Thursday, July 30, 2009

All I need are my feet and the ground.



No one has ever taken a photo of me running. But it is something I do on a daily basis. I average 3 miles a day, 5 days a week, which over the course of a year comes out to around 720 miles. I have been a runner since I was 15, so that means that I have run over 10,000 miles so far in my life.

Running is a major part of my life. Running is something that almost all other activities in my life are scheduled around. Running has not only improved the quality of my life, it has saved me (over and over again) from my natural-born self-destructive tendencies.

Obviously, as someone who has been an avid runner for 15 years, I am familiar with self discipline.

When you run 700 miles a year, you come to realize that not all of those miles will be rewarding. Sometimes, the run is painful, monotonous, and completely without joy. Sometimes, you feel too tired or too hungry to run. Sometimes, you would rather be lazy and drink a beer while watching Family Guy. But, when you have spent thousands of miles in a constant struggle for breath, you have learned that you are never as tired as you think you are. You have learned that within less than a minute into the run, you don't feel tired anymore - you feel strong and free.

You also learn that the Corona tastes so much BETTER after a run, when you are very, very, very thirsty.

After 30 years of being alive, I have learned how to stay physically fit and still be able to eat chocolate. I'm pretty grateful for that, because I have zero will power when it comes to sweets.

What I wish I could do is transfer that strong self discipline, success, and confidence into my professional life. If I could just learn how to be a runner in my career, I could maybe move on to the next level of my life.

The thing I love most about running is that it feels slightly like you have grown wings and can fly. I love that no matter what happens in the other parts of my life, nobody can take my run away from me. All I need are my feet and the ground, and I can escape.

Sometimes, I like to imagine what it might be like to go to Sudan or Liberia. Somewhere terrifying and hard. Somewhere that I could be put to good use. Somewhere that would teach me how easy I have it here in my little life in the states. And I like to imagine what it might be like to run barefoot in the village, maybe with some teenagers. I like to imagine how fast they would leave me in the dust.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Significant Calendar Dates

Seven years after he left the world, I still catch myself in moments where it surprises me to remember that my dad is dead.

You know that feeling you get when you are at the top peak of a roller coaster? That feeling you get in your guts when you first start down the other side of the hill? How your stomach flips over and bumps into your heart, your lungs seize up and your head gets swimmy? Well, that is the feeling I get on those occasions, when the realization that he's gone, comes at me as a surprise.

It always takes my breath away.



On July 25, he would have been 56 years old.

I never know what to do on his birthday. I usually spend it alone, driving up and down familiar highways, drinking coffee and listening to music - not knowing where to put all of the awareness that came with losing him; not knowing how to confine my intimate relationship with the emptiness he left behind because it is so vast, it stretches out into the black forever of the universe.

This year, I still did not know how to handle it.

So, on the night before what would have been my father's 56th birthday, I drank an $85.00 bottle of red wine from Washington state, a dirty martini, 2 vodka tonics, and then I had a few shots. I was captivated by a humid summer night, slapped hard on the butt by a hot little Phillipina chick, envied for how I looked wearing a skin tight white skirt and black stilletto heels, and I was the grateful recipient of some easy compliments and empty promises. I found an audience for my most sacred of hopes, and my most haunting fears. I was surrounded by old friends, and new friends, and kind strangers. I slept alone, and woke up more hungover than I have been in years.

This year, I did not try to cope with the heavy grief that settles in on me during what should be another important calendar date in my father's life. Instead, I chose to suppress, ignore, deny, and drown.

Oddly, I don't think I'm any worse off for having done so. I'm learning that grief is just something that will not ever go away. It is not true what they say.

Time does not heal all wounds.

John's Island & a curvy highway

So far, I had spent 2009 in a

stupor of fear and weariness,

mixed with a few bouts of hope and mania.

I was driving down a street that

stretches for a few miles underneath a canopy of

live oak limbs.

Even in the winter, they are

green and humid, shelter to a

hundred other species,

stronger than everything, stronger than the

march of time.

Intermittent patches of cold sunlight

visited the asphalt.

I was worrying.

Racked with fear that I am not good enough,

that I am too old,

or too embattled to ever be joyous,

or the kind of woman

anyone would want to have around.

