Samhain Thanksgiving Moon
A public tour of the Terra Cotta Warriors today. Hitting my stride. All the work beginning to pay off. Interested, engaged attendees. Lots of questions. Folks hanging around after. Felt good.
Samhain Thanksgiving Moon
A public tour of the Terra Cotta Warriors today. Hitting my stride. All the work beginning to pay off. Interested, engaged attendees. Lots of questions. Folks hanging around after. Felt good.
Samhain Thanksgiving Moon
Through a service I get posts from the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). This one came through and the irony just knocked my socks off.
“This month marks the 24th anniversary of the designation by Congress of the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area. The San Pedro River is one of the last free-flowing rivers in the southwestern United States. It runs through the Chihuahuan Desert and the Sonoran Desert in southeastern Arizona.”
Samhain Thanksgiving Moon
Last night Dick said, “I’m a pacifist, so I refer to my cancer as the dark guest. I’m not fighting it; I’m inviting it to leave.”
Third time I’ve encountered this idea of abandoning the war metaphor for cancer or serious illness, third time among folks I know, that is. I heard on the radio last night the current Drug Czar (an oxymoronic type title for a democracy) make a similar point. He wanted us to stop using the phrases War on Drugs and War on Cancer. As if these were situations where we could win and something else lose.
(Nótt-rides-her-horse-in-this-19th-century-painting-by-Peter-Nicolai-Arbo)
Metaphors matter. Think how much different our world would be today if George the Bush had chosen to describe 9/11 as a criminal conspiracy that needs dedicated police and law enforcement action rather than as an act of war. When he put us on a war footing, he wrong footed us in this whole matter from the very beginning. A metaphorical mistake that has cost literally trillions of dollars and thousands of lives.
I can see terrorism as a dark guest; a violation, say, of the old Bedouin laws of hospitality or the Greek xenia. I see it as a violent criminal enterprise, not much different than a heavily armed Mafia, one with a code of sharia and jihad rather than silence. By not much different I do not mean benign or insignificant.
No, terrorism is a true dark guest, just like cancer cells lurking after radical surgery. And we need to invite it to leave with urgency and active intervention. Just skip the F-16’s, the warthogs, the marine recon teams, the infantry. Send in the CIA, the FBI, the ATF and other counter terrorism specialists, even special forces.
Samhain Thanksgiving Moon
Cards tonight. Sheepshead. Middling hands and a middling score. One great hand which let me reflect that you get the best score when the least skill is required.
More important. Bill talking about his journey after Regina’s death and Dick about the 13th of 35 radiation treatments to knock out some lingering prostate cancer cells.
At the end of the evening Dick produced a small vial with O.S. on a label. Oleum sanctorum*. An oil sanctified by the Archbishop for use in particular sacraments. He had each of us rub the oil on our hands, then rub that oil on his. He believes that illness tends to produce isolation, a turning away from community. What better then than holding hands? Even oily ones.
Yes, we play sheepshead. No, it’s not the most important thing that happens.
*On Holy Thursday morning (in some dioceses it may be another morning during Holy Week), the bishop, joined by the priests of the diocese, gather at the Cathedral to celebrate the Chrism Mass. This Mass manifests the unity of the priests with their bishop.
Here the bishop blesses three oils — the oil of catechumens (oleum catechumenorum or oleum sanctorum), the oil of the infirm (oleum infirmorum) and holy chrism (sacrum chrisma) — which will be used in the administration of the sacraments throughout the diocese for the year. This tradition is rooted in the early Church as noted in the Gelasian Sacramentary (named after Pope Gelasius I, d. 496), but was later absorbed into the Holy Thursday evening Mass; Pope Pius XII issued a new Ordinal for Holy Week, which reinstituted a special Mass of the chrism distinct from the evening Mass.
