Monday, May 31, 2021
The Probability of Impermanence
Saturday, February 13, 2021
Pocketful of Rocks
This raven upon the tree that used to look like a grandmother in an old style of dress but has weathered into an artistic rendition of a pitchfork
Will hover in the air when dog approaches
And dog looks up and they appear to be yelling at each other
Raven dips down and up and down further but always out of reach
*
Then this runner feels the packed sand or molasses sand or silky sinking sand up Achilles to gastrocnemius
Hamstring to glutes to core
Breathe with beating waves retreating, heart meeting fish and salt’s smell and taste of nostalgia
One mile ago is never happening again
*
Phone rings most times regarding my role as physician and reminds
Me not to think I have my own life
*
This stone calls also
So I stoop to gather it
Pocket full of rocks
*
Dog twirls in air arriving fresh having fully known this was going to be the best day of his life so far
No last time or next time compares
*
I can run from this factually literally sensationally until the parts that ache forget their sorrow and the parts that sit idle remember their purpose and
While a powerful man who brags about pussy grabbing- as my transgender child with addiction and mental health problems serves thirteen years for a crime committed at age eighteen while high -is acquitted despite trying to kill our so-called democracy
This anger upon me dissolves into just being a mother and a doctor and my dog’s companion
Taking stones to my garden
Never quite able to get all the sand out of my running shoes or my dog’s tight curls
Saturday, December 12, 2020
Testaments
For a year now, I have been trying to learn and memorize the 48 preludes and fugues of Johann Sebastian Bach. These are the old testament of piano. Stepwise, Bach takes us through the keys, the well-tempered tuning presented in fortspinnung. Fanny Mendelssohn, the lesser known but equally precocious sister of Felix, memorized 24 preludes in a week at age 13. I am not jealous. I am not jealous. I am not jealous.
If I was Fanny Mendelssohn and 13 years old, I would have gotten the Well Tempered Clavier memorized by now. But I am 3.9 x 13 and fatally distracted by the world around me.
Memorizing music came naturally to me once. Actually scratch that, it was always hard work, but maybe I used to have better focus. Back in the days when I was not on call 24/7 and did not have this pocket-sized computer sitting next to me, making little chirps and rings and silently beckoning me away from any other task at hand. In music school, the practice rooms were in the basement of a building built to withstand a bomb (literally), and once in the little room with the door closed, you could be alone for hours. No phones in those days, except the ones connected to the wall. You could emerge from hours of practice into a dark world and realize your fingers were still tapping out phrases on your thighs which ached from sitting on a wooden bench. Once at midnight I came out of the music school to a large pack of raccoons. They all stopped their garbage can raid and swiveled their heads to me, two dozen glowing eye-dots between me and the parking lot.
I have been trying to memorize opus 109 of Ludwig Van Beethoven. The 32 piano sonatas he composed are the new testament of piano. Herein lies the gospel of theme, exposition, recapitulation and rondo. The deafer he got, the more laser-focused these pieces of music. No chaff, only wheat. Blessed are the piece makers, for they will be called the children of God.
When I sit and play piano, I think about coronavirus. I look out the window where the redwoods just sit there, unconcerned. So nice to have a day at home, but I worry about my friends on the hospital wards. I stop and scroll through my phone in case something has happened I need to know about instantly. I think about the fact that it might be better not to know.
Montel wrote an email to us today to let us know our child in prison is in good hands. New cellie, always some fear there. I worry about that too. But thanks for the reassurance, Montel.
Seems like the only time I do not worry is when I run. If I could run all day every day, I would never worry. The mask fogs my glasses and I take them off and run somewhat blind but at least not fog-blind. My brain turns off on a tangent with each new trail. On single track, if a runner comes from the opposite direction, we both pull back into the woods, diving away from shared air particles. I cannot hug friends. Our dogs still intermingle though.
That is not actually true, as my dog is on high alert regarding any other dog stepping paws on the same planet. How dare you enter my woods, my beach, my neighborhood! I fear my dog would be a Trump supporter if human, but then I see how he has a pure joy and realize there is no joy in Trumpland. Only hate and greed and mistrust of science. My dog digs science. He plays fetch with the discipline of a randomized controlled trial. He loves me best but Dr Fauci would be a close second, I am pretty sure.
I have not been able to creatively write for a long while. Mainly due to the aforementioned fatal distraction and a heavy dose of consternation. My piano may be well-tempered, but I am not. I tilt at betrayers of democracy. I foam at the mouth on the inside while smiling sweetly on the outside. I get on my knees and pray for clarity. I usually am tying my running shoes during this maneuver, and the prayer works almost every time. I write now as a testament to the dis-ease I fight daily. My face shield gives me superpowers. My hands are washed of any malarkey.
I wish everyone had the courtesy of Montel. Just to tell us we got each other's back, not to worry, not to despair. Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy.
