By Gayle Carline
Horse lover, author, and apologetic blogger
I'm so sorry. Mea culpa. Let the flogging begin.
I am normally on-track and on-schedule for my writing deadlines. Even "just a blog post" deserves my attention--I signed up to write a post, so I'm gonna write a post, dammit. I'm usually scheduled here the first Saturday of the month. Imagine my horror when I awoke to the email telling me to post on the last Saturday in June.
You see, I'm not here. I'm in San Francisco at the American Library Association convention. It's a crazy weekend here, with the decision from SCOTUS that gay marriage is legal in all states AND Gay Pride weekend at the same time. I'm staying in a hotel that's pretty close to the parade. You have no idea how torn I am. Should I go to the convention and learn how to use crowdfunding to raise money for my library, or should I go to the parade (and possibly watch history being made)?
Decisions, decisions.
One thing I am signed up to do is hang out in the Sisters-in-Crime booth at ALA and hand out copies of my mystery, MURDER ON THE HOOF. Hopefully, these copies will go to libraries that will hopefully include the book in their inventory. Hopefully.
I know it's not a mystery, but I'm also giving copies of Snoopy's book, FROM THE HORSE'S MOUTH: ONE LUCKY MEMOIR. It's a book for all ages, so libraries might be more likely to stock it.
At any rate, I hope you are all doing something fun or relaxing or meaningful this weekend. Hanging out with your horses would be nice. If I wasn't here, that's where I'd be!
Stop by and leave me a comment if you'd like, to tell me how you spent your Saturday and Sunday.
Writers of Equestrian Fiction
Ride with us into a world of suspense, romance, comedy, and mystery --
Because life always looks better from the back of a horse!
Saturday, June 27, 2015
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Magic...and Death, Dragonflies and chickens
by Laura Crum
Yes,
more stories about magic. It seems that the more I open my eyes to it, the more
I see. Magic everywhere. Is it all in my mind? Perhaps. As Albus Dumbledore
said, “But why on earth should that mean that it is not real?”
So the other day I was floating in
our little pond. I have written about the pond before and some of you may
remember. Andy and I built it together—we chose every stone, we supervised
every moment of the construction. And we filled it with water together and
played in it together and planted the water plants together. We battled the
algae together. Since Andy died the pond has been a huge comfort to me. Along
with my son, our animals, the garden, and a few very good friends, the pond has
been one of the biggest comforts in my life.
I
sit by the pond and watch the light change in the reflections and ripples, I
pour a cocktail for myself and for Andy in the evening and sit by the water and
toast him and us—just as we used to do together. I talk to him and I feel that
he talks to me.
On warm days I take a dip and I
float in the pond for hours at a time—watching the clouds in the sky, watching
the water lilies open their blossoms—pink and creamy yellow and white—and
watching the dragonflies. Floating on the water always soothes me—no matter how
sad I am in that moment. And watching the dragonflies comforts me.
Our little pond attracts all kinds
of life. Frogs and lizards and birds and bats…and dragonflies. I have written
before of the amazing dragonfly life cycle, and we have observed this first
hand. From the creatures mating, and laying eggs on the water, to the
underwater nymphs, which look like beetles, to seeing these same nymphs crawl
out of the water and transform into dragonflies—within about an hour. It really
is amazing to watch the once-underwater-being fly away into the sky on wings of
coppery translucency—now a creature of the air. It has always seemed to me to
be a clear paradigm for our earthly lives. And the other day I got another lesson
from the dragonfly.
To
understand this, you may need to understand that dragonflies have always been a
particular symbol here. Andy liked them—he drew them on his bike jacket, we
have images of them everywhere on the property. We were all delighted when
dragonflies came to our new pond last summer. One dragonfly—a bright red
one—was the most common here. Andy looked it up and said he thought it was
called a “flame skimmer.” (Dragonflies seem to have the most wonderful
names—flame skimmer, pond hawk, blue darter…etc)
The
male flame skimmer is a brilliant scarlet red; the female, as is so sadly
common in nature, is a duller orange-y brown. The males swoop above the pond
and perch on nearby branches overlooking the water—defending their territory
and mating with the females. They are lovely vivid creatures, easy to spot as
they skim through the air. But…
When
the dragonfly perches on a branch of the apple tree, as he often does, he is
very hard to spot. His slender three inch long body just looks like a reddish
twig. If, however, you, like me, have spent hours by this particular pond, you
know exactly where to look for him, and your eyes are accustomed to sorting him
out. And thus I can glance at the apple tree twenty feet away and see a red
dragonfly perched on the branch overlooking the water.