Samhain Thanksgiving Moon
A holiday, a holy day. A festival. Lights. Gifts. Banquets. Feasts. Holiseason, that long season from Samhain through Epiphany, includes so many. We know why, those of us in temperate climates where the nights get longer and longer until the day fades into a few hours of weak, cold sun.
And yet. The Winter Solstice, less than a month away now, celebrates what the other holidays bravely front with lights and smiles. The darkness. In the dark. Afraid of the dark. Blackness. Dirt. Hecate. The Underworld. Cerberus and Charon, Acheron and Lethe. The awesome Stygian oath. Death, not life. Life is bright, daylight, sunshine. Death is night, darkness, moonshine.
My own nature tends toward the dark, a melancholic soul, its shores washed by rivers running through the underworld of the psyche. I feel at home as the cold grows and the darkness become dominate. This feels to me the way I imagine the beach must feel to those who love the sun. A place to relax. To just be.
What does a holiday really represent? It is a memory, an anniversary of an idea, a placeholder with significance itself. Christmas, with no known anchor in history, commemorates the Christian understanding of a monotheistic God assuming human form, an incarnation. Thanksgiving has a generalized idea behind it, a combination of national solidarity, harvest festival and family gathering.
A holiday may, too, identify an event that can occur on only that date. July 4th is such a date, for instance, as are birthdays. The Winter Solstice and all the solar holidays are such holidays. But, taken from that perspective, they are astronomical facts, rather than religious moments in themselves.
Over time though even such particular events accrue meaning. Some of the meaning for solar holidays accrues due to their position in the larger astronomical reality of seasonal change. So Spring equinox takes on the flavor of renewal, resurrection, rebirth. The summer solstice the growing season and the fall equinox, the harvest.
The Winter Solstice then takes part of its character from the cold, the dark, the bleakness of the fallow season. In early farming cultures it also signified, in its end, the return of the sun and the gradual increase of light and warmth that promised another year of agricultural growth. It has, perhaps peculiarly among the solar holidays, a distinctive dark aspect and a distinctive light aspect.
It is its dark aspect that I celebrate. It fits my more hermetic, introverted self. There is, too, as I said above that melancholic stream acknowledged best in a holiday of the dark. Meditation takes me down and inside my self, a time of quiet darkness, an intimate moment. Darkness, too, is necessary to so many plants, bulbs and seeds alike, time to germinate, just as ideas sow themselves in the rich fields of the unconscious.
It’s the best time of the year.
Samhain Full Thanksgiving Moon
Picked up Kate yesterday. She missed the grandkids, but was glad to sleep in her own bed.
Eric, at Armstrong Kennels, said the snow up here on Thanksgiving night was so hard you couldn’t see through it. Darn it. I missed it.
(the holly king’s castle)
I’m closing in on the final chapters of Missing. I was further along than I thought I was. Once I get to the end, I still have a few things to do. First, I have a character I’m going to eliminate and that will take some spackling and a fresh coat of paint. Then, I have scenes that either need to get added to existing chapters or become chapters themselves. Finally, I have to add location descriptors to the beginning of each chapter. Not a lot of work, but some. After all that, I have to figure how to compile the whole thing (using Scrivener) in a uniform format, then print it out.
At that point I’ll read through it again, editing as I go, this time with a pencil. If it needs drastic changes, I’ll go through a third draft. If not, I’ll print out a copy, then hand it out to readers. After them, the third or fourth revision. Probably one more round of reading, then a final draft. At that point let the flogging of the manuscript begin.
Feels good to have gotten this far.
Samhain Thanksgiving Moon
6 degrees this morning. Looked out my study window yesterday evening and saw two deer walking in the street, taking in the lights and wondering about the neighbor with MS. The dogs didn’t want to stay outside long. Too cold.
My goal is to have Missing’s first revision done by January 1st. The Mythology class ends this week and will free up some time. It’s load has been manageable, but with the research for the Terra Cotta Warriors I’ve had little spare time. Missing and Latin have suffered.
