Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Semicolons

One of my passwords has become irrelevant.   I wonder if I should change it or keep it for memory's sake.  Memory's sake is an interesting sake.   Good sometimes for remembering lessons learned; bad sometimes for re-emoting through events that lost their value days and days ago.  I'll seriously consider a new password.

Relief is getting the tomato plants in before June 1st with cages to boot.

Teaching the last day of school to 9th graders on their way to high school is like sending loved ones off on a boat that you know is going to sink.  You can load it with plenty of life jackets and row boats, but some just won't make it.

I like it when google designs the letters to celebrate a holiday or a birthday.  I wonder if there is a entire team of computer wiz's who make their living designing those letters.  I wonder how much money they make... and if its worth it - designing the same 6 letters over and over.  (It's probably like teaching.  The subject stays the same, but the creativity lies in the new human beings that present themselves each time around.)  I wonder if they make more money than me.   I bet I could google it.

I have a graduate.  I have a child who will graduate from high school tomorrow.  I hope he feels more wise at 38 than I do.  18 and graduated from high school means now you are in charge of your own demise and your parents don't have to work so hard at ruining you.  It's blissful for everyone.  I'm in a static state of cliche the last few weeks.  I wonder if it will end in a few months or if it will just continue through to the first grandchild.  I watched some 10 year olds run home from school today and thought about how a few months ago I would have pined for the days when either I was running home from school, or when I had a house full of kids running home from school, but now (maybe because I'm old!) I realize that being a part of that moment is nothing more than seeing it, understanding it and enjoying it - which I can do - anytime.  I can as a 10 year old, a mother of a 10 year old, the neighbor of a 10 year old, the grandma or great grandma of a 10 year old.  We all live in the same days with each other.  God gives us so many chances to love every moment as we see them over and over.

I got to play the piano for Douglas and Jessie while they sang in class this last week.  It was a quintessential moment for me.  It was one of those slow motion, drink it all in, savor the moment, smell every last bloomin' rose, glance around steadily soaking it in, memorize the feel of the piano keys - moments.  Who I am and what I love is terribly evident in my children; for good or bad, and usually both at the same time. There they were singing their guts out.  My children are the prize.

Corinne is taller than me.  She is her daddy's child.  Maybe that's why I like her so much.

David is absent.  He is absent after school for hours.  He is being raised by this neighborhood on trampolines and with oreos and bike rides and sticks and bows and air soft guns and staring at the creek.  I miss him and love the neighborhood for keeping him out to play for so long.

Mark my words... this will be a landmark summer.  2012.
Congratulations to Douglas.  May the days behind illuminate with understanding for what had to be and what just plain old was. May the days ahead be just right and may you see them as such, always.

This post has two semicolons in it.  I have no idea if they are used correctly or much more about the rest of my punctuation.  I graduated from high school a long time ago.


Friday, May 11, 2012

musica

There is music that inspires instant tears.
Because of a memory.
Billy Joel's Lullaby
Because of an association.
Winter, Joshua Radin
Because of lyrics.
Beggar's Prayer, Emiliana Torrini
Because of the pure emotion.
Lux Arumque, Eric Whittaker
Malka Moma, Philip Koutev
This Years Love, David Gray
Slava V Vishnih Bogu, Rachmaninoff
This is the most magical and the most meaningful.
It's like I remember something I haven't been in yet.
Or is it empathy?
Are you so pushed around by emotion?
There's music for cleaning (Touch) and for dancing (Blue Savannah) and kissing (Every Breath You Take). There's music for staring (Gravity) and some for listening (Love, Unrequited Robs Me of Me Rest). There's music for driving (Alive and Kicking) and running (Impossible) and for eating (One Note Samba) .
There's music for flying (Just Like Heaven) and cooking (Ray Charles)  .
And probably some for dying. I hope there is music on this side when I go, and on the next.
I wonder if it will be the same song.


Thanks to 16 months of Losing.


Losing is being right but giving up.
I want to be kind more than right.
Losing is wanting without getting.
I want to be strong enough to want things I'll never have.
Losing is letting go.
I don't want to create the best tomorrow, I want to create the right one.
Losing is not being satisfied.
I want the freedom that comes without appetites to feed.
Losing is only wishing.
I want to wish for impossible stuff too.  It's fun.
Losing is not getting credit.
I want to serve and be forgotten.
Losing is not being loved back.
I want to love with every possibility of my heart and not with the limits of someone else's.
Losing is not being first.
I want to walk my own path.  
Losing is running out of time.
I want front row seats to every story - better yet, a supporting role.  But there isn't time.  And I want to die in agony that I didn't get to see them all.  
I want to be meek.

I want to lose more often.
I think God intends for us to desire things we will never have. 
Losing is living free of the conditions of winning.
I want to be a loser.

Lonely.


When I was 17, I was sat on a beach at Carmel Meadows and discovered my own company.  I came in a powerful state of self-pity.  I had made strong choices about with whom I would spend time and to whom I would give my affection.  I had an unreasonable standard and it left me alone.  I climbed down the thick stairs and took off my shoes to walk the edge of the water and found a place dry enough to sit.  I looked to my right and saw a bird made from the rocks.  He is a fat, cheerful bird with a straight, small beak and a dented eye.  His wings are folded back and he watches the water.  I was delighted by his company and couldn't help but stare at him and hope he was there for me.  I looked around for someone to show, but...  I was alone.  And it was ok.  I knew that I could make tough decisions because I had made them.  I knew what was important to me because I had protected it.  The choices left me alone with the bird - but eventually brought me the relationships I wanted most.  Soon I brought them to walk down the thick stairs and to take off their shoes and see the rocks.  And I kissed the boy and the little ones played in the waves and I was grateful for the company of the bird and knew certainly he was there for me.  Lonely fades then returns and sets us in motion.  Lonely reminds and remembers and brings us home.