I
didn’t realize how much familiarity aids me when it comes to doing this, until
the other day when a friend was here. I said something idly about the
dragonfly, and she said, “What dragonfly?”
It
did not matter how hard I tried to point him out, she could not see him. In the
end she laughed and said, “I don’t believe you. There’s no dragonfly there.”
So
I got up and walked over to the branch. The dragonfly flew away at my approach,
and then, of course, she could see him.
“Oh,”
she said. “He WAS there all along.”
And
in that moment I kind of got it.
If
you teach yourself to see magic—by looking for it and spending time in magical
places just being observant—you will learn to see it. And you will find that others
can’t see it. They haven’t taught themselves how. That doesn’t mean the magic
isn’t real. Just like the perching dragonfly, it’s real all right. But not
something you can see unless you learn how.
The
thing is—anyone can learn how. Spotting a perching dragonfly is available to
all. You just have to spend the time, you have to pay attention, you can’t be
ceaselessly distracting yourself with phones and computers and TVs and social
events…etc. You have to be willing to sit quietly by the water watching
dragonflies. For a good long while. And you will learn to spot them when they
are sitting still. In time it comes to you quickly and easily to spot them; it
is as natural as breathing.
You
will be able to see what others insist is not there. This, I think, is what
magic is really like.
And
then again, maybe magic is like my chicks.
You
see, if you know about chickens you know that there are things that they do and
don’t do. Sort of like horses or dogs or cats. But once in awhile they’ll do
something that you would say that they definitely DON’T do (again like horses
or dogs or cats—in fact like the cat who defended the little boy from an
attacking dog—in that video that I think everyone I know has seen). Is this
magic?
People
who know about chickens know that when a hen goes broody on a clutch of eggs,
it takes about three weeks for the eggs to hatch. Depending on how good of a
“sitter” the hen is, you will get a more (or less) complete hatching of the
eggs (if they are all fertile). The eggs normally hatch in a two day window,
even if they were (as they usually are) laid over a two week or more period.
The chicks actually talk to each other and the hen (by peeping in the egg) as
they are getting ready to hatch. And then, over 48 hours or so, all that can
manage to hatch do so. Not all chicks make it out. Some are too weak to hatch,
some aren’t made right. But after about two days the hen will normally take
what brood she has away from the nest and seek food and water for the chicks,
knowing that the remaining eggs won’t hatch. That’s what chickens do. Except
when they don’t.
So
what happens when they don’t? Maybe magic?
I
had a hen who was sitting on a clutch of eggs that had been layed rather
piecemeal—by several hens. The sitting hen eventually hatched one chick. It was
bright and lively, but days passed and there were no other chicks. My friend
Wally—who knows a lot about chickens—told me to throw the rest of the eggs
out—they wouldn’t hatch. But the hen continued to sit on the eggs. She mothered
the one chick she had, but she also kept sitting. I put food and water near the
nest and left her alone.
A
week after the first chick, a second chick hatched. And still the hen continued
to sit on the eggs. Wally and several other chicken owning friends were sure I
should throw the rest of the eggs out and let the hen get on with raising her
two chicks. But I kept food and water by the nest and left her alone.
A
week later a third chick hatched—and still the hen sat. And sure enough, a week
later a fourth chick hatched. After that the hen abandoned the two remaining
eggs—so I threw them out. And this hen now has a healthy little family of four
chicks—all of whom were born a week apart—so that the oldest one is a month
older than his youngest sibling.
To
those who know nothing about chickens, this might not seem much like magic or a
miracle. But Andy and I kept banties out here the whole seventeen years we were
together, and no hen has ever done anything like this. It is something I would
have adamantly assured you would NOT happen. But it did.
