Category Archives: Woolly Mammoths

The Herd Thins

Beltane                                                              Emergence Moon

Jim Johnson began the Woolly diaspora by his cowboy pivot made on the plains of South Dakota. Paul Strickland returned for good to an often frequented spot in Maine. Mario Odegard is an episodic emigre’, spending months at a time in different places, usually warmer than Minnesota.

Now, probably around this time in 2016, Kate and I will join the Woolly dispersal with a move to Colorado. This was a difficult decision, one made over a period of several years and made at first with reluctance, but now with growing excitement and anticipation.

We both want to move while we’re still able to develop an independent life for ourselves in a new setting. We will begin hunting for a place within an hour or so of Denver, something with acreage enough for dogs, yet still in broadband realm.

I plan to attend Woolly retreats and to continue hosting a meeting at some point during the year, too. Getting back to Minnesota will be important to me because the Woolly’s are important. They have changed my life for the better and it is with deep regret that I will leave them behind for most of the year.

Still, life’s realities change as we age and the call of family is a strong call. To care for and perhaps be cared for, that’s a profound life commitment and one to which we’re responding.

Wet

Spring                                                                       Emergent Moon

Pulled into the garage at 8 p.m. last night.  We were tired, but had had a good trip, our first together driving to Colorado in a very long time. It was rainy during much of the drive though our time in Denver was largely dry.

Minnesota is pushing toward our wettest April on record. Go team rain. Fall today. Many of our spring ephemerals are well out of the ground but only the crystata Iris are blooming so far. We need the warmth to open up leaves and flowers. Sun. We’re ready for the growing season.

My unusually heavy travel time will take on another chapter the third weekend in May with the 26th? annual retreat of the Woolly Mammoths.  This year we’re at Frontenac’s Villa Maria retreat center.

During this retreat, the theme, What is your walk, should bring up conversation about the next few years for each of us. We’ve supported each other for more than a quarter century. That’s really something.

What Is Your Walk?

Spring                                                         Bee Hiving Moon

What is your walk? How would you answer? It’s the theme for the 2014 Woolly retreat, our 25th or so yearly gathering.

Ancientrails is a record of my walk, meandering here, walking quickly there, taking a rest at this point or that. It shows the divergent paths, sometimes down the writing trail, sometimes down the scholar trail, sometimes too melancholy to do anything but shuffle along.

It’s a good question, an important one as our lives have taken the third major throughway of our lives, call it the path triskelion, third of the three broad ways down which we stroll from birth to death. Maybe an inflection of it would be, What is your walk now?

More on this to come.

The Ancientrail of the Grandparent

Spring                                                               Bee Hiving Moon

Ancientrails hits the road again today, heading back to Denver for Gabe’s birthday party on Saturday.  Kate and I are driving out.

Forgot to mention in the post below Charlie Haislet’s wonderful “32 Ways to See A Mammoth,” an homage to Wallace Stevens’ “13 ways to see a blackbird.” It was funny, quirky, profound, moving. A memorable work.

 

A Group of Mammoths Walk Into the University Club

Spring                                                            Bee Hiving Moon

The Woollies met at the University Club in St. Paul, a fine location with a quiet room, attentive service and lots of laughter.

We marveled at Tom’s fingers wriggling out beyond the stylish black cast that immobilized his recently operated thumb and his dexterity in grasping with no opposable thumb. We heard Bill talk about his numbness in his left shoulder, the moments just after he woke up at 4 am and his quiet acceptance that this was o.k. Except instead of dying he went back to sleep. Of course, we don’t know the number of people who do the same thing and then die. In Bill’s case a number of tests ensued and he learned he’s quite healthy with the exception of some calcium in his high vertebrae.

We discussed Frank’s ongoing recovery from his back surgery yesterday.  Pain manageable and up and walking today or tomorrow.

The retreat brought up a lively discussion, as always.  We settled on a topic/theme, What is your walk? This inspired by Tom’s reflections on a book he’s currently reading on the philosophy of walking. The retreat will involve excursions to Red Wing, possibly to Wabasha and hiking in the area around the Frontenac Retreat Center where we will stay.

Warren spoke about an adjustment to retirement that he’s been making. And we all helped him. Ha.

It was a lively, engaging evening. One interesting discussion came up about the issue of cooking for one. Bill raised it. Charlie suggested making something really tasty in a crockpot, or something else and then eating off it for three or four days. We looked at the idea of a meal and how a meal may involve at least two people. Otherwise you’re just eating. This is a matter widowers and singletons know intimately.

We went out to a clear night, stars bright and a cool breeze. An excellent Minnesota evening.

