt. I wanted to lick it like a deer in a meadow. He wouldn’t have minded, I’m sure. Instead I politely and discretely wet my finger on my tongue, rubbed it across the salt lamp, and put the finger back in my mouth. Salt. Bert grinned again, his understanding allowing plenty of room for common curiosity. Later, his wife gave us a small glass jar filled with broken chunks of the stony salt and told us to fill it with water and mix ½ teaspoon a day with water and drink it. The molecules match those of the body, she said. It heals.

When a mind closes around “positions” that don’t align with the current belonging, the current group, we lose out on wide, awakening variety, of not licking a chunk of salt because who would want to risk such social error. If I were back in Bert’s living room, I would flatten my tongue on that chunk and damn the consequences. Out in my living room I have a smaller version of Bert’s lamp that we bought for 22 euros in Bertesh Gaden. I can lick that one whenever I like but, oddly, I haven’t. I only want to lick his, at that precise moment in time.

My position is that we should not be so quick to defend a position. If I fix my eye too firmly on one position, I go blind to all others. I lose fluidity. I lose my right to change. I lose my heart.
I wonder. Had I known I was going to write about my dresser top this morning, would I have paid closer attention? For instance, I can’t recall the movies he saw. I looked, but I didn’t see. I didn’t know I’d be asked, an hour later, to recall it. I want to say Bowling, which would be short for Bowling for Columbine. He saw that in downtown Manhattan a month ago. There should be three stubs that say Bowling because the next day we both went to the matinee. There is a theme in the things on my dresser top and, perhaps, in the things I only imagine are there, like three stubs for Bowling for Columbine. The shootings at Columbine School are about belongingness-or not. Inclusion. Exclusion.

Suddenly, I remember what else was on my dresser top. Two photos. Just remembering them crashes me back into early September. September 4.

The first photo is a long, horizontal picture of my 17-year-old daughter, Lisa, at the wheel of her car. Her smile is big. She has a fabulous smile. Her left arm is extended straight out the window, her wrists circled with two blue bands of uncertain material. With attitude, that arm says. Behind her, a giant, cloud layered sky.

The second photo also has sky, bare of clouds this time. A steel power line structure takes the center of the photo like a giant. And on the earth below, tattered, scattered, and burned is a single engine Cessna belonging to my first husband, the father of my three children. Lisa’s dad. It’s a newspaper clipping that reads, “Local men dead after air crash. Near I-94 in central North Dakota.

The two pictures are incongruent, out of synch. When I called Lisa in the middle of the night to tell her that her father was dead, she screamed. As she screamed, her sister came in the door of her apartment in Lincoln, Nebraska, and they screamed together. I could hardly breath, listening to them scream with me a fucking nine hours away and my son still asleep in his bed in the sunroom.
I realize that my failure to remember these two pictures sitting on my dresser top while I ruminate about stones and sand dollars is my mind’s effort to shield me from this memory, of my children crying and their blade-sharp question, “Do you think he loved us? Really?”

The social scientist, Kurt Lewin said it is not belonging but our own uncertainty of belonging that makes us vulnerable. Rilke writes,

Finally, using both my eyes
I close my face,
And when it lies with its weight in my hand
It looks almost like rest.
That’s so they won’t think I have nowhere
To lay my head.
Blunt force impact. I will despise those words forever.

Later, my children went with their uncle to the site of the crash and threw carnations of all colors gathered from memorial mourners over the site. And then they dirtied their hands with soot and soil, digging like archeologists in search of any sign of him. My eldest filmed the scene which ended with my 17-year-old son washing a chunk of metal that looked like a sculpture of cumulus nimbus clouds. A piece of engine melted from form . . . to formless. His back is to the camera, he squats, dipping the metal in a stock pond on a piece of prairie outside of Bismark, North Dakota. In front of him, an incredible sunset swallows his hurt, taking it back to the earth.

Suddenly, I understand why my dresser top got so piled up these past two months. I don’t know where to put all the things it contains, how to assimilate, integrate–how to fit each item into the greater soul of my life. I can’t file and tuck these things away-and I can’t get rid of them either.

I think again about the position paper, of my tasteless motel room waiting for me at the top of Rimrock where I will go and sit cross-legged on a blue bedspread for the next twenty-four hours and write about belonging-or not; about conscious belonging-or not.

Semester’s end . . .

