Windblown Flight
Catch my wings and carry me
still higher into light,
beyond the misty rainbows.
If you could give one gift to our elders, what would it be?
Yet I cannot leave the answer alone there. I find there can be value in expanding my answer to define it as clearly as I am able. Too often I believe we tend to use "love" or "loving" in the sense of the warm fuzzies that feel good to all of us. To love, to be loving is so much more, and often it has very little to do with how one feels in the act of being loving, sharing love.
To love in the context of my intent is best described by the Greek word agape. Other words for love include filos, eros, etc. All are very different in context and use. Agape is that choice to place the welfare of others ahead of one's personal desires and interests, to act in a manner that benefits the other to his/her highest good. Agape involves the deepest respect for the other person to the point that there is no judgment, no expectation, no demand. It becomes simple acceptance with genuine caring for the other person's good. There is also the added consideration of respect involved. Without respect for anothe person there cannot be agape.
I look at all those words and I am not satisfied. There is so much more - at least a million or more. Those will have to do for now.
Our elders have lived longer, seen more, suffered more, given more simply by virtue of the fact they have had more time to do it all. Our elders, just as those who are younger, deserve to be respected for being. Each person has something to say, something to share. Each person deserves the same loving acceptance. Consequently, I think I will limit what I think every person with whom we have contact should have from us to those who are in their late time of life in the present, physical sense.
How often have some of us been guilty of being hurried and inattentive when one of our elders tells the same story we hear last week, last month, last year? How often do any of us simply drop a card in the mail, write a short letter, pick up the telephone? Most elders are not internet-savvy (except my 89-year-old mother who doesn't have access to the internet at the moment, though.) Our elders understand and treasure the spoken and written words we share with them, even when we have to write much larger and more carefully so older eyes can read. Or we must speak more slowly, clearly and loudly so older ears can hear.
I listen to my aunt and watch her as she is slowly transitioning away from life. I listen to my mother when I call her every week. I see and hear something that is almost inevitable and painful. Mother is quite articulate and very much connected mentally. She worked until she was 80 and now misses the daily stimulation of being with other people, doing useful things. Now she lives alone in a small apartment in Tulsa and has little contact with others. I call her once a week. My "other brother" (my deceased sister's husband) takes her to the grocery store, to doctors appointments, out to lunch or dinner and generally does everything he can for her. I have three brothers still present in life, one in Germany, one in Texas and one living about 40 miles or so from Mother. The two who are more distant call or send one thing or another now and then. Our elders need to know they are still important, still valuable, still needed.
Our elders need to be loved through our touch, hugs, holding their hands. Our elders need us to listen without rushing them. Our elders can best be gifted by our love in action.
A Time for Compassion
My day on Saturday was another of my usual trips, a two-hour drive south to visit with my aunt. It was a difficult visit in some ways, not entirely unexpected, though. I have shared about my aunt Ruth in earlier postings. The last few months have brought more challenge, more pain, decreasing ability to communicate effectively, increasing complications and declining health.
Something that might make the contrast of how she has changed and come so far away from the Aunt Ruth I've known all my life: In my mother's family one always makes one's bed upon arising and never lie back down on it until going to bed at night. One exception allowed, if one is so ill as not to be able to remain vertical. Even that might have been debatable with some of those women at times. When I arrived at the rehab hospital at 1:30 pm, my aunt was lying on her bed. She had eaten only half a banana so far that day. To say I was a bit surprised is to put it mildly.
Today I participated via phone in a conference with her caregivers, since the drive from my office to the rehab hospital would mean having to take almost an entire day from work, not a good idea at this time. I'll need those times when I must take off soon enough. For the first time I got a sense that at least a couple of the staff really do seem to care. Sometimes I have wondered. While I value their desire to help her function more effectively, to do things for herself we tend to take for granted, to have something of a life in the late part of her life, I think Aunt Ruth is cooperating with them more as a "go along to get along" means of managing. With me she is honest and allows her pain and her weariness of living to show.
Next time I go, and every time thereafter I believe I'll be taking my native American flutes to play for her.
What have you been missing?
What is life?
We Wait
We wait
and wonder in the waiting.
Is this the time, the place?
Are these the ones who also wait
and wonder if I am the one
for this time and in this place?
We wait
and watch the sun rise each morning,
tracking across the sky till night
and wonder in the waiting.
Will this day be the one
when I hear the clarion call
across the mountains,
the call asking me to come out
and be the one?
We wait
through the dark and quiet night,
waiting for the trackless path
no longer to be hidden from our eyes.
We wait.
Perhaps our best, most precious gift
is the silent, patient waiting
when the darkness seems never
to end or even to become less dark.
Perhaps the time and place we wait
is where we are meant to be,
sharing time and place with those
who also wait.
What gave you the most joy as a child?
Desert Spring
The winter desert waits in cold somnolence,
in grey-brown starkness spiked by faded scrub.
It is an austere, demanding land marked
and surrounded by sharp mauve-brown mountains
that thrust against the lower reaches
of a cobalt firmament which only hints at shreds
of wispy images of clouds.
On currents filled with sunshine's promise
she dirfts across the sage and Joshua trees,
blessing hidden crannies with her breath
which leaves a tattered trail of beauty
seen only by the diurnal lizard's eyes.
Before the eye she drops her treasures
leaving brigher, darker greens and
splashes of bright yellow floting
on the desert floor, dotted by the fuschia
bloom or brightened by white desert flowers.
She drops clumps of lighter sage among
refreshed smoke trees and paints spiked
orange up and down the valleys.
And where is least expected there is
the bright palest lavender blue, her eyes.
As she advances up slopes of burgundy
and burnt sienna she paints with mossy green
on rocks which before stood bare.
She warms the desert air with the sunshine
of her smile and the joy of her laughter,
the cactus blooms.
And as she trails yet further, higher,
the desert smiles and starts to fade
for summer comes and the desert dreams
until spring comes again.
Desert Walk and Winter
Winter is the hope-bringer to the desert. Without the occasional rains of winter, there are no magical flowers and amazing sights. There is animal life that can lie dormant for years until there is enough winter rain to bring it to life, disappearing once the heat of summer comes to lie dormant once more until enough winter rain comes again. Yet, even in the driest, harshest desert there is a miracle of small beauty in unexpected places.
It has been a cold, quiet winter so far. Here where the foothills become the High Sierras in northern California, winter is beginning to edge back and loosen its grip. This time of silence and introspection slowly will give way to new life, new hope, new beauty. The iris will start to grow up from the fallow ground, the buds on the fruit trees will begin to swell, promising a bountiful harvest of plums in a few months.
I have been quiet and fallow the last few months. It has been winter in my spirit, still and stark. This has not troubled or concerned me. Over the years I have discovered the hidden beauty of still times when life goes deep with nothing appearing to be growing and blooming. One need not bloom all the time. There are times we must be in the darkness where it is quiet, where our spirits may rest and renew until the winter rains warm into spring showers and encourage new flowering, new sharing. That time is coming. This time is good.
Eagle When She Flies
For all of us women






