I finally realized I can hang around upside down again!

Speaking the language of the djembe, learning how to play guitar, and becoming fluent in ASL are all good goals, but they are future-stuff (hopefully near), and I’m not yet very good at any of them.

Whereas it finally hit me that today, and each day, I can dress for the shirt-continuing-to-cover-my-chest-properly execution of a cartwheel, front walkover, round-off, or even flip-flop (well, this last one after I get back in shape).

I can walk upside down, stand on my head, and tumble between camper and laundry room any old day. I do believe I will resurrect the gymnastics-as-transportation habit this very afternoon.

My dad used tumbling as transport all through college. I was also a regular gymnastic traveler until about age fourteen. What happened?

I started dressing for boys, protecting fragile hairdos, holding my body in that particular way that now saddens me when I see the too-young girls doing it. I guess I expected attention from boys would be more fun than hanging out upside down half the day.

Then I forgot about hallway/sidewalk/anywhere tumbling completely.

I Kept hanging about hoping to attract boys (not a well thought out plan really, when I look back and think about all the cool things I could have been doing instead, like jamming on a djembe, learning to play guitar, or gaining a valuable skill like a working knowledge of ASL), and generally becoming duller by the effort.

Eventually, I was no longer all of me, instead hiding the important, fragile bits, creating a veritable stage show I pretended was real. Some of it was, but not enough.

I grew up, as some of us are lucky enough to do, discovered looks were a false gauge to determine future or even present happiness, that I needed to grow in maturity as well as bodily, and set about to get my mind and spirit in line with my new and liberating understanding.

I spent a lot of time alone.

I hadn’t forgotten fences, a steady companion in childhood, so ran my fingers numb along metal borders all over Chicago, watching my knuckles bounce to a rhythmless beat as I walked to and from work, to the cafe, the train, Lake Michigan. But I was still thoughtlessly right-side up most of the time, save the rare occasion I was at the park with other people’s children, showing off, and teaching the little ones a few tricks.

Some time later, I married. Soon after I was “mom” and my hands were blissfully full.

I was going to be the great exercising mother, my gym the outdoors, where baby and I would walk for miles every day. My first toddler disliked strollers, and thought each walk should include a thorough investigation of every tree, rock, bush, and flower. Sadly, I never got into the groove of the nature walk so this became daddy’s domain. By the time our second child was born, I was, other than when doing housework, mostly sitting down.

Habits form easily.

The boys are now eight and eleven, and I still haven’t figured out how to spend more of the free time in my day off my derriere than on it with my feet up, clicking away on my laptop. I’m making a beginning.

Our family has been bold enough to give away almost everything we own, move into an RV, and begin traveling around the country (slowly, at a family pace). In this unusual arena for daily life, peculiar and welcome changes are happening within and without each of us.

Once my kids see me tumbling more than just in a group of impressed children, maybe they’ll cartwheel with me on our walk to the park.

 

 

I wimped out. Though I’m perfectly able to spend half the journey to the playground upside down, I started thinking too much about who might be looking out their windows. But the boys and I did play catch for an hour, and my older son and I kept the ball going back and forth 44 times. Not much for some kids, but it took him a while to get good at catching a ball. The park ought to still be there tomorrow, along with the path to it, and my courage may hold out. If I just remember that seeing people have fun is generally good thing, I should be able to at least get one random cartwheel in before sunset.

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Our first ten days living on the road

After living in the RV for three months in Illinois about ten miles from our secured-to-the-ground-house which is now rented out to another family, we headed south west. Our first brief settling place was the KOA in Springfield MO, an ideal place to be in autumn as the park is full of trees. Here’s a bit about our time in the Ozarks.

Four Campfires – 3 at our site, 1 at the cabin of fellow campers we met the previous evening in the common room.

One Family field trip – To Laura Ingalls Wilder’s home in Mansfield Missouri, where, by fantastic, unplanned timing, we were on the same tour as our campground neighbors. I have never been to a museum or historical marker, aside from religious, that I had as much familiarity with as Laura’s home. I lingered in her writing room, fortunately alone, eyes closed, tears visiting, and I could feel the hours her spirit spent creating the Little House series. I felt like I was in a temple. Indeed, I was. I had the same experience in her living room, only it was prompted by a meditation on her life, played out day by day, hour by hour in the house where I stood, between the walls where I was pulling in breath even as my own spirit danced round and round to a faint but very real melody; echoes of a love lived long ago, continuing even now beyond the veil?