I am sitting out in Kyle, SD on the Pine Ridge Reservation watching a spring blizzard move in.  So strange–I could be home with my husband, warm and cozy.  We have meetings (maybe?) tomorrow and so I stayed here in the motel.  We have one more week of our semester at Oglala Lakota College and I have been testing students all week.  It is so strange–we have worked hard together all semester and I have seen them gain confidence, find their stride, and make great advances in learning how to learn.  I love it–and I hate that some “national” test gets to decide their fate and not me, their teacher. 

I can’t even imagine what the repercussions of this “test them” mentality will do on real learning.  At a time when we need to be showing people the power of creating and learning–we put them in a box instead.  It upsets me.  Sometimes I wish I could care less–how is that for a goal?  I know, it wouldn’t be me and it wouldn’t make any sense. 

On the other hand, I had a bunch of my “rapper” type students who sometimes smell like pot and who sometimes can’t make class pass through to the upper English class.  For each one, I put an ‘A’ on their test paper, shook their hands, and congratulated them. 

If I had my druthers (is that really a word?), I would re-write school like I have been re-writing my novel.  I would look for the most exquisite combination of creation, learning, energy work, challenge etc, etc.  I would make students plant gardens, test soil, make art and music, study only what interests them greatly.  I would not be a wise guy at the front of the room with a condescending attitude and a superior stick up my you know what. 

Guess I needed a rant and I also needed to post something.  I did get through the final little tweaky changes for ONE DRUM so I can send it off to my agent tomorrow.  Only 100 pages of tiny edits left.

Good night, friends.

Jamie

We Can’t Afford Not to Get it Right!

Today Leon Hale and I gave a presentation about our book, Washaka—The Bear Dreamer to a classroom of students in an alternative school. It is a brand new, beautiful facility on the edge of the northern hills. The teachers are committed and determined to help these students who have been school referred, court ordered . . . or dumped . . . on them. I asked to use the bathroom when we first got there and somebody with a key had to let me in. She said the entire place was a “lockdown” facility. Not a single door there could be opened without a key. The teachers (bless their hearts) were skittish, constantly looking around, counting heads, monitoring behavior.

I wanted to say, FOR GOD’S SAKE—THESE ARE OUR CHILDREN!! I had a flash back to one of the first real jobs I had which was in an “Attention” center for troubled youth. I hated that place. It took children who have been knocked around by life and treated them as if they were criminals. I only lasted a few months at that job.

This past year I’ve been invited to be a part of a progressive international group that is forming around the youth. It is called Global Passageways and is made up of both young people and “elders” who are working their butts off to find a way to treat the young with respect and guidance. I don’t yet know what will be accomplished by this global movement, but I hope it is something soon.

Yesterday Milt attended a town meeting that was discussing a mere 4 million dollar shortfall in our local school system. On the cut list of services were all elementary music, all elementary librarians (can you believe it?), the gifted and talented program, and who knows what all. Sports were not on the list.

I cannot for the life of me understand what kind of a wake-up call it will take for us to understand that our priorities are completely and totally upside down in this country. If we don’t invest in the youth—we have no future. Simple as that. We can’t afford not to get it right. The cost will be much, much greater than a war in some distant land . . .

Goodnight. I shouldn’t get up so early . . .

On a positive note, I finally got an agent for one of my novels. The novel is about how Unci Maka (Grandmother Earth) takes pity on the human race and sends us a little help . . .

Jamie

The Mother Load

Tonight is the anniversary of my mother’s death and tomorrow (April 9) is the anniversary of her birth.  My relationship with my mother was a complicated one.  It is odd how when parents do it right their children sometimes get a little “too big for their britches.”  That was a favorite phrase that my father used when we tried to rule the household.  But my goal is to revisit my relationship with my mother tonight and not my dad. 

 My mother had eight children.  I was third girl and was followed by five brothers. 

 No, not a summary.  I want to do what Natalie Goldberg urges writers to do and ” write to the bone.” 

 I looked down at my mother for some reason.  I thought she was not very smart, that she took things too seriously (particularly her Catholic faith), and that she didn’t really “get” me.  I was always a dreamy little girl with my nose in a book and she was a busy mom with a large household to run.  I constantly felt guilty for not doing enough to help, and the shadow of that guilt still follows me today.  My mother was not good at saying what she meant and would always couch things in a kind of passive-aggressive way, speaking from the side of her mouth.  “Long suffering” is another term I’ve heard that describes my mom. 