And then out of nowhere

it all shut off, and

I looked ahead of me

at the soldiering trees

bent over this small vein

of human traffic -

twisting and swaying,

quietly living on nothing but

sun and dirt and rain,

and for a brief moment

I felt powerful and free,

like a wild element or force of nature,

the same as the trees -

sun and dirt and rain;

simple, gifted, and aware

that there is nothing to fear.

That everywhere around me

is everything I will ever need

Monday, July 20, 2009

Luminous

I want to clear out all the other voices, all the other mumblings that are bouncing around in my head. I don't want to know what Ali Velshi thinks about the economy, nor do I want to hear Tom Ashbrook theorize about the death of Walter Cronkite as the death of a whole era of American goodness. I don't want to hear my heart aching, just for today - it's all I ask, just for a day, just for one small, simple day.

Sometimes I can't figure out which voice is mine in all this clamouring, and I just want to hear the voice of a bird, or a flock of birds, or the voice of the wind - the way it sounds playing in live oak leaves, or shaking the blooms of the crepe myrtle trees, their seeds gently clicking as they hit the sidewalk or the street.

Anything but this. Anything but this hellish, wailing din of thoughts that have been revving since I woke up today. I just want to hear a seagull screaming, or maybe two, and the wakes pulling back, pushing forward, pulling back, pushing forward. Water swishing. Small grains of sand. The drowning out of all of this needless turmoil - all these voices and questions and longings - I want to hear the blue and green and gray world around me, beating like a heart or a drum or like a pair of hummingbird wings, and the way they thud and buzz at the same time, a thousand times per minute.

I just want to hear the sunlight.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Good Morning, Neighbor

I looked out my bathroom window this morning and somehow noticed my neighbor sitting on the roof of his house, smoking a cigarette (or a joint?) with a friend. They were looking down into my back yard, and no doubt watched as I turned the blinds from open to closed. The reason I think they watched as I closed the blinds is because I am pretty sure I made eye contact, which is just beyond awesome, and not in the least disturbing.

After closing the blinds, I took a shower and went about preparing for work. But I could not shake the feeling that I would just LOVE to wrap my hands around that red neck of his and strangle him to death.

That is how he makes me feel, I guess. Predated to be sure, but also choked. Like I cannot do what I would normally do in my own house, which is walk around naked with my blinds open to the downpour of new morning sunlight. It just makes me happy to do that. I'm constrained all day long, and I need that small freedom. Heck, we all need to take pleasure in the small wonderful things of life, and that is one of my small wonderful things - to be able to look at sunlight and trees through my windows in the morning. {Also? It is one of the reasons I bought this house in the first place. Because the back yard (at that point) was totally secluded. Because someone had NOT, at that point, cut down all of the shrubbery on his side of the chain link fence. Which is where all of the privacy was planted, as I later found out.}

Driving to work, I kept experiencing vivid imaginings of cold-blooded murder. I could get a shot gun and blow a hole in his chest. I could sneak up behind him with a sharp knife. I won't go on, but you get the picture. *In short, there is something very, very wrong with me.

Also, however, he is a creep and a jerk. This is a guy who has a fire pit in his back yard. A fire pit that he sits by as he lifts weights. THIS IS OUTSIDE. HE LIFTS WEIGHTS OUTSIDE. Also, I barracaded his access to seeing my back yard - while he is working out at the fire pit in his back yard - by planting bamboo on my side of the chain link fence. So what does my neighbor do to solve that problem? He climbs up onto his roof, that's what he does.

He and his friend climb up onto his roof, at 7:00 in the morning.

Were it only that I could have such determination, resolve, and weird punk-ass energy. I might just be able to change the world.

*Please note that I could never follow through with my homocidal imaginings. I'm just prone to inner dialogue hyperbole.

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

All dressed up with nowhere to go.

at midnight, I went out into the night

with the click and spin of my bicycle

riding in swerves over yellow lines

looking for something real

but something unsettling remained very still

all the doors were shut, all the windows dark

there was nobody but me

out in the wild, warm night

not even a restless teenager

anywhere in sight

and it struck me as sad that the world was there

offering something simple, but striking and gorgeous

the gulf stream breeze kept mosquitos at bay

pink clouds moved overhead and the tide was

high, or near high, and no scent of mud, but that

of confederate jasmine and gardenia in full bloom

the starstrung beauty of the summer night

the best part, the best part

the tender heart of it

the tender heart

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Katharine

I forgive you, I love you, and I am not proud of you.