 

Significant People Update

Spring                                                                                 Bee Hiving Moon

Update on the unusual spate of hospitalizations I noted a couple of weeks ago.Gabe at 6

Woollies recovering:  Tom, thumb.  Frank, back. Bill’s good after his day of needles and scans. Granddaughter Ruth who smashed her foot under a teeter-totter, mending.

Today is Grandson Gabe’s 6th birthday.  He’s an earthday kid. We’re going to see him for his birthday party which is this Saturday. I’m looking forward to traveling with Kate.

 

Tom(‘s) Thumb

Spring                                                             Bee Hive Moon

Tom’s thumb will be done tomorrow, a nifty operation, done often, same day.  Then, no using that opposable thumb (and what are we, after all, without our opposable thumbs) for three full months.  This post is for Tom.

Talk about a great attitude.  Tom’s going to take this opportunity to use his non-dominant hand and thereby increase the flexibility of his brain.  Making lemonade out of hand surgery. Or something.

Doesn’t sound like much, three months, in the abstract, but when you begin to add up the things we do so easily with our dominant hand, especially after 60+ years of practice and habit, well, then three months sounds like a very long time.  Buttoning shirts.  Using table utensils.  Opening doors.  Driving.  Typing. On this one Tom’s going to try to learn Dragonspeak.  I hope he does, maybe it’ll spur me to finally learn it.

We’ll be thinking about you tomorrow morning, Tom.  8 am.

P.T. Barnum and Charles Sherwood Stratton (Tom Thumb)

Lucky Birthday

Spring                                                            Bee Hiving Moon

The Woollies met tonight at Christos, a Frank B. treat.  He’s in the O.R. on Monday at 7:30 and Tom goes into UofM hospital this Thursday at 6am for an 8am procedure.  Tom will be out the same day, but recovering for three months; while Frank will be in the O.R. for several hours, but perhaps require recovery of only 2-3 weeks.

We also celebrated Bill Schmidt’s lucky birthday (his observation), 77.  He had a candle stuck in some baklava.  Tom, Warren and Bill enjoyed some retsina which was on special.  Frank, Scott and I enjoyed the water.

We had some good laughs at my peccadillo in west Texas with the gas and even more about my surprise at ending up in Kansas.

At these times we bring 25 plus years of shared history so the sharing is deep without needing always to be verbalized.  I’m glad and proud to know these men, to love them and to have them in my life.

Best wishes to Tom and Frank during and after their respective visits to the temple.

We Three Skeptics

Imbolc                                                          Hare Moon

So, three Woolly’s walked into a bar.  The punch line is:  who is I?

Met for lunch with Bill Schmidt and Tom Crane today in Maple Grove, Biaggi’s.  I know about the three kings, the three wise guys and I’d title this group the three skeptical guys. We share a common suspicion of easy answers, traditional thought when it constricts the mind and the existence of only one I within.

Tom made an interesting observation about the I, “Maybe it’s more like a cloud with a floating data point, or like wave/photon theory of light.”  Makes sense to me.

We ate, then Tom, the still employed of the three of us, had to leave for a conference call. Ah, the workaday world.  I don’t miss it.

 

A Close Encounter (With Thousands) of the Dali Lama

Imbolc                                                         New (Hare) Moon

Up very early (for me) for a drive in to the Minneapolis Convention Center.  Had to be there by 8 am.  To get in line.  For a speech that began at 10.  Somebody famous, eh?  You betcha.  His Holiness the Dali Lama.

Frank Broderick got several tickets for his birthday and distributed them according to Frank criteria.  I was in the second tier, but benefited from someone else’s not taking him up on the offer.

Two lines, each with hundreds of people in them snaked back and forth, distended caricatures of a pleasant day at your local international airport.  After waiting in line for forty-five minutes to an hour, we went through the metal detectors and entered the auditorium.  With no one ever checking our tickets.

This was the opening of a Norwegian slanted Noble Peace Prize forum, apparently in its 26th year.  Who knew?  The forum celebrates laureates and the Dali Lama, being one, was chosen for the keynote opening address.

This auditorium, A, is huge with hundreds, if not thousands of seats and the orchestra level seats were full and much of the tiered seating was full, too.  This guy is charismatic, has a sort of rock star appeal.

He’s funny.  At least I think so.  He had several lines in his opening remarks where he laughed. But the acoustics were difficult and he speaks softly so following the thread of his talk proved beyond this hearing impaired guy.

I did get one part.  He talked about his love of honey.  “I might,” he said, lifting one hand and creating a small gap with thumb and index finger, “come back as a bee, I like honey so much.”  He made these remarks because he apparently had a physical while here and was told as a precautionary measure to cut back on sweet things.  Including honey.

He was easier to understand when he sat and took questions, fielded by Cathy Wurzer of NPR.  The answer I liked best was, when asked if he would give the gathering his blessing, he hesitated.  “I’m Buddhist. The blessing comes from within.”