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Changing locations

February 10th, 2015
Craig,  Alaska from Sunnahae Mountain

Craig, Alaska from Sunnahae Mountain

Here’s a little tale from my past:

I didn’t quit my job, just took a leave of absence, in case I hated the fifteen feet of rain that falls annually in Craig, Alaska.  I bought Tim’s new Honda Civic because he was too cheap to give it to me, and parked it at my mother’s for a month while I took a vacation in Baja, Mexico, with a friend in her small RV.  We drove through south and central Mexico, to Guymas, and I had a fling with a charming Argentine-Italian from Cupertino with a sexy voice who was also a teacher.  We sat under dried palm fronds during the day, played in Mulege’s phosphorescent water at night and drank tequilla, which still flattened my ass.   One night we watched the grunion run, incredible army of silver fish swimming to the shore. Continue reading “Changing locations” »

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Dream comes true

December 30th, 2014
boys need good men

boys need good men

My counselor suggested I start looking for a healthy partner, since my single mother gig was four years rolling.  Sure, I wanted a dad for my little son Brian, but my life was mostly fine, easy, no conflicts, plenty of fun.  I was busy staying sober and teaching, scared of screwing up again.

“You’ll never meet anyone if you stay home. Go do things, be with people who like to do what you like to do.”  I trusted this counselor to think I was ready for dating after four years as a single parent.  What’s to lose?  I love men, needed a real one in my life.  I wanted to be ‘normal’ and live in joy.  After all, I’d had ENOUGH sorrow.

A Sierra Club singles dance was being held in Strawberry near my house, in the same recreation center where my drunk dad fell down and mortified me in sixth grade.  I could make peace with that place, move on. 400 people attend the event, wouldn’t some man want to dance with me?  I put on my favorite flowing flowered red, orange and purple dress with sandals, and went.

He faced the door when I came inside and he was talking to other people.  Frank stood a full head taller than anyone in the room, wore a pink shirt with a red tie, a grey woolen blazer.  He was brown haired with a kind, honest expression on his face.

“He’s too cute for me,”   I thought, pheromones flowing.  He’s out of my league.  I only date losers.

Instead, I asked nondescript men to dance, and some said no—what the hell?   I thought we were at a singles dance!   I kept asking, anyway, wanted to have fun after such a long time.

Frank asked me to dance, looked directly at me, crinkled his eyes and smiled his loving smile.  My heart went wild and I almost jumped him.

I instantly recognized a powerful dream I had when I left  Alaska four years before.  Here was the bearlike man who made me feel okay!  I had forgotten my dream, but it’s true!  After the first dance, I went into a bathroom stall and hyperventilated. Whether or not I ever saw Frank again did not even matter to me.  I believe my dreams are messages.  Sobriety taught me to trust my intuition.  I had a dream and it was coming true right now!

We went onto the balcony and talked.  His wool jacket in June made sweat bead on his brow.

“Should you check your jacket?”

“ No, I’m fine.”  He was stubborn, there’s a clue.  Frank was a native San Franciscan, a Civil Engineer working in the East Bay, and specialized in soils and dam safety.

His Portuguese mother’s ancestors were farmers who immigrated from the Azore Islands.  They were the family who settled in old Tiburon’s Reed Station a hundred years before, in exactly the same place as my neighborhood across the street.  They might have planted the gigantic tulip tree near my house where I played as a kid!  They probably helped build the old barn behind my mother’s house.  We know they were famous for producing Marin County’s finest butter and cream dairy on Del Mar School property.

 “I come as a package, with a nearly four year-old boy who lights up my life,”   I told Frank about Brian right away, in case he didn’t like kids, briefly outlining circumstances of my second divorce.  Who wants a divorcee with a child?

Frank mattered to me, big time.  I wanted to see him again, so we exchanged phone numbers, though I was too shy to call him.  It’s that old generational thinking that sticks inside a person.

Frank’s honest eyes and smile gave me courage to believe that some stronger force than me handled this planet. I couldn’t have possibly orchestrated such a miracle as my dream coming true like it did in Strawberry’s recreation hall that night.

Frank called two weeks later, and invited me to hike with him on Tennesse Valley’s beach trail near Mill Valley.  Little Brian stood on the driveway when Frank pulled up in his funky tan van.

“Are you my mom’s date?”  Brian looked up at Frank and smiled at him.  Frank looked at Brian with indescribable gentleness, and I saw a good man.  I knew I loved him, even though he was a stranger.

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Trying to rearrange memories

December 9th, 2014
writing is power in its own right

writing is power in its own right

Editor Mary Rakow recently suggested that I write the next phase of my manuscript differently, when I met her in San Francisco.  We brainstormed ways to braid together life stories into descending and ascending arcs, that deliver a different experience for the reader than the saga I wrote about my time on this planet.  Like most people,  I usually tell my story in chronological order, but what happened doesn’t really need linear chronology.

For example, starting my life story with both sides of my grandparents doesn’t move my story.  It provides context for who I think I am, but other people probably don’t care about my grandparents.  When I jumble up personal anecdotes, people and events change.  My memory changes when I jumble it up. Continue reading “Trying to rearrange memories” »

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Proust and Thanksgiving

November 25th, 2014
seven county view

seven county view

We know nothing lasts forever.  “The places that we have known belong not only to that little world of space on which we map them for our own convenience.  None of them was ever more than a thin slice, held between the contiguous impressions that composed our life at that time; remembrance of a particular image is but regret for a particular moment;  and houses, roads and avenues are as fugitive, alas! as the years.”  Well stated, Marcel Proust!

I remember old days and olden times.  I can describe every step going up to my childhood tree fort.  We lived in a new cul-de-sac between Mill Valley and Tiburon, California.  Before I walked my hills, the place was called Reed Station.  My husband Fred’s great grandfather and grandfather lived on the exact spot more than one hundred years earlier. The Portuguese side of Fred’s family came from the Azore Islands after Gold Rush times, and they ran and owned dairies. Continue reading “Proust and Thanksgiving” »

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Lavender Labyrinth Lives

November 18th, 2014

this is the labryinth design

Thanks to the flow of people and love, we have a lavender labyrinth completed in what used to be a horse arena.   Mokelumne Lavender is in business!!  Mokelumne is the name of three forks of our rivers in this region.  We live between the north and middle fork of the Mokelumne.  Our pond eventually flows into the middle fork down below our property.

I want beauty in my life and my community, and Phase One of our simple lavender business has begun.   We started growing lavender with three hundred large Lavendula x-intermedia,’Grosso,’ planted into a maze design.  I met Patience Diaz in July, who came from Shasta Lavender Farm to our house for consultation in August.  She instructed us about the feasibility of establishing a lavender farm on our property.  Patience helped us decide where to plant, and made suggestions for getting the soil tested, checking for drainage, and different types of lavender choices that would be appropriate for our labyrinth. Continue reading “Lavender Labyrinth Lives” »

Little Wave

November 11th, 2014
stinson

Stinson Beach from Mt.Tam road

Ten years ago, Jennifer asked  me to be her spiritual advisor as she died of an inoperable brain tumor.  Of course I said yes, but really felt ill equipped to be somebody’s spiritual advisor.  She was my neighbor, people called her Skeeter as a child, because she was such a fast swimmer.  I miss that woman, and she taught me how to be brave.  Tuesday’s with Morrey by Mitch Albom had recently come out, and I read it, so Jennifer and I could talk about her process.  I told her Morrie’s parable about the little wave. Continue reading “Little Wave” »

Cheap Party

November 4th, 2014
boys running

being together is enough

What to do for Brian’s fifth birthday party? I didn’t want to spend a dime on it, because the neighborhood kids cared nothing for bowling or swimming.  They wanted to run around and have a good time.  I decided to make an old-fashioned birthday party, a la the 1960’s, and combine ingenuity with creativity.   Continue reading “Cheap Party” »

Ode to Lucky

October 21st, 2014

katThis is a story about Lucky, my cat from 1982.

One late summer evening in Craig, Alaska, my second husband and I walked back from the docks to our home on Loop Road.  A perky white kitten scampered along, curious and running beside us as we walked.  “If that cat follows us home, he’s mine, because I love him.”

“He’s lucky to have found us.” Roy, stated, which is how Lucky got his name. Continue reading “Ode to Lucky” »

Axe throwing

October 7th, 2014

I have been throwing an axe for years.

West Point, California women annually throw their axes on Lumberjack Day in competition, before a standing bull’s eye.  Axes fly end over end, and smash into shaken beer cans located in the center of the bulls’eye.  West Point, Calaveras County, west of Nevada in the Central Sierra Foothills, once flourished as a logging community, but no longer.  The  eight hundred person town has a forty-year history of annual parades,  with over 75 floats and afternoon logging activities.  Professional logger skills are performed in an arena format by members of the community.

After watching my first competition, I spoke with my favorite thrower, confiding that I also wanted to compete.

“Yeah, right,” she said. Continue reading “Axe throwing” »

Sierra Gold Rose

September 30th, 2014

sunset goldHome smells like a Sutter’s Gold rose in Mom’s backyard.  Even though Mom didn’t water it;  the gold glory crimson, orange, yellow grew over eight-feet tall outside of her kitchen window, loaded with full body brilliant perfumed blossoms in Tiburon during spring and summer.

Mom said the rose thrived on neglect, but maybe it was the Miwok Native American earth where Mom’s house was built that nurtured it.  We found evidence of beads, mortars and pestles in the yard.  Our subdivision house was built post WWII, on Richardson Bay, nestled in a cove at the base of a rock sprinkled mountain with a 360-degree view of seven Bay Area counties.  People planted roses in their yards, but our Sierra Gold was perfectly number one. Continue reading “Sierra Gold Rose” »

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