And
so perhaps many other things that people will assure you “cannot” happen can
also possibly happen. When the time is right. Maybe magic is like this? You
just pay attention to the signs and keep an open mind and suddenly something
miraculous happens.
Finally,
maybe magic is sometimes very simple and ordinary. Like watching a water lily
open or close. The water lilies are very lovely—and they open and close their
pointed buds in a short period of time. One evening I was sitting by the pond
with a young friend. We were drinking whisky and soda and talking about life in
the agricultural world, but we were also sitting quietly watching the
water—watching the water lilies, watching the dragonflies. And after a particular
quiet moment this young man turned to me with a big smile on his face.
He
pointed at the most spectacular of the water lilies, a biggish peach pink
blossom with a crown-like shape, and I saw that it was closed. “I watched it
close,” he said. “Watched it go from open to closed. I’ve never seen that
before.”
I
could tell that he felt that he’d seen something magical—and I agree with him.
But the thing is—such magic is readily available. Ordinary magic. Found simply
by sitting still and paying attention. Doing nothing. Going nowhere. Watching
the evening light on the pond.
Maybe magic is like that?
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Horses and Writing (Now)
by Laura Crum
That’s
what this blog is supposed to be about. I have deviated—A LOT-- from the theme,
I’m afraid. My interest lately is all about what counts…what in my life is
worth focusing on in the light of mortality. Ever since my husband died, my
life has changed in many ways. And most of all in the sense that I only give my
time to what needs to be done to take care of our little life here, and to what
I do out of love. I still love my horses and I still write—I think these things
are part of what counts for me. So I can give an update on my horses and my
writing, I guess, if anyone is interested.
Since
I’ve owned horses all my life and I don’t dump them when their using life is
over, I have (no surprise) a bunch of old horses. My horse property
accommodates four horses easily, five is OK, and I’ve squeezed six in at times
(not good). The way I feel these days, four horses is plenty. So I have my
retired horse, Plumber (26), my son’s horse
Henry, still a good walk/trot riding horse on level ground at 27, though no
longer comfortable climbing hills, and my Sunny, somewhere between sixteen and twenty and still
sound and a good trail horse.
And I also keep
my friend Wally’s Twister—19 and still going strong as a team roping horse.
I’ve promised to take care of Twister just like he was my own if Wally dies. I
don’t plan to acquire any more horses. My Gunner lived to be 35, and at that
rate I have a lot of years of horse care ahead of me with these guys.
All
of the horses I have here have been with us many years. I broke Plumber as a
three year old, and trained him to be a rope horse. He carried my son and me
when my boy was little, and took good care of us.
Sunny and Henry
took us on hundreds and hundreds of trail rides and gathers for seven straight
years—on the beach, in the hills, and in the mountains—without one bad moment.
We owe these horses and I am glad to
repay them by giving them the best life that I can. But my interest in riding
isn’t very high right now. I’ve ridden a couple of times this spring with my
son and we both enjoyed it. I’m still not drawn to make much effort in that
direction. Our horses seemed to enjoy being ridden after such a long break, and
I think they would be pleased if we rode a little more often, but I just don’t
have the emotional energy to devote to this pursuit.
Don’t
get me wrong. I loved to ride and I’m so glad that I spent many years
horseback. I don’t regret it at all. But I see now that the space and freedom
that I had to give my energy to exploring horseback pastimes came a great deal
from the content and security I felt with my husband. Even though he was not a
horseman himself, he supported me (financially and emotionally), and his
support gave me the freedom to enjoy my life with my horses in the way that I
did. Thank you, Andy.
My
energy now goes into tending the garden (by which I mean not just the veggie
garden but the entire property), making sure all critters are well cared for,
and that my son’s life stays good. There just isn’t any energy left over for
other pursuits. So though I sometimes feel sorry for the horses, and think they
look a little bored, I have to tell myself (and them), life isn’t perfect for
any of us right now. And their life is pretty good.
They
have plenty of room to run and play, they get fed grass/alfalfa hay three times
a day, there are shade trees and sunny spots and soft ground for rolling,
shelter from the rain, and plenty of equine companionship. Their feet are
trimmed, they are wormed as needed, and we get them out to be groomed and to
graze as much as we can. All of them are at a good healthy weight, pasture
sound, and seem to feel fine. There are many worse lives that they could have
as older horses.
