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an everyday life

an everyday life

Category Archives: The Great Outdoors

Ice Storm Strata

31 Sunday Jan 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, Soul Care, The Great Outdoors

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Death, Everyday Life, Parents, Soul Care, Winter Ice Storms

Ice pelts my window.

It calls me to relive memories of that earlier ice storm, which paralyzed our city and sent the National Guard with chain saws to our front yard.  I am haunted by the remains of those once beautiful trees.  But no matter; the trees were blocking traffic and what was dead had to be removed to allow life to return to the neighborhood.

But even now I see those decapitated trees.  We were lucky a tree did not hit our house; two weeks earlier, I had hired an arborist to remove a weak Siberian Elm from the back yard, whose wide network of limbs covered the back west of our home and the east half of our neighbor’s.  The healthier Siberian Elm in the front did not survive.

Last year’s ice storm, mild by comparison, woke me from a deep sleep.  Hearing the ice made me edgy.  And now this most recent ice storm, the one of two days ago, has converged to rest on top of two years of ice-storm memories.  Is there no disaster relief?  How many stratum will eventually build up before I can shake the memories surrounding that first devastating ice storm – the one of December 9, 2007?

I recall the date with ease.  It is not ancient history, after all.  But even if it were, I fear time will not lessen its grip over me.  Last year’s tossing and turning, as ice slammed against our rooftop, forced me from a warm bed to release sleep-robbing thoughts on paper. “Stop your whining,” I told them then.  And for a while, they grew still.

But the thoughts follow in the wake of every ice storm.  They are relentless.  There is nothing to fear, I tell myself.  Compared to many in the neighborhood, our losses were minor two years ago — no heat and power for three days and one old Elm tree gone forever — if we survived once, we can survive again.

But I wonder now, as I wondered then, whether the brevity of our suffering was a rare sort of grace given to those in mourning.

“Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.”

Two days before the 2007 storm hit, we laid my mother’s body to rest.  And because the ice storm followed mom’s death so closely, I fear I may forever associate one with the other.   Will I always wake up at night when I hear ice hitting the rooftop?  Will I always recall that moment of dark fancy – while living in our unlit cold home during the 2007 storm – when I wondered whether slinging around ice was mom’s way of venting anger from the grave, in the same way she infrequently resorted to slinging around a pot or pan, or slamming a door or drawer to vent her anger at life?

Mom was not angry about dying.  She had told my sister – a few months before her stroke, with no forecast of death close in hand – that she was ready to die.  If others of us weren’t as ready, then surely the inevitably of death’s appearance could make us so.

But making ready is not always easy.  When storms are coming, people prepare to live life amidst destruction, buying batteries and water and ready-to-eat food.  When the storm is death, we each prepare in our own ways.  My way involved tears.  Lots of tears.  I cried for an entire week, praying for a miracle, blubbering by my mother’s deathbed, until I finally told her the day before she died, that it was okay it she needed ‘to go.’

Swifter than any could have imagined, Mom died.  My maternal side of the family tree was gone.  The strong oak that I could never imagine being without, the tree I liked to lean upon to gather strength, was felled by death.  When the hospital called, we couldn’t get there fast enough.  We went anyway.  She died on a Wednesday night and an hour later we gathered by her bedside to whisper our final goodbyes.  We buried her two days later.  It was a cold Friday afternoon.

After six weeks of hope and one week of grief, all within the confines of an ICU room, I was ready to get on with the business of living.  But nature had other ideas.  That life-stopping ice storm came, and I was robbed of all mind-numbing distractions.  No television.  No books to read in an unlit house.  I was left alone to grieve in the dark and cold.

And so the memories come with every ice storm; the grief spigot opens to invite me to chip away at the remains of grief.  Yet, with tender mercy, it also invites me to remember Mom’s life and the way she absolutely loved to look out her window on falling snow.  And so last Thursday, in honor of Mom, I stopped life to look out my window.  And it was beautiful.  Then standing still, I listened.  The ice no longer sounded like pots and pans banging.  Instead, I heard hundreds of little bugs crashing into my windshield.

Someday, I think, the ice will become itself again.

Suspended in Time

29 Friday Jan 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, The Great Outdoors

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Dog Tales, Everyday Life, Snow Storms

Sugar frosted flakes are covering the world outside my window.

