Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Halloween's Obituary

I'm a rebel.  Started young… After everyone else had shouted "trick or treat", I'd be the one who chimed in "smell my feet, give me something good to eat"! Ah, the good ole days! I remember annual trips to K Mart for costumes and hoping that each year I wouldn't have to wear my ski coat over my selection.  Growing up in Colorado, it was guaranteed to be snowy and cold and readymade costumes had to be roomy enough for the warm layers underneath.

I shared my childhood between two neighborhoods.  The 31st of October was always a favored family event.  During the school day, Mom was room mother, always in costume. I remember her as a gypsy and a witch.  She was a consummate actress. It's a testimonial to her craft that I remember the details of her characters these 50 years later.

My next door buddy, Jimbo, celebrated his birthday on Halloween. All the kids on our street were invited to his party and dinner was always hotdogs and the cake was appropriately decorated in orange and black.  It was guaranteed to find some wax teeth in the goody bag.  Trick and treating was done en mass and near the 8:00 hour, my brother and I returned home and counted and traded candies.

Our family moved to another neighborhood when I started 2nd grade, I think.  Time for new traditions. We moved next door to my grandmother.  The sixty years age difference was perfect for us (she really was a child at heart). Readymade outfits were no longer the norm.  Costume shopping was accomplished in phases, from notions department at the local five and dime for material, buttons, snaps and zippers straight back to Grandma's house where she cut out a pattern from newsprint, to the sewing machine and finally to the arts and crafts store for face paint supplies.

She loved Halloween and before the threat of treats laced with narcotics, broken glass, etc., you'd be offered a choice of freshly baked goods served from an appropriately themed platter. One year she surprised us all with caramel apples. My favorite memory, however, was the year she gave out money.

The Great Depression changed her generation. Survival skills were honed at their most raw and basic level. Those skills stayed with her. She was an expert of what we would call "up cycling"; always reinventing new from old, beauty from scrap and a weeks worth of meals from just two or three ingredients.

She collected pennies and when the collection jar was full, she would visit her bank and convert cents into quarters which would be given to her grandkids in presentation booklets at Christmas. One year, her penny jar didn't last until December; she decided to count out equal amounts, wrap the change in tidy little net packages (like rice to throw at weddings) and deposit one each to the children.

That year, I must have been approaching "preteendom", because I recall ending my run of the neighborhood and stopping in to help her. Maybe it was upon suggestion from my mother, or maybe it was because my brother had ditched me and I didn't want to go home yet.  None the less, I remember sitting in her formal living room with best view of the street and keeping an eye on her as she opened the storm door and chatted with all the little ones.  I can hear the excited cries of "Look, Mommie, look at what I got!"

Grandma was just as excited and was pleased that her savings that year was sufficient to include the very last trick or treater. It was a very busy night, so much so, that she commented to me "Oh, my,
this is the first year that I've seen so many children in the same costumes"!  Our subdivision had been the target of families living out of town who came by station wagons to get the really good stuff.  So, Grandma didnt't think twice about it.  Of course, we didn't realize it then, but looking back, the truth of it was the children figured out if they changed their grouping at the corner, they could return to her house and help themselves to more. It was a very successful Halloween.

My children carried on the tradition.  They had classroom parties, I was their room mother. I baked treats and entertained the class with homemade "boo bingo" cards.  They wore hand stitched costumes when they were very little and  their own fashion statements as they got older.  My husband would stay home to answer the door and I accompanied both kids to the very last house and helped them carry their overflowing plastic pumpkins back to the house. As they got older, parties replaced
trick or treating and soon, the bewitching hour became the normal curfew.

I don't do Halloween anymore.  The defining moment was the year the children on the other side of my front door were taller than my husband.  I knew these kids, they'd grown up with mine and I didn't believe that trick or treating was a right of passage to the high school experience.

So, for the last several years, our house has joined the "no porch light" group.  We've lived in this neighborhood near twenty years and have seen recent shift in the number of homes with young families.  I know some of the newest families  haven't been told of the no porch light rule and I fully expect someone to ring the doorbell and hope that the door opens.  Some of the less enthusiastic neighbors leave bowls of  candy outside, but I'm not in favor of this practice.

