Category Archives: Friends

Nighttime Fireworks

Beltane                                                                 Summer Moon

It’s night time in the exurbs. The full summer moon lights up the neighbors lighting up the sky. With fireworks. Yes, our neighbors have a fascination with fireworks, a fascination that seems to strike them most often around 10 pm. And no, I don’t know why.

We have two dogs with mild thunder phobias and the fireworks often set them whining. I don’t blame them. They make me whine, too. The dogs though can’t know that the neighbors are, for the most part, peaceable and friendly. The other part being the 10 pm fireworks, of course.

They seem to have gone silent. Nope. Another one. Gertie’s upset. The nights around the 4th and the night of the 4th itself are the worst.

Just let Gertie in the bedroom. That’s her safe place when there’s thunder or fireworks. Rigel’s ok if she’s with her sis, Vega. If not, she heads for the small hallway coming in from the garage. Enclosed and dark.

It would be nice to find a place without even these signs of human habitation. Out there. You know. Colorado.

A Full Summer Moon

Beltane                                                                      Summer Moon

A full summer moon hangs in the June sky giving a lustre of mid-day to the objects below. About a half-mile before the turn onto 153rd Ave. Round Lake reflects this moon, faint ripples on its surface made silver. The rains and the snowfall of this first half-year have filled it up. It’s been a welcome sight on return trips home for twenty years.

Tonight I came back from the monthly sheepshead game at Roy Wolf’s in St. Paul. Luck, lady luck, was with me tonight. A nod to Fortuna and her grace. This group of three ex-Jesuits, one aging peace activist and a former Protestant make an odd group in terms of faith journeys. Two of us have left the formal religious world behind some time ago while three work in it in hopes of reform.

The ostensible thing that keeps us meeting once a month lies in small pieces of pasteboard, some with pictures, some not. We distribute them to each other, try to discern something from the ones given to us and play this German peasant game with its odd rules (queens are high for one thing). The game gets us together, but the relationships keep us coming together to play the game.

 

How others see us

Beltane                                                             Summer Moon

This from docent friend Allison:

I especially liked this wall art that I saw on a random building on a random street on a random day in LA.  The guy reminds me of Charlie…and that 
makes me smile.

 Charlie

A Wedding

Beltane                                                       Emergence Moon

White chairs set out by the lakeside. A metal frame holding white bunting and an autumn hued bouquet. Cirrus clouds wrote wispy notes in a bright sky, the blue of late afternoon in the north. Yes, it was a wedding. And the groomsmen and the bridesmaids, the groom and the bride, all so very young. So innocent with no sense of the gravity of what they did, only the hope that love whispers, a promise of life ahead, together.

Chaska and Paul. A young woman, born in Peru, raised in Edina by friends of mine, Lonnie and Stefan, now old enough to marry and have a house, already, in Richfield. Life already sending down tentative roots here. Right here.

Wedded at a resort well-known for its cross-country skiing and well-used by the Helgeson family, only this weekend, a Memorial day weekend, it was Helgeson specific not for skiing but for these two. This is Maplelag, far up in northern and western Minnesota, near Detroit Lakes and New York Mills, land long ago scraped flat by the original Caterpillar, the Wisconsin glaciation, then  pock marked with deep depressions, now some of the many, many lakes that dot the state.

They used the old vows, the traditional ones, and the language of the wedding was familiar, not Christian, but still the words used often in non-Christian ceremonies. The wedding rings are circles, infinite in line and like the love being celebrated. That sort of thing. A bit stale but warm and heartening, much like the chicken-fried steak I had at Nelson’s in Clear Lake on the way back home.

 

Trying a New Style

Beltane                                                                    Emergence Moon

OdieThese days my hero is a Norwegian (no surprise there) named Knausgård, whose six volume (so far) novel, My Struggle, has sold 500,000 copies in Norway where there are only 5 million people. His work, which I purchased last year and have not yet begun to read, recounts his life in a style more novelistic than memoir, not told in linear fashion, but through broad themes which nonetheless illustrate his life as it goes.