So
that’s my horse life. Not too exciting perhaps, but I do enjoy having the
horses here, I am grateful for the many years of reliable riding service each
horse has given us, and I plan to take good care of them all until they die.
This is what love means to me when it comes to horses. And they give me back love
in return—just by their presence in my life. The nickers when I come to feed,
meeting me at the gate to be caught, the soft sound of hay being chomped as I
sit in the barn, the look, smell and feel of these big, gentle creatures. The
willingness to carry me on their backs any time I choose to ride. Horses are
still magical to me. I can’t
imagine living here without horses.
As
for writing, well, I still write. Like the horses, I can’t picture my life
without writing. I don’t write novels these days, but I write these blog posts
and I keep a journal, and I have written several memoir pieces. I posted one of
them (My Life With Horses) in installments on this blog, and I have finished
another one (Ordinary Magic). I’ve begun one about my husband’s life. Not sure
what the ultimate goal/fate of these pieces is. I wrote them to please myself,
but some of you said you enjoyed the Life With Horses story, so maybe I will
eventually put the others up on this blog. We’ll see. You can let me know what
you think—if you’re interested.
I’m
often asked if I’ll write more novels. The short answer is that I don’t think
so. I wrote twelve novels in my mystery series featuring equine vet Gail
McCarthy, and a dozen novels was always my goal for that series. If you are interested
in my thoughts about horses and life in general, I wove many of my insights
into this mystery series, which covers twenty years in the life of one
woman—and took me twenty years to write. Serendipity. The series also covers
different aspects of the horse business that I’ve been involved with—from
cutting and reined cowhorse competitions through ranching, team roping,
horsepacking in the mountains, breaking and training young horses, and trail
riding here in the hills and on the beaches of the California coast. Not to
mention raising a child with horses. So if you’ve enjoyed my blog pieces I
think you’ll enjoy the novels, which are readily available on Amazon.
And
yes, that last bit was blatant self-promotion. I don’t bother with this sort of
thing much any more. I don’t really need the money and
I understand (from the little bit of local fame that I’ve experienced) that the
admiration of strangers isn’t something that I need or crave. But the truth is
that I DID put a huge amount of creative energy into my books—any little
insight I ever had about life and horses got added to one book or another. My
husband and son make appearances in the latter part of the series, and many
friends and acquaintances have turns as villains, victims, or suspects. (I
often cast people I really like in the roles of victims or villains because if
a victim or villain is not a truly interesting character, the story will fall
flat.)
Anyway,
for those who read my blog posts or have friended me on facebook—if you like my
writing here I’m pretty sure that you’ll enjoy my novels. If you read on Kindle
the books are very inexpensive. And if you don’t read on Kindle, I was able to
buy the first book in the series for a friend (used hardcover in perfect condition)
for less than four dollars on Amazon.
The
series begins with thirty year old Gail McCarthy beginning to practice as a
horse vet in Santa Cruz, California, and ends with now fifty year old Gail
deciding whether its time to retire from practice. Every single book has lots
of horseback action and all the details were drawn from my life spent with
horses. The order—for those who haven’t read the books and want to read them in
order-- is:
Cutter
(cutting horses)
Hoofprints
(reined cowhorses)
Roughstock (roping and endurance)
Roped
(ranching and roping)
Slickrock
(horse packing in the Sierra Nevada Mountains—and overall reader favorite)
Breakaway
(trail riding and training a colt—also the darkest of my books)
Hayburner
(breaking a colt and finding a partner)
Forged
(trail riding on the coast and marriage)
Moonblind
(TB layup farm and pregnancy—non-moms don’t usually like this one)
Chasing
Cans (barrel racing and raising a baby—non-moms same as above)
Going,
Gone (an auctioneer and trail riding in the hills)
Barnstorming
(yet more trail riding and life choices)
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
The Rug
by Laura Crum
I’m
talking about the “rug” that gets jerked out from under your feet. It can
happen to anyone. I just read a facebook post by Sheryl Sandberg. (Sent to me
by a facebook friend—thank you Maryben Stover.) Sheryl Sandberg is facebook’s
COO and was married to the CEO of Survey Monkey. They had children, they were
no doubt quite wealthy, they knew lots of famous people, they were apparently
well liked and a happy couple. They had, in short, all that the material world
could offer in terms of happiness and security. And yet, Sheryl Sandberg had
the rug jerked out from under her feet, just the same as if she had none of
these benefits. Her husband, who was only 47 years old, died suddenly in a
freak accident.