You are better than that. You are better than the life you've built around yourself.

You are allegory, ivory skin, and freckles.

I am freedom, and you are enterprise.

There are so many ways for you to atone, so many millions of colors to shift into - all of it could be so much more beautiful if you just had a little more faith in yourself.

I was thinking about you the other day, about how you used to dance like Elvis, swiveling your hips, turning your right foot on its side in those Doc Martins. I was thinking about how much more comfortable I always was to be in your home than I was to be in mine. I was thinking about your mother, and your cousins, and your aunts - about how they are as much my family as anyone ever could be.

And I realized that I will always forgive you, if only for this reason alone: my heart grew around you, like a tree will grow bark around a power line.

You are as much a part of me as my very own memories.

Aquamarine eyes.

Coal miner's daughter who has always hated the woods.

You're a beautiful girl, and I deeply love you.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Lighthouse

Riding shotgun, heading northeast on Ashley Street with you, a swarm of memories of the solitary experiences I had grown accustomed to when I first moved to this town began to engulf me.

You are so new to me, you don't know any of that stuff about me, and it kind of stings, but it is also quite freeing. Holding your hand as we walked toward the ocean, down the abandoned and closed off road, I remembered how years ago, walking down this same stretch of unkempt asphalt, I had gone off into the dunes to pee - an episode that ultimately resulted in a few nasty fire ant bites on my feet.

When we arrived at the shore, you had been quieted by my mumblings of recollections. "Don't take off your shoes in the dunes, there are thorns and burrs all throughout the sand", I had warned you. Up and over the last dune, as my first glimpse of the blue Atlantic unfolded, I immediately panicked. I had lured you to this spot with a vivid description of the wind-worn trees that lined the shore opposite the lighthouse.

Hastily, I looked from left to right, but I did not see the trees that I had remembered. I worried that it would make you trust me less the next time I remembered something beautiful that I wanted to share with you. But, as we began to walk toward the west side of the beach, there they were - just as stark and faint and weathered-gray as they had endured in my memory. The bare trees, the broken limbs, the twisted remnants of living things that present to be so completely dead, one wonders how they stay erect in the sand. Storm after storm.

I thought you seemed uncomfortable with the situation. I wanted terribly to kiss your plump, pink mouth, but your eyes darted from one stranger to the next. Incidentally, 4 different sets of professional photographers had chosen this spot. They were photographing 4 different sets of people wearing khaki pants and white shirts, or white sun dresses, with the ocean wind blowing back their hair in perfect accordance with such a picturesque scene.

Ever since I had fallen inlove with you - last October, in the evening, once I had slowed down enough to watch you from accross the room - I have wanted to share these beauties with you. Parts of me, the best parts of me, the most harmonious and least embattled parts of me; I wanted you to see those parts of me, so that, in some way, I could know they still exist.

All efforts leading to this point, and there we were, on the furthest shore of Folly Beach, looking at an old, red and white lighthouse; me, wanting to pull you around to the river side of the island, and you, offering to go the other direction. So I followed you and we lay a large towel down on the sand and opened our Coronas.

"Cheers, to the blue sea", I said. You clinked your bottle against mine and we drank as the westward wind threw sand down the beach, and the waves crashed into a set of large, dark brown rocks.

Tide was subsiding, so we sat in newly wet shore to avoid being sand-blasted.

I wanted so badly to share with you the whole array of memories I have of the island. For instance, I wanted to tell you about the day in late October, while in a state of heart break and feeling trapped, I came to this end of the island and nobody else was around. I tore off my clothes, except for my white thong underwear, and ran into the crashing waves. I wanted to tell you that it was cold and stormy on that day, but the water was still warm, retaining photonic energy that had been poured into it from April through September. I wanted to tell you that my tears fell into the saltwater, and how beautiful and alive it made me feel to experience the purity of that moment - when there was not one person alive in the world who knew, or even would care to know, the real and full woman that I had become. Yet, the sea was there, enveloping me, holding me adrift, tossing me up and down, consoling me.

