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.)

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

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

When Stars Can’t Shine

It has been several weeks since I posted.   Life is racing along at an unearthly pace as we prepare to empty our house of belongings and move to a spot of land in north Minnesota for the summer plus.  Regardless of where our path takes us, it has been challenging and freeing to unload years of belongings.  Tonight Milt was sorting boxes of slides and wondering where, when, and why he took so many pictures.  Many hit the circle file. 

Today we had friends over for a bit of chanting and meditation.  As I was sitting in that age-old posture, I kept thinking about the rest of my life.  I want it to be both meaningful and free of stress.  Just being.  Last week I went for a drive in the Black Hills to give an hour-long presentation to a facility that “houses” young people in need.  The facility is part lock-up, part treatment, and part . . . I find I can’t finish the statement.  The question I had on my drive home was, “What do they need–really?”   When I first got there I was a little nervous as I realized that writing about adolescence-and standing and talking in front of 150 adolescents are two totally different things.  I wondered if I would be in touch enough to speak to them and not at them.  I wondered how they would receive what I had to say.  Then, as the counselors and demi-guards brought the groups of young men and women in, I wondered what I would end up saying that would be against the basic philosophy of this boot camp atmosphere. 

It didn’t take long, however, to just focus on their young faces and talk as straight as I could to them.  I talked about ancient rites of passage versus the leftovers we have in our modern culture that sometimes forces the young to “gang up” and try to initiate themselves.  I talked about challenges and tests and what happens when we gain the strength to go through them.  I asked them what they needed in order to be able to face those tests and challenges.  It was a powerful thing for me.  They gave me words backed up by need.  Money, jobs, knowledge, support, love, time, understanding.  Discipline.  Choices.

My question.  Are we creating a world where these kids in need can fill in those blanks? 

During the last fifteen minutes, I invited questions.  Most of the questions that came my way were about being a writer.  What motivated me, what discouraged me, how did I get interested in writing, how many books have I written . . .   Finally one young man asked me what made me want to come and speak to a group like theirs.  That question touched me.  I thought a moment and said, “I like young people.  I like your energy.  I like your questions.  I like your spirits.  I like you-and I want to see you bloom.”  At the end I invited the young people to write to me and tell me why they are there and what they want.  I told them I had this idea to do a kind of “teen monologue”, kind of like The Vagina Monologues but with a very young voice. 

Friday, I got 20 letters in my mailbox.  Milt and I sat and read every one.  Even though I realized that the letters had probably been “commanded” by the teacher or counselor, I was moved by their stories.  Since giving that talk my energy has been cycling around those young people.  I realized that my entire adult life has been focused around education, developing humans, adolescence, and what we can do to help them become strong, resilient adults.  My first job was in the “trouble” room at a middle school.  My second job was in an adolescent care center.  Both ended when I could see that the systems that employed me were not at all tuned into the young.  It hurt me to even be there-and it wasn’t great for the young people either. 

I don’t think I am too much of an idealist to think that we could take a new approach with American youth.  I don’t think it would hurt us to see them and work with them AS THEY ARE instead of criminalizing or diagnosing or sentencing them.  Damn, it frustrates me.

So, I think over the next however many days or weeks, I will post one of those letters (or portions of them) in my blog so you can hear from them, too.  And I plan to answer every letter that comes!  The beginnings of my “Teen Monologues.”

Stay tuned.

Jamie

Thanks to the person in Montreal, Canada. Not fiction–but truth.

The story, West Toward Berkley, is an autobiographical story about the principal in my high school.  The man was literally “bigger than life” and he inspired me and moved me and contributed to who I am today.  It is very gratifying to hear from readers who read my bits and pieces and recognize the truth of them.  In truth, his name was Red Benson.  I so honor this man for what he taught me and I hope others will see my post on this great man. 

True confessions.  Every word of this story was true.

 

Jamie Lee