Another day of clearing, packing, painting.

Yesterday I took a much needed nap and dreamed that I was back with my first husband.  This has been a reoccurring dream where I am always trying to get back to the one I really love-but I can’t seem to make it happen.  This time it was my first love, Jack Wells, that I was trying to get back to.  Later I realized that I will be going back to northern Minnesota almost 32 years to the date that I left.  I married Wayne on May 28th of 1977.   It was a strange, dark time for me.  I graduated from college one week before the wedding.  I had worked my way through college by pushing drinks in a bar in Bemidji.  Those four years are a fog for me filled with depression, and the dim scenes of the early seventies.  All I wanted was to get away from that place.  I think I would have married Saddam Hussein just to get out. 

This does not make me proud.  Wayne was a good guy, but we never quite met in the sweet middle.  Always at odds.  He was an engineer-I wasn’t sure who I wanted to be.  Three children later we split up and I found Milt.  These past 20 years have been all sweet middle.  Now, we are about to embark on a new adventure-and heading back full circle for me . . . going home.

It is so odd.  Whenever I tell people that I have quit my job and we are going to live on a piece of land in the northern woods, they always ask if I am retiring.  My mind blanks out at the question.  I think of the word “retire” and imagine a person backing away from life.  I think of this as going forward into life.  I’m 55 years old and returning to a place I hated and married to get away from.  Now it calls me like a song-wind, water, earth, rain, sun.  (I think I’ll skip the snow and the freezing cold.)  We are one week from leaving.  We have done a stunning amount of work to get ready for this, and I am so ready. 

Today I walked around the house looking at what remains of my material goods.  It is pretty thin.  I got a couple of empty boxes and asked myself, “What do I really want to keep?”  Even the things I chose to keep all seemed to relate to where we are going; a thin tin cutout of turtles, a painting of a bear laying on his back eating berries (Milt bought me this in Alaska), a beautiful basket we bought in Mexico, a clam shell filled with small white pebble from Pebble Beach, CA  (we made love on that beach beneath a blazing sun).  Ah, the sweet middle.  Beneath my Swedish gas heater is a wooden box filled with the stones I have gathered during our travels while we produced Oyate Ta Olowan for public radio.  I will leave those stones there.  I washed them all this winter because the dust had gathered and I wanted them to look as if they were still where I first found them; the Colorado River, Alaska, Lake Superior, Bra D’Or in Nova
Scotia . . .

I guess this big change has me feeling a bit sentimental.  So much has gone away.  Maybe tomorrow I will post a piece of the novel I mentioned in my last post-about the woman who deconstructs her life.  I love that story but it (like so many) remains unfinished.  One of my goals is to get back to storytelling. 

Maybe I needed to go home first. 

Happy Mother’s Day.

Jamie

On the Move

Last January I said my goal was to reduce our “stuff” by half.  I think we are there or even beyond that goal.  I look around my house and see just those things that I want to keep-not much in the whole scheme of things.  All the rest has been passed forward, recycled, or somehow removed.  I’ve got a nice sharangi (how do you spell the name of a strange, eastern instrument?) if anyone is interested . . .

It is a little bit strange to think that in just over a week we will have finished packing and we will be heading down the road.  My last semester at Oglala Lakota College will be done.  The house will be beautifully ready for the next occupants (our son and his wife-thank God.) 

Our friends who rent our little house tilled the garden today.  For the past 26 years I have planted and tended that garden, reaping its generous harvest every fall.   And each year I have expanded it by inches-irresistible to the resolute gardener-to tell the guy with the tiller to go just another six inches, please.  I think it was that turned earth that brought me to the sharpest realization that we are really leaving.  For weeks my colleagues and friends have asked about our plans and my answers have become rote.  But that bit of earth-turned by others-that brought my head up.

What is it that would make two rational (middle-aged) human beings make such a dramatic change in the worst recession since the depression?  I quit a wonderful job, rented out my beautiful house, and we are off to live in a $250 camper until we get our straw bale house constructed.  And beyond October, we have no clear or definite plans.  It is so odd-but I know it is all exactly right and that somehow we will make all the right moves.  How is that for faith?    I haven’t been this excited since I met Milt and knew my life was never going to be the same.  Today I was slapping mud on the sheetrock, necessary since two new windows went in, and listening to Paul Simon sing “Graceland”.  I was dancing around the sunroom feeling like I was 20 and not 55. 

We give too much to fear.  Far, far too much.  All around us we are inundated with messages that we should fear the food we eat, the air we breathe, the earth we walk on, and the uncertain dollars we put in the bank.  I have had it with fear.  One day I will drop out of this life and go on to whatever is next-and I don’t want to do that knowing that I did not make the most out of each and every moment.  I want to have fun.  I want my time back.  I want to write a new book, grow a garden on some unturned piece of earth, and build the little house we have dreamed about for years.  And smile.  I want to laugh and smile a lot.

A question for you: what would you be doing if you weren’t afraid?   What would you be doing if you didn’t talk yourself out of it time and time again?  What would you be doing if you took some of the dollars (or time) you spent trying to conquer fear and just did what you wanted to do?   The other day I picked up another free book at the OLC library and it was on Mother Theresa’s life.  Did you know that she had a “darkness” that followed her every step of her life?  She felt like God did not love her or had abandoned her.  At some point in her life she realized that this darkness was part of her lightness and that one was necessary for the other to exist.  I think this is true for all of us.  We need our fear and doubt-they fuel the dreams and desires, the higher reach.  Am I afraid?  Yes.  Is that fear stopping me?  Not this time. 

Several years ago I wrote a novel about a woman who deconstructs her life and takes a new path.  I feel a little bit like my character now.  Oddly, in that novel, she ends up with a great man in a house he has built entirely from recycled stuff.  I should write more novels. 

Happy Mother’s Day.  And Mom-I miss you!

Jamie