Friday, September 30, 2011

Morning with Mother :: From the Files of Heart


Few moments are shared in the dawn’s early daze.  This time we saw deer walk along the path toward safety.  Oh, how the meadow glistened with freedom.  With the sweet smell of coffee brewing and binoculars in hand my mom watched.

“This is now school property; they’ll be safe, now.  How are you?”

I just sat there and wondered about too many things for such a small space of time.  She simply loves getting up. She loves that certain silence.  Always has I guess.

Now I know.

“There are horns on that buck, and LOOK -- there he goes over an invisible fence.  My folks once had that property in hand.  You know that Old Taylor Lake is near dead now.  I skated there.  A gem I was.  And now look at it.  Hurts me to even look at it.  Suppose those folks who purchased adjacent land, with a view, will see it too?”

Who am I to say much of anything?  The words, as I write them, bring tears of love so deep that the lake may well be filled. 

In just a moment; a rather rare moment, I spent a morning with my mother.

And oh, how much has been revealed to me.



... it was desperate to feel that one could never be a part of moments
so moving, that always one would be isolated from this landscape and
these people; and then gradually I realized I did not have to be a part of
it: rather, it could be a part of me.  Truman Capote -- Local Color (To Europe)

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Ravens and Wind :: Rascals and Wood

I have been out to some bars in what seems, to me, to be a deep Wisconsin darkness (we are quite far north here you know). The big sky is growing dim.   The rain has been pelting down and the wind has again taken branches from trees.  This is summer’s last battle and fall’s first win.  On nights like this my Grandma Myrtle would tell stories, read tea leaves and light candles. The flickers purred with clouds of pine incense.  

Look! She would say.  

I cannot resist sharing this with you this windy stormy rascal raven wood-in-the streets filled evening. An "oldie but goodie" as they say, and well worth the joy -- especially if you take a breath, a single breath, and imagine.


Convinced of Everything
for Myrtle and Ruthie


Sweep up the broken dreams of youth!
(The broom to use is utter truth.)
Theodore Roethke


Eating watermelon under the pond tree, Grandma brought to my attention that housing chickens in the barn might be a good idea.

Why I believed this then is not so far beyond me now.   This is the very same woman who ushered my friends in a funeral.  For my mouse.  Which I think had a house dropped on him by me -- and several others grasping the roof.  A bird house.  Truly.  But Grandma, scientist she was, decided that this might be a time to create a Kennedy memorial and teach us all about death.

So, all of us, I remember it now, marched in a kind of vigil.  We brought dead mouse in a band-aid can.  We formed a line of mourners and off we went.  Seemed like miles.  But! There was a tattered calico flag waving in the arms of our leader.  We dug a grave.  A big one!  And Grandma said:

“There you have it.”

Of course, she was looking at the barn, me and my friend.  Ronnie.

“Now then, what about life?  Who will clean up my barn?”

Amazing in a way, as the grass even then had grown as high
as the plum trees. The treasures therein were not seen by many.

The grass glistened as Ronnie and I went into the castle.  The dark barn.  The place where, well, ghosts once lingered.  The place, actually, that once housed chickens.

After the funeral, I reported back:

“Grandma, we need a broom!”

We had one.  Almost on the spot.  Given a week or two.  Most certainly Myrtle ate more watermelon and had a good smile over her marvelous moments with the neighborhood kids.

Meanwhile, I worked with the broom.  Ronnie sort of guided me, always wondering why on earth he befriended me at this point in his life.

Didn’t matter to him.

“Clean this up. “ he said.
“We can have chicks in this funny bin -- Jim -- Jim.”

Ronnie walked up the street (was a simple street then) to his home.  Ronnie was and always will be a sweetie. 

*

How many times have you had Grandparents encourage you to make
Creepy People to keep bugs and birds away from the strawberries?
Well, while I was conjuring the new chicken house, I was also cooking up
mini-scarecrows for various berry patches.  I felt then, as I do now, I had a
certain claim on the market.