Her
post about her grief and her struggle to carry on touched my heart. So many of
the things she said resonated for me, and remind me of my own struggle since my
husband died. Many of her insights resemble my own. Her sense that she wanted
to share her thoughts in case they might help someone else is the exact reason
that I have also written about my grief and my journey. In short, I am not
alone. None of us who walk this path of deep loss are alone. We just feel
alone.
Sheryl
Sandberg and her story remind me to be grateful for what I have been given. My
husband lived to be 64. We had seventeen years together as a happy couple. We
also had some warning that he would die and so were able to prepare a little.
He was with our son until our boy was fourteen. And he left us financially very
secure, which helps us to go on with our life now. Of course, none of this
takes away my grief, but for a fact, gratitude does help. The more I remember
to be grateful for the happy life I have had, and for the gifts that I still
have because of Andy, the sweeter and cleaner my grief becomes.
And
more and more I am aware that the rug gets jerked out from under everyone
eventually. It’s just a matter of when. Whether your spouse dies or your child
or your parent that means the world to you or your beloved dog—even if you live
to a good age and NONE of this happens to you—eventually you face the loss of
your happy life. And this is assuming that you (like me) are lucky enough to
consider your life happy. Because if you live to a ripe old age untouched by
tragic loss, you will face the loss of your health and independence.
A
certain wealthy old man that I know is just now (in his 80’s) dealing with
moving from his longtime home into assisted living, and his sadness is
palpable. The independent businessman, the world traveler, the happy
gardener…these are no more. Ill health, doctor visits, giving up his beloved
house—this is the stuff of his daily life. His wife is gone, his girlfriend is
gone. His grown children visit him—but he doesn’t smile to see them. He doesn’t
smile much at all. And this is a man nearing the end of a very long life in
which he had all the benefits that the world can offer. But the rug is still
being jerked from under his feet.
Slowly
but surely my own woe-is-me-why-did-this-happen-to-me emotion is being
transformed into gratitude for what I have been given and love for what is here
now. Along with understanding that this is part of the basic human condition. I
am always reminded of the woman who went to the Buddha because her son had died
and she could not bear losing him. She begged the Buddha to bring him back to
life.
The
Buddha said he would do this if she would bring him the ashes from a house fire
in a home that had not known death. The woman went to every house in her
village, but everywhere the answer was the same. “No, my mother died-- no, my
husband died-- no, my sister committed suicide…etc”
In
the end she understood. She went back to the Buddha accepting that her grief
was part of the human condition. I’m pretty sure that didn’t change how deeply
she missed her son. But it does change the bitterness of woe-is-me-why-me.
For
me the truth comes down to facing my loss and trying to walk the path I’m meant
to be on. I believe that my husband’s spirit transcends his death and that our love
for each other remains. I believe that our relationship continues—but in a
different form. That’s my belief, and it comforts me. But whether or not I’m
right about this, there is one thing I know for sure.
I
am not in control of much of anything. None of us are. As I started out to say,
the rug can be jerked out from under anyone at any time. You can lose your
spouse, your child, your health, your financial security, your home…etc. At any
moment. Without warning. There is NOTHING you can do or achieve that will
protect you from this basic truth of life.
Equally
you can believe anything you want about God and spiritual reality…etc, but you
cannot make or prove these things true. You have to trust. You have to walk in
the dark.
But
there is one thing you can be sure of. One thing you are in control of
absolutely. This is what I have discovered and I tell myself every day.
I
can choose to love. I can choose to love my husband and our son and this little
life we’ve made together. No matter what happens I can choose to love. As long
as this entity exists that I recognize as myself, I can love those that I love.
Not even God can do anything about this—except by causing “me” to cease to
exist. As long as I exist I can love what I choose to love. No one can stop me.