Four Predawn drives – To take my husband to his temporary work site, followed by three visible sunrises (one day it stormed all morning), and three naps into late morning/early afternoon (on the fourth day the boys determined to stay awake. I dozed here and there). This was the first time my kids witnessed a new day’s light.

I wrote about one of those perfect naps.

Meeting three new families who are now friends

-The first family was a couple we met by calling the National Baha’i Center for contact information for local Baha’is. We went to their house our second evening in Springfield MO, then walked to the best Health Food store I’ve ever been to. If you’re ever in the Ozarks, go to Mama Jeans. Their quality is outstanding. Tons of deli salads (many soy and onion free!), incredible soups, and rich bakery treats, including an amazing selection of gluten free sweets, like flourless almond brownies, mmmmmmm…….!

-The second family came to the main building to do laundry and noticed the common room was open. We had asked for it to remain open so my husband and boys could play a long, involved game of Ships which takes up lots of table space. When the other family’s dad turned on the Cardinal’s game, my older son asked politely if he could, “…please turn it off,” which prompted the dad to ask me, “Is he for real?” From then on we had a conversation going. I spent a while talking to their two daughters, enjoying an impromptu spelling bee, and later the mom and I talked as I folded clothes. Laughter came easily together. By night’s end we had plans for a campfire next evening. The campfire was magical. Four children running around wildly waving flashlights, giggling, the parents easily moving between humor and deep subjects, their twelve year old son quietly listening.

-The third family is a mother and daughter, Baha’i’s we met when attending the weekly Children’s class. Mom had not received word we were on the way. When four people pulled up to her house in a big black pickup truck on a quiet Sunday morning, she was rightly perplexed, but it all worked out beautifully. We spent the entire class sharing songs and teaching each other new melodies to familiar prayers. A few nights later they came to our home. We roasted hotdogs and talked as people will beneath moonlight in the glow a campfire.

(An addition I just remembered!) -We also met several other Baha’i’s at a Holy Day Celebration: The Birth of The Bab, First Manifestation for the Baha’i Faith. We met children our boys still talk about, and enjoyed a few brief conversations after the program. As we expect to spend more time in Springfield MO over the years, I expect we’ll get to know most of these people better. I hope I never take for granted the fact that we can go to anytown USA and be among friends.

Thanks to facebook, we’re now connected to all three families.

Then we spent a single morning packing up, unhitching, unhooking, and continued southwest to Texas.

We’ve been in our current spot for a little over a week. I have more to report than a generous serving of warmth and sunshine, but that will come in a later, once we’ve been here a while.

 

We are truly enjoying life on the road

 

sunrise

I wrote a poem about this first sunrise

 

camp fire

My older son gathering dry leaves for the first campfire

 

campfire2

My husband getting fire wood. The boys learned to use a saw on the same wood. I was too nervous to remember the camera when either child wielded a saw

 

campfire4

Fruits of their labor. Every fire was enjoyed until well after 10pm. Holding flashlights beams on the smoke rising after we poured water on the flames had a mesmerizing effect, much like a lava lamp in midair

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Subtle Sexism

Monday afternoon marked three times in one week, and the first time in eons I’ve encountered such nonsense. I actually began to doubt myself, even to feel a bit badly, as if I were doing something wrong, or was a bit defective after all.

That sort of oppression that comes with a laugh, the face of camaraderie, and a drop of poison veiled, but still capable of doing harm.

I admitted to it being my first time pulling our travel trailer into a campground space, that my husband normally does this but was currently at work and could he spot me. The park manager was happy to help, and got us parked in what he said was a good place.

Unfortunately I didn’t think to make sure the sewer opening on our camper was lined up with the sewer hole enough for the hose to be secured to both before I unhitched and got us all set up. I spent at least half an hour in the afternoon heat putting down landing gear, and hooking up the utilities. I dislike the sewer so it was naturally avoided until the last step. The manager hadn’t looked carefully when helping us, so here we were, nearly done, hot, tired, hungry, and having to hitch up all over again in order to move the camper one foot. This involved lining the truck up to the hitch (no small feat), lifting the leveling jacks manually, and unhooking the water hose and outside electric connection. Then putting it all beck together a second time.

An hour after we arrived, having now duplicated our efforts due to an oversight and me being too trusting of a stranger’s abilities to navigate, here comes the manager to check on us.

“Is that all the farther you’ve got?”

“Yeah, you had us pull forward too far and the sewer hose wouldn’t reach so we had to do everything twice.” I said this as a no big deal kind of thing.

“You’ve been here a while. Surprising it’s taken so long to get set up.” He walked away smiling, shaking his head just the slightest bit.

