Sonoma Sojourn

Tag: Sonoma

A Change in Venue

The “Year of Me” has come and gone.

I returned from Sonoma last April and dove into the rental season at Nashaquisset two weeks later.

It was a tough summer. Unexpected work challenges soured the enjoyment I usually experience on Nantucket, but life ignored my angst and marched on. Rental guests arrived and departed; toilets clogged and were augered; trips to Nantucket’s extraordinary dump (“The Madaket Mall”) were exciting and fruitful. The season ended; I traveled to Singapore again for the month of November to visit Max and Mason and their parents.

2014 arrived. I sold my beloved home in Potter Pond and moved to Hingham, an historical, beautiful coast town just south of Boston. I now live in a house originally built in 1750 and added onto in the ensuing years. My condo (there are four units in the shingled and clapboarded house) is less than half the size of my Lexington space; it is a welcome challenge to pare down, simplify, creatively furnish to accommodate my life’s essentials.

A light gray paint (or tan, depending upon the light) covers the mustard yellow walls. Bright white gloss covers the avocado green trim throughout. Hardwood floors replace the matted blue shag carpeting; new tiling, glass shower door, white vanity, comfort-height toilet make the formerly pink and brown bathroom a distant memory. New windows actually close tight, and roman shades add a designer’s touch to the small rooms. Of course, all these changes made the 1985 vintage kitchen look sad and troubling, so that was replaced, too: all white cabinets, white appliances, granite counter top, and kitchen island make me feel at home again.

Smokey has adapted well. She squeezes through the cat door carved out of the cellar entrance, trots down the stairs to use her litter box, and then explores the three small tunnels cut into the old stone walls of the basement. She perches on her cat tree in the living room as neighbors walk their dogs and joggers trot by. She follows the progress of the commuter train as it passes by our front door and descends into the underpass that brings it to the other side of the town center so as not to disturb Hingham’s history.

And I drive the back roads, get lost, learn my way home. I walk into town, into the small shops whose owners are warm and welcoming. I find a new gas station, new car wash, new grocery store, the post office, the library. I marvel that yet another chapter has begun.

So now … this becomes my South Shore Sojourn. Bring it on!

Hingham is just to the left of the dot called "Cohasset"! You can see the Boston skyline from our waterfront ....

Hingham is just to the left of the dot called “Cohasset”! You can see the Boston skyline from our waterfront ….

 

 

Refuse to Fall Down …

A tough week in Paradise.

Hormones? Stress? What the heck is going on with me?? I’m weepy and anxious; is it because my time in Sonoma is drawing nigh?

I come across a photo of my mother that’s been posted on FaceBook, and seeing her makes me cry. I wish I were a kid back in Brockton, washing windows and drying them with circular motions so they won’t streak. Ironing my father’s handkerchiefs: steam press all four outer edges first, glide the iron over the middle; fold and stack the white squares to await use. Hanging silvery icicles one by one from the stiff green branches of the Christmas tree. These are just some of the life-skills I learned at my mother’s hands.

This week, I’m tired of playing grown up and wish I could fall into my mother’s arms again and have her assure me that all will be well. I wish those hands would stroke my head and caress my face and tilt my chin so my eyes meet hers and she convinces me that things aren’t as bad as they seem.

This afternoon, I read today’s posting from gratefulness.org that arrived in this morning’s email:

Refuse to fall down. If you cannot refuse to fall down, refuse to stay down. If you cannot refuse to stay down, lift your heart toward heaven, and like a hungry beggar, ask that it be filled, and it will be filled. You may be pushed down. You may be kept from rising. But no one can keep you from lifting your heart toward heaven. – Dr. Clarissa Pinkola Estés

I’m thinking my mother changed her name to Clarissa once she got to heaven – I’m quite sure she’s the one who sent this message today.

Thanks, Mom.

Josephine Gilbode  1923 - 2011

Josephine Gilbode
1923 – 2001

Making Love

I am making love in the kitchen of my Sonoma cottage late Thursday night – I chop, stir, cook, grind, and spoon pureed steamed organic sweet potatoes, steamed organic broccoli, Haas avocados, extra lean ground beef, and organic white meat turkey into ice cube trays I’ve picked up at the thrift store earlier that day. Hayes arrives Friday afternoon, and I am preparing a smorgasborg for him: brown rice mixed into the meats; mashed avocado molded into green patties; broccoli that tastes delicious but infiltrates the house with its pungency. Bowls, spoons, pans cover every inch of available counter space. Blobs of orange and green splatter the side of the refrigerator – for some reason, the small food processor I use spits out the vegetables I’m pulverizing so that there is a fair amount that sticks to the fridge and counter. The mess doesn’t matter; Hayes arrives on Friday – and I can’t wait to serve him dinner!

