Yes

IMG_5718 IMG_5733 IMG_5775 IMG_5812 IMG_5832 IMG_5856 IMG_5887 IMG_5891 IMG_5907Jade and I went up the mountain one night, for no reason at all, except to see what we could see.  I had my camera along, because I always have my camera along, but we also packed a pair of puppies with us, some wool gear for when the air turned cold during the nightrise, and the good and comfortable company of each other.

I love Jade.  She’s one of my best friends and to make matters even more excellent, she and her husband (a smokejumper, also, and a true surrogate brother to Robert and I) bought the house exactly next door to ours here in Pocatello.  We call it the compound and it has been one of the most special experiences of my adult life to have good friends so near every moment of the day.  Most mornings, Jade and I have coffee together.  One of us brews a french press and strolls around, through two gates, through the raspberry patch, past the grapevines and into the companionship of the other.  We pour our cups of coffee, add our milk and when the weather was warmer, we would sit on porch steps in the sun and simply talk for a couple of hours.  It is such a glorious way to wake up to the day in the loving company of a best friend.  She is a painter and leatherworker, among other things, and shares my studio space with me.  We share dinners, watch movies, give each other seeds we have harvested from our gardens and lend or borrow a lawnmower back and forth.  There is an understanding between us that stems from being girls, creatives and fire wives.  Jade’s little family is an extension of our little family and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

———————————————————————-

I was having some body work done by my massage therapist a couple of months ago and she asked me what my life mantra was.  The actual word “mantra” isn’t part of my daily lexicon so I was stumped for a moment and then I told her I didn’t think I had a mantra.  So she rephrased the question so I could better understand and find a true answer.  She asked me if there’s a phrase I live by on a daily basis.  Here’s what I said:

“Yes!”

That was my answer to her as well as the phrase I have been living by for the past year or so.  When I get asked to do something, to be involved in something, to go somewhere, to spend my time a certain way and if the situation will involve our friends or family or a really unique life opportunity, I try not to think too hard about it.  I let myself respond as reflexively as possible.  I simply say, “Yes.”  Then I do my best to make the commitment work.

——————————————————————-

I realized something a few years ago after nearly working myself to death (which is relatively normal, small business takes your EVERYTHING — so does full time creative work) building The Noisy Plume: life is short.  It becomes more and more apparent to me as I watch my grandparents in the twilight of their wonderful lives, as I watch my parents age, as I see our siblings and friends having babies and growing the next generation, as I see the lines of a life well lived begin to pepper my face.  I’m not going to live forever.  Neither are you.  I am concerned that when I lay in the quiet of a failing heartbeat on my deathbed that I will regret how much time I spent worrying, how much time I spent on my computer hitting a “like” button, how many days I sacrificed making memories with the people I love on the land I adore for a small job I didn’t pour my heart and soul into.  When I realized all of this, I decided to say yes as often as possible to the people closest to me, even if there were 100 unanswered and festering emails in my inbox, even if I was straddling a deadline in the studio, even if I was running late on photo submissions for freelance work — I started setting those things aside and doing a better job of living for love, living for the love of life, living for the love of experiences.

More often than not, this makes me a terrible business woman, an incompetent emailer, and let’s face it, the volume of work coming out of my metal studio has slowed to a dribble — part of that has to do with an energy shift in my work.  I’m doing more freelancing than metalsmithing at the moment so the decrease in productivity in the studio makes perfect sense.  But I digress.  Let me tell you something, I have had such a wonderful year here.  I have traveled extensively.  I have explored and adventured.  I have spent time with my best friends, I have made new friends, I have learned so much about them, about myself, about the world, about nature.  More often than not, I have allowed myself to catapult in any direction on any given day and the freedom has changed who I am, taught me who I want to be, and fortified some of my relationships in wonderful ways.  This has been a year of living for me!  It has been grand.  I want to serve my friends and family as energetically and commitedly as I have served my small business over the years.  I want to pour myself into them and make memories so that when I walk towards the light at the end of the tunnel someday, I’ll walk in a soft cloak of assuredness that I lived this life well and served my people with a whole heart and my full attention.

My sister Caroline, on Robbie’s side of the family, pointed out the flip side of all this “yessing” I’ve been doing while we were with our family clan at Thanksgiving in San Diego last week.  She pointed out that no matter what, saying yes to something means saying no to something else, even if you don’t say the word.  And she’s right about that — no is a byproduct of yes; we had best make the word and the commitment count.

