Me on a Bobcat?

I couldn’t let this day end without writing at least a short post.  It was quite a day.  We shipped the textbook to the printer today along with a few quick prayers for it being as error free as it can be at this time.  To celebrate, I got on the Bobcat for the first time and dug into my slash pile.  I am usually a bit intimidated by pieced of equipment that are that much bigger than I am.  But I have to admit, I got what could possibly have been a testosterone rush.   I have been plucking at that small mountain with a garden rake and this was definitely the right tool for the job.

Then, to further top off an amazing day, our rafters were delivered this morning at 8:30 am, and at sunset we swam in a wonderful lake appropriately called “Grace Lake.”

I still have quite a bit of work to do on the Instructor’s Manual for the textbook,, but for the first time since I left South Dakota, I felt free.  This Saturday we are doing a Bead People event and I just spent an hour with a wonderful magazine called Northwoods Woman.  I had to smile because the fiction story in it seemed so, so familiar-my kind of story.  Do you suppose that is it for me?  I am a Northwoods woman who has found her way home again?  I have been out in South Dakota for over 30 years.  The other day I couldn’t resist checking up on my favorite blueberry path to see how “my” berries are coming along.

Life is good.

Jamie

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.)

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

Falling

Yesterday we put the garden to bed for the winter.  I wasn’t sure if some of the plants agreed or not.  The peppers and green beans were still putting on fragile white blooms, wanting more from life than the season’s end will allow.  And today I found out that a cousin passed away-again probably wanting more from life than the season’s end will allow. 

Fall is a strange time of year for me.  I get reflective, depressed, and energized all at the same time.  What do I want to do before season’s end?  I am trying very hard to withdraw my energy from the college.  I begin, as usual, to care too much and want too much and do too much.  Soon all my other goals have gone to the side, and I am discovering that that is not okay with me.  I want to plant my gardens where things have a good chance of growing. 

Into garden metaphors tonight, I guess.  It is appropriate, however, because we all have the many seasons of our lives.  I have been through the young years, the mothering years, and the dreaming years.   Now I want to live my life savoring each moment.

Milt and I are making plans to do a film on education and the Natural Human Learning Process.  It is an issue that hits close to the bone for both of us.  I just don’t understand how we think we can plot children in stiff little chairs, limit their creative play, and then produce outstanding “citizens”.  I keep thinking back to when we were in Lincoln, NE and I was watching my 7 month old grandson try to get his hand into my big bead box.  I have one of those large plastic containers about three quarters full of beads.  We were at the Taekwondo Tournament with The Bead People.  Adrien’s little mind was entirely focused on how to get to those beads.  Finally I lifted him up and let him put his bare feet in the beads.  It was great-he started paddling as if I had put him in water and when I pulled him back out, there were beads stuck between his toes. 

Learning is fun.  How could we forget that?  Learning is as natural as breathing and eating.  How could we forget that?  I really want us to produce a film that reminds people that we cripple the learning process when we present too much information too fast and in a way that is deadly dull. 

 I’ll keep you “posted”. 

I figured out that to date there are now over 4000 Bead People out wandering the world working their tiny bits of magic on people.  That is so cool.  If you don’t yet have your own, you can go to www.thebeadpeople.org and sign up to spread the word. 

 Jamie Lee

 

Where Am I?

I started back to work at Oglala Lakota College and am going through a bit of culture shock.  Where is my berry patch?  Where my little trailer?  Where my soul? 

Actually, I could already feel myself re-engaging with students today as I met each one during registration and did what I could to help them find a good schedule.  When we got home, we had a major weed patch to clear out, but the gardent looks marvelous and I picked about 3 gal. of green beans the other day.  Also zukes and my first cuke.

Apologies for not writing much and not going very in depth.  I never wanted to write a blog where I told you what we had for supper or what my cat was doing (actually, I don’t have a cat).  Bear with me and I’ll get back into some form of schedule. 

Wow–this summer opened me up wide.  More on that later.  You can see the great little films Milt has been producing on our Homesteading,MN experience at www.hollowbonefilms.com  Check it out.

Thanks for coming.

Jamie

How Do You Know When You are in Flow?

The answer is–everything seems easy.  Milt and I have been having so much fun experiencing this kind of flow.  Oh, I don’t mean we aren’t working hard–we are.  Milt sunk some poles in the ground today (he has been dying to sink a pole) for a small showerhouse.  We have no running water so it will be another creative endeavor.  That is what is so interesting about our adventure here this summer.  We just name something we need and then we see what is available to make it happen. 