We just leave for an extended dinner and hope that our return goes un noticed and we gain re-entry to the garage without giving false hope to the last of the youngsters.

Maybe this tradition is waning.  Since when did this holiday become so wholesome?  Haven't you noticed the trend of "fall festivals" in classrooms, churches, fraternal halls and retail outlets? Maybe the event has finally come full circle; revisiting agrarian celebrations and perhaps touching on a cultural tone.  Could be? I could be witness to it's epitaph.  I don't give it much thought.

My memories will entertain future generations around the dinner table. I will be reminded of them each year when I tuck a bag of candy corn among the usual groceries. If I happen to move again, to a town which embraces tradition, regardless of it's origins, I will open my door and delight in the innocence of childhood and remember the ghosts of Halloweens past.



Friday, October 16, 2015

Finding My Tribe

I'm going tribal; rather I am committed to going tribal;  I am unsure just how, but I think I am going tribal. Confused?  Me, too.

My life choices have me living well enough in a serene and safe location and yet I am out of sync with those around me.  I've tried to belong here.  Circumstances have predicated that I make a concerted effort to raise my family here with all the benefits of clean living coastal style.

Well, I've done a bang-up job.  Kids are mostly on their own journeys and have had independent mindsets for years.  They're prepared.

I'm not.  All I feel is a longing to be elsewhere. My soul is restless and tired.  The me I am is not who I am destined to be.  I know this. The message from far beyond the rainbow has been delivered in triplicate now. There is a unified voice which speaks at every reading…I am stuck.  My soul is creative but repressed, partly out of fear, partly out of ignorance and partly out of the loss of control.

How did I lose control over me?  The answer would be that I gave it away. Gave it away to make room for other's needs.  Survival.  As a single woman, came dating and marriage. As a married woman, came parenting, post parenting back to marriage and perhaps in the event, my husband dies first,  I will navigate life on my own again.

I don't want to wait for any eventuality.  The identity crisis is now.

This wanderlust desperation is cumulative.  It has been shelved and second-guessed for quite a long time; perhaps approaching one-third of my existence in this present reincarnation.

I have had clues all along.  Having lived half my life in one place and living the other half packing and unpacking to support my husband's naval career, raise children, work and volunteer, I want to just settle.  And I want to settle where I belong.  My heart knows the place; it's familiar.

Having just returned from a short reunion in that place, I realized that my identity lies within its geographical boundaries.  My beginning is my destiny.  The place where I grew up is waiting for me to return.

I have been itinerant, displaced but grateful for the challenges along the way. Each person, whether chosen by or for me, has been gifted by the universe in order to teach and guide me.  I am the product of an enormous collaborative effort and I like who I am.

I will continue to like who I am becoming; I have no self-doubt. In the meantime...

It has been suggested that I find a new "tribe" (for lack of a better noun) and that was not my word of choice. It belonged to my intuitive. Seated in her private office, I was receiving my annual reading and no surprise, my guides were harping on my seeming predicament of being an unwitting prisoner of my present circumstances.  That's a very descriptive way of saying "what's stopping you?"

The conversation had been innocent enough, just why was I happiest elsewhere?  And, why was I happiest elsewhere by myself? My response to her direct question was "anonymity". Okay then, I wanted to be a blank canvas and experience life with no prejudice. Sounds healthy.

She said "They are bringing up Shirley Valentine. It was a movie, I think in the '80s. It's who you are now.  Maybe you can stream it or order it through Amazon." I ordered it.  They were right.

She was lost, I am lost. She was used up. I am approaching empty. She took a chance and found joy.
I know where my joy is.  Sometimes a step back is necessary in order to forge ahead. Sometimes the best place to get to know yourself is where it all began.

I'm not searching for a new tribe. There's no need...There's no place like home.









Messages

Life interrupted-
it happened today.
Deliberately pausing
my agenda in a way
that was so reassuring.
brought a smile to my face.
To gaze at butterflies
in pursuit at the time
and the place…
of my existence.

Yesterday's message
came by way of a penny.
At first, didn't notice,
being busy with many
things on my mind.
And today the same thing.
Different place, not surprising to find
for I was standing outside of my bank.
It could have been taken by some body else.
Now whom do I humbly thank?

Every now and again,
I am touched by great love.
It connects and reminds me,
that below and above me,
is the realm and the destiny
which my soul will embrace.

The messages will continue
through time and through space-
to encourage and comfort,
to empower and embrace,
to reveal my truth,
to share it's power.
and there shall be
no definitive hour of my earthly demise.

For the universe, of which I am apart
is endless and forgiving.
All the more reason
to look forward to living

One message at a time.



Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Self Reunion

I'm experiencing a strange emotion.  You'd think at my age there would be few unexpected mind versus heart conflicts, but I can't help feeling I'm in the wrong place at the right time.

Loss is not temporary.  It lies deep within the soul and is triggered when revisiting the places where ghosts hold the key to unlock memories.

Memories come quickly, all at once. There is scarcely time to breathe between them…and then they're gone and I am left depleted and unrecognizable. I am changed.

I knew that my visit home would be a balancing act. An opportunity existed and the timing was perfect.
"Me time" was all I could think about.  I needed it, I deserved it.

When reunited with my brother at the airport, I just burst into tears and knew something was about to
redefine who I was and the person I would become.  Just knew it, couldn't explain it and didn't make any attempt to avoid it.

I have been holding my breath apparently.  Last time I remember purposeful breathing was at Dad's funeral.  I had to remain composed and give the eulogy.  I had to remain calm and ensure all the attendees were comfortable, fed and properly thanked.

Life changed then for the second time.  Mom died eight years prior.  I was exhausted following her death and looking back, never really stepped out of the grief.

I retraced the paths to all the highlights of my younger years. Sometimes the paths had been untouched by time. It was joyful.  Other times, there was no tangible evidence of my ever having been there.  It was disbelief.  How could parts of my life disappear?  I felt betrayed.

I do not embrace change. I am in an uncomfortable evolution; living a parallel life with my memories. I exist on one plane and my truth exists on the other.  How do I combine my selves and stop the competition?

The answer is the 40th parallel; that imaginary line runs east and west in the city of my youth.  I grew up quarter-mile south of it.  Guess the real me never really left for I found myself still lingering there in the virgin prairie meadows at the base of the Rocky Mountains. I heard the morning song of the Western Meadowlark. Well, my heart heard them for they are extinct in my home town now.

I don't understand why my soul remained without the outer shell. Have I been living a lie?

I am not sure.

Walking hand in hand with my former self, I wondered what I was thinking of leaving such a beautiful place.  Who's hand dealt the cards? Who's the responsible one? Me? Choices and consequences...that would be my guess.  I'll leave the choices (formerly presented) part to the universe,..to that continuation of my soul's journey.  The consequences?  Well, that's undetermined.

I am not easily victimized, must be that capricious nature I was gifted. So perhaps lessons learned will tilt the scale in my favour.

The reunion with family presented an opportunity to learn and appreciate those who had been estranged from me for such a long pause.  The new memories danced around old ones and helped to solidify my longing to return there. This was not a sentimental journey.  It was the catalyst for my survival...on my terms.

The emotions which I had suppressed burst through the layers of years of living elsewhere. I had lunch with myself in the same place I had taken Dad to celebrate his birthday.  Sat in the same place and ordered the same meal.  I cried in my salad.  I visited an art gallery and stood reverent at the base of original art which spoke to me of the pristine beauty of the solitary Aspen tree.

The conversations, laughter, and tears shared with loved ones, filled me to capacity; so much so, that I could not eat.  Had I had the presence of mind and no fear of possible embarrassment, I would have spun myself in the middle of some field with arms stretched wide singing the theme song from The Sound of Music...the Hills are Alive with the Sound of Music,,tra la la.

I left me there again for life does not wait upon dreams.  I have obligations and situations which must be resolved before my final reunion.

That day is coming.  I am telling you now just in case you turn around and I'm not here.  I'll leave a map and if you knew me at all, you'll not be in need of directions.