Hayes enjoys his meals ... the side of my refrigerator looked worse than his tray does!

Hayes sure does enjoy his meals (this one in his Boston home) … the side of my refrigerator looked much worse than his tray does by the time I was done with the food processor!

Here’s a link to a video Graham posted the other day on FaceBook: this is going to be a fun week! Hayes entertains (himself) during dinner!

What’s In a Name?

Catholic or not, today’s election of Pope Francis riveted many around the world – me included.

I am a recovering Catholic.  I would like to re-engage with the Church I knew as a child. I miss the traditions of my early Catholic years; I miss the rituals:

May Processions: Dressed in beautiful dresses with floral wreaths on our heads, we  lined up according to the color of the dress we wore. We walked carefully and in time with one another from St. Edward’s School to St. Edward’s Church. Our hands folded, we sang to Mary, Mother of God: “Oh Mary, we crown Thee with blossoms today! Queen of the angels…queen of the May.”. It was magical; we were little princesses singing to our Queen.

And Mass during the week was especially meaningful. We’d sing our Gregorian chants, and when it came time for Communion, we lined up to receive the body and blood of Jesus Christ according to where our favorite altar boy stood. Paul Cruise? I headed down the left aisle to be served by the priest that was served by Paul.

Stations of the Cross? Mmmmmmmm…burning incense still brings to mind all those seasons of atonement before the Bunny arrived early Easter Sunday morning. Oh wait! The Easter Bunny and Jesus’ ascension are not to be confused…although they were part of the same celebration, try as we might to keep these two events separate.

I could go on about early-life Catholic memories, including wearing mantillas – the lacy triangles we anchored to our heads with bobby pins (covered heads showed proper respect while in church). I loved wearing mantillas; they made me feel like I had the most glorious long hair on earth – even if my pretend hair was made of navy blue lace. And when we made our Confirmation at age 13, we were allowed to wear nylons for the first time! There were no panty hose in those days, and I remember pulling up the edge of my nylons to hook into my garter belt … and being SO excited to wear something as grownup as nylons, I pulled the nylons right through the hooks and ripped them. Oh. My. God. It was tragic.

Since I continued Catholic school education through high school (Cardinal Spellman High School in Brockton, MA) and into Junior College (Aquinas Junior College in Milton, MA), there are many more happy memories I have of growing up Catholic, before I became unhappy with being Catholic. (Another story, another time – yes?).

But today’s election of Pope Francis reminded me of my parents’ love of – and commitment to – the Church. My mother kept a statue of St. Francis of Assisi in the backyard of each of her homes. When Mom and Dad made their last move from their home on West Elm Terrace to an apartment with no yard for St. Francis, I inherited the statue. I loved St. Francis; I remembered especially my mother’s joy in the impatiens blooming in front of the statue each spring and summer. My mother reveled in nature, flowers, the outdoors – simple pleasures amplified.

I first brought the statue of St. Francis to my office in Natick, which I had arranged according to Feng Shui guidelines. St. Francis fit in perfectly. Then, when my mother died and we landscaped the bench that was to be her grave marker, it was obvious that that’s where St. Francis needed to be. He’s been watching over both Mom and Dad now for the past 12 years. I know they are happy to have him there.

And so … after suffering through years of Pope Benedict (there: I’ve said it. I did not care for him at all … he looked like a maniac to me and perhaps will be proven so – although I wish all things Catholic were clean and pure and real), I was unexpectedly happy to hear Pope Francis is to lead the Church.

I see Mom and Dad happy with the choice, too. Their faith in human kind – their appreciation of simple pleasures – is their legacy. Seeing Pope Francis on the balcony tonight at St.Peter’s gives me hope that the Church might now be led by a man worthy of the mantle he wears.

Many of the stories that surround the life of St. Francis deal with his love for animals. Perhaps the most famous incident that illustrates the Saint's humility towards nature is recounted in the "Fioretti" ("Little Flowers"), a collection of legends and folklore that sprang up after the Saint's death. It is said that, one day, while Francis was traveling with some companions, they happened upon a place in the road where birds filled the trees on either side. Francis told his companions to "wait for me while I go to preach to my sisters the birds." The birds surrounded him, intrigued by the power of his voice, and not one of them flew away. He is often portrayed with a bird, typically in his hand.