Grandpa would, sort of, coach me through the placement of the creations.  He did not seem worried about lead pencils and poisoned dirt.  Mostly he said:

“Here.”
“Here.”
“Like this one!”  grin smile

Grandma simply sat and listened.  From time to time she would speak:

“Paul -- the grapes.  Do not forget the grapes.”

“And Jimmy, do you hear the orchestra -- my own private orchestra -- the wind through the pines, the fish coming up for air, entrancing rainbow bubbles, the willow branches dancing, the flowers simply growing each day? Why, even the weeds have a place. Look, another box elder bug hugging its ground... oh well.”

Suddenly a new day would appear uninvited and we would all get up. 
Now -- if ever I was spoiled this was the time.  Getting up was easy then.

You know why?  There was joy.  Heartfelt.

But sleep always started with these three things:

1.  The walk upstairs and an ushering to the little room, complete with window, desk, pencils and paper, and a roof-tilted corner filled with pressed, fresh linen readied for me on a boy-sized bed; camphor, a luxury, in my pillow... Wow!

2.  The radio.  Softly playing music I had never heard before.  It sat in the middle of a small alcove that opened to three bedrooms and hid but one. There were flowers in the floor -- cracked roses, stepped on for centuries, holding even more stories.

3.  A quiet voice. Grandma.  Sleep now.  Night now.

After that, who wouldn’t want to get up in the magic of morning!


*

Winter now.  Still no chickens.  But boy, did Grandpa watch that bus for me.

You see, even then I could be drawn into the soon-to-bloom lilac tree.  And that certain Iris flower hiding under the snow.

Paul and I would stand there watching for the yellow and blinking red come over and under the valley (Ronnie lived at the top of this valley [which held a swamp, thousands of frogs, and a will-o’-the-wisp -- still does] ... now no more than a dip in an overly busy road.)

Sometimes I would still miss the bus.  I’d run after it, half way down to Vonnie and Kenny’s (other side of the valley, equally blessed) -- then give up, go back to Paul and Myrtle’s, have another cup of hot cocoa, and walk across the street to home.  There I would call my dad.

“May I speak to Russ Thompson, please -- in the Heating Plant, if you don’t mind.”

“Hi Jimmy -- have him right here for you.”

“Hello”

“I missed the bus.  Take me to school , please.”

“OK.”

I would always see Grandpa walking back up the driveway through the snow and drifted car tracks.  He would turn, looking forward, then down.  I am sure he chuckled.

*


Have you ever had the chance to blow the whistle? At NOON!

I did.

I would grab hold and tug and pull and off it would go.  I was the Heating Plant child.  And the Food Service child.  My dad’s office looked right into my mom’s office. I could see her doing menus even.  They were in love.  And my oh my, how grand it was and is to have these people in my world.

I pay attention to my parents.  And you know, they pay attention to me.  Just difficult times I now know, starting out and what have you.  Some day I’ll ring that NOON whistle again.

Meanwhile -- it is rhubarb time.  Spring again.  And I do have a pet chicken.  Talked my pa into that one as Myrtle smiled even more so.

“Let’s plant a pumpkin patch.”
“OK.”
“Behind the barn?”
“Fine.”

Grandpa and I were off through the grass as Grandma made Danish delights (from the rhubarb, dummy).

The barn home for chickens never came to pass (although I must say that the idea fed some delightful chats under the pond tree with Grandma while the pine wind whispered wisdom).  I did play Dracula there, several times (wonderful setting) -- and Ronnie and I really did clean it all up.  I used a cow feeder bin as my coffin, complete with rotted hay and well, a few unplugged nails that destroyed at least one version of my cape.

*

My family has always allowed, hesitantly but courageously nurtured, enjoyed, and to a certain point (with respect) grown fond of and grown from a certain biochemical and married-into-madness we all share.

So... one final, silly, little thought.

Pumpkins.

