Thursday, May 24, 2012

Words


I have had a love affair with words all my life.  One of my most powerful memories is of a Carrie five years old, sitting cross-legged on a kindergarten floor, book open in front of her, suddenly unlocking the mysteries of the words previously locked from her, unfolding the story of a child’s bedtime.  From that point on, words became my refuge, my holy grail and my solace.  Words flowed into me like the rising tide of the ocean, creeping ever upward on a beach, bringing beautiful trinkets from the deep, to be turned over, fondled and set upon a shelf until the time came to pull them out again and use them to define myself, and my world.

Words carried me through my formative years and into the tumultuous years of puberty, when, it seemed, no one understood a word I said sometimes, and I would take refuge in one of the journals that would someday chronicle my growth much as time elapsed photography chronicles the unfolding of a flower, or the growth of a sapling.  Words were the underlying current of my very foundation, no matter how dank and musty that foundation might get, words were the pillars I set myself on as I struggled to make rhyme or reason of my thoughts and feelings.

I had a sense of the power these words contained, even then, but even after a lifetime’s onslaught of words that stung, that often took me to my spiritual knees, I still did not fully realize the power of words.  Unitl now.  There is always truth in what I write, but sometimes the truth is more contained in the things I do not write; in the silence lying, impenetrable, between the lines.  These truths cannot be written for the public eye, but only in my journal, or spoken deep in the workings of my mind where they can hurt no one but myself, and there is no redemption from these words.  There is only the boldfaced truth, freshly scrubbed and smarting, never to be seen by the likes of this world until they are cajoled (and often dragged) out by only those closest to my heart, to be examined and either mercifully accepted or, even worse, rejected.

This love affair took me to South America, where I learned word upon word in a different language, as many as I could fit in a mouthful at any given moment.  For what is language if not more words, to be constructed in a whole new way, with new, beautiful sounds and syllables traipsing off my tongue and teasing my brain like a New York Times crossword puzzle?  It has also taken me to the darkest times I have ever known in my life, and I have felt betrayed by the words that I also love like another child, or a spouse.  For how can you feel truly betrayed by something you do not love fully, and without reservation? 

Words have been my safe harbor, tumbling out in the lines of poetry, defining Me and my world with their boundless combinations and unending variations, and flowing into me as a river spills into an ocean, feeding my soul in ways that few other things can.  Words have, quite literally, saved my life – saved me from a depression that has threaded its way through my veins like a drug at various points in my life.

It was a simple phrase in a rote prayer that took me out of the confines of the Catholic church and set me hurtling, a 13-year-old Black sheep, onto a path of spiritual discovery that I am only now beginning to make sense of.  Words can be more powerful, even, than a smack in the face, of that I have no doubt.

It is this love affair with words, I am only now coming to understand at the tender age of 41,that has also prevented me from attaining the very things I have sought since I was an early teen  – a balance in myself between my faith and all of the things that I eschew about that very word.  For I have discovered that some things can only be felt in the absence of words.  When we silence our minds, and our words, we only then begin to really hear our hearts, and the Divinity that resides within.  I am slowly learning this through a very difficult time, when the words I love so very much seem to have betrayed me.  It is only when I can sit them aside and lock them tight in a box that I can even begin to hear that which my heart holds and I can see a clear path forward.  When I let the words back out, I lose focus, and the path becomes muddied.  So I have taken to sitting beside my rose bush out back, after the morning rush of school and work departure has subsided, and simply try to rid my mind of all these words, one by one, placing them in that box until all I can hear is the sound of the birds and the hum of a neighbor’s lawn mower.  I try to hear the Divinity I know is within my heart, because I have heard it before, in those rare moments of stillness in my mind -  have felt it come crashing into me like the proverbial bull in a china shop, blindsiding me with its fierce love and devotion. 

