Little Gleaned Things

[Ruth Necklace & Rings :: sterling silver & 23 karat gold]

Fire Wife

I married a man.  Or, I thought I married a man.  It’s more complex than that.  I married fire.  I married the smoke of burning forests and grasslands, the hiss of singed deer as they drop down into lakes and streams, the billowing black that stains lungs and stings eyes, the rasping cough of tall flame.  I married lightning strikes, the violent explosions of tree trunks,  yellow shirts and green pants filthy with ash and sweat, the buzz of chainsaws, the danger of hovering helicopters, the maniacal purr of bulldozers and the crimson stripes of retardant turning mountain slopes to checkerboards.  I married the long, hot kisses of homecoming.  I  married cooking for one.  I married the blown out knees, the compressed vertebrae, the broken bones that come with too many hard landings.  I married the whispering silk of parachutes and the hum of industrial sewing machines.  I married a new lexicon; now I speak Canadian, American and fire.  I married childbearing in my late thirties, or early forties, or not at all.  Maybe I married lonesomeness in old age.  Maybe I married freedom and adventure for all my life.  I married the eternal wait for permanent positions, the bureaucratic crap that comes with federal employment, the tangle of job applications, the hope for interviews, the joy of reunions with our fire family at the start of the season and throughout winter.  I married missing Idaho and all her wild lands and all her dizzy skies.  For now, I am married to the Methow Valley.  I married summers alone but thank God for those short nights and long lasting sunsets and my little cabin in the woods.  I married winters of leisure, with just him and I.  I love winter.  I married the bros.  Then I married all their wives.  I married the last minute work details, the wilderness areas without cell service, the breakdown in communication after too many weeks apart.  I married trying not to cry on the phone.  After all, what can he do about it when he is so far away?  I married the black soot that rims the shower after he washes up.  I married stinky boots.  I married Pendleton whisky in a little green flask — his, not mine.   I married chewing tobacco — not his, theirs.  I married all of these things, but there are things I did not marry.  I did not marry fear, too stillness, evaporation of dreams.  I did not marry resentment.  I did not marry charcoaled wastelands, only clean slates and bald openness which green will velvet and the fuzz of fireweed blossoms will paint magenta.  There is the blessing and curse of opposites, bumping and whirling like magnets at play: I did not marry water, I married flame, though water I may be.  Perhaps this is pure spring creek flowing through me, water siphoned through steady bedrock, filtered with diamonds; a cool, melodic laugh rising up as I trip my way down mountain slopes and cascade in clouds from the razor edges of slate.  Perhaps I am the thing to soften, the thing to wear away the weary skin of tired things, the thing to make room for newness, the thing to quench all of these flames, the thing to unlock the trap of heat, to weight the power of the wind.  Perhaps I am the thing to calm and gently quell, to put out the smoulder of red where it licks against the black of night.  Perhaps, in the end, the true job of a fire wife is to provide for the ache of thirst, to be the small rain when it’s wild flame as far as a man can see.  If so, it’s a good thing I married fire.  I think I’m just what it needs.

I was being a twerp, so I made a list.

[soon the plums will come]

It’s a morning of pure, springtime glory here.  I’m telling you, it’s simply exquisite outside.  When I stepped out the back door of the house this morning, the sunshine came on like thunder, I reached a hand up and shielded my eyes from the light as I scanned the tree tops for the source of bird songs.  Then, oh holy of holies, I took a deep breath in through my nose and smelled the perfumes of the fruit trees in the yard.  Such sweetness.  Such promise.  And oh, the color of the peach blossoms!  I wandered around the yard, yanked at random weeds, rearranged the clematis vines on the trellis of the front porch, and wished I could spend the entire afternoon engineering my succulent garden under the big kitchen window.

We’ve officially tipped off the edge of sanity and into the depths of chaos here, as we seem to do before we make our summer move.  There’s so much to do.  Appointments to make and keep, random errand running, a truck to send into the shop…I’m stalling.  I’m hiding out in the studio most hours of the day.  When I go running on the mountain or hiking with the dogs, I go further and higher than usual, because coming home means working towards something I’m not keen to work on: moving.  Blah.  I’m writing postcards to friends when I should be making lists of all the things that need doing, cleaning, buying, selling, collecting, cleaning, gleaning…lists schmists.  Blah.

It’s overwhelming.  I’m overwhelmed.

What do you do when you are overwhelmed?  I shouldn’t be so avoidant about the packing and moving work.  I should grab the bull by the horns and really give it all heck.  Maybe I will.  Later.  Maybe.  Maybe tomorrow.

Because I am not thankful about having to pour energy into packing and moving, I think it would be a good idea to make a list of all the things I am thankful for today.

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-this very fine morning, the quality and strength of springtime light

-the fresh garlic I am going to pick and roast this afternoon

-how hard Robert is working to make this as smooth a transition as possible, I’m thankful I don’t have to do it alone

-your incredible support over at the Etsy shop this week (amazing amazing amazing)

-the Airstream (which is sort of like a mythical beast, a true griffin in this life of ours) and the way it makes so much possible for us

-my job

-Robert’s job

-the always good company of the dogs

-the stability of my usually terribly wobbly thyroid

-the 400 black tulips I have blooming in the front yard

-this excellent cup of coffee

-the elk steak we have defrosting for dinner (food, in general)

-the robins on the front lawn

-the view of the mountains from my office window

-the neighbor’s flowering quince

-the blue egg my hen laid me this morning (each one is a perfect little miracle)

-the rabbit skull I found yesterday

-these polka dot socks

-the freedom I feel, every single day, to simply develop and grow and learn and worship and work and express and be and live (not everyone has all these kinds of freedoms)

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I feel better now.  Less like a spoilt brat.  More like myself.  Brighter.  Fuller.  More grateful.  More aware.  More focused.  Ready to work.

What are you thankful for today?

The Littlest Herd

[Nomad Rings :: sterling silver]

The Sea Canaries

[belugas at the Shed Aquarium of Chicago, IL]

Robbie just walked into the office, looked over my shoulder at the computer monitor and said, “You are a beluga-aholic.”

I reckon there are worse things to be!

I could have sat and watched these whales for the rest of my life. They are so beautiful, their faces so innocent and their eyes so kind.  I have to be honest though, I can’t help but wonder what it would feel like to bump into one of these mystical beauties while drifting about in a canoe in Arctic waters.