We did grow the pumpkins.  And we did have rhubarb pie.  And we did sit under the pond tree. And, if you haven’t heard, we listened to the wind -- me, and Paul and Myrtle.

One Halloween, I had four pumpkins carved and glowing.  At that point in time in our home across the street, we sat in the front room, me my dad and my mom.  I heard something.  I did.  I got up and looked outside.

All four pumpkins were gone!

GONE I tell you! Gone!

I walked across the street to Paul and Myrt’s. I went behind the shadows to our special stash, looking at Iris leftovers and lilac trees in unsummoned snow drifts and car tracks left in the moment of lights in windows and rocking chairs rocking.  A smiling house. 

A few times after Grandpa died I went to Grandma’s front door -- 
a door that opened the island lawns of all possible remembrances. Might have even been Halloween -- or maybe New Year’s Eve -- when even then, the lady of mystery would share with me 1/2 a beer and perhaps a touch of sweet wine.  
Rocking, reading; rocking... watching...

But that night I had a very special mission.  I had more pumpkins. I carved out at least two of the half dozen or so I tugged back, all the while thinking what a cruel joke to play on the world.  


I smiled.

Probably made the bus on time the next morning.

And probably convinced everybody that Ronnie and I were housing chickens in a place unknown, kept only by the sweep of a broom and unending bubbles in our hands.

* * *


SJA




My Trip to Bountiful :: Fragrance of Halloweens Past


The Trip to Bountiful has always been one of my favorite movies.  I have often wept while singing the lovely hymn Softly and Tenderly Jesus is Calling.

Today I was called to visit me pops.  I found some time for myself in the doing. Solo car trips can really be eye opening, especially when a good friend awaits you at journey’s end.  At the end of one trip I communed with my dad; my return brought me back to my mom’s bedside.  Two friends in one day.  I am richly blessed.

Halloween time has always been a special time for my folks and me.  This year Halloween time will mark the first anniversary of my dad’s death, so I spent today remembering all the fun he, my mom and I had carving pumpkins, playing tricks on each other, preparing autumnal meals, watching monster movies… listening to the rustle of the wind and the crackle of leaves on the lawn.  One year in St. Louis we “did” the Central West End with steak dinners and trips to gay bars!  Mighty amazing I must say.

Halloween.  All Saint’s Day.  Día de los Muertos.

Spectral Observation

Is it all a phantasy
or potential obfuscated?
What might be
or all that is
that drives hope unrelated?

We search the dust of memories --
lived, yet all imagined;
seeing whom we might have been
while deflecting intrusive patterns.

Even history is a mythical moment
recreated for the present.
All is repeated
and repeated again.
Dancing with phantoms. Restless.

I prefer a rhapsody
of lust, trust, joy and wonder.
Joined together
with clanging truthful measures,
real melodies arise.

Is it all a phantasy?
It's life I say!
Needn't fix; simply play.
Oracles within will guide.

Insidious scenarios return bemused
by strides in personal growth.
Phantasy even then greets me --
securing a more noble host.








SJA

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

An Utterance: No Way to Win - 1 Kings 3: 24-28



Then the king said, “Bring me a sword.” So they brought a sword for the king. He then gave an order: “Cut the living child in two and give half to one and half to the other.”

The Great Shift is ultimately about giving up pretenses concerning business as usual – things are not the way they once were.  This country has been in a state of denial for at least five solid years.  Obama was elected as a way out; actually his being elected was a gigantic symptom of this denial. Let’s elect a pop rock political mega-star and all will be well. It’s the 60s again!

Did anybody REALLY hear what Obama was saying?  


America – you are gonna have to give up things, cut back, learn to live with less; we are in a real mess and it is going to take decades to reverse all this – and even then, don’t look for it all to be “the same.”  
That era was false. A complex bleep in a fantasy world.