 I often wondered what my mother did with her dreams and aspirations and I used that against her somehow.  How could she “settle” for so little?  Did she drown that dreamy part of her when she was young and never let her re-emerge?  And why did I think that who she was was not enough?  Didn’t she raise eight children to be creative and responsible adults? We are all still alive today and doing well raising families of our own. 

 As I think about it now, I think my own scornful thoughts were retaliation.  I wanted my mom to see ME.  I wanted her to tell me she was proud of me, that I had become someone she liked and admired.  I wanted her attention—desperately.  I still do. 

 Now I sometimes feel like my own children don’t get me; that they judge my life and find it wanting.  Isn’t it strange-what goes around comes around. 

 So on this, the eve of both her birth and death, I want to remember some of the things that were right with us.  Both Mom and I loved the quiet times.  My fondest memories are of putting puzzles together on rainy or snowy days, picking blueberries together, and playing scrabble for hours on end even though she never could beat me. 

 In my last year of college, I moved home to save money.  I was in my final semester of courses and planning a spring wedding.  I was tired . . . tired of thinking, tired of partying, tired of working so hard and pushing to put myself through college.  For one semester, instead of working so hard in a bar to pay the bills, I just moved home for the winter.  I did my classes, studied and then spent hours and hours and hours with my mom playing scrabble.  We didn’t talk much-my mother never was much for deep conversations but it was so comforting to just be there with her. 

 I am older now and wiser (I hope).  I realize fully that both of my parents gave me all I needed in order to pursue an education, create a nice life, and extend that life forward for my own children and my work.  I have the steadiness of my mother, the creativity of my father, and the love of life and children that both of them shared.  Something that I have learned in my constellation work is that the gift of life is the biggest gift of all—and my parents are much, much bigger than I am and always will be even though they are both gone now.

 Oh, and what I wouldn’t give to lay out a scrabble board or grab the berry bucket and head to the woods with my mother just one more time . . . just one more time.

 I miss you, Mom. 

 Love,

 Patti

 P.S.  My legal name is Patricia Lee Lee.  I have gone by “Jamie Lee” for the past twenty years except with my family–all of my brothers and sisters still call me Patti. 

Just For Fun . . .

The Bead PeopleDid you ever do something “just for fun” and then have it bloom around you like a pretty garden?  A couple of years ago I was making earrings and got bored with it, so “just for fun” I used the wire to create little people out of beads. 

Then a year ago I was scribbling away and wrote a little story about this big wind that comes and blows all the people of earth into one another until even their body parts get mixed up.  I liked the story and the message it carries-how about we should just get along and accept each others’ differences.  It is the same basic Second Bead Personstory First Man tells Albert in Albert’s Manuscript-minus the beads. Then, (oh, my relentless mind) I wanted pictures to go with the story but couldn’t find an illustrator (I can’t draw), so one night I was puttering around on Publisher and created a “mock up” of the story using geometric shapes and curves.  It was kind of cute so I printed a bunch and put them with The Bead People.  I ran out right away and so I then took the little book to the print shop and printed 1500 of them.

Now, one year later, the Bead People are on a walk-about around the world.  They’ve traveled to Finland, France, Germany and who knows where else.  Schools and organizations are calling me-we started taking trays of beads to festivals and school classrooms and letting children build their own Bead Person—just for fun.  The books are almost gone and I need to go back to the print shop because we have too many events scheduled for the next two months and not enough books.  So then we decided to build a website (http://www.thebeadpeople.org/) and start an international peace movement (getting a Bead Person automatically makes you a member J).  Milt even created a film of one of the festivals with a remake of the Beatles song, “All You Need are Beads” as the sound track.  

I think of all the many paths I’ve forged trying to make my way in the world and, suddenly, The Bead People come along to teach me that all I really need to do is something that expresses who I am and what I believe, and the path will unfold naturally.  They are such clever little beings, those Bead People.   Milt and I have been making up fun sayings like “Don’t Worry-Bead Happy” or “To Thine Ownself Bead True”.  We may put them on T-Shirts-just for fun.

I will never get wealthy from my little “just for fun” project, but acquiring wealth or stuff has never rung the bell for me.  I am, however, discovering a small side benefit.  Having schools call me is opening doors and allowing me to talk about the Natural Human Learning Process with teachers and administrators.  This process has transformed my own classroom and, I hope, will soon be transforming other classrooms.  (To see free videos of the process, visit the front page of http://www.manykites.org/ or to download free guidelines on how to use NHLP in your classroom visit Dr. Rita Smilkstein’s website at http://www.borntolearn.net/ ).