Many of the stories that surround the life of St. Francis deal with his love for animals. Perhaps the most famous incident that illustrates the Saint’s humility towards nature is recounted in the “Fioretti” (“Little Flowers”), a collection of legends and folklore that sprang up after the Saint’s death. It is said that, one day, while Francis was traveling with some companions, they happened upon a place in the road where birds filled the trees on either side. Francis told his companions to “wait for me while I go to preach to my sisters the birds.” The birds surrounded him, intrigued by the power of his voice, and not one of them flew away. He is often portrayed with a bird, typically in his hand.

This gives you an idea of what May processions were like in the early 60s - and if you need to hear "Oh Mary, we crown thee with blossoms today ..." visit http://youtu.be/p_fln4An7G4.

This gives you an idea of what May processions were like in the early 60s – and if you need to hear “Oh Mary, we crown thee with blossoms today …” visit http://youtu.be/p_fln4An7G4.

Fear of Flying

Heights frighten me – or perhaps it’s the fear of falling from high places that really makes it hard to breathe. I try not to think about this as I climb the narrow ladder 25 feet into the air. What awaits me, if I manage the climb safely, is a small platform from which I will grab a 10 pound trapeze bar and swing through the air – assuming with the greatest of ease, given all the circuses I’ve been to.

It’s not too late to climb back down the ladder, but I coax myself to put one foot above the other (the rungs bite into my arches) and hold on as I ascend. Breathe … breathe … breathe, dammit! After what might qualify as the slowest ascent to a trapeze’s beckoning, I arrive. What once looked daunting now looks absolutely forbidding.

I stand on the platform and breathe heavily. I am out of breath not only because I have held it during my ascent, but the height and expanse of the trapeze rig causes me to hyperventilate. John, an experienced and very kind ‘flyer’, holds onto the back of the leather safety belt that encircles my waist; the belt is cinched so tightly that my belly fat rolls both over and below it. John’s voice is low and appropriately intimate – which is to say it is extremely soothing and comforting, even to my disembodied ears.

“Left arm: up!”
I stretch my left arm slightly behind me and higher than my head; I grab the line that hoists the ladder and await the next order.

“Right arm: out!”
I stretch out my right arm, prepared to catch the fly bar that Jeannie is pulling in – she is the ‘biscuit’, the person who serves the bar to the fool (I mean, artiste) ready to fly.

John continues his coaching, a running litany of corrections and encouragement: chest out, lean forward, butt clenched, smile, look up at the flag, grab the bar with your right hand, clench your butt, now move your left hand to the bar, smile, raise the bar up three or four inches, smile, good! I see your butt is clenched!, you’re going to do great, listen to my cues!

“Ready!”
I bend my knees and wait for the next cue, which is when I will jump and fly into the abyss, the chasm below, the void. Because I am full of fear and hyperventilating yet full of exhilaration and hope, it seems like hours before I finally hear John say The Word:

“Hep!”
It’s now or never: I jump up, stretch out from the bar, try to hang onto it, pray to the goodlordjesus. I start to traverse the rig; I’m flying! The trapeze swings with my momentum (I later find out that I am swinging with the trapeze’s momentum) – but right now I am too dazed to be confused and before I get half way through the full swing, I lose my grip on the bar and fall into the safety net, bouncing like a cannon ball as I trip across the net. I remain fairly upright and avoid ‘net rash’ on my face and other parts of my body, but my toes get caught up in the webbing and hurt like hell and take my mind off the fact that I just fell off a trapeze over 25 feet in the air. I want to cry because they hurt, and I am embarrassed that my maiden voyage is so brief, but I stand up and wobble my way back to the ladder like a pigeon-toed kangaroo. I climb down to terra firma (there is no graceful somersault off the edge of the net which looks so easy on tv) and collapse on the bench next to Jeannie. Somewhat dazed, still, I feel tears well up. The disembodied me begins to reunite with the present me, though, and instead of crying I begin to laugh. Gibberish gushes out of my mouth that roughly translates to: “Omygod omygod omygod I can’t believe I actually DID that! THAT was ME up there?!” and so on. Why did I think this was a good idea in the first place? I blame it on Jeannie.