In many ways, we all face the king’s decree: we each get half the child. The American Dream is just that – a dream. Being unemployed, dealing with primal losses, and now, a mother who is struggling to figure out where she is and who she is each day is humbling:

  • For all practical purposes, both my mom and I are homeless.  Having worked in the homeless biz, I am not so surprised by this.  Most of us are only a paycheck away from being in this boat. Be careful – YOU could be next!
  • Trying to find work is trying under the best of circumstances.  A reader of mine recently wrote: There’s nothing about the process of job hunting that’s not excruciating. Given my situation (and I am NOT asking for the violins to play), it is nearly impossible.    
  • I really cannot win.  If I get a job in the Midwest, I leave behind dear friends but gain family.  If I get a job in Seattle, I am stuck in a city I no longer wish to be in. Though friends will mitigate this conundrum, no family.  If I get a job in some other part of the USA I am alone. Just me, my cats and piano – starting over at 52.  I can do it; but the thought of it scares me.  The “double-binds” in all this could lead to a breakdown. I am already facing a massive loss of spirit and energy; why not let the mind go as well? I am also looking at the loss of my mom each and every day. She seems to slip further and further into some form of gentle madness. Ouch.  
  • We really, truly, only have the moment.   This is being force-fed to me. It is good medicine.  But oh my friends, the pill is bitter. I have also lost track of “time for me” – especially being here for my mom.  This is reaching dangerous proportions; I am not sure what to do to turn this around.
  • I am blessed with some mighty fine friends and a really fantastic family. I have no idea how other people “in my shoes” get by.  I could not be doing as well as I am doing without a handful of friends that are sticking the course with me, a family that is so helpful and understanding I can’t believe it!  (LOL! Like any family we have had lots up ups and downs, but this whole fucking mess is bringing us closer together.)  I also enjoy the support and compassion of a therapist and a coach. I WOULD be nuts without these two gurus. But my family, I love them deeply, is really at the core of whatever might be sane in my current spin in life. Ah, life, lemons and lemonade.  Lots of truth in this, especially when one is living one hell of a lemon.

Oh, by the way – the story has a happy ending. I hope mine does as well.

The woman whose son was alive was deeply moved out of love for her son and said to the king, “Please, my lord, give her the living baby! Don’t kill him!” But the other said, “Neither I nor you shall have him. Cut him in two!” Then the king gave his ruling: “Give the living baby to the first woman. Do not kill him; she is his mother.” When all Israel heard the verdict the king had given, they held the king in awe, because they saw that he had wisdom from God to administer justice.


 

SJA

Monday, September 26, 2011

Ode to a Rascal

My cousin Mason is 10 years old with an undercurrent of maturity that exceeds many adults I have met in my life. Devil Boy (as I call him) is an old spirit with the exuberance of youth and a genuine inclination toward being not only a rascal, but also quite the raconteur.

I made a deal with Mason:  I will be your queer uncle if you will be my “acting” nephew.  He liked the notion and accepted the mission. We get along like a couple of old shoes.

Ah, children.  Their curiosity and honesty are refreshing. Mason has had his share of emotional contexts to cope with, for sure.   Sometimes he is a bit withdrawn in his world of sensitivity.  Other times he boldly goes where no Devil Boy has gone – right to the core of the matter.

My being unemployed intrigues him.  The other day he asked if I had received some “bad reports” – OMG I thought.  I have to answer this one honestly.  I responded by saying: Yes I have had some bad reports but am working hard to stay above the negative and look toward the positive.  Mason asked what I would do if I received eight emails each containing a job offer.  Hmmm I silently pondered; at the rate I’m going getting one email offering me a job might take an Act of God.  Mason answered his own question:  I’d take the one that paid the most.

Smart kid. Who cares about bad reports and finely tuned adult answers. Get right to the money man, who gives a crap about the one's past comportment or present philosophical approach. 

He's right -- both of the latter are pure bullshit.