Because he hadn’t apologized, or even (so it seemed) heard me explain that it was his error that caused us the extra set up time, not to mention work, and because he was actually (unbelievably) laughing at me, I began to doubt myself, to feel bad about myself in a hazy, sickly kind of way that defied what I knew to be true: I was being insulted for something I didn’t do by the person who had made the mistake.

I eventually shook it off and stopped feeling anything at all about the interaction.

Later, signing papers, paying, getting the lowdown on our new temporary neighborhood, I talked fast, made many jokes, didn’t mention his oversight or mistaken thinking, and nonchalantly said something like, “We’re all set up, now I just need to…” and he cuts in with a condescending “Relax?”

I corrected him before I realized this was fueling the problem.

“That’s Chicago you’re hearing. We talk fast and like to joke around.”

“You should really relax.”

I was a slow learner due to my inability to comprehend that this man could be so blind, rude… and then it dawned on me, sexist. I was not dealing with a person being rational, but a person confined by the chains of a prejudice that made him feel falsely superior.

My husband let me pick apart the experience on macro and micro levels for a good hour that evening. This was actually the second encounter of its kind in less than a week. I was hoping we weren’t seeing a new pattern of character building experiences.

Then it happened a third time.

The boys and I were in Target. I asked an employee, an older white male (same as the other two), for the location of a certain product. My older son cut in asking if the man would like to see a magic trick. I told my son it would have to wait a moment. The child, who is currently having a challenge with interrupting, pressed on, asking again. The man turned to him and said, “Yes, you can show me a trick.”

I turned to my son and said,”D, you’ll have to wait, please don’t interrupt again.”

The man completely ignored me then turned to my son and said, “Go ahead, show me your trick.”

Well now, this time I was wide awake. I looked at my child and said, “D, I told you to wait. I know this man gave you permission to go ahead and interrupt, but I’m your mother, and I told you to wait. You will have a turn to speak in a minute.”

Neither the man nor my son pressed the issue. In fact, D got to show the trick, the man asked if there was anything else he could help us find, D got to show him another trick, and the whole time we all joked and laughed.

The Target clerk may not have realized he was telling my son to ignore me or that he was also ignoring me, but his manner was similar (though not as unpleasant) to the first two men who were plainly disrespectful (a quality I can’t quite describe). I find it interesting that when I finally stopped trying to make the other person understand the reality of the situation in a friendly way, everything changed.

Will it always work to name reality boldly as I did in Target? Probably not, and it isn’t always the right way to deal with this kind of situation. But I know one thing: I hope that if I have any more such encounters, if I develop ill feeling for the other person during the conversation, I will not put on a happy face and press on. That is a kind of deception. If in my heart, I do not feel kindly, I will no longer act as if I do. I now see this is a form of lying that makes me feel small and encourages societal dysfunction to continue.

 

 

 

More thoughts: The reason the campground manager incident strikes me as particularly gender related is that I was doing a “man’s” job, and doing it well. I’ve encountered plenty of people simply being unpleasant, and that’s much easier to deal with. Usually a little humor goes a long way and I find most people easily change their tune in the face of kindness. But not this man. The most baffling was that he seemed to have selective hearing to keep his “superior” footing. The other two incidents may not have been gender related, especially the man in Target, but the cluster of disrespect got me thinking about how often men do talk down to women to keep everyone in their place.

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pause

I’ve deleted countless lines
in favor of something better
possibly just around the next thought.
I give up in favor of the mundane,
the silence of Starbuck’s where all I hear is reggae,
the hiss of steaming milk, and young Baristas
who say too much too loud too insecurely
(but I only hear them as if they’re not really there,
just like the moving wallpaper of cars driving past).
Drop shoulders every other breath,
and each time I relax into the leather sofa,
tears prick the back of my eyes,
in recognition of a life so rich I could melt (in love).
I am resting between symphonies.

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For the first to live here

ache

We have glorified your culture, yet left you cold, dry lands,
infertile soil we once pushed you in to (at gunpoint and lies).
We have knelt at the altar of your beauty
and imagine it defines you,
accepted your healing gifts and failed
to fight for you, even now.
“I am sorry” echoes through the nothing.

 

 

 

 

After watching the movie Little House on the Prairie, my son asked if things are better for Native Americans now, if we have made up for our abuses, set things right, apologized through deeds as well as words. What could I say? I told him the truth.