Still haven’t located anyone to do our snowplowing. No notices up on the usual places, grocery store bulletin boards, no advertising. Odd, but it may reflect the minimal snow fall we got last winter.
Kate comes home today and our house will once again have its full complement of mammals. This is an inter-mammalian species residence and I’m not counting the mice, the chipmunks, the raccoons, the opossums, the woodchucks, the squirrels and the rabbits though they reside on this property, too. Many of the latter live under our far shed.
Samhain Thanksgiving Moon
A quiet Sunday. Up about 7 with the dogs. Breakfast, oatmeal and a banana. Downstairs to write my first pass on the assignment for the mythology class. After that over to Festival. Back. Had two more pieces of pizza for lunch. I said it was quiet day.
Started the soup, a thirteen-bean soup. I soaked the beans over night, rinsed them, a bit foamy, added 5 quarts of water (I know. A lot of soup.) and a smoked turkey leg (replacing a ham-hock. Less fatty, still smoky), brought it up to a boil, down to simmer for 3 hours. Took a nap.
Got the ingredients for the last thirty minutes of the soup together: 2 quarts tomatoes, chili powder, dried garlic flakes (ours), an onion, 2 cups worth. This red onion made me back away from the counter, chemical warfare. Damn effective. All into the pot. Boil again. Wait.
It’s done. Cooling. Supper tonight. And for many other nights. A lot of it, most of it, will go in the freezer. Tired of eating meat, fatty things, over indulgence. Don’t like it but I do it anyhow. A puzzle.
Now. Edit the writing assignment. 250 words is a very tight capsule. Got to squeeze information in sideways.
Samhain Thanksgiving Moon
A professor stood before his philosophy class and had some items in front of him. When the class began, he wordlessly picked up a very large and empty mayonnaise jar and proceeded to fill it with golf balls. He then asked the students if the jar was full. They agreed that it was.
The professor then picked up a box of pebbles and poured them into the jar. He shook the jar lightly. The pebbles roll
ed into the open areas between the golf balls. He then asked the students again if the jar was full. They agreed it was.
The professor next picked up a box of sand and poured it into the jar. Of course, the sand filled up everything else. He asked once more if the jar was full.. The students responded with a unanimous ‘yes.’
The professor then produced two Beers from under the table and poured the entire contents into the jar effectively filling the empty space between the sand.The students laughed..
‘Now,’ said the professor as the laughter subsided, ‘I want you to recognize that this jar represents your life. The golf balls are the important things—-your family, your children, your health, your friends and your favorite passions—-and if everything else was lost and only they remained, your life would still be full. The pebbles are the other things that matter like your job, your house and your car.. The sand is everything else—-the small stuff.
‘If you put the sand into the jar first,’ he continued, ‘there is no room for the pebbles or the golf balls. The same goes for life.
If you spend all your time and energy on the small stuff you will never have room for the things that are important to you.
Pay attention to the things that are critical to your happiness.
Spend time with your children. Spend time with your parents. Visit with grandparents. Take your spouse out to dinner. Play another 18. There will always be time to clean the house and mow the lawn.
Take care of the golf balls first—-the things that really matter. Set your priorities. The rest is just sand.
One of the students raised her hand and inquired what the Beer represented. The professor smiled and said, ‘I’m glad you asked.’ The Beer just shows you that no matter how full your life may seem, there’s always room for a couple of Beers with a friend.
Samhain Thanksgiving Moon
Over to Festival…the supermarket. Listened to music of a festival, Christmas. Singing along to Rudolf as I plucked brown rice, persimmons and smoked turkey legs out of their temporary places and put them in my cart. Thanksgiving is over; let the shopping begin.
It is, as always, a pleasure to shop for groceries. Bright store, well stocked, interesting selections and…Christmas music. Brought me right out of Thebes and into the good ole heartland of the U.S. of A.
Gonna make a soup now, eat some pizza leftovers and then get to work on Jason and Medea.