Jun 182012
 

We should all know someone who reminds us of the joys of natural phenomena. These are people who drag you into a snowstorm to feel the cold kiss of snowflakes on your cheek. They grab your book from your hand, toss it aside, and say, “The potato chip box is ready; it’s time for the transit.”

My natural advisor is Rubbertoes.  Always cautious of my safety, Rubbertoes made sure I could experience the alignment of Venus, Earth, and sun without frying my eyeballs. He constructed a viewing device using a potato chip box and a pin. It didn’t matter how ridiculous we looked in the front yard. This was an event we would not see again in our lifetimes. The next time Venus crosses directly between the Earth and the sun will be 2117.

This is typical of my life with Rubbertoes, and it is the stuff that makes life interesting. We bundle in sleeping bags and lie on a hill in November as the Leonids meteor shower rains down on us. We joust with huge Minnesota mosquitoes to see constellations on a starry night. Sometimes we know what we are seeing, sometimes not. I have given Rubbertoes numerous star charts, which he keeps forgetting to pack on camping trips. (A scientific note: the Leonids appear to “fall” from the constellation Leo.)

This is about more than taking the time to “stop and smell the roses” or watch the Leonids. The predominant color in nature is green. If you practice yoga, you probably know that green is the color of the heart chakra, your healing energy. Follow the equation and you see that nature heals. So why aren’t we just bathing in nature? Are we afraid of mosquitoes or too lazy to stay up late and watch a star shoot across the sky?

When I come back from a vacation with Rubbertoes, I seldom remember the restaurants, but I always clutch a memory of nature to my heart. So the next time you see some goofball in his yard with a potato chip box on his head—probably looking at an eclipse or some other strange sighting in the sky—don’t laugh at him. Walk up to him and say, “Will you be my friend?”

It will change your world.

Mar 042012
 

When my mother died unexpectedly of cancer, she left five lost daughters, a husband who wrapped his mind around death by watching screaming news analysts on MSNBC, and a lifetime of paper. My mother made multiple copies of everything, from tax returns to brochures about preventing identity theft.

Looking for insurance policies and wills, my sisters and I waded into a sea of overdue bills, old family photos, heart-breaking fund-raising letters from ministries in Oklahoma, thirty-year-old magazine ads promoting the latest and greatest vitamin supplement, handmade birthday cards, embarrassing school report cards, precious letters from relatives we never met, cancelled checks, more copies of cancelled checks, and grease-spotted recipe cards.

Thank goodness, all of us are good swimmers. My mother, who could not swim, saw to that, religiously pulling us out of bed on lazy summer mornings and marching us down to the city pool for lessons in freezing water. So we did patient breaststrokes through waves of papers and found the important documentation, eventually.

We developed a system for clarity that probably would have seemed heartless and unsentimental to a stranger, but it was the most efficient method our grief-frozen brains could come up with given the immensity of the chore before us. We made piles: one to keep and one to burn. The grandchildren delivered the burn pile to a son-in-law who was tending the fire behind the barn. The sisters read and tossed; the grandkids carried; and our father worked the remote.

My mother’s preoccupation with identity theft came to weigh upon me with each box I sorted. Obviously, this was something that concerned her greatly. She was an orphan who had fought nearly every day of her life to establish herself, to be more than that girl in secondhand clothes who quit school, went to work at a restaurant, and was most assuredly headed for damnation. Head high, she fearlessly walked the hard streets of the small opinionated farm town where she lived, worked long hours, squirreled away her money, and made a name for herself in food services. She was so impressive that a competing restaurateur noticed her and actually hired her away with an offer of a percentage of the nightly take at his café—in addition to her salary, of course.

My mother knew who she was, and she wasn’t letting anyone steal it.

When you’re mother is taken from you, the ground shifts. Part of the grieving process is glinting into this bright light of loss and revelation—and seeing someone you don’t recognize. Who was she? Who are you now without her?

This question of identity buzzes around your mind. Even if we don’t realize it, we spend a lot of time arranging the pieces of who we are, what makes us who we are, and who others think we are.

Most of us are a compilation of little things, unobserved actions, quiet moments. Few of us live in the realm of the grand gesture. For example, I’m a catch and releaser. I scoop box elder bugs up in my palm and flick them out the door rather than flattening them on the wall. I do not offer the same courtesy to spiders. For them, I yell for my husband. What he does with them is no concern of mine. But sometimes, we are faced in this world with such an abundance of insect life in places where they are inconvenient to be, that we have to bend the karma branch.

Several months after my mother’s funeral, my husband plugged a hole in our house under the door where some bees were nesting, in an attempt to encourage them to move on to some other sucker’s siding. As expected, they didn’t like the relocation plan. “What’s that sound?” I asked. My husband motioned me over to the wall by the door. I leaned forward and jumped back. The wall was buzzing. Not friendly Sesame Street buzzing. This was taking-over-the-planet, Alfred Hitchcock-directed buzzing.