Mason has been exceptionally understanding of why I have been coming back to Wisconsin so much:  To see my mom.   At first it was a little hard for him; both he and I share a love of building tents in the basement, shooting cats with nerf guns, playing in tree houses and generally causing trouble and tribulation for other family members. Dealing with illness is not much fun for sure.

Yet – he understands, accepts and supports me on my journey with mom. He gets it.

A few days ago Mason asked me when I was leaving; I said, Hey, you trying to get rid of me? Mason simply said:

I don’t want you to go.

My friends, this one statement from my dear devilish dervish-like delightful pal made all the difference in the world – soothing my wounded heart and fragile soul as only a child who loves you can.




SJA

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Am I on the Bedpan Yet?

My experiences thus far with headhunters have been pretty much near misses.  I seem to make it through the cover letter/resume stage, past the vetting stage, often to the next stage and ... the stages seem to go on and on and on.  Often, this all includes some sort of massive personality test – always guaranteed to be only part of the search, something to “inform” the decision making process.  I think any deep knowledge of anyone’s real personality would result in immediate rejection, and probably a recommendation for immediate mental health care!

To me, the process of working with headhunters is somewhat like taking aim in a bedpan.  You know you gotta do it, you can’t really even see what you are doing, one’s sense of dignity is shot to hell, help is definitely needed to complete the process, and then, when it is all over, you sit with it, wondering when somebody will come back and get rid of it all so you can try again later.

Wild.

Having gone through a number of hiring processes as a potential employer, I really do understand why headhunting firms are retained: it takes a long time to go through resumes, conduct initial interviews and keep the home fires burning while doing all the other odds and ends associated with filling important positions. Creating a human process to hire another human being takes time.

Perhaps my experiences from the other side of the table have not been so terribly unique after all; still, seems like headhunters have quite the business going – sometimes, I feel, at the expense of their employers’ best interests.

Headhunting, the practice of taking a person's head after killing them. (from Wikipedia)




Like undertakers, headhunters will always have business. Half the jobs out there in the nonprofit world end up metaphorically killing employees anyway, especially regarding matters of the sacred soul.  Might be different if we took a fresh look at human resources and the unnatural – even false – conditions people are forced to interview under.

Time to remove the bedpan.  NURSE!

SJA

Monday, September 19, 2011

Personal Time Zones :: An Interlude from Debbie’s Hospital Room

I am sitting here today with my Mom in Rm. 706, looking out over a Midwestern Indian Summer Day. The smell of pumpkins and Halloween are in the air, but summer grips her last days with gusto.  Like the seasons, life seems to pass so quickly.  No wonder potential employers have trouble remembering USA time zones!  Dazed with hundreds of applicants from around the country, they probably need a GPS to navigate through the piles, let alone set up coast-to-coast interviews.

One reader commented that my opening “statement” showed anger.  Well, having been laid off for odious reasons, unemployed for six months, living through my Dad’s death and now my Mom’s cancer battle, having faced my own cancer scare, moved twice, nearly lost my best friend, endured the sale of my childhood home – blah blah.  I suppose one could be a bit angry.  Primal issues have been running amuck in my life.

But as I sit with my Mom I feel calm.  We have been talking about my upcoming interviews, a generic hospital table Ms. Debbie insists is an ironing board, the joys of thickened coffee and how we are going to deal with her two black toes.  The cancer is GONE!  But man, the residual damage is scary – and in my Mom’s case, possibly crippling.

The bottom line: All that has happened has led to this time with my Mom.

We are in our own time zone now. In a funny way, all is peaceful here.


SJA

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Dividing Point :: Death of Father

Now, just to be a bit more serious, it is only fair to let my readership know the true beginnings of the saga.  Me Pops Passed October 30, 2010.  I lost not only a Father, but also, more importantly, one of my dearest friends.

Or, am I seeing a misguided reflection?

I find it hard to write about this. It will become easier as we all progress through the journey.   Dad said to me one night after dancing in our underwear to Dean Martin tunes : Al, my Dad, was my friend.  I am your friend.

