Outside

Beltane                                                              Early Growth Moon

Trying to reconcile everyday writing (a creative need and best practice) with everyday gardening (a practical need and also best practice).  Decided in conversation with Kate to get up at 7 AM regularly, eat breakfast, work an hour outside until 9, then come in to write.  Today was the first day of that new schedule.

(Summer – Pierre Puvis de Chavannes)

Mostly I weeded this morning among vegetable rows where a stealthy clover had crept in and those damned prolific chives, bright green beautiful spears.  Along the way I observed the onions, the kale, the chard, the beets, lots of beets and the carrots.  Unlike my garlic, which had a very low germination rate, the carrots, often a problem, have responded with vigor, many of them up, almost a solid line of small green feathery stalks in each of three rows.

Due to the removal of the ash, and possibly the river birch pruning, we no longer have as much as shade as we had.  A major part of the point in both actions.  Yet.  We planted hostas and ferns and hydrangeas in both spots.  The ones under the ash will need to go elsewhere, way too much sun.  Those under the river birch, I’m not sure.  It’s an east facing side and the tree is still there, plus the seven oaks on our hill shade them, too.  I’ll watch them.

Javier and his crew finished the fire pit with crushed granite, extra thick landscape cloth and five cubic yards of shredded bark.  It’s ready for the grandkids, for the Woolly’s and for us, another outdoor room, this one away from the house at the edge of the woods.  There is a short path from the fire pit area to the grandkids play house.  It’s now a very spiffy area with a home for the imagination and a place to make smores nearby.

 

Rejecting Ariadne’s Gift

Beltane                                                               Early Growth Moon

I skipped some steps in my life education.  And I did that post-college when I was hungry for intellectual stimulation and found the cheapest source for it in seminary.  Instead of noticing what had my full attention, studying scripture with the tools of higher criticism, I followed my radical political passions into the ordained ministry.

Following the 60’s slogan, if you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem, I embarked on a decades long immersion in political work.  I believed and still do believe that political work is important and necessary, a responsibility  of a citizenry that would remain free as well as a corrective to social injustice cooked into the current culture.

But.  I also believe that when the creative life, the one where the Self you have been granted by the random, but highly particular thrownness you have experienced, finds its highest and best purpose, it equals the level of urgency of political action.  Why?  Because each of us are precious, unusual, unique and as a result need to offer the world what only we can provide.

This is at best a dilemma, at worst it can create paralysis or misdirection.  In my case I followed one path, political action, from college through my early 40’s.  That I did this through the church is only a happenstance, a function of the odd synchronicity of my time in Appleton, Wisconsin and a minister there, Curtis Herron, who knew United was, at the time, a politically engaged seminary.

My rationale for being in seminary, drenched in the zeitgeist of the 60’s, led me to pick up on all the threads that led through the labyrinth toward a political minotaur.  They were bright threads in those years, the early 70’s, and had the additional compelling flavor of righteousness, a dangerous route to follow, but one I pursued anyhow.

The threads I left lying on the ground, less bright and flavored not with righteousness but with tradition and imagination, came to me as I soaked up literary criticism, the history of the Pentateuch, the redactions of the gospels, the tradition criticism and form criticism so useful in the Hebrew scriptures, even the brief exposures to Hebrew and Greek.  Had I stuck with them, followed the literary and creative impulses they roused in me, I might have neglected some political work, but found my way to writing much sooner.

But I didn’t.  Now I’m in my late 60’s and, thanks to another lesson I’ve simply refused out of stubbornness and fear to learn, how to sell my finished work, have nothing to show for having finally picked up the threads less bright, yet the ones more in touch with my full Self.  Although it may sound like it, I’m not whining here, just observing the length of time I spent on one section of the labyrinth, not because I didn’t have help, but because I couldn’t discern the true help I did need.

Now, finally, I have all the threads in my hand, I’m following them to the end, aware that there is still ahead the Minotaur, a last battle.  When will it come?  I don’t know.  The labyrinth still has turns ahead and the way, the ancientrail, is dimly lit.

 

Cash Flow, Fiscal Tides

Beltane                                                               Early Growth Moon

Boy.  This money stuff doesn’t seem to get easier, even with practice.  The annoying reality of cash and its flow, in and out, never seeming to be quite enough, no matter how much is available.  A well known phenomenon at all income levels this is an area where Kate and I have grown enormously over the last 15 years, yet still have growing to do.

We have different approaches to money, no surprise there, we’re different people and most of the time the differences seem to complement each other.  Her more detailed way, my big picture way.  Her more generous nature, my more conservative one.  (when it comes to money.)  Sometimes we work at cross purposes and that requires extra conversation, extra listening, extra patience.

Money is very far from the point of life, for either of us, but its misuse can make life pretty damned miserable.  As we’ve experienced.  So we’re committed to staying on top of this, to stay in the conversation, to keep things clear and honest.  It’s good for us, but it’s not always easy.

I’m proud of both of us and how we’ve become more adult, more rational, more compassionate in this area of our life.  We never stop learning or growing.

Better

Beltane                                                                    Early Growth Moon

The ash is gone from the garden.  A shame, from the tree’s perspective, since it was a healthy specimen, though the emerald ash borer invasion suggested its future didn’t look positive.  Its removal opens two beds to full sun and creates a spot where another bed could go.  Another bed and a couple of other garden areas, suntrap and asparagus patch, will benefit, too.

The ash’s trunk and thicker branch now rest in the spot where I used to have the bees.  After a year drying out, I’ll split them and use them in the fire-pit.  Based on a bid we’ll get this morning the fire-pit will be finished, possibly by the end of the day.  We need to surface the area in a manner that will hold down weeds and still be a good place for folks to gather.

The front beds have been edged and our maple pruned, at last, after 20 years.  The river birch, too, no longer dangling its branches in the way of anyone walking or mowing the front yard.  All this work required stronger and more professional hands than mine or Kate’s.  Louis, Javier’s brother, gave Kate their card when he helped her carry plants to the car at our favorite local nursery, the Green Barn.

It feels good to have folks who know what they’re doing and that we can rely on.

Work Around the House

Beltane                                                                                 Early Growth Moon

Today has been a Missing day.  I’m focusing on it now, trying to get most of the way through the third revision before the Loft class.  I’ll make substantial progress by then and I might finish.

Javier and his crew removed the ash tree, cut up its trunk and branches, put down a gravel and sand like mixture in the fire pit, centered the fire ring and reset all the granite pavers.  Right now they’re finishing up the edging and trimming the river birch.

Having people do work around the house both pleases me and sets me on edge.  I know they are getting work done that I either cannot do or will not do.  In that sense they make our home more pleasant.  The on edge part comes from a part of me that is uncomfortable asking others to do things for me, even they get paid.  This comes from a myth of self-sufficiency, a part of patriarchy that would, on the one hand, dominate and on the other do everything.  This is a contradiction of a sexist world view, rooted in my past and not entirely dislodged.