I have called this feeling many things in my lifetime, always avoiding the moniker God because of its myriad connotations in my mind.  I have called it the Sacred, the Divine, the Universe, the Gods.  But it is over the past year that I realize that all these names all point to the same end, that we all, whatever paths we choose, wind up ultimately at the same spot, and I finally have become comfortable calling this thing God, and letting it into my life as such.  Funny how one word can be so many things at once, yet the same thing.  And this thing, which I search for in the silence of my heart every morning after I wake, has come to be that which sustains me, and keeps me sane, in a way that all my words have failed to do.  That feeling of peace that I find each morning is all of the beautiful words I know rolled into one and it is this beauty that I reach for when all my words have failed me.  For they do fail me, sometimes, even in all their glorious beauty and poetry, when that foundation upon which I have built myself buckles and it is the silence of my heart that is my only recourse. 

And so it is that you will find me, beside my rosebush in the morning light, searching for that thing that is so much more than myself, that is the essence of love and peace, yet myself at the same time.  And you will hear no words.

Friday, April 27, 2012

On the Hunt for Balance

In an effort to stave off a serious chemical imbalance caused by chronic stress, I've decided that today, at least for a while, I am going to set aside all of the things that I have to do (like the studying, the housework, the grocery shopping, the hygiene... well, ok, maybe not that), run away with my camera, and simply feed my soul for a bit. While I would be lying if I said that I am soul-food starved (if any of you have been following my pictures, you will know that that would be a lie), I feel the niggling of a Great Depression in the deep recesses of my brain (and even a little in my toes) - a response to events accumulated over months. The random tears here and there for no apparent reason, along with this melancholy heaviness sitting on my shoulders, tell me that it is time to take a deep breath (or three) and let go of it all, reset, and force myself back into balance.

So in the spirit of the hunt for the Unbearable Lightness of Being (thank you, Milan Kundera), and a little bit of balance, I'll start here.


Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Landslide

Laying next to my little K last night, snuggling as he struggled into sleep as he always does, this song came on the radio that plays softly by his bed every night to ease his transition from consciousness into his dreams.  And for some reason, this night, the words of the song wrapped around me like a melancholy blanket, heavy and bittersweet.

These past months have been a challenge, watching a person I love desperately struggle with the spectre of relapse; holding k in my arms each night wondering if something about life might ever come easy for him; struggling to balance the choice I made to finally pursue the education I always wanted and being present enough to face the turbulent challenges of raising 3 kids, 2 of whom teeter on the cusp of adolescence and adulthood, the other who simply teeters, wondering where he might land.  And these things make me wonder where I might find that strength to make it through these seasons of my life - whether I can juggle all of the balls without dropping one; whether I can be the person I need to be for all of the people in my life and still be the person I need to be for me. (I would say these are the things that keep me up at night, but thank all the Gods there is medication for that.)   Thankfully, change doesn't scare me, but failing does.  Sometimes I feel like I'm digging out from a landslide, just trying to catch my breath before it shifts again, but somehow I always seem to get my feet beneath me and I'm that person I have no choice but to be, even when the prospect of it seems too overwhelming and I'd rather run away and hide for awhile.  But there is no hiding, I've learned; there is only the path forward and all those little moments of beauty to capture and sustain me when those days come and I can't seem to find the beauty anywhere.  Thankfully, even on those days, there is the knowledge that even if I can't see it, I know it is there to find tomorrow.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

This Epic Life

I've always had a thing with death.  I suppose most people DO have some sort of "thing" about death, but my thing has a perspective that only those who have been seriously ill seem to really appreciate when I talk of it.  For most of my life, death has been a terrifying prospect always perched on the horizon like a vulture awaiting its dinner.  It wasn't until I was well into my adulthood that I could finally start making connections to my fear of this spectre and the time I spent in the hospital as an extremely ill child.  That year or so, shuffling between hospital stays and "real" life, seeing children come into the hospital and never leave and not knowing whether I was going to be one of the fortunate ones, defined me in ways I am only now coming to understand.  Having spent 35+ years fearing the very tenuousness of life, I am now able to embrace that same fragility and count my blessings each day that I am permitted to be with those I love, realizing that none of us never know whether we will have just one more day to right the wrongs in our lives, or with those we love.