It is absolutely in my control.
This
truth is a great comfort to me. When I feel most lost I repeat it to myself. I
can love my husband and son and this life we’ve made together. Even if I am
given not one more single message or sign that Andy is with me, I can still
choose to love him. I can still choose to trust that he is with me. Even if my
world collapses around me, even if the asteroid wipes out the planet, as long
as I exist in any way that I recognize I can choose to love. And so can we all.
Not
that making this choice transforms me—or anyone else—into some kind of saint. I
may choose to love, but like everyone else in the human condition, I have my
baggage. I am quick to anger; my chain is jerked by anxiety. I may be sorry,
every single day, for the ways I have failed to act loving. And circumstances
beyond my control may make it impossible for me to protect and care for those I
love the way I would wish. I can do nothing in the face of many disasters but
remain true to my choice to love.
This
is one rug that cannot be jerked away.
I
love you, Andy.
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
The Story of the Statue --and the Bizarre Truck (Walking in Darkness)
by Laura Crum
So
sometimes I walk in darkness. I am endlessly sad and I miss the form of my
happy life that used to be. My husband has been dead for six months and in many
ways it is harder now. The friends who gathered round and made great efforts to
support me initially have less time for this (I know this is inevitable—I’m not
complaining or bitter—just saying what is happening), and are busy with their
own lives. My good friends try very hard to be there for me. But I feel so
deeply the loss of my companion and partner. It is hard to face each new day
without his physical presence here in our home.
I have done my best to put our finances and the
garden/property/household in order, and have gotten this done. There is a
lull—in which I am so very weary of being sad. I had a very happy life for the
last seventeen years with Andy. I accept the sadness—I try to open my heart to
it. But I am unused to this form of life. It feels like walking in the dark.
I
try to trust. Trust in love, trust that Andy is with me, trust that I am being
led down the path where I am meant to go. Trust that this is true, even when I
can’t see or feel it. It is sort of like riding a horse in the pitch black.
I
remember doing this with Gunner. Riding him up a hill under some big trees on a
moonless night. I could not see a thing. I held up my hand—six inches from my
face—and I could not see it at all. It was the strangest feeling. I could not
see Gunner’s neck or head in front of me. But I could feel him underneath me,
carrying me through the utter dark. I had to trust that he could see, that we
would not run into a tree, or plunge off a bank. And sure enough, eventually we
came out from under the trees and I saw the lights of the barn up ahead (for
those who are interested, I worked that experience into my novel, ROPED).
So
now it is the same. I try to trust that Andy is with me, carrying me along,
even though I can’t feel or see his arms around me. I have to trust in signs and
messages. I have to trust in what is here now. It’s not an easy task. At least
not for me. I’m not good at trust.
And
yes, this is another weird story of the insights that come to me about life and
death and magic. I’ve noticed that some friends seem to shy away from the
notion that Andy is still with me and that magical stuff happens to show me
this is true. There is a pronounced silence when I bring such things up, and I
can hear the inward rolling of the eyes. The friend tries to change the subject
and assures me things will get better in time. This does nothing but make me
aware that the person and I are not on the same page. You don’t have to believe
any of the things I believe—I don’t care in the least—so if you don’t care for
this stuff, please click on the “x.”
The
thing about magic, which I always understood, is that it is always present. We
just aren’t aware of it. My son said that he wanted magic like flying
broomsticks in the Harry Potter books, and the funny thing is, I think I’ve experienced
things just as magical. (The totem animal dream I had at Burgson Lake comes to
mind.)
But
magic doesn’t look like what you expect it to look like. That’s where my life
and Harry Potter’s life are different. His life is obviously magical. (He exists
in a magical novel, of course.) My life looks like anybody else’s life. Just
normal, my son would say. But I don’t think normal exists at all. Magic
happens—and its up to you to choose. Will you see this or not? Will you choose
to see the magic happening or will you dismiss it as coincidence…etc.
The
story of the statue is a good example.
The
little statue by our pond—I call her the madonna—has been there many years.
Andy and I picked her out of a catalog not long after we got together. She is a
copy of a Frank Lloyd Wright statue and her actual name is “Garden Sprite.”