Make it worth it every time you say “Yes.”  I think it’s the best way to live without regret.

—————————————————————–

When Jade and I went up the mountain that night, we went up the mountain for no reason at all (which is sometimes the best reason of all) except to be in the company of each other, to ride in a delightful 1966 Dodge Powerwagon, to laugh at the puppies with us and pet their soft ears, to talk, to enjoy the silence when we didn’t talk, to watch the sun set and the moon rise.  We went out of love for each other, love for life and love for the word “Yes.”

 

Where our hearts wander, our feet follow close behind.

IMG_2777

IMG_2848

IMG_2812

I don’t sleep, not until the edges of dawn fill the sky.  It’s always like that in the backcountry — sleeplessness and cold, no matter how fatigued I am, even if I have good company I struggle to sleep.  The space and quiet, the lack of beeping messages, blinking lights and glowing screens, the lack of pressure, the lack of sound sends my body into gentle shock.  I have grown away from quietude, fallen under the spell of a gurgling, technological brew that simmers my mind and soul down to paste and ash.

When I am out, out in this space, I begin to rise once more.  There are three stars in my belt.  A bow in my left hand and arrows in my right.  Two wings on my back to navigate these wild currents.  My upturned face holds the sun for one eye and the moon for the other.

In the night, Farley is beside me, the curving line of his back warms me through the baffled wall of my sleeping bag.  Tater Tot is beside him, still as stone, hard asleep.  We make our bed, the three of us, in a 3x1ft patch of flat at the base of a talus field above a lake.  Becca’s bed is much the same only she looks lovely in her tidy little bivy — a swaddling of technical fabrics, zippers and lofty encasements.  I am my usual junk show, bedded down in the dirt like an animal on a thermarest that won’t hold air, in a rickety down sleeping bag under a haphazard tarp I cast over the reckless pile of dogs and girl to keep the dew at bay.

I lay awake there, in the inexhaustible and unsleeping black of the night, I see the conical forms of sub-alpine fir framing the sky above us, moonless and resplendent, juicy with the milky way.  I watch the constellations spin forth in the dark; the dippers, pegasus, cassiopeia in recline, andromeda and orion.  A bright, shuffling universe is a breath away, I exhale upon it, blow my ancient dust upward, somewhere the butterflies are stirring up hurricanes and my breathing is stoking a supernova into hot bliss.

I toss and I turn.  I bend my knees and lean them against a boulder.  I roll onto my side, press my hip bone into a divot and lay that way until my legs begin to ache.  I flip onto my stomach, carefully open the valve of my thermarest and puff air into it, marginally decreasing my discomfort.  I turn over onto my back once more.  I tuck my hands beneath my hips to cushion the the press of my bones against the earth.  I sigh.  The dogs shuffle and paw at their wild dreams, burping, woofing, chasing and whining their way through the uncomplicated canine subconscious.  All the while, eloquent stars deliver speeches in a blue language with silver tongues and I listen with a whole but tired heart, eager to know better the secrets of the universe.  I want to retrieve my small green journal and pen, to flip on my headlamp and record some of these thoughts, but it is too cold, or I worry I will be sacrificing the next moment sleep might come creeping into the vaulted spaces of my busy mind, or I worry the thoughts aren’t worth recording.  But this is the writing life.  Everything is worth writing down.  One can never tell until it’s all down on paper and left to age for a spell like meat in a smokehouse the quality of the blend, the depth of the thought, the beauty of the parabolic nature of a phrase.  I lay in the dark and neurotically repeat poetic syntax that come to mind, hoping the words will hold with me until morning when I can scratch them down on paper while I sip my coffee.

The stars continue spinning.  The nigh lasts and lasts.

IMG_2826

Eventually the dawn drifts in lazily like a boat on a slow current and I dip into sleep in the arms of the coming light.  I wake, momentarily, to see a the sky in a pink rage against granitic peaks.  I doze off once more.  When I finally wake up, fully, I mutter the word coffee to Becca, she mutters the same word back at me and so the day begins with the hiss and spark of two small stoves, the gurgle of boiling water and the scent of a hot brown liquid that will open our eyes and launch us into our day.