And so it is that I find myself walking rows of headstones in the local graveyards, appreciating the untold stories that lie behind each marker, and chronicling the lives of people I will never know with my camera in something I've dubbed This Epic Life Graveyard Series after a simple epithet I came across on one of my walks.  It is, I suppose, my own way of coming to peace with something I've been terrified of since I can remember.  And oddly enough, it does bring peace.





Friday, March 2, 2012

Ok, I concede...


I *am* obsessed.  I just can't help it.  This morning, after a huge downpour, what did I do but grab my camera and run outside to see what neat things might be in dire need of photographing (which, it just so happened, the grill did).  After a trek on campus and a few photos of the local flora in bloom, we are now bracing for some intense storms to come sweeping through (even let out school early) and, like a fool, I can't wait to see what photo opportunities arise from it.  I think I need help.



Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Daffodil Blossom Photo Series #6

Day 6, and we have full bloomage!  It has been incredibly fun chronicling the unfolding of these flowers... I'm not sure what I'm going to be able to obsess... ahem, be passionate about next.  I did get to spend a half hour yesterday photographing the local fowl at the lake, which proved a fun diversion, but for some reason, it just doesn't beat the excitement of watching a plant bloom day after day.







Monday, February 27, 2012

Daffodil Blossom Photo Series #5

It is fascinating what 12 hours will do in the life of a plant.  






Sunday, February 26, 2012

Daffodil Blossom Photo Series #4





Daffodil Blossom Photo Series #3






Just a few more days, I think.

Daffodil Blossom Photo Series #2

Day 2 of the unfolding.


Daffodil Blossom Photo Series #1

Daffodil Blossom Series #1


So the winter this year in Kentucky has been extremely mild.  So mild, in fact, that daffodils are blooming all over the place.  Imagine my delight to find that our new house has a plethora of daffodils scattered throughout the landscape - just something else to... ummm... be passionate over.  There is one daffodil plant that I see every morning as I go to my car and I've enjoyed watching the progress as it has grown and started to bloom, so I decided to grab my camera and chronicle its unfolding.  I hope you enjoy these half as much as I've enjoyed doing it.

Friday, February 24, 2012

Obsessive? Me?


So I was accused, by my mentor no less, of being obsessive.  Now, I will admit that I have an ability to focus on things to a degree which might be considered "obsessive" by some.  But I prefer to think of it more as being a bit "passionate."  Admittedly, my passions do tend to be very comprehensive in scope, engulfing most conscious thoughts in their wake and leaving room for only the bare minimum of space for everything else that I must fit into a day.  Not that I'm neglectful.  I mean, mostly, I'm not. Okay, well, maybe on occasion, but that is certainly not the norm.


I may have mentioned before (or if I did not, I most certainly meant to) that the more I get shoved into my left brain through school and research, the more my right brain starts pushing back and I find myself not only wanting, but actually requiring some sort of creative outlet.  It isn't optional.  Over the holidays I gifted myself something I've been wanting since the death of my 35mm film camera... the Canon Rebel T2i digital camera.   Couple that with this burning need for creative outlet, a few good macro lenses, and an intense love of itty bitty things and you have a woman who can think of almost nothing except what might make a good subject.


Ok, well, not exactly nothing.  Because that definitely would make me obsessive.  But close to. Nuts, bolts, rocks, flowers, moss, weeds... nothing is sacrosanct. I've discovered the love of a Flickr account.  I discovered the awesomeness of 500px.com and the profound thrill of having a photo added to someone's favorites (yeah, I know, it doesn't take much).  I scour the internet for amazing macro photography, camera tips, and have a lens wish list (if anyone should desire to mail me a camera lens I am happy to send you aforementioned list).


It is an odd thing, thinking through the lens of a camera.  Suddenly life is seen in a series of vignettes and photo ops and even the most mundane things, like a sink faucet or a plant specimen mired in silica gel, become photographic possibilities.  I've been bitten by the shutterbug before, but never in so intense a fashion.  Perhaps some may call me obsessive, but at least I have lots of pretty things on my walls.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Who Am I?

