Amos Robinson, My Bike, Tidelands Collection www.portofsandiego.org |
Forgotten Chariot, spin
Me across Earth’s loom…
I got back on my bicycle this month thanks to the
misadventures of April. Though I’m blessed to only be bound by one appointment
a week (teaching a night blogging class), I’ve been at the mercy of new
variations on the chaos the kids typically reserve for outwitting homework and undermining
chore schedules. And it has me second guessing pursuing my writing life outside
the house.
When the kids were little I could pretty much
perfect a day’s trajectory and control outcomes. Strollers give you walking restraining
systems. Cars, car-seats. You see, hear, and smell your little people
twenty-four-seven, for better or for worse. You just don’t go anywhere without
a sticky chubby hand or three holding yours.
Silver Strand Nature Discovery Trail, words by Edith Purer |
As I stirred brown sugar into my coffee, I relaxed
into the music coming out over the speakers: gentle guitar, a woman’s voice I
couldn’t place, and the refrain, “Don’t pick a fight with a poet”(a song by Madeleine Peyroux I'm in love with now...link takes you to a montage on Youtube).
My mom friends came to my emotional rescue (swiftly
as Jagger’s fine Arab chargers) attempting to staunch the hemorrhage of mother
guilt. Don’t take it so hard to heart, they said, this experience will give
your daughter the opportunity to troubleshoot without you. They’re right--later
my girl gleefully recounts the short journey from Lost to VIP. She asked for
help, got an escorted tour of secret passageways between gates, and made it to
her final destination in one piece.
Every time I think some kind of artificial boundary
exists between my family life and my writing life (as if!), I learn again that
they are inextricably braided. Earlier that afternoon, rushing to get my son
across the school parking lot, so anxious to get on the road to the airport, I’d stopped
in my tracks in front of a tree covered in pale grey curled layers of bark furling
back on themselves. A writer’s dream of a tree offering its harvest of scrolls to the human eye.
Some furls were soft, outer texture that of moth wings or wasp nests. Other furls
were hard. That’s my son’s hand in the photo…we both lingered.I took one more parting photo on the fly, and love how the tree seems to be dancing.
When I showed the photos to my friend Barbara Rockman (author of the poetry collection Sting and Nest), she tells me a childhood story about climbing her first tree. Which prompts me to ask...What is your tree story? Your tree poem? Which tree do you call home?
When my next teaching day rolls around, I’m
thinking no problem—I can do this. No one has a flight to catch, I just need to
teach a two hour class. But unfortunately, we find ourselves down a car—the van
remains on the aerial jack at the shop awaiting new brakes and my husband has
the night shift again. I’m set to hop on my bicycle to ride the five miles to
town when my son comes to me clutching his throat. Something about a splinter
in his throat…which turns out to be a sunflower seed wedged behind his tonsils.
Nothing my husband can’t eventually handle with a
wooden spoon and salad tongs, though I’m not there to witness this practical
tweaking of a favorite motto my husband has taught our family (improvise, adapt, overcome). Next time we’ll just hit Intermediate Care
(where we’d taken the youngest several weeks prior after he took an exuberant
leap onto, and through, a hard plastic car travelling case. Withdrawing his leg
left him with an eye-shaped tear below the knee which the doctor stapled
shut for us, no problem).Silver Strand Nature Discovery Trail, words by Edith Purer |
Right or wrong, I rush once again out of the house,
this time to the din of a gagging child. My savvy traveler, the teen back from
her trip, sees me and says, “You’re teaching in that? You can’t wear that…” as
if our roles were reversed, as if I were wearing a bikini to the library
instead of modest blue striped sweats. No choice but to roll a dress around a
pair of sandals, all the while muttering something about what else could
possibly go wrong. In the garage, I discover my bicycle has a flat, so it’s off
to ride on my son’s bike, knees skimming what’s left of my chest after
breastfeeding those three kids when they were babies.
Then I’m free, loosed out into the elements on my
chariot with a burning set of thighs, a fierce headwind, and the open miles of path
along the Strand’s Discovery Nature Trail, the promise of bright minds in town
on the other end.
I
cycle to teach
Dusk
and a dress on my back,
Spare
shoes. Lessons too.
Related
links:
I wrote the two haiku in this post in the Haiku
Room, (a Facebook group of poets creating content while they play). Here are a few blogposts in alphabetical order written by participating poets about various kinds of haiku joy:Pam Helberg: X is for April Haiku Review
Lisa Rizzo, includes 17 haiku: Can you Haiku?
Ruth Thompson: The Haiku Room
Ellen Tumivacus: Thinking in Haiku
At Transformative Blogging: a guest post by Erica Goss: Fairytales, Facebook and Poetry Prompts about the way her book of poetry Prompts, Vibrant Words, grew out of her regular postings of prompts on Facebook. Also includes a beautiful poem of hers and a way for you to think about fairytales to inspire your writing.
In the works:
Ceramic handprint by Orion James, photo Robyn Beattie |
Half-way through the micro-movie draft, our Siberian husky escaped from her bath. Somehow in her mad dash through the house, shaking and flinging water droplets everywhere, she hooked a pair of my daughter’s jeans across her back. When she swirled past me, the jeans snagged the power plug to my laptop and crashed the project.
T with Sisu, crasher of the poetry movie |
And here's the latest Perhaps, Maybe, written in collaboration with the lovely Liz Brennan:
Attempting the Impossible.
Oh Tania, the chaos of your life matches mine in so many ways. Today I had planned to devote to my writing...ha! the family had other plans. Frustration is a difficult emotion to work with, an uneasy mix of impatience, irritation, guilt and self-pity. On the worst days there is nothing else to do except try to walk alongside it, recalling promises to self to live mindfully, trying desperately to remember that the most important moment is now, that life is lived as a series of moments, that love conquers all.
ReplyDeleteSweet--maybe bittersweet even--Edith, to know we are part of the same spiral, swimming or swirling around the same storm eye. You are so right, love is the key, love for all of it. Always glad to see you here--hope you get to your writing tomorrow!
ReplyDelete