The bees were mad, trapped, and determined. It took only moments for them to find a way into the house. My husband dashed for the vacuum and began sucking bees from the windows, doors, carpets, and drapes. The vacuum dust canister was alive. He got stung on the arm and the foot. I surreptitiously moved to the back lines of this battle. And that’s the way the weekend went. Buzz, suck, sigh. Finally, in the relative quiet of Sunday evening, we sat on the porch and discussed the invasion.

“Do you think we got all the bees?” I asked, with visions of vindictive stingers creeping up on my pillow in the dead of night.

“Actually, they were yellow jackets. When you tell people this story (he knows me so well), make sure you call them yellow jackets.”

“Is that a type of bee?”

“It’s a wasp, I think. Anyway, we don’t want it to get around that we’ve been murdering bees all weekend. You know, with the mysterious declining bee population.”

Right, we don’t want to be identified as bee killers of killer bees. We spent the weekend with the yellow jackets. That sounds like a sports team or a band. And it was all in self-defense, I tell the karma scorekeeper.

My mother never cared what people thought of her. She was a survivor who did what needed to be done. She prayed for strangers, didn’t believe in karma, and probably killed her share of bees. Without apology.

Rest in peace, Mom. No one could steal your identity.

____________

Do you have a memory that says who your mother or father was or is? Please leave a comment.

If you enjoyed this post, please check out my novels, Book of Mercy and Maud’s House.

Oct 042011
 

My daughter hates birds. Except for Tippi Hedren after being cooped up for months on a shoot with spooky Alfred Hitchcock, I don’t understand someone taking such a dislike to birds. “It’s their knees,” she says. “They bend backwards. Gross.”

 

I, on the other hand, am intrigued by any creature that effortlessly runs, swims, or flies. It seems you never see a gazelle with arthritic knees or a klutzy sunfish or an eagle with a fear of heights. Gracefulness, that ability to move seamlessly through one’s environment, simply amazes me.

 

Oh, I’ll admit nature can be a pain. For weeks I entertained murderous thoughts about a woodpecker that enjoyed early morning jackhammering on the wall by my bed. A friend suggested that I place fake snakes on the side of the house to scare off the woodpecker, a trick similar to mounting phony owls on the runways of airports. But I didn’t think nailing rubber reptiles to the wood siding was going to enhance my property value.

 

And I have been known, while camping, to shout for a gun in the middle of the night as I tossed and turned in my sleeping bag, finding every rock on the ground, while a whippoorwill in a nearby tree called and called and called.

 

Yet despite these nuisances, I keep seeking nature out. Since moving from North Carolina to Minnesota, I have taken to the trails that crisscross the prairie. I never tire of seeing the white egret standing on the edge of the pond. And if the Canada geese are noisy so are the airplanes.

 

One of my first weekend trips after I arrived was to the Mississippi River where on an island there was a colony of great blue heron or as we birding insiders call them: GBHs. GBHs are cool creatures, winging overhead their long legs dangling behind them, but they are something else playing house in gargantuan nests atop the cottonwoods. A naturalist told me that every year they count the GBHs in Minnesota. It is not a job for the timid. The census takers wear goggles and rain gear because apparently the GBHs do not take kindly to being counted and express their displeasure by either pecking or vomiting on the GBH counter.

 

My husband, who was raised in Minnesota, has childhood memories of loons on crystal lakes. Even though we live in suburbia, he has two pairs of binoculars at the ready at all times. This is not as crazy as it sounds. When visiting Connemara, the North Carolina mountain home of Carl Sandburg, I noticed a pair of binoculars on the dining room table. There was a line of bird feeders outside the dining room windows. Apparently, it was not unusual for Carl to throw down his grilled cheese in the middle of lunch, grab the spyglasses, and scope out the hummingbirds.

 

Of course, it does not do to become too attached to anything in nature. Easy come, easy go is the natural law. Once I was watching a little boy tossing stale bread to some ducks in a small lake in North Carolina. It was spring, and the cuddly, fuzzy baby ducks simply melted your heart. We were laughing at the ducks’ antics when a big turtle rose out of the water and snapped off the head of one of the baby ducks. The traumatized child ran screaming to his mother. Suddenly, I wanted my mother, too.

 

After reading any news on the Timberwolves (the basketball team, not the critters) and the latest terrorist attacks, I usually turn to the Variety section of the paper. There in the “Did You Know?” column is all kinds of useful information. Sometimes even stuff about birds. One morning after reading the paper, I had to call my daughter. I’d just read that those knobs on the long, pencil-thin legs of flamingos were not knees. They were ankles. The knees of flamingos are actually hidden under their feathers.

 

“So, what you’re saying is this bird has ankles half way up its legs,” my daughter said. “That’s still gross.”