Inside it’s warm – thank God.  No power loss for us, though others are less fortunate.  My husband came to bed last night telling of an entire town, just an hour south of here, going to bed without power.   I wondered how many others were left to huddle in the dark and cold, as I turned over to turn out the light.

This morning I woke to an outdoor skating rink.  Gingerly, I stepped outside to salt down the back porch.  But already the lazy falling snow is blunting the slick ice, and soon it will be safe for even this thin-boned woman to venture out.  I don’t imagine I will; I prefer my experience of winter delights from an inside perch.

Like my mother before me, I do love to watch a pretty snowfall.  Suspended in time, each flake finds its own way to earth, riding an invisible magic carpet of air.  About twenty feet up from the ground, some reverse direction to go up, making somersaults in the air as they fall back to earth.  Some fall and turn sideways while others twist and turn in a spiral of snow ribbon.  Fast then slow; thick then thin, the flakes build to cover the ground in mass.

The dogs can’t resist the snow.  In and out… in and out… inandout… the door blurs in constant motion.  Sometimes they go to answer a nature call, but mostly they go out to play.

I look out to see Max grazing on snow; he reminds me a graceful deer at a salt lick.  Once he gets his fill he looks up and our eyes meet through the window.  I know he expects me to drop everything to let him in, even without courtesy of bark.  And like the dutiful mind-reading canine mom that I am, I open the door and in flashes a dark fur coat full of icy rhinestones.

Replete with snow, the dogs are now napping, insulated from an outside that has gone strangely silent without buses running up and down Walker.  I’m ready to settle into the silence as well.  I’ll carry a good book to curl up in my favorite spot.  And between book covers, and the covers of a warm blanket and the cover of snow that has put the neighborhood to sleep, I’ll enter a new world.   Between three layers of covers, I’ll be suspended in time.

Whether that new world will be one in a book …or one in a dream…. it’s too soon to tell.  But I’ll keep you posted.

Freezing Reign

28 Thursday Jan 2010

Posted by Janell in The Great Outdoors

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Human Nature, Politics, State of the Union, The American President

Freezing rain and snow will be here soon….unless, of course, the experts are wrong.

Pity the experts when they are wrong.  Pity anyone who is wrong.  Because admitting to wrongs is for sissies, especially in the public realm.  To make mistakes is to appear weak, to lose face.  To err is no longer just being human.  Today, we live in a world where it’s more acceptable to rationalize as adults OR… point fingers like children on the school playground — whaling out —   “He did it! “

Am I the only one who sees anything wrong with this picture?

I didn’t watch our “State of the Union” address last night because I expected it to be just another political speech, as all such speeches have been for as long as I can remember — emphasize the good news — skirt over the bad news –   when what I most long to hear is a hard and balanced look at how the state of the union really is.  Call me an idealist, but what I most want to hear is one truthful report out of the mouth of one man — and not two biased mouths, neither of whose word I can accept “as the truth and nothing but the truth.”

I was talking to my husband about this sad state of our world last night.  My wise husband smiled at me and said, “Oh, you want to live in a world that has an American president that acts like Michael Douglas, who has the courage to admit to making mistakes.”

I ask:  is there anything wrong with this desire?  What if my husband was right last night and he’s right this morning after the big speech —  that what I most want is the kind of president that comes out of Hollywood and not Washington?

Listening to the NPR recap, it seems as though last night’s speech was another verse of the same political song, with the exception that  no booing was heard by the President’s naysayers.  Is this the best that we can do — celebrate that there was no booing by our elected officials?  If so, today I am a very mad-sad American — red with anger and blue with sadness.

My friend Ann once called me apolitical.  If this were true then, it no longer is — though I confess to voting for both Republicans and Democrats.  I vote my conscience, both sides of the ticket, based on who I believe will do the best job for the office being sought.

If only our elected leaders could do the same — if only they could do the best in the job that were elected to do in spite of political cost — rather that seeing the world through red or blue shades — then maybe I would watch the State of the Union address — because then, it would live up to its name.

Well, there’s some freezing rain outside my window, living up to its name and making the expert right for now.  It will be a good day for movie watching about a great, if fictitious,  American president.  Hope we don’t lose power from a freezing reign.

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