I sit down with my hot brew on a sloping stone over an emerald lake under a turquoise sky and I write this short string of words in my small green book,  “All I have to do today is feed myself, walk for a while, fish, take photographs and love my way through the Sawtooths.  There’s only grace for me today, my own and that of the mountains.

I look down at the water below me, calm in the brilliant face of morning, watch the adolescent chatter of minnows at the lake edge, swallow the last drop of coffee in my cooking cup, pick up my fly rod, tie on a dry fly and scramble down to the water to see if I can coax something sterling and miraculous to the surface, and eventually to hand.

This is a great basin, a holding place in the heart of a mountain range I adore.  Peaks rise up in all directions, silent stones with endless, judging eyes and cold hands to hold the snows, the waters, the deer, the trout; so too am I held in the fairness of this space, like any wild, breathing thing, made beauteous by my own growth and decay, the tidy crumbling of my stone facades under the heat of God’s good gaze.

IMG_2862 IMG_2873 IMG_2886

The higher we walk up the mountain, the more the landscape is reduced to waves of stony texture.  The trees fade.  All colors turn to shades of grey.  The wild flowers shrink away.  There is stone, sky and echo.  I fling myself at all three.  Riccochet.  Break in three.  Body.  Spirit.  Mind.  I spill forth like talus, entrust myself to the curve of a slope, cling softly to scraps of rugged dirt, wear away in the wind.

IMG_2895

I stand above a great stone basin, stand there simply in a frigid breeze, alone but not lonesome, dimished to singularity despite my excellent company.  Becca and I brace ourselves against a grey, bird belly sky.  We are as tall and delicate as rock at ten thousand feet, trampled and crumbling, resilient wanderers, stalwart survivors, old of soul and cell, young of spirit, reaching out to the sky with hands like tattered ribbons.  Beggars.  Thieves.  Victims of beauty.

IMG_2908

Where our hearts wander, our feet follow close behind.  We walk that way for a day or a year, obediently trailing the purest versions of ourselves back down into the trees, beside still waters where our souls are restored.   

IMG_2920

IMG_2948IMG_2936 IMG_2900 IMG_2838 IMG_2833IMG_2791

Bearteethies

IMG_9677 IMG_9706 IMG_9715 IMG_9740

IMG_9741IMG_9785 IMG_9797 IMG_9816 IMG_9850IMG_9896 IMG_9947 IMG_9950 IMG_9962 IMG_9967IMG_0223IMG_0001 IMG_0218 IMG_0211 IMG_0195 IMG_0129 IMG_0126 IMG_0122 IMG_0104 IMG_0103 IMG_0102 IMG_0097 IMG_0081IMG_0077 IMG_0060 IMG_0058 IMG_0030 IMG_0007IMG_9788

IMG_0229

Beautiful, big backcountry.

Berries.

Great, noble dogs.

The company of an excellent friend (who is also an unofficial botanist so I came away SMARTER…and un-poisoned by berries…).

Starry starry nights.

Berries.

Great alpine fishing.

BERRIES.

Clean water.

Summer sausage cooked on open fires.

Sleeping in the dirt with my boys under a tarp and washing my face in the dawn.

First light — the holy of holies.

Wait, did I mention the berries yet?  The huckleberries, raspberries and thimbleberries were at their HEIGHT and we lallygagged as we walked, eating one berry for every single step we took.  It was decadent.  We had stained fingers and delighted tastebuds.

I’ve never had a summer like this before, one so stuffed with gallivanting and crammed with work.  I’m exhausted, but I am loving every moment of it.

X

Tried Tested and True

IMG_0258I acquired a hooded zip-up sweatshirt (a bunny hug, if you are from Saskatchewan) and t-shirt from my friend Brittan of Little Owl Arts a couple of months ago right when Idaho was transitioning out of winter and into the gentleness of springtime.  I make mention of these pieces of clothing here today because they are tried, tested and true!  I’ve done some living in these shirts and not only has the silkscreening held up beautifully through multiple washes, but the fabric used for these tops is so soft, it just seems to get softer with each wash I put these guys through.