••••••••••

Jeannie has been flying for 15 years and takes lessons here in Sonoma. We meet for lunch after one of her classes, where other members of her troupe also happen to be enjoying the delicious, creative soups, sandwiches, and baked goods at Community Cafe. Jeannie and I first met in the early 90s at the Santa Barbara Writers Conference; she lives 18 miles north of Sonoma in Santa Rosa and drives down to trapeze every week. A petite, lithe, vibrant 73 year old, Jeannie is an inspiration in so many ways – but her passion for the trapeze and her belief that the troupe she flies with is what helped her get through her husband’s health crisis and death in 2000 are irresistible. I must go to the mountain (where the trapeze is) and face my own demons. There are many, I am sure. If ‘flying’ can help me with at least one of them, I’m going there straightaway.

••••••••••

The 3.5 mile drive up to Keen Ranch and my inaugural flight reminds me yet again of Wyoming. The road quickly narrows to one lane, and I pray that no one is coming down as I drive up. Where in the world will I pull over to let them pass? There are no cutouts as there are on Red Grade. And do I honk as I approach a curve so anyone on the other side of that curve might hear me and squeeze to the side of the road so as not to sideswipe me and force my rented vehicle off the road and into the vineyards below? I drive this dental floss of a road and pray to St. Christopher, hoping he is the patron saint of drivers as well as of travelers.

••••••••••

The sign on the barn board gate reads “Keen Ranch”.  I ignore a smaller sign that reads “not a through road” and drive down the narrow driveway, around a bend where an alpaca and chestnut colored horse graze freely, and up the hill where I see several vehicles parked. In front of me is a cabin flanked by hills covered with willow, poplar, pine, chestnut, and cedar trees. Two men are down by the creek felling huge trees, cutting them into massive rounds: “Do you need any firewood?”, they offer. I wish I did, but ask them only if they know where the trapeze is. “Follow this path!” they say, gesturing over their shoulders and through the woods. I follow the narrow route from the parking area and across the creek; I walk up the hill and come into the clearing where the trapeze rig rises from the ground. I can’t believe I’m here. Class members are already on the trampoline warming up; some stretch, some wrap their hands in tape. Jeannie introduces me to each, and each is lovely: welcoming, encouraging, open to a novice, perhaps remembering when they too first assessed the wires and ropes that stood before me now.

 ••••••••••

Marek (“Professor and Proprietor”) greets me as he tightens ropes, calls out to Hope, Shannon, and Megan. There is no formal beginning of class: the veterans eventually make their way to the rig, climb the ladder, begin to swing. It is an amoebic-like effect, from where I stand; they are moths drawn to a light. Someone somewhere has called ‘lights, camera, action!’ and the show has begun. They swing, they fly, they twist, they land on the net. They laugh, they bounce, they critique themselves (as does Professor Marek). I am in awe; this is Cirque de Soliel come to life, and I’m about to join the circus!

 ••••••••••

Before I join them WAY UP THERE, Marek brings me over to a picnic table and goes over the ground rules (no pun intended):

Walk carefully around the rigs. Most students are looking up at the trapeze as the navigate the area; better to look down at the uneven ground, steel tethers, coiled ropes, mole holes that can ruin your plans if you trip over/into them.

Stay on the paths. Up in the mountains, rattlesnakes, deer, and coyotes are frequent visitors, he tells me, and poison oak abounds on the hillsides. I’m more afraid of poison oak than I am of rattlesnakes; the odds are far greater that I’ll suffer from the blisters of poison oak if I come in contact with it than from the venom of a snake I’m unlikely to run into.

Wear shoes when walking around. You climb the trapeze rig in socks or bare feet, but shoes should be worn otherwise to keep dirt from falling into your eyes while flying. I soon learn that there’s a lot to keep track of when you’re up there flying, so eliminating temporary blindness is an excellent idea.

Finally – and most importantly – SMILE and LISTEN TO THE INSTRUCTORS’ DIRECTIVES. I soon find out it is easier to climb up a 25 foot ladder holding your breath because you’re just so damned scared than it is to do either of these two things.

 ••••••••••

The knee-hang is considered one of the easiest tricks on the flying trapeze and is the first trick that most people try. The first stage of completing the knee-hang is getting your legs up and high enough so you can then push them between your arms and hook them over the bar. My understanding is that everyone can do this trick right out of the box, but I prove that premise false in the six swings I try today.