Oh my – did that have an impact.   Came around home though when I told him he could go.  He could go see Helen, his sister – and his Mom, Aleda, and his Pops, and his brother Robert and his sister Eleanor. 

And oh, how he hated to leave my Mom, Debbie. Stay tuned for much more on my new friend, Debbie.

Anyway, quite the experience.  I will refer to and ponder this expereince throughout my symphony of reflections.  My Father’s death triggered such a deep loss of "self and other" that I lost my way.

I have a professional coach now, and one of his first lessons was “getting” me to watch this. Not much more needs to be said –– and The Great Shift continues to emerge.

We are all more than we have become.  SJA



Grace:  Thanks to  BWS for the teaching, Cheryl for pushing me over the brink of fear, and Susan for her able eyes, mind, hand and heart to make my introduction to all of this, all of me, possible. On we go!  Now we begin. 

Emails or Phone Calls -- Which is Worse?


The first thing I wish to speak of is reading any email that comes your way.  I had a number of them yesterday or whatever day, in fact, from penis enlargement potential to headhunters calling off the hunt. 

I hear the clanking of my BlackBerry and think – this is the one.  The one that will matter.  Alas – it was only a phone call from the Opera asking me to purchase a ticket to Carmen.  Somehow it all seemed appropriate as I announced: I am unemployed so take me off the list.  He said: We hope you will come back to us soon. I said: Get me a job and I will.  He said: Good Luck.  

The End.

The funny thing is, I have been in contact with the Opera – interviewed twice with them actually, and never heard a word, a song, or a dance from them regarding employment matters.  No call-backs – only calls for tickets and money. 

Funny Girl or Bitter Bitch?

You gotta start somewhere to make The Great Shift.

Send me an email. Believe it or not, next week I have two interviews! 

SJA
sebastianjashift@gmail.com

The Great Shift :: An Introduction to the Madness of Finding a Job



America weeps about high unemployment rates—yet, how does one get a potential employer to wake up to what is really happening?
 
  • Nobody works anywhere any more for more than three or four years—not like my Mom and Dad, who worked for “the state” for 50 years. Yet, potential employers ask how long you will stay in the job. They seem to study how long you stayed at other jobs, rather than assessing experience, skills and passion.
  • The workforce is aging—so am I.   But, unless you hire Houdini, you just cannot be 30 years old with 25 years of work experience.  Did I miss something? The fact we all live longer and work longer deserves a Rockefeller Foundation study!
  • Nobody seems to think you can move anymore.   Man, when I was a kid, I moved from coast to coast—this is the America I recall.  Freedom. Growth. New experiences. New ideas. New people.  Progress?
  • Nobody seems to realize that the U. S. of A. has at least FOUR time zones (I am not asking for much here; no understanding of Hawaii, Alaska, anyplace else in North America or the Philippines—basic stuff).   Ever been in a phone interview and have “the other” candidate call in on the same conference call line?  
  • Headhunters—a remarkably ignorant bunch—drain nonprofits of cash and deplete possible benefits for the applicant who really WANTS to work on behalf of the organization that is paying the headhunter to find pearls in a pig’s ear.  
  • Tried SKYPE lately?  I staged my SKYPE interview. I actually showered and dressed for it, and was, relatively speaking, sober.
  • And what about rejection letters - unsigned from the Department of Human Resources AFTER having interviewed in-person on-site at the potential employer’s expense? Along with understanding the true meaning of human resources, a loss of grace and graciousness prevails in our daily communications.
  • And, finally, what is this nonsense about only hiring people that are employed—well, ding-dong—go back to the first bullet, my friends. If you are looking, you want something better; at least, possibly, more life-giving.  The pink slip just has not been delivered yet.

This is The Great Shift.

Thus begins a series of reflections on seeking work, and along the way, learning more about self and the merits of being humbled.

Sebastian J. Andrews
http://sebastianspeaksout.blogspot.com/
sebastianjashift@gmail.com