In spite of not yet reading them (and I will) Knausgård is my hero because his style sounds surprisingly similar to the work I do here, in this blog. Similar is the key word, because I’ve not been as brave as he is (I think he is from accounts.), nor as thoughtful toward the whole. Ancientrails is non-linear, and it could have been typed on Jack Kerouac’s famous roll of paper, the one he used to pound out On the Road. (There’s, by the way, a backward link to What is your walk? Though Kerouac celebrates the American road trip by car, On the Road could work with pilgrims inch-worming their way around, say, the holy mountain of Las Vegas.)

Can I acknowledge the pain I felt last Sunday morning when my long time friend, Mark Odegard, and I exchanged sharp words about China, potentially injuring our friendship over matters neither one of us truly understands?  I went into my a, b, c, d argument mode. A. China is not historically expansionist. Mark: tell that to the Dali Lama. Oh, well. Yes, but really about border security. I don’t like it, nor do I agree with it, but it doesn’t mean China has imperial ambitions. B. China’s military has not been blooded in a war against an external enemy in a couple of thousand years (at least not much) and when they have been, they’ve lost. And our military has fought many wars in the last 100 years alone. C. We spend more on the military than China does. All this while the visualize world peace Bahai retreatants ate noisily at other tables in the Villa Maria refectory and should have told us enough. Close the ears. Hug and talk about next year’s calendar.

But. Mark went on that John McCain says. Oh, John McCain is my lodestar for China analysis. Anyway he said someone will do something irrational. China loathes Japan for the 1936 invasion, the visits to the War Shrine. Japan is fearful of an expanded China. And North Korea. He’s a wildcard. Something will spark a war. Mark might have mentioned Taiwan or the Spratly Islands. Something will happen.

I pushed back about China’s rise not being about military gains but economic ones. Or, I might have, I can’t recall exactly now, but I remember the under current of having, again, gone too far in an argument. You don’t understand where people get there information. They trust Fox News, not the New York Times. He said.

But there I’d done it. And ever since that morning I’ve hoped I’ve not permanently injured my relationship with Mark. Then, we exchanged e-mails and agreed to meet for breakfast, maybe a week or so from now. He wants to continue them he said. That sounds hopeful. I want to reach across the table and say you are more important to me than China, all of China, old friend.

This the brave, honest sort of writing I imagine Knausgård using and what I want to adopt as mine. Not Knausgård’s style, not really, not his content, not at all, but the courage to say it all, not just some of it. And to do it every day. And the why of it comes then in the words, the path of them, the walk of them across the rolls of paper that this blog represents, an ancientrail, mine, being walked in the present.

Charge It

Beltane                                                           Emergence Moon

This post is for friend Tom Crane who bought a Chevy Volt a couple of years ago and, in engineer fashion, has been keeping data about it ever since. Here’s a link to an NYT article today: Owners Who Are Happy When the Engine Doesn’t Start. This article itself references three blogs:  Volt Stats, Volt Fan Site, and CarKnow.  This last one is for those who want to hack their rides.

The era of the all-electric car is not yet upon us, but the consumer fleet will move that way as responses to climate change push us further into electricity as the dominant energy source for more and more things.

Kudos to all of those who are willing to pioneer these changes. May they breed others.

Three Things

Beltane                                                                         Emergence Moon

To live in this world

you must be able
to do three things:
to love what is mortal;
to hold it

against your bones knowing
your own life depends on it;
and, when the time comes to let it go,
to let it go.                                  Mary Oliver, Blackwater Woods

This life here. This land. These friends. The memories. All mortal. And I love them all. For forty years I have held this life, in its glad moments and its sad ones, against my bones, knowing I did depend on it. For twenty years I have held this land and the life here with Kate against my bones knowing I depended on both of them. For twenty-five plus years I have held the Woollies and Kate against my bones knowing my life depended on them. The dogs, too. Later, the docents, friends from the Sierra Club and elsewhere. All against my bones.