IMG_0276IMG_4503IMG_4504IMG_4506I’ve worn these shirts to the sea, in the forest, on the mountain and for regular old every day stuff like gardening and slouching about the house with a cup of morning tea.  They layer up beautifully — I especially love the hooded sweatshirt under a down vest while I am out and about and the air is turning chilly on the mountain.  Best of all, Brittan sketches up the designs for her clothing and silkscreens them one by one with enduring love.  She cares for the wholeness of life, the beauty of the forest and the glorious face of the sea.  She is a tree hugger, mushroom picker, berry hunter, tea brewer, all around crafty woman and it’s just such a pleasure to feel like I am drawing near to her and all that she is when I slide into a piece of clothing she has made.  If you are an abnormal human being who does NOT wear t-shirts, she makes exquisite, natural, hand dyed sundries as well.  You can find an array of her offerings in her brimming-with-goodness shop.

IMG_4512It’s always a pleasure to carry a little piece of you out into the world with me, Brittan.  Thanks for making beautiful things.

X

-nYBeHyQydlvKqxuiyv9_riCRpr_RMzH0av2-LeI0H8,xGfaROGQ1cdX9irieB1U77P4MBWw1nFhYpczk4nqjxw,qJ7xxnGQL1t9B7V8UJn3f0HdDIsk0VE0-uf92vEUOO4 j1INKMzjpDeihmYV5yZ0AsAAt2-fJPqrRf5msa7ISs0,k67dZ1lotODOlwAnEXo6KM74VKr-bDfbEs1PtiGF3F4 n0PwB3zqxqncA1VAtlPPGw4e3U2K852lrIyHgptOR7o,hKUn2ju9iL9wYCrUDPIIkkARTCRkOkXhyLPpeU8mtKs,arrRJY0Os6JV3ipAQbwkvgsvOnOGJzX_xwWXbN6UGBQ oKMq4yR3gl6NGzvaRtOuFnfxdTdCJhtsB1lWAWCc5Fg,Ji4yRoMObwphp1SpWVCs3mhhca9TChccifdvAomKj00,1bDXUWRoPs15TXZMC79wZ9yTBqbLY6X4zi3PTfcBQIM,epndHA2cDOKbzq9Q0D1zCqO1tkynksztsRKM785EMSM p5WdW3nrCIJMI3vKZoxEg7Ytk5uLb9UBSEr5KaUpIng,DJUsm-QnPIVKn9ljwqn60bwGMvOaF7pKPrkDc1bJhbE qRWkOIZGgAyVUfMthUyDy9PChQbtTCCXQDLKQJU7fK4,AMLwGD-Lb_0ty_7h6bVz6KgkM_cmZl9Yaq1PDXYJoJ8,cf9JCUXa6FBxkv5oPbRbWZh21L5Whz9_0PSfHjGrVug SiDwC4mdlAnUH8FaNywIA7XZq7fSoJjqHMrTAmv07Cs,OAHU18-quyosJ1nsudhP5xE4KrR6f_uMWRgnNn3_mXw,0cSREakp6b9_UDJaLSYyqDYpTtmhieRUjTQ7et8IdQM[All images courtesy of one of my very beautiful, very talented, and very best friends.  If you decide pin any of these pictures to your boards on Pinterest, please give full credit to Melissa Wright Photography.]

I spent my birthday eve and birthday morning barefoot, in a long red dress, on the back of an indian pony, riding the dry escarpments along the Colorado River of Arizona under a magnificent sunset and sunrise.  Anything less magical would have been uncivilized and unnatural.  I watched the last hours of 31 fade away in the raw and refined glory of a sinking sun from the back of a horse and ushered in my first hours of 32 under a beautiful blue sky in the very same horsey manner.  It was dry as a whistle out there in the low desert of Arizona but I felt like I had a million blessings raining down on me, soaking me through to the soul.  It is good to be 32.  I can’t wait to live the heck out of every moment of this year.

On my birthday, on the highway between Quartzsite, Arizona and Blythe, California, I saw desert bighorns — a burly ram chasing two ewes across red rock.  You probably heard my shriek of delight, no matter where you are on this fair planet of ours.  Those bighorns were surely a sign of all the rare and incredible things to come in this next year of my life.

Onward.  Upward.  Fearlessly.  Truthfully.  Courageously.  2014.  My year of 32.

:::Post Scriptus:::

I haven’t told you this, M, but riding Alibi was one of my very best birthday gifts this year.  Thank you.  X

https://www.thenoisyplume.com/blog/2014/03/04/7706/