Swing #1:
I actually bend my arms when I first jump off the platform, which is why I fall off the trapeze so quickly. I didn’t trust the fact that you don’t necessarily have to be strong to hang onto the bar; no one has yet told me about momentum being my friend

Swing #2:
I miss the cue for “legs up” – being a hard-of-hearing novice trapeze artist does not make the transition from scaredy cat to accomplished performer easy.

Swing #3:
I hear the cue this time and try to get my feet up, through my arms, and over the bar. Things don’t go as intended, and once I waddle back across the net (because I’ve fallen again) and climb down the ladder, I hear that I didn’t ‘go with the flow’ and let gravity work for me. (Ah! The momentum thing, still unexplained.)

Swing #4:
Almost there – don’t look at your feet or the bar, Marek tells me afterward. Really? How will my feet know where to go if I’m not looking at them? (Ah! the momentum thing!)

Swings #5 and #6:
Marek agrees with John that I should try a different way of getting my legs up and over the bar: instead of sliding them through my arms, I will swing them around the trapeze and onto the bar this way. This move almost works, but the combination of fear, adrenalin, hope, trust, frustration, focus, and exhilaration (as well as six trips up the 25’ ladder) have tired me.

 ••••••••••

That night after a hot shower, I replay the afternoon’s highs and lows. I take Advil for the aches that are reminding me now that I have muscles yet unnamed in my upper body that are killing me. I go online to read more about the flying trapeze (Ah! Momentum!). I order a DVD of 35 flying trapeze tricks (34 of which I’m certain are a pipe dream for me). I sign up for next week’s class and go to sleep, dreaming of hanging upside down by knees 25 feet up in the air.

It’s not that I’m afraid of flying…it’s the trip up the ladder and it’s standing on the platform waiting to hear the cues to let go and fly…but I like what I’m hearing and hope to get past the knee-hang and onto trick #2.

Show time!

Show time! The trapeze rig looks harmless in this setting…

Climbing up

Jeannie climbing up The Ladder.

Determination and Concentration

Determination and Concentration – Jeannie is focused on her next trick.

Jeannie in flight: doing a '7'

Jeannie in flight: doing a ‘7’  – see how her body forms a ‘7’? It helps her get higher and faster.

Enjoy yourselves quietly....

Enjoy yourselves quietly….difficult to do so when your heart is beating so loudly you can’t hear a thing!

Professor Marek handling the safety lines ... wish he would speak louder so I can hear him as I fly! :)

Professor Marek handling the safety lines … wish he would speak louder so I can hear him as I fly! :)

Sharon has you covered!Sharon was there for me every time I fell ... she ran out to help me release my safety straps and led me back to safety (no small feat on this 'safety net'!) - notice her bare feet. Impressive!!!

Sharon has you covered!
Sharon was there for me every time I fell … she ran out to help me release my safety straps and led me back to safety (no small feat on this ‘safety net’!) – notice her bare feet. Impressive!!!

John between swings.John also climbs/flys with bare feet ... he's experienced enough to do it all in bare feet and to know enough to wear sandals in between swings (no dirt on HIS face!).

John between swings.
John also climbs/flys with bare feet … he’s experienced enough to do it all in bare feet and to know enough to wear sandals in between swings (no dirt on HIS face!).

Things are looking up for Cher!Unbelievably ... Cher grew up in Brockton and in East Bridgewater. She lives in Marin (about a half hour from here) and loves trapeze. She's an artist and a pretty cool woman, from what I can tell.

Things are looking up for Cher!
Cher grew up in Brockton and in East Bridgewater – can you believe that? (I grew up in Brockton – East Bridgewater is right down the street, just about!) Cher lives in Marin (about a half hour from here) and loves trapeze. She’s an artist and a pretty cool woman, from what I can tell.

Darryl waits while Cher prepares her trick ... Jeannie is next to fly!

Darryl waits while Cher prepares her trick … Jeannie is next to fly!

I'm TRYING to smile ... per orders!

I’m TRYING to smile … per orders!

I'm breathing deeply, trying to smile, afraid of everything, trying to listen .

I’m breathing deeply, trying to smile, afraid of everything, trying to listen .

Warning: This Is Not Pretty.One leg is up...the other isn't. Darnitall!!!!

Warning: This Is Not Pretty.
One leg is up…the other isn’t. Darnitall!!!! But there’s always NEXT week! :)