Now, and here is the gray cloud lying close to my mental ground, the ravens and the crows flying there, the catafalque. The weight. The heaviness. The mudstuck boots. Now, the time has come to let them go. All but Kate and the dogs.

No, of course there will be times. Times back here. Times together. Moments driving down the same streets, sitting in the same homes. But then as a visitor, a man from far away. No longer here. But there.

Mary says when the time comes, let them go. Yes. I’m doing that. She didn’t say anything about being glad. And I’m not. I’m sad in the deepest reaches of my bones. But, it is time, and I will let them all go.

 

And the Winner Is…Bill Schmidt

Beltane                                                                      Emergence Moon

Fortuna rode in from the western suburbs with Bill Schmidt tonight. He got hand after hand and played them well. Congratulations, Bill.

We’ve had a soaking here tonight. As I drove home around 9:30 after the sheepshead card game in St. Paul, the rain began to achieve downpour proportions.  I turned on Highway 10 headed toward Round Lake Boulevard and had the windshield wipers on full phaser.

Driving through the rain, here in the humid east, a background scene rolled past of future drives at night in the arid west. Will these storms be those of memory once we move to Colorado?

Even though we’ve set ourselves two years to make this move, there is a sense of the last time I’ll… in many things I do, including this drive in the rain. To return to the circus image, the stakes have begun to loosen and the ropes have got some slack even though the tents a long way from coming down.

Leeks In The Ground, Fresh Oil in the Truck

Beltane                                                              Emergence Moon

I planted leeks this morning and will plant the onions soon. The leeks went in with a IMAG0595sprinkling of Jubilate (microbial inoculant) and a drenching with transplant water, made from OND and water. OND is a fish emulsion.  After closing up the 8″ trenches, I put all the planting paraphernalia back in the honey house, then hopped in the Rav4.

Over to Carlson Toyota for its 35,000 mile oil change and service. While waiting, the Lenovo laptop connected with Perseus and I went over my Latin for Friday’s session with Greg. In the work for him we’re back when Jupiter told his azure brother, Neptune, to let loose the reins that hold back the rivers. Let them flood the earth. The waters cover the fields, the cattle, the human beings and their homes and temples.

On the way to Carlson I had a thought about mentors. I’ve often said that I’ve neglected mentors and have probably suffered because of it. It occurred to me that that’s not exactly true. I have a circle of mentors in the Woolly Mammoths.

 

How We Walk

Beltane                                                                 Emergence Moon

It has always been so, I imagine. That those closest to us teach us life’s important lessons. Over the last couple of years my longtime and good friends in the Woolly Mammoths have taught me many things. This sort of teaching is much closer to apprenticeship than classroom lecture. That is, the lessons are taught by example rather than declamation. When we learn by example, we integrate the lesson into our journey; we learn as it affects us, rather than focusing on getting it right.

Regina_20120926aTwo lessons stand out though there have been many from each Woolly. The first, accepting the death of a spouse has come from Woolly Bill Schmidt whose wife, Regina, died in September of 2012. The grace in his acceptance of her death, his willingness to give voice to his grief and his sense of loss while remaining upright and present to all around him teaches one elegant way to walk the ancientrail occasioned by our mortality. It is not in mimicking him that we will learn his lesson but, in heeding the deeper lesson, that is, to be present to grief in a way that is authentically our own.

The second is the homecoming of Frank Broderick. Frank has been in tremendous pain from spinal degeneration for the last couple of years. To deal with it a back operation, his second, was the only solution. But, Frank has a bad heart. Frank had to choose between a image002life of constant pain (He’s 81.) or an operation with some risk of death. As Frank does, he weighed his options seriously, getting a second opinion at the Mayo Clinic. Satisfied with the level of risk, he decided to go ahead.

He came home yesterday after a grueling 10 days of rehab and faced with several weeks of rehab still ahead. Again, the Frank lesson is not in how to deal with pain or a bad back, though he did both of those well, but how to bring personal courage and intelligent decision making to the often complex health matters we will all deal with as we age.

Both of these men have granted me access to their lives and to the way they live them. When the student was ready, his teachers appeared.