My bottom line.  Today I had the fine opportunity to watch two classrooms full of developmental English students wrap their minds around the structure of a sentence and really GET it for the first time.  I get to watch them as they realize their own potential to learn anything-given the right chance.  This is wealth beyond measure . . .

Good night and sleep well.

Jamie

When We Create . . .

As you can see, I came to the end of Albert’s Manuscript.  That story is so close to my heart.  I hope you took the time to read it because I think it contains a bit of prophecy.  While writing it, I was amazed to see emerge in the fringes of Albert’s amazing story what I now think of as the four major movements of mankind.  First man and First Woman tell Albert about the walkers, the watchers, the weavers-and the weepers. When I think of the walkers, I think of the many thousands of years that passed while small bands and clans of people wandered and populated the earth. 

The Watchers mark the emergence of the modern world where reason, intelligence, language begin to rule the evolving world.  The age of science and inquiry-of watching-broke the world into pieces and parts in order to better understand its structure.  They have built the world we now occupy.

The weavers remind me of what some call “the indigo child.”  The weavers now enter the world to put back together what the age of reason somehow took apart.  The weavers are the creators and they are my main concern.  How can we support the young spirits into living creatively and making a harmonious whole out of the separated “threads” of the human loom. 

The weepers I think of as those who could not or would not learn to weave-and so they weep. 

It is almost impossible for me to know how many thousands of lives I’ve touched in my work.  I started out opening a day care center when my first child was born.  Then I taught aerobic dance (yes, it’s true) and later moved into becoming an NLP trainer in my twenties.  I spent ten years working with groups and individuals and then went from there to doing the radio documentary work which took my husband and me over 100,000 miles into Indian Country.  Now, I am a teacher. 

The faces of all the people I have met and worked with are like a vast sea but if I were to summarize that 30 years of experience, I could easily separate the thousands of faces into two groups—those who have learned to create according to some inner spiritual gyroscope-and those who didn’t.  The weavers-and the weepers. 

I don’t always understand the many forces that create one or the other-I wish I could.  It is so sad to see precious life energy expended in constant self-criticism, old (awful) tape loops and behaviors or aimed against others.  Sometimes I just want to tell people who are feeling sorry for themselves or blaming others or wishing for some other life to KNOCK IT OFF-YOU DON’T HAVE TIME FOR THAT!!

Learning to live a creative, resourceful life is a skill.  It can be learned.  It takes discipline, self-inquiry, a willingness to risk doing what your heart tells you to do and then a lot of practice and research.  And it is worth every ounce of energy that it requires.   

This is a bit of a rant stemming from a personal frustration with watching people I am close to shut their creative juices down or direct them in terrible ways.  I also know that I always teach what I most need to learn—so I try to listen to my own rants. 

Stretch your arms out from your sides as far as you can and then act within that sphere.  It is all at your fingertips.

To close tonight, I want to thank the many people who have registered for my blog site.  It encourages me to keep writing.  I may not know your faces-but I’d like to.

Peace,

Jamie  

Dear Gina,

I wanted to add this letter to last night’s post but it got too wordy so I decided to save it for tonight.  It is not my intention to fill my blog with doom and gloom-there are just too many vibrant possibilities all around–but once in awhile I need to vent. I was so angry when Gina Score died (almost ten years ago) and just the other day I was reading about other teenagers being abused in “correctional” facilities.  We have to understand that violating young people does nothing to correct the sometimes uneasy path they walk. 

Also, I have a plan.  Over the next couple of weeks (while I am hopefully busy with the new baby), I think I will post the entire Albert’s Manuscript chapter by chapter.  This story is the first version of the little story that appears in The Bead People book and gives a great message about our youth-the weavers.   I’ll tell you more about the origins of this book when I make the first post tomorrow night. 

For now, bear with me as I vent.

Jamie

(In honor of Gina Score, age fourteen, who died of heat exhaustion after a forced run at the Plankington State Juvenile Training School in Plankington, SD)

Child in Need of Supervision

Dear Gina,

I’ve thought of you so often since that hot, sunny July day in 1999 when you laid down, not to suntan yourself or to smile at blue sky and dream, but to watch your spirit leave your body and fly off to parts unknown. 

They thought you were faking, playing sick after the forced three-mile run.  The other girls watched your lips turn blue and your breath grow ragged.  They cried, said the counselors laughed and taunted you.  It was, after all, Boot Camp in Plankinton State Training School and you were a CHINS, a child in need of supervision. 

What did you do that brought this day of execution?  They said you stole $2.99 worth of Press-N-Go fingernails from ShopKo.  They said you were over 200 pounds and fourteen years old, and that the counselors let you lay in the hot sun with 83% humidity for three hours until your body temperature rose to 108 degrees (as far as the thermometer reads).   I’m hoping you don’t remember any of it-that some great and gentle being of light came early into that awful scene and took you past all pain. 

We don’t make it easy for our youth.  We’ve made being young a crime in this culture.  When you step out of childhood and into adolescence and your powerful need to understand explodes, we roll our eyes and say “teenagers” as if that explains the whole sorry mess. 

Well, you’re safe now, dear Gina.  Beyond all reach . . . except I miss you.  I miss your energy, your highest ideals; I even miss your beautiful anger signaling the need for change.  I sincerely hope your death will serve as a catalyst for real change, to wake us in some, sharp, startling, blood curdling way. 

Then, and only then, can I come to terms with your unspeakable death. 

Coming Together

Milt sent out one of my sporadic newsletters today and since then I have been inundated with such wonderful notes from readers and friends.  Thanks to all of you who responded.  I also made the offer of sending a free link to download a pdf copy of Washaka-The Bear Dreamer to any who requested it.  I think I’ll make the same offer here-good for the next month. So, any who register for my blog during the rest of March or into April will also get a link sent to them.  You may share it with others or pass the word along to register for their own copy. In my newsletter and in an earlier post I talked about saying yes to spirit.  That is how Washaka came about.  Everything about that book has been touched by the greater spirit, from Leon’s first approach to me, to writing the book and then seeing it through to publication. 

I want to tell you a bit of what has happened since Washaka was published.  It has been such a fun journey for both Leon and me.  Last Friday Leon presented a program to three classes at an elementary school.  During the program he read the piece of the story where Little Chief uses the flute to ease Mato Ska’s fears enough that he can emerge from the woods and be seen without scaring the boy.  Leon played flute music during his talk and then he talked to them about how the elders raised the children.  I didn’t get to attend because I had meetings to go to, but Leon told me about it.  I had to laugh when he said he left five minutes for questions and then got swarmed. 

Leon said he wanted to send a message not just to the students but to the teachers also.  He wanted them to see that working with children means not hollering at them-treating them with respect, expecting respect back, and that children are easily hurt by life.  Two years ago Leon had never dreamed of doing anything like this.  It has been fun to see him grow as a result of sharing his story with me and having the book be so well loved by so many.  Leon has watched many of his grandchildren be “hurt by life” and wants us all to return to an earlier way.

Oh, I want so much for these children (even us older ones).  They deserve to be treated sweetly and with a sacred hand.  I am especially sensitive at the moment because my daughter, Lisa, is due to give birth to her first child in the coming days.  I have her wrapped in my own safe energy and can hardly wait until I can get to Lincoln, NE to be with her.  I think of those little points of energy joining us on this plane and everything in me says they deserve all the best we can give them. 

Today I showed Milt’s film, Video Letters From Prison to two of my classes at Oglala Lakota College.  It is such a heart-rending and yet beautiful film.  I’ve used it before in classes and then I always have the students write a short reaction paper about it after.  I ask them to write about their fathers, fatherhood, grandfathers, or whatever moves them.  These papers are always the best writing I have ever seen-straight from the heart.   Today one student who has barely said five words directly to me since the semester began stayed after class and told me all about his own absent, alcoholic father and how it has affected him and shaped him in life.  It was amazing.  After he left I read the paper he left behind and it was all too typical of these reservation families.  The line that struck me most was, “I hate my father-I love my father.”  That single line showed how well this student knows his own inner self. 

By the way, Video Letters is a film Milt produced about three girls whose father is in prison.   They connect with him through a series of video “meetings.”  Milt times the edits so that you can see the reactions of all of them.  It is a powerful film and he has continued to follow the girls through graduations, actually meeting Dad in the prison, and on into life. Eventually it will be an hour-long documentary.   If ever there was a doubt that children need their fathers, we need only to watch this film to know the truth. 

I wasn’t going to write so much or so long tonight.  I actually just wanted to say thanks for the nice notes today, but I can’t seem to help myself.  (Lord, keep me from writing again?)

I’m hoping one of the next posts will include a welcome to my newest grandchild.  Lisa and Brian chose not to discover the baby’s sex and so we will be surprised-most of us think  girl, though. 

Until then,

Stay safe and warm,

Jamie

   

The Muse in Black

 In a few days I travel again to Lincoln, NE to meet yet another new grandchild.  Today is my Lisa’s due date and she has been much on my mind the past few weeks.  Her planning is right on because I go on spring break in two days. 

The past week I have been scanning through the 80 books I got in the mail (after I agreed to judge an awards thing).  It has been interesting to be just the reader and not the editor/writer.  Reading so many pages and trying to determine what is “good writing” and what is “so-so” writing is a challenge.  It reminds me of a little essay I wrote several years ago after sorting literary journals in a bookstore trying to see where my own writing fits.  In all honesty, I don’t get the literary thing-but I do get literature.  So, I’ll post my essay below and see what you think.  I wrote it during a lovely drive to Wisconsin to interview my constellation teacher, Heinz Stark. 

The Muse in Black

In Milwaukee I find the mother lode of literary magazines in a bookstore and park my ass on the dull carpet and scan the titles, plucking first one and then another off the shelf to read, beginning with ‘A’ for Antioch and moving to ‘Z’ for Zoetrope.  Most of them I’ve never seen despite all dire warnings of read the markets before you submit.  I can’t help it.  I write and write with little care of who will take the offering. 

But here, now, I intend to find out where I belong.

The style is an email style;  a short, cut it until it bleeds truth, bony finger language, incomplete sentences.  Stop.  Staccato, wings clipped, flight impossible in the mutation of language, in the marriage of current culture and language, in the deep abandonment of soul. 

There is no generous, voluptuous language swinging its hips, stretching a finger across space to touch a blemished face, across time to spy on a mother’s first moments with her newborn, no loose-limbed walk across an open field filled with the scent of soil, sage, and sex sticking to your jeans. 

More like jab, poke, flip. 

And in the moment when white space, breath, a time-stopping exquisite pause is required, or desired, to give the long muscle time to bunch and loosen, a few lines, nothing more, flex, flex, flex, biceps strong and bulked, the moment when you see me, really see me and I see you.

It takes me back to my radio days when the NPR style suggested we edit the breath itself for efficient sound bite, sound chunk, bits and bites and no chewing, no time for digestion or digression or exposure.  I think back to my German teacher who says all neurosis rests in a failure to complete the reaching out movement.  Infant to mother, soul to life, the complete outward stretch. 

I read the Braille of my culture in the clip, clip, clip of the new writer, leaf tips curling from early frost, fruitless buds, hearts frozen, all memory of blooming gone.

No, I prefer to let it breathe, let it flow out like water, like rivers, like floods, like vines creeping over the earth, like skin stretching over twins held in mother’s belly. 

I want to discover my own truth and think Colorado peach.  I want, I desire, I long for, I reach and reach and stretch and elongate, in elegant braids of desire and need, in a moment, one moment more, the breath caught in my thought, salivating, the zen movement, the satori of breathing through the obstacle until yes, feel it, smell it, touch it, bite it, suck it, juice dripping, wet, water, life flowing, yes, yes, mine. 

Tension releases.  I eat the peach. 

There is such unheard of abundance in nature . . . and such stingy, cringing, stopped growth called Art.

 If I want to call Art I will call him lover or despot or son and spin his tales until he folds his head into my lap and weeps. 

I overhear two women in the bookstore speaking and one says, “They had a perfectly good story and they stuck this literary ending on and ruined it.”  This lady is not just unhappy-she’s pissed off at being lured into the garden and then blindfolded, blindsided, and then left in the darkness. 

The Muse in black.  She mourns. 

I leave most of the magazines on the shelf.  Buy two.  Stuff them in the bag.  Take them to the hotel.  Leave them in the bag. 

And then I drive again through Wisconsin gold and red, autumn in the leafy world, along the river, through the farmlands of Minnesota, back across the long, dry prairie, counting cows and counting minutes until I can get back to my page of blank white paper and play and dance and sing the muse out of hiding and demand she disrobe before the grand council and do a river dance until her toes bleed and her heart sings once again for the sheer love of it, the sheer love of life, the sheer love of language. 

She sheds her widow’s weeds and joins me in the dance.