Last night I was on the Lakeland Public Television news with The Bead People.  My niece, Lizzie, went over to the reporter at Ribfest and told her she should do a story on us–and they did.  And Saturday I’ll be at Book World in Bemidji with a Bead People event.  And today I picked five, gorgeous quarts of wild blueberries to take home with me.  And I am just getting started with picking berries although my backside says I over did it for this moment.

I am beginning to really contemplate the idea of living my life totally in this flow.  If it isn’t easy–it isn’t right.  Easy means things flowing together, meeting the right person at the right time, having links and synchronicity on our side.  I don’t want to do a single thing because I “should”.  It seems to rob my spirit of something important, something lively and moving. 

I have a feeling that when we go home and dive back into our “real” lives we may discover it was not so real after all.  We may discover that packing a lot of stuff in around us is a diversion from real.  We may discover that spending too much time worrying about money and things is not what we want.  We may have an auction:)

I took some pictures of my berries and the berry patch today.  I know I need to get better at including those images and I SHOULD figure it out–maybe later.

Thanks for tuning in.

Jamie  

 

The Homestead

Tonight the moon was almost full and shining red through the pines on the bit of earth in Northern Minnesota that we have recently tagged “our land” (although I still doubt that anybody can actually “own” such a thing).  We have been here for one week and the magical flow we discovered from the moment we decided to buy into these twenty acres continues. 

On our way out from Rapid City, SD, Milt and I were coming to terms with the fact that we probably would not have the expertise or resources to actually begin building our strawbale house.  On Tuesday we considered finding a camper or something more substantial than a tent to live in while we prepare our project.  On Wednesday we found two potential old campers, made an offer on one, hooked it to my brother’s truck, and pulled it to our homestead.  It is a 1966 Trailblazer and we bought it for $250.  By Thursday we had cleaned it, repaired some leaks, blocked it, and generally made it livable.  Now, a week later, we are sleeping like babies in our cozy bed and listening to all the night sounds with the breezes blowing across our faces.  Of course, we also do nightly mosquito checks to make sure none of the friendly (hungry) little buggers have followed us in the door.  

They have completely torn up the main street of Cass Lake.  Evidently the town received a major “Miracle” grant and is trying to bring itself back to life.  The main street will now be paved with bricks that, hopefully, will attract new businesses and energy.  I walked around down there today thinking about how busy it was when I went to high school here-two drug stores, three grocery stores, several bars, Two Traders, and the Five and Dime.  Now-not much. 

Not since I graduated from college and moved to SD (in 1977) have I spent this much time here.  I am feeling strange and adrift, as if my main street had been torn up and something new was about to replace it.  I am just not sure what.  Our small 8 x 18 foot trailer requires that we choose carefully what we “want” and then keep it in its right space.  The land makes me breathe more fully in a way that I haven’t in many years.  A few days ago I discovered one of the most beautiful wild blueberry patches I’ve ever seen-and it is right on our land.  The plants are loaded with green berries that begin to blush toward blue.  I go now every day to see how they are progressing and feel confident they will be ripe for me to pick before I have to leave.

All of this is making me feel oddly alive and young.  It makes me wonder what it was I was trying to accomplish-push, push, push.  Sometimes I have tried so hard to be “something” that I just forgot to “be”.

 Now I just want to be.

 So far this is the first writing I have done since we got here.  We were busy carving a small space for ourselves, nudging Mother Nature over just a bit.  Tonight was the first night I felt that peculiar itch I get to put words on paper (or my computer).  I am curious to see if I can find a new rhythm of writing AND being as we are here over the next two weeks.  We did set up to do The Bead People at the annual Rib Fest this weekend so that should be fun.  

 It has also been many years since I have lived close to so many family members again.  They keep popping in and out and bringing many gifts.  When I woke up this morning there was a small round table outside the trailer.  I didn’t see it but evidently my nephew, Ryan, found it at the recycling place and thought we might be able to use it.  He wrote his name with sticks to let us know he had left it.  And then tonight when I returned home from doing some other stuff, there was a bucket of newly-dug raspberry bushes beside my trailer-and a new metal plate replacing the hole in the floor near my front door.  Last night we were ferried over the lake by one brother so we could join another brother on Star Island while he tried out their new Snuba gear.  Snuba is a combination of snorkeling and scuba-a generator on a floating tire, two 40-foot hoses, mouth breathing gear and weights to help you explore the underwater world.  

 So, I am surrounded by gifts both from the earth and from family and friends.  Could it be that as I seek a simpler life, it will get richer in many other ways?  Probably.  I would certainly like to find out. 

What a life.  And by the way, my 24 blueberry plants seem to be thriving and establishing new roots-just like us.  I think it will be hard to leave in two weeks and the only thing I will miss are a few trillion ticks and mosquitoes.

 More on our adventures to follow . . .

 Jamie   

 

 

 

 

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