(One: Passion)


I am the heat that courses
through your skin
as lips collide,
dropping like stones
to the floor
amidst our clothes.

I am the want
settling in your bones
like a fever,
the threads of my desire
weaving through your veins
in a tangled map of lust.

I am the memory
of a breath exhaled
against the dimpled flesh
of anticipation
as hands careen in an endless slide
across your thigh.

And I am the sigh
caught between your lips
and the curve
of my back,
the distance between the salt
of my lips
and your eyes
as you strip me away
and leave me shivering.


C. Black
September 2006

The first poem of an ongoing series of poems, reflecting that we are all so many things, in many different ways.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

The Sounds of Silence

So I was a funny kid.  Funny in an amusing, odd sort of way.  I'm not sure why, but I fancied myself the family comedian and had great aspirations from a very young age of being a creative genius.  And coming from a household that did not have much in the way of music immersion programs (in other words, other than the car, I rarely remember music on in the house) I still managed to find a love for music at an extremely young age.  In fact, I think my love affair with music started about the time my love affair with words began, and come to think of it, the two would become intertwined for most of my life.  When I was six years old I remember saving my allowance and purchasing my first album - an album by my first girl crush ever, Shawn Cassidy, complete with hunky poster and everything.  I begged and cajoled my dad into taking me to purchase it and I will never forget that feeling of accomplishment I had walking out of the store, holding his hand, album swinging from the other.

From there I progressed to Muskrat Love by Captain and Tennile, Going to the Chapel by The Dixie Cups (one that satisfied my dreams of wedlock to my beloved Shawn), and an all around stellar album by Lesley Gore of teenage love and angst that I discovered in my mother's stash (from a very young age I just couldn't wait to be old, but that is another story entirely).  Music became the background for the movie of my life - I laid for hours in the basement where the stereo had been consigned, listening to music and singing at the top of my lungs with the headphones on.  It was on when my barbies fought and when they inevitably made up.  It was on when I wrote.  There was a song for every emotion that I could possibly feel and some that I didn't even know I had yet.  The only time music was really not present was when I was immersed in my books or roller skating (which, admittedly, was at least half the time) but I guarantee, had they invented such things as portable 8-track players, I would have had one strapped on along with my skates.

Music and words have often collided in my world, and I've been known to run around making up new lyrics to songs ala Al Yankovic, highly entertaining myself and, later, my children, if no one else.  I performed in musicals growing up, and dreamed of Broadway.  Music is a vein that travels deep in my soul and so it was with considerable surprise that I found when I started college in the fall of 2010 that I suddenly could not listen to music.  Where music had followed my days from morning to night, there was suddenly silence.  It seemed that there was no space in my head for the things I was learning and the distraction of a melody.  When I drove, it was in silence, with the radio off, the iPod tucked away in a drawer so that equations and cell functions could fill all of those gaps previously occupied by that thing called music.  It seemed the background noise in my head was more than enough. 

And somehow, oddly enough, I was ok with it.  In some way, I suppose, the process of a mathematical equation or the function of a sodium potassium pump are almost melodious in and of themselves, and I began to see the beauty of a new way to immerse myself.  It wasn't until a year later, in August of this past year, that this need for silence passed, as suddenly as it had come.  As my mom lay at home, in the final days of her life, a lifetime's worth of songs played non-stop on the stereo next to her bed - every song she ever loved, the songs that knit the painful moments of our lives together and the songs that celebrated every triumph, issued forth from an iPod meant to give her comfort.  How powerful is it that music can illustrate an entire life, almost like a series of photos, each song attached to a memory?  And even when that memory is gone, the trigger for it seems to remain buried within those melodies.

In the days that followed my mom's death, my need for that trigger, for those memories, surfaced like a tidal wave and the sound of silence was almost too much to bear.  Music came back into my life with a vengeance and my emotions were played out like a symphony in stereo.  It was my voice and my words when I had none of my own.  And it was music that got me through to the place I am right now, to a place that is somewhere between those two extremes.  I don't need to drive in silence anymore - I find that my brain needs the distraction in order to process the information of the day.  But I have learned to savor the stillness deep in my soul when it comes, like tonight, as I sit with only the sound of my fingers clicking on the keyboard and the soft breaths of the dog on the floor beside me.