Andy and I liked her and we put her by the pond and there she has been for
almost twenty years—but not without changes.
One
year the deer knocked her over and she broke in half. I put her head in a
flower bed for awhile—her bottom half lay toppled and concealed by a huge bush.
Things were like that for a few years. But the bush died and was cut down and
we found the statue and set her back up again, gluing her head back on. And
there she stood.
Her
head is downcast and she looks serene, but pensive.
So
the other day I was walking up the driveway feeling very sad—and worn down with
feeling sad. Just so tired… What am I supposed to do, I asked Andy. I had
reached the little goldfish pond and I glanced over at the statue. Something
was different.
I
stared, wondering if I was imagining things. Because the statue was looking
right at me, her head tilted slightly back; her expression—in this
pose—appeared calm and confident, rather than tranquilly sad. It was a very slight
change—no one who didn’t live with her would ever have noticed. But it jumped
out at me.
I
stared and stared. And it dawned on me that she had been shifted
slightly—probably due to a deer bumping into her—and the broken top half was
tipped back a little. I could see the crack. But how odd, I thought. She hadn’t
been knocked over (which had happened several times) or had her head knocked
off. She had merely been posed differently. Serene and regal—looking out at the
world, rather than down.
In
this moment I felt my question was being answered. Andy wants me to be OK, to
be serene and confident, to enjoy my life here in my garden. He wants me to
make the same shift as the statue has made. From downcast and sad to calm and
looking outward. She even seemed to be smiling—perhaps a trick of the angle and
the light. But the message came through to me.
Is
this magic?
I think it all depends on how you
choose to see it. For instance, like the truck…
The other day I pulled onto Highway
1 to take my kid to his nine o’clock class—and the stop-and-go traffic was in
full commute mode. I happened to end up behind a truck—a very odd truck. I had
been crying all morning and was just trying to drive through my tears, but this
truck was bizarre enough to cause me to stare. My son stared, too. “Look at
that,” he said.
The truck was some sort of tank
truck—perhaps used to pump out septics or porta potties. It was not new—it was
nothing regal or glamorous. But the back of it was painted with a very intricate
and elaborate design. There were no words and no obvious connection between the
design on the back and the purpose of the truck. The more we stared at it, the
more puzzling it was.
The background was golden yellow
and there was a round mandala shape with various symbols. They were nothing
that I understood—I had no idea what system of thinking they might belong to.
In the center was a painting of a god-like looking male figure with a golden
headdress carrying a female figure who appeared to be asleep or passed out. The
male figure looked powerful, his head was up and looking out, he was bathed in
light and wore some sort of ceremonial clothes. The female figure wore a long
white dress and lay in his arms, her eyes closed, her body limp. But she did not
look dead.
The more I stared at this—we were
behind the truck in stop-and-go traffic for at least twenty minutes—the more I
wondered what it was meant to represent. Nothing really made any sense to me.
And then (it was a cold gray day), the sun came briefly out of the clouds and
lit the male figure’s face with radiant white light. A thought came to me, and
stuck with me.
I had been battling so much sadness
that morning, feeling so alone. I could not feel Andy’s presence, though I
tried to trust it was there. I was so sad. Maybe this odd painting was here to
show me something. The woman doesn’t know she is being carried. She is asleep
or unconscious, moving through darkness, not knowing the male figure is there.
But he IS there—he is in fact carrying her towards the light, though she is
clearly unaware of him or of being carried. Maybe it is like that for me?
As I feel I’m moving through
darkness in a confused way, I am really being carried by my loved husband, who
is taking me towards the light. I may not be able to perceive him directly as I
live in my human body with its limitations, but he is there, carrying me in his
arms. For a moment it all seemed so clear.
I stared at the bizarre truck. Was
this what magic was like? Getting stuck behind odd trucks on the highway?
In the end, magic is about what you
choose to believe. My son complained that he thought our life was “normal,”
like other people—not magical. I said that many of the people that he regarded
as “normal” adamantly believe that a certain man died and that his body came
back to life three days later. How “normal” is that? Surely that’s as magical
as anything I can come up with?
So I persist in seeing the magic—or
magik—and I put my trust out there in love. Even though I am walking in the
dark.