36 by 12.31.2012

Summer                                                   Under the Lily Moon

Wore myself out this morning and slept awhile longer than usual during the nap.  Felt good.

I’ve started playing an online game called Superbetter.  I heard about it on the TED hour, a talk given by a woman gamer who had to overcome a severe concussion.  She invented a game, called Superbetter, to help her win back her health.  It’s adaptable to the goal that you have and in my case I’m going for a 36 inch waistline by December 31st, 2012.

I want to feel better about how I look and improve my health.  Want to see all my grandkids.  Finish writing as many novels as I can.  Live here with Kate and be healthy during that time.

In all instances but my extending waist line I have either come to peace with myself or celebrate myself.  Yes, I’ll always suffer fools poorly.  Just gonna be that way.  Yes, I’ll learn new things, keep interesting projects in front of me.  I can say yes to everything about me except this bad eating habit.  So, I’m gonna kick it. Once and for all.  Before I have to.

If you know me, I’d appreciate your support.

Summer                                       Under the Lily Moon

A morning with the garden.  Odds and ends.  Transplanting hosta and pachysandra.  Removing the tire from the wagon so it could be filled with air.  Loading the mower into the truck for degunking.  Weeding in the beet and kale bed.  Cutting an old carpet up for weed control in the vegetable garden.  Mulch will go on top of it.

Paul and Sarah – Before They Left

Summer                                                           Under the Lily Moon

Over to the area of Lake Calhoun near the Bakken Museum today.   The lake had people biking, running, exercising, doing yoga, lying on towels.  A busy place with people grabbing the Minnesota summer when it let up from rains.

An open house for Paul and Sarah Strickland.

Paul and Sarah have a place in a great part of the world, on the St. Croix River, looking across the river the land they see is New Brunswick.  The famous Bay of Fundy is not far from them and the tides there are legendary for their extremes.

Saw Bill and Regina, Warren and Sheryl, Mark Odegard there.  Scott Simpson and Yin were coming as we were leaving.  I came home to get a nap before the drive out to Woodbury.

This part of Woodbury has very upscale homes settled on Wild Canyon Drive and Wild Canyon Trail.  It’s lovely, with mature trees, some elevation and many homes set far back from the road.

The ceremony tonight featured Paul and Sarah and how their friends, their family, the “people who see us” as Sarah said, had connected with them and sustained them through the years.  Warren and Sheryl, Tom and Roxann, Stefan and Lonnie were there representing the Woollies.

I confess to some dis-ease with the Native American cum Mayan slant to the ceremonial part of the evening.  It feels like poaching, taking this and that into a melange that ends up being a little hokey.*  If I put that aside, the evening allowed for time together with Paul and Sarah, a chance to chat with others and a chance to express feelings of loss and connection.

Ross Levin, a financial planner who writes a column for the Star-Tribune was there, as was Eric Utne of Utne Reader fame.  They were part of Paul’s second men’s group, the Outliers.

It was a classic Minnesota summer evening.  A twilight with rosy clouds backlit the St. Paul Cathedral and the Minnesota Capitol Building, framing, as they did, the business center of downtown St. Paul.  The Mississippi reflected back both the darkening blue of the  sky and the rose and gold tints in the sky.

An evening, in the end, of good-byes.

*addendum  I know this may be harsh and in one sense my inclination is to say so be it.  But.  While the frame had questionable elements, the caring and love demonstrated did not.

In that vein I realize that my judgments on these matters may reflect a concept of purity and authenticity too strong for these instances.  Cultural patrimony is always fluid and cultures do absorb and adapt learnings from others all the time.

All of these folks have a genuine spiritual journey on which a Native American sensibility has come to have meaning.  In the end it is not the container but the ancientrail that is important and the ancientrail here is one of love and care for each other and for our mother, the earth.  Blessed be.

La Revedere, Stricklands

Summer                                              Under the Lily Moon

After taking Kate to work (below), I went over to Paul and Sarah Strickland’s, ready to help them move.  Funerals, hospice and moving vans have been big themes for the Woolly Mammoths this last year or so.  Paul and Sarah drive away on Monday with the last load of Minnesota stuff on its way to Maine.  Includes, by the way, several large rocks lugged back here on airplanes.

Turns out they had hired movers so we weren’t necessary and I was glad of that.  Allowed me to come home, get a nap, feed the dogs and work on Rembrandt.  Tomorrow are two different leave taking events for the two of them so this is not the last chance to say good-bye.

 

Kate’s Next to Last Day of Work

Summer                                              Under the Lily Moon

Business meeting this am.  Our financial situation looks good.  For now.  Wondering about the changes to the tax code, the possibility of continued slow to no growth.  Impacts of both would require changes in our budget.  Still, that’s tomorrow’s problem and today’s, as the good book says, are sufficient unto themselves.

Took Kate into work for the second to last time.  Next Wednesday she goes in 5:00 to 9:00 for her last work session in a long career, dating back to her 19th birthday.  Since then, one way or another, she’s been involved in medicine.  That’s over 49 years, damn near 50, and the last 18 driving Highway 10 south to the Coon Rapids Allina Clinic.