Blessed are those sharing their music with us during this lockdown, including the current Queen of Bach. I am not jealous. I am not jealous. I am not jealous.
Wednesday, September 9, 2020
Apocalyptic Meditations
Saturday, July 25, 2020
A Bird Whispered in My Ear and Other Pandemic Ponderings
Somebody's hope
Floated by on the river's edge
Smelling like sewage and fish markets.
The river, not their hope.
It left me breathless (their hope, not the river).
It felt like that when I saw Neowise, that comet. My stomach twisted around itself, settled only by the hot cocoa and small paper bags of popcorn we brought with us to Berry Summit. Sixty-eight hundred years from now it will come by again.
My children swear like sailors, though if I am honest I have never actually met a sailor who swears. I sit down in front of my piano and try to learn music. I stand six feet apart from my neighbors at the farmer's Market on Saturdays. I shave my hair short. I do a three thousand piece puzzle my brother sent, like he is continuing the tradition of torturing his little sister. My dog ate some pieces of the puzzle. I post on Facebook about fake vacations. I can't remember how my mother sounded or her smell. I get a weekly swab for SARS-COV2. The skin on my hands is rough from so much hand-washing.
When I walked in another country, I flashed on the collective burden of humanity on this Earth, which made me shift my bag of souvenirs, suddenly awkward in my grasp. We stopped at a villager's home, where an elder weaved on her dirt floor. The sewage draining by path reminded me that civil engineers outclass doctors every time, when it comes to the health of communities. When I walked my daughters through the red light district in the still light, almost-midnight sky, it was not on purpose, we just ended up there. Women in windows, like so much merchandise.
A professor of history, a mother, a specialist in the rise of fascism, was gassed and shot by the feds in Portland. Rubber bullets bounce off skulls there as an experiment in what we will tolerate. I am indignant, then spend my day gardening and listening to my book on Audible.com.
When I walked in another country, I marveled at how the women gathered around my child who lost their kite in the Yangtze River. I had lost my child, in a city of some millions, and it just turned out to be they were in the middle of a circle of cooing mother-types. Later the Maoist driver untangled the kite string, silently. He was always silent except that time he guffawed at my child saying in perfect Mandarin, "who farted?"
If everyone wore a mask, we could venture out more safely. If we could venture out more safely, less people would die. If less people die, it would be less sad and frightening.
When I sit next to my husband of almost twenty-eight years, I understand why people insist on going to the intensive care unit even when it makes no physiological sense.
There is something reassuring about leaning against someone you have known for so long, who sees the beauty and funny in the same instant you do, and who can sit through the same piece of piano music countless times without batting an eyelash.
Though often this ends in snoring on the couch. I mean I look over like "did you hear that sublime thing I just did with that passage of Bach?" and he is open-mouthed sleeping. If you play Bach to the open mouth of a sleeping person, do the notes float down their windpipes and come out later as a musical eructation? Can you burp a fugue?
As I walk down the sidewalk in another country, I eat up the antiquities with my reluctantly American eyeballs. They taste like fresh fruit that might have ancestors in the Garden of Eden.
They smell like some ancient army pounding drums on a dusty road. They look like bones, all catacombed yet humming with stories of all the shitty empires of yore. They feel like music written in modes I never dreamed existed.
The antiquities, not my eyeballs.
Fresh bread and a Miyazaki flick. The dog leaning against you, all trust and fluffiness. The sudden realization you have to do more before it is too late. And by doing more I mean to say loving more.
A small bird whispered in my ear that of all the places it ever flew, straight into the heart of compassion was the absolute fucking bomb.
Monday, May 25, 2020
The Smell of Home Baked Bread
I mean it isn't really a thing as long as you are not old.
Unless you have a child who gets sick and maybe dies.
I mean it isn't really a thing as long as you believe in freedom and God.
Unless someone at church is sick and might not even know it yet.
I do feel for people who are truly stuck at home. I "get" to go to work every day. Where I tend to sick people and lose sleep over, and over again.
When I run I notice the Ravens click-clacking, croaking, gurgling. The thrush whistles once or spins up a wild scale. Woodpeckers tap-tap-tap on trees, they have a secret knock and someone lets them in maybe for a worm and beetle party or something. Top secret. Forget-Me-Nots never sing but they whisper and make you look at them when they could otherwise so easily be missed. "Psst, running lady, down here. Watch out for that murder guy."
Komorebi makes my heart ache for something it misses but cannot quite remember in so much detail. A feeling also evoked by the smell of home baked bread. A feeling also evoked by my practically grown child's laughter while watching her favorite Korean drama. A feeling also evoked when sitting on a kitchen stool watching Yo-Yo Ma play Bach on youtube. A feeling also evoked by the way I want to hug my friends but just at the moment I cannot.
Because, science.
The truth, it is murder.