Friday, March 22, 2013

The Golden Rule And J.A.G.

I have been thinking of Jonathan-J.A.G. to his fellow employees at LandPaths, for over a week now as I worked through a difficult week at work, physically and emotionally.  I am spent today.  Tomorrow, the memorial for Jonathan will be held and I have decided to go for a hike to honor him, think of him and celebrate him.  That pain of losing him is still real and sharp for me.  Perhaps it is just as much about feeling so much loss this past year-jobs, money, Ginger, friends and family, as about Jonathan in particular.

And so I will hope that all of the folks who journey to honor Jonathan Glass tomorrow, including a large contingent of cyclists, will find peace and company in their grief. 

This week, for me, embodied the idea of The Golden Rule-or simply doing for others as we would want to experience.  I would say that my work life has ended up in the dung heap due to some very dysfunctional leadership and a history of inappropriate favoritism where I work.

One would not think it should be this hard but sometimes life lessons carry a punch.  More like an anvil in a glove!  I was able to pass on some love, tucked into small actions, for my coworkers who seem to get as little praise as I do.  Maybe I made a difference for someone.

In the meantime, I am gonna read on the couch with the Greyhounds slumbering nearby.  Peace be with all of us tonight.

 
 

Friday, March 15, 2013

Remembering Jonathan Glass

Perhaps, just perhaps, I am one of the lucky ones.  Maybe. Sometimes. Living with many memories, hopes, disappointments and dark feelings for a lifetime helps one get to know oneself very well.  That voice of despair is always there, a little bit to the left of my left ear.  A demon, a thought born of stress and a very dark upbringing.  Exercise helps and being outdoors can send that demon packing.

Having said all of that, I am remembering a man named Jonathan Glass who died in February.  A brilliant, capable, funny, outdoorsy man who ran LandPaths for many years gave me the chance to show up on Thursdays, clean up the database a bit and be a part of something positive.  Jonathan gave me the chance to allay my own darkness in a time of unemployment.  He gave me a purpose and a place to sit.  He helped me to belong and feel purposeful.  He helped me stay alive.

And so it was with great sadness to know that his own hidden despair ended his all-too-brief life here in northern California.  To say he is missed is not to fully comprehend how Jonathan made open space happen here in Sonoma County.  He was cherished and his absence here is profoundly sorrowful.  There is a great emptiness where that beaming smile lit up the room.

May he now be free and may the rest of us find a way to ask for help, show understanding where we only think of ourselves, take chances, make a statement and know that living does mean that we are one of the lucky ones.

Monday, March 11, 2013

The Lemur In The Backseat

I look up
  from the overpriced plant that I am
  watering,
  in a nursery where I work
  for pittance wondering
  what happened to my beautiful life,
  to see a silver sedan pulling into the parking lot,
  slowly moving forward seeking the perfect
  parking spot,
  and there is a lemur, wide eyed and taking in all that washes
  before her through a  car window,
  short in the seat,
  she is tiny and very real.
I look up
  realizing that my lemur is an old woman,
  shrunken by age,
  viewing the world through eyes
  like pie plates,
  on her outing to the nursery where she will move slowly
  on the arm of her adult child,
  with those huge, hopeful eyes upon all
  that she will be missing.
I look up
  and wonder what happened to all that I had
  planned and know
  one day soon,
  I will become the lemur in the back seat.


Sunday, March 3, 2013

That'll Be Me

That'll be me in about 20 years
 with my translucent skin over sharp
 cheek bones,
 asking a retail clerk to get something for me that I cannot
 reach,
 my teeth hanging on by a thread of tissue,
 my eyes will become distant as if I see the end of my life but
 I am not there yet,
 just this frail, petite wisp of a body that
 doesn't walk well or quickly anymore.
That'll be me with my thinning hair and excellent manners which
 tell the story of a much different generation where
 texting was something strange about to take over a nation and
 great Pie was the way we told others
 about our joy for living.
That'll be me with my ache to be seen,
 long gone now as others look past my diminishing body,
 they fail to see themselves or even realize that
 one day
 they will be saying to themselves
That'll be me
too.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

A Sense Of Wonder In A Pile Of Dung

I can say that life has been challenging, knowing that, in itself, is a euphemism for a bunch of crap. Making a living in California, where our sales tax is about 10% is very "challenging" to say the least.  Finding a job that is tolerable and perhaps, enjoyable, that pays more than $10 an hour, without benefits of course, is almost unheard of, to say the least.  Getting a job at all is like magic.  I wonder if things will ever be different here or anywhere post 2008.

So, enough said about the hardships though after a Roto Rooter bill to the tune of $337.50-what is the .50 for?-and a broken VCR, well making $10 an hour doesn't leave much else.  Groceries, utilities, dog food and gasoline round out the full spectrum.

I found my sense of wonder in the rising moon tonight, albeit viewed through the power lines, to be my own talisman.  I do try to find those things that make me wonder why I am here.  Sometimes it is the grandest sunset from our driveway or the stars at night over our old, freezing house or the about-to-be full moon. 

All of these images were fueled by a book that my mother had called "The Sense Of Wonder" by Rachel Carson.  I often looked through that book that my mother strategically placed on the coffee table.  For me, a child already too old for her years, it awakened who I was already in that painful childhood home. I was fascinated by the photography of the magic of nature.  I still feel that profoundly though I wonder, every day, why am I here and why is life so damn tough?

Finding that "sense of wonder" in a pile of crap is harder but never far from my grasp.  I feel fortunate to still have that desire and amazement of all that nature offers to us here on earth, struggling and not, rich and not, wise and not.  Thank you mother earth!



Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Sunrise

A hawk sits
 at the edge of sunrise,
a desolate perch against the growing blue,
swollen feathers braced against the frigid morning as
I run by on
 this February morning,
disappointed with my life yet
 still moving forward, running on old, skinny legs,
hoping,
clueless,
fragile.
A hawk sits
 at the edge of sunrise,
her silhouette black against the growing light,
at the edge of the lake where I
run by on
 this February morning.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Jade Man Doody Turns Ten!

One of our Greyhounds had his 10th birthday yesterday.  For a Greyhound, he is getting ancient and it is so important to keep loving him and to cherish every day with him.  Don't get me wrong, he is a big Diva-man.  However, he is the most gentle dog who has ever called me theirs and he still cracks me up that he is so very serious.

We celebrated by singing Happy Birthday to our Jade man and he and Omi got some turkey in their food too.  Yucky meat for a vegetarian and so it is that Jade was treated like his royal self.  I am one of his minions and gladly so!  I love those big Greyhound guys and he weighs almost as much as I do!

Happy Birthday Jade-no one wears a hat quite like you do.