Or, I could have told you about the time in late September one year, when I was driving northeast on Ashley Street, and from accross the marsh flitting toward, over, and beyond the peaks of the ocean were thousands of orange Queen butterflies. I could have told you that, in that moment, I found myself weeping from the sheer power and awe of the natural world. Deeply thankful, and thunderstruck, that I could have been so blessed as to find myself at that place, at that exact time, so captivated by that wild, genetically encoded migration over an entire ocean. Into the winter, into oblivion, the butterflies fluttered en masse. A phenomenon that looked like God had shaken orange confetti over the island to celebrate the beginning of autumn.

Instead, however, I was quiet and listened to your stories and laughed at your jokes, and admired your subtle, yet poignant beauty cast against this background so familiar, it fit like my favorite pair of old blue jeans. There you were, and there I was with you, not something I would have ever imagined at any point on the continuum that lies between my life before meeting you, and my life now.

I never would have imagined that, at the age of 30, I would find myself wildly inlove, caught unaware by someone as mysterious and gorgeous as you are. I never would have dreamt I could experience something as uniquely delightful as the surprising way you stir me in the most ordinary of settings, saying and doing the most ordinary things. Your blue eyes, and the blue saltwater; your unfathomable nature, and the unknown depths of that deep, cold sea; you drinking a beer, sitting beside me.

Thank you for giving me new memories of the sand and the storm clouds and the crashing, foam-blasting, unpredictable ocean. You don't know this about me, so I am going to tell you; those moments, there with you, were the closest to home that I will ever be.

Monday, July 6, 2009

One True Joy

This is the one true joy in life, the being used for a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one; the being thoroughly worn out before you are thrown on the scrap heap; the being a force of nature instead of a feverish little clod of ailments and grievances complaining that the world will not devote itself to making you happy.


- George Bernard Shaw

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Memories of Snow, Lots and Lots of Snow

When I was 13, a blizzard hit. I was living in West Virginia at the time, in the home that I grew up in.

I do not remember all of the details, but I do remember that my Dad's Z71 got stuck in the driveway. I remember being really worried about that. Also, that was the week that I found Jesus.

The blizzard came in over night, snow pouring down in paper sheets of white, snowflakes as large as dimes. The towering pine trees growing on the hill in my back yard creaked under the weight of the snow piling up, one foot, two feet, three feet high - on their branches. Throughout the night, I would doze off, only to be awakened by a loud snap, and the subsequent crunching of branches being plucked off, one by one, shearing the pine trees to look like toothpicks in the morning sun.

Of course, it goes without saying that we lost our electricity. This was a common occurance in the mountains and something that always caused me severe anxiety. But especially now that I was in my first year of menstration, and on my period. The thought of not being able to shower the heavy blood away made me want to die.

However, being the true mountain girl that I was, even my heavy, teenage period could not keep me from the 5 feet deep snow and eight feet high drifts beyond my window. I had never seen so much bright, white freeze before, and the silence of the newly minted cover called me outside.

In my thickest snow wear, I walked outside alone. My front porch emptied directly out into the as-yet-untrespassed blizzard blanket. I chose to cross the hill to the cemetary, where I knew a grove of beautiful pines. I wanted, first, to assess the damage to one of my favorite sanctuaries. But I also wanted to walk and experience the resonant silence that only that amount of snow can create.

I am serious. The silence was palpable. You could not hear a thing. Not anything. No birds, no echoes of trains, no cars on the highway, no people out plowing their driveways - nothing. There was no sound. Except one, you could hear the trees bearing the weight of the snow, and the way that it caused them to sigh and breathe very deeply and heavily, as if they were soldiers carrying wounded comrades out of a war zone.

At least, that is what it made me imagine. With nothing but the sound of the trees, and the blinding white snow overwhelming all of my senses, I walked quietly and with great trouble, to the cemetary.

Once I got there, I smiled broadly at the realization that all of the headstones were covered by the snow. Only the most ornately statued gravesites were visible - the ones with angels or large cement crosses. It was such a stark and beautiful scene. I found my grove and, worn out from walking over a hill in 3-5 feet of snow, I lay down under the pines.

Looking up, I could see the underbelly of the branches caked in snow. Beyond the branches, the sky was also aspirin white. The complete lack of color only made everything more beautiful.

It was the single most solitary and peaceful moment I have ever experienced in my entire life.

Nothing but silence and snow.

How I Will Change The World

I will make the world a better place.

I will make my life into something beautiful.

I am powerful enough to do whatever it takes.

These are the incantations of a despairing soul, begging herself for forgiveness and freedom from the tethers of the past.