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clocks say

Between loads of laundry, she writes.
Pumpkin bread for a sunny afternoon,
egg salad dinner, boys making noise after sunset.
She holds still on a small couch,
still between key-clicks, word tricks,
a deep inhale of cricket songs, and a single, distant, light.
Clocks say seven minutes to unwind.

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before winter

leaves racing over ground play music like falling rain –
leaves turn to confetti beneath our tread
(back and forth to any place)
we stretch cool faces into it, that autumn-cast wind,
a slow breeze here, a rushing there,
then wide gusts blaze over the Midwest prairie,
bending tall grass, small trees
and dying sunflowers

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streaming thoughts at Barnes & Noble (unedited)

I like the back of the bookstore. I am alone among pages I will never read, allowed to listen to Tori Amos free of other people’s energy bouncing around. On the way to a wooden chair I learned there is a mommy blogging for dummies guide. I am a mommy. I am a blogger. I am not a mommy blogger. I enjoy reading the insights and experiences of a few women, and one man who publicly record the ins and outs and seemingly every minute of parenthood, but mostly, I get irritated. Judgmental and all that. I have the answers for the questions unasked, unsolicited advice sure to solve their woes, but really, I’m not kidding. Our family enjoys such a state of peace and delightedness with each other most of the time and I want to shout the answers to anyone who suffers unnecessarily. I am certain others have the answers for my woes as well, and I probably don’t listen, but as not listening is a not, I really don’t have specifics to report. When the kids are grown, then we can all compare notes, or something like that.

It boils down to this: Love, seek out true support, heal from childhood wounds, treat your child like a full person, Love, hug a lot, read together, be silly as much as possible, laugh at every opportunity, Love, listen to parents whose grown children have earned your admiration, spend lots of quiet time together, and a whole bunch of other things I’m sure are part of the mix, things I can’t think of just now.

Here I was going to write about “AUSTENtatious Crochet”ing, or at least wonder in written words, wonder at the influence of a few talented people, a handful among millions that stand out and steer generations, or at least entertain generations. I haven’t read any Jane Austen to know if she’s a guider or simply an excellent word chooser. I’ve tried a few times, but couldn’t get past page two in two separate books. maybe I’m not old enough yet. At fifty perhaps (I love that word) I will spend a year of Sunday’s behind Sense and Sensibility and all the rest. Or not.

We’re in the dream. Parked in a wooded grounds, making friends, roasting hotdogs over campfires my husband and sons have built together with logs dad and the boys sawed to the proper size on sunny autumn afternoons. We move southwesterly in a day or two, to park for the winter. We have friends and a history in the land we’re aiming for next. I will not need to ache for their company any longer, and I’ll try not to send my heart to Illinois too often, lest I miss the gift at hand.

Tori, her lovely, aching melody, is really bringing it all together. I am alone this evening, able to remember, and to be completely still in body and mind, thus able to wander the fields of my heart. I am running beside the carefree girl who lives in that wonderland.

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even as i sing

it is in (considering) that vastness, stretching out
unknown in every direction
where i can sink or swim
soar, or find my wings caked in mud

spin, spin, spin away

i am a single tear glistening
the breeze cooling my cheek
heart breaking if i remember impermanence
and (falsely) believe it is all there is

it is the vastness, endless

a space beyond hours, a place no flesh sighs
closer, closer than a breath, always near
even for a life lived one hundred years

where my soul resides
even as i sing into the first rays
of morning

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Autumn is for slowing down

5:30 am, morning, yet dark as black night, coffee brews, its aroma an enchantment. I wish we didn’t have to wake the boys, shattering their comfort, though I’m excited to share the first edge of sunrise together, and we have no choice today.

On a nearly empty highway, we drive daddy to work. Rustling a drowsy silence, D asks me to sing something. My husband and I sing that prayer comparing children to flowers in a garden.

Home now, from a mostly quiet ride through a dawn-blue fog spreading out over fields on both sides of us, D and M lie down beside me on our dining table converted into a bed. As they sleep, refolding into dreams, I pray; for my mother, my family, my world. Then I stretch out beside them and drift away to the sound of rain on the roof top, planes overhead, the sad and lovely whistle of a freight train rumbling past close enough for me to reach out one sleepy hand and touch its peeling orange paint.

We wake before noon, though not by much. M recounts his dreams, looking to a far corner to retrieve fleeting images, speaking in slow syllables. When he has spent a slumber’s tale, I move to the couch to write notes and D and M, their red sweatshirt hoods still framing small faces, stay in bed, D telling an attentive M a made-up adventure story.

Hours later, we are still quietly in the embrace of a lazy, cool autumn day.

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