Friday, January 6, 2012

New Year's Resolutions

There is a phenomenon that occurs every year starting January 1st and lasts through about March.  It is called New Year's Resolution time at the gym.  Inevitably there is a huge influx of people, determined to get into shape, and the gym regulars have to move over for a bit to make room for these all-or-nothing harbingers of fitness.  And inevitably, there is a lot of complaint from the regulars because gym time is sacred time - get in, get focused and get out.  No one wants to wait for equipment, especially for someone who may or may not be there in a month.  But every once in a while, a resolution sticks, and I wonder what it is that is the catalyst for those people.  Because for me, all it took was a friend saying to me, "I give it a month."  If there is anything in the world that I (ashamedly) love to do, it is to prove someone wrong.  It is the competitor in me.  I just can't help it.

I have been active in some form or fashion all of my life.  Having kids who left me little to no time to exercise (or, when they did, they wanted to be ON me while I tried to workout) I was at my wit's end with the body I was trapped in.  It just wasn't mine anymore, after 3 kids and over 180 pounds gained and not quite lost between the three of them.  5 years ago I was sporadically working out, trying to make it a priority but always having other things weasel in on that time.  I had already gone through every friend I had trying to recruit a workout partner, to no avail (thank you very much, you guys know who you are).  But it was on January 1st, 2007 that I declared on a public forum that my resolution was to workout at least 4 times per week and I would not allow myself computer time until I had done so.  Hence, the previously mentioned comment.   On a public forum, I might add.  If ever there was a call to arms, for me, that was it.  I would rather die than let him be right.

And so here I am, 5 years later, a personal fitness trainer certification under my belt (and rarely in use anymore), still plugging away.  Some people call it an obsession, this love affair I have with weights, but I call it a lifestyle.  It has become such a huge part of my life and who I am, from how I look and feel in my skin to how it helps me manage my moods, conflict and stress in my life.  And let's not forget that little benefit called health.  I just received blood work back from the doctor showing that all of my levels are absolutely perfect (and not just for a 40 year old, either) and I doubt I would have been quite so fortunate had I not had that kick in the pants 5 years ago from the friend who thought I wouldn't (or perhaps just knew that I couldn't pass up a challenge). 

4 years ago, I fell in love with strength training, my workout partner (see what happens when you say yes?), and had lost 4 clothes sizes.  This year my workout partner cum husband and I are challenging each other to a fixed workout schedule rather than the haphazard, random workouts that come when we don't let other things get in the way and have set attainable personal goals again.   So to all those out there who poo poo the notion that resolutions can work, I say you are wrong.  They can.  We just have to find that motivating factor that turns a resolution into a lifestyle, no matter what kind of change it is we wish to see.  And to those of you who made resolutions, there is no doubt in my mind that you can do it if you really want to be the change you envision.  You just have to want it bad enough.  Or, like me, have someone tell you you can't.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Smack me once, shame on you...

Smack me twice, shame on me, as the saying goes.  Or something like that.  No one likes getting smacked in the face, regardless of what it is, but twice in 20 minutes is a sign to me that I needed it, and I'm slightly ashamed to admit that I did.  I'd forgotten a simple lesson that took me 36 years to learn:  savor life.  I could expound upon it, go verbose (as I'm want to do) and wax philosophical for several paragraphs on it, but when I think about it, I can really condense it down to those two words.  I've forgotten to do that lately - to hit each day head-on, dazzled with the possibilities it can hold, writing a page worthy of being written.  I find that I've slipped into survival mode again, and I'm not content there.  I'm not content to have pages unworthy of being read or, even worse, pages that would cause a reader to shut the book entirely.  I am not content to lose the lessons that I've worked so hard to learn.

And so I was smacked this morning.  Twice.  And I am thankful.. but with any luck, I won't need it again for at least a couple of weeks.



   


And my personal favorite wake-up call: