Wednesday, July 21, 2010

whew...Lesson of the Flies

Whew…

When I think of how my loved ones must be responding to the recent craziness at Angel Lake, I am a little embarrassed and also cautious to not let this story dominate my mind nor this memoir that I am writing. And being stuck on the ledge at over 9 thousand feet, needing to be rescued and then, after one is safe on the ground, watching the helicopter that brought your saviors crash right next to one’s campsite is dramatic to the point of absurdity. Truly such a significant day will be played out (raw and fresh) in the minds and hearts of everyone that witnessed the event and I certainly will not fail to also ponder and glean from what God has graced us to suffer and live through, especially to take time to be thankful of life and to guard all life more carefully in the future.

Thankfully no one was seriously hurt though James, the fireman who helped me off the mountain, may never want to get into a helicopter again.

The Lesson of the Flies:

(That morning of the infamous Angel Lake hike)

Straightening up my tent, I struggled to get the flies out. The sun had risen and my tent glowed orange. I had opened the tent door for air and breeze to make sleeping in easier (say till 7 instead of 6) The flies had come in but as I got out of bed (making the bed in preparation for the next night) I wanted to close the door to keep any bugs coming in during the day. Trouble was, there was already about 25 flies flying persistently towards the screened roof and nothing (not sprinkling water nor hand scooping) would convince them that the open door was the only way out of the tent. The flies and I speak a different language. While their God-given instinct to fly towards a light source works well in the world God has made…it doesn’t apply for human-made spaces that I understood and moved in. To them up at the highest point of light is the way out even though mesh blocked that path and this instinct was so rigidly set that they would not explore the tent for alternate paths. Furthermore, my attempts to save them were perceived by the flies to be attacks on their lives—another instance in which a usually life-preserving instinct worked against them.

Before I realized why the flies were persisting in using the roof as an escape I felt like God knowing what the flies needed to know for survival but was frustrated with my inability communicate with the flies who would soon die like their brothers and sisters already on the floor. I decided that I must learn their language and when I realized that instinct was driving them…I removed everything from the tent and then lifted the true exit to the sky. The flies immediately (and I think gratefully) flew out of the tent! I prayed:

“As I was merciful to the flies, please be merciful to me God. Speak my language when I cannot understand yours.”

In the hours that followed…I hiked where I should not have gone. I could not see how difficult the hike was from the ground. When I was stuck and every instinct in me cried to go up or even across more of the mountain than I had crossed I heard God say there is danger above and below and to the right and to the left but if you stay where you are, you will be safe. I like, the flies, wanted to climb above because up always feels better than down on a mountain like that but my vision was limited and I later found out that had I done so, I would have met another impasse and this one with no safe waiting place. Rescuers came…rappelled me down and then later crashed near my campsite.

They were not badly hurt

Campers were not hurt and we all had opportunity to thank God and help each other

And that night we all slept loving our loved ones more because we knew what we could have lost.

Praise God

Thursday, July 1, 2010

New Beginnings!

I have boxes marked for Colorado (leaving soon August)
I have boxes (mostly books cause it is hard to find English in print sometimes) to be shipped only God knows where

Clothes
Books
and (eventually art supplies)

These are under the back patio&
Life has now become so simple

My room is in this in-between place of not belonging to anyone

The unknown is simple
If one does not fear it

If I die, then I go to Christ
If I am wounded then God will make something beautiful of the wound

I am not afraid it all
& this leaving everything to go I do not know where

feels so normal






Sunday, April 11, 2010

Cool Talking/Divine Meeting

Woman

5ft11in
not much more than 100lbs

approaches

me

She asks
AREyoujewish

and then speaks

to me in hebrew

before i can say

no i am not jewish by faith
only blood
perhaps

but then she
says

i love your necklace


and i say

tHank=yOu

She asks

ARE YOU MARRIED?

She tells me

about
dI VORCE
&
SADNESS

and how her faith is blood
without the heart


and how she cannot eat

i speak with her
about protein shakes&

my faith and how I am wearing
hanukuh candles, a star of david and a fish

because
i am Christian

she leaves
but later returns

because....

she has lost
a ring
most precious to her mother

she is distraught
and i am praying
more for her than for the ring

for the ring is only a symbol
of all the other things she has lost

i pray
and i help her look for the ring
and i tell her

you are more precious than the ring
and your mother would be more upset if something happened to you

she hugs me and again praises my necklace
i put it around her neck

praying that it goes around her heart also
Today is the 15th day of the trip and I haven't written anything for about a week (since James C. joined us actually)...guess it is because we kept either having to deal with rain or got to camp so late that I didn't have the energy to write once things got settled...

...not that I am blaming anybody.

I am really glad that I came and that I am doing this. I hope these crazy kind of writings make sense. The short access times to a computers necessitates that I write at a breakneck speed and plus I don't concentrate well in public places and there just are not any private ones for the traveler in need of an electric socket.

ODE to James for being willing to carry this heavy laptop...James Dyer, James Comfort has gone back home just to clarify things.

This past week described very briefly in "Intermission" was really a time of adjustment for me.

The days blur together and so it is difficult to pull out separate events as being part of such and such day so here I will not try to do that. I will instead write what comes to my head because there are reasons why some events come to our heads and others do not. I believe I remember these stories because they fall under a theme or because they speak of universal truths...

Ok enough disclaimers

Theme of Human Kindness

One of the things about a trip like this is that kindness is a very practical virtue rather than something to talk about. We don't talk about how the world needs kindness...we do it and we start within our mini tribe.

Yes I am part of some crazy mini tribe.

I want to thank my incredible team.

Last week when we were in Santa Cruz that final night...I had left my walking stick behind (my teammates could twitter about all the stuff I am always losing).

"OOOH $%#T"
was my rather carnal response.

I was greatly upset as the stick is handmade--a gift from my Dad. Plus I suffer from occasional vertigo because of some inner nerve damage connected with my hearing loss so I depend on that stick! It was either get on the bus and leave it behind or go back and miss what we thought was the last bus out. James graciously offered to get the stick for me and the group was willing to stay another rainy night in Santa Cruz for me but I told them no...turned out we had missed the bus already anyway and I was able to get the staff and then we all got on another bus...Not only that but we were able to look at cool art since the next bus was three hours later.

That meant so much to me that they were willing to do that!

Thankful

I am thankful for the gray sky of a day in which I have no desire to go into the ocean. It feels wonderful to sit here and write. As one with ADHD, I depend on bad weather sometimes to help me focus on things like sitting and reflecting.

Theme of Enjoying Art:

One of the things that I really want from the trip is to be where we are and have opportunity to both absorb and create things of beauty (landscapes/painting/installations/words/deeds)

Art and History Museum:

Admission: Free

Theme: surfing and more surfing/history of early settlers of Santa Cruz

Did you know that Santa Cruz is the first place in the continental U.S. to have surfers (introduced by Hawaiian visitors)?

Way COOL!

I want to surf and be inside the tubes with the wave crashing over my head!

Photos
Paintings
Installations
(some of them moved)

I was in awe

Art truly feeds the soul, even to the point that I can be tired and hungry and I will not feel either when I contemplate art.

So it is cool that a week later in Pacifica we went to the opening night of Art on Fire (which included a 40 minute Belly Dancing performance). Did you know that Belly dancing was taught by mothers to their daughters?

I love getting inside the heads of others and it was fun to see the work of other artists--lifted the day above the ordinariness of packing, cooking, eating and trying to stay warm. You see...it has been the ordinariness that is so challenging.

Ask about the night I fought with my tent because the ground was bumpy or when I accidentally knocked over the propane stove while cooking dinner on a hill in the dark.


We may be spiritual beings having a material experience but often it is the irritations of the physical/material realm (like being cold, tired, hungry and/or in pain) that make it difficult to act spiritually.










Intermission

Special thanks to James Comfort for his good humor and ready smile

Also you are the first that I've met that likes that ocean as much as I do!

We went to a small town Presidia or some such where we sold jewelry...walked and you with that outrageous pack and us drinking gatorade to lighten your load (was hard but someone had to do it SMILE)...Also another town that James Dyer mispronounced in so many ways that I cannot remember the name of where they did not have real groceries but only things like Aunt Georgia's precious Blackberry preserves for 10 bucks and so on...

We slept next to the ocean whose personality changed with every new site and we slept under Pine trees [which I (unfortunately) am allergic too but (fortunately) Poison Oak is too and refuses to grow there ) and you got to hear me fight with my tent which I had fallen into for the umpteenth time...and so on

Thanks for sharing a week with us from Davenport to Pacifica.


April 3rd or the Day JAMES C. CAME

James Comfort came today...Unfortunately Meg couldn't make it.

Yesterday was the first time that I really felt peeved about the sleeping situation...We came into Davenport after taking a bus out of Santa Cruz and it was freaking dark and there was PosionOak on the ground ( A lot of P.O. on this coast and I hate the plant!)


OK OK
'
I can get a little rabid about the whole Poison Oak thing but the stuff is painful and takes me months to get over and that is with access to a shower and a washing machine...

I don't have either here

But I do feel like God is helping me put stuff like that in perspective...P.O. is like sin//don't wanna underestimate it but you don't want to go around hating plants because some of them are poisonous...like at the time of writing this I am actually in Pacifica and I had gone on a beautiful hike before the rain started//everywhere gorgeous plants and yes some of them P.O. but I can't miss out on the good out of fear of the bad

So...Poison Oak is a good metaphor for sin

Better to err on the side of caution
but don't get paranoid either

So back to remembering and back to the original journal notes///

I woke up in this new beautiful spot in Davenport (having felt freaked and having explained to Nick and James in detail why I felt freaked) and I thought

I am having breakfast by a beautiful beach

I do not have to drive somewhere beautiful

I am here in somewhere beautiful

I miss a few of the routines at my parents home and I certainly miss my parents.

//also talked metaphysics on the phone about morality or the metaphysics of morality

Here morality consists of:

Helping your teammate pack his tent or pick up his bag
Sharing food
Being patient with each other

Morality is a do here
and not an idea

Incredible to be here///swim bathe in this ocean

feel like the salt is purifying me
and the cold of it is small payment for being part of its largeness

and its power.

I spent the morning doing doing and doing
I have to get my Ya Ya's out in order to be content to sit here, content to reflect.

Writing seems boring now.

I think I want to build a sand sculpture

Had a great talk with the guys last night...communion (pineapple juice and corn tortillas) in the tent with candles.

Realizing how much time it takes to get things done...when one doesn't have a car.

Puts life on a more human scale

James C is an awesome person...We walked up the road (long and uphill to find a beach with huge scary waves). He packed way too much stuff///his bag was bigger than me. Came within 10 feet of the tent at 2 in the morning...don't think I've been that freaked in a long time. I like the ocean when I go to it but I shudder when it comes to me. Am I that way with God? Nah. I like it when God comes to me. He doesn't overwhelm me with a 20 ft wave. He has all kinds of water in this world...Gentle pools for toddlers and these waves for the terminally insane.

May I be one of those terminally insane.





April 2, 2010

Yesterday was April Fool's day and I played a prank that (in retrospect) really made me re-consider the tradition of fooling one's friends. It may be overrated.

We walked thru Santa Cruz with our packs looking for a good place to cook lunch and the sell the jewelry we had made. Unfortunately just as we were about to get settled on the board walk we saw a ill humored police officer giving a woman a ticket for selling beautiful necklaces (gorgeous cords with huge purple and green teardrop stones)...

So much for that idea. And with that and with all the signs saying things like:

No littering
No Loitering
No camping

Violators will be arrested

So much for easy breezy hippie town

I would think that selling what you have (if you cannot afford rent, overhead and all ) would be a way for people out of work to doing something enriching and keep them from needing to panhandle...one could even work one's way up.

But obviously the powers of commerce do not lay in the hands of ordinary people.

WHY?

People come to places like Santa Cruz to experience alternate cultures. Buying cool stuff from hippies with dreadlocks is one of the fun things to do here. If I want delightfully amateurish jewelry, I'll buy from them...If I want high end stuff, I'll go to a store...don't see how the two venues have to compete...now if the stores want to sell stuff that is mass produced but seems like it might have been made by an artisy hippie that is another story...I don't understand the conflict

Whoa...

We also had a scary moment in which James was threaten by a 4ft10in guy with too much vodka in him...Guy kept bragging about his baseball bats (arms) and how he was going to slug them into James. I stood up with my walking stick, put my pepper spray in my pocket...but James did a great job at diffusing the situation and the guy finally walked away once he saw none of us were going to take the bait.

It felt good to know that I had a plan in my head and wasn't afraid at all.

We also lost the wonderful peas that James had cooked but the walk back to Natural Bridges was so beautiful that we quickly forgot about the beans and the crazy midget

Susanne