The change to medicine run as a corporate enterprise and a vertically integrated one at that has made practicing much less appealing to her.  Schedules, pace, income, review all dependent on corporate norms, not medical results.  The physician has transisted, over her years of practice, from a private, mom and/or pop shop to giant clinics like Coon Rapids stuffed with specialties and designed to “maximize revenue.”  Not as much fun, not as good a medical environment for either patients or docs.  Great for administrators, though.

 

Summer                                                    Under the Lily Moon

Realized this week that in leaving the Sierra Club and choosing to focus on Latin, writing, art and reimagining faith, that I’ve chosen the humanities over politics.  Feels right.  For now.  In fact, I’ve chosen to move my life more and more in that direction for some time now.  I’ve just caught up to what the rest of me’s been doing.  ‘Bout time.

Summer Solstice 2012

Summer                                                                  Lily Moon

 

The summer solstice.  On Tuesday the sun rose at 5:26 am and set at 9:03 pm.  That same length of day lasts through tomorrow.  On Saturday we move to 5:27 am rise, 9:03 set.  Sunday, too.  The change in daylight begins to decrease in very tiny increments, but is now on a course that will culminate in the Winter Solstice when the sun will rise at 7:48 am and set at 4:34 pm.  So, today, for example we have 12 hours and 37 minutes of day light; by December 21st that will have receded to 8 hours and 46 minutes.

The solstices are the extremes of our solar year while the equinoxes, coming in between them mark the days of relative equality between daylight and dark.  Another way to look at the equinox is as the moment halfway between one solstice and the other.

Roughly, too, they mark the point when the amount of light shifts toward its next extreme.  That is, September 22nd, the autumnal equinox, has sunrise at 7:00 am and sunset at 7:09, almost 12 hours of light and 12 hours of dark.  After that the night begins to gain ascendance with more and more of each 24 hours dark rather than light.

The midsummer festivals in Northern Europe, like the ones around Beltane, often involve fire.  The painting at the top is a Finnish summer solstice festival from 1910.

Look at what burns within you now, what illuminates your life.  What part of your life could be more visible?  Needs more light?

If you try to match your life to the seasons at all, this is a time to consider picnics, gardens, being on the water, painting outside, perhaps drawing.  It’s a time to be with others out of doors.

This is also a moment to consider the value of excess in your life.  What might benefit from an all out, all stops out push from you?  What things about which you have been moderate or even frugal might blossom if given an outlandish amount of attention.  This is a time when the balance has swung up on the side of maximum light.  What deserves maximum effort from you?

It is, too, a time to celebrate the gifts of peak experience.  Look for those things in your current life that are reaching their pinnacle.  Don’t let them languish through inattention.  Beat their drum.  Sound their cymbal.

Most of all, embrace the light in your life.  This is its day.  Its week.

 

Beltane (last day)                                              New Lily Moon

Mounding potatoes this am.  They’ve grown very fast in a location I cleared out in the perennial garden a couple of years ago.  We have a limited number of full sun spots now and I wanted to make use of it.  Kate thought potatoes might go well there since I’ve used up the growing areas in the vegetable garden for them for now.  They have to rotate out every four years or the colorado beetles find them. Not fun.

Checking on the bees.  Should be ready for honey supers in the next week or so.  We’ll see.  A bit of weeding.  Then it’s back inside for Rembrandt and Ovid.  A busy day today.

Beltane                                                   New Lily Moon

At 6:09 tomorrow evening the summer solstice arrives.  Beltane will slide off into its now truncated cross-quarter holiday length and give way to the astronomical definition of summer.  Meteorological summer has already been under way for 20 days, beginning on June 1st.

What’s interesting to me right now is that this year the summer solstice will arrive during a new moon.  A full, dark night will punctuate the longest day.  After tomorrow, the long slow slide toward the Winter Solstice begins.  This movement from the full light of the summer solstice to the long night of the Winter Solstice is, for me, the most sacred and contemplative part of the year.

I appreciate Beltane as introducing the growing season and recognize the importance for all our animal needs that it represents, even so, for me, the trend toward darkness marks a time of greater richness for the soul.  I look forward to it.

Tyger, Tyger’s Dying Light

Beltane                                                  New Lily Moon

Finished Tiger by John Valliant.  It has so many great lines.  Hope dies last.  Russian proverb.  The only other warm blooded animal that rivals humans in total numbers?  Chickens.  The native people tell me I’m now marked by the tiger, Yuri Trush.  Trush is the dominant figure in the book who survived a direct assault by a tiger.  The story of that tiger and its death is the strong lineament of the book.

Because the tiger is an apex predator in the eco-systems it inhabits, the health of the tiger population serves as a, perhaps the, key indicator of the health of that eco-system. If the tiger population is healthy, then the prey species are healthy as are the complex network of plants and other animals that depend on these two, predator and prey, for their survival.  The sad news is that the apex apex predator, humans, has begun to push its competitors out of existence in the wild and that includes tigers.

A good book, well written and provocative.